Bookmark and Share
Digg!;  Stumbleupon  RSS Pinterest
Tweet This;      Join Savvy Veg on Facebook;

Free SV Reports!

Vegetarian Nutrition

10 Tips for Going Veg

Eat Beans Without Gas

Veg Social Etiquette

Veg Non-Veg Together


Savvy Veg Fans

"I am awed by the variety of information, recipes, tips etc. I am and will remain a regular visitor :)" - Steph S.

"Thanks for providing the healthiest of the vegetarian recipe options out there, & for choosing recipes that celebrate whole foods!" - Trish R.

"Your website is really cool. The articles are fantastic and the recipes are varied and not difficult. I can't wait to tell my friends about this site!" - Kathy C.

"Your site is quite wonderful. Thank you for helping us live in a sustainable, ethical and healthful way for all living things" - Erin L.

"I just found your website and love that many of the recipes are vegan! Thank you thank you! Love it! So stoked to find you." - Elaine E.

"Thank you for the great advice ... I'm sure your web site will answer all my questions. I'm very happy I found your web site ... thanks again" - Gailey M.

More Testimonials

Gaia's Garden: Backyard Permaculture

A complete, user friendly guide to permaculture gardening

Gaia's Garden has become my favorite gardening book. It's a complete, user friendly guide to backyard permaculture - organic, sustainable, ecologically sound agriculture scaled to the small holding.

Last summer I attended a workshop on sustainable agriculture. The whole thing was lifted word for word, complete with illustrations, from Gaia's Garden. The people giving the workshop knew it doesn't get any better than this, so why not go straight to the source!

Written in a non-technical, story-telling style, Gaia's Garden leads you from the concept of the garden as eco-system, from theory through practice, using examples, illustrations, techniques and tables of information for support. Author Toby Hemenway is supremely practical, balancing the ideal with the real. He says, "I'd much rather see gardeners consume some nonrenewable resources to create eventually self-sustaining gardens than have them sit paralyzed by the fear of committing an environmentally incorrect act."


Quinoa Recipe Ebook

A Few Things I've Picked Up From Gaia's Garden:

  • The Zone System - how to use every square inch of your yard to grow food
  • Natural Patterns - abandoning the straight and narrow
  • Sheet Mulching - letting the creatures who live in the soil build the soil
  • Cover Crops - when, what, where, how and why
  • Polycultural Gardening - inviting other species to live in your yard and help you garden
  • Garden Guilds - the effortless way to grow lovely organic fruit with natural plant communities
  • Tables of complete information on every kind of useful plant you could ever want, a glossary, bibliograpy, and resource list, and much more.

If you can only buy one gardening book, let it be Gaia's garden. I haven't bought it yet, I just get it out of the library often, and have it pretty much memorized.



Articles and Reviews on Related Topics:

Ecological Organic Agriculture Got Local Organic Milk? Ode to Spring: Confessions of an Obsessive Organic Gardener Organic Food: What Is It and Why Should We Eat It? Organic Consumers Association Back To Articles Index Contact Us Health Disclaimer, Privacy Policy, Publishing Policy
Digg!;  Stumbleupon   Follow Savvy Veg On Twitter;   Join Savvy Veg on Facebook;   Pinterest   RSS      Print

More Info