After I became aware of the damage modern urbanized civilization causes with its mountains of garbage of rotting food scraps in plastic trash bags, I started throwing away unwanted produce & food scraps into the wooded patch behind my house for wildlife to consume, or for it to naturally process, instead of throwing it in plastic trash bags, and contributing to environmental damage. All of the vegetables that were getting too old to use I’d also throw into the woods behind my house. After a little while I noticed some strange plants I don’t recognize growing in the woods where I threw away the unwanted veggies. I went to see what it was, and found that it was potatoes that I threw away. They started growing. I’m just sharing this to show how easy it is to grow food. I didn’t even bury these potatoes. I just threw them onto the surface ground in the woods, and they started to grow. Of course it wasn’t that many because most vegetables were eaten by animals.
I just threw the seed from avocado that I was using for cooking sometime during the end of this past summer, and now I see it’s turning into a plant. Again I didn’t even buried this avocado seed. I just threw it into the grass in my backyard, and it took root and started to grow into a plant. I put some soil on top of it to bury it a little bit
Same thing with a piece of carrot. It’s crazy how easy it is to grow food. You’d think it’s super complicated, but it isn’t. I was cooking with carrots, and the leftover pieces of carrot that I was not using I threw into my backyard for the wild animals to consume. One of the pieces took root and now it turned into a plant.
Seeing that just by throwing vegetables into my backyard on surface of the ground, without even burying them, produced plants that gave more vegetables, made me want to experiment with growing food.
I didn’t start researching how to grow food, or read books on gardening. I simply took the seeds from the vegetables I used for cooking dinner, and buried these seeds into a pot of soil, and watered them to see what happens. The seeds produced plants that produce more vegetables.
Here you see an image of black bean plant that grew out of a few dry beans that I buried into pot of soil. I had a bag of old dry beans that I was going to throw away, but I buried a few of them, and they did turn into a plant that gave me more black beans.
I didn’t start researching how to grow food, or read books on gardening. I simply took the seeds from the vegetables I used for cooking dinner, and buried these seeds into a pot of soil, and watered them to see what happens. The seeds produced plants that produce more vegetables.
Here you see an image of black bean plant that grew out of a few dry beans that I buried into pot of soil. I had a bag of old dry beans that I was going to throw away, but I buried a few of them, and they did turn into a plant that gave me more black beans.
I am not trying to be a professional gardener right now. I am just experimenting at home. I wanted to know how easy it is to grow food without all of the fertilizers and special treatment of soil, etc. I wanted to know what will happen if you just bury the seed into the soil and water it, and it actually works. Of course if I’m going to start producing food for myself and family I will do a lot more research on how to grow food, but this is just at home experimenting on trying to understand if it’s super complicated or easy.
This came from burying cantaloupe seeds I got from store bought cantaloupe. I buried some of the seeds, and the seeds did grow into a plant and it produced just one tiny cantaloupe, but unfortunately it never got big. Maybe because I kept it in a shaded area. Still, if I applied more work and effort, I’m sure I can grow food for me and my family.
I experimented with seeds I got from Bell peppers that I used for cooking one day. I took some of the seeds and buried them in soil. I didn’t do any proper fertilizer, or any other additives. Just putting the seed in the soil and adding water. It did turn into a plant, and it did produce small size bell peppers.
If you cut open a store bought cantaloupe for eating, take the seeds and throw them on the ground somewhere in your backyard, before you know it these seeds will take root and start to turn into plants. It’s very easy for the cantaloupe seeds to turn into a plants, but it is not easy to produce fruit from it. I only got one fruit from the cantaloupe plants that grew from store-bought cantaloupe seeds.
Those who are complaining about overpopulation issue, should look to modern industrial, urbanized civilization. That is the cause of overpopulation. It is those who live in modern urban cities who are multiplying like cockroaches, and not folks who live in remote country villages, close to wild nature, and far away from urban areas. They always glorify and praise densely populated urban cities such as New York, and they do it deliberately so that humanity would think urbanization is a good thing. In reality these urban cities are exactly like farms for domesticated human cattle. Urban cities are artificial environment where domesticated human cattle is kept. Urban metropolises are places to herd humans where people loose all freedom and rights, and remain under strict control and surveillance. It’s a place where people are fed toxic, lab-crafted foods & medicine, drink poison water and breath toxic air, completely disconnected from organic nature
I found this video years ago. It sort of has a Native American theme. I love the places they show here. The places in nature are so beautiful. This planet is truly a paradise!