Organic Gardening & Guerrilla Gardening Show Trailer on -Survive and Thrive TV Living a organic lifestyle is possible anywhere. Organic Gardening is easy to do no matter where you live. Survive and Thrive TV

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    Mallory Gwynn explains the benefits of planting strawberries as a landscape cover.

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    Patti shows you more innovative ways to vertical garden. Check out her website at www.gardengirltv.com

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    Afraid of using technical terms to describe your lady parts? Try these fresh, mountain scented natural metaphors. Watch infoMania Thursdays at 11/10c on Current TV www.current.com www.infomaniafacebook.com VIEW more infoMania & SUBSCRIBE to the YouTube playlist here… http

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    Patti shows you how to grow vining crops vertically continued. www.gardengirltv.com

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      www.weird.tv Marty Chang explains how gardening can be similar to working in the yard.

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      Gary Vaynerchuk of Wine Library TV tv.winelibrary.com Rocketboom interview on Wine Library TV tv.winelibrary.com

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      Online Video Wine Show Host Signs with CAA: “Swish Your Wine like Mouthwash!” Gary Vaynerchuk, host of the wildly successful daily online show Wine Library TV, which has some 60000 viewers, with traffic that greatly exceeds industry Goliath, the Wine Spectator, came by the Beet.TV studios the other night for some wine tasting basics. Smelling the wine is key — as is swishing it like “mouthwash.” Well, the wines Gary brought over were certainly nothing like mouthwash. Gary really knows his wines and takes a very direct approach to sharing and teaching — there is not one bit of snobbery. The 32-year-old New Jersey wine merchant, who started his show two years ago (when Beet.TV launched, btw), has become a celebrity and is poised for stardom. Beet.TV has learned that he has been signed by the Hollywood power talent agency CAA. Not sure how his career will unfold. A big TV series, maybe “Top Sommelier?” I don’t know, but this guy is going to be big. Stay tuned. We were so pleased he came to our studios and turned us on to some great Chianti, cabs and other nice things to rinse with! Thanks for the vino and the good times. Update: Robert Scoble reports that the Kevin Rose crew at Revision3, producers of Diggnation and several Web shows, watch Wine Library TV for innovative ideas. — Andy Plesser Posted on Friday, February 15, 2008

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      It’s never too early to start little ones on healthful eating habits. Ask Nina and Jeff, two energetic mini-monsters who live in a garden full of wonderfully nutritious goodies. In To The Garden, these adorable little fiends cultivate a love of fruits and vegetables through fun-filled songs, rhymes and quizzes. “What is that orange thing buried in the ground?” “What are those red balls doing up in that tree?” They plant, hoe, harvest, and picnic their way to teaching kids the importance of fresh produce for a healthy diet. To The Garden makes small appetites grow monstrous for nature’s bounty.

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      Patti Moreno, the Garden Girl, shows you techniques to get more out of limited landspace, by growing up. Check out her website at www.gardengirltv.com This video is available through closed caption(cc) enjoy in any language. FULL TEXT Vertical Gardening Part 1 As urban gardeners, we have a limited amount of space to grow our vegetables and flowers. What I have done is I have employed verticle gardening. Right here as you can see, I have a variety of different cucumber plants. Now, a cucumber is vining crop, which means that with vertical support like this one, you can train it to grow up and the fruit, Take a look right here, can grow perfectly fine on the vine. Different types of crops that work well in a vertical garden are watermelon and pumpkin. Let us go take a look. Here, as you can see, my pumpkin plants are thriving. Pumpkin plants are also vining crops. Now, in the country, where you have a lot of space, you can just let this grow along the ground, but here in a city environment, we do not have all that space. So, what I have done here is, I put together a dog kennel. This is actually really nifty. It is exactly 4 x 4 so it fits perfectly in your raise beds. And, these vines just slough on themselves eventually. You do not have to continuously train them. Okay, so you can go vining crops on vertical supports, but there are other types of plants that also need support like my heirloom tomatoes here, this are Tiffin Mennonite tomatoes, and it grows to be a huge

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