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A must-read book about our relationship with food. |
In practice, however, I’m basically a hypocrite. It’s not that I don’t grow any of my own food; I do. But it’s more of a novelty than a bona fide food source. For example, I have a mature peach tree that produces more fruit all at once than we could ever hope to eat. So for about 10 glorious digestively-regular days we have peach milkshakes, peach cobbler, and grilled peaches but that’s where it all ends. We don’t can our extra peaches to extend our bounty and we don’t have any other trees that produce fruits or nuts for us to eat until December when the oranges are ripe so we'd probably develop scurvy should the world as we know it come to a screeching halt. You can basically repeat this scenario for all the other things I grow. A lot of my tomatoes end up in the compost bin. Much of the lettuce I grow in the spring winds up there too. I chewed on one single piece of broccoli (and spit it out) before I pulled up this year’s plants in favor of the warm season bell peppers I planted a couple months ago (and have yet to harvest). I have every intention of increasing my homegrown food yield, but when it comes right down to it, I haven’t devoted the time and, more importantly, the garden space to doing it right.
Part of the problem is that we just don’t eat enough fruits and vegetables in my household to make it worthwhile. My three-and-a-half year old recently interrupted a conversation we were having about what we needed from the grocery store to note that "we eat a lot of potato chips". The other part of the problem is that I’m still hung up on growing ornamentals and perennials in my yard. I don’t want to apologize for that. It’s just where I’m at in my evolution as a gardener. But at the same time, I am apologizing for that because I disagree with myself philosophically and it’s about time I confessed before it ate me up inside.
You see, for years I’ve found excuses not to become a more self-sufficient link in the food chain and my excuses are growing (unlike my neglected butternut squash).
My friend, Brian, took me along on a fact-finding trip to a bee shop a while ago. He was interested in starting his own hive and I was curious about the whole thing too. Who doesn’t love honey? And more bees in the yard would be great for my plants. Besides, bees need a little help with that colony collapse disorder, right?
Well, in spite of being gung ho about it all initially, I found ample reasons not to pursue bee keeping myself. First, my wife is allergic to bee stings; a fact that, by itself, should have precluded me from even thinking about keeping bees. Plus, I’d be signing up for regular trips to Walgreens to restock EpiPens and after the first ER visit I have a feeling that my Queen Bee would make me look for a hive/apartment of my own. Second, it’s not exactly cheap getting set up as a beekeeper. It could easily run a couple hundred bucks after you get the robotic looking netted-hat contraption, a smoker, the wood boxes for the hive, the bees, and the equipment to extract the honey from the honey combs. And really, it seems like a whole lot of effort for just a little bit of honey. And that's the real reason. I don't have the time or the energy to do it right. So I chose instead to spend $10-$15 a year to buy local honey and support those dedicated farmers who’ve already got the set up and depend upon customers like you and me to keep them in business.
I could stretch my dollar by also using one of these suits to play paint ball in. If I played paint ball. |
Well, in spite of being gung ho about it all initially, I found ample reasons not to pursue bee keeping myself. First, my wife is allergic to bee stings; a fact that, by itself, should have precluded me from even thinking about keeping bees. Plus, I’d be signing up for regular trips to Walgreens to restock EpiPens and after the first ER visit I have a feeling that my Queen Bee would make me look for a hive/apartment of my own. Second, it’s not exactly cheap getting set up as a beekeeper. It could easily run a couple hundred bucks after you get the robotic looking netted-hat contraption, a smoker, the wood boxes for the hive, the bees, and the equipment to extract the honey from the honey combs. And really, it seems like a whole lot of effort for just a little bit of honey. And that's the real reason. I don't have the time or the energy to do it right. So I chose instead to spend $10-$15 a year to buy local honey and support those dedicated farmers who’ve already got the set up and depend upon customers like you and me to keep them in business.
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Not sure exactly what the message was, but this was part of "Chalk It Up" in downtown Sacramento last week. |
"Besides," I told myself, "I’d rather have chickens." Which was a convenient thing to tell myself, because I already knew that Sacramento County prohibited keeping chickens unless you had a lot that was at least 10,000 square feet (which most homeowners in this area don't even begin to get close to). Oh, and one minor financial consideration: in case you did have a 10,000 square foot lot, you still had to submit an application along with a non-refundable $4,500 application fee. Yes, that’s four-thousand-five-hundred United States dollars. And just because you applied did not mean you would be given approval. So you could either fund your Roth IRA for a year or apply for the privilege of keeping a couple chickens. Clearly, Sacramento ’s City Council was just egging us on to follow the old adage “it’s easier to ask for forgiveness than permission.”
Undaunted but uncommitted, I researched the quietest chicken breeds (Black Australorps, apparently) and some covert coops designed to look like garbage cans and herb gardens so nosy neighbors wouldn’t have enough audio visual evidence to turn me into the chicken coppers. I was really into the idea and thought it would be great. Free, nutritious eggs and an ongoing source of manure for the garden? Plus they would make fun pets for my daughter. How awesome would that be?
But I never followed through with it. I told myself it was because I didn’t want to break the law. And now, in my revisionist historian ways, I’m telling myself it was also because of my wife’s debilitating ornithophobia, but we all know my sympathy for that has its limitations. The truth is probably closer to the fact that I don’t want to add taking care of chickens to my list of things to do right now. Not without a good place to keep them. Not with an aggressive shepherd-mix dog that would harass them non-stop. Not with dreams of going on vacation and not wanting to ask my neighbors to water the plants, take in the mail, turn on the porch light, get the dog water, AND feed the darn chickens.
So last week when the City Council finally came to their senses and lifted the backyard ban on chickens I knew that it wasn’t going to change anything for me. I’m really, really thankful that people in my county can now pay just 1% of the former application fee to keep up to three chickens. They have to pay $15 upfront and then $10 for each hen – no roosters allowed! Still, in spite of the drastic reduction, $45 in up front costs for a few chickens, not to mention the cost of the coop and the feed, reduces the economic benefit when a dozen eggs is only $1.89 right now. Even if you consume a dozen eggs a week, half the annual money you'd save by having chickens of your own would be lost due to the fees.
Of course, once those Mad Max scenarios come to pass, those chickens are going to be worth their weight in gold.
*For a really great chicken related blog, check out Scratch and Peck. And do yourself a favor. Start reading from the very first blog entry.