
The average office worker could save 475 sheets of paper per year by reducing their margins from the default setting of 1" to 0.50".
Find ways to renew your property, which in turn will help renew the environment on the Eastern Shore. Plant native trees and bushes.
Download a copy of the Eastern Shore Gardener newsletter. Download pdf.
Forests once covered most of the land area of Maryland, Virginia, and Pennsylvania, but changing land use and more development in recent decades means there are fewer forested areas to filter water runoff and slow soil erosion. This results in more sediment and nutrients reaching the Chesapeake Bay and its surrounding waterways. Sediment and nutrients, the two major pollutants in the Bay, reduce water clarity and prevent sunlight from reaching underwater grasses (which form a critical habitat for crabs, fish, and other Bay life, and also provide food for waterfowl). Sediments stay suspended in the water column and block sunlight directly, while nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorous) spur the growth of algae, which in turn reduces the sunlight that reaches the bottom. When algae dies, decomposing bacteria consume oxygen in the water needed by fish, oysters, crabs, and other organisms.
These tree species thrive in or are tolerant of moist soils:
Need some help deciding on what trees to plant, and where? Check out www.forestryforthebay.org. Forestry for the Bay is a free, voluntary membership program made up of small and medium sized landowners who, like you, are interested in actively conserving their woodland or want to restore woods to their property.