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You want to talk about a truly useful skill-set? The quick and easy ten steps if you have no experience...
 

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You want to talk about a truly useful skill-set? The quick and easy ten steps if you have no experience...


(edit: I didn't want to get it away, because some readers might think, "Oh I already know that", and would miss a great read)


You want to talk about a truly useful skill-set?

Learn how to grow some or most of your own food or teach others how to do the same.

This is not as complicated as you might think. If you have access to a deck, a roof, a patch of ground no larger than a flower bed or far more space, you can, with just a few of the resources listed on this page learn to feed yourself and others.

Any reasonably intelligent person with time or patience or internet access can learn as much about soil and gardening as the most experienced farmer knew a hundred years ago--putting it into practice takes time however, today is the day to begin a garden.

The quick and easy guide to getting started:

10 steps to getting started if you have no gardening experience.

The key elements you must have are some sun, soil and water.

Minimum tools needed. A shovel
1. Stop applying all pesticides and weed killers to the soil in and around your entire garden. No exceptions.

2. Start small, 25 square feet for example. Find the spot that ideally has sun all year in your yard. If it's shaded part of the year, that's OK too. Avoid the area next to buildings or fences because of possible contamination of the soil by paint, heavy metals or chemicals.

3. Remove whatever debris is covering the soil including rocks larger than a fingernail. If plants already grow there that you want somewhere else, dig them out with the shovel and save them off to the side.

4. Cover your gardening area with organic material such as leaves, dried grass and fine plant material from your own or other's non-pesticide sprayed gardens.

5. Get a bucketful of good compost from someone else's garden or crumbly black sweet-smelling soil from under forest trees. Spread this thinly all over your garden. You will be inoculating your soil with all manner of soil organisms, little bugs, worms and other beneficial life forms that are going to do most of the work for you if you give them the chance.

6. Use the pick or shovel to mix the top 3 inches of soil and organic material. Burying the organic material any deeper just kills the critters and wastes your energy because there may not be enough oxygen for them further down.

7. Keep the soil damp like a wrung out sponge, not soggy. Once again, you need air in the soil for life.

8. Never walk on your soil. Make a kneeling board out of a small piece of scrap plywood to avoid compacting the soil and use an old cushion to save your knees. Create the minimum width paths to be able to reach across a four foot wide bed from both sides.

9. Obtain vegetables in 4" square pots, a common size, or plants from friends. pots. Dig a hole slightly larger than the rootball, squeeze the sides of the pot to unstick the plant, fluff it's roots sideways and plant it. Mulch around it on the surface with organic material like leaves or straw to keep the soil moist underneath it. Water the root ball with a slow drip to allow air to be pulled down after the water.

10. Start your own compost heap in a corner of the garden. Skip the gimmicks, tumblers, boxes and devices. Just heap up all the clean organic material that you can get and mix it up occasionally, keeping it as moist as a wrung out sponge. Apply the compost periodically to the soil around your plants as a light dusting or use it to start your own seeds in a 50/50 mix of native soil and compost.

Excerpt From:
http://www.verdant.net/food.htm


Here’s the index to the entire Overcoming Consumerism site http://www.verdant.net/index.htm


Contains ideas for economic survival and shared solutions for sustainable low cost green living.
 

 
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