Peak Moment 51: Tour Scott McGuire's "White Sage Gardens" in the back yard of his rental home -- a demonstration site for suburban sustainability. He ponders, "How might a household produce and preserve a significant portion of its own food supply?" Composting, a water-conserving greenhouse, and seed-saving are all facets of this beautiful work in progress. [www.whitesagegardens.com]
Channel: People & Blogs Uploaded: March 11, 2007 at 5:46 pm Author:peakmoment
hi, I live in very small apartment in Germany with a balcony sizing north. Is there any way I can grow my food at home? I cannot move any where soon. Any suggestion? Energy efficiency wise is it smart to grow vegetable indoors or with very little sun.
carsiotto(Tuesday 28th of October 2008 05:02:51 PM)
IF he destroyed the pest, he wouldnt need it predator that would possible destroy the crop. Dont get his method.
That's the way to go! I started the same experiment 20 years ago. Many of my friends were gradually convinced over the years. It's balancing, healthy and grounding.
jbryant13(Saturday 13th of September 2008 03:16:46 PM)
I tried to go to the whitesagegardens . com site and it was down. Is he out of business ?
peakmoment(Monday 13th of October 2008 09:37:26 PM)
No, Scott is very much still at it. He's changing to a new website. As soon as I get the new url, I'll post it. --Janaia
LeahTVdotcom(Monday 1st of September 2008 04:41:02 AM)
That is correct, that was the original American focus, but then thy got onto oil in Pensylvania and that buggared it!
cloudberry121(Friday 1st of August 2008 10:49:34 PM)
I agree everyone should have a veggie garden, if they like. It's lots of fun. Sorry about you losing your chickens, mikedarrow. Nothing tastes better than fresh chicken and kids love to find eggs.