Thursday, 1 January 2009

Plants for a future blog

Welcome to the new Plants for a Future blog!

7 comments:

chrismarsh said...

Happy New Year! to everybody, and thank you to Paul Harding for setting up this blog for us. This contains material which was previously on an ordinary website, and because some of the links here do not work, I've parked the old stuff at:
http://www.homeandlocalfood.co.uk/pfaforguk/pfaforgukhome.htm
from there you can get to the PFAF charity Mem and Arts, the TOR for the Survey and the letter inviting Proposals for taking over the website, www.pfaf.org
Best wishes, Chris

georgesobol said...

Happy New Year All
Thanks Paul for setting this up. Looking forward to exciting developments in 2009!

Kind Regards, George

Thalia said...

happy new year to grandma and all her friends

thalia, lavy and flash the kittens!

It's Snowball said...

The pfaf.org website keeps redirecting to http://www.web-mania.com/data-transfer.html

At least on my computer. Any ideas?

ekoradgivning said...

Hi
There must be some kind of trouble with the web hostel as I am experiencing the same thing as Snowball when I try to open www.pfaf.org.

I hope Ken and Addy will update us when they have found something similar to what they are looking for. I met you two in 2001 and have spread the word about pfaf wherever I have gone since. I am am building gardens with edible plants and teaching city farming in Sweden and another friend , Anders , that have visited you run a nurserey with edible plants today. Your ideas have spread like rings on water, further than you realize. Best wishes!

Tora Råberg
www.ekoradgivning.se

loora said...

Thanks for your hydroponics garden news blog. I enjoy it very much. Were a usa and worldwide provider and we loved your article, so well put it on our blogs associated with out site http://www.hydroponicswholesale.com

Simon said...

Thank you for all the work that has gone into Plants for a Future. The database and the articles on the website are a really valuable resource and an inspiration. I have found them really useful for planning and planting a small forest garden in the UK and I'm sure they have inspired many others too.

I'm documenting my experiences in the hope that it might encourage even more people to give forest gardening a try: Landed - forest gardening

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