I came to your blog through Plans, and I’m glad to see you posting again.
I love Earth User’s Guide to Permaculture. It’s got a lot of good info, but my favorite part is that the author is Australian, and finding evidence of this in the book is like a scavenger hunt. Sometimes you’ll just be reading along and they pop up–things like getting full sun with north exposure, or November being early summer. Good times!
Yeah, I’ve been thumbing thru it and thinking, “I don’t think acacia and banana would do very well in the Pacific Northwest…nor do I think cockatoos will be pilfering fruit from my garden…”
The sketches are really nice though – they give the girls a really nice visual explanation of the concepts.
We’ve dreaming of spring here in New England. It’s been raining for the last two days, and the world is mudluscious brown and gray. It’s definitely needing some green growing things.
_Our Farm_ looks like a great read. I’ll be looking for that one.
I came to your blog through Plans, and I’m glad to see you posting again.
I love Earth User’s Guide to Permaculture. It’s got a lot of good info, but my favorite part is that the author is Australian, and finding evidence of this in the book is like a scavenger hunt. Sometimes you’ll just be reading along and they pop up–things like getting full sun with north exposure, or November being early summer. Good times!
Yeah, I’ve been thumbing thru it and thinking, “I don’t think acacia and banana would do very well in the Pacific Northwest…nor do I think cockatoos will be pilfering fruit from my garden…”
The sketches are really nice though – they give the girls a really nice visual explanation of the concepts.
Thanks for stopping by!
We’ve dreaming of spring here in New England. It’s been raining for the last two days, and the world is mudluscious brown and gray. It’s definitely needing some green growing things.
_Our Farm_ looks like a great read. I’ll be looking for that one.
Thanks!