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Posts tagged “gardening

Drought Tolerant Plants | Volunteer Gardener


Research: Gardening fights depression naturally

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(NaturalNews) It makes sense that cultivating a garden of any type can help one’s state of mind, even preventing or resolving issues of depression. Focusing on nourishing plant life takes one’s attention to nature and away from negative “stinkin’ thinkin'” that fosters depression.

The energy field of natural settings also helps calm the mind. Ayurveda practitioners recommend walks in nature, not malls, to balance and harmonize one’s energies. Then there’s the sunshine received while gardening to promote more vitamin D3, which also reduces depression risks (http://www.naturalnews.com).

Finally, there are the fruits of gardening food, the food itself. Most food gardening is done without synthetic chemical fertilizers, pesticides, and insecticides. So it’s organic despite not having the label!

It’s also very fresh and full of life. Agri-business products tend to lose nutrients while sitting around in warehouses and stores or in transit with long distance shipping.

Increasing food prices, increasing GMO infiltration, and increasing centralization of food sources that make the food supply more vulnerable to drought and other natural or man-made calamities can lead to losing confidence of how to eat in the near future.

A recently released movie, “Side Effects”, floats a definition of depression as losing confidence for the future. So if you’re concerned about the future of healthy food, food gardening may be a viable, healthy solution toward living without depression.

Some recent inspirational examples of small scale food gardening

The UK is renowned for individual or private small scale gardening, which historically has tended to be botanical. There have been several British newspapers and magazines quoting studies that prove gardening promotes an emotional and mental disposition that discourages depression. [1] [2]

But there has also been a rising interest in gardening foods over the past few years in the UK. Thus far the government has not interfered, at least not much.

One town in England has urban food garden plots in several public areas, even on the police station premises. All started by a small group of private citizens (http://www.naturalnews.com).

Upon the collapse of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s, Cubans were forced into a food supply crisis. They responded valiantly by growing food wherever they could on their own. And the Cuban government did better than look away, it helped promote and support that movement. [3] [4]

Even more amazing is the same situation of urban gardening has flourished in modern Russia. Today, a majority of Russia’s food supply is from small scale farming and family gardens that are encouraged and supported by the Russian government.

This Natural News article, “Russia’s small-scale agricultural model may hold the key to feeding the world” may raise both your eyebrows and astonish you (http://www.naturalnews.com).

That same thrust toward small scale private and collective volunteer urban gardening for food has cropped up in the USA as well. However, local, state, and federal governments have put up obstacles and enforced restraints against this grass roots movement instead of supporting it or at least looking the other way.

Despite this, a South Central Los Angeles food activist, Ron Finley, has boldly created an urban food guerrilla movement, taking over abandoned lots and public road medians and parkways with local volunteers using small-scale agricultural techniques to help feed the community.

In his TED talk, he lamented how “fast food drive-throughs are killing more South Central youths than drive-by shootings.” His guerrilla gardening approach has inspired young local volunteers who never had anything to do with gardening or even purchasing fresh organic whole foods before. [5]

Ron summarized it this way, “Growing your own food is like printing money.” Now that’s a solution not only for depression, but for encouraging healthy eating. “Food is the first medicine” is not just a clever expression. It’s the real deal. [6]

Sources for this article include:

[1] http://www.bbc.co.uk

[2] http://www.dailymail.co.uk

[3] http://www.dac.dk

[4] http://www.archdaily.com

[5]http://www.ted.com

[6] http://preventdisease.com

Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/041239_gardening_depression_organic_food.html#ixzz2os5kgjp3

 

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Home Grown

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Seasonal Advice for December: Recipes, Gardening, Folklore

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Happy Holidays! December 2013 brings with it snow (for some), family, and parties, but remember to grab some hot cocoa during this winter month and relax when you can.

Christmas is coming, the geese are getting fat,
Please to put a penny in the old man’s hat;
If you haven’t got a penny, a ha’penny will do,
If you haven’t got a ha’penny, God bless you!

Beggar’s rhyme.

Calendar

December comes from the Latin word decem meaning “ten” because this had been the tenth month of the early Roman calendar.

December 6 is Saint Nicholas Day. St. Nicholas, the patron saint of children, inspires traditions around the world from hunts for presents to stockings with sweets.

The 7th of the month is always National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day

St. Lucia’s Day on the 13th has long been associated with festivals of light. Before the Gregorian calendar reform in 1752, her feast day occurred on the shortest day of the year (hence the saying “Lucy light, Lucy light, shortest day and longest night”).

Winter begins with the solstice at 12:11 P.M. on the 21st. See more about the first day of winter including facts, folklore, and wonderful winter photos!

December 25 is Christmas Day, a Christian holiday commemorating the birth of Jesus Christ. Learn more about American Christmas Traditions and Christmas Questions and Answers.

On the last evening of the year, December 31, kiss the person you hope to keep kissing!

Recipes for the Season

To help you prepare for this holiday season, check out our Holiday Recipepage for delicious dinner, side dish, and dessert ideas.

Going to a party? You may also enjoy our Christmas Party Appetizer Recipes.

Baking cookies for friends and family? See 5 new Christmas Cookie recipes.

Need a gift for a cook? Give him or her 118 scrumptious recipes for cookies, pies, cakes, breads, and more home-baked goods with our brand-new Everyday Baking cookbook!

Gardening

This is a good time to start pruning dead and dangerous limbs from trees.

If you enjoy holiday plants, here are tips on plant care for poinsettia, Christmas cactus, and amaryllis.

As houseplants are growing more slowly in December light, cut down on watering by half until active growth resumes. Hold off on fertilizing as well. See tips on growing houseplants.

Everyday Advice

To help you with this holiday season, check out some of our tips and fun crafts:
The Holiday Table: Setting and Decorating
Holiday Cooking and Cleaning Checklist
Christmas Tree Care Tips
Make Your Own Holiday Candle

Astronomy

The dark winter night sky is a joy to behold. See our monthly Sky Watchfor highlights of the December sky.

December brings the Full Cold Moon on December 17, 2013.

Weather

Love snow? Check out our Snow Report page for snow conditions across the U.S.

Plus, you’ll find long-range weather forecasts, great recipes to warm you up, weather references, and more!

December changeable and mild, the whole winter will remain a child. December cold, with snow, brings rye everywhere.

More Articles:

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Winter down under

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Winter down under

by Fiona Ogilvie
The Mediterranean Garden

Winter is a wonderful time for gardeners in warm climates. It might lack the cooler climates’ carpets of multi-coloured leaves and glitter of hips and berries, but its compensations are great. Sunny, still days mean more flowers and indeed more time for gardening, rather than sitting trapped behind double-glazing looking at bare branches and wondering if it will ever stop raining. Sure, cool temperate climates produce sensational gardens: few things compare to emerald lawns, cascading roses and bosomy herbaceous borders. But never forget the endless drizzle that keeps them that way.

 
Read in full here 


The Most Essential Item to any Garden ~ What Does a Bumble Bee Do in the Garden?

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An Amish garden in August, bustling and gleeful

Laura Anne Lapp in her family’s garden in Newburg, Pa., with sons Micah, 3, (foreground) and Thomas, 4, each with an armload of potatoes. Not only does she grow vegetables, but she also cooks and bakes, makes clothes, and tends to 18 egg-laying hens. (APRIL SAUL / Staff Photographer)

By Virginia A. Smith, Inquirer Staff Writer

The second corn crop is coming in and peaches are practically falling from the sky. There are tomatoes and cucumbers to pick, potatoes and carrots to dig, and for Laura Anne Lapp, it’s canning time.

“August is the busy season,” says Laura, 32, author of a new book called An Amish Garden, a month-by-month chronicle of a full year in her Cumberland County, Pa., garden.

Actually, every season is busy for this Old Order Amish wife and mother of three. She not only grows food and puts things up, she also cooks and bakes from scratch, makes clothes, and tends to 18 egg-laying hens and one noisy rooster.
 

Read in full here ~ more photos 

 
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Seasonal Advice for August: Recipes, Gardening, Folklore

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Enjoy our season advice for August: recipes, gardening tips, folklore, and more!

This month, we love to celebrate the fruits of the season. Homemade tomatoes, ripe melon, sweet corn on the cob, and blueberres are just a few of our favorites.

Canning season is here, too, and you can find tips and recipes below.

The end of the month signals the time to start preparing for autumn.

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Summer declines and roses have grown rare,
But cottage crofts are gay with hollyhocks,
And in old garden walks you breathe an air
Fragrant of pinks and August-smelling stocks.

—John Todhunter (1839-1916)

Calendar

August is named in honor of the first Roman emperor, Augustus Caesar (63 B.C.– A.D. 14), who was the grandnephew of Julius Caesar.

August 1 traditionally marked the beginning of the serious harvest. “After Lammas Day, corn ripens as much by night as by day.” See more about Lammas Day.

On August 17, Cat Nights Begin, harking back to a rather obscure Irish legend concerning witches; this bit of folklore also led to the idea that a cat has nine lives.

Recipes for the Season

Try some of our recipes featuring this month’s crops to wrap up the summer:
Pickled Watermelon
Summer Corn Cakes
Great Zucchini Bread

See more summertime recipes at What’s in Season: Summer Recipes.

The summer and fall are also popular times for family gatherings. Visit our Family Reunion Planner for lots of great recipe ideas.

Gardening

Planting a second (or third) crop? Check our Succession Gardening chartfor last planting dates.

For “how to” harvest all those vegetables, herbs, and fruit, consult our free Plant Guides with information on all your common edibles.

Remember to plant your fall bulbs now: Growing Guide: Fall–Planted Bulbs

Preserve the bounty of the season’s harvest. Try your hand at Pickling and Canning!

See how to store your fruits, vegetables, and herbs for the coming winter.

Everyday Advice

Planning on finishing up outdoor house projects before the summer ends? See our Home Improvement pages on painting, flooring, wallpapering, roofing, and more.

Bugs buggin’ you? Look to our natural remedies for insect bites and stings.

Astronomy

August is a wonderful month for star gazing! At a glance, see what’s up in the August sky.

When is the August Moon? See our August Full Moon Guide for Moon phase dates, best days, and more.

Folklore for the Season

  • As August, so February.
  • Observe on what day in August the first heavy fog occurs, and expect a hard frost on the same day in October.
  • If the first week of August is unusually warm, The winter will be white and long.

Related Articles

 


Seasonal Advice for June: Recipes, Gardening, Folklore

Seasonal Advice for June: Recipes, Gardening, Folklore

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It’s June 2013 and everything’s coming up roses, not to mention strawberries! June brings beautiful bouquets, delicious fruits and vegetables, and an urge to get out there and enjoy the sunshine. See our tips!

It is the month of June,
The month of leaves and roses,
When pleasant sights salute the eyes,
And pleasant scents the noses.

–N. P. Willis (1807-67)

Calendar
June monthJune is named after the Roman goddess Juno, patroness of marriage and the well-being of women.

This year, the summer solstice falls on June 21 heralding the start of summer! Read more about the first day of summer.

Since ancient times, June is the time for weddings, feasts, and revelry, especially on Midsummer Day, June 24.

June is also a big month for fishing. Check out the best fishing days for 2013.

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Recipes for the Season
Summer brings juicy fruit ripened by the Sun and many garden treats to the table! Try:
Zucchini and Tomato Casserole
Strawberry Delight Cake
Stuffed Artichokes

See “What’s in Season: Summer Recipes” more seasonal recipes.

Gardening

How are the tomatoes? See our Tomato Guide for pest control and plant care.

Got slugs, weeds, or other annoying insects? See our Pests and Problems library.

Mow grass when it’s 2 to 3 inches high. See our lawn care tips.

See our tips on how to keep bouquets fresh!

Home Hints
Wedding PlannerWedding season is upon us! Check your wedding weather and ideas for great wedding gifts.

Since the weather is warm, try saving some money this summer by using a clothesline to dry your clothes instead of the dryer.

Planning to paint the house? See how much paint you need and how to choose a paintbrush.

Nature
Let’s go fishing! Learn something new about trout and bass:
How to Catch and Cook Trout
Smallmouth Bass: What are They and How do you Catch One?

To help you catch this year’s prize fish, check out the Four Fundamentals of Successful Fishing.

Astronomy
Sky WatchLook up! Enjoy the night sky from your own backyard. See our Sky Watch highlights.

The Full Strawberry Moon is on June 23, 2013. See the Full Moon times for your location.

Folklore for the Season

  • A dripping June brings all things in tune.
  • He who bathes in June will sing a merry tune.
  • If June be sunny, harvest comes early.

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Fairy Gardens for Kids of all Ages :)