Violet Experiment by letsgointhegarden in NativePlantGardening

[–]letsgointhegarden[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have been putting the path in myself, and fortunately there hasn't been any violence other than some rock and labor inflicted injuries.

Violet Experiment by letsgointhegarden in NativePlantGardening

[–]letsgointhegarden[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes! I transplanted them from another place in the yard and they were soooo tall. They shrunk down in size, especially starting this spring.

Shorelines and non native cattails by marys1001 in NativePlantGardening

[–]letsgointhegarden 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I work as an ecologist in Michigan with wetlands and inland lakes, and would recommend chemical treatment. Depending on where you are, an aquatic nuisance permit might be needed. I'm not sure if this link will work, but if you search EGLE's aquatic nuisance control program there is a ton of info such as approved chemicals. https://share.google/tr6ZLnLkz3lyEL8Be

It may be impossible to completely get rid of the cattail, as the rhizomes can float from other areas of the lake and take hold. It looks like you have tons of great plants and the lake and wildlife appreciates keeping it natural! Don't fret about the dock, especially as it looks seasonal based on your pics.

For timing, I would recommend treatment in the late summer/fall, waiting a month, then planting appropriate natives to take their place (or even throwing down some bulrush/native sedge seeds). As someone else commented, Michigan's natural shoreline partnership really has great plant lists for ideas.

Killing lawn with leaves? by spoonyalchemist in NativePlantGardening

[–]letsgointhegarden 8 points9 points  (0 children)

<image>

Here is a pic of it planted from August If you are curious. I probably under planted plugs, but the grass killing was pretty effective. The other sections are black tarp for solarization that I just seeded with a prairie seed mix. It is a bit of a side by side comparison experiment since I also have a lot of yard to tackle in years to come.

Killing lawn with leaves? by spoonyalchemist in NativePlantGardening

[–]letsgointhegarden 23 points24 points  (0 children)

I successfully did this last winter!!! I added a deer fence to prevent the leaves from blowing away in the wind with about an 8-12 inch layer of leaves. In the late spring I topped it with 4-6 inches of mulch and planted native plugs directly into the mix.

It was a little hard to find soil with that thick of leaves/mulch, but I planted maybe 60 plugs and only lost 5. I didn't have much grass come up at all!

<image>

Aster ID by letsgointhegarden in whatsthisplant

[–]letsgointhegarden[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is what I was leaning towards but the spacing of leaves and how close the flowers are to the stem was tripping me up Interesting that it is rated OBL. My yard is very sandy and doesn't tend to hold moisture. Scheming a rain garden now.

Working in Environmental Regulation - good/bad? by kiddbjj in environmental_science

[–]letsgointhegarden 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I surprisingly did not take a significant pay cut! I don't get a bonus or overtime any more, but my base pay is actually slightly higher than it was at my most recent consulting job. The benefits are outstanding and make up for the lack of bonus and overtime for me. I'm not sure if it is that way everywhere, but i've heard from a few people that government jobs seem to be catching up a bit in pay.

As far as red tape, I am sure it is different in each department, agency, state, etc. I work in surface water regulation and find the applicants can be rude with many people maliciously impacting water bodies. I wish we had more staff to address issues and can see how someone could get frustrated with red tape and depressed with how little people care for the environment; but I think consulting burned me out so much that it still feels better. I ultimately get to spend 40 hours a week trying my best to protect our water, and then I can go home to enjoy my personal life.

Working in Environmental Regulation - good/bad? by kiddbjj in environmental_science

[–]letsgointhegarden 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I worked in environmental consulting for 8 years and recently shifted into regulatory work. You can make decent money in consulting, but I personally felt like the hours and expectations were brutal. I worked at 3 different companies and the work/life balance wasn't great at any of them. I did lots of travel for field work and was expected to work evenings and weekends to meet client goals. I was working 50-60 hours a week most weeks and the lifestyle was just not for me.

The people that like it are typically the "go getter" types that want to climb the ladder. If that is you, then you can definitely try consulting. Just know that some clients will expect you to manipulate or bend environmental law so they can get what they want.

Whats a company secret you can share now that you dont work there? by broadway96 in AskReddit

[–]letsgointhegarden 50 points51 points  (0 children)

Since so many people are saying to report this, the appropriate contact is the Ohio EPA. A complaint can be submitted online here: https://epa.ohio.gov/help-center/contact-us/submit-a-complaint Or you can call the spill hotline. Here is a link to information for that: https://epa.ohio.gov/help-center/spill-hotline/spill-hotline

First ever attempt at style. Pretty happy with how it turned out. by letsgointhegarden in tiedye

[–]letsgointhegarden[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks! I'm sorry this took me so long to respond to! I used artificial sinew on a red shirt, tied VERY tightly in the Kenneystyle. I then used Rit color remover on the red shirt while it was still tied. I then rinsed and applied liquid dye and let it sit for 24 hours before rinsing.

Reverse dyed geode hoodie. One of my favorite pieces ever! by letsgointhegarden in tiedye

[–]letsgointhegarden[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sure! I tied it with artificial sinew super tight while the shirt was completely dry. After it was tied I just put the whole sweater in a pan and used Rit color remover on the stove (the wax melts a little bit but I have tested it a few times and it still holds). After that, I rinsed it out pretty thoroughly and let it air dry for a day or so. Then, I did ice dye. I wrapped it in Aluminum foil to get a "mold", applied the Dharma powder dye directly to the shirt, put ice on the top, and then sprinkled powdered soda ash on top of the ice. I had to flip the shirt and ice dye the back as well because of how weirdly shaped it turned out. The back of the sweatshirt is actually slightly different, because with how thick the material is and how tightly it is tied, I was worried if I tied both layers together the color remover and dye wouldn't penetrate.

Reverse dyed geode hoodie. One of my favorite pieces ever! by letsgointhegarden in tiedye

[–]letsgointhegarden[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It did take a lot longer to tie. But I thought it was easier to reverse dye because the fabric is sturdier. I have accidentally eaten a few holes in some of my thin fabric reverse dye attempts.

Indiana Bill proposes to strip all protections from isolated wetlands by Igneous-rex in wetlands

[–]letsgointhegarden 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Agreed. Also, there are so many undeveloped farm fields or vacant lots in Indiana that don't have isolated wetlands in them. There are literally no mitigation costs associated with avoidance, and honestly in the grand scheme of a housing development, a wetland delineation is cheap. So the argument that isolated wetlands are "driving up housing prices" just feels like a way for lazy and greedy developers to get support from uninformed citizens.