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Could a Garden Save You 4K a Year?

I just did a post here talking about gardening with kids- but after I read this, I wanted to post it in here also. Souce is link below!

http://www.comcast.net/articles/finance/20090316/Recession.Gardening/

Dollars from dirt: Economy spurs home garden boom By GILLIAN FLACCUS, AP Sun Mar 15, 9:28 PM EDT

LONG BEACH, Calif. — With the recession in full swing, many Americans are returning to their roots — literally — cultivating vegetables in their backyards to squeeze every penny out of their food budget.

Industry surveys show double-digit growth in the number of home gardeners this year and mail-order companies report such a tremendous demand that some have run out of seeds for basic vegetables such as onions, tomatoes and peppers.

"People's home grocery budget got absolutely shredded and now we've seen just this dramatic increase in the demand for our vegetable seeds. We're selling out," said George Ball, CEO of Burpee Seeds, the largest mail-order seed company in the U.S. "I've never seen anything like it."

Gardening advocates, who have long struggled to get America grubby, have dubbed the newly planted tracts "recession gardens" and hope to shape the interest into a movement similar to the victory gardens of World War II.

Those gardens, modeled after a White House patch planted by Eleanor Roosevelt in 1943, were intended to inspire self-sufficiency, and at their peak supplied 40 percent of the nation's fresh produce, said Roger Doiron, founding director of Kitchen Gardeners International.

Doiron and several colleagues are petitioning President Obama to plant a similar garden at the White House as part of his call for a responsible, eco-friendly economic turnaround. Proponents have collected 75,000 signatures on an online petition.

"It's really part of our history and it's part of the White House's history," Doiron said. "When I found out why it had been done over the course of history and I looked at where we are now, it makes sense again."

But for many Americans, the appeal of backyard gardening isn't in its history — it's in the savings.

The National Gardening Association estimates that a well-maintained vegetable garden yields a $500 average return per year. A study by Burpee Seeds claims that $50 spent on gardening supplies can multiply into $1,250 worth of produce annually.

Doiron spent nine months weighing and recording each vegetable he pulled from his 1,600-square-foot garden outside Portland, Maine. After counting the final winter leaves of Belgian endive, he found he had saved about $2,150 by growing produce for his family of five instead of buying it.

Adriana Martinez, an accountant who reduced her grocery bill to $40 a week by gardening, said there's peace of mind in knowing where her food comes from. And she said the effort has fostered a sense of community through a neighborhood veggie co-op.

"We're helping to feed each other and what better time than now?" Martinez said.

A new report by the National Gardening Association predicts a 19 percent increase in home gardening in 2009, based on spring seed sales data and a telephone survey. One-fifth of respondents said they planned to start a food garden this year and more than half said they already were gardening to save on groceries.

Community gardens nationwide are also seeing a surge of interest. The waiting list at the 312-plot Long Beach Community Garden has nearly quadrupled — and no one is leaving, said Lonnie Brundage, who runs the garden's membership list.

"They're growing for themselves, but you figure if they can use our community garden year-round they can save $2,000 or $3,000 or $4,000 a year," she said. "It doesn't take a lot for it to add up."

Seed companies say this renaissance has rescued their vegetable business after years of drooping sales. Orders for vegetable seeds have skyrocketed, while orders for ornamental flowers are flat or down, said Richard Chamberlin, president of Harris Seeds in Rochester, N.Y.

Business there has increased 40 percent in the last year, with the most growth among vegetables such as peppers, tomatoes and kitchen herbs that can thrive in small urban plots or patio containers, he said. Harris Seeds recently had to reorder pepper and tomato seeds.

"I think if things were fine, you wouldn't see people doing this. They're just too busy," Chamberlin said. "Gardening for most Americans was a dirty word because it meant work and nobody wanted more work — but that's changed."

Harris Seed's Web site now gets 40,000 hits a day.

Among larger companies, Burpee saw a 20 percent spike in sales in the last year and started marketing a kit for first-time gardeners called "The Money Garden." It has sold 15,000 in about two months, said Ball.

A Web-based retailer called MasterGardening.com is selling similar packages, and Park Seed of Greenwood, S.C., is marketing a "Garden for Victory Seed Collection." Slogan: "Win the war in your own backyard against high supermarket prices and nonlocal produce!"

Cultivators with years of experience worry that home gardeners lured by promises of big savings will burn out when they see the amount of labor required to get dollars from their dirt. The average gardener spends nearly five hours a week grubbing in the dirt and often contends with failure early on, said Bruce Butterfield, a spokesman for The National Gardening Association.

"The one thing you don't factor into it is the cost of your time and your labor," he said.

"But even if it's just a couple of tomato plants in a pot, that's worth the price of admission."

___

On the Net:

Kitchen Gardeners: http://www.kitchengardeners.org/

National Gardening Assn: http://www.garden.org/home

Burpee Seeds: http://www.burpee.com/

MasterGardening: http://mastergardening.com/

Harris Seeds: http://www.harrisseeds.com/

After reading it I realized! Your Garden = Major Money Saver. And for as much basil and cilantro I buy during the year... I feel motivated to start my garden up again!

What do you think? Are you already have a garden? Look forward to hearing your thoughts!- C

3/17/2009 10:02 AM
3 Replies to Could a Garden Save You 4K a Year?

Idea I think it is a wonderful thing to do anyway! We have seed pots all over our house...pumpkins, watermelons, peppers, tomatoes, greens of all kinds! Will be adding more! Got herbs and flowers starting as well! I am very excited!

4/15/2009 9:35 AM

:) Thank you for your post indianasweetheart! are Pumpkins and watermelons harder to grown than peppers or tomatoes?

Also, one of the Betty Crocker Kitchen Bloggers, Heidi is gardening... here is her post about it. http://www.bettycrocker.com/CommunityBlogs/blogs.aspx/journals/2009/05/11/how-does-your-garden-grow

 

 

 

5/14/2009 1:36 PM

We've had a garden for years, (my husband and I both grew up in the country) and last nights salad came from the garden.  It is a little hard to keep up with, even with (especially with) the kids helping.  I'm teaching my preschoolers how to tell the weeds from the plants, so they can help.  They even have their own section where nothing is planted and they can dig.  Watermelons were never hard to grow back home in Florida, but they are a challenge here in Virginia - lettuce was a challenge there, but does well here.  When we lived in a tiny apartment we had pots of tomatoes and peppers on the balcony.  As long as you have a sunny spot and a large container, keep the plants watered and fertilized and you should do fine.  There's nothing like fresh picked sweet peppers on the grill, or fresh garden tomatoes on the salad.


I do doubt the 4k savings figure though.  We've never eaten that many vegetables in a year, and we still have to buy some every year.  Our small patch (about 12x24) probably figures in the $500 range, mostly in fresh herbs.  I grow basil, parsley, chives, oregano, sage, rosemary, lavender, dill, and coriander in a little raised bed (18"x 8') on one end of the garden and pots on the front porch.  The vegetables we grow include indian corn, green beans, peppers, tomatoes, radishes, carrots, lettuce, cucumbers, pumpkins, and melons or cantalopes.  It's a little hard to rotate plantings in a space that small, but we try, since it keeps the diseases down.  We also have a grape vine on one end of our deck, raspberries in a patch near the corner of the yard and blueberries under the pine trees by the fence.  All this in a typical suburban lot labout 1/3 acre.

6/8/2009 8:19 AM

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