A different take on gardening
Jennifer K Mahal
Sitting at a table in Mariners Park, Douglas Kent looks around at
the trees, shrubs and grass. It’s pretty, he says, but if the city
was concerned with the environment, they’d pave it with concrete.
No, Kent is not a developer. He’s not against open space. The
Costa Mesa man is a gardener whose controversial new book “A New Era
For Gardening” espouses the theory that many gardens -- through both
the plants and their care -- create more carbon dioxide than they do
oxygen.
The oxygen plants that release into the atmosphere during their
lifetime, says Kent, is sucked back when the biomass (dry organic
matter) of the plants is composted. That essentially makes plants
oxygen neutral. When you add in all the carbon dioxide created by
gardening -- from the chemical fertilizers to the gasoline used by
lawnmowers -- it means gardens are contributing to global warming,
Kent theorizes.
The only way to gain some of that oxygen back is to not compost
all of the plant material and instead to bury it in a landfill, he
says. That way the release of carbon dioxide during decomposition is
contained. It is not that Kent is anti-composting, it’s just that he
thinks that we do too much of it.
“Compost is the cheapest, most versatile, most effective material
for a landscape,” Kent says. “But you hit a diminishing return
point.”
Watching two children climb a tree, Kent says the carbon dioxide
costs of Mariners Park can be justified. After all, it’s an area that
gets used by many people. It’s the front lawns, back yards and small
strips of grass that concern him more.
“If we can just start out with small parts, it could lead to a
whole that’s beneficial,” he says.
“A New Era for Gardening” provides suggestions for how to increase
the oxygen production in gardens. Using native plants, replacing
mature plants, mulching only 10% of a landscape’s green waste and
avoiding “fleshy” plants that are water and nutrient dependent are
some of the steps advocated.
The book, which includes a way for people with green thumbs to
audit the oxygen and carbon dioxide production of their gardens, has
generated Kent some hate mail since it was released in the Midwest
and Canada.
Though it’s based on basic scientific principles, it’s a hard
theory for people to accept, he says.
“I think of myself as an environmentalist,” said Charlotte
Marshal, a member of the board of directors of the Manhattan Beach
Botanical Garden who edited the 103-page book. “I grew up in the
‘60s, was there for the first Earth Day, I try to believe I put into
practice things to make the Earth a better place to live.
“When Doug brought this to me, it went against things I thought I
knew.”
Marshall is now working with Kent on an oxygen audit of the
botanical garden. Some of the other board members were hesitant at
first, she said, but then decided that they wanted to know if the
garden is helping or hurting the environment.
Kent has been involved in gardening since he was a teenager. His
first experiences were “punishment for being an errant child.” Kent’s
parents would send the 14-year-old boy to his great aunt and uncle’s
home in Corona del Mar to work in her quarter-acre landscape of
flowers.
“She nurtured a love of gardening in me,” he says of his great
aunt, “and it stuck.”
Kent attended Orange Coast College, then Cal Poly San Luis Obispo
before graduating Cal State Long Beach with a bachelor’s in
sociology, emphasis in environmental policy. For years, he worked at
Roger’s Gardens in Corona del Mar, running an environmental lecture
series.
His first taste of environmentalism came through the Environmental
Nature Center in Newport Beach. At 21, Kent wrote “A Field Guide to
California Natives,” which is still used in an updated form by the
center.
He got the idea for “A New Era of Gardening” after reading
Irvine’s development plan for sustainability, which was written in
the late 1980s. The numbers, he says, did not add up. So, he started
doing research on oxygen and carbon dioxide production.
In the meantime, Kent developed a resume that included working
with FireSafe Marin as a horticultural advisor, becoming a garden
columnist for San Francisco Bay Area newspapers and writing a
well-received book on landscaping for fire prevention.
He finished “A New Era of Gardening” in 2001.
“I would encourage people who might initially think he’s all wet
or way off base with his theory to just read the book, go all the way
through and then just think about it,” Marshal says.
“A New Era for Gardening” is not yet available in local
bookstores, but it can be ordered through www.gardeningforoxygen.com.
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