Skip to main content

Home/ Save The Planet/ Group items tagged care

Rss Feed Group items tagged

plantoraapp

Plant Care App: Top 5 Best Plant Care Apps - Plantora - 0 views

  •  
    Taking care of plants is important task for plant lovers and enthusiast but sometime they misses out due to lack of knowledge or education. One can become an expert in plant care through research, practice, and the help of a plant care app. To select the best plant care app you need to follow some criteria. Plant Identification, Plant Database, Compatibility, Personalised Care Reminders, Regular Updates and many other things. Read this article to know more about best plant care app.
plantoraapp

Plant Care: How Plantora App Can Guide You in Plant Care - Plantora - 0 views

  •  
    For every plant lover, the joy of growing new plants good feeling. But to achieve such a goal it takes real patience, time, effort, and most importantly knowledge about plant care and plant health. And for such people we bring the ultimate plant guide - The Plantora app. Plantora is a free-plant identifier and plant care app. This app provides you with some of the best available features like a plant water calculator, plant guides, plant disease diagnosis, plant identification, and much more. With Plantora's vast database of 10000+ plants, you can identify any plant species with their common and scientific name.
plantoraapp

American Ginseng Plant: A Complete Care Guide - Plantora - 0 views

  •  
    American ginseng (Panax quinquefolius) is a herbaceous plant belongs to North America. It has been used for centuries in traditional medicine for its super health benefits. Growing and caring for American ginseng requires specific conditions and attention. Few steps for care are: Seeds, soil, climate, temperature, planting time, mulching and many more. To read the full article click on the link and download the best plant identification app and start caring of american ginseng plant.
plantoraapp

Top 5 Free Plant scanner apps with Expert Plant Care Tips in 2023 - Plantora - 0 views

  •  
    Revolutionize Your Gardening Experience with Plant Scanner Apps: The Guide to Plant Health, Expert Advice, and Comprehensive Plant Databases. A plant scanner or plant health app can provide many features to the users such as an extensive plant database for better recognition, plant care tips, and plant expert guide. A plant scanner app can offer tons of best features that can help you in various gardening and plant care activities. There are several plant identifier and scanner apps available that can help identify plants, provide care tips, and offer various gardening resources.
plantoraapp

How To Grow And Care For Red Hot Poker Plant - Plantora - 0 views

  •  
    Red Hot Poker, also known as Kniphofia, is a striking perennial plant with unique, vibrant, torch-like flowers. To grow and care for Red Hot Poker Plant, you'll need to consider several factors, including planting, soil preparation, watering, and maintenance. Red hot poker plants are pollinator-friendly and attract hummingbirds, bees, and butterflies. Know how you can grow and take care of the amazing red hot poker plant. Also, discover some famous varieties to grow. So let's look at some plant care tips that can help you grow and maintain the red hot poker plant.
plantoraapp

Skeleton Flower Care: A Complete Guide - Plantora - 0 views

  •  
    The Skeleton Flower, scientifically known as Diphelleia grayi, is a unique and fascinating plant known for its translucent, white petals. Native to the mountainsides of Japan, China, and the Appalachian region in the United States, the Skeleton Flower is a deciduous perennial that requires specific care to thrive. Remember that the Skeleton Flower is a unique plant, so it's important to provide the specific conditions it needs to thrive. Here's a complete guide on caring for the Skeleton Flower.
plantoraapp

Parlor Palm Care: A Complete Guide - Plantora - 0 views

  •  
    The Parlor Palm, also known as the Neanthe Bella palm or the Good Luck palm, is a popular indoor plant known for its attractive appearance and relatively easy care. Here's a complete guide on how to care for a Parlor Palm: Light, Temperature,Watering, Humidity, Soil, Fertilizing, Pest and Propagation. Read the full article for healthy and thriving Parlor Palm in your indoor space.
plantoraapp

Outdoor Plants: 7 Low-Maintenance plants for Outdoor Gardens - Plantora - 0 views

  •  
    If you're looking for low maintenance for your outdoor garden, there are several plants that require very less care. Succulent, Cone flower, daffodils, Pothos, Russian Sage and many more. These are just few examples of low maintenance plants for your outdoor garden. When selecting plants, consider your climate, soil conditions, and the amount of sunlight receives. Use plant identification and plant care app Plantora for more information.
plantoraapp

Pet-Friendly Plants For Your Indoor and Outdoor Garden - Plantora - 0 views

  •  
    Creating a pet-friendly garden, whether indoors or outdoors, requires careful consideration of the plants you choose. Some plants can be toxic to pets if ingested, causing various health issues. To ensure the safety and well-being of your furry friends, In this article we share some pet-friendly plant options for both indoor and outdoor gardens. To grow these pet friendly plants use free plant identifier and plant care app plantora from today.
plantoraapp

10 Desert Plants You Can Grow At Home - Plantora - 0 views

  •  
    There are several desert plants that you can grow at home, even if you don't live in a desert like climate. These plants are known for their ability to tolerate arid conditions and require less water as compared to other types of plants.Check out these desert plants that can be grown in any garden if provided in some desert-like conditions with minimal maintenance. Growing a desert plant at home can be a rewarding experience. While many desert plants are adapted to arid environments, some can be successfully cultivated indoors or in containers. To grow desert plants at home use plant care and free plant identifier app to grow plants and will also helps you in identify plant disease.
vrocky

Top skincare tips for working women - 0 views

  •  
    Working Women Skincare Tips If you are able to run away from fast food fast sufficient, you might be doing a enormous favour to your skin. The ingredients in fast food can damage your health and your skin too. At work, have a some of almonds, berries or some fruits handy. You need habitually eat all types and colours of organic, fresh vegetables, particularly green and leafy ones. Be necessary at least one cup of two-three dissimilar types of berries thrice a week. Take in veggie juices in your diet. These types of foods are sure to improvement your antioxidant
Skeptical Debunker

Rough Water - 0 views

  • For most of the last 1,500 years, the river supported a sustainable salmon economy. Salmon were at the heart of all the Klamath’s tribal cultures, and Indians were careful not to over-harvest them. Each summer, the lower Klamath’s Yurok and Hoopa tribes blocked the upstream paths of spawning salmon with barriers; then, after ten days of fishing, they removed the barriers, allowing upstream tribes to take their share. As the salmon completed their lifecycle, dying in the waters where they’d been spawned, they enriched the watershed with nutrients ingested during years in the ocean. Among the beneficiaries were at least 22 species of mammals and birds that eat salmon. Even the salmon carcasses that bears left behind on the riverbanks fertilized trees that provided shade along the river’s banks, cooling its waters so that the next generation of vulnerable juvenile salmon could survive. “We tried to go to court, to go through the political process, but it didn’t work. …The big issues were still out there, and we still had to resolve them.” Salmon’s biological family may have started in the age of dinosaurs a hundred million years ago. They’ve survived through heat waves and droughts, in rivers of varying flow, temperature, and nutrient load – but they were as ill-prepared for Europeans’ arrival as the Indians themselves. Gold miners who showed up in the mid-nineteenth century washed entire hillsides into the river with high-pressure hoses and scoured the river’s bed with dredges. Loggers dragged trees down streambeds, causing massive erosion, and dumped sawdust into the river, smothering incubating salmon eggs. Cattle grazed at the river’s edge, causing soil erosion and destroying shade-giving vegetation. Farmers diverted water to feed their crops. The dams were the crowning blows. Between 1908 and 1962, six dams were built on the Klamath. The tallest, the 173-foot-high Iron Gate, is the farthest downstream, and definitively blocked salmon from the river’s upper quarter – after it was built, the river’s salmon population plummeted. In addition, the dams devastated water quality by promoting thick growths of toxic algae in the reservoirs. For Klamath basin farmers, however, the dams were deemed indispensable, as they generated hydropower that made pumping of their irrigation water possible.To the farmers, the potential loss of the dams’ hydropower was considered no less crippling than an end to Klamath-supplied irrigation.
  • For most of the last century, the farmers were oblivious to the damage that dams and water diversions caused downstream, while the tribes and commercial fishermen quietly seethed. The annual salmon run, once so abundant that people caught fish with their hands, was roughly pegged at more than a million fish at its peak; in recent years it has dropped to perhaps 200,000 in good years, and as low as 12,000 – below the minimum believed necessary to sustain the runs – in bad years. Spring Chinook, which once comprised the river’s dominant salmon run, entirely disappeared. Two fish species – the Lost River sucker and the shortnose sucker – that once supported a commercial fishery, were listed as endangered in 1988. Coho salmon were listed as threatened nine years later. All this has had a devastating impact on the tribes. Traditionally able to sustain themselves throughout the year on seasonal migrations of the river’s salmon, trout, and candlefish, tribal members suffered greatly as the runs declined or went extinct. For four decades beginning in 1933, the tribes were barred from fishing the river even as commercial fishermen went unrestricted. Members of the Karuk tribe once consumed an estimated average of 450 pounds of salmon a year; a 2004 survey found that the average had dropped to five pounds a year. The survey linked salmon’s absence to epidemics of diabetes and heart disease that now plague the Karuk. The 2001 cutoff left farmers without irrigated water for the first time in the Klamath Project’s history. Over the next four months, many farmers performed repeated acts of civil disobedience, most notably when a bucket brigade passed pails of banned water from its lake storage to an irrigation canal while thousands of onlookers cheered. The protests attracted Christian-fundamentalist, anti-government, and property rights advocates from throughout the West; former Idaho Congresswoman Helen Chenoweth-Hage likened the farmers’ struggle to the American Revolution.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • A year later, it was the tribes’ and fishermen’s turn to experience calamity. According to a Washington Post report, Vice President Dick Cheney ordered Interior Department officials to deliver Klamath water to Project farmers in 2002, even though federal law seemed to favor the fish. Interior Secretary Gale Norton herself opened the head gates launching the 2002 release of water to the Project, while approving farmers chanted, “Let the water flow!” Six months later, the carcasses of tens of thousands of Chinook and Coho salmon washed up on the riverbanks near the Klamath’s mouth, in what is considered the largest adult salmon die-off in the history of the American West. The immediate cause was a parasitic disease called ich, or “white spot disease,” commonly triggered when fish are overcrowded. Given the presence of an unusually large fall Chinook run in 2002 and a paucity of Klamath flow, the 2002 water diversion probably caused the die-off. Yurok representatives said that months earlier they begged government officials to release more water into the lower river to support the salmon, but were ignored. photo courtesy Earthjustice In 2002, low water levels on the Klamath led to the largest adult salmon die-off in the history of the American West. The die-off deprived many tribes-people of salmon and abruptly ended the river’s sport-fishing season, but its impact didn’t fully register until four years later, when the offspring of the prematurely deceased 2002 salmon would have made their spawning run. By then the Klamath stock was so depleted that the federal government placed 700 miles of Pacific Ocean coastline, from San Francisco to central Oregon, off limits to commercial salmon fishing for most of the 2006 fishing season. As a result, commercial ocean fishermen lost about $100 million in income, forcing many into bankruptcy. Even more devastating, a precipitous decline in Sacramento River salmon led to the cancellation of the entire Pacific salmon fishing season in both 2008 and 2009. The Klamath basin was in a permanent crisis. It turned out that desperation and frustration were perfect preconditions for negotiations. “Every one of us would have rolled the others if we could have,” Fletcher, the Yurok leader, says. “We all tried to go to court, to go through the political process, but it didn’t work – we might win one battle today and lose one tomorrow, so nothing was resolved. We spent millions of dollars on attorneys, plane tickets to Washington, political donations, but it didn’t make any of us sleep any better, because the big issues were still out there, and we still had to resolve them.”
  • In January 2008, the negotiators announced the first of two breakthrough Klamath pacts: the 255-page Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement. In it, most of the parties – farmers, three of the four tribes, a commercial fishermen’s group, seven federal and state agencies, and nine environmental groups – agreed to a basic plan. It includes measures to take down the four dams, divert some water from Project farmers to the river in return for guaranteeing the farmers’ right to a smaller amount, restore fisheries habitat, reintroduce salmon to the upper basin, develop renewable energy to make up for the loss of the dams, and support the Klamath Tribes of Oregon’s effort to regain some land lost when Congress “terminated” its reservation in 1962. This was a seminal moment, a genuine reconciliation among tribal and agricultural leaders who discovered that the hatred they’d nursed was unfounded. “Trust is the key,” says Kandra, the Project farmer who went from litigant to negotiator. “We took little baby steps, giving each other opportunities to build trust, and then we got to a place where we could have some really candid discussions, without screaming and yelling – it was like, ‘Here’s how I see the world.’ Pretty valuable stuff. The folks that developed those kinds of relationships got along pretty good.” Still, one crucial ingredient was missing: Unless PacifiCorp agreed to dismantle the dams, river restoration was impossible, and the pact was a well-intentioned, empty exercise. But PacifiCorp now had compelling reasons to consider dam removal. Not only was relicensing going to be expensive, but Klamath tribespeople were becoming an embarrassing irritant, in two consecutive years interrupting Berkshire Hathaway’s annual-meeting/Buffett-lovefests in Omaha with nonviolent protests that won media attention. Also, the Bush administration, customarily no friend of dam removal, signaled its support for a basin-wide agreement. Negotiations between PacifiCorp and mid-level government officials began in January 2008, but made little progress until a meeting in Shepherdstown, West Virginia four months later, when for the first time Senior Interior Department Counselor Michael Bogert presided. As Bogert recently explained, President Bush himself took an interest in the Klamath “because it was early on in his watch that the Klamath became almost a symbol” of river basin dysfunction. To Bush, the decision to support dam removal was a business decision, not an environmental one: The “game-changer,” Bogert said, was the realization that because of the high cost of relicensing, dam removal made good fiscal sense for PacifiCorp. That fact distinguished the Klamath from other dam removal controversies such as the battle over four dams on Idaho’s Snake River, whose removal the Bush administration continued to oppose.
  • In November 2008, when then-Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne announced a detailed agreement in principle with PacifiCorp to take down the dams, he acknowledged that he customarily opposed dam removal, but that the Klamath had taught him “to evaluate each situation on a case-by-case basis.” In September 2009, Kempthorne’s successor, Ken Salazar, announced that PacifiCorp and government officials had reached a final agreement. PacifiCorp and the many signers of the earlier Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement then ironed out inconsistencies between the two pacts in a final negotiation that ended with a final deal in January 2010.
  •  
    Maybe the Klamath River basin would have turned itself around without Jeff Mitchell. Back in 2001, at the pinnacle of the conflict over the river's fate, when the Klamath earned its reputation as the most contentious river basin in the country, Mitchell planted a seed. Thanks to a drought and a resulting Interior Department decision to protect the river's endangered fish stocks, delivery of Klamath water to California and Oregon farmers was cut off mid-season, and they were livid. They blamed the Endangered Species Act, the federal government that enforced it, and the basin's salmon-centric Indians who considered irrigation a death sentence for their cultures. The basin divided up, farmers and ranchers on one side, Indians and commercial fishermen on the other. They sued one another, denounced one another in the press, and hired lobbyists to pass legislation undermining one another. Drunken goose-hunters discharged shotguns over the heads of Indians and shot up storefronts in the largely tribal town of Chiloquin, Oregon. An alcohol-fueled argument over water there prompted a white boy to kick in the head of a young Indian, killing him.
Benno Hansen

From climate news to classroom views : Nature News - 0 views

  • The lines between what we call 'communication' and 'journalism' are blurring, and the role of journalism is definitely shrinking
  • There is a potential to lose that sort of wider conversation about stuff if we all end up just reading blogs on things we already care about.
  • it's very clear that as a species, we're not well set up to absorb this message. You could write perfect stories and have them all on the front page every day, but as long as it's not affecting people's lives they're not going to change their ways
Jean Peterson

Artificial Grass Perth are Good Alternative to Natural Grass - 2 views

I once used natural grass on my lawn in Perth. However, due to the nature of my work, I had no time to take care of my lawn until it all withered up. But, still I wanted to have a green look in my ...

synthetic artificial grass lawn

started by Jean Peterson on 12 Jan 11 no follow-up yet
Jean Peterson

Great Job GreenPlanetGrass - 1 views

Thank you GreenPlanetGrass. We are pleased with the installation of our synthetic lawn. It looks terrific and just what we had hoped for. We were quite impressed with all the aspects of your operat...

artificial grass

started by Jean Peterson on 06 Apr 11 no follow-up yet
kathleen252

CNA-1.pdf - 0 views

shared by kathleen252 on 01 Sep 17 - No Cached
  •  
    These days, there are several thousand people who are struggling to secure a job. However the healthcare industry has recently been rising, and so the supply of health-related careers is also going up. Here's your chance to obtain a healthcare career. Visit site for more details. http://www.cnaflintmichigan.com/
1 - 17 of 17
Showing 20 items per page