by Pixie » Thu 06 Dec 2007, 16:42:33
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tanada', ' ')I was shocked to discover that the jar of peaches I got out of the cupboard the other day from Dole stated on the lable, Peaches from Greece, packaged in Thailand. ... When I was growing up we had a small orchard and grew our own northern fruits, Peaches, Plums, Pears, Apples, Cherries and Grapes, plus we grew Strawberries in the garden. We grew enough fruits and vegetables on an acre of land to replace all the fruit and most of the vegetables for a houshold with 7 -11 residents! ...
99% or more of the people on here have no clue what you can grow for yourself with a few hours of labor a week on a small plot of land. Of course the city objects if you try and garden too much, which cetainly doesn't help matters any.
I got my 20 year old friend interested in square foot gardening this last year. She lives in an apartment, but there was a small piece of dirt next to her door that belonged to the chiropractor's office next door. On that little plot, she was able to grow tomatoes, swiss chard, cabbage, potatoes, bush beans, brussel sprouts and strawberries.
She also had a nice little compost pile that other residents of the building contributed to.
Unfortunately, she grew up eating food from cans and she continued to eat food from cans. 90% of her tomatoes went into the compost with the first frost. Turns out she doesn't like swiss chard or cabbage. The beans got too old and woody to eat... She taught herself to grow her own food, but not to eat it.
I, on the other hand, am still eating fresh cabbage from her garden in December.
For her birthday, she wanted a diet book called "Skinny Bitch." This book did what I could never do, no matter how much I preached. It convinced her to go organic and vegan. She got to the chapter about slaughterhouses and was too sickened to read further. Her mom got her a book called "Gardening When it Matters" which is all about organic gardening after peak oil. Maybe next year, she will eat her own produce.
Talk about teaching the young people! It gives me hope. The thing that I have noticed about 20 somethings today: they already have reduced expectations compared to what we had in the 90's. It may be a little noticed cultural phenomenon, but I believe today's young people already don't expect this party to last.