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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Little John Deere

We've been puttering around here, working on a bunch of different stuff....


Yesterday, the Gman got the little JD out of the shed. Started giving it a tune up - realized we are missing a part to run the mower deck.
Anyway, I got a lesson on how to drive it. So off I went, up and down the driveway, it was a bit of a jerky ride. Maybe I'll get used to it!




I set up temporary fencing for the chickens. They were driving us both nuts again. They have 11 acres to hang out on, but they really seem to like my flower beds.


So, I'll put them in here around 1pm or so, then let them stay in there till almost dark. They are liking it, I throw a bunch of scratch out for them. And they have some shade from under one of the big trees. I put some water out there for them and set the bucket in the shade, so they should all be just fine.


We have a good number of broccoli and cauliflower come up, no tomatoes yet tho! The plan for tomorrow is to work on the greenhouse. We need to get the staple gun out and refasten some of the plastic. Aside from that, it held up really well over the winter.
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Monday, April 27, 2009

Moving Da Pigs

We got quite a bit done yesterday! Mainly, setting up the first outdoor run for the piglets, then getting them all moved out there.

How do you move 6 pigs easily? Oh, who knows?? We don't think it's that easy to make a pig go where YOU want it to go....We thought about it for awhile, then decided to basically build a chute.

We needed to move the pigs from the large room in the barn. We needed them to end up in the outdoor run, so we nailed some pieces of OSB down the aisleway of the barn.
(The pigs were living behind that door)










Then we pounded in some T posts, and ran boards (attached with wire) to the T posts.....

At the other end was the open gate to the first outdoor run....












But before we did that, we put up T posts and insulators, making a run out of part of the Animal Garden. We can't move the piggys down below the Garden yet, as the field is still way too wet....

You can see the run we made for them, inside the white tape. You can't see the pig house, as it is behind that tree....







Then we doublechecked everything, and went to open the door to the barn room. First one piggy stepped out (it took him a bit to work up his courage)

Once one went out, two others followed....the last 2 took quite awhile before they were willing to leave the barn room. But eventually, they too started down the aisle.

Here you can see the chute we made....the Gman had already started to take it apart before I could get a picture of it all done up.













And here...the end result! 6 Piggys, in their new home....didn't take them long to start rooting away and playing in the dirt.







We left them alone for awhile....later we fed them and began to wonder how we were going to get them to go into the pig house.

In the past, we brought the piggies right INTO their house, so that they would know where they would sleep and get out of the weather. This time, we couldn't easily do that as the pigs are quite a bit bigger. It's hard to pick up a pig!! They run fast and they squirm like crazy, trying to get out of your arms....

In the end, the Gman caught one pig and managed to put it in the house. We had already put lots of hay down for their bedding. I grabbed a partial can of grain and the Gman sprinkled some out in front of the piggy. Finally, the piggy settled down and started eating the grain. (Gman had put the grain in the doorway so the other piggys could see the one guy eating away) Then we went back up to the house and watched....

Finally! After some time, the Gman said "There's 5 piggys in the house!" One little straggler was afraid to go in. We watched and watched and finally, in it went.

So first thing this morning, I looked out and there were no piggys Out at all! Well, until the sun came out and they started wondering where their breakfast was!

Now, they are out there running around chasing each other.....thank goodness the move is over with and it went very smoothly!

We've got the room in the barn airing out...propped open all the doors. Today, we are going to move the greenhouse that is propped up against the double doors to that room. Once we move the greenhouse pieces, we can open up the double doors and the room will air out quickly.

In a few days, we'll clean out all the bedding in that room, and then let it air out for a few more weeks. We'll be needing the room in mid-May for when our chicks arrive!
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Sunday, April 26, 2009

Monsanto Sues Germany to Force GMO Food

Monsanto Sues Germany to Force GMO Food
http://www.opednews.com/articles/MEG...90422-816.html

Monsanto is now suing the German government (and, by that, the people) to force them to grow their GM Corn. Monsanto files suit against Germany over GM ban:

MON810 maize is genetically engineered to produce Bacillus thuringiensis, which is toxic to the corn borer pest. Permitted in Europe since 1998 for animal feed, it is marketed as a way to save farmers money on insecticides and other pest controls.

However German agriculture minister Ilse Aigner claimed last week that she had "legitimate reasons" to believe the maize to be a danger to the environment – and believes the Environment Ministry to agree with the view. Although MON810 has been permitted in Germany since 2005, she scrapped plans for 3,600 hectares (8,892 acres) to be planted in the eastern states for this summer's harvest.

Now the biotech giant has hit back, according to a Reuters article, filing a lawsuit against the Germany government in the administrative court in Braunschweig, northern Germany

The wire quotes a spokesperson for Monsanto as saying the ban is "arbitrary". A clause in EU law does allow member states to impose such a ban, but Monsanto claims they can only do so once a plant has already been approved if new scientific evidence has come to light.

If the outcome of the lawsuit is in Monsanto's favour, the cost to the German government has been estimated at between €6m and €7m....

Germany's response to Monsanto: "Eat it!" Sphere: Related Content

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Garden Poll Progress

We're entering the last week of the Garden Poll, here's the results so far:

12% are putting in a Garden for the first time
7% are looking into putting in their first Garden
12% are putting in the same size Garden as they did last year
68% are Making their Garden Bigger
0% are going to get their veggies at the store

Wow! 68% are making their garden bigger...that's a HUGE number of respondents.

Good for you! Sphere: Related Content

The Garlic is Up

Saw some garlic poking thru the straw....









The rhubarb is growing!










A little birdie at the feeder....












The Gman is coming home late this afternoon! I'm going to spend the rest of the afternoon cleaning up down at the barn. Then, maybe work in the berry bed for an hour.

This weekend, hopefully we will work on getting the first outside run ready for the pigs, then get them moved.....
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Friday, April 24, 2009

Broccoli, Cauliflower and Tomato Seeds

Ok, well yesterday afternoon, I managed to get my potting room cleaned up from the last round. Then I started seeding.

I seeded 20 Broccoli and 20 Cauliflower....crossing my fingers that they germinate well.

This morning, I got my tomatoes seeded:

7 Sweet Baby Girl Cherry
6 Siberian - a hardy tomato for growing Up North (am doing these up for a friend)
10 Amish Paste
7 Roma
9 Jetsetter

Hmmm, that gives me 33 plants for our use, I think between the 2 greenhouses, I would have room for a few more, maybe 5 more....so I may do a few more Jetsetters.

I grew those last year and they were wonderfully large and tasty. Fantastic for fresh eating, and good for sauce too. This year I am trying Roma and the Amish Paste mostly to use for sauce. Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, April 23, 2009

'Superweed’ explosion threatens Monsanto heartlands

‘Superweed’ explosion threatens Monsanto heartlands
Sunday 19 April 2009
http://www.france24.com/en/20090418-superweed-explosion-threatens-monsanto-heartlands-genetically-modified-US-crops

“Superweeds” are plaguing high-tech Monsanto crops in southern US states, driving farmers to use more herbicides, return to conventional crops or even abandon their farms.

The gospel of high-tech genetically modified (GM) crops is not sounding quite so sweet in the land of the converted. A new pest, the evil pigweed, is hitting headlines and chomping its way across Sun Belt states, threatening to transform cotton and soybean plots into weed battlefields.

In late 2004, “superweeds” that resisted Monsanto’s iconic “Roundup” herbicide, popped up in GM crops in the county of Macon, Georgia. Monsanto, the US multinational biotech corporation, is the world’s leading producer of Roundup, as well as genetically engineered seeds. Company figures show that nine out of 10 US farmers produce Roundup Ready seeds for their soybean crops.

Superweeds have since alarmingly appeared in other parts of Georgia, as well as South Carolina, North Carolina, Arkansas, Tennessee, Kentucky and Missouri, according to media reports. Roundup contains the active ingredient glyphosate, which is the most used herbicide in the USA.

GM protesters demonstrate near the French town of Toulouse in March 2008.

How has this happened?

Farmers over-relied on Monsanto’s revolutionary and controversial combination of a single “round up” herbicide and a high-tech seed with a built-in resistance to glyphosate, scientists say.

Today, 100,000 acres in Georgia are severely infested with pigweed and 29 counties have now confirmed resistance to glyphosate, according to weed specialist Stanley Culpepper from the University of Georgia.

“Farmers are taking this threat very seriously. It took us two years to make them understand how serious it was. But once they understood, they started taking a very aggressive approach to the weed,” Culpepper told FRANCE 24.

“Just to illustrate how aggressive we are, last year we hand-weeded 45% of our severely infested fields,” said Culpepper, adding that the fight involved “spending a lot of money.”

In 2007, 10,000 acres of land were abandoned in Macon country, the epicentre of the superweed explosion, North Carolina State University’s Alan York told local media.

The perfect weed

Had Monsanto wanted to design a deadlier weed, they probably could not have done better. Resistant pigweed is the most feared superweed, alongside horseweed, ragweed and waterhemp.

“Palmer pigweed is the one pest you don’t want, it is so dominating,” says Culpepper. Pigweed can produce 10,000 seeds at a time, is drought-resistant, and has very diverse genetics. It can grow to three metres high and easily smother young cotton plants.

Today, farmers are struggling to find an effective herbicide they can safely use over cotton plants.

Controversial solutions
In an interview with FRANCE 24, Monsanto’s technical development manager, Rick Cole, said he believed superweeds were manageable. “The problem of weeds that have developed a resistance to Roundup crops is real and [Monsanto] doesn’t deny that, however the problem is manageable,” he said.

Cole encourages farmers to alternate crops and use different makes of herbicides.

Indeed, according to Monsanto press releases, company sales representatives are encouraging farmers to mix glyphosate and older herbicides such as 2,4-D, a herbicide which was banned in Sweden, Denmark and Norway over its links to cancer, reproductive harm and mental impairment. 2,4-D is also well-known for being a component of Agent Orange, a toxic herbicide which was used in chemical warfare in Vietnam in the 1960s.

FRANCE 24 report: French scientist Eric Seralini says research shows Roundup herbicide is highly toxic to human beings.

Questioned on the environmental impact and toxicity of such mixtures, Monsanto’s public affairs director, Janice Person, said that “they didn’t recommend any mixtures that were not approved by the EPA,” she said, referring to the US federal Environmental Protection Agency.

According to the UK-based Soil Association, which campaigns for and certifies organic food, Monsanto was well aware of the risk of superweeds as early as 2001 and took out a patent on mixtures of glyphosate and herbicide targeting glyphosate-resistant weeds.

“The patent will enable the company to profit from a problem that its products had created in the first place,” says a 2002 Soil Association report.

Returning to conventional crops
In the face of the weed explosion in cotton and soybean crops, some farmers are even considering moving back to non-GM seeds. “It’s good for us to go back, people have overdone the Roundup seeds,” Alan Rowland, a soybean seed producer based in Dudley, Missouri, told FRANCE 24. He used to sell 80% Monsanto “Roundup Ready” soybeans and now has gone back to traditional crops, in a market overwhelmingly dominated by Monsanto.

According to a number of agricultural specialists, farmers are considering moving back to conventional crops. But it’s all down to economics, they say. GM crops are becoming expensive, growers say.

While farmers and specialists are reluctant to blame Monsanto, Rowland says he’s started to “see people rebelling against the higher costs.” Sphere: Related Content

Seedlings

Well, I'm pretty disapointed....of all those cabbage seeds I started, I have 50 green cabbage up and 1, yes one (!) measly red cabbage. I don't know what has happened. I waterered properly, have the lights on for them...I dunno.

Anyway, today I need to move on and start the tomatoes, broccoli and cauliflower. Maybe I'll have more luck with these, at least I hope so!

I've been working outside, the snow is 99% gone. I've been concentrating on weeding out the berry bed properly. Pics later today hopefully! Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Some Stocks are Just Crap

Or as WayneR will tell ya....all stocks are shit!

Over the last while, I have been caught up in something....well, no, what I should say is I have been caught up on reading something....for the second time in a year, another "friend" has fallen into the trap.


The trap of greed....the trap of pumping up a particular stock. Why? Well, because they're being compensated, of course. Whether it's by the company or by a third party, they are being paid to post positive stuff about the stock....with nary a thought towards a newbie trying to learn how to play stocks. They don't mind at all sucking someone in and making them lose their money.




Two people who I no longer trust....two people who just couldn't be satisfied making less money (still, making gooooood money, don't get me wrong). But hey, the face of Greed shows up....


And now, they each have zero credibility....Karma, it's a bitch, ain't it?


There is a saying in the stock world...I probably won't write it quite correctly, but it goes something like this.....


There are some stocks that are just crap....you can put lipstick on a pig, but in the end, it's still Just a Pig.....


Kinda like this....



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Sunday, April 19, 2009

Making a Milking Stand for Goats

Linda and her husband Jim just finished making a stand for milking their goats.....check it out.

There's lots of photos, and they built it out of scrap wood they found around their place! Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Baby Lambs and Baby Goats

I went to my friends' house yesterday and remembered to bring the camera....

Dayuuummmm....these little guys are so cute!






There is a bit of molasses mixed in with the water. My friend said it is to give the sheep a bit more energy and also there are minerals in the molasses.


Da blaaaaaaack sheep of the family, hahahaha, just like me!







Goats, sheep, lambs, roosters, hens....and dogs....all enjoying a spring day.



These little lambs are about 2 weeks old...






These little twin goats were less than 24 hours old!


It's this Mama's first time. She did a great job!



And, a few flower pics....she has a much nicer flower garden than I do!


Snowdrops











Crocuses














Look how these crocuses are already blooming and the snow is not even off of them yet!








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Monday, April 13, 2009

Chickens Love Milk!!

Boy, do they ever Love Milk! I had some extra goat milk, so I gave some to the girls. Pretty hard to get a pic before they had finished it off!
Today, I cut up the Last Cabbage that was still in the cold room....I had to chuck several of the outer layers of leaves, but the inside was still good!
Amazing, since it's been down there since early last Fall - nice for us to know the cold room is doing a great job!

A pic of part of the chicken coop....the Gman's homemade feeder and the roosts are visible on the right.
We put some of their feed in the bucket....then we throw the rest around the coop on the floor.
The hens scratch around to find their grains. In doing so, they help to aerate the litter - cuts down on the smell. I'd clean the coop thoroughly, but I can't run the wheelbarrow thru all the mud around here!
You can see the snow is pretty much gone from the side yard.....within a month, everything will be nice and green...and growing!!!
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Sunday, April 12, 2009

Our Piggys


I took a few piggy pics this morning. We've added one more feeding trough for the little guys and gals.....they're getting bigger and a few of them were starting to "hog" the trough!






Dayum, they are cute!









This little one looked up at me right when I was taking the pic....

I have to turn over and move the troughs pretty much every feeding now. They are beginning to play with the troughs and try throwing them around!
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Walking thru the Yard

Ooooh, here's what I found this morning coming back up from the barn! There's still snow on the ground, not much, but things are popping up!

Valerian












Chives












Rhubarb











I swear things grow up here even when the snow is still on the plants....cuz as soon as the snow disappears, there is quite a bit of green growth!

Have a Blessed Easter, everyone! I'll be putting some more pics up later this afternoon....
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Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Making Maple Syrup

Interested in seeing the process for making maple syrup? Check out So...There...Then's blog She's been a busy gal, along with her hubby and friends.

Pretty cool...I'm sure the Gman will be all over this one! We don't have maple trees up here, but we do have birch. And Birch Syrup is pretty darn good!

In other news, I think I have finally figured out how to hot link....hot linking and hot flashing....that'd be me! I'll be linking and flashing all over this here blog! Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Cabbage Seedlings


I was just downstairs counting up the cabbage seedlings that are poking thru the soil.....we are up to 24!


Not one of the red cabbages is up yet, nor any peppers yet, tho it's too early for them. Peppers take several weeks to get started....
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The Big Melt

The weather has been wonderful these last couple of days. So wonderful, in fact, it hit 24C yesterday afternoon! Yes, Really! Which meant I was able to sit out on the porch in the sun for several hours, it was fantastic!








So, of course, the Big Melt is on....so much so, we have put away our winter boots and are putting on our rubber boots. Squish, squish, is what is heard as we walk around, sinking in all the mud around here!


You can see the snow is all gone now from the path to the barn.....of course, now it's mud!




The Gman laid boards down the pathway to the barn. Much easier! We're still hauling water to the piggys, so carrying a 5 gallon bucket down the boards is a bit of an adventure, but so far, so good.







Look! There's my garden bench again....my ole friend, I have not seen you in months!
I spent part of yesterday clearing out the little ditches down at the barn.....we need them open to carry all this water away!
After I got that done, I sat on my butt for most of the afternoon!
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Saturday, April 4, 2009

Framing Lumber for the Shop


Oooooh, exciting! While we were in town this morning, we picked up the framing material needed to get started on the Gman's shop!


We won't be building for a couple more months, but we picked up the lumber. The Gman says this wood will frame all the exterior walls. After this, the next thing to do will be to order the trusses for the roof.
We got it all stacked and tarped over, ready for us to use when the time comes!

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Gulp! Did a Coyote Try to Get in the Pig Room?

Well....we found something interesting this morning! We were walking around the back side of the barn this morning.

The Gman found this.....











and then this.....














and then this.......














and then This!!!!














He thinks the tracks are from a coyote. Maybe it is the same lone coyote I have seen a few times now??

Thank goodness he couldn't get into the room, that is where all the piggys are! Poor things, they would have been scared silly! This most likely happened while we were both on the Coast. We had taken da Wolf with us, so our place probably seemed a lot more tempting!

You can see how big the window opening is, thankfully we built them so they tip inwards at the top!
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Thursday, April 2, 2009

The Obamas Are Putting In a Veggie Garden


I'd be remiss if I didn't post about this. I think it's a good thing. If 10 citizens put in a garden based on the fact that their POTUS put in a garden, hey, I think that's fantastic!


I'm glad they are planting a rhubarb, but where are the potatoes? And....someone in that House sure does like spinach, look how much they are planting!


Anyway, here's a map of the garden and a friendly critique by Rob Hopkins....


_________________________________________________________
If I had written it as a Transition Tale in the Transition Handbook, it would have ranked as being even more ridiculous than the Beckhams’ cob retirement house. However, here we are, and Michelle Obama has started to dig up part of the White House lawn and turn it into a vegetable garden. According to the New York Times;
…whether there would be a White House garden had become more than a matter of landscaping. The question had taken on political and environmental symbolism, with the Obamas lobbied for months by advocates who believe that growing more food locally, and organically, can lead to more healthful eating and reduce reliance on huge industrial farms that use more oil for transportation and chemicals for fertilizer.
It is a fantastic development with enormous and potent symbolism. According to the article, it will be used to grow 55 kinds of vegetable (go on, sit down with a piece of paper and a pen and try and think of 55 kinds of vegetable… I got to 25 and started to struggle…), the first time since Eleanor Roosevelt’s Victory Garden during World War Two. The plot will be 1,100 feet, just slightly larger than the average UK allotment, so while we are not talking a self-sufficient White House here, it is a powerful statement. Here is a clip from the television about it…
However, I thought it might be useful to offer some constructive and supportive advice to the Obamas as they take their first steps into the world of gardening, from a permaculture design angle. For this, I am indebted to the piece in the New York Times, and its map of their garden-to-be.
First Tip. Put the garden nearer the house. Bill Mollison, co-founder of permaculture, used to suggest growing your food “no further from the back door than you could throw the kitchen sink”. Here in England, the traditional family vegetable garden was usually down at the end of the garden, ideally hidden away behind a low hedge, as though it were something to be slightly ashamed of. The effort of trudging down to it was one of the reasons gardening died away as a mass pursuit sometime in the early 1960s.
Putting the vegetable garden up against the house, in aesthetically delightful raised beds on the south facing side of the house would make harvesting easier, would look great in the formal photos taken with visiting heads of state (”Vladimir, just a bit to the left so they can get the artichokes in”). It would model to the nation that growing food, edible landscaping, is something to put centrally in our lives rather than tucking away out of sight of the house.
I blame Capability Brown and all those dreadful 18th century landscape artists, who popularised the idea that the view from the house is everything, that it should be sweeping and open, it should present the viewer with some idealised landscape, denuded of anything that is actually useful. To be able to look out of the Oval Office window and onto an edible landscape would be very powerful. Lose that lawn.
Second Tip. Add more fruit. The design thus far is all vegetables and herbs, with rhubarb being the sole fruit. When Bob Flowerdew visited Totnes and was asked how to get the people of the town growing food, he suggested by focusing on fruit rather than vegetables. They are easier to grow, take less time and are more costly to buy than vegetables. Some espaliered fruit trees, or perhaps an orchard… to return to the previous point, energy efficient layout would suggest that the vegetable garden go as close to the house as possible, the fruit can be further away. Perhaps there is a route into and out of the White House that visiting dignitaries use, which would be planted with apple trees, grafted to form a tunnel?
Third Tip. Think holistically. A vegetable garden is just one element of a sustainable lifestyle. Why not put back the solar panels that Jimmy Carter put on the in 1970s which Ronald Reagan subsequently took off again? If being off the grid is good enough for George Bush’s Texas ranch, surely it is time the White House stepped into the 21st century. Insulate. Draught proof. Thicken those curtains. Do an energy audit and work though its recommendations. Visiting dignitaries being invited to use the compost toilet? Now that would be a powerful message to the world!
Fourth Tip. Add more diversity. Although the New York Times piece talks of 55 vegetable varieties, the map they publish shows 16 types of vegetable and 14 herbs. While it is admirable that the focus, as a garden for a busy urban family, is on greens and salads, there could be a wider range of these. Where’s the rocket, the mizuna, the mustard leaves, the amazing range of cut-and-come-again or pick-and-pluck salads? As a model for the small family garden, salad mixes are an important element in making the most of small spaces.
Also, there are very few carrots, and those are tucked in with the herbs. Why not grow them together with the onions (for their companion planting properties), and grow more of them? Pulling carrots is deeply satisfying. Finally, potatoes. Although in a small garden it is not worth growing lots of potatoes, as they can be bought so cheaply from local organic growers, for kids there is nothing like digging up your own potatoes and then eating them.
Geoff Lawton is fond of saying that all the problems of the world can be solved in a garden. Here is an amazing opportunity to prove that he is right. It should also provide a great education for the nation, including the newsreader in the clip above who says “we have flowers along the side of it that I’m sure aren’t edible, nasturtiums, marigolds….” (both of which are, of course, edible flowers)… Eleanor Roosevelt’s Victory Garden led to millions across the country, producing 40% of the nation’s food, hopefully we are about to see something similar again. Over to you now Gordon Brown. Edible hanging baskets at Number 10?
Do you have any tips for the Obamas as they start life as gardeners? What would you do with the space they have? Clearly, Michelle Obama isn’t yet especially practical when it comes to gardening, so what would your advice be for a family starting from scratch? Send us your tips. The Obamas almost certainly read Transition Culture every morning, so your tips may well end up being implemented at the White House…. you never know.
P.S. Congratulations to those who ran the campaign to make this garden happen….. fantastic….
Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Recession gardens' trim grocery bills, teach lessons

'Recession gardens' trim grocery bills, teach lessons'


http://www.cnn.com/2009/LIVING/04/01/recession.garden/index.html

CNN) -- As American families try to stretch their food budgets during the recession, some are turning to the backyard, rather than the grocery store, as the place to look for produce.

Susan Hopper of Tampa, Florida, uses her garden to teach her students where food comes from.

Recession gardens are catching on with many first-time planters who want a healthy meal at an affordable price.


The gardeners are following seed-strewn paths laid by Michelle Obama and Eleanor Roosevelt, both of whom have used the White House lawn to show the value of a garden during tough times.

The scope of today's trend is shocking even to those in the gardening industry.

W. Atlee Burpee & Co., the largest seed and gardening supply store in the country, says it has seen a 25 to 30 percent spike in vegetable seed and plant sales this spring compared with last.


"I've been in the business for 30 years, and I've never seen anything like it -- even remotely like it," said George Ball, chairman and CEO of the company.

In 2008, there was a 15 to 20 percent uptick in seed sales because of high food and gasoline prices. Not since the '70s, when the company saw sales increases in the 10 percent range, has gardening seen such buzz, he said.


The National Gardening Association expects 43 million American households to grow their own fruits, vegetables, herbs and berries this year. That's up 19 percent over last year, according to a 2,559-household survey the group conducted in January.

About a fifth of the gardeners this year will be new to the activity, the survey says. Most -- 54 percent -- said they will garden because it saves them money on food bills. A slightly larger group say they garden because homegrown food tastes better.


There's evidence that recession gardeners stand to see substantial savings at the grocery store checkout.

Last year, Burpee released a report saying a family will get an average 25-to-1 return on its investment in a garden.

So, by that count, a family that spends about $200 on a medium-to-large garden, as Michelle Obama reportedly did, will save $5,000 in grocery bills over the course of a year.

That statistic is inflated, said Mike Metallo, spokesman for the National Gardening Association.

Metallo's group says a $70 investment in a garden will yield $600 in produce for the year.

To get those savings, a gardener has to know what to plant, when to plant it, where to plant it, how to deal with different soil types and how to care for the garden.

That knowledge isn't innate these days, especially for urban dwellers.
Bobby Wilson, president of the American Community Gardening Association, says all of that interest is great, but he worries that Americans aren't equipped to grow their own food without some help.


"Many of the people that want to get into the gardening and greening movement right here have never gained the skills," he said. "Many of them came up in an era where there was no vocational education, so there was no need to learn anything about horticulture or agriculture."

He said all of the country's elementary schools should have gardens so future generations will learn how to save money and fend for themselves.

Susan Hopper, a 41-year-old elementary school teacher in Tampa, Florida, said she started a garden last year, partly to teach her family and her students about the food chain.

"I have three children of my own, and they think chicken comes in tenders and nuggets," she said. "I was concerned about their health, and I wanted them to understand that food is a process that we're a part of, and it just doesn't come in neat packages."

Hopper grew up watching her older family members garden, but when she first decided to plow a patch of her own yard, she wasn't too successful.

Florida's growing season is somewhat reversed, she said, so even though she had read Internet articles about how to garden, she didn't know the local tricks needed to make her plants survive.

In the process of digging back into the soil, though, some new gardeners are struggling with the fact that they're several generations removed from a farm.
Pamela Price, a 38-year-old mom in San Antonio, Texas, said her garden isn't profitable just yet because of droughts in her state.


She grew up in a family of ranchers and farmers, but she's forgotten much of what she learned when she was young.

"We are fortunate that we don't have to rely on [the garden], but I certainly want to make sure that, in the event that something happens, we would know how to," she said. "It's a life skill."

Price said she's started to look at her local environment anew as she leans which plants will or won't grow in the harsh climate.

That gives her a connection with history, too, she said. She recently read a book about how some of Texas' residents a century ago had similar issues.

Wilson, of the community garden association, said new gardeners should seek advice from neighbors. On every block, there's a gardener who is willing to talk about the process, he said.

Face-to-face conversations are more helpful than Internet searches when it comes to learning about the local environment, he said.

One way to tap local garden knowledge is to join a community garden, where neighbors turn up communal plots together.

The activity is expected to see a fivefold increase this year, with 5 million households saying they're at least "very interested" in participating in a community garden, said Metallo, of the National Gardening Association.
New gardeners should start out small, he said. That way you'll learn as you go and won't get as frustrated.


"You don't have to go hogwild crazy," he said, adding that people who tear up their entire yards are usually disappointed. "Get comfortable with it."

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