• Zombie-Mantis@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    It’s a little late to start a food garden. You won’t be getting any harvests for a while, and it won’t be much. Best to stock up on shelf-stable goods now, and build community for mutual aid.

  • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    Who wants a kitchen garden?

    Who wants to care for a kitchen garden? It’s not as simple as putting seeds into the ground and waiting until it grows. You have to dig up the site. You have to water it in a drought. You have to pull out the weed. You might even have to fight against insects, or use fertilizer. 19 out of 20 people I knew had given up on the idea of a kitchen garden.

  • Digit@lemmy.wtf
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    9 hours ago

    By design by those who refuse to escape their mysanthropic anthrocidal circular reasoning.

  • r1veRRR@feddit.org
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    17 hours ago

    Is this a good time to mention that animal ag is the most wasteful form of food we have? Further, consider capitalism and western rich countries. If the choice is between feedin poor people and feeding cows, what choice will the money make?

  • mlg@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    I read the title in the same voice as youtube’s “That’s how the law works.”

  • 1984@lemmy.today
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    22 hours ago

    A lot of dreamers here who never actually tried to grow something. A lot of YouTube video knowledge but no practical experience.

    Its damn difficult to grow your own food. I think buying canned goods and storing them is the best option for almost everyone instead of trying to grow your own.

    • Taleya@aussie.zone
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      10 hours ago

      Growing food isn’t hard but takes knowledge and time, and even then there is no way in fuck you can be self sufficient.

    • Draconic NEO@mander.xyz
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      10 hours ago

      I agree that people should definitely keep a good store of non-perishable foods in case of hard times, but you also should try to grow food as well. I don’t think anyone is trying to say it’ll be easy, like anything at first it is difficult. It’s definitely worth trying though, if you can and have the space. Like I said, don’t go all in as your only option, keep non-perishable foods on hand, like canned goods, or dried goods. If you’re able to grow your own food you get fresh fruits and veggies, and you won’t use up as many canned goods.

    • bryophile@lemmy.zip
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      12 hours ago

      Haha, are you speaking from your own practical experience, in which you failed and decided to buy canned food instead?

      It’s not easy, but it’s not impossible either. It depends on your circumstances.

      And there’s an in between as well: grow some of your own food and buy canned foods as well. Or share a garden with people who know what they’re doing.

    • Agent641@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Buying dry food is probably better than canned. It’s lighter, stores for longer, and is much more compact.

        • Agent641@lemmy.world
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          16 hours ago

          Rice, lentils, peas, beans, wheat berries, barley, oats, etc. But if you buy in large bulk (which you should do for the cost savings), you should repack the goods into smaller individually sealed containers. Because a 25kg bag of rice, once opened, will take a small family all year to get through, and having an open bag of rice attracts rodents, weevils, moisture, mould and dust. Pack it down into half kilo or 1kg containers, ideally vacuum sealed or with some other preventative treatment. Then only open 1 container at a time.

          This is good advice not just for building resilience against food cost shocks, but just generally good practice for saving money by buying in bulk and repacking yourself. Around here,a 25kg bag of rice costs me about $40, but buying 25kgs of rice in individual kilo bags at the supermarket costs $3.50 per kilogram for the cheap stuff, or $7.50 for the premium stuff ($88 or $188 respectively for 25kg worth)

    • hydroxycotton@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      22 hours ago

      As someone who has been trying to grow tomatoes in containers for about 10 years, I can confirm that it really is difficult. It took me about 5 years to achieve fairly consistent results and get the hang of properly amending the soil, planting correctly, watering, pruning etc. And I still have years where the production is really low, largely due to fungal diseases.

      • mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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        20 hours ago

        see what you should have done is just toss some rotten ones onto your driveway or behind the shed and ignored them and next year you’d have had the biggest baddest bitchingest tomato plants you’d ever seen

      • lepinkainen@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        We planted tomatoes on the backyard last year and we drowned in them, kilos and kilos of the stuff

        It also would’ve been a lot cheaper to get the same amount from the grocery store 😅

      • 1984@lemmy.today
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        22 hours ago

        Yeah. I have the largest respect for people who manage to get that far. It really is not easy.

      • CentipedeFarrier@piefed.social
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        17 hours ago

        Not wanting to add complexity or anything but have you considered trying a deep water culture (DWC) hydroponic system? That’s all a fancy way to say a dark colored large 5-ish gallon bucket of water with specific hydroponic nutrients dissolved in the water (I use a generic balanced powder and it works nicely) and an air pump to keep the water from going stagnant. As long as you keep the air pump dry, you can do the whole thing outside without issue. I hang mine under a plastic camera guard and it works nicely.

        I’m terrible at growing things in dirt because dirt remembers what you did to it (holds salts and nutrient excess unless you flush the soil), but hydroponics is a totally different thing. You can just toss the water and give it new when it starts showing signs of nutrient deficiency/toxicity. The roots end up massive and healthy and everything grows faster since there’s zero resistance in the growth medium. Just sucking up everything they can. Tho since the typical advice is to just completely toss the water at least weekly once it’s grown up (great for outside gardens or houseplants after the tomato buckets), you usually don’t end up with imbalances like that at all.

        Proper care of a hydro system makes for a bountiful harvest most years, and if you want, you can very easily keep a tomato clone over winter to keep some smaller amount of production going. Hydro works very well inside because you don’t bring most of the bugs you would with a dirt pot.

        Throw like 4 standard screw-in daylight bulbs of 60+watt-equivalent leds and you’ve got a grow space. No fancy expensive nonsense required.

    • Dozzi92@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Yeah, my peppers got too much calcium and had black ends. Cucumbers got too yellow. Cabbage worked fine, but I fucking hate cabbage. Beans were seriously lacking. Shit certainly isn’t easy, and it’s way to easy to think, hey, I can do this no problem!

    • dejova281@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      The best is community roles in a collective. If you try to do everything yourself you’ll fail but in specializing you’ll succeed. For produce, one neighbor specializes in tomatoes, the other cucumber, the other onions, etc etc… that’s how human society survived in tough times and that’s actually as a species how we’re supposed to operate. As a community. Another reason why everyone is so dang lonely and depressed. Anyways, I digress…

      • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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        14 hours ago

        As a species we were never supposed to operate by giving all labour and spoils to tree people, it’s speciciede

    • morto@piefed.social
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      17 hours ago

      I grow a lot of stuff in a relatively small space. Sometimes I have to give stuff away because it’s too much for me. Maybe living in a tropical region helps? or maybe because I grow mostly native stuff that needs near to zero care.

      • FeatherConstrictor@sh.itjust.works
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        17 hours ago

        Living in a tropical region definitely helps. Up north, the selection is difficult. Where and when you plant different items is really important, since you can very easily kill the plant if you plant it too early or late

        • morto@piefed.social
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          16 hours ago

          That’s interesting to know. I never paid attention to timing when planting. We can plant most things in any season without much difference around here. Sometimes, things grow “spontaneously”, like the papaya tree that appeared last year and is already mature and giving fruits. Looks like I’m playing real-life stardew valley in easy mode >.<

      • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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        17 hours ago

        LOL yeah. Stuff actually grows in tropical regions! :p

        I’m happy for you there. (Although I imagine pest control gets interesting haha)

        Southwestern U.S desert? Yeah, another story. Hydroponics are basically the best bet for your typical suburbia-dweller, I think.

        • morto@piefed.social
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          16 hours ago

          Indeed, I have some trouble with pests, especially with the guava tree, but I’ve been using the technique of covering the young fruits in clothing bags so that pests can’t access them, and it’ has been effective so far. Needs a bit of work, but it’s cheap and doesn’t need using any chemicals. Sometimes, a naughty possum comes and takes something away, but it’s not so frequent, so I let them take their share lol. I once planted a broccoli that was growing so big and nice-looking, but had it suddenly disappear, eaten by a group of caterpillars.

          But I simply avoid the things that attracted pests and favor the ones that grow without much need of maintenance, like acerola, cassava, some pumpkins, passion fruits, some wild grape-like fruits, and so on. My backyard looks like an abandoned house with the wilds taking over, i admit, but well, I like it that way…

  • Agent641@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    Most chemical fertilizer is synthesised from LNG.

    The two biggest exporters are Russia (sanctioned) and Qatar (all plants shut down)

  • Coleslaw4145@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    Good thing my country exports 90% of its agricultural produce, so if we start getting hungry then we’ll just export a bit less.

    (We learned the hard way a long time ago when we ran out of potatoes.)

    • Viper_NZ@lemmy.nz
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      19 hours ago

      Ireland was exporting food during the potato famine.

      Don’t assume your food won’t continue to be sold overseas if the growers/wholesalers can make more money that way.

      • Coleslaw4145@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        Ireland was exporting food during the potato famine.

        *Britian was exporting food from Ireland during the famine.

        • Qwel@sopuli.xyz
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          16 hours ago

          Regardless of nationality, don’t expect your billionaire overlord to have ethics if it comes at the cost of a 0.7% income loss

          • Coleslaw4145@lemmy.world
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            11 hours ago

            What billionaire overlord? Irish agriculture is made up of over 100,000 independant family farms, and each farmers income is on average about €40-50k.

            We produce enough beef to support almost 3x the population and enough dairy for 10x the population.

            Ireland is the 2nd most food secure country in the world.

            • Qwel@sopuli.xyz
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              12 minutes ago

              That sounds impressive, I never heard about it. Do you have some resource about it? I don’t know how to search for it and Google is, like, you know

          • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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            14 hours ago

            No, you have to expect your government to do that, which is why almost the entire world is not hyper capitalist choochoo trains

    • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      whatever land you can take.

      some cities have programs that allocate park or unused land for community gardens. some even give you a small budget to build infrastructure like beds or buying dirt.

      grow staple foods that have long storage life: squash, pumpkins, carrots, rutabaga, potatoes. these can stay on your shelf for 3-8 months if stored properly. personally I have about 12 (3-5lbs each) spaghetti squash sitting since harvest in November that will be fine until about August.

      secondary are things you can freeze or dry: squash, peppers, peas, green beans, Lima beans, kidney beans, cabbage, beets. I dry most of these and toss them into soups and ramen.

      tertiary are foods you can process and preserved through canning, drying, or freezing: tomatoes (sauce or breaded), okra (breaded), etc…

      your diet will change, but you’ll feel good about what you’re cooking because you grew it.

      also, stay away from petroleum based fertilizers. if you add too much or too often you can burn your soil out and kill your crop. if you used naturally derived fertilizers you don’t have to be as careful.

      good luck!

      • HasturInYellow@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        Plant the 3 sisters (beans, corn, squash/pumpkin) together in a small area to maximize shelf stable production. You will need to do a small amount of research on planting times but the times are fast approaching.

        • 8oow3291d@feddit.dk
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          22 hours ago

          You will need to do a small amount of research on planting times

          And climate zone. There are many places where it is too cold.

      • trackball_fetish@lemmy.wtf
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        21 hours ago

        Yeah I get that, what I’m saying is most of us can’t afford land, let alone a house. Cool if you can but I’m not lucky.

        • jefferyjefferson@lemmy.org
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          21 hours ago

          Yes, it’s a shame how the system is designed to trap people into paying rent so they never save enough to own property.

  • cogitase@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    Natural gas is used to produce hydrogen, which is then used in the Haber-Bosch process to produce ammonia from nitrogen in the atmosphere. Only about 6% of natural gas is used to produce hydrogen, so even if the price were to rise substantially, we could divert natural gas from other uses and have plenty for making ammonia. We also have other ways of producing hydrogen, it’s just that natural gas is more established.

    PEM electrolyzers paired with cheap solar in countries with high insolation can now produce hydrogen for less than the cost of natural gas, but we’re only recently starting to see the construction of the large-scale green ammonia plants needed to accomplish this. Egypt is currently constructing a 100-MW green ammonia plant powered by solar energy. Even if you didn’t have enough PEM eletrolyzers you could still just pass current through some salt water and produce hydrogen, albeit much less efficiently.

    It’s not going to be a catastrophic issue.

    • fullsquare@awful.systems
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      12 hours ago

      Adding to that, logistics are such that direct impact will be felt strongest in places like India that rely heavily on Qatari LNG to make fertilizer, but many places have other sources of both gas and fertilizer. Americas, EU, Russia and China will get by because they have their own supply and will be only affected by price increase

    • Rusty@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      Fun fact: Fritz Haber, the German guy that invented the Haber-Bosch process is the same Fritz Haber that developed a way to use the chlorine gas in chemical warfare. He was personally overseeing its effect in the battle of Ypres.

      • als@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        24 hours ago

        Clara Immerwahr, who was married to Fritz Haber and was a successful chemist in her own right, spoke out against his research as a “perversion of the ideals of science” and “a sign of barbarity, corrupting the very discipline which ought to bring new insights into life.” She ended her own life the day before he traveled to the eastern front to oversee the use of chlorine gas against Russian troops.

    • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      Thank you for explaining the process, because the pro-fuel-cell pact doesn’t understand that hydrogen isn’t free and production is still heavily reliant on fossil fuels.

      “Oh it comes from ammonia”. Alright, where does the ammonia come from???

      You’re just moving the problem around, not fixing anything.

        • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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          20 hours ago

          But why not just make electricity from renewable energy?

          Like, I get the benefit of fuel cells, but people need to realize that hydrogen closer to a battery than a fuel source itself. You’re expending energy now to make storage of energy that can be tapped later.

          It’s good for places where vehicles can’t tap into the grid and need dense energy storage (i.e. transoceanic freighters), or where long charging times are infeasible (like long-range trucking).

          And probably good for grid-level storage, too.

          But for a typical family car/commuter? There’s really no point. You’re adding more steps in energy conversion, and losing efficiency at every additional step (thanks to basic physics), and to gain what? A faster refueling time on a long road trip? An experience closer to what we were used to with ICE-cars? An experience that really isn’t that great anywhere that has a winter. Or an excessively hot summer.

          Maybe for people who can’t have a charger at home, even an L1, but there are better solutions for that (like…adding an outlet? Making landlords responsible for providing power whenever there is parking? More municipal charging locations?)

          • Hypx@piefed.social
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            19 hours ago

            You can’t store electricity by itself. The problem we are facing is massive curtailment, i.e. massive overproduction of green energy that can’t be utilized. There needs to be way of storing it at a massive scale. There is no feasible way of storing that much energy in conventional batteries.

            If you can acknowledge that hydrogen is needed for dense energy storage and grid-level storage, then you should realize that we will eventually have a huge hydrogen infrastructure, and production capacity to match. That will create very cheap green hydrogen, and will mirror what happened with solar and wind.

            Cheap hydrogen alone will drive large-scale adoption of hydrogen cars, regardless of the popularity of BEVs. A lot of people will choose hydrogen cars (possible e-fuel cars too, since e-fuels can be made from hydrogen) simply because it is akin to an ICE-car in usage.

            The other point is that battery production is not green and is very resource intensive. Hydrogen cars let’s you avoid that almost entirely. In the long-run, it will be pointless to care about efficiency when green energy becomes nearly free. That suggests hydrogen, not batteries, is the better idea.

    • The_v@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Farmers almost uniformly over-apply N fertilizer. Having it be more expensive and forcing them to look into more efficient ways of applying fertilizer and managing nutrients is not a bad thing.

        • The_v@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Farmers are price-takers not price-makers. The prices they receive are driven by speculation on the commodities markets (even for crops not traded on the market).

          Since they can’t control the price they receive for their crop, they are very sensitive to any change in the cost of inputs. Determining how much to spent on inputs is the part of their profitablity they can control. So widespread behavioral change is usually pretty close to immediate.

    • marcos@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      we could divert natural gas from other uses and have plenty for making ammonia. We also have other ways of producing hydrogen

      We can’t do any of those in a scale large enough to replace the destruction and have it online for the next planting season on the North Hemisphere. Or the next one on the South Hemisphere either, btw. Or the following ones for each.

    • OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml
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      17 hours ago

      It might not be a massive scientific issue but I bet prices will still rise and the news will be fearmongering causing pricing to go up and never come back down. It’s a capitalism issue and corruption and greed.

  • Catoblepas@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    You should always feel free to grow a garden, but you shouldn’t necessarily expect it to be cheaper than buying food. Especially the first year, if you don’t live in a place where you can just dig up some dirt and chunk seeds in it. Even if you do you should make sure the soil isn’t literally toxic first, especially since it’s common to have a buildup of things like lead or arsenic from now-outlawed fertilizers that can be absorbed by plants.

    My grandparents planted maybe half an acre? Of crops for 10 people, and it was supplemental, not a complete replacement. It also takes a lot of work and can go to shit if the weather is bad. You can account for some of this by planting a variety of crops, trying to head off drainage and shade issues before they start, and with supplemental watering. But don’t expect everything to be super productive every year, especially in the age of climate change. My sister had some plants not put out at all last year (peppers).

    • stabby_cicada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 day ago

      That’s the thing. Gardening is more expensive than buying food, in the United States and Western Europe, now, because the real cost of food production is heavily subsidized by our governments and we guarantee yields by throwing tons of fossil fuels and their derivatives at the soil of corporate megafarms. There’s a nonzero chance that’s going to change shortly - probably within a generation - for a ton of reasons including but not limited to little Donnie assassinating the supreme leader of Iran for shits and giggles.

      Grow a garden even if it’s not economically efficient. Do it now, when you aren’t relying on it for food, and get the issues with soil and drainage and so on worked out now. Learn to save seeds and select the best growing plants each year so that, as your climate changes, the varieties you grow change with it. That way you’ll have the skills to do it later, when you really need it.

  • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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    19 hours ago

    Good thing I have a couple of acquaintances that have small farms and produce, so if shit goes downhill, I know where to offer my labor

    • couldhavebeenyou@lemmy.zip
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      7 hours ago

      They’ll have plenty of friends and family that suddenly feel an urge to come over and lend them a hand once the real shit goes down