Buyer's Guide

15

In My Garden Blog

May 8, 2008
Middle South
By Suzanne DeJohn,
Candler, NC

2779
What could be better than a homegrown harvest and canned goods to enjoy into winter?

Food Gardeners Unite

Like many of you, I take announcements of new "trends" with a grain of salt. One year purple is in, the next season it's orange. One year it's Victorian baroque, the next, minimalism. However, a recent spate of news items caught my eye. It seems that home vegetable gardening is on the rise. "Interesting," I thought. "Can it be true?" So last weekend when I was buying plants at a local greenhouse I asked the grower if he had noticed an increase in vegetable transplant sales. He said yes, he's seen a big rise, and he's already running low on tomato and pepper plants -- and the official spring planting date (Mother's Day) was still a week off. He told me people are buying vegetable plants early and storing them until it's time to plant, telling him they are worried about rising food prices.

A Gardening Renaissance?
Except for some of the local old-timers and "back-to-the-landers," few people I know have been growing a significant amount of their own food in recent years. Supermarket food has been relatively inexpensive so there wasn't a financial imperative. Flowers and lawns were the focus. Food gardens were a novelty -- a few tomato and pepper plants.

All that appears to be changing. Is this a food gardening renaissance or a blip in the statistics that will flatten if and when food prices drop -- or when we just get used to them? I hope it's not just a fad, but rather a sea change in the way we look at our food.

People ask me why I'd rather can and freeze my own food when it's so much easier to buy it in the store. (And probably cheaper, when you add up the cost of growing the food and buying the mason jars and electricity to can them.) Because to me growing and preserving food are life skills with intrinsic value. I'm not a purist, but if I have a choice I'd rather eat food from my garden than food grown who knows where by who knows who. And I DO have a choice.

I value the old-fashioned homesteading skills -- gardening, canning, sewing, cooking, baking bread. It makes sense to me to know how to fulfill my basic needs. And there's no place I'd rather be on a sunny day than in my garden. I'm one of those annoying people who likes to weed. In my spare time I read books about plants and botany and gardening. I noticed the odd glance of a passerby one day as I was examining up close the beautiful bark on a tree. I suspect she murmured, "She must be on drugs." No, I just love observing nature. To me plant bark is just as enthralling as art in a museum. I suppose you could call me a plant nerd.

Plant Nerds, Unite!
It seems like every few generations there's renewed interest in gardening and garden-related things. WWII had its Victory Gardens. The 1970s had the back-to-the-land hippies. Now, after a few generations of high-tech, gee-whiz electronics -- the "Revenge of the Nerds" era -- maybe us plant nerds will have our day in the sun again.

Several "20-somethings" have recently asked me to show them how to do homestead-y things. I showed one young couple how to bake bread, and now they bake all their own. Another exuberant friend called, asking "Do you know how to make pumpkin pie from a pumpkin?" As though it were akin to brain surgery. I shared how to make a homemade pie, from cooking and pureeing the pumpkin to making the crust. I think she was surprised at how easy it was, and I doubt she'll ever buy canned pie filling again.

Whatever it takes to get people back into the garden, I'm all for it. Gardening gets people outdoors and offers a glimpse into the natural world. And when people grow food, they tend to be more concerned about what pesticides they're spraying. So in a roundabout way, food gardening is good for the environment.

The Times Are A-Changing
Can you believe that some subdivisions prohibit food gardening? According to one source, almost one in five Americans -- 57 million -- live in homes regulated by homeowner associations (HOAs), whose covenants regulate what residents can and can't do. And some of those convenants prohibit or restrict food gardens (see http://www.alternet.org/environment/51001).

According to the Web site for the Crest Mountain gated community in Asheville, North Carolina, vegetable gardens are not allowed (http://www.crestmtn.com/legal_documents/coven.PDF).

At Tavistock Farms in Leesburg, Virginia, you can have a vegetable garden as long as it doesn't exceed 64 square feet. Just how much food can you grow in an 8' x 8' garden? And no veggies in the front yard. And free-standing greenhouses are forbidden. Where is the farm in Tavistock Farms?
(http://www.tavistockfarms.org/documents/TFCA%20ACC%20Guidelines%202001.pdf).

Something is very wrong with these restrictions. If your property has a covenant that prohibits you from growing your own food, maybe now's the time to take a stand and help this food gardening "trend" become a "movement" and eventually, maybe, a way of life. Share your knowledge about gardening. Growing your own food gives you power. In a world where so much seems to be out of our control, this is one place we can all participate.

If you're inspired to grow some edibles this season, be sure to check out National Gardening Association's Edible Landscaping Web site and eNewsletter: http://www.garden.org/ediblelandscaping

add a comment Comments on Food Gardeners Unite

We welcome your questions and comments about this column. If you have gardening questions unrelated to the column, please ask them on our message boards.

add a comment
Suzanne DeJohn
Are you growing more of your own food this year? Why? What
challenges are you facing? Will you be preserving (canning or
freezing) the extra produce? 
add a comment
Garden Girl
I am pleased but not surprised by your column about food gardening.
I am the coordinator of a community garden and part of a growing
network of church-based community gardens across central North
Carolina. We have seen our membership expand and more people who
have never gardened before wanting to learn how to grow their own
food, how to cook with fresh produce, how to raise honeybees, how to
preserve food, and how to connect with God, nature, and each other
in the garden. It is a revolution!
add a comment
dilly202
If I were to either rent or buy in a formal community I for one
would make sure that I could garden and not just flowers.  As far as
I am concerned my back yard is MINE not the busy body down the block
who does not like home grown veggies or fruits.  If it is in the
back yard it does not take away from the cookie cutter front yards. 
When I was arranging to rent my current place one of the first
questions I ask was can I plant a garden?  
add a comment
Liz Sanders
I have a very small area to use for vegetables and am limited by
disabilities.  In my "garden" I am growing squash, zucchini,
eggplant,  3 types of tomatoes, and radishes. In other pots I have a
fairly complete herb garden.  I also grow cilanto with with my
flowers. My Swiss chard has done nicely in a container as all my
other herbs.
I often trade herbs for vegetables. With food prices continuing to
rise grow where you can and enjoy.
add a comment
mommalynne
There are many wonderful ideas and reasons for growing your own food
and I am one that wants to do just that. I live on public housing
property and I too want to grow my own again but, there seems to be
a problem. I need help and since I have a special needs child and
the garden will need to be high enough to accomodate him and his
wheelchair. If anyone has any ideas please feel free to post
anything that may help. Also, I have planted a few herbs outside the
kitchen door beside the wheelchair raamp. It's wonderful!!
add a comment
cjmray
Mommalynn,
Can I suggest container gardening, w/the pots on top of a table that
is the right height for your child to reach?

To add my 2 cents to the overall subject, I have for the past 4-5
years been a member of a CSA, which stands for "Community Supported
Agriculture."  Basically, I invest in the part-ownership of a farm's
crop for the season.  I pay an amount and volunteer 32 hours of my
labor.  In exchange, every week for 6 months I receive a big box of
produce.  The farm is located in a beautiful valley.  I look forward
to my workdays for the view, being outdoors and the camaraderie.

Over the winter I read "Animal, Vegetable, Mineral" by Barbara
Kingsolver, which has inspired me to no end.  This year I am
planting some veggies that I don't get enough of from the farm,
and/or that I can freeze: tomatoes, peppers and sugar snap peas. 
I'm trying to establish a strawberry patch and an asparagus patch. 
Because of the drought, I also set up a cistern to harvest rainwater
from the roof.  I don't totally make my own bread, but I have
perfected my favorite multi-grain recipe using the breadmaker.

It feels empowering to be doing more for me and my family -
healthier, cheaper and it's all done w/love!
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