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HIDDEN: Prepper's Secret Edible Garden

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Do you need to hide your edible garden from the prying eyes of neighbors?
How do you hide food growing in plain sight?
In this book, you will learn about 10 plants that are not only ornamental but are edible as well. Supplement your prepper food stash with fresh, renewable food sources while beautifying your garden with plants that will grow in most of North America!
But, there's no need to wait until SHTF. Learn how to enjoy eating these plants today with almost 40 recipes that are included in this book. Buy this book to learn how you can start growing "hidden" food today!

176 pages, Kindle Edition

Published July 9, 2016

2 people want to read

About the author

Jill b.

48 books6 followers
Self-Reliance -- One Step at a Time

Get free e-books at byJillb.com

Reliance on one job. Reliance on the agri-industrial food system. Are you ready to break free, take control and to rely on yourself?

With a no-nonsense style, Jill Bong draws from her own homesteading experiences and mistakes, and writes books focusing on maximizing output with minimal input to save you time and money.

Jill was born and raised in a country with one of highest population densities in the world. Dreaming of chickens and fruit trees, she left the trappings of the big city and is setting up her homestead in an American town with a population of less than 300.

Jill writes under the pen name Jill b. She is an author, entrepreneur, homesteader and is the co-inventor and co-founder of Chicken Armor, an affordable, low maintenance chicken saddle. She has also written over a dozen books on homesteading and self-reliance.

Jill has been mentioned/quoted in various publications including The Associated Press, The New York Times, The Denver Post and ABC News. She has written for various magazines including Countryside and Small Stock Journal, Molly Green, Farm Show Magazine and Backyard Poultry Magazine. She holds an Engineering degree from an Ivy League from a previous life.

At its height, her previous homestead included over 100 chickens, geese and ducks, as well as cats, a dog, bees and a donkey named Elvis. She currently learning permaculture techniques to apply to her homestead in rural Oregon.

Learn more by visiting her site byJillb.com

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