Is My Organic Garden Saving Me Money on Grocery Bills?
I spend a little time and a little money in my garden. I do it for fun and to have fresh veggies around, but does it make sense financially, too?
I spend a little time and a little money in my garden. I do it for fun and to have fresh veggies around, but does it make sense financially, too?
On March 20th, 2009, Michelle Obama and the kids broke ground on the White House Lawn for an organic garden. I wrote about it for Ecopreneurist.com, and suggested that the Obamas could help generate thousands of new green businesses across the country as people increasingly hire organic gardeners to tend their backyard and produce food for them. In addition to this terrific development, other dignitaries might follow suit, leading to a worldwide revolution in public awareness of sustainable agriculture. 
Maria Shriver, California’s First Lady, took the plunge and…
Hiring a good landscape designer knowledgeable about permaculture and organic/biodynamic gardening would be a terrific step toward food independence for you and your family. With Monsanto and other agribusiness contributing $60+ million to political campaigns last year, to Republicans by a wide margin (but down from almost a 4:1 ratio just 8 years ago, as an interesting aside probably affiliated with the growing interest in ethanol), isn’t it time to take some money and power away from them? One easy way to do that is to start growing your own food, free of GMOs, free of chemicals, and free of transportation pollution required to bring it to your kitchen.
Or at least, we hope it is. Michael Pollan, sustainable food activist and author of several books, advocated for turning part of the White House lawn into an organic garden. If you google “Obama Organic Garden”, you’ll see the overwhelmingly positive response from the blogosphere. While the Obamas have not commented on the possibilities, I’d wager they’re considering it. Their daughters attend a private school which uses organic ingredients in their food, unbleached napkins made from
This video calls for the President to lead by example on climate change by planting a food garden in the White House. Says Roger Doiron, the creator,
“This video was made to support the “Eat the View” campaign, a citizen-powered effort to petition the next President to show leadership on global issues such as climate change and food security by converting part of the White House’s 18 acre grounds back into an edible landscape. It made sense in the past for [...]
Little girls love princess, but eco, feminist parents lament the adoration of helpless females who need rescued by princes. My daughter has thankfully moved away from the princess phase, no matter how much I tried to shield her from its influence from the start, but she often still asks about real princesses. I tell her that yes they exist, but that royal families aren’t necessarily role models. Now, I have found a princess that is inspiring her subjects to grow organic vegetables.
Her Royal Highness Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn of Thailand is calling on residents of Nan to plant organic gardens. Her own Thong Noi palace, which she visits once or twice a year, is a model of organic farming. Somsak Yasang, the princess’ gardener, explains:
Sometimes the princess cuts vegetables in the backyard herself. The vegetables grown in the palace are served on her table. The princess also sells home-grown vegetables at reasonable prices. Some of the surplus produce is processed and sold. Fruit including jackfruit, tamarind and papaya were donated to the nearby Nan Panyanugul school for mentally challenged children.
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