|
I'm glad that people realize that growing "Victory gardens" in 2022 is not the way to save money on food. As someone else said, there is an argument that chickens could be a good idea, but that's only if we had a major egg shortgage.
One thing that is a good replacement for store-bought food is fish. After initial investment of some gear, you can catch fish far cheaper than the market prices unless you are buying fish sticks or something. |
|
You’ll need to invest a lot to get started. We did a lot of veggie gardening when the kids were young.
Deer and rabbit fencing Raised beds or wood if you are making them High quality soil and compost Good hose Support for some veggies Rototiller for turning over soil Weed protectors If you are doing seeds inside you needed to start now, you need large grow lamps and a table What did really well,, 1. zucchini and pumpkins first two years and then squash bug infestations destroyed them 2. Cucumbers , yes we made pickles but that takes jars, vinegar, seasoning etc 3. Tomatoes but very variable on weather, tomatoes stop growing when it’s hotter than 85 degrees 4. Basil, oregano, rosemary 5. Radishes, beets What never went well 1. Peppers, always thin for bell peppers, jalapeños weren’t very hot 2. Cilantro always bolted too hot 3. Carrots, always tiny |
Excuse me but bartering is not a form of capitalism. I’m sure this woman is participating in other forms of the capitalist economy, but you seem to be suggesting that by trading with someone else, that she is engaging in capitalism. That is not capitalism. |
+1 |
Where in this area would you catch fish though? The bodies of water here are mostly polluted, except a few stocked lakes. |
This would be news to every gardener ever. Just put some space between. |
| We live in the city and for a few years, I had a container garden on my back porch. I spent a lot getting it started that first year, but after that it was cheap. I also didn't know what I was doing so I had a lot of things die that first year. The things were easy to grow were onions, scallions, tomatoes, peppers, and herbs. I think I got the most bang for my buck on the herbs though. |
|
The biggest bang for the buck I have experienced are with potatoes, lettuce, zucchini and summer squash and tomatoes.
But I freeze a lot. It’s a labor of love. |
+1. My potato row is right beside my tomato row. |
|
We've been CSA members for a few years for veg/fruit and eggs. I haven't always enjoyed the extra time of washing them and finding recipes based on what we get each week and was considering stopping this year. However, I just signed up for 2022 given rising inflation/food shortage possibilities.
I love the idea of a garden in theory, but I don't have a green thumb and the time and costs to keep it actually producing are significant. |