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Survive - One Family In California Grows 6,000 Pounds Of Produce On Just 1/10th Of An Acre
The American Dream ^ | 3-3-2011

Posted on 03/03/2011 9:08:03 PM PST by blam

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To: diamond6

You can improve your backyard by nailing together some planks of wood to make a raised bed with good soil dumped in to fill the planters.

Increase your vegetable yields by training your plants to grow up instead of out on trellis or strings, etc. You can expand your growing area using 5 gallon buckets to hold plants and place on a deck, porch, or the edge of buildings.

If you need motivation, picture your local grocery during any weather emergency, empty right? Now picture the store remaining that way for weeks on end. If you can move, do so. If you can’t, plan on sheltering in place because you might not be able to run away when you need to. If sheltering in place is not an option, make a bug out plan. You will need food, water, fuel, first aid, firearms and a vehicle that can be driven where there is no road. The roads will be too jammed with others fleeing.

You will need to have a location already chosen, hopefully with pre-positioned supplies. Showing up at someone’s door unannounced might get you shot. If they give you their food and supplies, they too will die. Looters are looters after all.


61 posted on 03/04/2011 3:17:48 AM PST by Rearden (Deo Vindice)
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To: blam

6,000 lbs. on 1/10th of an acre? Doesn’t sound right to me.


62 posted on 03/04/2011 3:30:50 AM PST by ViLaLuz (2 Chronicles 7:14)
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To: blam

Thanks for posting. Great article. What surprises most is the number of naysayers on this thread.


63 posted on 03/04/2011 4:11:13 AM PST by caver (Obama: Home of the Whopper)
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To: Jack Black

Yeah, I just finished Amnity Shales, The Forgotten Man. Should be required reading, or listening to every person in the country. FDR was, like Democrats in general, an economic idiot.


64 posted on 03/04/2011 4:18:43 AM PST by Leisler (Our debts are someone's profit. Follow the money, the vig.....)
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To: dragnet2

You must be hard of reading. I never said they were bad people or that being self sufficient was bad.

You must also be young if you don’t know what the hippie counterculture movement was about. If they prefer to be identified as hippies, then more power to them. They’re in a good place for that lifestyle.


65 posted on 03/04/2011 4:28:53 AM PST by Kirkwood (Zombie Hunter)
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To: Kirkwood

Actually, I’ve eaten food grown in a greenhouse and they’re actually quite good, mostly because in a greenhouse you can precisely measure the amount of fertilizer needed and the amount of water you use and in a greenhouse, there’s a lot less need for pesticides and herbicides (natural or not!).


66 posted on 03/04/2011 4:39:55 AM PST by RayChuang88 (FairTax: America's economic cure)
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To: Leisler

Actually it is...they sell excess to the restaurants.


67 posted on 03/04/2011 4:51:34 AM PST by EBH ( Whether you eat your bread or see it vanish into a looter's stomach, is an absolute.)
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To: blam

If you have the money the following technology truly enables you to grow an enormous amount in a very small space and if you go with their injectors your maintenance is dramatically reduced.

http://www.hydrostacker.com/

This is one of the most water-efficient gardening systems I have used.


68 posted on 03/04/2011 5:03:33 AM PST by surfer (To err is human, to really foul things up takes a Democrat, don't expect the GOP to have the answer!)
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To: mountainbunny

People who sue for exclusive use of wording which has been used in the past deserve nothing but contempt.


69 posted on 03/04/2011 5:20:35 AM PST by Red in Blue PA (islam- It's a religion of peace (0.0000000000000000001% of the time))
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To: blam; jenbean

pinging the wife


70 posted on 03/04/2011 5:32:49 AM PST by DCBryan1 (FORGET the lawyers...first kill the "journalists". (Die Ritter der Kokosnuss))
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To: iowamark

It’s amazing what can be done with ideas and hard work;

http://www.fourseasonfarm.com/

Coleman has been at the forefront of sustainable food production IN MAINE.

For you old hippies, he purchased his land from Helen and Scott Nearing.


71 posted on 03/04/2011 5:48:14 AM PST by maine yankee
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To: iowamark

I have almost no back yard and it would be fruitless to grow stuff for others to pick in my front yard. So I guess I’m screwed. But, I guess I will have plenty of company and we can forage together or maybe not;(.


72 posted on 03/04/2011 6:03:12 AM PST by Bitsy ( i)
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To: ottbmare

Mexicans strip our pear trees regularly even thought the small orchard is posted.


73 posted on 03/04/2011 6:24:15 AM PST by kalee (The offences we give, we write in the dust; Those we take, we engrave in marble. J Huett 1658)
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To: blam
In fact, they grow so much food that they are able to sell much of it to restaurants in the area.

Almost certainly a zoning violation...

74 posted on 03/04/2011 6:30:27 AM PST by IamConservative (Liberalism - the surety of knowing that which cannot be proven.)
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To: RayChuang88; Kirkwood

That is true. My own hydroponic tomatoes, lettuce and romaine have improved since I began using 3-part liquid nutrients and vary the mix for the stages of growth. It takes some experimentation to find the right varieties. True dwarfs/miniatures are best.

The best winter tomatoes available, IMO, are Campari, which are greenhouse grown in Canada. For some reason, they are hard to find for the past couple of months. I have only been able to find the large flats at Sam’s. $6/flat, but by putting them in Green Bags on the counter, they last us about 3 weeks. Like everything else, they have increased in price in the past 3-4 months, so it isn’t just the February freeze.

I let the miniature romaine and lettuce mature into heads with a fairly thick stalk, harvest the entire head, bag in regular ziplocks and refrigerate for at least 24 hours to get them crisp. Transfer into Green Bags with a sheet of paper toweling and they last several weeks.

Pea pods need a larger setup to get any sort of decent harvest, but they are crisp and flavorful, too.

The real drawback is light and temperature. It takes electricity and high output CFLs, but the newest lights and a small pump are only about 65 watts and at 16-hours/day are still affordable. These are small tabletop units, not a big greenhouse. I couldn’t afford a real greenhouse in the winter up here.


75 posted on 03/04/2011 6:31:58 AM PST by reformedliberal
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To: sneakers

We used the grids, they really came in handy.

We assembled 2 X 12s into the 4’X 8’ beds, stapled landscaping cloth to a side, turned it over (cloth down) and then measured off foot lengths of the sides and ends. Then we ran nylon string back and forth, stapling it down at the measured off marks, to create the grid.

We used potting soil, compost, and sphagnum peat moss in about equal parts to fill the beds to about 9” deep. I read that coconut coir is much cheaper and holds the water as well if not better than the peat moss. Next beds we build, I’m going to try that.

The SFG book says you can plant in as little as 6” of soil, but I wanted some carrots, so we went a little wider (deeper) on our framework.

The SFG book says to put 9 green bean plants per square foot. We did that, filling one of our 4’ X 8’ beds with nothing but Blue Lake green beans. I wanted to gauge how much we’d get. I noticed when we were cleaning up at the end of the season that none of the squares had more than 7 plants left, guess the weak plants were crowded out. Seriously thinking about only planting 6 or 7 per SF this year.

We got a MARVELOUS crop, btw. I canned 85 pints of GBs, froze about 5 pounds and dehydrated probably 10 lbs. All out of 4’ X 8’.

We used Miracle Grow once - after everything had sprouted and was starting to grow.


76 posted on 03/04/2011 6:53:39 AM PST by FrogMom (No such thing as an honest democrat!)
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To: iowamark
Yes, growing your own food always sounds good.

It's a lot of work, but I enjoy it. You simply can't beat the produce quality. Light years ahead of what you can buy in the store. I've been selling some of my excess to local restaurants for several years now. Some neighbors buy from me, too, or swap for something I'm not growing or don't have enough of. I've been selling sweet corn, peppers, tomatoes, eggs, okra, etc. and swapping one neighbor sweet corn for blueberries the past couple of years. My barber will take fresh squash and corn in exchange for a haircut. The main question everybody asks is "when are you going to have more?".....

77 posted on 03/04/2011 6:58:41 AM PST by Thermalseeker (The theft being perpetrated by Congress and the Fed makes Bernie Maddoff look like a pickpocket.)
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To: RayChuang88

I built a 12’x24’ greenhouse kit about 3 years ago. I put raised beds in it with mushroom compost and the amount of produce it puts off in the wintertime is amazing. Carrots, celery, lettuce, onions, Brussels sprouts, shallots, broccoli. The taste blows away what you can buy in the store. The carrots and Brussels sprouts are especially good. Way more than the wife and I can eat, too. Doesn’t work too well in the summer. It gets too hot in there, but that’s when the outdoor garden is going.


78 posted on 03/04/2011 7:05:17 AM PST by Thermalseeker (The theft being perpetrated by Congress and the Fed makes Bernie Maddoff look like a pickpocket.)
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To: blam
Thanks for the ping. I never see anyone talking about food composting and it is a great/easy way to boost your gardens yield, help those with bad soil. For anyone who's interested here are links on how to make your own, what to/not to compost.

Bin Compost Plans

HOW TO COMPOST FOOD SCRAPS

79 posted on 03/04/2011 8:01:24 AM PST by FromLori (FromLori">)
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To: FrogMom

Thank you! Is that mixture of potting soil, peat and sphagnum the Mel’s mix I’ve heard about?

I think the amount of beans we’re planning on planting is way too much, based on what you said you got. We have 6 4x8 beds planned as well. Going to have to rethink this!


80 posted on 03/04/2011 9:02:30 AM PST by sneakers
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