Wild Revolution · From Industrial to Green · Our job is to plant seeds

Select Your Instant Gardens - Choose from

Salsa (Tomato, onion, cilantro…) | Three Sisters (squash bean corn)

Brassicas (cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower…) | Pollinator | Flower Salad | Apple | Grape | Medicine

Lay out your instant garden guild (30“X30”) and/or seed strips (18”) and cover with an inch of soil.

Water your new garden daily until you see sprouts growing!

Choose any of the guilds below

| Add seed strips between guilds or as patterns and borders in your garden | Have fun planting your garden |

Why Grow Wild?

I think the most important thing we can do for ourselves and the environment right now is to plant wild. Not only is it way more nutritious than the modified produce we buy at the market, but it benefits our bio diversity in nature as well. With the increasing interest of foraging, we should look into growing wild instead. Nurture instead nature of taking from nature.

Most wild plants are so easy to grow, and the majority of them grow in all types of soil and need very little maintenance. They also grow abundantly with little effort, so you can sit back, relax and observe nature’s magic unfolding with an abundance of nutrition.

Feed your body what it is missing: Wild Edible Fresh Foods

Feature Seed:

Wild Spinach / Lambs Quarter

The young greens, especially when tender in the spring, can be juiced for their calcium and vitamins A, C, and B complex in addition to vital enzymes, chlorophyll, and trace minerals. The juice has a gentle detoxifying nature.

Wild Spinach is rich in magnesium and potassium, it has more fiber, beta carotene (pro-vitamin A), vitamin C, riboflavin, calcium, zinc, copper and manganese than domestic spinach. Domestic spinach has more iron and folic acid.

—From Edible Wild Plants”: Wild Foods from Dirt to Plate, by John Kallas, PhD)

The definition is this…

A Guild is often a reference to a group of people or plants each has its own property in the guild to help it survive and thrive to the best of its abilities.

Instead of planting monoculture, permaculture teaches us how to build guilds. Working with nature, not against it.