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Our modern way of life has strayed from the family farm and has moved toward the urban and suburban environment. This change has left many people in a compromised position when it comes to full self-sufficiency. However, there are some fantastic examples of cooperative efforts taking place, as well as independent ingenuity, that should serve as a reminder that providing for one’s family is quite attainable under virtually any style of living.
One of the very best examples of food independence on a small plot of land comes from the Dervaes family who live on 1/10th of an acre just outside of the Los Angeles city center. Please view the following inspirational video which highlights how they have transformed what could have been a simple plot of grass into a location that produces enough food for a family of four AND enables an income of $20,000 per year … all done organically. It is a supreme example of Urban Homesteading, which you can learn more about at their website Urban Homestead.
As the cost of food increases and more people learn about the dangers of traditional produce which can be loaded with pesticides and/or compromised by genetic engineering, many communities are looking to take back control and introduce local solutions.
Community gardens are just such a solution. The incredible range of benefits were succinctly summarized by Christina Sarich as she documented her own recent involvement with community gardening. She found it to be a transformative experience:
There are now too many innovative, and low-cost methods to produce food in virtually any sized space that the only obstacle is one of knowledge. Thankfully there are people like Ron Finley who have made it their work to help bring the value (and values) of gardening back to formerly abandoned places and show people exactly how to build their communities from the food up, combining their efforts to share work and reduce cost. As he states, “Growing your own food is like printing money” … among many other socio-political benefits he addresses in the following video:
For an example of how transformative Finley’s ideas can be, one small town in England has become “The Incredible, Edible Town,” showing what real revolution is all about.
Even Closer to Home
For those who would like to start in their own home, immediately, there can be no better example than aquaponics. Imagine growing fish and plants together in one integrated system. Aquaponics might offer the least expensive, least time-consuming path to creating your own sustainable ecosystem.
Aquaponics is a full simulation of nature where fish and plants are both kept healthy and productive through a balance supplied by each in a recirculating environment. The aquaculture side offers nutrient-rich water that is provided as natural fertilizer for plants. These nutrients are normally a disposal problem for fish farmers who need to eliminate the toxic waste. On the other side, hydroponics desperately requires nutrient-rich water in order to grow in a soil-less environment, so the plants serve as a natural filter for the fish. This mini-ecosystem is surprisingly easy and relatively inexpensive to set up thanks to emerging science and technology. Here is an example of a reasonably small-scale set up.
For further education, visit Growingpower.org, a non-profit organization that has been instrumental in bringing this new concept to fruition mainly in urban settings. They offer workshops in aquaponics and portable farms.
The beauty of aquaponics is in the small scale … and it can get even smaller. Just as micro-farming has taken root in urban environments, aquaponics can utilize a home aquarium, a mini garden of herbs, vegetables, or even flowers. This is known as Desktop Aquaponics and serves as a great showpiece, or as an educational microcosm of what is possible through the fusion of fish and plants.
You can begin taking the step toward self-sufficient food production . . . no matter where you live, and no matter the season. Look at what you can do right in your own home in this excellent short demo of Desktop Aquaponics:
It is commonly known that the best form of survival is not physical strength or dominance, but the ability to adapt. A terrific example of this is highlighted by the new wave of urban farming that is transforming some very unlikely spaces into thriving and productive food locations:
In Fresh Food From Small Spaces: The Square-Inch Gardener’s Guide to Year-Round Growing, Fermenting, and Sprouting, author R. J. Ruppenthal turns a seemingly anti-urban idea — that farming has to be done outside, with a red barn and rolling fields of wheat — on its head. Because urbanites, too, can grow their own food indoors, in cramped spaces, and without access to land! For real.
Ruppenthal gives loads of details about what crops are most productive, as well as the top 5 things a city resident needs to know about urban gardening in this must-read article.
Humans are creative and innovative to an unlimited capacity. The future of small-space, budget farming through concepts like vertical farming on a large scale (here and here), as well as the comprehensive ideas in the video below, illustrate the many small-scale, low-cost options. Combined, these are inspiring lessons that demonstrate that even in times of apparently increasing adversity, the solutions are right there at our fingertips. And where our fingertips meet the earth is perhaps the place where our greatest opportunity to grow resides.
Daisy Luther is a freelance writer and editor who lives in a small village in the Pacific Northwestern area of the United States. She is the author of The Pantry Primer: How to Build a One Year Food Supply in Three Months. On her website, The Organic Prepper, Daisy writes about healthy prepping, homesteading adventures, and the pursuit of liberty and food freedom. Daisy is a co-founder of the website Nutritional Anarchy, which focuses on resistance through food self-sufficiency. Daisy’s articles are widely republished throughout alternative media. You can follow her on Facebook, Pinterest, and Twitter, and you can email her at [email protected]
The article Lessons In Farming With Limited Space On A Limited Budget (VIDEOS) published by TheSleuthJournal – Real News Without Synthetics