Bazsites.com Biointensive Culture
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Bountiful Gardens - Biointensive supplies, seeds, garden tools, books, pamphlets, videos; Bountiful Gardens and Ecology Action workshops; sells all biointensive and Grow Biointensive products.
- Biointensive for Russia - People-to-people environmental gardening project supported by Ecology Action and USAID. Works via Russian-language publications and seminars hosted by ecology groups and agricultural colleges in former Soviet Union.
- Minifarms Network - Ken Hargesheimer teaches organic, biointensive, raised bed and market gardening, mini-farming, and ranching worldwide. Includes articles, books, programs, suggested applications, tools, and methods.
- Ecology Action - Organization providing research and promotion of biointensive gardening and mini-farming, conserving soil and resources, sustainability. Includes definitions, tours, workshops, conferences, books, and brief case histories.
- Seattle Tilth Association - Promotes organic gardening in an urban setting. Lists activities, workshops, children's programs, employment and volunteer opportunities, and links to related websites.
- Center for Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems - On campus of University of California, Santa Cruz; research, education, public service program to raise ecological sustainability and social justice in food and agriculture system. Runs 2-acre Alan Chadwick Garden, and 25-acre Farm. Both sites managed with organic methods; are research, teaching, training facilities for students, staff, faculty.
Wikipedia Articles
- Srubna culture - The Srubna culture (Зрубнá культ́ура, also Timber-grave culture), was a Late Bronze Age (16th-9th centuries BC) culture. It is a successor to the Yamna culture, the Catacomb culture and the Abashevo culture.
- Working class culture - Working class culture is a range of cultures created by or popular among working class people. The cultures can be contrasted with high culture and folk culture and are sometimes equated with popular culture and low culture (the counterpart of high culture).
- Intangible culture - Intangible culture is the opposite of culture which is tangible or touchable such as a castle, a statue, or a painting. Intangible culture includes song, music, drama, skills, crafts, and the other parts of culture that can be recorded but cannot be touched and interacted with, without a vehicle for the culture.
- Wielbark culture - Wielbark culture also known as, Willenberg culture (, , ) was a pre-literate culture that archaeologists have identified with the Goths; it appeared during the first half of the 1st century AD. It replaced the Oksywie culture, in the area of modern-day Eastern Pomerania around the lower Vistula river, which was related to the Przeworsk ...
- Independence II culture - The Independence II Culture was an ancient culture that lived in North Greenland from the 8th century BC to the 1st century BC; this culture rose in the same zone where rose the Independence I culture, fallen six centuries before, and shacked up with the Dorset culture that lived in South Greenland.