La Times Reviews “You Grow Girl” Book

From: LATimes (March 10, 2005.)
The dirt on alt gardening

by Alexandria Abramian-Mott

“Looking for an antidote to the gardening how-to book written by estate-owning bluebloods with eponymous tea roses? Gayla Trail, a bona fide alt chick with the cat glasses and obscure ’80s rock T-shirts to prove it, has the dirt. She has distilled the gardening process into a series of bite-sized, quirkily written sections for a new generation of land- and time-deprived DIY females (males, too, if you skip the parts about growing loofa sponges and making peppermint foot scrubs.) Don’t have a patch of dirt to call your own? A fire escape or a window sill will do, writes Trail, who devotes many pages to container gardening.

The book is high on practical advice and written for an instant-messaging generation looking for snapshots, not diatribes, of information. All you need to know about soil pH levels is distilled into one short paragraph while sewing a funky gardening apron is given two pages.

Blended in with the basics are Trail’s homegrown ideas, such as starting seeds in Jell-O, burying wine bottles upside down to border a path and planting a garden for pets (her cat is named — what else? — Volton). She even suggests scooping up droppings left from police horses for free manure and practicing guerrilla gardening — growing plants on public property — as a way of fostering a green thumb.

Bluebloods need not apply.”

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You Grow Girl is Awarded

You Grow Girl won in the category of “Favorite Place to Learn How to Grow Your Own” in the “2004 The Morning News Editor’s Awards in Online Excellence.” Thanks Morning News!

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New York Times – The Blog Generation Takes Up Its Trowels

The Blog Generation Takes Up Its Trowels

You Grow Girl was interviewed for an New York Times article about young, urban gardeners.

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Unusual & Striking New Herbs

I need to start thinking about what I’m going to grow this year so decided to check out Richters Herbs to see what’s new. I’m completely blown away by some of the unusual new selections and thought I would share.
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Spring Pinhole Photo

Spring really, truly is finally here and I’ve been taking every opportunity to capture it on film.

This photo of a crocus cluster was taken in my garden using a homemade pinhole camera I constructed from a broken camera and a pie tin.

Check out these planty pinhole photos taken in a greenhouse by Andreas Wolkerstorfer. This image of cyclamen is particularly beautiful.

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