How to Tell if You're Ovulating

Many of the forms of birth control currently available to women seem like easy fixes—IUDs, the pill, hormone shots—you put the thing in your body or you tae the little pill and you can forget about what your body is doing. It’s all taken care of. The result of this has been a severe alienation from our own bodies, to the point that many women have no idea when they are the most or least fertile. So when standard forms of birth control don’t work or are unavailable, women end up unexpectedly pregnant.

Learning how to decipher al the subtle changes our bodies go through every month not only grounds us in our own skin, but allows us to understand what ur bodies are doing and autonomously act on what they need. So how to tell if your ovaries just released that lil’ magic speck known as the ovum?

Generally, ovulation happens halfway through your cycle, but each body is different and external variables can affect our cycles month to month. One good tipoff is an increase in sexual appetite. If you suddenly find yourself wanting to hump the closest hipster, you may be ovulating. As far as the internal workings, a good first step is checking out your cervix—if you never have, you can sometimes acquire plastic speculums from reproductive health clinics. If that fails, there’s always the “grab a spec out of the drawer when the gyno’s out of the room” approach—although this could put a strain on future spec resources. How about sharing one between friends?

Once you’ve got a good view… your cervix changes color and texture depending on where you are in your cycle. Bright blue or verging on bluish? Probably time for a prego test! When you are ovulating, your cervix will be pulled higher up and it may be softer and larger than usual (which you will not recognize unless you routinely peek up in there. The os (openings to your cervix) may also be slightly open.

In conjunction with the daily guise of your cunt, your juices are very telling. You taste differently when you’re about to bleed than when you’re ovulating… Doing routine taste tests—or getting someone else to–  can help determine where you are at in your cycle. Also, the consistency of vaginal mucous changes as hormones shift though your cycle. To test your juices, make sure your fingers are clean and clipped and gently swipe around your cervix. If you find a clear, salty, slightly thick blob of what appears to be snot, you’re ovulating! Before you ovulate your mucous will be thinner and kind of milky and creamy. A good test is to test the mucous with your fingers: when you’re ovulating, it will be almost gummy, and it should stretch between your fingers. Pre-fertile mucous will not be as tacky. Right after you ovulate, you will find thick, sticky, maybe curdy or clumpy, white mucous. If it is sticky and white with little or no snot, it’s safe to say you just ovulated. The rise in progesterone as your period approaches makes your vagina dry up a bit. With some practice and close attention, it is also possible to actually feel your ovaries releasing an egg—a very slight pain or tightness in the vicinity of your ovaries is the cue.

Knowing these things does not do much unless you routinely check the status of your vagina and familiarize yourself with the progression of your cycle, including moods and bodily changes. Making it a weekly habit to do a little self-inspection goes a long way toward planning birth control as well as the amazing empowerment of knowing what your body is doing and when.

Compiled from my head/body and “Cunt” by Inga Muscio, Seal Press, 2002.

Heroin/Downer Overdose Prevention

Learning to deal with drug overdose is a key tool in harm reduction—.

 

*Warning Signs of an Overdose

-Can’t be woken up by noise or pain.

-Blue lips and fingernails; snoring, gasping, or gurgling.

-Slow or shallow breathing (less than 1 breath every 5 seconds).

-If the person is still unconscious but doesn’t seem OK, try to keep them awake and monitor their breathing.

What to do if someone is overdosing

-Try to wake them up by calling their name, shaking them, or raking their breastbone with your knuckles.

-If you need to leave the person alone, put them on their side so if they vomit, the won’t choke.

-If the person des not respond to noise or pain, call 911. Stay calm. Tell the operator where you are and that someone is not breathing. Stash IDs and drugs if necessary.

-Don’t be scared to call for help because you’re worried that police will arrive—jail is better than death. In San Francisco and other cities, if police come they are ONLY there to back up the paramedics and NOT to arrest anyone.

-If they aren’t breathing, use rescue breathing: at least 1 breath every 5 seconds, tilt their head back and make sure their airway is clear. Pinch the nose closed, and give 1 slow breath every 5 seconds until the paramedics arrive or they start breathing normally. Watch to see that their chest is rising and falling with every breath.

Preventing Overdose

­-Fix with a friend.

-Avoid mixing heroin/pills with alcohol.

-Use less after getting out of jail, the hospital, or detox.

-Release the tourniquet before injecting the whole shot.

-Ask at your local needle exchange about getting naxolone (Narcan), the medication that brings people back from an opiate (heroin) overdose.

-If you live in the Bay Area, you can get naloxone at many places. Call the Drug Overdose Prevention and Education Project (part of the Harmed Reduction Coalition) for more information at 510.444.6969 x16

 

Harm Reduction 101

-Understand drug use as a complex, multifaceted phenomenon that encompasses a continuum of behaviors from severe abuse to total abstinence, and acknowledges that some ways of using drugs are clearly safer than others.

-Establishes quality of individual and community life and wellbeing—not necessarily cessation of all drug use—as the criteria for successful interventions and policies.

-Calls for the non-judgmental, non-coercive provision of services and resources to people who use drugs and the communities in which they live in order to assist them in reducing attendant harm.

-Ensures that drug users and those with a history of drug use routinely have a real voice in the creation of programs and policies designed to serve them.

-Affirms drug users themselves as the primary agents of reducing the harms of their drug use, and seeks to empower users to share information and support each other in strategies that meet their actual conditions of use.

-Recognizes that the realities of poverty, class, racism, social isolation, past trauma, sex-based discrimination, and other social inequalities affect both people’s vulnerability to and capacity for effectively dealing with drug-related harm.

-Does not attempt to minimize or ignore the real and tragic harm and danger associated with licit and illicit drug use.

Book List 2006

Fiction

-Message from Forever, Marlo Morgan.

City of Joy, Dominique Lapierre.

-Bless Me Ultima, Rodolfo Anaya.

The Tin Drum, Hunter Grass.

Reservation Blues, Sherman Alexis.

The Dewbraker, Edwidge Danticat.

-Caramelo, Sandra Cisneros.

In the Time of Butterflies, Julia Alvarez.

-Everything is Illuminated, Jonathan Safran Foer.

-The Satanic Verses, Salman Rushdie.

-Rent Girl, Michelle Tea.

-Mixed Reviews, Aaron Cometbus.

The Alchemist, Paulo Coehlo.

-The God of Small Things, Arundhati Roy.

-You Shall Know Our Velocity, Dave Eggars.

The Heart is Deceitful Above All Things, J.T. Leroy.

Ulysses, James Joyce.

 

Kids

-A Wrinkle in Time, Madeleine L’Engle.

The Seed, Isabel Pin.

Abiyoyo, Pete Seeger and Michael Hays.

The Phantom Tollbooth, Norton Juster.

The Princess Knight, Cornelia Funke.

 

Non-fiction

-War Against the Weak: Eugenics and America’s Campaign to Create a Master Race, Edwin Black.

No Surrender Writings from an Anti-Imperialist Political Prisoner, David Gilbert.

The Better World Handbook, Jones, Hanenfler, Johbnson and Klocke.

-O Solo Homo: The New Queer Performance, Holly Hughes and David Roman.

­-Exile and Pride: Disability, Queerness and Liberation, Eli Claire.

-Wobblies! A Graphic History of the Industrial Workers of the World, Paul Buhle and Nicole Schulman.

-Mongo: Adventures in Trash, Ted Botha.

-Yakuza: Japan’s Criminal Underworld, David E. Kaplan and Alec Dubro.

Cinderella’s Big Score: Women of the Punk Rock and Indie Underground, Maria Raha.

Reinventing the Enemy’s Language: Contemporary Native Women’s Writing of North America, Joy Harjo, Gloria Bird, and Valerie Martinez.

-Can’t Stop Won’t Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation, Jeff Change.

Back from the Land: How Young Americans Went to Nature in the 1970s and Why They Came Back, Eleanor Agnew.

Central America: At Home and Abroad, Hollbrook Teter.

-Woman at Point Zero, Nawal El Saadawi.

-We Make the Road by Walking: Conversations on Education and Social Change, Myles Horton and Paulo Freire.

-Revolucion! Cuban Poster Art, Lincoln Cushing.

­-Borderlands, Gloria Anzaldua.

Peops, Fly.

-Ham on Rye, Charles Bukowski.

-Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom, bell hooks.

Rights on Trial! Odyssey of a People’s Lawyer, Arthur Kinoy.

-Manifest Destiny, Anders Stephenson.

-Thirrd World omen and the Politics of Feminism, Chandra Mohanty.

-Sweatshop Warriors, Miriam Ching Yoon Louie.

-Killing the Black Body, Dorothy Roberts.

Doris Anthology, Cindy.

 

Zines

­-Distress, Astro Girl.

Loitering is Good, Joey Alone.

The Match

-Scam, Eric Lyle.

-Maximun Rock and Roll

-Absolutely Zippo

-Slug and Lettuce, Christ(ine)

FagSchool, Brontez

Inkling Zine, Melissa Kline

-Long Ago and Right Now Audio Zine, Sara Jaffe and Melissa Kline.

KerBloom, Artnoose

-Teenage Death Songs, Tennessee Jones.

Routed- A Road Map for Those Who are Fucked with by R.S.I.

-This Little Girl of Mine, Moe.

A Brooklyn Diary, Carolyn Connolly.

Don't Dream It– Be It!

There is no easy roadmap to get from the troubled world we inhabit now to a sustainable, non-oppressive future because there are so many possible routes and no clearly defined destination—we seek freedom rather than a new prison.

Sometimes it seems like a lot of people aren’t on a road, but are instead content to stay where they are—accepting the established order, hierarchy, and short-term environmental practices. Part of building a new world is figuring out—personally and socially—how to get beyond the hopelessness that causes people to accept the status quo. It is hard to imagine a different world and even harder to see a way to get there. The most basic form of activism—underlying the concrete things people do like cooking Food Not Bombs or going to protests—is fighting the sense of hopelessness and apathy that makes an uprising and the construction of new structures possible.

Imagining a different world is crucial to getting beyond despair and an acceptance of the existing order, because in thinking about how a different society would look, things start seeming less permanent and pre-determined. We need to figure out why so many folks assume that centralized control by the few over the many, permanent poverty and inequality, structural violence and war, intolerance, ugly and soulless cities, and environmental destruction for every human function are “normal.”

The current social order assumes that everyone will behave selfishly, but our lives tell us that people are generous. A different world of freedom, cooperation, free time for play, and sustainability floats in our minds—community gardens, childcare collectives, free skools, cooperative communities, collective workplaces. Imagining new structures and forms of organization is a crucial activity for all of us who struggle for change.

But just imagining a different world is clearly not enough. A lot of people talk a good game about how they wish things could be, or what they will do after the revolution, which begs the question: Why the gap between our dieas and our daily lived practice?

Daily living forces everyone to make constant decisions: to decide whether you’ll compromise and conform with “the way things are” or do your best to live what’s in your heart and your imagination. Those individual daily decisions eventually add up to your lifetime. Each decision seems minor—each compromise and conformity can get rationalized as “necessary, realistic, or inevitable.” But if you imagine a different world—a world with cooperation, sharing, equitable distribution of resources and sustainable environmental choices—why do you think that some moment in the future will be the right moment to start living according to your vision?

What are you waiting for? If you think about it, the capitalist/industrial system requires participation, whether to “get ahead” or just to survive. Learning to live according to human values instead of economic imperatives means figuring out how to reduce your dependence on the capitalist infrastructure while increasing your social and physical wellbeing. This includes redefining property, transportation, food, entertainment, and family relationships—really all relationships. Each of us must escape from whatever imprisons us. While everyone’s obstacles and options are different—economic class and many other demographic factors that influence the roads of resistance people take—everyone has opportunities to envision a different existence and figure out ways to live that existence.

In finally living according to your vision instead of always living a compromise, you instantly have shifted to a new world: beyond an unrealized dream and into a new way of living that changes the only life you can ultimately determine—your own.

Introduction to 2006 Organizer

When you open this organizer, you might think “my god it looks like chaos!” Precisely. Every page, every day is different—which is the way we would like to live our lives. Think of this organizer as the paper equivalent of a multi-tool. In addition to keeping your life organized, we hope this book provides inspiration, useful historical facts, clipart, scrap paper, comic relief, and tips on foot massage. Foot massages are important especially after long days at a protest where the signs are all the same and the speakers are a drag! Fuck standardization, we demand diversity of tactics!

This book is an example of non-hierarchical resistance. It’s a mess. But the many hands, hearts, and manes that helped create it make it what it is: a reflection of the ways we all struggle separately and together. It’s not easy—it has never been easy—but the rewards of community building are worth it. You will get stuck, and when you do, it might just be time to run for the exit and get some pie. On that note, we’re off for pie! See ya next year!

This is the 12th year we’ve been privileged to publish the Organizer. It raises funds to publish the bimonthly, radical, independent Slingshot Newspaper. We try to distribute the newspaper for free everywhere in the USA. Contact us to become a local distributors or we’ll send you a free subscription if you send us your mailing address. Thanks to the people who made this year’s Organizer: Abra, Anna, Artnoose, Ben, Cara, Caroline, Crow, Crystal x2, David, Dia, Elisa, Erik, Gregg, Heather, Jenn, Josh, Julia, Jyoti, Karen, Kathryn, Kerrie, Lew, Luke, Molly, Moraya, Paseo, PB, Robert, Sarick, Seeley, Stormy, Sydney, Terru, Theresa, Tracey, and Venec.

Emergency Contraception

If you’re having penile/vagina sex, there’s always the risk of having a condom break or having another event that can lead to pregnancy. These methods can prevent pregnancy if used within 1-3 days. Everyone will react differently to each method, and you may have serious side effects, so use caution. It’s a good idea to tell a friend what you’re doing so they can help if something goes wrong.***

Vitamin C

In the first moments after risky sex, insert a 500 mg. vitamin C tablet (non-chewable) into your vagina. Twice a day for the next 3 days, insert another 1-2 tablets in your vagina. This creates a hostile environment for sperm. At the same time, take one 500 mg. tablet orally every hour (6000 mg/day). This method does not work as well for women who are already used to taking high doses of Vitamin C, and can cause burning and irritation in the vagina. Some people get sick from taking, or after they stop taking, mega-doses of Vitamin C, so be careful.

Wild Carrot Seed

Take 1 tsp. of wild carrot seed (Daucus carota) every day for a week or until you start to bleed. This prevents a fertilized egg from implanting itself on the wall of the uterus. If you buy the seeds, make sure they haven’t been chemically treated. If you collect them, make sure you identify the plant correctly—it’s easy to confuse with poison hemlock, which is poisonous. Wild carrot is also a milder poison (it kills cows), so be careful and stop taking it if you’re getting too sick.

Hormones

The FDA was set to release the hormone “day after pill” Plan B for over-the-counter use, but changed its mind under religious pressure. You can still get it with a doctor’s prescription. Alternatively, take 4 normal low-dose birth control pills (the ones with 35 mcg of ethynil estradiol), followed by 4 more pills 12 hours later. The disruption of hormone levels keeps the egg from implanting. Some women feel very sick (tired, headaches, bloating, nauseous, etc). so this is not for everyone. Don’t use this method if you have health issues that make birth control pills dangerous for you.

***A reader pointed put that if a person with a uterus taking EC weighs more than 160 pounds, there is a high chance the EC will not work. See:

http://plannedparenthood.tumblr.com/post/68197145284/does-my-weight-affect-which-emergency

Recipes 2005

Bread

Ingredients:

-2 tablespoons yeast

-1 cup warm water

-1 teaspoon vegan sugar

-1/4 cup vegan sugar

-1 or 2 tablespoon salt

-2 to 4 tablespoon oil

-6 to 7 cups of unbleached organic flour

Mix first three ingredients together, let stand until foamy. About 3-5 min. Add 3 cups of warm water, sugar, and start adding flour. When mixture is very thick add salt and oil. Continue adding flour until you can’t add any ore. Turn out and let rest while you clean bowl. Knead for 10 min adding remaining flour. Place in oiled bowl and turn over to coat. Cover and let rise in a warm plate until doubled. Pouch down and divide into four equal parts. Place in oiled pan and let rise until even with top of pan.

Bake at 250 for 25 to 30 min.

Serves: 4 loaves.

 

Corn Bread

Ingredients:

-1 ½ c. cornmeal.

-1 ½ c. unbleached flour.

-3 ½ tsp baking powder

-1 Tbsp sugar

-1 tsp salt

-2 ¼ c. soymilk or water

-1/4 c. oil

Heat oven to 400. Put in an oiled 10” iron skillet in oven to heat. Mix the dry ingredients well, then stir in soymilk and oil. Mix and pour into the heated skillet. Bake 30 minutes. Test with fork to ensure done-ness.

OPTIONAL: Before putting into pan, mix in one or two apples, cut in very small pieces, OR one onion, cut very finely, OR half an onion and some diced chili peppers, OR a handful of raisin, OR some corn cut fresh off the cob!

Vegan Spanikopita

Ingredients:

-1 Tbsp sill weed

-1 Tbsp salt

-2 Tbsp lemon juice

-1/4 c. margarine for frying

-1/2 cup margarine or olive oil for brushing filo dough

-pastry brush (a brand-new paintbrush works too)

-1 package filo dough

-2 to 3 bunches of fresh spinach

-1 large onion

-1 to 2 tbs. firm tofu

-1/2 c. farina (cream of wheat) uncooked

Filo dough usually comes frozen, so first you need to set it out in its plastic bag to let it thaw. Carefully wash the spinach and remove the stems. Then chop it into pieces no larger than 1 inch, Chop the onion as finely as you possibly can. In a large frying pan, sauté the onion gently in ¼ of margarine until it is transparent. Add the spinach and allow it to cook down. You probably won’t be able to fit all the spinach in the pan at once—just keep adding it as it cooks down. Add the dill, salt, pepper, lemon juice, and farina to the spinach. Add tofu and use a potato masher to thoroughly mash the tofu into the mixture so there are no chunks larger than a pea. Taste the mixture to add more salt as needed. It should taste salty.

In a small sauce pan, melt the margarine for brushing and brush the sides and bottom of a 9 X 13 inch pan. Carefully cover the bottom with one sheet of filo dough. Very lightly brush more oil on and add another layer of filo. Continue until you have about 9 layers on the bottom. You do not need much oil on the bottom layer—save most of the oil for the top to make it crispy. Add half of the spinach mixture to the pan. Cover with 3 to 4 more layers of filo dough. Then add the remaining spinach mixture and smooth it out. Cover the top with a layer of filo, thoroughly brush oil on top and add another layer. Continue until you have about 12 layers or until you run out of oil. Bake in a 350 degree oven for about 40 minutes or until the top is golden brown. Serves 6-8 people.

Tofu Jerky

-1 lb. tofu

-1/4 c. soy sauce

-1/2 c. red wine vinegar

-1 c. water

-6 cloves of garlic

-1 tsp sage

-1 tsp basil

-1 tsp oregano

-salt and pepper to taste

Freeze the tofu until solid. Then thaw and slice into 1 X ½ X 6 inch strips. Crush garlic and mix with soy sauce, vinegar, water, sage, basil, and oregano. Add salt and pepper. Marinate tofu in mixture overnight or at least for 1 hour. Pour off marinade and save for future use (up to a month in fridge). Lightly grease a cookie sheet and spread tofu on the sheet. Bake in 150-200 degree oven for 1 to 2 hours, turning if necessary, until dried.

Tips for Disruption

Building a new world based on freedom, cooperation, and environmental sustainability in the face of powerful corporations and governments that seek to maintain their domination is not an easy task. To make progress, we need to flexibly embrace a wide variety of tactics and strategies—from strikes, street protests, direct action, and riots to street theater, educational campaigns, and even letter writing—whatever may help in a particular situation. These pages suggest how to effectively create disorder and disruption—because these skills are under-utilized and under-theorized. But we don’t want to disrespect or dismiss the use of other kinds of tactics that may be effective in a particular situation.

 

General Theory

In a protests, you request or demand change from those in power. Direct action is when people ignore those in power and build new forms of social interaction on their own—cooperatively organized housing, farms, workplaces, etc. Militant disruption falls between traditional protests and direct action—the common situation in which people reject the authority and legitimacy of those in power, yet don’t have sufficient social resources to just build a world outside the rulers’ control. Disruption seeks to prevent business as usual and resist social control, thereby weakening the rulers and opening possibilities for new social structures.

If you’re lucky, you and a group of friends can get together, run through a shopping mall, push some dumpsters into the middle of traffic, and generally run amok. If you keep moving, you’ll never see any police because by the time they arrive at a particular location, you’ll be gone. Tactics that evade the police are almost always the most disruptive. All too often, you see would-be militants getting caught up in the cop game by focusing on confronting the police—pushing against a police line, etc. This is often a mistake, however, if you want to maximize disorder and disruption. When you confront the police, it usually results in order, not disorder, because the police know precisely where you are. They can re-route traffic around you, maintaining productivity and business as usual everywhere else except on your tiny corner until they can amass enough forces to surround and bust your ass. If you see a police line, it is usually best to go the other way or melt away and regroup elsewhere. This keeps them guessing and confused while you’re free to cause chaos everywhere the police aren’t. The police are organized centrally, so if we can keep mobile in several different groups, their hierarchical structure has a much harder time keeping track of it all. It’s also good to keep in mind that disruption and disorder can take many forms. Sometimes, creating beautiful expressions of the world we seek to build—music, art, gardens, public sex, etc.—can be disruptive while avoiding the system’s “us and them” paradigm. The system loves a conventional war within traditional categories—like guerilla fighters, it’s our job to figure out forms of struggle on plains of reality where we have an advantage.

 

What to Bring.

To be mobile and maximize the area that gets disrupted, you want to travel as light as possible and avoid bulky signs, props, or costumes that slow you down. Carrying water in a quirt bottle for drinking and treating chemical weapons exposure is highly recommended. Use a fanny pack or bag that doesn’t get in the way in case you have to run. The black bloc uniform (black hoodies, etc) is outdated and silly—like wearing a huge target on your ass—avoid it. If weather permits, water repellent clothes protect skin from pepper spray. Layers are good because they provide padding and can e used for disguise/escape. In hot weather, dress comfortably—avoiding heatstroke and dehydration so you can run is way more important than protection from chemical weapons or a disguise. Wear good running shoes. Don’t wear contact lenses, jewelry, long hair, or anything the cops can grab. Never bring drugs, weapons, burglary tools, or anything that would get you in extra trouble if arrested. Never bring address books or sensitive information. Gas masks, goggles and helmets are almost always silly—the protection they offer is far outweighed by the extent to which they make you a target and slow you down. Those who’ve been tear gassed will tell you—it isn’t the worst thing in the world.

 

Affinity Groups/Decision Making.

Affinity groups are small action cells—usually 4 to 8 people—who share attitudes about tactics and who organize themselves for effectiveness and protection. The best affinity groups are people with pre-existing relationships who know and trust each other intimately. Decisions are (hopefully) made democratically, face-to-face, and quickly on the spot. In a chaotic situation, affinity groups enable decision making (as opposed to just reacting), while watching each other’s backs. Affinity groups with experience and a vision within a bigger crowd can take the initiative and start something when the larger crowd is standing around wondering what to do next.

Some affinity groups use a code word that any member can yell if they have an idea for what the group should do next. Upon hearing the word, others in the group yell it too until the whole group gathers up and the person who called the huddle makes a quick proposal. The group can then agree to the proposal, briefly discuss alternatives, and then move. A code word can also allow regrouping when the group gets separated in a chaotic situation. It is a good idea for everyone in the group to discuss their limits before an action. During the action, taking the time to check in about how everyone is feeling will keep the group unified. Don’t forget to eat and take pee breaks, which will be a lot easier if someone can act as a lookout while you duck behind a dumpster.

 

Book List 2005

Non-Fiction

-The Society of the Spectacle, Guy Debord.

-The Function of the Orgasm, Wilhelm Reich.

-Saying Yes: In Defense of Drug Use, Jacob Sullum.

-Water Wars, Vandana Shiva.

-Autobiography, Angela Davis.

-How I Became Hettie Jones, Hettie Jones.

-In the Shadow of the American Dream, David Wojnarowicz.

-High Risk Anthology, Vol. 1 & 2, Ed. Amy Scholder and Ira Silverberg.

-Asian American Dreams: The Emergence of an American People, Helen Zia.

-Healing with Whole Foods: Asian Traditions and Modern Nutrition, Paul Pitchford.

-The Mass Psychology of Fascism, Wilhelm Reich.

-The Evolution of Cooperation, Robert Axelrod.

-Women´s Bodies, Women´s Wisdom, Christiane Northrup M.D.

-The Bandit Queen of India: An Amazing Journey from Peasant to International Legend, Phoolan Devi, Marie Therese Cuny and Paul Rambali.

-Sink or Swim:A History of Sausal Creek, Cleo Woelfle-Erskine and Annie Danger.

 

Fiction

-Blanche Cleans Up, Barbara Neely.

-Stone Butch Blues, Leslie Feinberg.

-Pigs in heaven, Barbara Kingsolver.

-Memoirs of a Woman Doctor, Nawal El Saadawi.

-Tracks, Louise Erdrich.

-The Gates to Women´s Country, Sherri S. Tepper.

-The Gilda Stories, Jewelle Gomez

-The Inhabited Woman, Giaconda Belli

-Walking Back Up Depot Street, Minnie Bruce Pratt.

-Abeng, Michelle Cliff.

-Gravity´s Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon.

-Always Coming Home, Ursula K. LeGuin.

-Book of Coming Prayer, Joan Didion.

A Concise Planting Guide for Gardeners and Other Radicals

Name Plant* Pick** pH# Sun##
Arugula

-6

40

6.5

F-P

Beans

-1

50-90

6.7

F

Beets

-4

50-60

6.7

F

Broccoli

-3T

45-70

7

F

Cabbage

-3T

60-110

6.4

F

Carrot

-4

55-75

6.2

F

Celery

-6T

100-120

6.5

F

Choy (var)

All year

43-80

6.4

F/C P/H

Corn

-1

65-95

6.4

F

Cukes

+4T

45-60

6.5

FA

Eggplant

+1T

60-75

6.2

FH

Garlic

-5fall

11mos

6.5

F

Kale

-3T

50-65

6.7

F

Kohlrabi

-3

35-45

6.5

F

Leek

-7T

75-115

6.8

F

Lettuce

-3T

30-50

6.4

F/C P/H

Melon

0

75-120

6.5

F

Mustard

-6T

40-50

6

F

Okra

-1

50-60

7

F

Onion

-6T

80-120

6.7

F

Parsley

-1T

75

6.5

F

Peas

-7

50-65

6.5

FA

Pepper

+1T

70-85

6.5

FH

Potato

-5

65-90

5.7

F

Radish

-7

35-50

6.2

P

Spinach

-6

35-45

6.5

F-P

Squash

0

45-55

6.2

FA

Sweet potato

+1

Bef. frost

6

F

Tomato

+1T

50-80

6.5

FH

Turnip

-5

35-50

6.2

F/C P/H

 

*Weeks +/- last spring frost to plant seeds or starts (T)

**Days to ripeness

#Ideal soil pH for crop

## F- full; P- partial; H-hot; C- cool; A- good air circulation.

—Plant beneficial flowers to encourage bees and repel pests.

—Use compost to enrich your soil before planting and midseason.