What is Greening?
Greening is a process of fertilizing and soil mantenance. Inflate and place 2-3 of our sand bags in the ground before planting a tree or plant. By doing so the tree is able to drink even during drought periods, also causing the root system to grow downward instead of floating to the surface to find water. This improves water retention and capacity and improves soil structure and increases root growth. In this way you are helping the vegetation to have a very healthy and strong root system able to withstand stronger winds, even hurricanes. Greening is very effective in areas where drought, high wind, and clay soil are present. Benefits include: Saving water Increasing plant growth Deeper root growth and root development Improving Yield and production etc… The application of greening can is extensive: Indoor plants Flower beds and gardens Near oceans Urban landscapes Environmental protection Reforestation Lawns Embankment, slope, and hillside planting Etc.
Greening, a term that began to surface in the 1980s, refers to the incremental improvements that profitably remove waste and environmental harm from products and processes. Greening challenged conventional wisdom that held there was always a trade-off between a firm’s financial and social or environmental performance. Driven by the realization that pollution is waste and dialogue with stakeholders is superior to court battles, greening opened the door for companies to take a proactive stance toward social and environmental issues. Pollution prevention and product stewardship have succeeded in reducing waste, emissions, and pollution, while simultaneously reducing cost, risk, and stakeholder resistance. At its core, however, the incremental nature of greening tends to mostly slow the rate of environmental and social damage.