Friday, June 13

Low Water Home Gardens

A retired PhD economist grows chard in Los Angeles:

Since he began gardening in this fashion, he says, he has been "inundated" with food. With the exception of some recent losses to raccoons drawn to the soil's abundant grubs and earthworms, Marfisi's garden is thriving with beets, collard greens, chard, celery, tomatoes, chives, peppers, basil, chives, lettuces and leeks. He estimates he grows enough food to feed three people daily.

When asked how much he waters, Marfisi shoves his hand deep beside some Swiss chard and pulls out moist, decomposed soil laced with remnants of straw. "I haven't watered in 10 days," he says. "This is what I want people to know: You can have beauty and abundance without a lot of water."
Bottom Line: The future of food is local and sustainable. Go make compost!

2 comments:

Fixed Carbon said...

David: Many thanks on this link! d

Dano said...

Go Aggies again - the GF and I have the lowest water bill on the block and our (little) grass is greener, and we will give away tons of food this year. We incorporate our Environmental Hort education from UCD to the best use possible. Totally doable, and I'm going to semi-retire in a few years to start a consultancy to teach more people how to do it simply and cheaply.

Totally doable for many people.

Best,

D