Experts Say Grow Your Garden Space with Raised Beds
FarmersAlamanac.com Debuts Earth Day Contest to Win Your Own (and
Other Prizes)
SAVANNAH, Ga. (Business Wire EON) March 31, 2008 --
Patti Moreno, The Garden Girl host of the television show Farmers’
Almanac TV and a New York City native, says it doesn’t
matter if your yard is urban or suburban. This spring you can celebrate
nature by growing your own fresh fruits, herbs and vegetables - and you
don’t have to be a green thumb to do it.
Moreno grows her family’s produce in 4- by
4-foot raised beds made of untreated lumber, set into the ground like a
sandbox and filled with highly enriched organic soil purchased from the
local garden center. You can win your own raised bed kit through April
30, 2008, just by entering at www.farmersalmanac.com/earth-day/.
Entering now is the perfect way to celebrate Earth Day on Tuesday, April
22.
Click the “raised beds”
button and enter to win a raised bed kit from Naturalyards, a $100 gift
certificate from Johnny’s Selected Seeds,
Earth-friendly prizes from the FarmersAlmanac.com store and a 30-minute
consultation from Moreno. The special site at www.farmersalmanac.com/earth-day/
features a step-by-step video of Moreno building a Naturalyards raised
bed, filling it with organic soil and compost, introducing beneficial
worms (or vermiculture) and planting multiple plants from seed.
The contest is designed to teach city-dwellers and suburbanites how to
reduce their food miles – the distance food
travels from production to the grocery store - by growing food in
window-style boxes, on their patios and even in the smallest back yard.
By growing in a raised bed - a strategy developed thousands of years ago
that’s enjoying a resurgence today for its
ease and practicality - you can grow produce longer, boost your family’s
nutrition and conserve precious energy and water.
“By growing some or all of your own organic
produce, you consume less food that travels far distances and that’s
a very Earth-friendly thing to do,” Moreno
says. “It’s also
very rewarding for your family because it teaches nurturing and
perseverance skills and promotes healthy living while teaching kids that
food doesn’t come from the produce aisle at
the grocery store.”
Raised beds can be made of wood, concrete or brick. Naturalyards kits
can be purchased at store.farmersalmanac.com/.
No purchase is necessary to enter the contest. Raised beds are filled
with soil and planted with fruits, vegetables, herbs, flowers and just
about anything that can be grown outdoors. Since Moreno likes to cook,
she grows foods that she uses most often like basil, oregano, parsley,
tomatoes and sweet red peppers.
“I love to grow what I like to eat and there
is nothing like the flavor of a plump red tomato picked from the vine in
my own raised bed,” she says. “Raised
beds lift the garden space off the ground, taking the back-breaking work
out of gardening and they are great for people with disabilities and for
gardening with children. In many cities, soil is heavily compacted and
in poor condition so gardening in the ground is not possible. Raised
beds make it so.”
To enter to win your own raised bed and other prizes –
and to get expert tips and ideas that make sense inside and outside the
home – visit www.farmersalmanac.com/earth-day/.
For information on Johnny’s Selected Seeds,
visit http://www.johnnyseeds.com/.
Visit Naturalyards online at http://naturalyards.com/raisedbeds/.
Farmers’ Almanac, which features an
orange and green cover, has been published every year since 1818. It
contains useful and interesting articles as well as long-range weather
predictions, gardening advice, recipes and more. Editors Peter Geiger
and Sandi Duncan are available for lively and informative interviews,
either by phone or in person. Both love to talk about the weather, share
useful Almanac trivia and advice, and offer tips on how to get back to
the simple life.
Farmers’ Almanac TV, based in
Savannah, Georgia, is a wholly owned subsidiary of Buy The Farm, LLC,
which owns the exclusive license for video and electronic media
production of the Farmers’ Almanac
brand. American Public Television distributed the public television
show, Farmers’ Almanac TV. Farmers’
Almanac TV and Farmers’ Almanac
trademarks are licensed from Almanac Publishing Company and are used by
Buy The Farm, LLC, with full rights therein.
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