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Sally Nex

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Sally Nex

Tag Archives: gravel

Recycled lavatories revisited

17 Thursday Sep 2009

Posted by sallynex in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

aggregates, environmentally-friendly gardening, gravel, recycling

We’ve had to pause in our pond-making activities (oh dear… another half-finished project…) since nine tons of aggregate turned up, was dumped on our verge and needed moving. Fast.

Unusually, considering the prospect of long hours behind a laden wheelbarrow is generally about as welcome as double-digging in January, I have been enjoying this immensely – largely because most of the nine tons is recycled lavatories.

I went on about this at some length a little while ago, as my conscience was savaged by the revelation that the ubiquitous, common-or-garden gravel we all splash about on our paths and drives is about as environmentally unfriendly as it gets. Always a woman of my word – when it (at last) came to the crunch and we’d got all the various bits of digging-out and wooden edging sorted out enough to actually order the stuff, I went for the recycled option.

There were many dire warnings from assorted relatives about how horrible it would look (I bought it, more than a little apprehensively, sight unseen) – but do you know what, it’s really rather nice.

This is the first patch we did, by the greenhouse, which if you ask me looks just like 10mm pea shingle. But look a little closer…

The stuff is full of little bits of coloured china. The kids are in heaven – they spent most of yesterday pulling out chips and washing them to make mosaics. And there’s more, though sadly, my powers of photography are not up to showing you. The best thing about our new gravel is that those glazed bits catch the sunlight (and car headlights at night) and glint like little stars on the path.

This is lovely stuff, and I shall never use anything else now. It goes by the rather prosaic name of Traxmax (the manufacturers are obviously not as taken with its prettier qualities as we are) and all our neighbours are fascinated – I suspect it will be all over this corner of Surrey before long. It’s even reasonably priced – no more expensive than ordinary gravel. Order it here – and spread the word. Your local landfill will thank you.

Recycled lavatories

19 Friday Dec 2008

Posted by sallynex in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Capel Manor, environmentally-friendly gardening, garden makeover, gravel, organic, weedkillers

The other week at my ever-challenging and interesting plant design course at Capel Manor, we got to talking about environmentally-friendly gardening.

Now, I’ll nail my colours to the mast here and say I’m not entirely organic – I’ve been known to spray bindweed with glyphosate when nobody’s looking, and my most heinous crime is to Pathclear my patio and driveway every year which I will no doubt have to account for in the afterlife. However – five minutes of talking to my very knowledgeable classmates has made me realise there’s rather more to it than that.

We were talking about gravel. I’ve got loads of the stuff here – on my driveway, on the patio, and under my cold frame. It’s cheap and easy as pie to use, I buy big jiffy bags of the stuff every few years or so to top things up, and until now I’d thought that was a relatively neutral material, insofar as I’d thought about it at all: the RHS promotes it as a good alternative in its “don’t pave your front driveways” campaign, after all, doesn’t it?

Not so. Marine-dredged gravel is the worst of all: “harvested” by something akin to Spanish trawlers only much, much more devastating. They suck everything up off the seabed to a depth of a couple of metres, killing all marine life that happens to be in their way, then they clean, grade and sort the gravel and spit back into the sea what isn’t needed. Incidentally smothering all marine life that happens to have wandered into the area in the meantime.

So – you avoid that like the plague, and source it as land-dredged gravel, right? Well – if you can get companies to specify where they get their gravel from – this is certainly better. But the amount of fuel it takes to suck the stuff out of the ground, sort, grade and then transport it where it’s needed requires a few aircraft-longhaul equivalents of carbon a throw.

This was all getting me in a real gloom. I was already having a conscience about using paving to hard-landscape the area around my shed and greenhouse (the garden makeover is proceeding apace, of which more later). It’s not just the (itself not very eco-friendly) paving: it’s also the sand and the cement-based hardcore I don’t like having to use. Now it turns out the so-called ‘better’ options like gravel actually aren’t.

The ‘green’ alternatives to gravel – bark chips, recycled tyres or bright blue recycled glass bits – are either too hippy or too horrible to contemplate. Or they wouldn’t last five minutes. And then I discovered the wonderful world of recycled aggregates.

This is basically some of our rubbish that would have gone into landfill but is instead crushed down and sold back to us as gravel-like surfaces for pathways and hard standing. Surprisingly, for what might seem like an obvious idea, it seems to be a bit new, so there aren’t that many people doing it yet. Long Rake Spar, in the Peak District, does a gravel made of crushed building materials that looks pretty good (and very like regular gravel), but the one I really like the sound of is sold as Traxmax. It’s ceramics, either tiles or bathroom suites (I wonder if it’s sometimes avocado-coloured?) taken out of the local tip, hopefully cleaned up a bit, smashed up into little bits and delivered in a big bag. The best thing about it is that because the original ceramic was made of clay, once it’s broken up it becomes a little sticky again – so when you put it down on your path and it rains, it bonds to itself and becomes a solid surface.

You get it from this company – the only supplier I could find – and it’s not even very expensive. There may be a catch: but I’m going to give it a go and I’ll let you know what it’s like. And anyway, I kind of like the idea of walking over second-hand loos on my way down the garden.

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