Home & Garden Gardening

Diy Matters Pledges To Help Save The Environment With A Biodegradable Garden Fabric

Manchester-based gardening company, DIY Matters, has launched a new product designed to lower Britains carbon footprint.

The newly developedgarden membrane, Biodegradable Frost Protection Fleece, can be disposed of in a household green garden waste bin.

It will then be sent to a municipal composting facility where it can decompose - which it cannot do in a regular compost heap.

Gardeners who use DIY Matters Frost Protection Fleece can be assured their plants will remain protected during autumn and winter - because it is the ultimate defence against cold weather.

This defensive barrier lets plants breathe while keeping frost, wind and pests at bay.

The biodegradableFrost Protection Fleeceis ideal for protecting new shoots, spring flowers and newly seeded areas. In addition, it is an extremely light weight fabric - so it allows delicate plants to grow.

Plants still get the air, moisture and light they need because of the special material. It wraps easily around most plants.

By preparing for cold weather using DIY MattersFrost Protection Fleece, gardening enthusiasts can use winter as a time to rearrange parts of the garden - without worrying about their plants getting damaged.

Moving your plants around can give a garden a completely new look.

The biodegradable material is specially manufactured from a renewable and sustainable biopolymer material called Polyactic Acid - which is derived from plant sugars. It has been scientifically tested and proven to be both biodegradable and compostable.

DIY Matters supplies a wide range of landscaping fabric, which also includes - weed control fabric and general garden membranes.

Weed membrane and landscaping membrane are vital to maintaining a healthy, weed free beautiful garden.

DIY Matters was set up as a subsidiary to one of the largest importers of garden fabric in the UK - giving it unique access to some of the world's most effective landscape fabric.

For more information visit www.diymatters.co.uk.


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