Saturday, April 18, 2020

Growing food in a time of crisis

We started growing food in 2010...I thought it would be a good life skill for my then 4 homeschooled children. For the next 8 years we slowly converted our whole garden to vegetable, fruit and herbs.

It was hard work, not just the sowing, composting, planting, weeding, watering and harvesting but the processing when the food was ready.




It is so much easier to just open a bag of lettuce leaves and dump them in a bowl...but when you have to pick and wash the leaves, pick the tomatoes, check for bugs - which always come along with organic veg - spin them dry and then make the salad, your salad making goes from 10 minutes to 30.



In 2016 when the drought hit Cape Town hard, we reduced our vegetable beds from 15 to 5. Where the 10 stood we changed into Fynbos and indigenous plants which could survive the drought. The 5 beds that were left took all the borehole water we were able to spare and the fynbos had to just manage on itself.





Yet here we are today amid the CoVid-19 pandemic and our Fynbos garden is blooming in the autumn sunshine and out small vegetable patch supplying what we need for the 3 of us that still live here. And with the time created by lock down the vegetables are getting extra love and care.

Planting out the winter seedlings today, reminded me of what food security is and where it comes from. It first comes from our Heavenly Father who has provided seeds for planting, rain from heaven and sunshine. It secondly comes from knowing that you can grow food, if not all, some of it no matter where you live and how much space you have.



Take a look back over the posts labelled on the side for ideas of what to plant in pots on windowsills, in larger pots on balconies, or how to pull up your lawn and grow on a larger scale like us. Either way, use the time to learn this skill...it really is rewarding. 

3 comments:

MandyLondonCare said...

Wow, I love your blog! You sure have green fingers! I'd love to start a veggie garden too. We live in London. I wonder if the weather would affect how things grow. I guess I'll need some advice?

MandyLondonCare said...

Wow, I love your blog! You sure have green fingers! I'd love to start a veggie garden too. We live in London. I wonder if the weather would affect how things grow. I guess I'll need some advice?

Unknown said...

Hey Mandy, you can definitely grow veggies in London....look for Gardener's World on BBC and check out Youtube, there are soooo many people with those typical long narrow London gardens that completely convert to veggie growing.