Tag Archives: organic

Fresh food, or the freshest food?

Lettuce in a terracotta planter.

Lettuce in a terracotta planter.

The first year or so for my garden wasn’t very productive. The few edible plants that did grow were eaten by pests or not big enough to bother harvesting (this is what I get for using the cheapest available potting mix).

I buried most of the plants as they ended their productive lives. This made the soil richer, which meant that over summer there was some food actually worth harvesting – mostly zucchini and tomatoes. Heading into this garden’s second year, we’ve also harvested one onion (with more still growing) and a fair amount of lettuce and parsley (again, with more still growing).

The biggest challenge is keeping bugs off the lettuces. I’ve been squashing them as I find them, and we’re getting help from a gekko which recently moved in. It tried to get inside the apartment but I caught it and put it among the pots, it seems much happier there.

So, why grow your own food?

  • The fresher food is, the better it tastes. And you can’t beat “picked less than 2 mintues ago” for freshness.
  • Commercially produced food varieties (like you find in supermarkets) are generally chosen for how long they last and how well they travel, and flavour usually suffers. With home gardening, travel and storage are generally non-issues, so you can choose better tasting varieties.
  • Setting up the garden cost a few hundred dollars, but in the long run eating our own stuff will be much cheaper than buying food. Aside from the initial setting up, I have to do around an hour a week of work there. To buy what it produces would cost more than an hour of my wages in my day job, so it makes sense financially.
  • It gives me something to talk about with the neighbours.

We’ve just put in seeds for leeks and have some winter fruiting tomatoes & a something else coming soon (i.e. when I get around to collecting them) from my brother. I’ve also got some kind of flower (I forget what) starting to come up in some of the unused planters, and I plan to get a dwarf variety of some kind of fruit tree.

52Books: The Organic Suburbanite

Lawn by kevindooley on flickrFor first book number 1 of 52, I read The Organic Suburbanite by Warren Schultz. I received the book for Christmas from my brother John and his partner Cass (who run All the rest have thirty-one which is turning out to be a useful and entertaining green living blog).

The book is a guide to living the “American dream” lifestyle of a big house in the suburbs without being so damaging to the environment. That kind of book can be intimidating, but this one isn’t. It’s obviously written for the novice. The book is divided into three sections: The Organic Suburbanite at Home (includes kitchen, laundry and cleaning tips), Around the Suburban Yard (maintenance of paths, decks, cars and swimming pools), and Suburban Lawns and Gardens (gardening). I live in a rented apartment so two-thirds of the advice simply does not apply to me. It is still good, but I would recommend apartment dwellers pick up one of the many eco-cleaning books out there instead. The book is written in plain language, which makes a change from a lot of these kinds of books. Also, use of colours, spacious layout and photos of 1950s American suburbia make it a joy to read.

All in all, it’s worth having on the environmentally friendly bookshelf.