A growing number of people are turning to nature to help them save electricity this summer, creating so-called green curtains of climbing plants. According to the Energy Conservation Center, Japan, a key element in
power conservation is reducing the use of air conditioners, which
consume the most electricity in homes. A green curtain helps block the
sun and keep room temperatures from rising through transpiration of the
plant's leaves.
Green curtains can be
easily set up at home, and Tokyo's Itabashi Ward Office has been
promoting them as an effective way to battle global warming. With power shortages expected this summer as a result of the crisis
at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant, the ward office has received
an increasing number of inquiries from local residents about growing
green curtains. It also received more than two applications for every spot available
in a class organized by the ward office on how to grow a green curtain.
Likewise, Katsushika Ward of Tokyo distributed free goya bitter
gourd seeds to residents in late April. All 500 packets were taken by
the second day.
A Katsushika Ward official in charge of distributing the seeds said,
"Interest is higher [in growing goya] than usual. Many people are
trying to grow it for the first time."
Tsuneo Kobayashi of Itabashi Ward, 79, has grown goya since 2009. He
said the plant can make a four-meter high and three-meter wide green
curtain as its vines grow.
"The room with a green curtain is clearly cooler than one next to
it, which gets direct sun," Kobayashi said. "Seeing green plants soothes
me."
Plants suitable for making green curtains include goya, bottle gourd, morning glory and others. Accordnig to Koichi Sugawara, secretary general of the Tokyo-based
nonprofit organization Midori no Curtain Oendan (green curtain cheering
squad): "You can save money on electricity by making green curtains, which also give you the joy of growing and harvesting something."
Ichiro Awano, public relations director of Sakata Seed Co. in Yokohama, recommended goya for green curtains
because it is easy to grow. People who want to use planters should
purchase one that can contains at least 36 liters of soil, Awano said. Goya seedlings should be planted 20 centimeters apart in a planter
filled with soil for growing vegetables. It is important to fix a garden
net firmly under the eaves, which goya vines could twine around. A net
with a mesh of 10 to 18 centimeters should be used, Awano said. When goya has seven or eight mature leaves, the tip of its stem
should be nipped off to help lateral buds grow. Provide additional
fertilizer after goya begins bearing vegetables, he added.
"If you want to make a thick leafy curtain, you should give extra
nitrogen fertilizer," Awano said. "But this will result in a slightly
smaller harvest."
Source: Yomiuri News 2011-05-10
God invented shade!
And the LORD God prepared a gourd, and made it to come up over Jonah, that it might be a shadow over his head, to deliver him from his grief. So Jonah was exceeding glad of the gourd (Jonah 4:6, KJB).
Spiritually, God shades us from the fierce onslaught of the evil one!
The LORD is thy keeper: the LORD is thy shade upon thy right hand. (Ps. 121:5, KJB).
The Lord is your covering, your protection, your shade.
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