How to grow 300 pounds of food in your backyard

Struggling to grow your own food? This workshop teaches you how to grow 300 pounds of food in your backyard – in less than 4 hours per week!

Sign up now to be ready for next season!

As a gardener, you want to grow lots of healthy, chemical-free food for your family.

And it sounds simple enough…but, often it feels impossible! When should you start seeds? Why didn’t my plants grow? How do I figure out what went wrong?

But it doesn’t have to be such a challenge. In fact, with the right system, you can grow over 300 pounds of food in a normal suburban backyard – in only a few hours per week! Leaving you plenty of time to find new recipes for all those organic veggies!

WORKSHOP: How to grow 300 Pounds of Food in Your Backyard

WHEN: October 16 @ 1pm EST

WHAT: A 90 minute LIVE workshop + live Q&A

COST: $35

Here’s what you’ll learn:

1) How to keep your eye on the prize and get over the overwhelm of growing food successfully

2) The BEST way to develop a garden plan that will take the guesswork out of growing food

3) What it looks like to plant your garden THE RIGHT WAY

4) 4 steps to figuring out what went wrong – and what to do about it

Turn your two-tomato garden into an organic food paradise!

It’s time to finally say “good-bye” to dead plants, no harvests, and not knowing how to fix your garden issues. Sign up for the How to Grow 300 Pounds of Food in Your Backyard workshop and learn how to grow tons of organic food in less than 4 hours per week!

how to grow 300 pounds of food

MEET YOUR INSTRUCTOR

Veronica Regly is a busy wife, chicken keeper, and long time gardener. After gardening for over 10 years she figured growing more of her own food wouldn’t be a problem.

But with a full time job, a family, daily life it seemed like growing tons of healthy organic food wasn’t possible.

Finally, after much soul-searching, strategizing, and simplifying, she came up with a system she’s been able to stick to – and it’s changed her family forever! Today she teaches suburban gardening on the Mini Urban Farm blog and YouTube channel – and enjoys teaching other gardeners how they can grow their own food in just a few hours per week.