Gardening Is a Hedge Against Supply Chain Disruptions
Grow your own in uncertain times.

The first tomato you grow yourself will probably be the most expensive one you ever eat. The same is true of peppers, zucchini, carrots, and any other crops you raise. While costs do go down as you gain expertise and reuse tools and materials, your initial gardening efforts will be less a means of saving money than a commitment to a hobby. But it's a rewarding hobby that builds skills, drives you a bit nuts, and offers you the means in uncertain times of supplying yourself and your neighbors with your favorite fruits, vegetables, and herbs.
Supply came home to me as an issue when there were no garlic bulbs to be found at the market. "The whole shipment came in rotten," the produce manager told me. "It looked like it sat too long someplace."
That sort of problem is all too common in a year of supply-chain disruptions featuring shipping delays and intermittently empty shelves. "About 31% of grocery products consumers browsed were out of stock in the first week of April," CBS reported. "That's up from 11% at the end of November 2021."
Disruptions in fertilizer production, predating Russia's invasion of Ukraine but exacerbated by it, raise costs to farmers. The war also interfered with the cultivation and export of grain and other products from those countries, contributing to a "catastrophic global hunger crisis," in the cheery words of the United Nations' World Food Program. And while the vast farming acreage of the United States will cushion Americans from the worst effects, it's a fair bet that prices will continue to rise and the availability of some produce will remain spotty. Even expensive homegrown veggies are an alluring hedge against none.
What and how to grow depend to a large extent on where you live. I'm in Arizona, where the environment is a tad harsh and, as the University of Arizona Cooperative Extension puts it, "water is precious and expensive." So we look for drought-resistant and desert-adapted varieties of vegetables and fruits that have a hope of surviving in our conditions.
We've adopted square foot gardening, a technique that divides a garden into small, intensively planted sections. The term was coined by author Mel Bartholomew, and free information is available online from the Square Foot Gardening Foundation and other sources, including Clemson University's College of Agriculture, Forestry, and Life Sciences.
Planting in raised beds, whether store-bought or home-built, offers easier control over soil quality than planting in the ground. Clemson's experts advise that "combining a raised bed and square foot gardening allows a reduction in space to 16 square feet for fresh foods or 32 square feet if preserving for later use" per individual for each crop, compared to 100 or 200 square feet, respectively, with a traditional garden.
For irrigation, you might try anything from drip systems to old-fashioned watering cans. My wife and I favor burying perforated, plastic soda bottles in the soil into which water can be poured. That delivers water directly to the roots instead of serving it up to the great desiccator in the sky.
You can manage the environment in your garden by building hoops over it with PVC pipe. The hoops support shade cloth to protect against the hot sun, plastic sheeting that converts the beds into greenhouses, and netting that protects against birds and other creatures that share your taste in vegetables.
But the world belongs to hungry critters, and you'll always be fighting them. Aphids made their way into our dill until I dusted the plants with abrasive diatomaceous earth, basically dragging the little vampire bugs over the equivalent of broken glass. And just days before my neighbors planned to pick ripe peaches from their trees, pack rats stripped them bare. The last time I saw those folks, they had a bucket of rat poison in their truck and planned to lay out a vengeful buffet.
If you do everything right, you'll gain at least a greater appreciation for farmers. But you also will eventually have something to show for your labor, like the broccoli my wife and I picked all winter and the garlic we have curing right now. It's unlikely your efforts will replace trips to the grocery store. But in a time of uncertain supply, it's reassuring to know that you can keep yourself and your friends fed.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Grow Your Own."
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Tuccille....too bad you cannot embed photos of your set-up in this article. That would be helpful information.
I have 7 raised beds in my small urban backyard, with automatic irrigation. We grow (4 types of) tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuce, 9 types of herbs (but not the devil's lettuce!) grapes, onions, garlic, 5 types of peppers, carrots, lettuce, and tomatillos. Sometimes we also do green beans on the trellis. One year I did potatoes. I gave up on corn - not enough yield for the space it takes up.
It takes a bit to get started, I began with just 3 beds, and in the PRNJ you might even need permits, but it's worth it to not need to go to the store and pay $3 for an ounce of fresh basil or oregano. Also dirt-grown tomatoes and even carrots are so much more flavorful than their grocery store counterparts, it's amazing.
My setup is basically that I use ground-contact-rated, treated AC2 Cedartone-colored 2x8 boards, built up in boxes between 2 and 4 boards high (15" - 30" tall) lined with heavy duty weed control fabric on the inside. I filled the bases of the boxes with loose fill (rocks, gravel, cinderblock, whatever) to within about 12-15 inches of the top and then topped it with a mixture of garden soil, manure, and organic compost.
I would post pictures if I could.
We took an old decorative drink-cooler and turned it into an herb box. Not only is it cheaper than herbs at the store, you also don't need to be prepared and always have something to dress up salad, or even sides like potatoes or mac and cheese. We also keep a pot of green onions growing in our kitchen's window sill. Whenever I need a little brightness, I can just cut the tops off onto food, and they keep growing.
But that is about as much effort as I can spare for food gardening.
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Garden fresh garlic chives are the bomb.
Absolutely! Cloves and the greens! Cant even get proper chives in stores near me - they just sell 'young green' onions past their best b4 date.
We have chives growing all over our yard. Some even sprang up in the gravel around our firepit this year.
I started with a few raised beds and grew tomatoes and zucchinis just as a hobby. It's expanded to 120 sf of mixed raised beds and in-ground beds. I experimented with the "French intensive" style, where everything is planted pretty densly to maximize space and keep down weeds. Last year, I was able to nearly fill a chest freezer with beans and broccoli (the two things my kids love the most). It lasted us most of the winter. This year, I've got carrots and squash as well as the standard beans and broccoli.
I also have 8 chickens, so I haven't bought an egg in about 2 years. This year, we started with rabbits and have 15 bunnies in the freezer, with two more batches about ready to harvest. My brother does chickens and turkeys, so all I need to buy is pork and beef, but we don't eat a ton of beef anyway. There's a local dairy that milks on site, so we have the milk man deliver milk. I grind wheat and bake my own bread- it's friggin delicious. Once you eat a chocolate chip cookie made from fresh ground flour, you'll never eat any other kind.
I'm not a "prepper" per se, but the shutdowns made me never want to have to rely on the supply chain for anything, especially with two kids to feed.
One of my neighbors has about 8 chickens. Mostly laying hens, sometimes they get a rooster.
The roosters don't last long - if you stop hearing it crowing, there's probably a BBQ invite coming.
Roosters are delicious.
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We’ve got an antique metal sink that we grow herbs in. I also built four stands and put old grill halves on them and grow more herbs and some hot pepper plants in those, and then we grow peppers, tomatoes, etc in pots on the deck and in an old dog kennel. Also turned an old riding lawnmower trailer into a planter for some zucchini.
Unfortunately most of our yard is woods and hills, with the only large flat open area having our septic, and between all the deer, rabbits, and other woodland animals, anything we grow needs to be raised and/or surrounded by fencing. So we can supplement our groceries, but we can’t grow enough to not still have to buy produce.
A good trick with green onions is you can buy some and eat all the green stem, then plant the white roots, and they’ll grow back really quick.
Raised boxes will stop most rabbits, but squirrels, raccoons and deer are all like 'hold my beer'.
I have a chipmunk who put his burrow in my cucumber bed. Very convenient for him. Luckily he doesn't eat much.
Last year a fucking groundhog was climbing up on my deck railings and went to town in a tomato plant. This year the chipmunks have been out of control eating branches and digging holes in everything. Pulled a whole jalapeño plant out. I’ve killed 20+ of them and they just keep coming. I’ve found cayenne powder helps in the dirt, and a cayenne water mix sprayed on the plants helps, but it’s a pain keeping up on it.
I tried dried blood as a deterrent, which seems to keep deer and rabbits away, but the squirrels and chipmunks do not give a single shit.
"I’ve killed 20+ of them and they just keep coming."
If you weren't indoctrinated to think guns and death are always the answer, maybe this would tell you that you are using the wrong solution.
Killing animals you consider pests simply encourages migration into the area to fill the vacant niche. You are not going to singlehandedly wipe out chipmunks in north America, so all you're doing is wasting ammo and killing small animals for no apparent reason.
It is vastly more effective to keep the population of pests up, but stop them eating your produce. Study their behaviour and make them have to do things they don't like in order to get to food - v low voltage electrification of the ground can be surprisingly effective. They'll rapidly take to other food sources, while preventing any new pests migrating in.
Fuck off you self righteous twat.
your message could have been entirely acceptable by everyone [i think] if you could have exercised the self restraint to keep that judgey and presumptuous 2nd paragraph out.
The truth hurts, especially to those who have been fooled by liars and shysters into believing daft nonsense. The simple fact is that everything I wrote there is completely uncontentious except to those who have drunk the kool-aid offered by the Jim Jones Gun Cult.
I dunno, my army vet neighbor absolutely wasted a squirrel that was feasting on our heirloom tomatoes, with a pellet rifle from his upstair window. The other tree rats pretty much stopped after that, for a couple of weeks.
We've since moved our purple cherokee's to an enclosed bed.
Victor rat-traps, with the metal bait pan and the spike that you can bend up, baited with a chunck of apple, seem to be solving my chipmunk and vole issue.
Still haven't determined if I can simply dump the bodies and reuse them to get the rest of the clan or not.
"We’ve got an antique metal sink that we grow herbs in"
!
I hope you've checked the metal composition. Antique metal alloys are not always the safest by modern standards, and those are the perfect conditions for e.g. lead to leach into the soil and be concentrated by your herbs.
You're probably fine. Probably.
Very useful info Minadin...what are the dimensions of the raised beds?
I use either 10-ft or 8-ft boards, nominal. When you put them together they end up about 2 inches longer overall, and the short boards you can cut to 2'-6", so it's about 2'-8" wide. If you plan it carefully you can get the boards to cut out evenly without much (or any) waste). I use the same AC2 cedartone lumber, but 2x4's, for the vertical supports. On a 10-ft bed I use 4 on each side, on an 8-ft bed I use 3.
For height, 2 boards equals about 15 inches. It's slightly less than that if the boards are perfect and you cut them perfect and you put them together perfect, but let's not count on that. Technically a 2x8 should be 1.50 inches by 7.25 inches, but - if you find one, let me know.
You can get 1 tomato plant in that space or 2 rows of herbs. Or peppers. Or whatever you like. It's easy to reach from both sides (Both Sidez!) and having your herbs 15 or 22 or 30 inches off the ground is a lot better on my back than ground planting.
Oh, use stainless steel deck screws, and you can thank me later.
If you put an automatic drip / other irrigation system in those beds, and / or if it sees much rain . . .
Screws that don't rust are screws you can trust.
I had a garden off & on for 30 years. It's not easy, at first, but with thought, research, advice from more experienced growers, you can keep simplifying, reducing the hours, and getting more produce.
I advise planting fruit trees rather than veggies, for the most with the least work. But I prefer fruit over all other food.
"Grow your own for..." to be certain you are getting organic, fresh, tree-ripened. Apricots need to left on the tree, do not ship well, and therefore they are picked green, regardless of the flavor loss.
I think it will be faster and cheaper to just vote for Republicans, and rescue the economy from the attack of the democrats.
What, and skip the socialist luddite green revolution, and the Great Leap Backwards?
It's time free Carnivores took over the Locovore franchise from the benighted Vegans.
With less restrictive hunting laws , gardening can furnish the whole barbecue menu, not just the salad course. Whitetail deer that poach vegetables should be incorporated into the human food chain on the spot, not just because they're delicious, but because it's good for climatic stability- free marketers can make vegans howl by reminding them that moving food around the planet has a bigger carbon footprint than manufacturing :
https://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/2022/07/the-key-to-green-barbecue-is-shooting.html
A man (I assume) after my own heart!
If it leads it bleeds,
If it's brown it's down,
If it flies it dies,
If it's red it's dead.
Where's the fun in that?
What about open borders, buttsex, abortion-on-demand, and free drugs?
Start digging your garden. Tomorrow. Even though the lumber for your raised beds is up 350% since the bad orange man left office.
You could always use stone instead of lumber or, as I once did, use dirt-filed worn-out tires found on the roadside to grow veggies. With straw or wood chips, you can xrowdout a lot of weeds and retain water.
Putting one of those tire gardens of tomato plants in the shady part of the North side of the house, I got months worth of Roma tomatoes! I also grew Banana and Cayanne Peppers and cucumbers that added to these tasty bite-sized beauties in salads!
Oh, and nothing says you couldn't use rose bushes or blackberry briars to protect your personal borders, gardens to grow your weed, and deep blueberry bushes to conceal your outdoor buttsex, which would mean no need for abortions. How's that for bringing it all together? 🙂
"What about open borders, buttsex, abortion-on-demand, and free drugs?"
It's interesting what makes you jealous.
With a garden, who cared who does it (open borders), who you do it with (buttsex), who will take over (abortion) and free drugs (grow your own!)
Faster than growing sprouts in your kitcben or shootin' up some food in the backyard? I doubt that.
In the 50's thru the late 70's my dad had a big yard and hence a big garden. no raised boxes - he dug in, turned the soil every year by shovel and eventually by rototiller. 65 - 70 % of the garden was potatoes... another 15-20 maybe was cabbage and cauliflower. then the rest was onions peas leak beats swiss chard radishes... you know assorted small stuff.
Oh yeah, and green onions, chives and garlic!
point being - with a big family on a tiny income he prob did save some money BUT if we werent living in undeclared poverty all this crops were in the lowest cost foods anyways - the easiest to afford for people with regular decent income. As an immigrant man from a rural background who loved doing this stuff.
Unless you love gardening - or want to learn to love it - it really has no scale at all to make it really worth it economically in almost all cases.
Bingo, we have a winner!!!!!
Gardening is NOT about saving money, it's simply a joy. And if it's not, do something else to stay sane.
It does provide exercise which can save medical bills. And you have the option of getting it fresh without having a bunch of others pawing, breathing, and sneezing over it. And you can pick and choose varieties and breeds that the store may not carry. There is more gain to it than you make out to be.
Just hope that your home garden doesn't get regulated under the Commerce Clause. Wickard v. Philburn, never forget. By growing your own food, you're choosing not to engage in interstate commerce, which IS engaging in interstate commerce, so Congress can send in the Feds to burn your garden.
You WILL buy all your food from Whole Foods, or you will starve.
They might be fertilizing gardens if it comes to that.
there is one ruling that should have been aborted before seeing the light of day
Coming soon to a SCOTUS near you, the overturn of Wickard.... we can only hope!
The best thing about Tuccille is how he'll write whatever the regime wants him to write without worrying about ethics or his dignity
It is kinda cute. And I have to (slightly) admire his ability to put a happy spin on the most evil shit. He might have been useful at Auschwitz, too.
Next month’s article: Eating bugs can be fun and nutritious!
I had chocolate crickets in Mexico once and it was an interesting experience that I enjoyed.
Doesn't mean I'm ordering them online, though.
Dude, don't you get it? You should totally make your own.
Like button needed!
What's the ethical qualm here? Gardening is the ultimate peacful defiance. People who control their own food supply can't be kept in line.
Read on, and join reality about what a garden will do for most of us.
"It's unlikely your efforts will replace trips to the grocery store. But in a time of uncertain supply, it's reassuring to know that you can keep yourself and your friends fed."
Last August, I was able to bring half a gallon of fresh salsa and a large caprese salad to a BBQ party for about 20 people, and the only thing I needed from the store was the fresh mozz.
I respect those who garden, and also think you will never get better tomatoes or strawberries than ones ripened and harvested in your back yard.
That said, I often see gardening as the young urbanite's version of a rawhide chew stick. My dog can can get food pretty easily, but the mental stimulation of slowly softening and unraveling the rawhide sticks will keep him busy for hours. Likewise, almost every gardener I know does it for the mental stimulation rather than the resulting greens.
And like the numerous mostly unraveled and abandoned chew sticks I often find under my couch, I have found most urban gardeners have abandoned it after 2 seasons.
If you want the Gardening Results without the experience, an alternative is to join a co-op (CSA). Then you too can get 2 ripe tomatoes at midyear, and then figure out how to deal with 3 lbs of kale every week. At the end of the year, you get enough squash ruin it for life at the kitchen table, and if you are really bored, you can learn to can (which is actually quite fun for me).
Progressive yuppies make the worst gardeners. For reference, see CHAZ.
I live in a 4-family flat and I've had (mostly women) house-neighbors who always have suggestions about the garden, but no desire to work at it, or even harvest it. One gal from (previously) Seattle suggested I plant an apple tree in my raised beds. Another wanted Kale and Swiss Chard and Arugula, but never took any, until August, when she was surprised that it was out of season.
We lived in rural colorado for years, and my in-laws next door had a large garden that bordered on being a small farm. I am glad they enjoyed it. I spent one week weeding in 90 degree evening heat and decided that I want fuckall to do with that in the future. Much better to argue on Reason comments and get my produce from a CSA or store.
“One gal from (previously) Seattle suggested I plant an apple tree in my raised beds.”
Did you laugh in her face?
Quite loudly.
This sounds about right.
Gardening is mostly the school of hard knocks.
Vermin do most of the harvesting, and really, how many tomatoes do you need, even if you're making sauce. A rod of cukes is great, but they a come in at once, so suddenly, you need to switch to making pickles. But do you really want 6 dozen jars of pickled cukes this winter?
A wonderful fantasy, but let's get some perspective. The reason we live so well is specialization. I do chemistry, you do delivery, someone else does manufacturing, We each do it well, and efficiently, but when I garden, it 's a net loss of $$$. (Although, it does help the blood pressure... for me, at least).
But do you really want 6 dozen jars of pickled cukes this winter?
Uh, fuck yeah? There are burgers to be dressed and salads to top and relish plates to fill for the Holidays.
And gardening does not preclude division of labor and trade. I can grow tomatoes, peppers, onions, greens, herbs, aloe vera, and luffa well, but never could get squash, pumpkins, melons or Venus Fly Traps to grow well. So I could barter or buy what I can't grow and others who can't grow what I grow can barter or buy what I've got. Neat.
No, I agree, your average home garden isn't terribly cost effective. If it's something you enjoy, it can insulate you against fresh veggies and herbs being unavailable, and you can get better quality and selection than is available from the grocery store. We have about a 900 square foot garden composed of raised beds with a garden arch between, and it's not enough to feed us.
But if cost effectiveness is your only criterion, buy dry staples bulk, and stock up on vitamin pills. (Vitamins last a LONG time if you keep them in the deep freeze.) You need a lot of space and work to feed yourself from your own garden; I have a friend who does it, but, duh: He's a farmer.
Let's see; We have a bay laurel tree, (Fresh bay leaves are hugely superior to dried.) a few rosemary bushes, and an herb garden with sage, oregano, and thyme. Herbs are probably the easiest thing to be self-sufficient on, depending on your climate.
For fruits we plant melon and ground cherries. I highly recommend ground cherries; Delicious, and they store for months without any special effort, as each one is hermetically sealed in it's own paper husk. You just pick them up off the ground when they fall off the plant. The melons were a bust this year, something killed them.
Veggies? Swiss chard, yard long beans, tomatoes, peppers, and squash.
Forget zucchini, try growing yellow crookneck. Not quite as prolific, but flavor-wise the difference is amazing. It's like the difference between tofu and steak. Bushes, but big ones.
We're experimenting with potatoes, (That was a success.) beets, (Not so much.) carrots, and salsify. The carrots have been a moderate success, the salsify I don't know yet.
Beets, beets, beets.... easy, and fairly high value. Potatoes are good. Squash are easy, but mostly water.
Fruit trees are where it's at, but take a looooooooong time to establish. Eff the dwarf and semi-dwarf that can't take a monthlong drought, letalone a dry summer. Fullsized apples is where it's at! But start now, and you'll have a few bushels each year in 10 years or so.
Damn! You've got a wonderful set-up! Composting, companion planting, splicing, and naturwl and man-made pest repellants and kilers can make that even more prolific. Build bat-boxes to lure the bug eaters. Welcome black snakes to eat the bigger vermin. Use marigolds, peppers, onions, garlic, and cinnamon as repellants. The possibilities are limitless!
Home gardening for subsistence, aka farming! What a great way to spend a few hours every day, out in the sun and fresh air. And a nice break from spinning and weaving, splitting firewood, hauling water, repairing the irrigation system, caring for the chickens, checking the fences, drying and canning, and washing clothes by hand. Plus, home schooling is easy since the kids learn everything they need to know by helping mom and dad (or mom and mom, dad and dad, xer and zhe, or whatever). And those few hours around the radio before bedtime are priceless!
A full time job of very hard work just to feed yourself. A lot of folks will become very thin and cranky.
Damn straight on that! Full time gardener since I quit work, and I'm down a pound a month. 3000 calories - don't know if it 's work, or not bored / nervous nibbling, but 3 kcal / month is 3 kcal / month eityher way!
I never experienced gardening as mucb work. It helps to crowd out weeds with compost or woodchips, find automated methods of irrigation, and know proper plant placement and the garden does all the work.
I do the chickens, firewood, and canning. Chickens are actually very little work; A few minutes a day on average. Splitting sweetgum, OTOH, is a workout and then some.
Try locust, tupelo or elm ( if you can find it). The devil himself would lose patience on the grain in those!.
I take it The Good Life never made it to the US?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Good_Life_(1975_TV_series)
There was a parody on The Young Ones. I'll have to find it.
Here's one bit where the trash the show. Damn! Vyvian is hilarious!
The Young Ones--The Good Life
https://youtu.be/nu44FTsE90Q
Here's the full episode. The guys taking off on The Good Life starts qt 25:30
The Young Ones Season 2 Episode 5--Sick
https://youtu.be/Z1wsvhfbb9Q
I'd love having you as a farming neighbor. Rest assured, I wouldn't run a Yasger's Farm next door and would be ever at your assistance with whatever efforts I could give keeping fences, livestock, wild crops, and stray drones in their proper place.
Get all the kulaks here. When the shit hits the fan the gov-guns will be out and about confiscating and redistributing your food.
yes. this was after the swords are beaten into plowshares. The swords will get a workout first though.
And who says you can't rig your plowshare with a sword sheath or, better yet, rotating scythes in mid-air to make short work of Reaver raiders!
Sorry, Isaiah. You gotta study war to fight it right and prevent it.
Hey, that's why it's smart to do root crops. Wheat and such need to be harvested when ready, but potatoes, beets, carrots, etc. can sit in the ground (mostly) until you want them, but the invading armies tend (mostly) to ignore them.
Also a good idea!
And after harvest may be a good time to leave the holes uncovered for invaders to trip in at dark!
As you can tell by the time, I 've been know to lay up nights thinking up stuff like that. 😉
They'll have to get through the blackberry briarpatches and rose-bushes, as well as the bee hives rigged to fishing line trip-wires all along the periphery. Then, they'll have to survive homesteaders dressed in corn stalk ghillie suits and packing 12 gauge small pellet shotguns. It'll be damn hard times for Putin's, Xi's, Khameini's, and Salman's Blue Helmets.
*Hearing "WOLVERIIIIINES!" in my wet dreams with a wide-eyed Ralphie smile.*
Grow your own cuts out the drug dealers too.
Fuck free markets! Do it all yourself!
That's included in Free Markets, silly!
News sources don’t make much effort to look into incidents of past heatwaves:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1911_United_Kingdom_heat_wave
Oh, boy, here we go with the Ivana was murdered theories:
https://twitter.com/drgjackbrown/status/1548257521919332352?s=21&t=EFls_RxXI4UP5WkGptjBeA
“Ivana's body was found next to a spilled cup of coffee at the bottom of her stairs. Hmmm. If she fell down a spiral staircase, the cup may have tumbled all the way down the stairs, but the coffee would have been spilled initially at the top of the stairs. Story doesn't add up.”
Turns out a lot of people think they are smarter than they are. I think there is a name for that. Some sort of effect.
Anyway -
Jeffrey Epstein didn't murder himself.
But Ghislaine Maxwell will...
maybe she has already and just doesnt know it?
Makes me wonder if there are already obits prepared citing suicide in prison (with the requisite multiple security systems failures identified) ready to go like they have with celebrity obits.
While I don't have a garden, I do grow my own herbs. Way cheaper than buying them.
If you use fresh herbs in your cooking, you're a fool if you don't grow your own. Start with rosemary. It's virtually indestructible.
Oregano is also difficult to kill, and fresh oregano is spicy and delicious on a lot of things.
Bay laurel, too, and it's the hydra of the plant world. Every time you clip a leaf off, it branches at the base of the leaf.
Mint.... and don't let it get loose or it will take over your yard.
But in a time of uncertain supply, it's reassuring to know that you can keep yourself and your friends fed.
Good luck getting 2,000 calories a day from zucchini and carrots.
Potatoes and beets???
Canned and other preserved foods are a hedge against supply chain disruptions. Gardening is a hobby. It is impossible to reliably produce food on demand from any single garden - whether it's pests, weather, your neighbour's house catching fire and the (plastic infused) smoke ruining the lot, or some other such hopefully rare event, you cannot rely on a single garden.
Or, if you do, you're likely to find out what the Irish potato famine was like, except you can still pop to the shops and buy some bread.
Where is the magic place where food is not available but cans, lids, seeds, and feritilizer are?
Not sure if you've misunderstood me slightly or are agreeing obliquely.
I was suggesting that if what is wanted is a hedge against supply disruptions, one should stock up with canned goods purchased when there is no supply disruption. Not can one's own from a small garden.
As you rightly point out, there's no reason to think the stuff needed for gardening won't sell out too if supply chains are disrupted to that extent.
Nah, if you have a large enough storage area (preferably in a place that doesn't get too hot or too cold, so possibly buried if you can swing it) you can totally stock up on enough canned food to last a month without services.
That is prepping for a "disruption".
But unless you're preserving stuff, a home garden isn't prepping for disruption.
Heya JD..... good job!
I was expecting something like "with 10 square feet you can cut your grocery bill in half". Good that this is a bit more balance! As a book about gardening around my part of the worlds says "you can have a nice little fortune farming, if you start with a big fortune to big with"
It's a great pass-time, and the quality is far better than anything I can buy, even at a farm stand, but it's a great way to go broke too! If you start there (you're NOT going to save money), you'll be just fine.
p.s. I grew up with a father who gardened, as his grandfather had shown him, and he shewed me,, but I find more mistakes to make every year!
Hey, for all the folks to whom I have responded above, gardening really is great, and I do love it, but just trying to make sure no one thinks they're going to solve the world's problems with a little piece of God'sGreenEarth.
Sorry, too much (homemade) cider talking tonight....
Get a seed catalog, but start small, treat it as a learning experience, and just try to have fun!
Sounds like somebody put their crops to good use. 😉
I've been thinking a lot about a farmbot lately. It's a 3-d printer type of setup that runs on tracks on your raised bed. You plan out the garden with an app, and a robot plants seeds, picks weeds, tests local soil water content and waters each plant accordingly.
It's a neat concept, I looked at it myself, but it's awfully hardware intensive for the size of garden it's good for.
Hello. Personally, I like gardening. If you do your research online, you will find many interesting facts about why gardening is beneficial. No, seriously. There has been ample research that conclusively surmises that gardening is good for the mind, body, and soul — not just for your yard. By the way if you need some professional help with design, I can recommend to check projects from avantilandscaping.ca. These guys have great experience in this field!