Although I wish Pippa well with this, I have to agree that it's not right for me. For those of us trying to grow our own within a budget as well as having health, peace of mind, educational and other reasons, it is far cheaper to pop to local shops to buy seed and then learn by trial and error, library books and internet. There are several reknowned, knowledgable web sites offering free topical weekly email advice. As a novice, I for one would have needed (and still do) more than 1 or 2 Pippa credits for personal queries but obviously her time is constrained. That isn't saying that people without limiting budgets wouldn't find this useful, as I'm sure the plants are top notch and the advice from Pippa would be a very valuable aid!
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
GYO With Pippa Greenwood
Collapse
X
-
Is this cashing in on newbies inexperience? You'd be mad to pay those prices IMHO. You can get 3 packets of seeds for a quid!
I can see it being popular amongst the pretentious middle class band wagon jumpers, but seems inappropriate to me to have it here, when innocent newbies won't know any better.
Comment
-
'Pretentious middle class band wagon jumpers'? It's only you poor working class hicks that can grow real vegetables then is it?
There's plenty on here that are no longer 'innocent newbies' (whatever they are!) that have 'difficulty' in growing certain things from seed.Last edited by smallblueplanet; 02-10-2009, 11:00 AM.To see a world in a grain of sand
And a heaven in a wild flower
Comment
-
Originally posted by smallblueplanet View Postthat have 'difficulty' in growing certain things from seed.
However, I think the 'Pippa credits' are a bit gimmicky, and wouldn't induce me to buy one of her kits, solely to benefit from her advice, I'd rather look it up in one of my books, or search on here. There isn't much that we don't grow as a community - someone is bound to know the answer to our questions, aren't they.
BTW (just incase anyone is interested) - my plant kit arrived from vegetable plants direct, and they look great. He admits he has struggled with nature and demand this year, and has had to source some of his bare root stock from a local farmer who grows for market, rather than supplying from his own nursery. But, they were well packed (in damp newspaper), well labelled, and look to be nice healthy plants. I'll be popping them in my now empty beds this afternoon, yay!!Last edited by Pumpkin Becki; 02-10-2009, 12:10 PM.
Comment
-
Bren - on seeing your post I signed up. It seems straightforward enough.
Sign up for her newsletter, on completing the form you get an email thanking you for signing up with an attached PDF of the E-Book.
You can unsubscribe from the list whenever you like and she promises not to share details with anyone else.
I don't usually sign up for things but I figure I could do with all the info I can muster on organic gardening and the newsletter may be useful to me starting out. It may contain tricks people haven't thought of.
So, it's not a free lunch as you've got to join her mailing list, but you don't have to stay on it anyway.
Hope this Helps.
Comment
-
Hey Bren, I wonder would you agree with this.
I've just had a read now.
It's probably decent for someone who's tempted by organic gardening and needs a summary of the reasons to go organic. The "how" of "the how and the why" is somewhat thin on the ground though. More for someone who has no clue how you'd get by without chemicals, but they'd most certainly have to read further to get even a basic understanding of organic gardening.
My advice to anyone thinking about it is if you already have a bit of a clue about organic gardening it won't really bring much (if anything) new to the table, but if you want something to outline to others why organic is the way to go, it might be a good one.Last edited by organic; 15-10-2009, 02:55 PM.
Comment
Latest Topics
Collapse
Recent Blog Posts
Collapse
Comment