But if everyone tried to be more food self-sufficient, might that not hurt the economy as overall sales dip?
Ah, but where there's a will to make a buck, there's a way to make even self-sufficiency a boost for the broader economy. Last night's Marketplace tells us about "edible landscaping companies" that make their living helping newbie gardeners turn their boring old lawns into do-it-yourself cornucopiae:
It's part of a day-long organic gardening crash-course by Weihmann's company, All Edibles. They design and build your garden and teach you how to take care of it.
First-time gardeners Paul Silverman and Laura Shapiro are doing a new low-budget package developed by All Edibles. The entire garden gets built in one day, and the clients have to help do the work....
This one-day build costs $1,400. Not cheap, but the garden planted today should produce enough vegatables and herbs to feed a small family for the entire year [Andrew Stelzer, "Cheaper Dinner Grown in the Backyard," Marketplace, 2009.03.23].
Even in the self-sufficient local economy, the smart businessperson can find a way to provide a service that helps the neighbors and puts food on everyone's table.
Your site meter just broke 150,000 hits. That is quite a milestone in two years in a town of 6000. Nice Job! I don't always agree with you, but you give us a forum in which opinions can flow freely. I think our community is better for it.
ReplyDelete$1400 to make a garden...pretty sure my grandma just rolled over in her grave.
ReplyDeletefunny how we can "modernize" anything into a yupster commodity, i guess.
[Anon 1:01: thanks for noticing! I'm happy to serve. :-) ]
ReplyDeleteAnon 3:06: never underestimate the willingness of big-city people to pay good money for stuff you and I and Grandma all have the gumption to do for ourselves. But remember, city folks may not have the equipment it takes to convert a normal yard into a garden. If this service gets homeowners started with gardening, and the homeowners take it from there and do the work themselves, that's a good thing.