FOOD FROM MY OWN GARDEN
... Awake magazine Dec, 2003
In many lands a daily concern of people is how they will feed their
families. The high price of common vegetables often make doing so a
real challenge. Nevertheless, some have found a relatively simple
solution - growing some of their own food! You may very well want to
try starting a small garden yourself. True, there may not be much land
around your own home, but
perhaps there is some land nearby that you can arrange to cultivate.
Think of all the money you can save by producing delicious and healthy
food! Gardening can even be a way for you to get some needed physical
exercise. A garden can also be a family project that your children will
enjoy.
Indeed, cultivating a vegetable garden is educational. It teaches such
values as patience (James 5:7). Additionally, watching things grow can
draw you closer to
the Creator of all good things - Psalm 104:14. Now do not imagine that
growing your own food will be effortless or that you will get quick
results. However, with determination and a little know-how, you can
succeed.
A Family Meets the Challenge
Take, for example, Timothee and Lucie - a Christian couple with two
children, who live in Bangui, Capital of the Central African Republic.
They found that starting their own garden was a practical and enjoyable
way to stretch their modest earnings. When Lucie was 13 years old, she
cultivated a small garden next to her home, working on it after school
and on weekends. She took pleasure in watching it grow. It was not
until years later, though, that the idea of starting a garden for the
family came to her mind. She arranged to use a nearby field that was
basically serving as a garbage heap. Lucie saw its potential. Far from
resulting in a ruined parcel of land, the disintegration of the garbage
over the years had created soil useful for growing food. Lucie and
Timothee decided to turn that land into a flourishing garden.
Getting Started
First, though, they had to do some research. They talked to others who
knew about vegetable cultivation and they listened carefully. Since the
plot of land was in need of irrigation, they even learned how to dig
their own well. Reading books on gardening also proved helpful. They
read about plant interactions, and they learned that some plants help
one another to thrive. However, some plants actually hinder one
another's growth. Some say that carrots and tomatoes are ideal partners
in a vegetable garden. Likewise, planting celery and cauliflower
together is advantageous for both. And dill is a 'friend' of peas,
cucumbers, lettuce and onions. However, green lettuce and parsley do
not do well together. Onions will harm green beans and peas. When
plants are harmful to one another, they weaken and become easy targets
for pests, harmful insects and diseases. Timothee and Lucie also
learned that is was unwise to cultivate a single plant crop on a plot
of land. If it was attacked by insects or disease, they could lose
everything. Planting a well-chosen variety of plants helped them
minimize that risk. Herbs and flowers added colour, life and beauty to
their vegetable garden and attracted bees and other useful insects that
help gardens remain healthy. The couple also found ways to avoid using
poisonous sprays on their crops. They learned that simply planting
garlic can help rid a garden of certain pests. It took much hard work
and patience, but today Timothee and Lucie have a thriving garden. It
produces cabbage, parsley, tomatoes, carrots, cucumbers and
boulangers -- sometimes more than the family can consume.
Grow Your own Garden
It is not just in Africa,though,that people have discovered the
practicality of having their own garden. In Germany,for example,there
are over a million urban allotment gardens that are rented out to city
dwellers. According to one researcher, these tiny gardens 'play an
important role for the production of fresh fruits and vegetables'. The
gardens also serve as patches of 'paradise' for the gardeners -- a
place to work and relax.
Remember: he that tilleth his
land shall have plenty of bread - Proverbs 28:19