Lost in the Farmers Market

Welcome to the LITFM weekly blog. This blog is a text-based complement to the LITFM YouTube channel and covers the forage food side of gardening. It is my goal to make gardening and forage food accessible for all while promoting good land stewardship and sustainable practices by providing honest and balanced information backed by verifiable scientific fact. Since this blog now focuses on wild plants or ‘weeds’ we will be taking an objective look at them and their uses. Thank you for reading.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Meet the Houseplants: Part 2

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Season's Greetings and welcome back to another episode of Lost in the farmer's market, in the interest of keeping the content f...

Meet the Houseplants: Part 1

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Welcome back to another episode of Lost in the Farmer's Market As you may have noticed due to the holidays and college assignments ...
Saturday, November 10, 2012

Food Security Part One

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Welcome back to another episode of Lost in the Farmer’s Market, due to college work load, and the extra time needed to pull information...
Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Double your posting, double your plants!

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Welcome back to another episode of Lost in the Farmers Market.  As you may have seen today has had a double post, the earlier one i...

Always something out there

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Here we are at the juncture of summer and fall; up north there is no doubt that the deciduous trees are already showing color. In the south...
Monday, October 15, 2012

Cold-Weather Projects

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  The wonderment of autumn is best seen through a lens that only the rapid color change of deciduous foliage can cast. Here we ar...
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Bordeaux Regional Nursery

Thomas Clark
Fayetteville, North Carolina, United States
Thomas Clark is the proprietor of Bordeaux Regional Nursery, which is located in Fayetteville North Carolina. He has a degree in Horticultural technology and has twenty-six (as of 2024) years of field experience in landscaping and horticulture. He is currently working on a third edition of his garden book 'Southward Skies: A Guide to Southern Gardening'.
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