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-   -   Growing your own Veggies for dummies ? (http://goldismoney.info/forums/showthread.php?t=203729)

Goldeneye 11-22-2007 07:48 PM

Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Any book recommendations or web sites for someone who hasn't got a clue about growing their own food... or being self sufficient...

Easy to read, follow and implement, I'm talking city slicker here.. I don't want to spend hours a day toiling in the garden ..

'KISS' (Keep it simple approach) ..

Cheers

Goldeneye

chewy 11-22-2007 08:28 PM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Here ya go. Labor and cost effective.

http://www.squarefootgardening.com/

Unclad Lad 11-22-2007 09:51 PM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
If I could only grab 10 books, this would be one of them:


damoc 11-22-2007 10:33 PM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
permaculture a designers manual by bill mollison it wont tell you exactly what to do but it will give you ideas and concepts for lazy,sensible and sustainable agriculture small or large scale i saw one for about 150 dollars on ebay.

Andy9999 11-22-2007 11:42 PM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Goldeneye (Post 841881)
Any book recommendations or web sites for someone who hasn't got a clue about growing their own food... or being self sufficient...

Easy to read, follow and implement, I'm talking city slicker here.. I don't want to spend hours a day toiling in the garden ..

'KISS' (Keep it simple approach) ..

Cheers

Goldeneye

don't need book check this forum
you have a lot of time till spring
good info on this forum and friendly folks.
http://forums2.gardenweb.com/forums/soil/
http://forums2.gardenweb.com/forums/cornucop/
http://forums.gardenweb.com/forums/sqfoot/

REV127 11-23-2007 12:52 AM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Every patch of land is different and you'll have to tailor what you do to what you have. As a general rule if you want to do the least work possible for the most reward your best bet is probably creating deep dug beds. You dig them once, don't walk on them and they require nothing more than incedental weeding for many years. Weeding itself is kept to a minimum by dense planting that helps shade weeds out.

GardenWeb is good.

This has been my favorite gardening book.


eyeofliberty 11-23-2007 02:01 AM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Unclad Lad (Post 842004)

I'll second that, and Steve's other book, which is region-specific, Growing Vegetables West of the Cascades.

He also has a good info website:

http://www.soilandhealth.org/

GoldRocks 11-23-2007 10:04 AM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Goldeneye
... I don't want to spend hours a day toiling in the garden ..

'KISS' (Keep it simple approach) ..


The others had some good suggestions. But the simplest approach would be just to hire me to come out to the west coast and be your personal gardener. You'd never have to get your hands dirty. lol
(as a side bonus I'm also good with anything mechanical)

Come to think of it, I might just run an ad in the paper out there. :rofl::rofl:

compass 11-23-2007 01:29 PM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by damoc (Post 842069)
permaculture a designers manual by bill mollison it wont tell you exactly what to do but it will give you ideas and concepts for lazy,sensible and sustainable agriculture small or large scale i saw one for about 150 dollars on ebay.

I second that. I just took a 2 week permaculture workshop a few weeks ago and was blown away by how simple it is to create self-sustaining systems to provide all your water and food needs. Excellent book packed full of information. I bought mine for about $90 from online.

Another idea is to join groups that do gardening in your area. Most cities have gardening clubs and organizations that teach how to garden and compost for free.

Also check out any local herb walks to learn how to identify edible plants that grow in the wild. This is a good way to have fresh food with nature doing all the work. I have been amazed at the abundance of food and medicine that is growing right under our noses and often considered to be nuisance weeds.

Good luck!

Goldeneye 11-23-2007 01:49 PM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Thank you all very much for your responses .. GIM'ers ROCK !! :applause_:applause_:applause_

I'll definately check out all the info posted thus far ..

Cheers

Goldeneye

Andy9999 11-23-2007 09:04 PM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by eyeofliberty (Post 842325)
I'll second that, and Steve's other book, which is region-specific, Growing Vegetables West of the Cascades.

He also has a good info website:

http://www.soilandhealth.org/

thank you so much for this link
a lots of very good books
I did check a few and I'm impressed
I recommend to go to agriculture library and check

Joseph A. cocanouer .Weeds :Guardians of the soil great book

Unclad Lad 11-24-2007 03:14 PM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Quote:

The others had some good suggestions. But the simplest approach would be just to hire me to come out to the west coast and be your personal gardener. You'd never have to get your hands dirty. lol
(as a side bonus I'm also good with anything mechanical)

Come to think of it, I might just run an ad in the paper out there.

Are you pretty, too? :shocked_ma:

TheSimpleton 11-28-2007 03:59 PM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
I would always vote for Eliot Coleman's "New Organic Grower" It is truck-farm scale, however, he has a range of ideas that work and are scalable.

If you reduced his ideas to city-lot size, you'd be in square-foot gardening.

After that, his "4-Season Grower" is key with extensive work on greenhouses and foods for the off-season, even in cold climates (Maine...don't laugh you Cheeseheads)

The off-side is that he tends toward the intensive with composting and soil amendments. Important but high-energy. His second book continues to reverse that former orthodoxy and turn towards low-imput self-sustaining practices.

On that ground, try Masunobu Fukuoka, who was big in the early ethos of Permaculture. "One Straw Revolution" Although most of us do not live in tropical Japan, the principle of what he's saying (Permaculture imitating nature) is especially clear. Internalize this and you can make a garden anywhere. ...See the link to that african who made an Eden of waterponds in the African Desert.

TS

RealJack 11-28-2007 05:11 PM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Simpleton, you so often amaze me with your posts.

Because of your suggestion I searched and found this little interview I feel compelled to share here.


http://www.context.org/ICLIB/IC14/Fukuoka.htm

Quote:

Greening The Desert

Applying natural farming techniques in Africa

an interview with Masanobu Fukuoka, by Robert and Diane Gilman

One of the articles in Sustainable Habitat (IC#14)
Autumn 1986, Page 37
Copyright (c)1986, 1997 by Context Institute | To order this issue ...


Masanobu Fukuoka is another of the major pioneers of sustainable agriculture who came to the 2nd International Permaculture Conference. We spoke with him a few days before the conference while he was visiting the Abundant Life Seed Foundation in Port Townsend, Washington.

He likes to say of himself that he has no knowledge, but his books, including One-Straw Revolution and The Natural Way of Farming illustrate that he at least has wisdom. His farming method involves no tillage, no fertilizer, no pesticides, no weeding, no pruning, and remarkably little labor! He accomplishes all this (and high yields) by careful timing of his seeding and careful combinations of plants (polyculture). In short, he has brought the practical art of working with nature to a high level of refinement.

In this interview, he describes how his natural farming methods might be applied to the world's deserts, based on his experience in Africa during 1985. Translation assistance for the interview was provided by Katsuyuki Shibata and Hizuru Aoyama.


Robert: What have you learned in your 50 years of work about what people could do with their agriculture?

Masanobu: I am a small man, as you can see, but I came to the States with a very big intention. This small man becomes smaller and smaller, and won't last very long, so I'd like to share my idea from 50 years ago. My dream is just like a balloon. It could get smaller and smaller, or it could get bigger and bigger. If it could be said in a brief way, it could be said as the word "nothingness." In a larger way it could wrap the entire earth.

I live on a small mountain doing farming. I don't have any knowledge, I don't do anything. My way of farming is no cultivation, no fertilizer, no chemicals. Ten years ago my book, One Straw Revolution, was published by Rodale Press in the United States. From that point I couldn't just sleep in the mountains. Seven years ago I took an airplane for the first time in my life and went to California, Boston, New York City. I was surprised because I thought the United States was full of green everywhere, but it looked like death land to me.

Then I talked to the head of the desert department at the United Nations about my natural farming. He asked me if my natural farming could change the desert of Iraq. He told me to develop the way of changing the desert to green. At that point I thought that I was a poor farmer and I had no power and no knowledge, so I told him that I couldn't. But from then I started thinking that my task is working on the desert.

Several years ago, I travelled around Europe. It seemed to me that Europe was very nice and beautiful, with lots of nature preserved. But three feet under the surface I felt desert slowly coming in. I kept wondering why. I realized it was the mistake they made in agriculture. The beginning of the mistake is from growing meat for the king and wine for the church. All around, cow, cow, cow, grape, grape, grape. European and American agriculture started with grazing cows and growing grapes for the king and the church. They changed nature by doing this, especially on the hill slopes. Then soil erosion occurs. Only the 20% of the soil in the valleys remains healthy, and 80% of the land is depleted. Because the land is depleted, they need chemical fertilizers and pesticides. United States, Europe, even in Japan, their agriculture started by tilling the land. Cultivation is also related to civilization, and that is the beginning of the mistake. True natural farming uses no cultivation, no plow. Using tractors and tools destroys the true nature. Trees' biggest enemies are the saw and ax. Soil's biggest enemies are cultivation and plowing. If people don't have those tools, it will be a better life for everything.

Since my farm uses no cultivation, no fertilizer, no chemicals, there are many insects and animals living there within the farm. They use pesticide to kill a certain kind of pest, and that destroys the balance of nature. If we allow it to be completely free, a perfect nature will come back.

Robert: How have you applied your method to the deserts?

Masanobu: Chemical agriculture can't change the desert. Even if they have a tractor and a big irrigation system, they are not able to do it. I came to the realization that to make the desert green requires natural farming. The method is very simple. You just need to sow seeds in the desert. Here is a picture of experimentation in Ethiopia. This area was beautiful 90 years ago, and now it looks like the desert in Colorado. I gave seeds for 100 varieties of plants to people in Ethiopia and Somalia. Children planted seeds, and watered them for three days. Because of high temperature and not having water, the root goes down quickly. Now the large Daikon radishes are growing there. People think there isn't any water in the desert, but even in Somalia and Ethiopia, they have a big river. It is not that they do not have water; the water just stays underneath the earth. They find the water under 6 to 12 feet.

Diane: Do you just use water to germinate the seeds, and then the plants are on their own?

Masanobu: They still need water, like after ten days and after a month, but you should not water too much, so that the root grows deep. People have home gardens in Somalia these days.

The project started with the help of UNESCO with a large amount of money, but there are only a couple of people doing the experiment right now. These young people from Tokyo don't know much about farming. I think it is better to send seeds to people in Somalia and Ethiopia, rather than sending milk and flour, but there isn't any way to send them. People in Ethiopia and Somalia can sow seeds, even children can do that. But the African governments, the United States, Italy, France, they don't send seeds, they only send immediate food and clothing. The African government is discouraging home gardens and small farming. During the last 100 years, garden seed has become scarce.

Diane: Why do these governments do this?

Masanobu: The African governments and the United States government want people to grow coffee, tea, cotton, peanuts, sugar - only five or six varieties to export and make money. Vegetables are just food, they don't bring in any money. They say they will provide corn and grain, so people don't have to grow their own vegetables.

Robert: Do we, in the United States, have the type of seeds that would grow well in these parts of Africa?

Masanobu: As a matter of fact, I saw quite a few plants including vegetables, ornamentals, and grains here in this town (Port Townsend) this morning that would grow in the desert. Something like Daikon radish even grows better over there than in my fields, and also things like amaranth and succulents grow very well.

Robert: So if people in the United States and Japan and Europe wanted to help the people in Africa and reduce the desert, would you suggest that they send seeds?

Masanobu: When I was in Somalia, I thought, if there are ten farmers, one truck, and seeds, then it would be so easy to help the people there. They don't have any greens for half of the year, they don't have any vitamins, and so of course they get sick. They have even forgotten how to eat vegetables. They just eat the leaves and not the edible root portion.

I went to the Olympic National Park yesterday. I was very amazed and I almost cried. There, the soil was alive! The mountain looked like the bed of God. The forest seems alive, something you don't find even in Europe. The redwoods in California and the French meadows are beautiful, but this is the best! People who live around here have water and firewood and trees. This is like a garden of Eden. If people are truly happy, this place is a real Utopia.

The people in the deserts have only a cup and a knife and a pot. Some families don't even have a knife, so they have to throw rocks to cut the wood, and they have to carry that for a mile or more. I was very impressed by seeing this beautiful area, but at the same time my heart aches because of thinking about the people in the desert. The difference is like heaven and hell. I think the world is coming to a very dangerous point. The United States has the power to destroy the world but also to help the world. I wonder if people in this country realize that the United States is helping the people in Somalia but also killing them. Making them grow coffee, sugar and giving them food. The Japanese government is the same way. It gives them clothes, and the Italian government gives them macaroni. The United States is trying to make them bread eaters. The people in Ethiopia cook rice, barley and vegetables. They are happy being small farmers. The United States government is telling them to work, work, like slaves on a big farm, growing coffee. The United States is telling them that they can make money and be happy that way.

A Japanese college professor that went to Somalia and Ethiopia said this is the hell of the world. I said, "No, this is the entrance to heaven." Those people have no money, no food, but they are very happy. The reason they are very happy is that they don't have schools or teachers. They are happy carrying water, happy cutting the wood. It is not a hard thing for them to do; they truly enjoy doing that. Between noon and three it is very hot, but other than that, there is a breeze, and there are not flies or mosquitoes.

One thing the people of the United States can do instead of going to outer space is to sow seeds from the space shuttle into the deserts. There are many seed companies related to multi-national corporations. They could sow seeds from airplanes.

Diane: If seeds were thrown out like that, would the rains be enough to germinate them?

Masanobu: No, that is not enough, so I would sow coated seeds so they wouldn't dry out or get eaten by animals. There are probably different ways to coat the seeds. You can use soil, but you have to make that stick, or you can use calcium.

My farm has everything: fruit trees, vegetables, acacia. Like my fields, you need to mix everything and sow at the same time. I took about 100 varieties of grafted trees there, two of each, and almost all of them, about 80%, are growing there now. The reason I am saying to use an airplane is because, if you are just testing you use only a small area. But we need to make a large area green quickly. It needs to be done at once! You have to mix vegetables and trees; that's the fastest way for success.

Another reason I am saying you have to use airplanes is that you have to grow them fast, because if there is 3% less green area around the world, the whole earth is going to die. Because of lack of oxygen, people won't feel happy. You feel happy in the spring because of the oxygen from the plants. We breathe out carbon dioxide and breathe in oxygen, and the plants do the opposite. Human beings and plants not only have a relationship in eating, but also share air. Therefore, the lack of oxygen in Somalia is not only a problem there, it is also a problem here. Because of the rapid depletion of the land in those parts of Africa, everyone will feel this happening. It is happening very quickly. There is no time to wait. We have to do something now.

People in Ethiopia are happy with wind and light, fire and water. Why do people need more? Our task is to practice farming the way God does. That could be the way to start saving this world.

GoldRocks 11-28-2007 05:16 PM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Unclad Lad
Are you pretty, too?


Another thread troll on my ignore list. Get a life.

Unclad Lad 11-29-2007 12:45 AM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Unclad Lad

Are you pretty, too?



Another thread troll on my ignore list. Get a life.
Wow! It was meant as a joke--I did not intend to imply anything. It just read like an old country personal ad. Next time, I won't use :shocked_ma:
but :bear_w00t:

hugo_danner 11-29-2007 02:26 AM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Goldeneye (Post 841881)
Any book recommendations or web sites for someone who hasn't got a clue about growing their own food... or being self sufficient...

Easy to read, follow and implement, I'm talking city slicker here.. I don't want to spend hours a day toiling in the garden ..

'KISS' (Keep it simple approach) ..

Cheers

Goldeneye

Go survivalblog.com LOTS of resources and links!

GoldRocks 11-29-2007 03:46 AM

Re: Growing your own Veggies for dummies ?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Unclad Lad
Wow! It was meant as a joke--I did not intend to imply anything. It just read like an old country personal ad...

Well you can understand the confusion. We've never spoken, and I don't know you. And sometimes one-liners can be taken different ways. Especially in text form. A sarcasm tag would have helped.
But no pressure.


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