Even in winter you can start planting your spring garden outside using these ideas for homemade, mini greenhouses made from recycled containers.
Winter sowing is a popular method of starting seeds early in tiny greenhouses made from empty milk jugs. The process is inexpensive, uses recycled materials, requires no electricity, produces healthier plants, and offers an outlet for gardeners to start planting in the winter. Plus, it’s fun!
These homemade greenhouses and their seeds will endure the freezing and thawing of winter months and can even handle being covered in snow and ice.
The basic concept is to plant seeds in potting soil placed in a plastic container, add water, cover, label the container and place in a full-sun, protected area outside. The seeds will sprout when the weather is right, and when it’s warm enough in the spring, seedlings can be planted in the garden.
What seeds are good for winter sowing?
There are many plants that can be seeded in winter. Most flowers, herbs and vegetables will do well. Native plant seeds are perfect for winter sowing because many need a cool, moist stratification period to germinate.
These plants do well in the Midwest:
- Flowers (mostly native and perennial): coneflowers, butterfly weed, blazing star, passion flower, cardinal flower, cardinal vine, standing cypress, lupine, Mexican hats, blanket flower, coreopsis, black-eyed Susan, mallow, yarrow, sweet William, hyacinth bean, purple and red flax, bee balm, cleome, golden rod, verbena, wallflower, foxglove, nasturtium, columbine, salvia, morning glory and snap dragon.
- Herbs: anise hyssop, basil, bee balm, cilantro, primrose, lavender, parsley, pineapple sage and sage.
- Vegetables: beets, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, corn, eggplant, parsnip, peppers, spinach and tomatoes.
How to prep the containers
To get started, you’ll need several milk jugs or plastic containers, seeds, potting soil, a box cutter, knife or scissors to cut the plastic and either duct tape, clear packing tape or pipe cleaners for closing the milk jug. The containers can be recycled one-gallon plastic milk or water jugs, two-liter soda bottles, rotisserie chicken containers, plastic take-out containers, or salad mix containers. The plastic does not need to be totally clear, but it does need to let light penetrate.
- Using a milk jug, make a horizontal slit with a sharp knife right at the side of the lower end of the handle.
- Place the scissors or box cutter into the slit and cut around the jug and stop cutting about 1½ inches from the starting point, leaving this portion intact to make a hinge.
- Poke drainage holes in the bottom of the jug and along the very lowest portion to provide adequate openings for drainage and watering. You can water from the bottom so as not to disturb the seeds/seedlings.
- Leave the small opening at the top uncovered to allow snow, rain or ice to enter.
How to plant the mini greenhouses
- Choose your soil mix such as a perlite peat moss mixture, and prep it for planting by pre-soaking to be sure it is well saturated.
- Line the bottom of each milk jug with a couple layers of newspaper.
- Place three to four inches of soil and add a little more water until it drains out the bottom. The soil should be really wet because that’s how this system works.
- Plant the seeds according to the packet directions. If you don’t have new seeds, older ones will usually germinate, but the yield will be smaller. In nature, the seeds are just scattered, however, you can plant in neat rows. Then lightly smooth the soil over the seeds.
- Close the lid and secure it with duct tape or by twisting a pipe cleaner between a hole in the top and bottom sections — for easy opening and closing.
- Label each container with a fade-resistant, waterproof marker — or you could be in for some surprises come spring.
Where to store the containers
To find a perfect home for your greenhouses, look for an outside location that is out of the wind, preferably in nearly full sun near a foundation or wall. They should face the elements, but not be in the direct path of dogs, cats or vehicles.
Enjoy your garden
Germination really depends on your seed varieties. Amazingly, plants will sprout when the time is right for them. Then you can plant the seedlings in the garden at the time recommended for each variety. So, broccoli still gets planted well before tomatoes.
Have you tried winter sowing? Share your experience in the comments.
The post Start planting now with winter sowing appeared first on Greenability.
Green Living
Melting Glaciers Could Lead to More Frequent and Explosive Volcanic Eruptions: Study
Ice loss from melting glaciers around the world due to global heating could cause pressure to be released from volcanic magma chambers located deep underground.
The process — already seen in Iceland — makes volcanic eruptions more frequent and powerful, according to new research conducted in the Chilean Andes.
“As glaciers retreat due to climate change, our findings suggest these volcanoes go on to erupt more frequently and more explosively,” said lead author of the research Pablo Moreno-Yaeger, a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, as The Guardian reported. “We found that following deglaciation, the volcano starts to erupt way more, and also changes composition.”
While eruptions are suppressed, magma melts crustal rocks, making the molten rock more viscous and setting the stage for it to be more explosive when it erupts.
Melting glaciers and ice caps could unleash wave of volcanic eruptions, study says
— The Guardian (@theguardian.com) July 7, 2025 at 7:18 PM
“Glacial loading and unloading can impact eruptive outputs at mid- to high-latitude arc volcanoes, yet the influence on magma storage conditions remains poorly understood. Mocho-Choshuenco volcano in the Andean Southern Volcanic Zone has been impacted by the advance and retreat of the Patagonian ice sheet,” the authors of the study wrote.
The findings of the study were presented on July 8 at the Goldschmidt Conference in Prague. The research suggests that hundreds of subglacial volcanoes that have been dormant — especially in Antarctica — have the potential to become active as glacial retreat accelerates under climate change, a press release from the Goldschmidt Conference said.
Since the 1970s, scientists have been aware of the link between increased volcanic activity and retreating glaciers in Iceland. However, this is among the first studies to examine this type of event in continental volcanic systems.
The findings could help scientists better comprehend, as well as predict, volcanic activity in glacial regions.
To study how past volcanic behavior was influenced by the retreat and advance of the Patagonian Ice Sheet, the researchers used crystal analysis and argon dating across six Chilean volcanoes, including now-dormant Mocho-Choshuenco.
Volcano paper alert
! Our new 40Ar/39Ar + 3He ages and magma compositions on Mocho-Choshuenco show an interesting behavior of the volcanic complex before, during, and following the Last Glacial Maximum. See here pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/gsabulle…
— Pablo Moreno-Yaeger (@pmorenoyaeger.bsky.social) June 7, 2024 at 6:45 PM
Through the analysis of erupted rock crystals and precisely dated earlier eruptions, the research team was able to track how the pressure and weight of glacial ice altered the characteristics of underground magma.
They discovered that thick ice cover at the peak of the last Ice Age roughly 26,000 to 18,000 years ago suppressed eruption volume, allowing a large silica-rich magma reservoir to accumulate 10 to 15 kilometers underground.
The sudden loss of weight from the rapidly melting ice sheet as the last Ice Age ended caused a relaxation of the crust and an expansion of gases in the magma. The pressure led to explosive volcanic eruptions deep within the reservoir, causing formation of the volcano.
“Glaciers tend to suppress the volume of eruptions from the volcanoes beneath them,” Moreno-Yaeger said. “The key requirement for increased explosivity is initially having a very thick glacial coverage over a magma chamber, and the trigger point is when these glaciers start to retreat, releasing pressure — which is currently happening in places like Antarctica.”
Moreno-Yaeger said the findings suggested the phenomenon wasn’t limited to Iceland, but could happen all over the world.
“Other continental regions, like parts of North America, New Zealand and Russia, also now warrant closer scientific attention,” Moreno-Yaeger said.
Although in geological terms the volcanoes’ response to glacial melt is almost instant, changes to the magma system are gradual, occurring over centuries, which provides some time for monitoring and warnings to be issued.
The team noted that an increase in volcanic activity could impact the whole planet. Eruptions release aerosols that can provide temporary cooling in the short-term. This was the case following the eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines in 1991. The explosion reduced global temperatures by roughly 0.5 degrees Celsius.
However, multiple eruptions have a reverse effect.
“Over time the cumulative effect of multiple eruptions can contribute to long-term global warming because of a buildup of greenhouse gases,” Moreno-Yaeger explained. “This creates a positive feedback loop, where melting glaciers trigger eruptions, and the eruptions in turn could contribute to further warming and melting.”
The post Melting Glaciers Could Lead to More Frequent and Explosive Volcanic Eruptions: Study appeared first on EcoWatch.
https://www.ecowatch.com/melting-glaciers-volcano-eruptions.html
Green Living
‘Poisoning the Well’ Authors Sharon Udasin and Rachel Frazin on PFAS Contamination and Why It ‘Has Not Received the Attention It Deserves’
In the introduction to Sharon Udasin and Rachel Frazin’s new book, Poisoning The Well: How Forever Chemicals Contaminated America, the authors cite an alarming statistic from 2015 that PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are present in the bodies of an estimated 97% of Americans. How did we ever get to this point? Their book is an attempt to explain that history, and to highlight those resisting the seeming inevitability of PFAS.
“I think we have the corporate cover-up and awareness on both the corporations’ and government’s part for decades upon decades,” said Udasin. “But we also see the power of regular people to effect change, to really bring about what politicians are not necessarily willing to do.”
The book tells stories of people deeply affected by ingesting PFAS, and the saga of how companies have been able to continue to churn out hundreds of different chemicals under the banner of PFAS, despite the risks and harms to human health. It is estimated that there may be at least 15,000 types of PFAS.
“These products are useful — waterproof stuff is nice to have, and there are other uses like medical and military uses that are very important,” said Frazin. “You know, preventing jet fuel fires is essential. But the price that we pay for all of that is the contamination in these communities.”
Udasin and Frazin, both reporters for The Hill, fanned out into four communities in the U.S. – in Alabama, Colorado, Maine and North Carolina. In Alabama, they found people ingesting industrial PFAS emanating from the very locations that employed them. In Maine, PFAS-contaminated sludge was spread over farmland.

“Colorado is a story of military contamination, in which area installations released PFAS-laden firefighting foam into the environment, enabling the chemicals to make their way into groundwater and then in the faucets of unsuspecting residents,” said Udasin.
In Alabama, Udasin said, “The death was so visible.” A key figure in the book is Brenda Hampton, an Alabama native who developed life-threatening illnesses that doctors suspected could be linked to toxic chemical exposure. “Brenda’s ‘death tour’ through the tiny twin towns of Courtland and North Courtland was particularly striking to me, because the extent of the damage was visible in such a compact space,” Udasin said.
New book spotlights ‘forever chemicals’ in North Alabama: ‘I know I’m facing death.’ www.al.com/news/huntsvi…
— Sharon Udasin (@sharonudasin.bsky.social) April 10, 2025 at 4:31 PM
Udasin’s reporting also helped reveal the ugly underside to rural areas of New England.
“Seeing the livelihoods of farmers ripped apart in the deceptively beautiful landscape of South and Central Maine allowed me to connect with both the people and natural beauty of that place — a place teeming with chemical contamination beneath its historic New England charm,” she said.

Alongside local reporting, the authors pored through documents looking for what Frazin called “needles in the haystack,” to unearth moments when companies – or the government – were aware of the potential toxic effects of PFAS but debated how to release that information.
“I believe we did have some original finds, including a document I dug up at the National Archives,” Frazin said, “where a doctor told the FDA that one of his patients who worked with Teflon was experiencing ‘angina-like’ symptoms. This document says the patient’s foreman told him the symptoms were caused by Teflon and that they all know about it.
“The corporations definitely had evidence of the adverse health impacts and ubiquity of PFAS for decades and still manufactured and sold PFAS-containing products,” she added.
Finds like these are highlighted throughout the book and tell the long and complicated story of the expansion of these “forever chemicals” into the world. The stories of death and illness are heartbreaking. But what Udasin and Frazin also discovered was that the crusade to break the hold of PFAS has become an ad-hoc national movement.
“I do think it’s become a grassroots national movement,” Udasin said, “because even all these local activists, they all know each other now, and they have created the National PFAS Coalition.
“When Brenda had her latest health incident, they were all from different sides of the country, getting together to check on her because they have created a national activist movement.”
Drinking water standards vary widely from state-to-state, which “creates an environmental justice issue, in which certain communities are less protected than others, through no fault of their own,” Udasin noted.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has currently issued PFAS drinking water regulations. Frazin said that “this rule is a massive deal that is likely to lead many communities to filter out PFAS from their drinking water. It would not be subject to enforcement yet because the rule first required water utilities to test for PFAS and then to install filters if it found levels of one of a few PFAS above a certain threshold.”
On top of this, Frazin noted that the Trump administration has reduced the types of PFAS that will be covered by this rule and that implementation will be delayed until 2031. Which, as Udasin noted, puts the onus more on states, “given the Trump administration’s decision to rescind and reconsider existing rules on drinking water standards.”
When it comes to the regulation of “forever chemicals,” it’s “just a big unanswered question whether this administration and this EPA is going to be serious about enforcing anything,” a former EPA official told ProPublica.
— ProPublica (@propublica.org) July 8, 2025 at 11:01 AM
But the movement to improve drinking water standards — and decrease threats to human health — persists.
“I think that what I see is maybe the biggest difference between this movement and some of the other historical examples like movements on climate change or tobacco,” said Frazin, “is the media attention and the level of awareness. And so that’s what we’re trying to do – we’re trying to bring that attention to this issue. This issue has not received the attention it deserves.”
And Udasin noted that science might one day break the “unbreakable” chemical bonds that make up PFAS and perhaps reduce their toxic impact.
“I have a lot of hope in the science and technology that are actually currently being developed,” she said. “There are these brilliant scientists all over the world right now who in their laboratories are actually breaking apart the PFAS. A few of them are starting to be at commercial scale, or at least pilot-level commercial scale. So that gives me some hope that at least there may be a solution to getting rid of these at some point. And it’s not in the too-distant future.”
The post ‘Poisoning the Well’ Authors Sharon Udasin and Rachel Frazin on PFAS Contamination and Why It ‘Has Not Received the Attention It Deserves’ appeared first on EcoWatch.
https://www.ecowatch.com/poisoning-the-well-book-ecowatch.html
Green Living
Facing Climate Anxiety With Visual Comedy: ‘World Without End’ Graphic Artist Christophe Blain
Jean-Marc Jancovici is a well-known lecturer in France, and on YouTube, on the topics of energy and climate change. He focuses on the deep history and interconnections of the Earth’s consumption apparatus – how things are made, what things are made of, how energy is created, distributed and burned, and how the energy needs of the future should be met.
Christophe Blain is a French graphic artist known for his humorous historical works, most notably Weapons of Mass Diplomacy. But a few years ago, he was struck by current events in his home country.
“In the summer of 2018, there were severe heat waves,” Blain said. “I realized they were linked to global warming. I said to myself, ‘This is it, we’re here.’ I was very anxious for a year.”
He began talking to his brother to see what could be done. His brother had been following Jancovici’s lectures for more than ten years, and recommended that Blain watch a few and possibly make a connection with Jancovici.
“My brother told me, ‘Make an album (book) with Jean-Marc.’ I immediately replied, ‘I know. But it’s going to be hard.’ He said, ‘Do you have a choice?’ Five minutes later, I wrote an e-mail to Jean-Marc.”

The result of this meeting of minds is World Without End, a full-length graphic book that melds Jancovici’s words with Blain’s vibrant and comical illustrations to tell the story of energy: where we’ve been, and where we might be headed. It’s a long-form book version of one of his lectures, rich in data, theory and commentary, propelled by Blain’s unique method of visual storytelling in which a reader never gets lost or overwhelmed. The book has been a sensation in France, selling more than a million copies, and a translated version has been released in the U.S.
Blain shared some answers with EcoWatch via e-mail.
How and why did the book become so popular in France?
On social networks, I noticed that the people who followed Jean-Marc all wanted to pass on his thoughts and make him known. As if it were a vital necessity. I felt the same way.
I said to myself: a book is an object that’s easier to transmit than a conference. You can take your time to fully understand what’s at stake. What happened was exactly what I’d hoped: the people who read it wanted to give it away and pass it on.
How collaborative was the illustration / text process?
We’d meet up with Jean-Marc, and he’d use his courses, his conferences and the research he was doing with his company, Carbone 4. I’d ask him lots of questions, we’d comment on current events, and I’d take lots of notes. Then I’d work alone to transform my notes into a storyboard. We’d meet up again and correct my storyboard. Then we’d start again.
What kind of challenges were there illustrating the topic of energy, energy history and climate?
Jean-Marc is an extraordinary teacher. He uses lots of poetic, amusing images to explain sometimes complex concepts. If you don’t understand one image, he uses another. He always gets it right in the end. And everything becomes luminous. He makes you smart.

I love using images to explain sometimes abstract concepts. I do it a lot in my work. I love drawing crazy, poetic images, a bit psychedelic, to talk about something complex and subtle. Jean-Marc and I understand each other very well. We had a lot of fun together.
You choose visual “comedy” to move some sections forward – it helps to move through some quite depressing facts – how did you manage to juxtapose some of the bleaker facts with these kind of cartoony “jokes”?
Because I’m a funny guy. And I like to laugh at my anxieties. And because the book had to be fun. Always fluid, always hyper-understandable. This album is about serious, complex things. But I’ve worked very hard to make it easy to read.
As you were illustrating the book, what things did you learn?
I learned a lot from Jean-Marc’s own attitude. He’s been fighting this battle for years. His patience, energy and determination fascinate me. I’d often get angry at what I thought was idiotic behavior, in the face of the challenges facing all humanity. Jean-Marc brought me back to reason and patience, not to waste my energy in anger but to train my mind to find the right arguments.
What did you learn about the importance of energy?
I’ve learned that our way of life, even if we don’t see it, even if we don’t realize it, requires a colossal use of energy, of the Earth’s resources.
The details about the toothpaste tube and the smart phone, and the massive apparatus needed to create these ubiquitous objects… these were eye-opening to me. How did you feel learning that?
I felt that we live in a more fragile world than we think. That many details of our daily lives, which seem obvious and unchanging, can disappear faster than we think.

Was it surprising to you to see that “organic” is just a label that really has little impact on the deep underlying problems with the agricultural industry?
This is true for many other aspects. We live on heavy industry. A few organic beans are a good thing. But you have to look at the whole production chain, which produces for the masses, for millions of people, using colossal resources.
How was this book “therapy” for you? (On page 133, Blain talks about his recurring dreams of a nuclear accident.)
Jean-Marc told me that once you start looking into these problems, researching and working on them, you can’t stop. It’s a constant therapy through action. Understanding is the first and most important step. Even if you don’t know how to act right away. We change in spite of ourselves. We look at our surroundings differently. And then, little by little, we take action, in our daily lives or on a wider scale.
For example, we gradually stop wanting the same things. You organize your life differently. You have to accept that this is a step-by-step process. Not a radical revolution that will solve all problems.
Compared to your other work, how does World Without End fit in?
My vision of the world is different and I can’t go back. And I’m continuing to work with Jean-Marc.
Any other final words?
I sincerely hope to find an American audience who will welcome us. Not just because it would bring us success, but obviously because the USA has an extremely powerful influence on the world. I’ve traveled there several times. It’s a country that fascinates me.
The post Facing Climate Anxiety With Visual Comedy: ‘World Without End’ Graphic Artist Christophe Blain appeared first on EcoWatch.
https://www.ecowatch.com/world-without-end-graphic-book-ecowatch.html
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