[Community_garden] growing potatoes in old tires

Vicki Garrett vickigarrett at columbus.rr.com
Fri Mar 21 12:42:53 EDT 2008


Hey Mike,
I almost always agree with everything you say, but . . . I have friends
working hard to keep toxic waste incinerators out of low-income and minority
communities. As much as you work to keep toxic petrochemicals and metals out
of our garden soil, they're working to keep them out of our lungs. They
would argue that there aren't sophisticated enough processes to eliminate
all those toxins, and combustion often creates more (dioxins, etc.).
Waste-to-energy sounds like a great idea, but until we quit using toxic
stuff, we're stuck with toxic waste.
But I agree with everything else ;-).   ---Vicki


On Fri, Mar 21, 2008 at 11:16 AM, Mike McGrath <MikeMcG at ptd.net> wrote:

> Zinc and cadmium are the big contaminants that leach out in high amounts;
> but I just find the whole idea repulsive, period. They're old, dirty and
> made with toxic petrochemicals and metals.
> Tires can--and should--be recycled professionally and burned for fuel in
> clean plants; its the perfect way to dispose of them.
>
> And hey--how about growing potatoes in DIRT?! There's an idea!
>
>                                                        ---McG
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Linda Casto" <lindacasto7430 at sbcglobal.net>
> To: <community_garden at list.communitygarden.org>
> Sent: Friday, March 21, 2008 11:07 AM
> Subject: [Community_garden] growing potatoes in old tires
>
>
> >A member on a garden website I belong to is recommending growing potatoes
> >in old tires.
> >
> >  I know there are contaminants that come from old tires but I don't
> > remember what. (This was in a discussion in the last week or so).
> >
> >  I'd like to be able to post something in response to this
> recommendation
> > letting folks know what kind of contaminants they are turning loose in
> > their gardens.
> >
> >  Thanks
> >
> >  Linda Casto
> >  Glenwood UMC community garden
> >  Columbus, Ohio
> >
> >
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