Commoning Sense: Growing Food In Public Places
The phrase ‘eating the suburbs’ is for many of us a rare pleasure. Most of the time, public vegetation means ‘don’t eat it’. Look at it, stand under it, breathe it in… but not too deeply in case your allergies flare, and whatever you do, don’t put it in your mouth. Eating from our everyday environment is far less common than common sense might imagine. There just aren’t that many public spaces purpose-grown to maximise edible yields.
The concept of growing food in public spaces seems stuck in first gear in most of our towns. As urban areas become increasingly dense and pricey, growing food in our private spaces becomes a harder ask. While pot plants, backyards, balconies and planter boxes are noble food growing efforts, what about those great big public spaces: parks, nature strips, verges, footpaths, even botanical gardens. Couldn’t we harvest those public assets?
A few folks around the country reckon we can and perhaps should. They’re inviting us to eat our suburbs and make our environment a whole lot tastier. They are the friends of fruit trees in Daylesford, champions of the council-grown carrot in Bega, and defenders of the pawpaw in Buderim.
Daylesford in Victoria is home to the grand folks of permaculture, David Holmgren and Su Dennett. Like many forest giants, they provide the conditions for an ecosystem of amazing species. Patrick Jones, also based in Daylesford, is a keystone species in the ‘commoning’ food movement. Patrick has been planting both indigenous and food-producing plants and trees in the Hepburn Shire since 1999.
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Esta historia es de la edición Issue 10 de Pip Magazine.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
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Nettle
Nettle
Commoning Sense: Growing Food In Public Places
Commoning Sense: Growing Food In Public Places
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David Holmgren
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Mulberry
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Pumpkin
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International Permaculture Convergence, India
International Permaculture Convergence, India