V o lu me T h i rt y O ne , N umber 7
July 2017
Compost tea seen as key to a greener Beaumont in more ways than one By Irene Borgogno
In its pursuit of greener grass, bug-free and weedless, Beaumont has long relied on chemicals that are increasingly being recognized as toxic to creatures from microbes to us. This summer, however, visible changes are under way. Beaumont has begun moving toward ecologically friendly alternatives, and key among these is the humble mixture of decomposed organic matter known as compost. Compost is not new. Its use to help build healthy soil has a long history, with written material dating at least to the Roman Empire and Pliny the Elder (AD 23-79). Beaumont’s Green/Grounds Subcommittee, created in 2015, obtained approval of the BRCI Board to discontinue the use of toxic chemicals in the Park, the area surrounded by villas on Pond Lane, Pasture Lane and Middle Road.
COMPOST-TEA BREWER steeps liquid organic fertilizer in Austin garage.
All photos by Richard Stephens
This area is being used to experiment with organic methods of lawn care. The subcommittee, headed from the beginning by Ann Reed of the Green Committee, recommended and financed the attendance of Grounds COMPOST continued on page 4
Frogs who went a-wooing leave a mystery behind Text and photos by Linda Madara PLOP! What on earth was that? I was minding my own business pulling out rogue weeds from my garden when it happened a second time. PLOP!! I looked at the little fish pondcum-bird bath on the ground. There was
TAKING TIME to smell the roses. . .er. . .petunias.
a large circular ripple on the surface of the water, but no sign of anything else. How strange! Having a generous collection of weeds, I continued on. At our previous house, we had a small pond set in a garden in the grass circle of the drive. Frogs used to FROGS continued on page 5