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It is a really simple idea - things that can't go on the way they have been, usually don't. Sooner or later things that have no future just stop. We all know intellectually that we can't all live and consume like middle class Americans, that our kids are going to have a harder time because of our way of life, that Empires end and ecological disasters cause things to come to hard stops. We know it, but we don't KNOW it. This blog is about coming to KNOW, and figuring out where we go from here. I'm a science writer, teacher, environmental activist and small farmer who is trying to put her lifestyle where her mouth is, and live in a way with a future. When not writing books, serving on the board of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas, I run my farm with my husband, where we raise dairy goats, herbs, pastured poultry, heirloom vegetable plants, children and havoc.

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Only Two Things that Money Can't Buy...

Category: food preservationgarden
Posted on: August 30, 2010 8:31 AM, by Sharon Astyk

"...and that's true love and homegrown tomatoes." - Guy Clark

Guy Clark's song is true - and over here we've got homegrown tomatoes and true love coming out our ears. The true love can be put up for winter until it is chilly and huddling together for warmth looks good, but the tomatoes, well, they have to be eaten, and preserved. So that's what your blogiste is doing today.

You might as well listen to the song while I'm at it:

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Comments

1

With two working parents and a 13 month old toddler and no nearby relatives to watch our daughter, too many of our tomatoes have rotted instead of getting preserved. But even with that we have over 4 gallons of salsa canned in the basement and about 10 gallons of romas sitting on the porch ready to be preserved.

Posted by: Mike | August 30, 2010 8:54 AM

2

The city of Northbrook IL told a resident to get rid of her tomato plants because they don't look as nice as suburban grass:

http://triblocal.com/Northbrook/detail/209712.html

Posted by: Ken | August 30, 2010 9:03 AM

3

Those stories such as Ken just posted, about outlaw veggie gardens just continue to amaze me, even though I've been reading them for several years now.

I will say that the reader comments usually appended to the newspaper articles, more and more, seem to be voicing support for gardens, fruit trees, chickens, etc. Even one such reader mentioned that this situation is changing due to the changing economic times. This is why I love reading online newspaper article reader comments. Even though they can be very hostile and nasty, it's interesting to watch the social situation evolve.

Posted by: Stephen B. | August 30, 2010 10:00 AM

4

Amusingly a colleague of mine has a completely different take on homegrown tomatoes - to paraphrase him

"this year I grew tomatoes, they're a lot like store bought tomatoes, only they cost me maybe five times as much, and didn't taste quite as good"

Apparently money can buy you home grown tomatoes. Poopy ones. Latterly he decided to return said plants to the wild, and ran his mower over them.

Ken's comment scares me somewhat, living in suburbia as I do, with all the lawn regulations (which thankfully as yet aren't enforced very stringently from observation of the neighbors yard) and my desire to expand my vegetable garden so that I can be producing nothing on a larger scale - I'll be mightily upset should the city come tell me I can't grow nothing but grass (of between 0.25 and 4" in height)

Posted by: Ewan R | August 30, 2010 1:16 PM

5

Thanks for the song, it was very amusing for me and my daughters. I live in one of the poorer parts of town, downtown. The nice thing about it is that when we want to make some part of our yard into garden, no one really cares, or we get nice comments from the neighbors. Living simply is easier in some ways here that I think it would be in the suburbs, simply because we live among people who have even less than we do.

Posted by: melissa | August 30, 2010 5:29 PM

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