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Comment Policy

Share your ideas!  Speak right into the zucchini, I mean, microphone.

Share your ideas! Speak right into the zucchini, I mean, microphone.

Hi.

So glad you’re here, and I can’t wait to see what ideas, comments, and questions you have to share.

But before you plant your “seeds of wisdom” into the comment section on one of our pages, please take a quick look at the guidelines below.

Things we like to see in the Comment Section:

  • Constructive ideas that add to an article’s focus
  • Sharing what you found helpful in a post
  • Questions or problems you have about a given topic
  • Solutions that have worked for you
  • Constructive criticism: It’s okay to disagree with the ideas in an article or a comment, but it must be courteous and not disrespectful
  • Any combination of the above

“Weeds” that will get pulled from the Comment Section:

Below are some examples of things that will get yanked quicker than crabgrass.

  • Comments that indicate you didn’t actually read, watch, or listen to the content
  • Off topic personal comments or unrelated professional rants
  • Being an anonymous troublemaker
  • Obscene or racist remarks
  • Any form of defamation
  • Threatening us or other visitors
  • Keywords in the name field instead of your real name
  • Violation of anyone’s copyright, trademark, etc.
  • Spammy links back to your latest venture

That’s simple enough, right?

I look forward to hearing from you!

 

Comments

  1. jon hutton says

    August 17, 2014 at 11:40 am

    Can’t wait to tell you about my new waterless method of growing all plants. This will take a great community like you fine folk here to develop what works and what doesn’t. I have had great success at it, but because this method has never been written about most all of the knowledge base will have to come from trial and error. I stumbled on this over 9 years ago, and am working at it almost full time now. It requires no weeding, spraying, tilling, digging or watering. No well water, or tap water. So lets blog our results because this has so much potential to help drought farming areas.

    Reply
  2. Winni says

    September 22, 2019 at 10:18 am

    Really wanted to print this recipe, but was utterly dismayed when I did to find that I got 21 pages of junk along with it.
    I am shocked that Rodale does not have a more sustainable was to allow us to print a recipe.

    Reply
    • James Early says

      September 24, 2019 at 10:03 am

      Winni,
      Not sure which recipe you wanted to print out. What recipe did you want to print? Were the 21 pages of stuff on my site or Rodale’s?

      Reply

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