Black Friday
Holiday gift giving doesn't have to be store bought. You can give gifts from the garden. This week's tip offers a few suggestions.
Holiday gift giving doesn't have to be store bought. You can give gifts from the garden. This week's tip offers a few suggestions.
At the beginning of November I attended the 3-day Grow BioIntensive workshop in Willits, CA. It blew my mind. In fact, it took my brain out of
my
head, turned it inside out and put it back in. What is Grow BioIntensive, you ask? Well, let me attempt to explain it in less than three days:
Grow BioIntensive is a method of gardening/farming that combines French Intensive, which useshexagonal plant spacing"2">as well as double-digging ...
If you really want to be sustainable, you can grow your own top soil - in the form of compost, that is. This week's tip focuses on how you can feed your garden and build top soil at the same time.
I just got back from a 3-day workshop at Ecology Action and found this to be one of the most comprehensive closed-system organic gardening methods available.
Back in my early college years, all I wanted to do was make bread and swing in a hammock all day. I dove head-first into environmental issues and
chose
recycling as my personal passion. Along with the strong desire to sort trash came an awareness of solar power and all its benefits. It was then that I discovered Real Goods.
Real Goods had not yet been bought by Gaiam.com when ...
I just got word today that we've been mentioned in an online article for Dwell Magazine.
Miguel Nelson brought me in as the garden expert for the project and we partnered with School Nutrition Plus to create the Woolly Pocket School Garden Program back in early Summer 2009. So far, we've installed 5 school gardens and we're about to venture into Arizona to reach other schools.
Here's a chance to see what goes on in Miguel's head when he invents these great ideas for our participating schools:
Keep your tools in tip top shape this fall with these handy instructions for cleaning and sharpening your garden tools.
Coming up next week, the Gardenerd Organic Gardening Series will be offered for the first time ever as a Weekend Intensive.
An interesting question came in this week:
"I'd like to eradicate some Laurel Sumac in my yard. Do you have any
natural remedy I could use to do this. I thought I read at one time you
could make a potion of vinegar and baking soda and make a small hole in
the trunk and poor mixture down it. Of course, I can't find where I
read this and don't know portions so if you know of anything it would
be greatly appreciated. Thanks"
I'll admit that I'm ...
A fellow Gardenerd wrote in last week to offer a tip on inexpensive alternatives to Floating Row Cover or Garden Fabric. Here's what she said:
"Suggestion from a friend that I tried and it works: For brassicas and
anything that attracts moths/eggs that are not beneficials, cover the
plants, especially the younger ones, with bridal veil tulle. It's so
light you don't need to stake it, the sun and rain penetrate, and you
can move it around so easily. It's < $2/yard at Joanne's and you can
get so ...