Food Gardening Basics for Beginners PLR; New PLR Automated Courses; Setting Boundaries

Published: Wed, 04/07/21


Scarlett and I made a trip to Trader Joe's this week because her optometrist is nearby and before we went on, I got on Tik Tok and looked up Trader Joes videos because people always do videos of the great things they found there. For example, there's a pack of mozzarella balls soaking in a delicious oil and people were saying to use the oil as a bread dip. And you take the cheese and stuff that, along with garlic spread, into one of those round loaves of bread and put it in the air fryer for 4 minutes. 

Just things I wouldn't have thought about. But the real reason I wanted to go was because one day I bought a salad at Sprouts and it included a small pack of "Everything but the bagel" seasoning and OMG deliciousness! Ha ha. I loved it. Had to get some. Now I'll be putting it on everything. 

FYI: As of last night, there were about 10 copies left of my part 8 limited report called Putting the Finishing Touches on Your Copy and Info Product.

Food Gardening Basics for Beginners PLR - Lifetimers DO NOT BUY IT

I had a request for some new food gardening PLR, since it's a huge topic right now. So I created a brand new front end called Food Gardening Basics for Beginners and packaged up all of my gardening PLR content from my store for a heavily discounted upgrade option. 

Lifetimers will see it in their membership, so don't buy it because there are no refunds on my PLR.

In the BRAND NEW 37-page front end content, you get a report and a set of articles:

Report: Food Gardening Basics for Beginners

This 17-page, 7,387-word report starts with an introduction and then covers the following:

- Planning Your Gardening Growing Space
- Understanding Your Growing Schedule
- Making Sure Your Soil Is Ready
- Composting and Fertilizing to Keep Your Soil Rich and Healthy
- Growing Plants from Seed
- Starting Your Garden with Plants
- Make Sure You're Not Over or Under Watering Your Garden
- Keeping Pests Away from Your Edible Garden
- Tools That Are Essential for Good Gardening
- The Easiest Foods to Grow for Beginners
- Grow the Food Your Family Loves to Eat
- Foods You Can Grow That Deliver Big Yields
- Don't Forget to Grow Some Herbs to Flavor Your New Foods!
- Things You Can Do with Your Harvest
- Preparing Your Garden for Upcoming Seasons

20 Articles:

1. Things You Can Grow for Optimal Nutritional Value - 474 words
2. Food Insecurity During the Pandemic Has Increased Interest in Gardening - 420 words
3. Growing Flowers Near Your Foods to Attract Pollinators - 422 words
4. Smart Gardening Gadgets That Help You Succeed - 428 words
5. Growing a Food Garden in an Urban Setting - 400 words
6. Calculating the Amount of Sun Your Garden Will Get - 435 words
7. Dealing with Mold and Mildew on Your Vegetable Plants - 429 words
8. Heat Resistant Vegetables You Can Grow in Hot Summer Months - 442 words
9. The Best Vegetables to Grow During Winter Months - 410 words
10. Maximize Your Harvest with Succession Planting - 425 words
11. Make Sure Your Vegetable Garden Has Good Drainage - 415 words
12. Understand How Much Space a Plant Will Need - 419 words
13. Start Small as a New Gardener - 432 words
14. Be Sure to Weed Your Garden to Allow Your Plants to Grow - 440 words
15. Growing Perennial Vegetables Means Less Replanting Annually - 420 words
16. Don't Let Tall Plants Overshadow Your Other Vegetables - 420 words
17. How to Attract Good Insects to Your Vegetable Garden - 447 words
18. How to Grow Delicious and Nutritious Microgreens - 417 words
19. Maximize Your Garden Space Using Interplanting - 440 words
20. Growing Food in the Wrong Season Can Affect the Taste of It - 411 words

Check out the deal here and be sure to take a peek at the upgrade offer, too:
https://www.plrlaunch.com/food-gardening-basics-for-beginners-plr

New PLR: Automated Courses: Create Your Dream Course and Get Paid for it Over and Over Again

Nicole Dean and Melissa Ingold have a new course with PLR called Automated Courses: Create Your Dream Course and Get Paid for it Over and Over Again. Use Promo Code: 77 to get a big discount until tomorrow night. 

It includes:

Use Promo Code: 77 to get a big discount until tomorrow night here: 
https://in234.isrefer.com/go/automated/TiffanyLambert

Setting Boundaries with Work to Nurture a Better Home Life 

Usually, when you have a project to do, you accept it without considering how much time it’ll take out of your day. Many people are too afraid to lessen their workload so that it’s less demanding so that they can maintain personal satisfaction. 

You have to be able to set boundaries with yourself, your work partners, customers and clients so that you can keep a healthy balance between your career and personal life. Don’t allow other people to walk all over you and use you. 

If a work partner or project partners are trying to push some of their workload off onto you, then let them know in a polite, yet stern way that you have your own job to do and they have theirs. Picking up their slack isn’t your responsibility. 
 
If you think you’re being overworked and underpaid, work on finding the right balance or delegating tasks. Maintain a flexible approach with work partners about the situation and offer suggestions to create a fair work environment. 
 
You might feel guilty because you work too much or that it’s your fault because you’re an overachiever. While being an overachiever usually isn’t a bad thing, sometimes it takes away precious time from your personal life that it didn’t have to infringe on. 

You have to force yourself to stop working past the schedule you originally intended. Taking time to care for yourself and your loved ones is just as important as getting your work done, so make sure you balance the two equally so that you’re satisfied with your home life. 
 
Sometimes, your customers might ask too much of you. Let them know where your boundaries stand and don’t let them try to get you to do more work than they paid for. They say the customer’s always right, but sometimes you need to protect your interests. 

Try to stay flexible with your customers, but also make sure that it’s very clear where you draw the line. When working, you sometimes get too wrapped up in finishing a certain project or task. 

While getting these things done is important, you have to balance your work with your personal time, even if it means a project will take a bit longer to complete. Taking care of yourself is important to keep your stress levels down, and no one should prioritize work over their health and happiness.

That's it for me today - hope you have a great rest of your day!

Tiff ;)

P.S. Prefer a weekly digest?
http://www.tiffanylambert.com/weeklytiff.html