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What if everyone just had a big garden out front instead of a big lawn?
You will only get a few growing seasons out of those wooden planters. If you're going to go through all of that trouble, why not excavate the top few feet of soil then replace it with two feet of rich fertile garden soil? With the price of wood, not only would it be more practical, but cheaper and much more growing real estate.
And what have they got there really, a couple weeks of garden greens? That image doesn't look very productive considering all of the expense that went into it. I would expect more fruiting vegetables, than cruciferous, lettuces and greens
You really cannot buy authentic dill pickles anywhere
richwicks says
You really cannot buy authentic dill pickles anywhere
The Sonomy Brinery pickles at Trader Joe's are very good.
Lawns are firebreaks. That's their original purpose. It's so the house wouldn't burn down if there was a forest fire.
What I'm saying is for 80% of the country it is a status thing. Not much to do with fires. My lawn is better than Ted or Joe's. Desert Southwest doesn't much care either. The fire problems are in CA, OR, WA, MT, UT and CO for the most part.
When I was a kid, we had a huge garden
Consider the supermarkets. At a glance, their shelves groan with abundance. Aisle after aisle packed with a dizzying variety of ultrapalatable foods, ringed with a perimeter of cheeses, breads, meats, vegetables, and fruits obtained out of season from distant lands with friendly climates.
Yet, peer behind the curtain, and it’s a mirage. The processed foods stocking the aisles are almost entirely built from derivatives of corn and soybean oil, laced with generous quantities of artificial flavouring, preservatives, emulsifiers, and other chemical agents rubberstamped into the food supply by captured regulators. For all that they are calorically dense, these packaged items are not in any meaningful sense ‘food’. They are addictive drugs shot through with poisons.
Then there are the unprocessed foods. These are suffused in pesticides and herbicides, painted and waxed so as to preserve their appearance and what flavour they retain from the mineral-stripped soil in which they were chemically fertilized. The meat is hormonal and antibiotic, injected with dyes to simulate freshness, stitched together from scraps using glue to give the appearance of steak.
This isn’t to say that actual food is impossible to find. Most supermarkets offer organic produce, locally sourced free-range chicken, grass-fed beef, and so on. Such food is, however, extremely expensive. Limit your diet to such items and you rapidly realize how ‘rich’ you truly are.
Over the last generation or so our agribusiness and food distribution system has engaged in a vast sleight of hand. Actual food has been slowly replaced with the simulation of food, without anyone really noticing. Sometimes this was done openly, as with the encouragement to use the toxic sludge called ‘margarine’ rather than the butter we’d been eating for thousands of years. Saturated fats are bad for your heart, you know1. In other cases it was done with no great fanfare: using the engine lubricant called canola oil in place of olive oil to make mayonnaise, or substituting high fructose corn syrup for cane sugar in Coca-Cola. Recipes were quietly altered, by and large no one noticed the difference, and corporations pocketed the difference arising from their lower production costs, happily externalizing the costs inflicted by the ruined health of the general populace that this mass poisoning resulted in.
Those gardens look easy but, pests , rodents , deer, birds all going to eat it before you. Gardening is lot of work.
I've always hated lawns anyway. What if everyone just had a big garden out front instead of a big lawn?
Note that I'm not talking about forcing anyone to do anything. I'm just promoting the idea people should grow more of their own food for more independence.