- From: The Toronto Star (May 21, 2005.)


-Shopping Section
Comments OffBotanical art, garden craft, toys, downloads, shop, fun…
- From: The Toronto Star (May 21, 2005.)


-Shopping Section
Comments Off- From: VENUS Magazine Spring 2005

-page 75
Comments OffFrom: Library Journal Review
“Reaching a new audience, this gardening book is as fresh and funky as the web site that inspired it. A professional print designer before turning to web design, Trail couldn’t find gardening information geared toward young, hip, frugal, urban gardeners like herself, so she used her skills to create YouGrowGirl.com in early 2000. Like the acclaimed site, the book is artsy but informative. Highly appropriate for beginners, it covers the basics of planning, planting, growing, harvesting, and reflecting on your garden successes. Trail’s organic and inexpensive methods for growing flowers, food, and herbs are practical for postage stamp-sized yards or even city fire escapes. Interspersed are offbeat projects like pest prophylactics, home-sewn tea bags, and a garden memory journal made of recycled materials.
The creative design uses a nice combination of drawings and photos, while the author’s edgy attitude and language are reminiscent of clever, suburban garden writer Cassandra Danz. Though other organic gardening books are prevalent, this introduction is recommended to public libraries catering particularly to twentysomethings and small-space gardeners. “- Bonnie Poquette, Milwaukee
Comments Off- From: BUST April/May 2005

-page 99
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Guest post by Sampath Jagannathan
One man’s cheap and organic alternative to fancy store-bought grow bags.
Take a plastic bag.
Fill it with soil.
Scatter some seeds.
Water.
Seedlings sprout.
Let them grow.
They become bigger.
Cover the soil with:
Fruit peels.
Uncooked vegetable waste.
Tea and coffee grounds.
Water when the plant asks for water.
It won’t ask often.
Will it grow into a plant?
Will it flower?
Will it fruit?
It did for me.
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