Grow Your Own Meal, Inc.

Grow Your Own Meal, Inc. Grow Your Own Meal is a 501 (c3) non-profit providing resources for Boulder County farmers & ranchers Our mission is to revitalize local agriculture.

We source resources for farmers, their families & the community to support development of innovative, sustainable & ecologically safe growing techniques helping to preserve the agricultural roots of Boulder County, CO

Heads up   residents the toxic chemicals to which none of us are immune to being negatively impacted by the lack of prog...
06/18/2026

Heads up residents the toxic chemicals to which none of us are immune to being negatively impacted by the lack of progress is remediation.

A pump and treat plan has been proposed to treat contaminated groundwater. Construction could begin as soon as late summer.

06/17/2026

There is so much goodness that emanates from **ds, you need to educate yourself.

Overcoming challenges breeds innovation.  Here is an imaginative solution for upgrading the energy systems of aging buil...
06/17/2026

Overcoming challenges breeds innovation. Here is an imaginative solution for upgrading the energy systems of aging buildings.

Denver is trying to turn an unlikely resource β€” sewage β€” into a climate solution.

For those with less time to devote to   in a home garden ecosystem.
06/14/2026

For those with less time to devote to in a home garden ecosystem.

Some veggies can grow surprisingly fast in the garden. We asked gardening experts to reveal the fastest growing vegetables and the ideal time to plant them.

06/14/2026

You toss one in the trash every few days without thinking about it. By December, you've thrown away 384 perfectly engineered planting vessels that cost garden centers four dollars each. That's over fifteen hundred dollars of seedling infrastructure heading to a landfill, and nobody told you.

Here's what those tubes actually do when you fill them with soil and tuck a seed inside. The cardboard cylinder forces the root to grow vertically instead of spiraling around in circles like it does in plastic pots. You end up with a taproot that drives straight down, building the kind of foundation system that laughs at drought and stands firm in wind. It's the difference between a plant with shallow cocktail-party roots and one with an anchor.

But the real magic happens at planting time. You don't unpot anything. You don't disturb a single root hair. You dig your hole, drop the entire tube in the ground, cover it with soil, and walk away. The cardboard walls dissolve within weeks, releasing the root system exactly when it's ready to expand. The plant never experiences that traumatic moment when roots hit air and panic. It just keeps growing as if nothing happened, because from its perspective, nothing did.

While those walls break down, they're feeding an entire underground workforce you never see. Soil microbes arrive to feast on the cardboard fibers, reproducing rapidly and creating networks that help your plant absorb nutrients. The decomposition process releases small amounts of carbon that neighboring plants can use. You didn't just plant a seedling. You planted a biodegradable fertilizer packet that delivers nutrition on a time-release schedule perfectly synced to root development.

The same tube that protected your toilet paper becomes a guardian for tender stems. Slice it into rings, press each one into the soil around a transplant, and you've built a fortress that stands between your baby plant and every creature that crawls at night looking for soft tissue to sever. The barrier works for weeks, then melts into the earth without leaving a trace.

Stack them flat and they become w**d suppression that improves the ground instead of contaminating it. Unlike landscape fabric that eventually shreds into permanent plastic confetti, cardboard smothers unwanted seeds and then vanishes into humus. You get all the benefits of a barrier with none of the environmental guilt that comes from burying synthetic materials around your food.

The brilliance is in what you're not doing. You're not spending money on peat pots that cost a fortune and take forever to decompose. You're not wrestling with root-bound transplants or watching seedlings wilt from shock. You're not buying plastic collars or chemical w**d preventers. You're intercepting something on its way to waste and converting it into five different garden solutions that work better than what you'd buy.

Three hundred eighty-four chances every year to build stronger plants, protect vulnerable stems, feed your soil, and block w**ds. All you have to do is reach into the trash can before the bin goes to the curb. The resource was always there. You just didn't know it was worth saving. [V5JJ1]

Labeled as  , w**d does not mean there are no beneficial applications for essential forest restoration work necessary to...
06/14/2026

Labeled as , w**d does not mean there are no beneficial applications for essential forest restoration work necessary to regenerate an ecosystem devastated by .

A pioneer that heals and hijacks in the same gesture

A clever solution, both economical and practical.
06/14/2026

A clever solution, both economical and practical.

They may look like a canvas of cotton candy, but these rainbow nets are actually a brilliant form of pest control.

Stretched over crops, the kaleidoscope of colors confuses insects like aphids and whiteflies, scrambling their ability to locate the plants underneath. Some farmers have cut pesticide use by 25‑50% without losing yields.

The nets also act as shields against harsh sun, heavy rain, and wind, regulating humidity and reducing plant stress. It's a simple, sustainable trick that lets farmers protect harvests without dousing them in chemicals.

Practical science, painted in every color of the spectrum. πŸ§‘β€πŸŒΎπŸŒˆ

Focusing on   is a productive path to managing the widespread damage to  's   above and below the waterlines.
06/14/2026

Focusing on is a productive path to managing the widespread damage to 's above and below the waterlines.

At one time, kelp forests β€” which shelter fish, slow erosion, and sequester carbon β€” grew along a third of the world’s coastlines. Now, scientists are working to bolster heat-stressed kelp by attacking the urchins that prey on them and transplanting hardier kelp varieties.

Support this effort for the sponsored programs essential for securing  ,  , and   for optimum health and well-being.
06/14/2026

Support this effort for the sponsored programs essential for securing , , and for optimum health and well-being.

More than 450 schools, farmers, food hubs, and nutrition organizations are urging Congress to create a "Local Food Purchase Option" in the farm bill that would allow schools to use existing USDA school meal funding to buy fresh, locally sourced foods from nearby farmers.The change would reduce barri...

A low-tech solution for   on ranchland finds support for implementation from an   grant.
06/10/2026

A low-tech solution for on ranchland finds support for implementation from an grant.

In this segment, rancher Ariel Greenwood shows us an innovative project to keep water on the landscape longer: one-rock dams. Many rocks wide (but only one-rock high, hence the name), the construction of these dams was funded by an Environmental Quality Incentive Program (EQIP) grant, a valuable res...

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916 Pine Street
Boulder, CO
80302

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