Susana Posted December 8, 2015 Share Posted December 8, 2015 Garden Dreams: Let us live like Kings, not Pawns with control over our domain, health and nutrition. I’m looking forward to the future where the cost of living will dramatically decrease due to continued scientific innovation, automation and hopefully lots of an-caps but the clash between collectivist centralization and decentralized Independence continues to unfold and I would like to share the research and resources I have collected by seeking out other gardeners both online and in my city as well as detoxification techniques to increase the quality and length of your life/health. Your body does not need junk food, it needs nutrients. You don’t have to run away to the wilderness or own vast acres to be able to have a high quality high nutrient dense food. You do however have to seek and to be informed to know your options and take control of your own food and nutrition. There are easy options that are self watering, use no electricity as well as inexpensive options that give you amazing results. I’ve started a small garden indoors and outdoors as well as potted fruit trees and volunteering at an urban garden and nursery. 1. When you decide to grow, you will soon have an abundance of high quality food. By Growing your Greens or Herbs you don’t need that much space and you are starting with the highest quality food for your body which is also the most expensive at the grocery store anyway. Growing your greens such as sprouts which takes a few days or leafy greens in a raised garden bed indoors or outdoors. Edible flowers and Herbs which add high value to your food are also the easiest to grow. Think arugula, cilantro (detox heavy metals) chives(super easy even half rock soil), basil, oregano (anti-cancer), kale, swiss chard, dill, garlic, marigold flowers, spinach, regrow your celery roots, regrow your onion roots, grow garlic etc. Its actually very easy to even grow potted fruit trees indoors in pots such as olives, meyers lemon, limes, apples, cherries and more. 2. Use High Quality WATER! Filter your water because shocker, the chlorine and fluoride from the municipality (tap/city) water has fluoride and chlorine that kills beneficial microbial life in your garden. If you are starting feel free to water your plants by hand, a cup of water per plant, water the roots/dirt not the leaves. Here is an example of an inline filter from Boogie Brew that attaches to a garden hose http://www.boogiebrew.net/water-filter/ 3. High quality food needs high quality minerals and growing mediums. The Square Foot Gardening Method by Mel Bartholomew is the favorite book of John Kohler from Growing your Greens. To this method he advocates adding in “rock dust” and other options that increase the nutrients available to the plants. Raised Garden Beds Square Foot Gardening “OMRI Listed” are your options for organic non-toxic growing medium options 1/3 Compost (fungal dominated and vermicompost (worms)) no animal manure 1/3 Pearlite or Vermiculite 1/3 Coco Coir or Peat Moss +Added minerals such as Azomite Rock dust, lowest prices from www.Rootnaturally.com 4. Make your own compost!! If you enjoy this post, you will eventually be tempted to get a “compost tumbler” and I highly recommend starting off small and productive with a worm bin you can build yourself. Here is a link to the lovely Cali Kim. If you are a juicer or avid organics eater then composting is definitely for you! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjHxt7kfPWM EASY OPTIONS TO GET STARTED 1. No watering or weeding, set up indoors, easy set-up there are a few options. The Kratsky method has been around and it does not need electricity, just water and nutrients. The health ranger from Naturalnews.com has come out a system that runs about $100 and/or use your 3d printer to make the parts. http://www.naturalnews.com/048727_Food_Rising_grow_box_Health_Ranger_revolution.html http://www.supplysource.com/Starter-Kit_c_66.html 2. Raised Gardening Options a. Using cement blocks, low cost, easy to move around or change in the future b. Build your own raised garden bed, ideally from untreated Cedar wood c. Use these connectors to easily make a raised garden bed without the need for any tools http://www.gardeners.com/buy/in-line-connectors-for-raised-beds/33-247VS.html#q=garden+bed&start=13 d. Cold Weather- there are cold weather crops such as carrots but also build a garden bed with a hoop house and/or a greenhouse or indoors e. “Smart-pot” just unfold and fill with dirt. Easy to set up and uses air pruning of roots but will not last as long as wood or cinderblocks. f. Use nursery pots as the border of your garden 3. Aerogarden- this is initially how I started gardening, very easy grows quickly. If interested sign up on their websites as they will send you discount offers 4. Patio Picker/City Picker – good option to start, gives you “raised garden bed” advantages and also has a feature to “self-water” so that it is more forgiving if you do not water every day. 5. Garden Tower Project. Fits over 50-60 plants in 4 square feet. Will run you about $300 but this is a fabulous option if you have limited space. http://www.gardentowerproject.com/ 6. Potted Fruit Trees, go with potting mix of (quality compost + pearlite + cococoir) or Al's Gritty Mix 5-1-1-1-1 Fruit trees such as meyers lemons and citrus do not like having "wet feet" a good draining mix is essential and Al's Gritty Mix is 5 parts pine bark (aprox $3 at home depot for huge bag, larger pieces better) 1 part vermiculite/Pearlite 1 part cococoir 1 part gypsen 1 part lime Also an easy "gritty mix" is 3-1-1 which is pine bark and cocoir and vermiculite. This gritty mix is also good helping over-watered plants in the ground that are not well draining, add this on top of the dirt at the base of the plant so that the soil can incorporate the draining properties of the mix. 7. Living Forever – looking to link a recent article about life extension technologies including nutrient therapy. It also mentioned membership clubs in London offering these services to their clients. 8. Other resources Fruiting, rare and tropical plants https://www.logees.com/ Employee owned garden company https://www.monstergardens.com/ John Kohler Growing your Greens website for dehydrators and juicers www.discountjuicer.com 9. ASMR sounds of the organic vegetable garden https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fn9XO6u4suU Please add in any tips, tricks, advice, comments, criticisms. Please feel free to Reuse any and all information you have learned from this article. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
csekavec Posted February 10, 2016 Share Posted February 10, 2016 Magnificent post. Gardening in various forms and under various names is exploding in popularity as high IQ folks are withdrawing their productivity from support of a sick society. Those are great resources. And if one can't actually begin at least read up on the topic. My two favorite inspirational gardening/farming books are "10 acres enough" by Edmund Morris (available free here and here) and "Farmer Boy" by Laura Ingalls Wilder. Each year I grow my garden a bit and eventually I'll do it full time. This year I shrank a bit to a 10 x 15 meter municipal plot. For the year the fee was $50. I'm gardening in the shared space instead of on my own land because I hope to meet folks of like mind. My expenses for straw mulch, seeds, incidentals, and the plot won't exceed $250 this year. Three years ago my comparable size garden produced more food than I could eat. I gave away potato and onion by the bucketful, made 200 pounds of sauerkraut, and ate on the various other vegetables all summer. This year I'm going to try to get better at transitioning from early to late year produce. Each person has their own goals for gardening. I add my voice to the OP, gardening is a thing worth doing. There is no joy quite like eating sweet vegetables that minutes before were growing in your garden. My words fail to describe that feeling. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scottm Posted July 2, 2016 Share Posted July 2, 2016 Nice work on this Susana! Id love to have you on my show, to do a "howto" & discuss your experiences. We are all about tangible solutions for freedom & one major aspect id decentralized food production. Would you be interested in doing an interview? E-mail me: [email protected] or shoot me a message here with your contact info. Thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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