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Urban Farm (1-year auto-renewal)

Urban Farm (1-year auto-renewal)
Urban Farm (1-year auto-renewal)

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    Customer Reviews of Urban Farm (1-year auto-renewal)

    19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars Recommended, February 7, 2011

    I like magazine overall. Great articles teaching you how to make hybrid trees and bee keeping for example. There a few articles that seemed a bit contrived – community action. I get the social aspect, but I would rather have more focus on the techniques, how-tos, and learning than the social aspects. I would recommend this magazine to people living in urban areas.

    30 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars Informative Magazine, January 13, 2011
    By 
    DMG (San Jose, CA USA) – See all my reviews

    I received the first issue of this magazine and I like it. It has a lot of good articles that are applicable to gardening such as raising rabbits and chickens. Some of the articles tend to be a bit too left-wing envirnomentalist for me, but overall I still like the magazine.

    14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars Fun, curious and a little off-beat, March 13, 2011

    I ordered this magazine on a whim during a promotion and both my husband and I are fans. My husband has previously remarked he would like to try keeping chickens and bees, and this magazine gives practical information and stories of those as well as on topics like container and community gardens. The content focuses on sustainable living without being preachy, with beautiful pictures. The magazine arrived quickly, within 2-3 weeks of placing my order. Most of the ads are in the back of the magazine, except when related to article content. Overall, the magazine is informative, a little quirky and fun.

    8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars Urban Farm makes sustainable living a fun, informative read, May 28, 2011
    By 
    Jared Castle (Roseburg, Oregon United States) – See all my reviews
    (VINE VOICE)  (TOP 500 REVIEWER)  

    `Green\’ magazines often preach instead of teach with a finger-wagging attitude that makes reading a chore. Urban Farm makes sustainable living a fun, informative read.

    The clean, easy-to-read design blends nicely with beautiful, full-color photographs and how-to illustrations that appear cover-to-cover.

    This edition included 12 feature stories, four columns – Backyard Coop, Curbside Tools, Green Thumb and Urban Feast – and a handful of other pieces. Here are Urban Farm\’s five cover teasers in the July/August 2011 edition:

    * Grow Hot Peppers on a windowsill or a balcony
    * Street Smarts: Forage for Urban Edibles
    * 4 Easy Steps to Freezer Jam
    * Simple Bio-Retention: Incorporate a Rain Garden into Your Landscape
    * Sweet Corn Season Arrives! Details and recipes inside

    The most interesting feature is Debbie Moors\’ story `Not Just Window Dressing.\’ The story features the Windowfarms Project and introduces home-hydroponic systems that are built from the contents of a recycling bin.

    I can\’t say enough about the photography. Sure, there are some stock photos but the main features nicely balance all the elements. Rhoda Peacher\’s freezer jam photos are simply mouth-watering (Yum! Brambleberry!) There are eight step-by-step color photos accompanying Michael Locke\’s instructions on how to build a kitchen table from a salvaged pre-hung door (each photo is given enough real estate that you won\’t need to rummage through a junk drawer for a magnifying glass).

    In summary, Urban Farm is my best, new magazine subscription in recent memory. I\’m pleasantly surprised by the use of color, quality content and the friendly tone. I used to find myself flipping through Better Homes and Gardens and Good Housekeeping, looking for something interesting to pop out but more often disappointed in the results. I didn\’t bother to renew Real Simple, which is chock full of pricey gadgets and so bereft of utilitarian advice it should be classified as a home show catalog instead of a magazine. If you subscribe to these other magazines and find them unfulfilling then I recommend Urban Farm.

    Rating: Five stars.

    8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars Great magazine, March 8, 2011

    We were already into urban gardening before we subscribed to this magazine. When I found it on Amazon.com it piqued my interest. We read a copy and loved every article. It doesn\’t have really indepth articles but it sure gets you motivated to try out the various ideas. We love having fresh vegetables every day just about here in Florida and are not worried about any mass outbreak of illness because of production line veggies.

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