[Prev][Next][Index][Thread]

Alternatives to New Farm



I am sorry to hear that NEW FARM will cease publication. The Rodale
people have been important innovators in organic and sustainable
agriculture and this magazine provides news about the latest happenings.

However, there are many newsletters, newspapers and magazines that
provide some of the same information. You may have to join the
organizations to get these publications or you can subscribe to some of
the magazines.


Here is a sampling of some items that may be of interest

.Natural Food and Farming (Atlanta, Texas)
.Annals of Earth (Falmouth, Massachusetts)
.Buzzworm, The Environmental Journal (Boulder, Colorado)
.Environmental Action (Takoma Park, Maryland)
.In Context: A Quarterly of Humane Sustainable Culture (Bainbridge
 Island, Washington)
.Permaculture Activist (Primm Springs, Tennessee)
.Harrowsmith Country Life (Charlotte, Vermont)
.Prairie Journal (Des Moines, Iowa)
.Small Farm Today (Clark, Mississippi)
.Earth Ethics (Washington, DC)
.Acres USA (Kansas City, Missouri)
.Biodynamic News and Events (Kimberton, Pennsylvania)
.Health Harvest News (Washington, DC)
.The Land Stewardship Letter (Marine, Minnesota)
.Organic Food Matters: The Journal of Sustainable Agric. (Colfax, CA)
.Natural Farmer (Barre, Massachusetts)
.In Good Tilth (Corvallis, Oregon)
.Sustainable Farming Quarterly (Helena, Montana)
.Sustainable Farming News (Whiting, News)
.Earth Save (Santa Cruz, California)
.Land Letter (Arlington, Virginia)
.Remineralize the Earth (Northampton, Massachusetts)
.Living Off The Land (Melbourne, Florida)
.IPM Practitioner (Berkeley, California)
.The Beginning Farmer (Hartington, Nebraska)
.Agrarian Advocate (Davis, California)
.Back Home (Hendersonville, North California)

and lots more that provide information on organic and sustainable
agriculture and extra features such as news items, book reviews, helpful
hints, etc.

They may not replace NEW FARM entirely but obviously the Rodale People
are right in their concern that the information is widely available in
other sources.


Irwin Weintraub
Agriculture Resource Librarian
Library of Science and Medicine
Rutgers University
Piscataway, New Jersey 08855
weintraub@zodiac.rutgers.edu


Article 2368 of bionet.plants:
Newsgroups: bionet.plants
Path: bigblue.oit.unc.edu!concert!corpgate!bnrgate!nott!dgbt!netfs.dnd.ca!ub!news.kei.com!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!sgiblab!munnari.oz.au!yoyo.aarnet.edu.au!news.adelaide.edu.au!basser.cs.su.oz.au!news.cs.su.oz.au!metro!usage!aix00.csd.unsw.OZ.AU!p8443882
From: p8443882@aix00.csd.unsw.OZ.AU (David Orlovich)
Subject: Re: Plant Taxonomy Textbooks?
Message-ID: <1994Feb8.094738.22399@usage.csd.unsw.OZ.AU>
Sender: news@usage.csd.unsw.OZ.AU
Nntp-Posting-Host: aix00.csd.unsw.oz.au
Organization: University of New South Wales, Sydney Australia.
References: <2j3l4s$fk4@umd5.umd.edu>
Date: Tue, 8 Feb 1994 09:47:38 GMT
Lines: 9



A good plant systematics text is Plant Taxonomy and Biosystematics by
Clive A. Stace.  It ISN'T a book about plant identification but it has
lots of systematics - phylogenetics theory suitable for the undergraguate
student.  I think the publisher is Academic Press but I don't have a copy
with me to check.
David Orlovich.



Article 35767 of rec.gardens:
Path: bigblue.oit.unc.edu!concert!gatech!swrinde!pipex!sunic!EU.net!uunet!newstf01.cr1.aol.com!search01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: catyron@aol.com (Cat Yron)
Newsgroups: rec.gardens
Subject: Re: how to learn taxonomy
Date: 17 Jun 1994 01:32:01 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 41
Sender: news@search01.news.aol.com
Message-ID: <2trcgh$cmm@search01.news.aol.com>
References: <2tqdha$jpc@agate.berkeley.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: search01.news.aol.com

The recommendation to acquire a book by Liberty Hyde Bailey for
self-tutoring help in taxonomy is great! I agree that although many
families and genera have "split" since he was alive, he is the
clearest at laying out the essentials. His book "Hortus," (avoid the
revised third edition, by the way) is essential reading. 

The mention of the MALVA group made me smile. My daughter is named
Althaea (the old spelling, not the more common Althea). The word
means "healer," and the soothing juice of roots of several plants in
that family were once used in medicine. (The juice of Marsh Mallow
roots, for instance,  was mixed with honey and beaten egg whites to
cure soore throats, but it was so tasty that it became a kind of
treat, and now a "marshmallow" is a candy made from sugar and
geletine.)

Anyway, rather than give our child a middle name, her father and i
planted an assortment of Althaeas, including some which had been
split off into other genera (Sidalcea, Hibiscus, etc.). When she was
four, she asked why her friends had middle names and she didn't, so
we told her we wanted her to pick her own middle name and we took her
out to the Hollyhock family patch. She went right to the Althaea
zebrina and said, "That's the one i want for my middle name," and she
has been Althaea Zebrina Yronwode ever since. (For those of you
unfamiliar with it, A. zebrina is a rangy plant with rather small
flowers for its family, but they are beautifully striated in purple
over lavender, hence "zebrina" -- zebra-striped.) 

Only once in her life has anyone commented on her name. When she was
a student at the University of California at Berkeley, she went on a
blind date with a friend of a friend. The young man was a botany
student. He told her that Althaea was an "obsolete name for the
Hollyhock." She responded that she knew that -- and that her middle
name was Zebrina. "That's a Turkish species, i believe," he said. She
joked that she was afriad to date him again because next time he
might chide her for capitalizing Zebrina! 

Gosh, was that off-topic or what?

Sorry!

catherine anna yronwode, hollyhock grower