Kitchen worktops serve a number of purposes.Their primary one is their practical use as a space on which items can be stored and food can be prepared.However,they also have an aesthetic function.Indeed, these days there is such a variety of wooden worktops and other types of product available that consumers generally find it easy to source versions that perfectly compliment the looks of their cooking areas.
But one expert has suggested that kitchen worktops can serve a further purpose and that is providing an area on which certain plants can be grown. Writing in the Daily Telegraph, consultant, broadcaster and author Joanna Yarrow, who specialises in green living, pointed out that such areas can be great as a place to keep grow food such as sprouting beans.
Meanwhile, as well as wooden worktops and other such provisions, windowsills and “soil-filled tyres” can make good growing locations, she noted.At present, there is a trend among many people in the UK towards producing more food in and around their homes or with the help of allotments. Many individuals engage in such endeavours not only as a way of being eco-friendly but also of improving their health.
As well as growing fruit and vegetables, there are many other things consumers can do to reduce their carbon footprints, Ms Yarrow stated. She recommended that what they cannot produce themselves, they should try to source from local producers and added that they ought to make leftovers into “new feasts”.
The expert also advised individuals to avoid short car journeys in favour of walking and noted that overland journeys are less damaging to the planet than flights.Environmental concerns continue to rise up the political agenda and the demand for green goods and services seems likely to grow yet further over coming months and years.