
Growing food to replace the lawn. Adapting our suburban property for food production. Reconnecting with the seasonal rhythms of the year. We can't all live on a farm, but we can do our bit where we're planted. I photo-document our progress.
| Platform | Pricing | Freemium | Publishes | Weekly | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Issues | 72 | Founded | 4 years ago | Last Issue | 3 months ago |
| Active | |||||

Each bee senses that her one obligation is to give the smallest motion of her flight muscles to the collective work of keeping the queen and the colony’s honey stores warm. The whole hive knows they will survive only if they shiver together...
…three months since you looked at me. So sang this Substack to me, to the tune of the 1998 Barenaked Ladies’ song “One Week,” in a piteous yet successful attempt to use the pop culture of a quarter century ago to grab my att...
Pears in the mini orchard, hazy day
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During the entire season, the Sun arose each morning as though in a cloud of smoke, red and rayless, shedding little...
The bees have been greedy for the spotlight here of late, so let’s lead off with the plants this time around.
Wild bergamot, beloved by bumblebees. Not the same bergamot found in Earl Grey tea. Thanks to Phillip’s b...
This is our first year of having bees survive the Winter, and thus our first experience with Spring beekeeping. Instead of starting over with a nuc (“nuke,” a small box with a queen and a few frames of bee...
Subscribers, engagement, traffic and sponsorship for The Suburb Farm.
| Subscribers | Engagement | 65 | Monthly Web Visits | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accepts Sponsors | Estimated Cost per Ad | ||||
The writers behind this newsletter.
Midwesterner, mom & wife. We're growing food in the suburbs. Transforming our lawn into a mini-farm. Relearning centuries-old skills. Trying to walk gently on the earth & on the grid. Modern life guided by the liturgical, agrarian calendar.
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