Please see Links below to Ending Hunger, child education, child health, training for women, sustainable technology, organic gardening-farming, recycling, reducing water usuage and good books to read.
Your Local Food Bank needs you.
Luke 10:29 Isaiah 1:17; 1:19
http://www.yesmagazine.com/article.a sp?ID=576
WHERE IS MY LOCAL FOOD BANK
http://yp.yahoo.com/py/yploc.py?&clr=yp Results&stp=y&stx=8104716&desc=Food+and+H unger&qtx=&tab=B2C&country_in=us
~
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=fo od+banks&btnG=Google+Search
~
http://yellowpages.superpages.com/listi ngs.jsp?SRC=lycos8&C=food+bank+&S=CA&PS=4 5&STYPE=AS&L=CA&MC=1&OO=1&F=1&CP=Communi ty+%26+Government%5EPublic+Health+%26+Sa fety%5EEmergency+Services%5EFood+Banks%5 E
~
http://ylwbook.yellowcom.addresses.c om/ypbook.php?ReportType=44&aid=1916&sid= &refer=1916&adword=YELLOW&qbn=&qbc=fo od+banks&qc=los%20angeles&qs=ca&tncpy=&s id=97
HOW TO HELP in your LOCAL Community
GROW A ROW of fresh organic food for your LOCAL Food Bank
http://www.cnh.bc.ca/foodsecurity/grows harearow.htm
http://www.lifecyclesproject.ca/initiat ives/past_projects/grow_a_row.php
http://www.stcatharines.ca/recreation/p t/grow_row.asp
http://www.gov.pe.ca/news/getrelease.ph p3?number=4279
http://www.compost.org/growarowpressrel ease2.html
Anyone with a backyard garden can plant extra row and contact your local Gleaners Group for help harvesting or delivering the vegetables from your garden to your Local Food Bank.
SEATTLE P-PATCH PROGRAM for helping Food Banks and the poor
You can copy the Seattle Method, and use it in your LOCAL Neighborhood.
http://www.seattle.gov/neighborhoods/pp atch
http://www.seattletilth.org
GARDEN-RAISED BOUNTY (GRUB)
You can duplicate their methods in your city.
http://goodgrub.org/youth/index.htm l
http://goodgrub.org
http://communitygarden.org
FOOD SECURITY links
http://www.foodsecurity.org/links.html
FOOD FOR EVERYONE FOUNDATION
http://foodforeveryone.org
HOW TO: ORGANIC GARDENING
http://wasatchgardens.org/gardenresourc es.html
http://www.howtoorganicgarden.com
GLEANER GROUPS IN YOUR COMMUNITY
Please set up a Gleaners Group in your community to pick excess Fresh Organic vegetables and organic fruits from your neighbors' gardens, from local farms and from Farmers Markets for use by your local food bank. Thank you.
http://www.localharvest.org
http://www.gleanerscoalition.org
http://www.gcfb.org/site/News2?page=New sArticle&id=6943
VICTORY GARDENS
International Movement to feed the hungry
http://www.earthlypursuits.com/VictoryG ardHandbook/VGHv.htm
http://www.cityfarmer.org/grandpasVG.ht ml
http://sidewalksprouts.wordpress.com/hi story/vg
http://www.archive.org/details/victory_ garden
http://www.ezonemag.net/dig
http://www.victoryseeds.com
http://www.fenwayvictorygardens.com
Student James Hardebeck normally spends the summer on vacation, reading or lazing about.
But this summer, he and 10 other Komachin Middle School students are volunteering to tend 18 vegetable beds they're planting for low-income families.
"We have this garden, and we're not using it very much," he said. "There's nothing planted in here but weeds, so it was just a waste. There are people who need what we have."
The students aren't alone this planting season.
Farmers, backyard gardeners and groups across the county have begun planting seeds and tilling land in a unified effort to keep the Thurston County Food Bank's shelves stocked. Farm land that would normally lie fallow and surplus vegetables that would otherwise go to waste have found a new purpose.
The food bank had a record 58,055 client visits last year, said Robert Coit, executive director at the food bank. The number has increased 30 percent a month during the past seven months, in part because higher gasoline prices have forced people to funnel more of their paychecks into fueling their cars to drive to work. At the same time, the food bank has opened satellite sites at two large low-income apartment complexes.
The food bank gets donated produce from growers, but donations ebb in the cold months. So Coit uses cash donations and reserves to buy produce.
In February, Garden-Raised Bounty began pulling local growers together. Some, like GRuB and The Kiwanis Club, had grown for the food bank before. Others were newcomers. Fourteen groups or individual growers are now on board, with the combined goal of growing 30,000 pounds of food this year, said Blue Peetz, GRuB coordinator. The Gleaners Coalition, which dispatches volunteers to help farms harvest excess food, is also a partner.
Planting has begun at GRuB's greenhouse on Elliot Avenue and at The Kiwanis Club's half-acre farm near Mud Bay Road. The Kiwanis Club is the food bank's single largest donor, delivering 15,000 pounds of produce last year. They hope to match or surpass that amount this year, he said.
"It's a fairly productive small patch," said Don Leaf of The Kiwanis Club. "We've been producing fresh produce for the food bank for several years. We try to harvest when things are ripe and not overripe, and try to deliver it immediately."
In Rochester, the Helsing Junction Farm has set aside two acres for the food bank where they've planted carrots, beets, fennel and chard, said Susan Ujcic, co-owner. The Gleaners and H.E.A.R.T. Alternative High School students will help harvest.
The food bank also will benefit from the farm's community-supported agriculture program. Under CSA, members pay monthly for a full or half share and, in return, get weekly produce and flowers, often getting more food than the cost of their share. The farm is matching every $1 that CSA members donate, and the money is used to provide shares to food bank clients.
The Gleaners are organizing a giving garden, where they'll grow herbs and vegetables, at the Olympia Community Gardens and Bentley Farms, said Barry Cannon, who heads the group. The Gleaners will organize work parties to run the garden, its volunteers will keep any harvest they need and the rest will be donated to the food bank and other area emergency food and meal programs.
In addition, the Gleaners will launch a food preparation display starting May 24, where they'll prepare dishes at the food bank using the vegetables and herbs clients receive. They'll serve samples and hand out recipe kits, especially for vegetables people might not be familiar with, like kohlrabi, which is a cabbage that resembles a turnip.
"You give it to somebody and it's a weird-looking thing and people might not know what to do with it," Cannon said. "It's also nutritional teaching. Greens can be cooked so much they turn brown and limp. We'll teach them how to hold the nutrition in the vegetables."
Kiwanis Club member Don Leaf tills the soil Thursday morning as he and other members get ready for planting on their half-acre garden on 11th Avenue.
QUADRUPLING FOOD PRODUCTION - ORGANIC FARMING AND GARDENING
Per a report from Malaysia, crops grown with Volcanic Rock Dust ( http://www.remineralize.org ) and Eeffective Micro-organisms (EM http://www.effectivemicro-organisms.c o.uk ) increased production by 400%.
References: Permaculture Magazine, #51, Spring 2007; article: Stone Age Science; by Dylan Keating
http://www.remineralize.org/story.php?s tory=EEZFAlEukZOJwODROk.html
http://www.permaculture-magazine.co.uk
http://www.squarefootgardening.com http://www.carbon.org http://www.localharvest.org
book: An Earth Saving Revolution, Vol. 1, Vol 2; by Teruo Higa http://www.emshop.co.nz/em-products-boo ks_videos.html
book: Bread from Stones; by Michael Olson http://www.acresusa.com
book: Eco-Farm; by Charles Walters http://www.acresusa.com
book: Worms Eat My Garbage; by Mary Appelhof http://www.wormwoman.com http://www.vermico.com
book: Recycle With Earthworms; by Shelley Grossman http://www.wormbooks.com/all.books.htm http://elementgreen.com
book: The Farmer's Earthworm Handbook; by David Ernst http://www.acresusa.com
Eeffective Micro-organisms: http://www.eminfo.info http://www.emnz.com http://www.emrochina.com http://www.agriton.nl http://www.emro.co.jp http://www.bmecology.com http://www.embiotech.org http://emiko.de
Free organic gardening-farming Catalog: http://www.acresusa.com/other/freesampl e.htm
utilizing ORGANIC COMMUNITY GARDENS to Empower communities
http://www.communitygarden.org.au http://seattletilth.org http://www.cityslickerfarms.org
http://growinghope.net http://www.communitygarden.org http://www.growingpower.org http://www.growingcommunity.org
http://www.ssawg.org/cfs-resources.h tml http://www.greenguerillas.org http://www.greenthumbnyc.org http://www.rswr.org
http://www.hmk.on.ca/plantarow.html http://garden.hortport.com/Current_Issu e.htm?ID=3796 http://www.toronto.ca/health/plant_a_ro w.pdf
http://www.seedinternational.com.au/com munity_food.html
http://www.cityfarmer.org/booksales.htm l
http://www.longbeachorganic.org/Site/en glishstartupguide.PDF
http://celosangeles.ucdavis.edu/gar den/articles/startup_guide.html
http://www.ascribe.org/cgi-bin/spew 4th.pl?ascribeid=20030513.123819&time=13+1 9+PDT&year=2003&public=1
http://news.ucanr.org/newsstorymain.c fm?story=476
http://www.vegparadise.com/24carrot4.ht ml
http://www.lta.org/resources/index.h tml
http://www.lta.org/publicpolicy/advocat es.htm
Free book: http://www.wasatchgardens.org/Library/C ommunityGardenStart-upHandbook.PDF
book: Growing Communities: How to Build Community Through Community Gardening; by Jeanette Abi-Nader
book: Cultivating Community, Principles and Practices for Community Gardening as a Community-Building Tool; by Karen Payne
book: Chillies & Roses, Inspiring Multi-Ethnic Involvement at Community Gardens; by Kerry Rowe
book: Beyond You and Me, Inspiration and Wisdom For Building Community; by Robin Alfred
book: Community Planning Handbook; by N. Wates http://www.eco-logicbooks.com
book: Sustainable Communities; by H. Barton http://www.eco-logicbooks.com
book: Sustainable Community - A Practical Guide http://www.eco-logicbooks.com
book: Common Sense of Community; by D. Atkinson http://www.eco-logicbooks.com
book: Guerrilla Gardening; by David Tracey
book: Great Neighborhood Book; by Jay Walljasper
book: Do It Yourself; by Kim Bryan
book: Creating a Life Together; by Diana Christian
book: Food Not Lawns; by Heather C. Flores
book: 21st-Century Smallholder; by Paul Waddington
book: Conservation Finance Handbook; by Kim Hopper http://www.chelseagreen.com/2004/it ems/conservationfinance
book: Doing Deals: A Guide to Buying Land for Conservation
book: In Gardens We Trust http://www.tpl.org/tier2_kad.cfm?folder _id=1385
STARTING a FARMERS MARKET
At your School, Church and Elsewhere
book: New Farmers Market; by Vance Corum
book: Legal Guide for Direct Farm Marketing; by Neil Hamilton
book: Grassroots Marketing; by Shel Horowitz
book: Backyard Market Gardening; by Andrew Lee
book: MetroFarm; by Michael Olson http://www.metrofarm.com
book: Micro Eco-Farming; by Barbara Berst Adams http://www.microecofarming.com
book: Growing and Selling Fresh-Cut Herbs; by Sandie Shores
book: Sharing the Harvest; by Elizabeth Henderson
FOOD COOPS
~How to Set Up a Food Coop at schools, churches etc
book: Food Co-Ops for Small Groups; by Tony Vellela
book: How to Start a Food Co-op; by Karen Zimbelman
http://www.cooperativegrocer.coop/cg_sp ecial.html#howtostart
http://www.vegfamily.com/articles/c oop-food-buying.htm
http://www.foodcoop500.coop
http://www.uwcc.wisc.edu
http://www.coopdirectory.org/bp003.htm
http://www.flatbushfoodcoop.com/wtsacoo p.html
http://www.foodcoop.coop
http://www.go.coop
http://www.flatbushfoodcoop.com/coops.h tml#cooperative%20organizations
http://www.coopdirectory.org/#What%2 0is%20a%20Co-op?
book: Consumer Food Cooperatives; by Ronald Cotterill
~Coop Directory
http://www.coopdirectory.org
http://www.localharvest.org
http://www.cooperativegrocer.coop
~Help Book Online: Common Ground Food Co-op helpbook.prairienet.org/fs010235aa.php
~Journals:
Cooperative Grocer http://www.cooperativegrocer.coop
New Sector, Community and Co-operative Enterprise http://www.newsector.co.uk
Cooperative Business Journal http://www.ncba.coop
~Food Securtiy
http://www.copac.coop/idc/fao-idc2000.h tm
~Food Share Programs
http://www.sacfoodcoop.com/pages/commun ity/comm_prog.htm
http://www.sacfoodcoop.com/pages/commun ity/comm_don.htm
~School Tours to Food Coops
http://www.foodcoop.coop/index.php?p age=school_store_tour
~Cooperative Development Services
http://www.cdsfood.coop/food/faq
~Federal Grants for Community Food Project, Food Coops
http://www.foodsecurity.org/funding.htm l
http://www.davisfood.coop/dccf.html
http://www.cooperativegrocer.coop/artic les/index.php?id=689
http://www.csrees.usda.gov/nea/food/in_ focus/hunger_if_competitive.html
http://www.csrees.usda.gov/fo/community foodprojects.cfm
BUYERS CLUBS
Creating Buyyers Clubs at schools, churches and communities
http://www.unitedbuyingclubs.com
ORGANIC INSECT CONTROL
~Compost Tea fights plant diseases, insects and increases plant growth
http://www.vermico.com/compost_tea_brew ers.htm http://www.growingsolutions.com http://www.soilsoup.com
~Worm Tea fights plant diseases, organic fertilizers http://www.ourvitalearth.com/worm-tea.h tm http://bristen.com/natureshop/gardenjou rnal/wormtea.htm http://www.kitsapezearth.com/fact.h tml#tea
~book: Soul of Soil; by Grace Gershuny - This book shows that one of the main reason plants are attacked by insects and disease is due to unhealthy soils and growing conditions, and using chemical fertilizers. Please make sure your plants are growing healthy soil. Healthy Plants create their own insect repellents and disease killers.
book: How to Grow World Record Tomatoes; by Charles Wilber - The methods in this book apply to all plants.
~Organic Control Systems
Neem http://www.plasmaneem.com http://www.ozonebiotech.com http://www.fortunebiotech.com
Garlic Barrier http://www.garlicbarrier.com
Extremely Green http://www.extremelygreen.com
Biocontrol Network http://www.biconet.com
Milky Spore http://www.milkyspore.com
Planet Natural http://www.planetnatural.com
Nixalite http://www.nixalite.com
Hot Pepper Wax http://www.hotpepperwax.com
Orange Guard http://www.orangeguard.com
Renaissance Herbs http://www.renaissanceherbs.com.au
Greenfire http://www.greenfire.net
ARBICO Organics http://www.arbico-organics.com
Beneficial Insectary http://www.insectary.com
Beneficial Insects http://www.thebeneficialinsectco.co m
A-1 Unique Insect Control http://www.a-1unique.com
Rincon-Vitova http://www.rinconvitova.com
Bethurum Insect Control http://www.bethurum.com
Eradicate Rodents http://www.eradi-products.com
Certified Organics Bio Control http://www.certifiedorganics.info
Enviro-Guard organic lawn http://www.aggrand.guarding-our-earth.c om
Hunkin Garden http://www.hunkin.co.nz
book: Manual of Biocontrol Agents; by Leonard G. Copping
book: Carrots Love Tomatoes, Secrets of Companion Planting for Successful Gardening; by Louise Riotte
book: Great Garden Companions; by Sally Jean Cunningham
ESSENTIAL OILS
insect and pests repellents, disease control
http://www.eonseed.com/catalog501.h tml#insect
Eucalyptus Oil
Tea Tree Oil
Lavender Oil
Peppermint Oil
Lemon Oil
Virginia Cedarwood Oil
Citronella Oil
Jojoba Oil
Lavandin Oil
Lemongrass Oil
Wintergreen Oil
Thyme Oil
Cinnamon Oil
Clove Oil
Orange Oil
Caraway Oil
RECIPES FOR MAKING YOUR OWN PEST DETERRENTS
http://www.eonseed.com/catalog501.h tml#insect
OTHER BIO CONTROLS
http://www.cleanairgardening.com/insect repel.html
http://www.cleanairgardening.com/pestco ntrol.html
Organic Natural Fire Ant Killer
Organic Insecticidal Soap
Buji Poison Ivy Blocker
Spinosad Organic Lawn Insect Killer
Diatomaceous Earth Insect Killer
Electronic Slug and Snail Fence
Grub Beater Insect Control
Bug-a-Tak Organic Insecticide
Solar Insect and Pest Killer
No-See-Um Organic Insect Repellent
Beetle Trap Bags
Organic Mole and Gopher Repellent
Ant-a-Tak Organic Ant Insecticide
http://www.gardenersnet.com/organicgard ening/organicrepellent.htm
http://www.organicgardeninfo.com/in sect-glossary-m-p.html
http://www.stretcher.com/stories/04/04a pr19c.cfm
http://www.tyratech.com
http://www.crocodile-insectrepellent.co m
http://www.naturesgift.com/skeeter.htm
http://bugmace.com/
http://www.biopesticide.net.cn
http://www.liquidfence.com
http://www.oddanchatrammarket.com/biope sticide.html
GLOBAL WARMING and FOOD CHOICES
http://foodchoice.livejournal.com
LINKS TO LOCAL SUSTAINABLE GROUPS
http://solarlink.livejournal.com
ORGANIC GARDENING THERAPY and DISABLED PEOPLE
Do an internet search on Gardening Theraphy or Horticultural Therapy
There are many excellent books and research papers on the subject.
http://www.growingcenter.org http://www.plants-for-people.org/en g http://www.gardening4good.org http://www.horticulturaltherapy.com.au http://www.thrive.org.uk http://www.camphillkimberton.org http://www.camphill.org.uk http://www.steinerwaldorf.org.uk http://www.kidsgardening.com http://www.calhealthyschools.org
http://www.kurisu.com/kurisu-restorativ e-gardens.shtml http://www.meristem.org
http://www.sustland.umn.edu/design/heal inggardens.html
http://www.kinghorngardens.com/heal ing.htm http://www.kurisu.com
http://www.djc.com/special/landsca pe98/10037844.htm
http://www.socialworktoday.com/arc hive/swt_0905p19.htm
http://www.mhtachapter.org/resources.ht m
http://www.healthdesign.org/resources/p ubs/books/books_gardens.php
book: Starting a Horticultural Therapy Program; by Cathedne Drew
book: Healing Gardens, Therapeutic Benefits and Design Recommendations; by Clare Cooper Marcus http://www.alibris.com
book: Healing Through Working; by D. Ketelaars http://www.fellowshipcommunity.org/inde x.php?s=announce&id=5&t=healing-through-w orking
book: Accessible Gardening: Tips and Techniques for Seniors and the Disabled; by Joann Woy
book: Restorative Gardens; by Nancy Gerlach-Spriggs
book: Horticultural Therapy and the Older Adult Population; by Suzanne Wells
book: Horticulture As Therapy, A Practical Guide to Using Horticulture As a Therapeutic Tool; by Mitchell Hewson
ORGANIC GARDENING TECHNOLOGIES
http://melbourne.indymedia.org/news/200 6/01/102980.php
http://adelaide.indymedia.org/newsw ire/display/12155/index.php
http://beirut.indymedia.org/ar/2006/0 1/3660.shtml
see below PART 2 OF 3
Your Local Food Bank needs you.
Luke 10:29 Isaiah 1:17; 1:19
http://www.yesmagazine.com/article.a
WHERE IS MY LOCAL FOOD BANK
http://yp.yahoo.com/py/yploc.py?&clr=yp
~
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=fo
~
http://yellowpages.superpages.com/listi
~
http://ylwbook.yellowcom.addresses.c
HOW TO HELP in your LOCAL Community
GROW A ROW of fresh organic food for your LOCAL Food Bank
http://www.cnh.bc.ca/foodsecurity/grows
http://www.lifecyclesproject.ca/initiat
http://www.stcatharines.ca/recreation/p
http://www.gov.pe.ca/news/getrelease.ph
http://www.compost.org/growarowpressrel
Anyone with a backyard garden can plant extra row and contact your local Gleaners Group for help harvesting or delivering the vegetables from your garden to your Local Food Bank.
SEATTLE P-PATCH PROGRAM for helping Food Banks and the poor
You can copy the Seattle Method, and use it in your LOCAL Neighborhood.
http://www.seattle.gov/neighborhoods/pp
http://www.seattletilth.org
GARDEN-RAISED BOUNTY (GRUB)
You can duplicate their methods in your city.
http://goodgrub.org/youth/index.htm
http://goodgrub.org
http://communitygarden.org
FOOD SECURITY links
http://www.foodsecurity.org/links.html
FOOD FOR EVERYONE FOUNDATION
http://foodforeveryone.org
HOW TO: ORGANIC GARDENING
http://wasatchgardens.org/gardenresourc
http://www.howtoorganicgarden.com
GLEANER GROUPS IN YOUR COMMUNITY
Please set up a Gleaners Group in your community to pick excess Fresh Organic vegetables and organic fruits from your neighbors' gardens, from local farms and from Farmers Markets for use by your local food bank. Thank you.
http://www.localharvest.org
http://www.gleanerscoalition.org
http://www.gcfb.org/site/News2?page=New
VICTORY GARDENS
International Movement to feed the hungry
http://www.earthlypursuits.com/VictoryG
http://www.cityfarmer.org/grandpasVG.ht
http://sidewalksprouts.wordpress.com/hi
http://www.archive.org/details/victory_
http://www.ezonemag.net/dig
http://www.victoryseeds.com
http://www.fenwayvictorygardens.com
Student James Hardebeck normally spends the summer on vacation, reading or lazing about.
But this summer, he and 10 other Komachin Middle School students are volunteering to tend 18 vegetable beds they're planting for low-income families.
"We have this garden, and we're not using it very much," he said. "There's nothing planted in here but weeds, so it was just a waste. There are people who need what we have."
The students aren't alone this planting season.
Farmers, backyard gardeners and groups across the county have begun planting seeds and tilling land in a unified effort to keep the Thurston County Food Bank's shelves stocked. Farm land that would normally lie fallow and surplus vegetables that would otherwise go to waste have found a new purpose.
The food bank had a record 58,055 client visits last year, said Robert Coit, executive director at the food bank. The number has increased 30 percent a month during the past seven months, in part because higher gasoline prices have forced people to funnel more of their paychecks into fueling their cars to drive to work. At the same time, the food bank has opened satellite sites at two large low-income apartment complexes.
The food bank gets donated produce from growers, but donations ebb in the cold months. So Coit uses cash donations and reserves to buy produce.
In February, Garden-Raised Bounty began pulling local growers together. Some, like GRuB and The Kiwanis Club, had grown for the food bank before. Others were newcomers. Fourteen groups or individual growers are now on board, with the combined goal of growing 30,000 pounds of food this year, said Blue Peetz, GRuB coordinator. The Gleaners Coalition, which dispatches volunteers to help farms harvest excess food, is also a partner.
Planting has begun at GRuB's greenhouse on Elliot Avenue and at The Kiwanis Club's half-acre farm near Mud Bay Road. The Kiwanis Club is the food bank's single largest donor, delivering 15,000 pounds of produce last year. They hope to match or surpass that amount this year, he said.
"It's a fairly productive small patch," said Don Leaf of The Kiwanis Club. "We've been producing fresh produce for the food bank for several years. We try to harvest when things are ripe and not overripe, and try to deliver it immediately."
In Rochester, the Helsing Junction Farm has set aside two acres for the food bank where they've planted carrots, beets, fennel and chard, said Susan Ujcic, co-owner. The Gleaners and H.E.A.R.T. Alternative High School students will help harvest.
The food bank also will benefit from the farm's community-supported agriculture program. Under CSA, members pay monthly for a full or half share and, in return, get weekly produce and flowers, often getting more food than the cost of their share. The farm is matching every $1 that CSA members donate, and the money is used to provide shares to food bank clients.
The Gleaners are organizing a giving garden, where they'll grow herbs and vegetables, at the Olympia Community Gardens and Bentley Farms, said Barry Cannon, who heads the group. The Gleaners will organize work parties to run the garden, its volunteers will keep any harvest they need and the rest will be donated to the food bank and other area emergency food and meal programs.
In addition, the Gleaners will launch a food preparation display starting May 24, where they'll prepare dishes at the food bank using the vegetables and herbs clients receive. They'll serve samples and hand out recipe kits, especially for vegetables people might not be familiar with, like kohlrabi, which is a cabbage that resembles a turnip.
"You give it to somebody and it's a weird-looking thing and people might not know what to do with it," Cannon said. "It's also nutritional teaching. Greens can be cooked so much they turn brown and limp. We'll teach them how to hold the nutrition in the vegetables."
Kiwanis Club member Don Leaf tills the soil Thursday morning as he and other members get ready for planting on their half-acre garden on 11th Avenue.
QUADRUPLING FOOD PRODUCTION - ORGANIC FARMING AND GARDENING
Per a report from Malaysia, crops grown with Volcanic Rock Dust ( http://www.remineralize.org ) and Eeffective Micro-organisms (EM http://www.effectivemicro-organisms.c
References: Permaculture Magazine, #51, Spring 2007; article: Stone Age Science; by Dylan Keating
http://www.remineralize.org/story.php?s
http://www.permaculture-magazine.co.uk
http://www.squarefootgardening.com
book: An Earth Saving Revolution, Vol. 1, Vol 2; by Teruo Higa http://www.emshop.co.nz/em-products-boo
book: Bread from Stones; by Michael Olson http://www.acresusa.com
book: Eco-Farm; by Charles Walters http://www.acresusa.com
book: Worms Eat My Garbage; by Mary Appelhof http://www.wormwoman.com http://www.vermico.com
book: Recycle With Earthworms; by Shelley Grossman http://www.wormbooks.com/all.books.htm
book: The Farmer's Earthworm Handbook; by David Ernst http://www.acresusa.com
Eeffective Micro-organisms: http://www.eminfo.info http://www.emnz.com http://www.emrochina.com http://www.agriton.nl http://www.emro.co.jp http://www.bmecology.com http://www.embiotech.org http://emiko.de
Free organic gardening-farming Catalog: http://www.acresusa.com/other/freesampl
utilizing ORGANIC COMMUNITY GARDENS to Empower communities
http://www.communitygarden.org.au http://seattletilth.org http://www.cityslickerfarms.org
http://growinghope.net http://www.communitygarden.org http://www.growingpower.org http://www.growingcommunity.org
http://www.ssawg.org/cfs-resources.h
http://www.hmk.on.ca/plantarow.html
http://www.seedinternational.com.au/com
http://www.cityfarmer.org/booksales.htm
http://www.longbeachorganic.org/Site/en
http://celosangeles.ucdavis.edu/gar
http://www.ascribe.org/cgi-bin/spew
http://news.ucanr.org/newsstorymain.c
http://www.vegparadise.com/24carrot4.ht
http://www.lta.org/resources/index.h
http://www.lta.org/publicpolicy/advocat
Free book: http://www.wasatchgardens.org/Library/C
book: Growing Communities: How to Build Community Through Community Gardening; by Jeanette Abi-Nader
book: Cultivating Community, Principles and Practices for Community Gardening as a Community-Building Tool; by Karen Payne
book: Chillies & Roses, Inspiring Multi-Ethnic Involvement at Community Gardens; by Kerry Rowe
book: Beyond You and Me, Inspiration and Wisdom For Building Community; by Robin Alfred
book: Community Planning Handbook; by N. Wates http://www.eco-logicbooks.com
book: Sustainable Communities; by H. Barton http://www.eco-logicbooks.com
book: Sustainable Community - A Practical Guide http://www.eco-logicbooks.com
book: Common Sense of Community; by D. Atkinson http://www.eco-logicbooks.com
book: Guerrilla Gardening; by David Tracey
book: Great Neighborhood Book; by Jay Walljasper
book: Do It Yourself; by Kim Bryan
book: Creating a Life Together; by Diana Christian
book: Food Not Lawns; by Heather C. Flores
book: 21st-Century Smallholder; by Paul Waddington
book: Conservation Finance Handbook; by Kim Hopper http://www.chelseagreen.com/2004/it
book: Doing Deals: A Guide to Buying Land for Conservation
book: In Gardens We Trust http://www.tpl.org/tier2_kad.cfm?folder
STARTING a FARMERS MARKET
At your School, Church and Elsewhere
book: New Farmers Market; by Vance Corum
book: Legal Guide for Direct Farm Marketing; by Neil Hamilton
book: Grassroots Marketing; by Shel Horowitz
book: Backyard Market Gardening; by Andrew Lee
book: MetroFarm; by Michael Olson http://www.metrofarm.com
book: Micro Eco-Farming; by Barbara Berst Adams http://www.microecofarming.com
book: Growing and Selling Fresh-Cut Herbs; by Sandie Shores
book: Sharing the Harvest; by Elizabeth Henderson
FOOD COOPS
~How to Set Up a Food Coop at schools, churches etc
book: Food Co-Ops for Small Groups; by Tony Vellela
book: How to Start a Food Co-op; by Karen Zimbelman
http://www.cooperativegrocer.coop/cg_sp
http://www.vegfamily.com/articles/c
http://www.foodcoop500.coop
http://www.uwcc.wisc.edu
http://www.coopdirectory.org/bp003.htm
http://www.flatbushfoodcoop.com/wtsacoo
http://www.foodcoop.coop
http://www.go.coop
http://www.flatbushfoodcoop.com/coops.h
http://www.coopdirectory.org/#What%2
book: Consumer Food Cooperatives; by Ronald Cotterill
~Coop Directory
http://www.coopdirectory.org
http://www.localharvest.org
http://www.cooperativegrocer.coop
~Help Book Online: Common Ground Food Co-op helpbook.prairienet.org/fs010235aa.php
~Journals:
Cooperative Grocer http://www.cooperativegrocer.coop
New Sector, Community and Co-operative Enterprise http://www.newsector.co.uk
Cooperative Business Journal http://www.ncba.coop
~Food Securtiy
http://www.copac.coop/idc/fao-idc2000.h
~Food Share Programs
http://www.sacfoodcoop.com/pages/commun
http://www.sacfoodcoop.com/pages/commun
~School Tours to Food Coops
http://www.foodcoop.coop/index.php?p
~Cooperative Development Services
http://www.cdsfood.coop/food/faq
~Federal Grants for Community Food Project, Food Coops
http://www.foodsecurity.org/funding.htm
http://www.davisfood.coop/dccf.html
http://www.cooperativegrocer.coop/artic
http://www.csrees.usda.gov/nea/food/in_
http://www.csrees.usda.gov/fo/community
BUYERS CLUBS
Creating Buyyers Clubs at schools, churches and communities
http://www.unitedbuyingclubs.com
ORGANIC INSECT CONTROL
~Compost Tea fights plant diseases, insects and increases plant growth
http://www.vermico.com/compost_tea_brew
~Worm Tea fights plant diseases, organic fertilizers http://www.ourvitalearth.com/worm-tea.h
~book: Soul of Soil; by Grace Gershuny - This book shows that one of the main reason plants are attacked by insects and disease is due to unhealthy soils and growing conditions, and using chemical fertilizers. Please make sure your plants are growing healthy soil. Healthy Plants create their own insect repellents and disease killers.
book: How to Grow World Record Tomatoes; by Charles Wilber - The methods in this book apply to all plants.
~Organic Control Systems
Neem http://www.plasmaneem.com http://www.ozonebiotech.com http://www.fortunebiotech.com
Garlic Barrier http://www.garlicbarrier.com
Extremely Green http://www.extremelygreen.com
Biocontrol Network http://www.biconet.com
Milky Spore http://www.milkyspore.com
Planet Natural http://www.planetnatural.com
Nixalite http://www.nixalite.com
Hot Pepper Wax http://www.hotpepperwax.com
Orange Guard http://www.orangeguard.com
Renaissance Herbs http://www.renaissanceherbs.com.au
Greenfire http://www.greenfire.net
ARBICO Organics http://www.arbico-organics.com
Beneficial Insectary http://www.insectary.com
Beneficial Insects http://www.thebeneficialinsectco.co
A-1 Unique Insect Control http://www.a-1unique.com
Rincon-Vitova http://www.rinconvitova.com
Bethurum Insect Control http://www.bethurum.com
Eradicate Rodents http://www.eradi-products.com
Certified Organics Bio Control http://www.certifiedorganics.info
Enviro-Guard organic lawn http://www.aggrand.guarding-our-earth.c
Hunkin Garden http://www.hunkin.co.nz
book: Manual of Biocontrol Agents; by Leonard G. Copping
book: Carrots Love Tomatoes, Secrets of Companion Planting for Successful Gardening; by Louise Riotte
book: Great Garden Companions; by Sally Jean Cunningham
ESSENTIAL OILS
insect and pests repellents, disease control
http://www.eonseed.com/catalog501.h
Eucalyptus Oil
Tea Tree Oil
Lavender Oil
Peppermint Oil
Lemon Oil
Virginia Cedarwood Oil
Citronella Oil
Jojoba Oil
Lavandin Oil
Lemongrass Oil
Wintergreen Oil
Thyme Oil
Cinnamon Oil
Clove Oil
Orange Oil
Caraway Oil
RECIPES FOR MAKING YOUR OWN PEST DETERRENTS
http://www.eonseed.com/catalog501.h
OTHER BIO CONTROLS
http://www.cleanairgardening.com/insect
http://www.cleanairgardening.com/pestco
Organic Natural Fire Ant Killer
Organic Insecticidal Soap
Buji Poison Ivy Blocker
Spinosad Organic Lawn Insect Killer
Diatomaceous Earth Insect Killer
Electronic Slug and Snail Fence
Grub Beater Insect Control
Bug-a-Tak Organic Insecticide
Solar Insect and Pest Killer
No-See-Um Organic Insect Repellent
Beetle Trap Bags
Organic Mole and Gopher Repellent
Ant-a-Tak Organic Ant Insecticide
http://www.gardenersnet.com/organicgard
http://www.organicgardeninfo.com/in
http://www.stretcher.com/stories/04/04a
http://www.tyratech.com
http://www.crocodile-insectrepellent.co
http://www.naturesgift.com/skeeter.htm
http://bugmace.com/
http://www.biopesticide.net.cn
http://www.liquidfence.com
http://www.oddanchatrammarket.com/biope
GLOBAL WARMING and FOOD CHOICES
http://foodchoice.livejournal.com
LINKS TO LOCAL SUSTAINABLE GROUPS
http://solarlink.livejournal.com
ORGANIC GARDENING THERAPY and DISABLED PEOPLE
Do an internet search on Gardening Theraphy or Horticultural Therapy
There are many excellent books and research papers on the subject.
http://www.growingcenter.org http://www.plants-for-people.org/en
http://www.kurisu.com/kurisu-restorativ
http://www.sustland.umn.edu/design/heal
http://www.kinghorngardens.com/heal
http://www.djc.com/special/landsca
http://www.socialworktoday.com/arc
http://www.mhtachapter.org/resources.ht
http://www.healthdesign.org/resources/p
book: Starting a Horticultural Therapy Program; by Cathedne Drew
book: Healing Gardens, Therapeutic Benefits and Design Recommendations; by Clare Cooper Marcus http://www.alibris.com
book: Healing Through Working; by D. Ketelaars http://www.fellowshipcommunity.org/inde
book: Accessible Gardening: Tips and Techniques for Seniors and the Disabled; by Joann Woy
book: Restorative Gardens; by Nancy Gerlach-Spriggs
book: Horticultural Therapy and the Older Adult Population; by Suzanne Wells
book: Horticulture As Therapy, A Practical Guide to Using Horticulture As a Therapeutic Tool; by Mitchell Hewson
ORGANIC GARDENING TECHNOLOGIES
http://melbourne.indymedia.org/news/200
http://adelaide.indymedia.org/newsw
http://beirut.indymedia.org/ar/2006/0
see below PART 2 OF 3
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