Eco-Schools Environmental Projects in Glasgow Scotland 2004 - 2009
Posted on February 9, 2010
Brick City Urban Farms (part 1)
Posted on January 26, 2010
In Latino Gardens, Vegetables, Good Health and Savings Flourish
Posted on January 18, 2010
The two-month-old vegetable garden, from which Mrs. Alarcon picks extravagant bursts of broccoli for breakfast with scrambled eggs, is both comforting and unfamiliar. It is one of 30 backyard vegetable gardens recently planted by a nonprofit group here called La Mesa Verde, or The Green Table, which makes house calls to help residents of the city’s low-income, predominantly Latino neighborhoods grow their own organic produce.
Lambhill Stables Community Garden Project Glasgow 2009
Posted on December 31, 2009
How are you going to change this into a community garden?" A short video feature about the developments at the community garden site in Lambhil Stables, in north Glasgow.
  • Prison food
    Posted on December 31, 2009
    Hugh helps some young offenders set up a growing space with chickens in a gaol.
  • More Landsharing on council land
    Posted on December 31, 2009
    Doreen and Marg in Leigh who have obtained permission from their local council to start a community Landshare.
  • Landshare | Landshare community grows | channel4
    Posted on December 31, 2009
    The Landshare community grows stronger and stronger as more people offer their land to people willling to get involved with the gardening scheme.
  • Naturewise: Teifi Community Forest Garden
    Posted on December 31, 2009
    Todmorden's Good life: Introducing Britain's greenest town
    Posted on December 14, 2009
    'Grow your own' fever has gripped the Pennines community, which is aiming for self-sufficiency
    The Big Question: Should landowners be forced to give up space for allotments?
    Posted on December 14, 2009
    According to the New Local Government Network, persuading councils to turn over vacant brownfield sites – and landowners to give up under-used parts of their private estates – would quickly free up huge tracts of land that could easily be turned over to growing food.