Guest guest Posted March 24, 2006 Report Share Posted March 24, 2006 Those pesky pesticides By Charlene Peters/ cpeters Thursday, March 23, 2006 http://www2.townonline.com/swampscott/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=454044 & for\ mat=text Fear of failure is the driving force behind resistance to change. On an individual level, taking a risk can be scary, even if the results benefit your health. Horticulturist Chip Osborne took a large-scale risk three years ago, when he convinced the community of Marblehead to allow him to transform a pesticide-laden athletic field into an organic, livable lawn to prevent long-term health risks associated with agrochemicals. Many stood back at arms length, waiting for his pesticide crusade to fail. Osborne recalls a preliminary comment from one town official, " Just give the guy three years. It's going to blow up in his face, the grass is going to be horrible, and then we can go back to using chemicals again. " Like many state, college and town officials he's faced since that time, Marblehead was afraid if they stopped using pesticides, the whole system would collapse. Fortunately, Osborne's organic methods succeeded, and he's become co-chairman of Marblehead's Living Lawn Project, a seeing-is-believing organic lawn and garden demonstration site. The success he found in his small community has begun to spread across the state of Massachusetts and, most recently, nationwide. This weekend, the Marblehead Chamber of Commerce holds its ninth annual Home and Garden Show and Plant Sale at the Community Center on 10 Humphrey St., Marblehead. Osborne, now a nationally recognized natural, organic lawn and turf consultant, will be there to answer questions about organic lawns and gardens and promote pesticide awareness on Saturday from 1-4 p.m. and Sunday noon-4 p.m. at the Osborne Florist and Greenhouse booth. Based on 30 years of eye-opening horticultural experience, Osborne's most recent venture was to convert his greenhouse operation into an organic management plan. 'Better living through chemistry' Born in the 1950s, Osborne grew up in a time where the mindset was " better living through chemistry. " When he bought his business in 1974, his education was pesticide oriented. " I was taught as a greenhouse grower to spray a cocktail mix of pesticides every 7 to 10 days, with the idea that there would be nothing living in the greenhouse environment to pose danger to my crops, " explains Osborne. " I used to inject a fungicide through my waterline, so every time I planted a geranium or a poinsettia, I would drench the pots with fungicide. I didn't wear gloves, and my hands would be stained yellow at the end of the day. " In the late '70s, the first tests on the possible carcinogenic effects of agrochemicals ranked the fungicide Osborne had been using number three on the list of high-risk carcinogens. The list reinforced a loss close to home, when his two English Springer spaniels, which had spent their days at Osborne's greenhouse nestled under a bench in the cool soil, died prematurely of cancer. " One was covered in open sores on her belly, " says Osborne as he points to the framed portrait of his dogs. Osborne is painfully aware that some of the lawn chemicals still legally in use today on athletic fields, backyards and golf courses have a component of Agent Orange, a chemical used during the Vietnam War. During the '80s, when Osborne married and began to raise a family, he realized the need to explore a change in his method of pest control. He says, " I didn't want my kids to come into this kind of environment, so I backed away from toxic chemicals and began a process called Integrated Pest Management, where you use a series of cultural steps to get rid of a bug or a pest of some kind. If that doesn't work, you use a pesticide. " He then went one step further and gave up the use of all toxic pesticides. He uses natural products, such as oils, soaps and garlic to thwart pests from ruining his plants. His greenhouse even sells a pre-made formulation of hot pepper, ground chili peppers and garlic to spray on plants to clog the openings in the pests' skins, leaving them to suffocate and die. Although Osborne has become a nationwide activist against pesticide use, he does understand how certain chemicals have been beneficial to humanity. " I'm not against all chemicals, by any means, " says Osborne. " Certainly, there have been gains in our society with the advent of certain chemicals, but with such an enormous chemical cloud overhead, there are ways in our society that we can learn to live without some of these chemicals and reduce exposures. " Over-treated population Those yellow flags on your neighbors' lawns mean that poison has been applied and that you, your kids and your dogs shouldn't walk there, notes Osborne. If that fact doesn't scare you enough to change lawn-care practices, log on to www.bodyburden.com to browse through the results of nine people whose blood was tested at random and found to contain 77 different chemicals from home products and power-plant proximity. Pat Beckett was walking her babies in a stroller on the streets of New York when she began to identify the strong odor as pesticide treatments on the lawns she passed. It rang a bell, it was close to her heart, and she wanted to learn more. A decade ago, Beckett came to Marblehead and placed an advertisement looking for someone interested in pesticide reduction. Osborne answered her ad, and together they developed an Awareness Through Education campaign committee, offering simple steps to organic lawn care. Since they formed the committee, the two have spoken to thousands of people in a " non-alarmist way " to send the message of the health risks associated with pesticides, and why one should consider going organic. Says Osborne, " In 1997, we began to give classes to landscapers to bring them on board and explain that we're not the enemy. " By 1999, the two took their campaign to the Marblehead Board of Health, which agreed that pesticide usage was a public-health issue. They issued a statement, published in the Reporter on April 22, 1999, to explain the serious adverse health effects of pesticide exposure, even at low levels. Further discussions on pesticide usage brought the town's Recreation, Parks and Forestry Commission on board. In May 2001, the Board of Health adopted an organic pest-management policy, stipulating all town-owned land be taken care of without the use of pesticide products. As one of the first organic policies in Massachusetts and one of the first in the United States, Marblehead took a leadership role nationwide. In December 2005, the Board of Health went one step further and made the policy a regulation: No pesticide can be used on town land in Marblehead. All about the soil At the Home and Garden Show, Osborne's newest company, Osborne Organics, will offer a complimentary DVD for anyone interested in taking the first step to organic lawn care. For just under two years, Osborne has been developing a series of DVDs to inform professional landscapers, homeowners and municipal officials about natural organic land care. Osborne Organics will offer a service where, for a fee of about $100, Osborne will walk onto a property, perform soil tests and provide easy-to-understand analyses on how to incorporate an organic program. His first job was the grounds at the Marblehead Museum and Historical Society's Jeremiah Lee Mansion, which he's served as a consultant for the past four years. According to Osborne, aeration of soil and over-seeding your lawn are the keys to success. " The soil in the area of Marblehead is 45 percent mineral, 5 percent organic matter, 25 percent air, 25 percent water, " he explains. " When the soil gets compacted, the air portion of the soil is forced out and grass won't grow. Weeds love compacted soil. Turf grass hates it. One of the biggest things to do is just to aerate the soil. The other thing is to over-seed. Grass gets damaged and can't reproduce as quickly. If it gets thin and grass gets damaged, weeds can come in as a secondary infection very quickly, and if you over-seed once or twice a year, you'll always keep it thick because you're getting new growth. " Osborne is in the process of offering an additional service to aerate, over-seed, fertilize and spread compost, and by next year, he expects to incorporate a full maintenance service. Grubs be gone " So much of natural lawn care is just understanding what's going on, " says Osborne as he explains how to get rid of those pesky grubs, which are the larval stage of beetles and a food source that attract skunks, raccoons and crows. He explains, " When the temperature gets colder, the grubs go deeper in the soil and lie dormant throughout winter. In May, they move back up and feed actively through June. In July, they metamorphose into adults and emerge as beetles and feed on foliage. " Drought conditions intensify grub issues. Heavy watering for a few days will cause the grubs to surface for air or drown. When they surface, birds, skunks and raccoons swoop in to eat them, thereby naturally ridding your lawn of grubs. For larger parcels of land, a beneficial nematode may need to be sprayed, as was the case recently at Seaside Park. Five days after 24 million nematodes were sprayed onto the field, dead grubs surfaced. The cost for the non-pesticide application is the same as chemical control, says Osborne, plus a little patience. Says Osborne, " As society changes, the market changes. We said 10 years ago it would be the consumer that changes the market. " When you stand on Gatchell's athletic field or catch the beauty of the Living Lawn Project's garden, you have to admit - organic works. ==================================================== " Our ideal is not the spirituality that withdraws from life but the conquest of life by the power of the spirit. " - Aurobindo. New Messenger with Voice. 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