The Urban Garden: How One Community Turned Idle Land into a Garden City and How You Can, Too
By (Author) Jeremy N. Smith
By (photographer) Chad Harder
By (photographer) Sepp Jannotta
Foreword by Bill McKibben
Skyhorse Publishing
Skyhorse Publishing
21st October 2014
United States
General
Non Fiction
Allotments / Community gardens
630.91732
Paperback
240
Width 203mm, Height 254mm, Spine 20mm
987g
Fifteen peopleplus a class of first graderstell how local food, farms, and gardens changed their lives and their community . . . and how they can change yours, too.
Urban Farming Handbook includes:
Fifteen first-person stories of personal and civic transformation from a range of individuals, including farmers and community garden members, a low-income senior and a troubled teen, a foodie, a food bank officer, and many more
Seven in-depth How It Works sections on student farms, community gardens, community-supported agriculture (CSA), community education, farm work therapy, community outreach, and more
Detailed information on dozens of additional resources from relevant books and websites to government programs and national nonprofit organizations
Seventy full-color photographs showing a diverse local food community at home, work, and play
Read Urban Farming Handbook to learn how people like you, with busy lives like yours, can and do enjoy the many benefits of local food without having to become full-time organic farmers. Gain the information you need to organize or get involved in your own growing community anywhere across the country and around the world.
Jeremy N. Smith is a writer and freelance journalist based in Missoula, Montana. His work has appeared in Gourmet, Saveur, the Christian Science Monitor, and the Chicago Tribune, among many other publications, and he is the author of Growing a Garden City, about building community through local food, farms, and gardens.