Skip to main content

Gardening for the environment: How to minimize your footprint for maximum results

If you’ve ever wondered how gardening can help the environment, consider this. Planting and maintaining a garden can lead to a net reduction in carbon emissions, preserve or improve water quality, and offer a way to conserve at-risk species. But, to gain some or all of these eco-friendly benefits, you’ll have to approach gardening in a way that emphasizes natural processes and minimizes reliance on external inputs. 

Going green isn’t just good for the environment, it is a less costly way to garden and leads to plentiful yields. Gardening with nature means purchasing fewer plant care products from the garden center. Natural nutrient cycling and a diverse garden ecosystem then produce sustainable yields. Here are a few ways to get started.

adding scraps to a compost bin

Start composting

One of the most important garden-related reductions of household carbon emissions comes from composting. Vegetative waste that goes to the landfill must be trucked there, and then it gives off methane and nitrous oxide as it rots. In a proper backyard composting system, all sorts of household and landscape debris is converted to a nutrient rich soil amendment. The biogenic carbon dioxide emissions from composting are net neutral. The resulting soil amendment replaces purchased soil amendments and some of the purchased fertilizers needed to grow a healthy garden.

Grow your own food

Some lawn grass is good, but more is not necessarily better. A good solution that eliminates excess mowing, fertilization, and water consumption is to plant a vegetable garden. A well-planned and maintained vegetable garden supplies a steady stream of food and eliminates the travel and production emissions of the grocery store produce it replaces. 

The greatest benefit of backyard veggie gardening comes from an overall reduction in waste sent to the landfill. To reap the environmental rewards, grow only as much as you’ll eat or share with neighbors, and be sure to compost the waste. And, keep it up. Starting a garden and then neglecting it releases more carbon than not starting one in the first place.

sprinkler watering garden seedlings

Water efficiently

There is no way for gardeners to eliminate irrigation, but there are ways to do so wisely. Water between 5 a.m. and 10 a.m. to minimize evaporation loss. Use drip irrigation to apply water only where it is needed. Apply a three-inch layer of mulch to keep the soil surface cool and further reduce evaporative loss. These strategies can reduce water consumption by 30 percent or more. Consider using other methods to further reduce city water consumption. Instead of city water, use collected rainwater for irrigation, or divert graywater from the washing machine or bathtub. 

Avoid emissions-intensive garden products

Although caring for a garden is always a great way to connect with nature, some plant care products shrink your footprint more effectively than others. Appropriate use of fertilizer helps gardeners grow abundant crops efficiently. However, fertilizer plants produce high levels of greenhouse gas emissions. Gardeners can reduce their share of these emissions by using a well-planned crop rotation and by using homemade compost.

Another popular product of which gardeners should beware is sphagnum peat moss. Peat moss is a widely used ingredient in potting soils, seed starting mixes, and other soil amendments. But, sphagnum peat moss as it exists in northern peat bogs, is a carbon sink that, when mined and processed for sale, is eliminated. It is technically renewable, but takes about 1,000 years to replenish a three-foot layer. Eco-friendly alternatives to peat moss include coconut fiber (coir), rice hulls, compost, and composted wood products.

Use recycled materials

Reduce, reuse, recycle. That’s the old environmental mantra for eliminating stuff from the waste stream. Old materials that would be destined for the dump or even the recycler may find new uses in the garden. Egg cartons make great seed starter trays. Tires can become raised beds. There are endless uses for old wooden pallets, such as wall planters, fences, garden work stations, tool holders, and more.

Caring for a garden is an eco-friendly activity any way you do it. Garden plants efficiently clean the air by absorbing carbon dioxide and other air pollutants and releasing oxygen into the atmosphere. But you can take it further by adopting some of these green gardening practices. By choosing natural and environmentally friendly gardening habits, you can minimize your footprint and maximize results.

Editors' Recommendations

Mark Wolfe
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Mark Wolfe is a freelance writer who specializes in garden, landscaping, and home improvement. After two decades in the…
Where to buy seed potatoes for your garden
Your guide to seed potatoes
Stack of seed potatoes on a pile of soil

Growing potatoes by yourself is easy and effective. The only things you really need are seed potatoes and dirt. This makes potatoes a popular garden staple, especially for beginner gardeners who may not feel confident enough to grow more finicky plants. The fact that potatoes are incredibly versatile and delicious makes them appealing as well.

If you're looking to start your own potato garden, you'll need to know where to find seed potatoes. This guide will answer all your questions about finding seed potatoes and how to make sure your seed potatoes are top-notch choices. Let’s dig in and find some potatoes for you.

Read more
How to prune a Japanese maple, and when to do it for the best results
Get the most of your beautiful tree with these easy pruning instructions and tips
Japanese maple tree

The Japanese maple (Acer palmatum), hardy in zones 5 to 8, is a stunning and uniquely shaped tree native to Japan, central China, and Korea. The trees were introduced in England in 1820 and have been used ever since as focal points in gardens all over the world for their stunning, brightly colored leaves and canopy growth patterns.

Typically, Japanese maples grow to about 15 to 20 feet tall, and their canopies reach out to about the same length. However, there are dwarf versions of these trees that are some of the best options for smaller gardens. They have bright, hand-shaped leaves that appear in the summer in a beautiful green color but then turn red, purple, or yellow in the fall.

Read more
Amazing tips for forget-me-nots care so they don’t take over your garden
Everything you need to know about growing forget-me-nots
A bumble bee on blue forget-me-not flowers

If you’re looking for a dainty, lovely flower to use as a ground cover in your garden, you can’t go wrong with forget-me-nots. Delicate in appearance but deceptively hardy, they make the perfect additions to cottage or woodland-style landscape designs. However, these sweet-looking flowers are native to Europe and invasive in the U.S., and they can quickly spread out of control.

If you want to grow these beautiful flowers without them taking over your garden, this is the guide for you. To keep your flower healthy and under control, this forget-me-nots care guide will break down everything you need to know.

Read more