Article/Tip
How to make a simple, easy compost bin
Patti, the Garden Girl, shows you a simple and easy way to make a compost bin for your organic lawn or garden.
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Article/Tip
Patti, the Garden Girl, shows you a simple and easy way to make a compost bin for your organic lawn or garden.
Article/Tip
Your Backyard Farmer grows veggies in unexpected spots
Article/Tip
There's been a lot of hype about a few new food bills. And while most of it is conspiracy theory, there are some reasons to be alarmed.
Ashland, OR
Local News
Peak Moment 51: Tour Scott McGuire's "White Sage Gardens" in the back yard of his rental home -- a demonstration site for suburban sustainability.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOaPFt_ajvU#GU5U2spHI_4
News
Health Freedom Alliance - HR 875 Legislation - "The food police, criminalizing organic farming and the backyard gardener, and violation of the 10th amendment."
blogs.healthfreedomalliance.org/blog/2009/03/26/...
12180 Philips Hwy
Jacksonville, FL 32256
904-292-9444
Local Green Business
An OUTDOOR SHOWROOM of local professional craftsmen with examples of energy savings products -- so you can experience 'how things work'.
www.backyardliving.us
6917 Kensington Ave
Kansas City, MO 64132
816-931-3877
Green Business
KCCG is a non-profit organization dedicated to improving the quality of life of low-income households and other members of the community by helping them grow their own nutritious fruits and vegetables.
www.kccg.org
Green Business
Backyard Harvest farmers contract with homeowners, renters and communities to create gardens in their backyards, maintain the gardens and harvest all of the produce weekly for each family.
www.pricoldclimate.org/about_backyard_harvest
Product
Backyard Composter.
www.signaturemarketing.com/page/6
San Francisco, CA
Local City Rankings Article
In a nod to its past—and, some hope, its future—the city of San Francisco approved a Victory Garden on the front lawn of City Hall this past summer. The last time the lawns were dug up in favor of leafy greens was in 1943. By mid-August, gardeners were harvesting kale, bok choy, broccoli, beets, collard and mustard greens, and fifteen types of lettuce—all of it donated to a local foodbank. “We wanted a diverse array of plants to demonstrate the potential of what you can grow in San Francisco in your own backyard,” says John Bela, who designed and manages the garden.
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