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"City Folk's Guide to Urban Backyard Farming", a Special Report by veteran urban farmer Britney Daniels, is a must-have guide for city dwellers interested in reinventing their outdoor spaces. Discover a new shade of green amongst the urban concrete desert.This comprehensive guide takes the reader on a journey, transporting them from the hustle and bustle of city life into the rewarding realms of self-sufficiency and eco-friendly living. Britney's hands-on approach, equipped with real-life experiences, practical advice, and intuitive techniques, makes the concept of farming in the city not just feasible, but fun!Introduction to Urban Backyard FarmingChoosing Your Crops: From Seed to HarvestAnd more...With "City Folk's Guide to Urban Backyard Farming", you won't just grow plants-you'll nurture a personal connection to your food source, cultivate a greener lifestyle, and contribute to a sustainable cityscape.Whether you're a hobbyist gardener looking to expand your skills, or a complete newbie striving for a touch of green in your urban life, this guide proves that you don't need to leave the city to appreciate the countryside, you just need to open your backdoor. Embrace the thrill of self-sustainability with Britney Daniels and convert your urban backyard into a blooming paradise today!
"Britney Daniels is a Black, masculine-presenting, tattooed lesbian from a working-class background. For the last five years, she has been working as an emergency-room nurse. She began Journal of a Black Queer Nurse as a personal diary, a tool to heal from the day-to-day traumas of seeing too much and caring too much. Hilarious, gut-wrenching, and infuriating by turns, these stories are told from the perspective of a deeply empathetic, no-nonsense young nurse, who highlights the way race, inequality, and a profit-driven healthcare system make the hospital a place where systemic racism is lived. Whether it is giving one's own clothes to a homeless patient, sticking up for patients of color in the face of indifference from white doctors and nurses, or nursing one's own back pain accrued from transporting too many bodies as the morgues overflowed during the pandemic, Journal of a Black Queer Nurse reveals the ways in which care is much more than treating a physical body and how the commitment to real care-care that involves listening to and understanding patients in a deeper sense-demands nurses, especially nurses of color, must also be warriors"--
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