10 Risk Factors of Peripheral Artery Disease

Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD) is basically the narrowing of arteries because of plaque build-up, which is one of the primary causes of a heart attack or stroke.

It’s important to make sure you have healthy cholesterol levels and lipids (LDH, HDL, Triglycerides, Homocysteine, etc.). But it may be even MORE IMPORTANT to make sure you have healthy blood flow and improved circulation.

Please take a quick look at the below info-graphic for important risk factors and potential solutions. Make sure to also ready my summary at the end…


Summary:
Improving blood flow and increasing circulation in your body has MANY benefits:

helps improve brain function, cognition and memory
helps reduce blood pressure
helps avoid a heart attack or stroke (something my dad recently had)
very important if you are concerned about diabetes or heart disease
vital for improved muscle function and sexual performance (especially for men)
Your goal should be to reduce risk factors which can lead to a heart attack or stroke and thus, avoid having any kind of surgery.

You need to do your best daily, to live a healthy life-style… By eating more natural foods, having some physical activity daily, managing your stress levels and taking some natural herbs, vitamins and minerals if you want faster results with less effort.
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Work Your Calves Hard And Often For Great-Looking Legs

In bodybuilding, calf exercises increase the bulk and definition of the upper back and sides of the lower legs. The leg press calf raise is an excellent movement for this purpose.

Ankle joint extension is vital in speed walking, running and jumping activities because it provides the final push in propelling the body forward or upward as needed. This includes jumping in volleyball and basketball, diving, ski jumping, ballet, the high jump and long jump. In running and speed walking, ankle joint extension can create up to 50% of the force needed to propel you forward for maximum speed. That’s why this action is important in sports such as track, soccer, tennis, lacrosse and other activities that involve sprinting.


More explosive sports may build calf muscle definition, but you won’t see an increase in calf muscle mass. If you’re looking for maximum mass development, bodybuilding is the answer.

Leg Press Calf Raise

Sit in an incline leg press machine with your glutes and lower back in firm contact with the seat pads.

Place the balls of your feet a comfortable width apart at the bottom edge of the resistance platform so that your heels are free to move.

Keep your toes pointed straight or slightly out. Your legs should be straight or very slightly bent but never locked.

Grip the machine’s side handles to stabilize your upper body after you release the platform.

Inhale and hold your breath as you extend your feet at a slow to moderate rate of speed through an approximate 30 – 45 degree range of motion. Hold the fully extended position for 1 – 2 seconds to maximize the contraction.

Exhale as you return under control till you feel a slight stretch in your calves. Pause momentarily and then repeat.

To prevent your feet from slipping, wear shoes with good traction and be sure the surface of the resistance platform isn’t slippery. The balls of your feet should stay in firm contact at all times.

Workout Tips

For safety and to ensure an adequate range of motion, do this exercise slowly or at a moderate rate of speed. If you do the movement quickly, you may fully straighten your legs and lose contact with the resistance platform.

The calf raise on a leg press machine is best suited for development of strength and mass through a shortened range of motion. If you fully extend your feet, you’ll increase the possibility of your feet slipping off the platform. Limit your range of motion to ensure that your feet remain in contact at all times.

Avoid the exercise if the machine’s platform or the soles of your shoes are smooth. Your chances of slipping increases greatly and the potential for severe injury can be quite high.

Be sure to keep your legs straight during execution, but don’t lock or hyperextend your knees. This can be potentially dangerous, especially if your legs are slightly bowed when completely extended.

Hold your breath to stabilize your body and maximize your focus on ankle joint action. When you exhale on the return, control the movement at all times. Never completely relax as you could lose control of the platform.

Don’t lower the resistance platform too quickly or bounce in the bottom position. This increases your chance of injury and the possibility of your feet slipping off the platform.

Primary Muscles Involved

The gastrocnemius, a two headed muscle that crosses both the ankle and knee joints and thus has an action at each end, shapes the upper portion of the back of your lower leg. Each head is clearly visible when the muscle is well defined. The soleus is slightly wider than the gastrocnemius and lies mostly underneath it. When well developed, this muscle can be seen to the sides of and slightly below the gastrocnemius.

Collectively, the gastrocnemius and soleus muscles are known as the calf muscles or the triceps surae muscle group. At its upper end, the gastrocnemius attaches to the thigh bone (femur); at its upper end, the soleus attaches to the tibia and fibula. They combine into the Achilles tendon at the lower end to attach to the heel bone (calcaneus).

Muscle / Joint Actions

In ankle joint extension, your feet move away from your shins. The gastrocnemius is most powerful when your legs are straight; the soleus is equally powerful regardless of knee position. The straighter your legs and the greater the weight, the more you’ll work your gastrocnemius.

[womensfitnessfocus.com]
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First Fitness Journey? Here’s How To Get Started

Like they say, every journey begins with the first step. If you’re ready to begin your first journey to better fitness, this will help.

Training the whole body three days a week (Monday, Wednesday, Friday) is ideal for the beginner. This allows the beginner nearly 48 hours of rest between workouts and gives the beginner an additional two days of rest over weekends.


Do 1 – 2 exercises of two sets of ten reps per body part. The beginner may feel like doing more, but don’t. The beginner should do this type of training for about a month before doing more exercises. This will allow the body proper stimulation for growth without overtaxing its ability to recuperate.

As the beginner progresses, he may decide to do more advanced training, such as working specific body parts in some workouts, with whole body sessions only two times a week. Examples of such training include the double split, the push pull system, four on/one off and three on/one off.

Your decision to get into new types of training depends on how fast your body adapts to each new level of training and your individual goals. The beginner may be ready to go beyond the three day a week workout only after one month of training. Another beginner may decide that three day a week training is ideal for his or her lifestyle and goals.

Sets and reps are important factors to your bodybuilding success. A good set is made up of good reps and a good workout is made up of both. At this point in your training, doing more than two sets of 10 reps per body part greatly increases your chance of overtraining (doing too much work and getting inadequate rest, leading to diminished gains). Ten reps provide optimal muscle stimulation without putting your body into a state of over or under training.

As your body improves in strength and condition, you may decide to use supersets, giant sets, pyramid training, staggered sets, high/moderate/low rep training, rest pause, volume training, speed training and many other advanced techniques, as a way of increasing the intensity of your workouts for maximum growth.

A beginner will often ask, ‘How do I know when to increase the weight on the exercises I do?’ Once you’re able to do 10 reps fairly easy with a given weight, try increasing the weight by 10%. Let’s say you can bench press 85 pounds for 10 easy reps. On your next set, try going up to 95-100 pounds for 10 reps. Continue to do this on all your exercises. This is the heart of progressive resistance training, which is the best way to gain definition and strength.

Avoiding the Big Mistake: Why more is not better

Far too many beginner bodybuilders fall victim to more is better. Your body needs time to adjust to do the exercises you asking it to do. One exercise per body part may not sound like enough to produce any results, but if you’re a beginner, it will. As you continue to train and your body adapts to the exercises and recuperative demands you place upon it, you’ll be able to add more sets and exercises to your routine. Be patient and don’t overtrain. Overtraining will halt your progress and increase your chances of injury. It takes time to build a great body, but the rewards are worth it.

Go with the Basics

Starting out with the basic exercises is something that you’ll be grateful for later down the road. The basic exercises let your body get used to the proper groove for each movement. You’ve got to know how to do an exercise correctly before you can get the most benefit from it.

The basic exercises should be the foundation for your bodybuilding program both now and in the future. Stay away from cables and machines at this point. They’ll be important to your training later on. Concentrate on mastering the basic movements. Nearly every bodybuilding champion still uses basic movements as the cornerstone of his or her training routines.

One of the most important elements to laying the proper foundation for your bodybuilding success is using good form on every exercise. Good form means doing every exercise and every rep with complete control through the full range of motion. Incomplete reps build incomplete body parts, so always keep the weight under strict control through the full range of motion. Don’t be so concerned with how much weight you can lift. Concentrate on feeling the exercise and working the muscle completely.

Sloppy form is a major cause of injury to muscle and connective tissue. An injury can side line you for weeks and even months. When you train, you want results, not injuries and no progress. Use good form and you’ll avoid injuries while getting results toward your bodybuilding goals.

[womensfitnessfocus.com]
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Keep Your Heart Healthy With These Brisk Walking Workouts

Some people walk a rut in the mud trying to decide upon an exercise program. They don’t like running because it hurts their feet. Maybe they’ll walk down to the gym and have a look around. But those bodybuilders and power lifters are too intimidating, so they just walk on and don’t look back. What about the health club? Walk in and look at all the pretty women with hard bodies. What to do? Keep walking and thinking.


Sometimes you really can’t see the forest for the trees. This whole time you’ve been pacing around you’ve been active and burning calories. Oh my gosh! You’ve discovered your exercise program. Yes sir, walking can be your fitness program. It’s been shown to have many health benefits and there are several variations you can use.

Most people take walking for granted and fail to associate it with any health benefits. They think you have to grunt, sweat and experience pain to be healthy and happy. But, that just isn’t so. Anything that keeps you active can keep you healthy, and here’s how.

Aerobic Power

Contrary to popular belief, walking can increase your aerobic power. Any previously sedentary individual who walks three times per week for 30 minutes a moderate pace will show improvements. Doing so for 12 weeks can increase aerobic power by 12 percent. Obviously, the faster you walk the greater the aerobic benefits.

Body Composition

To lose fat, you must be active and burn calories. Walking is an activity and it burns calories. In a 16-week study, a group of people lost an average of 12 Ibs and decreased body fat by six percent. The group walked 90 minutes per day for five days per week. Walking a mile burns approximately the same number of calories as running a mile; it just takes more time.

Blood Lipids

Walking can increase the levels of HDL cholesterol, which transports cholesterol to the liver for removal from the body. A program of at least 12 weeks of high-intensity, long distance walking will increase the HDL levels in the blood and put one at a lower risk for cardiovascular disease.

Blood Pressure

If you suffer from mild or moderate hypertension, walking can lower both the systolic (pumping) and diastolic (resting) blood pressure. Even people with normal blood pressure will experience a slight drop in pressure. These reductions may not be spectacular, but they are significant. Other walking benefits, such as weight loss, will also help lower your blood pressure. Walking also lowers your resting heart rate.

Mental Health

Taking long walks can also be good for the soul. Any form of exercise can relieve stress, combat depression and ease anxiety. You may not be able to walk away from life’s problems, but you can walk off the stress.

Bones and Joints

Men lose bone strength as they age, although not nearly to the same degree as women. Regular walking can have positive effects on bone density and lessen the risk of fractures. Because walking places less mechanical stress on the joints, it is less likely to result in injuries.

Think of it this way; the journey to good health starts with a single step. Putting one foot in front of the other is all it takes to get started. Walking is simple, safe, accessible to everyone and has the lowest dropout rate of all exercises. After a while, most people want to experiment with various forms of walking that will further increase their aerobic capacity and strength.

Here’s some basic walking programs to try.

Walking 101

This is for beginners. It’s for those who are severely out of shape and want lo begin an exercise program, like newly uprooted couch potatoes or those recovering from an illness. It consists of brisk walking at around three to four miles per hour. To do this, take longer steps than normal and proceed at a faster pace. Be sure to learn to walk erectly and keep the shoulders back. Breathe deeply as you walk and let your hands and arms swing freely at your sides.

All you really need for walking is a good pair of shoes and some comfortable clothes. Any type of shoe will suffice. Most wear regular tennis shoes, but you can purchase walking shoes at a sporting goods store. Clothing should be loose and comfortable, and appropriate for the weather if you walk outdoors.

Advanced Walking

As your strength and aerobic capacity increases, you’ll want to pick up the pace and walk both faster and for longer times. However, at some point you will reach a level where you can’t challenge yourself further by walking alone. Now it’s time to get serious about walking and add some challenging variations to the routine. To increase the workload, try walking over hilly terrain. This will raise your heart rate and burn more calories at the same time. Walking briskly up a 10-degree incline will burn about 300 calories in less than 30 minutes.

Another method for increasing the workload is to carry additional weight as you walk. Most commonly you see people carrying light hand-held weights when walking. Alternatively, ankle weights, weight belts or weighted backpacks can also be used alone or in combination. Try walking up a hill with a weighted backpack if you still think walking isn’t much of a challenge.

Race Walking

This is not a more intense form of walking, but a unique form of movement. Sure, you’ve seen the people who seem to wobble rapidly along the sidewalk – that’s race walking. This requires using strides, where longer steps are taken and the feet follow a straight line. The strides are very rapid and the pelvis rotates dramatically with each step. This shifting of weight with the hips causes the person to glide smoothly along the path.
Besides lower body movements, race walking also uses the upper body.

The arms are used as pendulums to regulate the leg and hip movements. As you step forward with your leg, drive your opposite arm backwards to propel you forward. As the leg pushes forward, bring your arm forward for the next movement. Because race walking is not as natural as normal walking, it will take some practice and possibly a little coaching to get it down right.

The good thing about walking is that you can do it just about anytime and anywhere. You can walk around the block at lunch time, walk to work or simply walk around and explore your own neighborhood. During the spring and fall you will surely want to take advantage of the outdoors. Many parks have walking trails and most athletic fields have running/walking tracks.

Everybody’s heard of mall walking. Many malls open early in the morning so people can walk their long or circular corridors. Since most malls are multiple level, you can walk the stairs to make your workout more strenuous. Best of all, malls are excellent for the summer and winter months; they provide a safe environment, and they’re free.

If you don’t want to have to leave the house to walk, then invest in one of the many good quality treadmills that are available. Many offer a computer that will vary the walking speed, as well as constantly increasing and decreasing the slope to simulate mountain trails.

Facts & Figures

The Rockport Walking Institute (RWI) is dedicated to conducting research on walking and disseminating the information. Working in conjunction with doctors and exercise scientists, the RWI developed the following fact sheet.

Walking is the number one participant sport in America.

According to a recent report, 90 million people walk for physical fitness.

Walking is a healthy, natural function of the human body.

Because of the structure, shape and flexibility of the spine, the human body is better suited for walking than for sitting, standing or running.

Fitness walking is more than just walking for fitness.

Simply defined, fitness walking is walking at a brisk enough pace to maintain your heart rate in the target training zone. Fitness walking is the cornerstone of a total approach to personal fitness that uses walking as the major exercise, but also includes improving strength and flexibility, paying attention to diet, and reducing stress. With fitness walking, the goal is to develop a training program that will strengthen your heart. There isn’t any magical overall fitness formula that is right for everyone; it’s all tailored to the individual’s ability and level of fitness. And fitness walking is virtually an injury-free exercise, with a very low participant dropout rate.

Walking speeds vary greatly.

For a person in reasonably good health, a normal walking pace is somewhere between 3.0 and 3.5 m.p.h.

3.75 to 4.0 m.p.h. is considered a brisk pace, although speeds of up to 5.5 m.p.h. are not unusual for well-conditioned athletes. For most people, anything below 3.0 is slow.

Regular walking can help you lose weight.

Fitness walking is an excellent adjunct to an overall program to lose weight. While walking burns about 20 percent fewer calories at most speeds than does running, it still is the preferred exercise for most individuals who seek to lose weight. This is because walking is ideal for a consistent program, and consistency is what counts in an overall lifetime weight-management program.

Walking produces a variety of important health benefits.

Walking improves cardiovascular efficiency, may lower blood pressure, relieves stress, reduces body fat, strengthens leg and abdominal muscles, and may improve the quality of sleep. Moreover, biomechanics studies have demonstrated that the foot lands with only 1.5 times the force of body weight in walking, while it may exceed three times body weight in running. Thus walking poses much less risk of orthopedic injury.

Walking is truly an ideal sport for consistent, life-long aerobic conditioning.

Fitness walking is especially beneficial to the cardiovascular system. By expending 2,000 calories a week in vigorous exercise, participation in a fitness walking program can significantly reduce the risk of heart attack. Indeed, fitness walking is frequently incorporated into a cardiac rehabilitation program.

[womensfitnessfocus.com]
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How More Mediation And Exercise Will Help You Cut Sick Days At Work

Reuters recently published an article about meditation and exercise reducing the days of sick leave employees may be forced to take.

Dr. Bruce Barrett of the University of Wisconsin-Madison led research to confirm what earlier studies have suggested: That people who exercise moderately often and those who have less stress are not as prone to getting respiratory illnesses such as colds and flues.


The study’s focus was meant to discover how employees could stay in their work stations more without taking as much time off for temporary sick leave during cold and flu seasons. Fortunately, flu shots were not considered.

Though colds and flus are minor, and days of sick leave may not amount to much among a handful of people in one small company, Dr. Barrett is convinced that it amounts to billions of dollars of cost to society with both treatments and lost production.

He pointed out that there is no medicine or supplement that prevents or cures colds, and vaccines may prevent flus in half of a healthy group. Guess the good doctor knows very little about vitamin C or D3 or numerous herbal supplements. It also seems like he would rather not flirt with the flu vaccine’s adverse reaction toll.

Nevertheless, study they did. Some consider the study too short and the subjects too few, while others consider it a confirmation of what’s been suggested from other studies.

Dr. Barrett’s study details

The study randomly assigned 149 people to three different groups: One group would meditate regularly, another group would exercise moderately most of the week, and the third group did neither.

Earlier studies demonstrated that those who meditated regularly reduced their stress levels and allowed their immune systems to strengthen somehow. The exercise routines used were aerobic and included cycling, jogging, and/or brisk walking in moderation.

Other studies have determined that intense athletic exercise can lower your immune system for up to 72 hours. So moderation is a key for good health. Wiping yourself out may be necessary for competitive sports, but not overall health.

The meditation and exercise groups met weekly for two-and-a-half hours of instruction and were encouraged to apply what they had learned with 45 minutes of meditation or exercise activity for five days.

This went on for eight weeks, just in time for Wisconsin’s dreary fall and winter weather, considered their peak cold and flu season.

During that cold and flu season after the eight weeks, all three groups’ work attendance records were monitored as well as their reported ailments and recovery times whenever work was missed. Apparently, the test study didn’t take into account the occasional sick fib call-in.

In the group that neither exercised nor meditated, there were 40 bouts of mild respiratory illness. The meditation group showed 27 bouts of colds or flus while the exercise group had 26 bouts. The inactive, non-meditation group generally felt sick for nine days, while both the meditation and exercise groups felt sick for five days.

Even more importantly for corporate America, the inactive group missed 67 days due to respiratory infections, while the exercise group missed 32 days and the meditation group missed only 16 days.

The reason for the meditation group’s lowest days missed was attributed to the fact that they experienced the least amount of misery during their bouts of respiratory infections.

Many NaturalNews readers know that vitamins D3 and C are important tools for preventative care. But this study offered a couple more tools. Maybe what’s left of corporate America’s domestic work force should be taught meditation and/or encouraged to exercise moderately while consuming vitamins D3 and C.

[womensfitnessfocus.com]
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Injecting children with multiple vaccines at once is dangerous, says renowned medical journal in groundbreaking study

(NaturalNews) It's a scene that is familiar to many parents: You bring your baby in for a check-up, and the doctor informs you that your 6-month-old is due for "some shots." After some prodding, he reveals that your baby actually needs a combination of eight different vaccines. He assures you that this is normal practice and nothing to worry about. You brace yourself for the inevitable crying that will accompany the needle's jab, and then you go home and forget the whole thing ever happened ... until the next check-up.


However, for some parents, the injection and crying are only the beginning of the nightmare. Half a million adverse events have been reported in association with vaccines in the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), which is run by the FDA and the CDC.

That statistic is pretty shocking, but the fact that 5.4 percent of these reactions in children getting five or more vaccines concurrently were fatal is completely unforgivable. Now, medical research journalist Neil Z. Miller is warning parents that the practice of administering multiple vaccines in one visit is unsafe and can even be deadly.

Miller states that the CDC recommends that infants receive the polio, diphtheria, hepatitis B, rotavirus, pneumococcal, tetanus, Haemophilus influenza Type B and pertussis vaccines at 2, 4 and 6 months of age, despite the fact that such a combination has never been tested for safety in clinical trials.

Infants who receive multiple vaccines more likely to die

After examining data regarding the percentage of reported reactions involving hospitalization or death as it relates to the number of vaccines the child received as well as their age, he noted:

"Our study showed that infants who receive several vaccines concurrently...are significantly more likely to be hospitalized or die when compared with infants who receive fewer vaccines simultaneously.

"It also showed that reported adverse effects were more likely to lead to hospitalization or death in younger infants."

While 5.4 percent of reactions were fatal in those infants who received five or more vaccines at once, the figure fell to 3.6 percent for those receiving four or fewer. This rate is still unacceptably high, but the difference does illustrate how receiving more vaccines is a lot riskier.

Miller's findings were published in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons. He was also part of a 2012 study that compiled data from VAERS which revealed a positive correlation between the number of vaccine doses administered and the percentage of hospitalizations and deaths.

Real vaccine damage figures could be much higher

Even worse, experts have suggested that vaccine reactions are vastly under-reported, with former FDA commissioner David Kessler saying that ''only about one percent of serious events [adverse drug reactions] are reported." This means that the actual number of deaths from multiple vaccine doses could be a lot higher than reported rates. How can this practice be allowed to continue?

Crystal Downing is one mother who knows all too well just how dangerous multiple vaccine doses can be. Her infant son died just one day after receiving eight vaccinations at once. The doctors tried to blame it on SIDS, but she noticed him acting strangely almost immediately after getting the shots.

She wants other parents to be aware of the dangers. "My son was injected with 8 vaccines, if you don't know what is in them, learn! When I did, I was shocked and mad at myself for not questioning this before," she said.

It can be pretty difficult to convince some people of the dangers of vaccines, and many parents rightfully want their children to be protected from the illnesses many of these vaccines are designed for. The best move that parents who still wish to vaccinate their children can make is to insist that only single doses are given, and that they be spaced out far enough to ensure that a cumulative effect does not occur.

[naturalnews.com]
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Florida couple forced to destroy organic front-yard veggie garden, sues city over constitutional rights violation

(NaturalNews) It's happening more and more: local government nannies forcing Americans to become reliant on "the system," and less independent, so that they can control them.

The latest example of this took place in Miami Shores where, as reported by The Associated Press, local government officials forced a South Florida couple to dig up an organic vegetable garden that they had grown in their front yard for 17 years.


Why? Because city council members passed a new ordinance banishing all gardens to back yards. And now the couple is suing, asking a judge to rule that the front yard ban is a violation of their constitutional rights.

As AP noted:

Tom Carroll and Hermine Ricketts say they dug up the garden in front of their Miami Shores home in August 2013 when town officials threatened to fine them $50 a day if they didn't. The threatened fine came a few months after the Miami Shores Village Council adopted a new zoning plan for the town of about 10,500 north of Miami.

The couple sued, and at a hearing [recently] their attorney said the ban violates the Florida Constitution in several ways, including improper limits on their private property rights and violation of the equal protection clause by singling out vegetables over other plants.

"We're not saying you can do anything you want on your property," attorney Ari Bargil told Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Monica Gordo. "We are simply saying you can grow vegetables on your property and that is protected by the Constitution."

'It's just a garden'

The city argued otherwise. Attorney Richard Sarafan told the court that the new zoning rule was not an irrational decision, and that all homeowners were being treated the same – they had to grow grass, sod or "living ground cover" in their front yards, though the ordinance did not further define that last part. Anyone, he said, can grow a veggie garden in the back yard.

"There certainly is not fundamental right to grow vegetables in your front yard," Sarafan said. "Aesthetics and uniformity are legitimate government purposes. Not every property can lawfully be used for every purpose."

Apparently Sarafan and the city elders have never heard of the concepts of freedom and individual liberty. How it is possible to adjudge that the cosmetic appearance of a person's property – as it pertains to the growing of a vegetable garden – is a legitimate government interest is understandable only to an authoritarian.

Carroll, who went to the hearing, said that the couple wanted to grow vegetables and produce organically, without the use of any pesticides. He also said that throughout the time they grew the garden – which contained about 75 different varieties of vegetables – they never once received any complaints from any neighbors.

"It's important that we have the right to do something on our own property," Carroll said. "We're just trying to grow vegetables."

It's not like they've got an oil well or a burn pit in the front yard.

The couple is represented by attorneys from a Libertarian nonprofit organization, the Arlington, Virginia-based Institute for Justice, which specializes in privacy rights, school choice and free speech. And, while Gordo had not yet ruled on the matter, both sides said there would likely be an appeal of any decision.

Finally, a victory

This isn't the first case of its kind. In November 2012 we reported that Orlando, another Florida city, and site of a recent terrorist attack, was attempting to force a resident to get rid of his front yard garden.

According to local reports, Jason Helvingston, who planted a 25 x 25 foot micro-irrigated garden of radishes, wax beans, kale and other veggies, planned to defy the city, saying he didn't see any problem in trying to grow his own food.

The following January we reported that Jason and his wife, Jennifer, were facing fines of $500 a day if they didn't dig up their garden. They, too, were represented by the Institute for Justice.

[naturalnews.com]
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