Home
Archive
Newsletters
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise

Environment

The Obamas Kick Off a Victory Garden Movement -- Who Will Join Them?

By Kerry Trueman, Huffington Post. Posted March 25, 2009.


Now that there's a White House veggie garden, what's next? Schoolyards, retirement homes, vacant urban lots, governors' mansions ...
Advertisement
Upcoming AlterNet stories on Digg

Faithful followers of Obama Foodorama, the food politics blog whose house specialty is a perfect blend of substance and froth, were treated to an especially tasty scoop yesterday -- the news that there will, indeed, be a vegetable garden at the White House.

As they say in my native San Fernando Valley, OMG. This turn of events is not just epic, it's biblical: ask, and ye shall receive.

I'm not talking about the slacktivists who sit around railing and wailing, "why bother?" I refer, rather, to the asktivists like Roger Doiron, the founder of Kitchen Gardeners International who looked at that vast expanse of lawn circling the White House like a gaudy green bauble and asked, "why not grow food instead of grass?"

Roger's the force of nature behind the Eat The View campaign, started just over a year ago in February, 2008. I first met Roger -- a modest, affable fellow from Maine -- at Manhattan's Union Square a few years back when he manned a table at the NYC Grows Garden Festival to spread the word about Kitchen Gardeners International. We had a great chat about urban ag and I've been a fan of his work with KGI ever since.

A couple of months after Roger started Eat the View, Daniel Bowman Simon, an NYU student who's working towards a Masters in Urban Planning, posted a query on a sustainable ag listserv asking:

"Has there ever been a concerted effort to get a President to plant a real food garden on the grounds? Is anybody here interested in participating in the 2008 version? Any thoughts are most welcome. I'm just an average joe with a big idea!"


OK, so he wasn't the first average joe with this particular big idea, but just as the 70's punk scene was big enough to accommodate the Sex Pistols and the Ramones, so, too, did the grassroots Victory Garden groundswell welcome these two campaigns.

Funnily enough, Union Square is also where I first encountered the WHO farm folks last summer when they parked their trademark topsy turvy bus at the Greenmarket last summer before embarking on their cross-country odyssey to promote the idea of a food garden on the White House lawn. The top of the bus hadn't been planted yet, so I brought them a bag of organic fertilizer to help them get growing.

These two endeavors were greeted by many as a quixotic quest, or, worse, a trivial distraction. But the Kitchen Gardener and the WHO Farmers persisted, and today, they're taking a victory lap on behalf of all us victory gardeners. So, yesterday, I asked Roger where he found the resolve to lobby tirelessly for the transformation of the White House landscape, and -- proving yet again that if you ask, you'll receive -- he kindly emailed me back:

Me: You lobbied tirelessly for the WH victory garden despite the cynics who said that (a) it would never happen, and (b) it's just a symbolic gesture that won't really mean anything. What motivated you to keep lobbying for a vegetable garden on the WH lawn in the face of all that skepticism, and what do you think it will mean?

Roger: My short answer to your question is that gardeners are good at delayed gratification. I stuck with the White House victory garden campaign for over a year for the same reason I stick with my own garden through fair weather and storms: because I knew the benefits would greatly outweigh the costs.

I know how my garden benefits me, my family, and my community and want to see those benefits extended to everyone who is prepared to roll up his or her sleeves and do a bit of digging. In pushing for a new garden at the White House, I knew that I was helping to plant the seeds not just of one garden, but the millions of gardens that one garden would inspire.

Gardens, for me, are a way of not only growing healthy children and communities, but also achieving social justice. They represent the democratization of the good food movement.

Although the White House garden campaign is winding down, the Eat the View campaign is just getting warmed up. Now that the Obamas are on board, we're going to be reaching out to other people and identifying other high-profile pieces of land that could be transformed into edible landscapes. Sprawling lawns around governors' residences, schoolyards, retirement homes, vacant urban lots: those are all views that should be eaten.

In thinking about my stick-to-itiveness, I also think that coming from Maine has something to do with it. Although Maine gardeners like me are short on frost-free days, we're long on the type of hope and patience that such an extended advocacy campaign requires. As proof of that, I'm about to get my first taste of parsnips I planted late last June, a feast nearly nine months in the making!


Digg!    Share on facebook   submit to reddit    Bookmark on Delicious   Stumble This  

See more stories tagged with: gardens, victory garden, white house garden

Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from Environment! Sign up now »


Advertisement
Advertisement

 

Comments Turn comments off sitewide Give us feedback »
Comments closed.
The comments for this story have been closed. Thank you to everyone who participated.
View:
I'm not sure most folks can grow a victory garden. Your mileage may vary.
Posted by: JenniferBedingfield on Mar 25, 2009 3:39 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So if I'm one of those who are single, choose not to live in a big house but in a typical condo or townhouse out in the city or even suburbs as it's generally cheaper and isn't as much work to maintain, work day and night and on the weekends, put up with very long traffic jams to and from work, can cook but can't grow a garden due to the rules of renting or even those of living in a condo or townhouse, I'm not so sure that growing a veggie garden works in this case. I'll stick to my local farmer's market.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Quick suggestion... Posted by: djnoll
» RE: Quick suggestion... Posted by: pelican beak
» RE: Quick suggestion... Posted by: JenniferBedingfield
» Hi, thanks. On those two ideas, Posted by: JenniferBedingfield
» RE: Quick suggestion... Posted by: Longdream
» Customize your Victory Garden! Posted by: pandahead
» RE: Customize your Victory Garden! Posted by: JenniferBedingfield
» HOA Posted by: truthlover
» RE: HOA Posted by: JenniferBedingfield
MC
Posted by: marcatine on Mar 25, 2009 4:34 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
After years of using non-organic pesticides, chemical enhancers for lawns and treating the White House lawns like golf courses, the First Lady is now planning to feed White House visitors with vegetables grown in that toxic chemical soup. Nice photo op but unless they plan raised beds-which are expensive and really not available to low income people-it's not really a practical political policy. Why not increase funding for old community gardens-like Rizzoland in SW Phila-or for land set asides in communities. That would be more effective. Stop building houses on farm lands and encourage land sharing and start rebuilding the inner city with community garden areas set aside. Bring home ec and gardening back into the inner city and I'll be impressed.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» valid points Posted by: aislinnluv
» COMPOST! Posted by: grammasanity
there are many solutions
Posted by: aislinnluv on Mar 25, 2009 4:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to the question of "how can we grow a garden?" in the case of the above poster, perhaps one or more of those "hanging garden" thingies now hawked on telly might be an answer - got a balcony? hang up a tomato plant. for others of us, like myself, who do have a bit of lawn, other obstacles must be overcome. my own back yard is full of underground cables and a sewer line complete with manhole. planting back there is not much of an option. i do have a nice, southern-facing front yard, which would be great for a good veg plot - if it weren't for the evil HOA. how would the local fascisti feel about eggplant on the easement? aubergines on st. augustine? beans on the bermuda? my gut feeling is, not very good. for this as well as many other reasons, i think we need to disempower these mini-oligarchies so that we can exercise the right to grow our own. i'm ready to plant and i can already taste the succulent stalks of asparagus. who's with me?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: there are many solutions Posted by: Longdream
» my agenda this spring Posted by: aislinnluv
» RE: my agenda this spring Posted by: Longdream
Any Garden in a Storm
Posted by: Nicnic on Mar 25, 2009 6:32 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On the one hand there just isn't anything bad about encouraging folks to grow or produce anything on the local or regional level. Much of what is wrong with our food supply (fractionalized, devitalized, fortified, laced with artificial flavorings and preservatives, mind numbingly poisonous neurotoxic artificial sweeteners, irradiated, GMO, etc., etc.) is a direct result of inefficiencies and economic pressures of centralized production and distribution, which is a complete unmitigated disaster if you know exactly what it's all about. Aside from higher costs and lower quality foods, the environment is trashed along the way, and in step, the human body is becoming weaker and more easily diseased. On the surface this new system is directly responsible for bringing us such things as Ecoli, Mad Cow and salmonella, but the trickle down is incalculable. Lastly, as an internal security issue it makes our whole infrastructure exceedingly weak and vulnerable.

On the other hand it highlights the never ending, same old tired elitist folly of producing some touchy-feely-curtsy facade to perpetuate the illusion that they are sensitive to our needs and that by God, something is being done about it. I see a lot of this, especially when it comes to the environment. The goal is to perpetuate the ignorance, which is what allows them to continue undermining the system in some bizarre twisted manner that Vonnegut so easily perceived. They want us all the think things are getting better, but the programs that have been instituted to reinforce that notion are completely meaningless.

Case in point, the USPS will go through the trouble to print artsy stamps depicting our rapidly declining species and habitat with such things as the Earth Day Stamp, etc., which should be a step in the right direction. Well, at least that's what they want you to think. But take my neighborhood, for example, where the postman drives his truck, door to door, each time starting and stopping it at 40 foot intervals. Do you have any idea what that does to the issue of annual maintenance on such vehicles, not to mention the waste in fuel and increased carbon emissions? It takes him forever to get up and down the block only to arrive at my door with a bunch of trash that should have been made illegal years ago. But not only is it permissible, I can't stop it as they won't honor any kind of request, formal or otherwise, to discontinue junk mail. The reason is simple, it's all a direct subsidy from corporate America, the same folks that are advertising how their products are produced in an eco-friendly manner. We are told everything is getting better, but the truth is they've invented a system that allows them to legally litter my property with the spoils of the environment and I have no say about it.

And that's the bottom line; we still don't have a say about it because we haven't collectively asserted ourselves to that degree. Whether it's the environment, food, health, politics, Constitution, etc., the truth is it's all getting steadily worse in contrast to the images of the beautiful little veggie garden the First Lady gives us, which to me is just another slap in the face.

But there is something we can do about. We have the power to bring any corporation involved in the hideous growing global plutocracy to its knees in very short order.

ASSERT YOUR POWER. BUY LOCAL ONLY. SPEND YOUR MONEY AS CASH WHENEVER POSSIBLE AND BOYCOTT THOSE PRODUCTS MADE BY OUR MULTI-NATIONAL ENEMIES THAT ARE DESTROYING THIS COUNTRY AND THE WORLD BY ASSUALTING OUR HEALTH, OUR ENVIRONMENT AND OUR CONSTITUTION.

It's really that simple. You do have the power. Plant your own victory garden, even if it’s only symbolic or imaginary. But exercise your prerogative against the above prescription and you'll see magic happen before your eyes.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Any Garden in a Storm Posted by: VZEQICVA
» RE: Kurt Vonnegut. Posted by: Longdream
Hurray for the Obamas
Posted by: rcase on Mar 25, 2009 6:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whether actually practical or not, I appreciate the idea of a vegetable garden on the White House grounds. I can remember back to W.W. II when victory gardens, it seemed, were on every vacant lot. Not everyone can have a garden, but a whole lot more people can than do. However, I am curious as to how they are going to make it "organic." Our community garden area finally gave up the organic part when we essentially ended up with no potatos because of the potato bugs. The final conclusion: cheaper to buy potatos than grow them without pesticides. I would argue there needs to be a a balance between proper use of commercial fertilizers and chemicals and total organic. I do make a point with people that my ragweed and thistles are "organic." I can't use pesticides in my wildflower patches without killing the wildflowers. Thus, it is pull by hand.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Hurray for the Obamas Posted by: Longdream
While I applaud this article and those doing such great work in it...I find...
Posted by: Prophit on Mar 25, 2009 6:51 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mrs. obama's veggie garden a bit hypocritical. Here is why....

HB 875 which would essentially criminalize organic and small farming.

Excerpt of link:

"Under a heading described as protecting the public health and ensuring the safety of food it creates a "Food Safety Administration" within Health and Human Services. Oddly, not just adding regulations to the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) which is also under HHS. And don't we have the USDA as well? The bill applies to all manner of "Food Establishments" and "Food Production Facilities" (note the following excerpt).


(14) FOOD PRODUCTION FACILITY- The term ‘food production facility’ means any farm, ranch, orchard, vineyard, aquaculture facility, or confined animal-feeding operation.

The bill would appear to even cover fishing boats and your downtown hot dog street vendors. In fact, the bill probably would also apply to your family garden since no exemption is apparent.

What it essentially does is place a tremendous regulatory burden on all of these organizations and individuals by requiring them to have "food safety plans", consider all relevant hazards [note: I wish Congress would consider all "relevant hazards" or unintended consequences of everything THEY did], testing, sample keeping and to maintain all kinds of records. The bill also allows the government to dictate all manner of standards related to fertilizer use, nutrients, packaging, temperature controls and other items.

This massive bloat in government regulation (and taxpayer expense to support it) would add additional cost and headache to every farm, fishing boat, restaurant, slaughterhouse, processing plant, CO-OP and anyone else associated with growing, storing or processing food. The bill authorizes fines of up to $1,000,000 (one million) dollars for "each act" and for "each day" of a violation."

Maybe Michelle can take a break from gardening and help fight this bill criminalizing seed banking which is a 4,000 year old practice.

The Criminalization of Seed Banking

Maybe Michelle ought to take a break from gardening and go fight her husband and congress on the resistance to the rest of us doing the same thing.... In fact, this is a golden opportunity for her to go to LA and get back that garden for poor folks in LA who used it to grow fresh fruits and veggies so they could be healthy and THE CITY BULLDOZED IT DOWN WITH GESTAPO POLICE PROTECTING THE BULLDOZERS FROM THE HUNGRY AND DEPRESSED POOR WHO HAD WORKED SO HARD ON GROWING THEIR OWN FOOD.....Check this out as well. Don't forget to copy and paste the links.

Watch LAPD cops stand guard as the food supply of hundreds of poor L.A. families is being bulldozed into dust... this is madness in the extreme, and it's happening right here in the United States of America, by the orders of city officials!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wusCsE9C5rw

Then watch this and what was left when they got done

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=juMe8ls3yOI

So while its "cute" that she is growing her own garden, this shit doesn't work on us anymore when we are feeling a threat to our food supply, our ability to feed ourselves, and the threat to our very lives from such actions... and next will be water... mark my words, you can feel it coming.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

LANDMINE HIDDEN WITHIN HR 875
Posted by: wellaware lec on Mar 25, 2009 7:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Quietly hidden within this the FOOD SAFETY MODERNIZATION ACT is legislation that could be the darkest cloud ever for those who value good and nutritious food, incl. that grown by themselves and farmers who come to farmers market.
Please look into this. If I gave details here, I doubt you'd read the rest of this comment, you'd think I was being so extreme. A key element is that seeds have been changed in status to food, and therefore are subject to standards of food, including machinery requirements that would put huge numbers of organic farmers out of business or in jail, and also potentially target backyard gardeners. This bill would also stop seed saving by organic farmers, and if you don't understand the seriousness of this, do your homework!!! Thousands of farmers in India have lost everything they have, then committed suicide, because of the damage done to them and their families because of this seed dynamic at the hands of Monsanto, along with completely failed GMO crops, also leading to sick and dying herds of their animals from eating same.
Very, very serious. Get the word out, ASAP!!!!!
Alternet needs to do an article about this and feature it!!!!!
Ironically, Alice WAters, who ultimately convinced Ms. Obama to support a White House garden doesn't want to broach this subject with same, because she thinks it's such a delicate subject .
Also, Ms. DeLauro, huge proponent of this bill, has a husband named Stanley Greenberg, who has Monsanto as one of his research clients. CLEAR conflict of interest

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

The Agrarian States of America
Posted by: FREEDOM OF SPEECH on Mar 25, 2009 7:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America was founded as an agrarian republic, as a country of yeoman farmers (plus ranchers, hunters, and so on, i.e. people who drew their livelihoods from productive work on the land). Additionally, most of the Founding Fathers and other socially, economically, and politically prominent early Americans were staunch agriculturalists who followed the theories of the physiocrats who were a group of early economists that believed the wealth of nation-states was derived mostly from the land and thus inherently productive and vital pursuits such as agriculture. Thus, agriculture runs deep in the veins of many Americans and the gradual loss of local agriculture has in many respects decimated and disempowered the economic and social foundations of many American communities.

America has a massive housing problem, related mostly to a huge OVERSUPPLY of housing. To fix this, many of these vacant or otherwise unusable or decrepit homes should be dismantled (with those materials being reused and recycled) and large community gardens, orchards, greenspace, or even small-scale livestock pens (chickens, milk cows, goats, etc) should be put in their places.

For instance: if you take a typical suburban neighborhood of say 100 homes, and dismantle maybe 20-25 of them which are either vacant (with no hope of being sold soon, if at all) or decrepit, that would create more than enough open green space for local inhabitants to grow or raise a very large portion of their vegetables, fruits, or other edibles within their local communities, thus saving people a lot of money and re-igniting interest in the most important occupation in human history: local agriculture.

This would also have the effect of bringing neighbors together to socialize and work together for the common good outside of the pitiful rat-race of the 9-5 world, which seems to be very rare in many of these overbuilt, hastily constructed, and often alienating/isolating 20th-21st Century American urban and suburban neighborhoods. People would become more in touch with the Earth and nature, children could be retaught the fundamentals of agriculture and local food production, the under/unemployed would have something productive to work on until they can get a 'regular' job, people would get outdoors more for exercise and community connections, the loneliness of the elderly could be partially alleviated through more community contact, and so on.

Also, any and all new urban/suburban neighborhoods and homes which are built should (if at all possible) incorporate space for home gardens as many American homes always did in the past.

America is a massive country and does not lack for arable land overall, and it's a terrible tragedy that more and more Americans continue to pile in to the dense suburbs and cities along America's coastal regions, allowing America's vast rural areas to depopulate and thus go to waste on so many levels. In fact, this population massing only seems to increase the sense of economic uneasiness and lack of control so many modern people obviously feel in their lives, because as more and more become detached from the land which once sustained them they then become almost wholly dependent on the corrupt, unstable, and inequitable economic system which currently reigns.

In a city or suburb you are a virtual slave to the system because you don't supply any of your own physical needs and have to rely on the corrupt government and corporations just to feed, clothe, house, and transport you: but out in the countryside you are free to carve out your own niche unhindered by an intrusive government and centralized business systems.

Also, out on the land truly vital local culture(s) can flourish, as opposed to the typical mass-consumerist, conformist, and mass-media driven culture which is found in the cities/suburbs.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Gwen
Posted by: gwenschantz on Mar 25, 2009 7:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Maria and Arnold are putting one in at the CA state building: http://tinyurl.com/daovsc

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Gwen Posted by: maxpayne
Oh darn. I kinda feel guilty now for not growing them gardens but I have my reasons.
Posted by: maxpayne on Mar 25, 2009 9:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Work days can get a bit too long and even on the weekends, there's always loads of work left to be done. We're too tired to garden after stressful weeks at work but then again we're used to buying the best groceries we can get at the organic stores, local or nationwide. Besides, everytime I'd try to get her to try gardening out, she always seems to have terrible memories of one of her uncles who was a farmer in India and yet another victim of corporate greed that he committed suicide. She used to be an avid gardener before agri-business pushed him to the point of suicide. I dunno but I think it's a long shot for us.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Gardening relieves stress! Posted by: maxpayne
VG
Posted by: EinMD on Mar 25, 2009 9:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm starting mine this weekend actually. I've been waiting for the weird ass weather we have in MD to calm down a bit so my veggies don't die.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» I beg to differ sir. Posted by: maxpayne
DURING WWII
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Mar 25, 2009 9:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
President and Mrs. Roosevelt had a big garden. I think that's where the "Victory Gardens" got started. It's refreshing to see the first lady involved with the daily lives of Americans. I believe that she's 100% sincere and people who know her love her. This won't solve all of our problems but it beats having a snotty woman in the White House who truly doesn't care. Yes, I mean Laura. ANNA

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Window Sill Gardens or Victory Gardens
Posted by: RJMosk on Mar 25, 2009 9:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]

In 1940-41, when I was 12 our family planted a Victory garden in our front yard. Our gardeners included my grandparents, aunts,uncles and next-door neighbors. Everyone contributed to the effort planting their fave veggies, and tending the garden. You haven't lived until you prepare your homegrown, fresh delicious, healthy food and enjoyed the fruits of your labor!It is a joy that you and your kids will treasure for years to come.For a less labor-intensive garden, try a 'window-box'of a variety of spices, dill, rosemary, basil,thyme, any or all of your favorites. Each in their own small pots in a sunny window. Just pick what you need for a recipe, rinse, chop and stir it in. You will savor every bite. Bon Appetite.....

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Already started
Posted by: Sushi on Mar 25, 2009 10:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, it is work, but it is rewarding. I have never, ever been able to grow carrots before, but this year I planted a row and dang if I don't have a crop of the prettiest, sweetest orange carrots I ever ate! Cherry tomatoes enough to give extras away, fresh herbs, green onions (you know that the ones you buy at the grocery store...if you cut them down, don't throw away that last inch with the roots. Plant them and they will grow more greens!) Same with leeks. Compost the "throw-away" parts of fruits and veggies.

I stop at the local horse stables and gather bags of "stable apples", which are quite free, toss them into the compost. (They are quite used to people asking for poo, many of them use it for their own gardens.

I think it is lovely that the Obamas are leading by example, even if they aren't out there digging away every day. They inspire others, which is more the point. Better than Bush, who only had a crop of "brush" for photo ops.

Sushi
"I planted some bird seed and a bird came up. Now what do I feed it?"

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Rhubarb
Posted by: Lilly on Mar 25, 2009 12:00 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I notice that rhubarb is often unknown to younger people, a forgotten sweet. Rhubarb is a very enduring perennial; if you plant some roots, that rhubarb will still be there in fifty years. In one spot, the rhubarb will grow into a big circle, or you can lay it out as a hedge. The plant has long pink stems that look like celery, and big dark-green leaves that are POISONOUS. Year after year you harvest armloads of the pink stems which you cut up and stew for ten minutes with a little water and sugar. Although botanically it's not a fruit, stewed rhubarb is sweet and tastes like fruit and it comes in just in the early springtime when you are bored with winter and want some fruit. It's also very good in pies, alone or with strawberries or apples. And it cooks up to a beautiful color. If you live where you expect to be for a few years and have even a small piece of land, consider establishing a bed of lovely old-fashioned rhubarb. You'll get a huge free payback. (PS, This morning in Chicago rhubarb is selling for $4.99 lb.)

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: hubarb Posted by: JenniferBedingfield
» RE: Rhubarb Posted by: badkitty
This is kinda funny... a rich guy and a veggie garden?! Bwahahahaha!
Posted by: DaBear on Mar 25, 2009 12:34 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Will we see Michelle or Barack out there workin' in that garden? How the hell are they going to clean up the soil first? Will they grow Monsanto seed? Will Monsanto give them stuff to kill weeds with and shit?

All of this is laughable and particularly ironic given that the new Food and Safety dude is a Monsanto wise-guy!

I live for the day when rich people and the rest of their owning class peers can get a clue as to just how absolutely stoopid they look trying to fake out the rest of us who actually work for a living. We know what gardening is, and sorry... what's "proposed" just don't look right.

Back to my winter lettuce.... damned raccoon got into the bed last night.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» wrong again Posted by: gellero1
When Loudoun County, VA went from normally rural to suburban sprawl,
Posted by: CarlaWaters on Mar 25, 2009 7:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we had to rethink our plans for gardening. Worsening traffic jams from Loudoun County, VA to Washington and back has been one factor that has made it difficult for us to keep up with our gardens. On the bright side, we're lucky not to be under HOA hell and there are fewer bugs biting our plants. I just hope this growing suburb does not become like our neighboring Fairfax County.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

CONGRESS IS STABBING THE PEOPLE IN THE BACK
Posted by: cori on Mar 25, 2009 10:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
CONGRESS IS STABBING THE PEOPLE IN THE BACK

In the face of a national crisis, while our nations population is struggling to survive, extravgant defense spending is putting people’s survival on the back burner.

While we were fussing over millions for AIG the military is getting 556 billion of our tax dollars. You better get on the phone and give them an ear full becuse this is not what we voted for.

Congresses proposal fully funds Obama's $556 billion for defense spending and would budget $130 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

WHERE IS HEALTHCARE REFORM?

WHERE ARE AFFORDABLE COLLEGES?

WHERE ARE SAFETY NETS FOR PEOPLE.?

WHERE IS THE SINGLE PAYER SYSTEM?

YOU GUYS IN CONGRESS ARE ROBBING US AGAIN.

TOO MUCH FOR MILITARY SPENDING AND NOT ENOUGH FOR THE PEOPLE. THESE ARE OUR TAX DOLLARS. OR DON'T YOU GIVE A DAMN.

This is not what we voted for and will be posted on the internet.

We voted for change and this is business as usual

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Just because the Obamas have a garden doesn't mean it's being written into law.
Posted by: Longdream on Mar 26, 2009 5:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's no national policy position on equal gardening for all.

Rich people garden, poor people garden--people garden who WANT to. And if they really want to, they find a way.

The significance of the garden at the White House is maybe its example of THESE people, the Obamas, who are probably some of the busiest people alive, setting things up so that they and their kids and their guests have very fresh produce in growing season. They're not going to do all the work, although they'll derive some enjoyment from doing some of it.

Some of us can garden, and some of us can't. Sometimes it's circumstances beyond our control, sometimes it's a matter of the free choices we made that aren't conducive to that activity. For some people it's an issue of self-defeat as opposed to persistence.

But saying that growing a few vegetables is a waste of time because you can't grow everything that your family eats, or that the Obamas are bogus because you can't have a garden, or that nothing is REALLY organic so why bother--that's just rummaging around to find fault with something innocent.

There's a lot of that when it comes to the Obamas. In some of these comments it really sticks out for what it is.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

homegrown stimulus plan: grow a garden
Posted by: akimble on Mar 26, 2009 8:52 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No matter what your living situation is you can benefit from growing vegetables. Plant a tomato plant in a pot, basil in a windowsill, lettuce amongst your flowers. You will save money and reap the benefits of growing your own food. My family feels so strongly about promoting "Victory Gardens" that we have devoted our business to providing people information and products to get their gardens started. Just today, my 4 yr old son and I planted seeds in our small raised bed. Everyday of summer my kids anticipate going outside and checking on their zucchini or popping a cherry tomato in their mouths. Check out my website for help. We want to support and educate Americans as much as we can in this effort. www.mojella.com

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Advertisement
Advertisement