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ladymelissa
08-23-2006, 12:47 PM
There is a new movement to turn our virtually unused front lawns into productive vegetable gardens. This was a story aired last night on ABC World News, I can't find the copy on their website but here is what I did find from here http://www.fritzhaeg.com/garden/initiatives/edibleestates/main.html

EDIBLE ESTATES

Edible Estates is an attack on the American front lawn and everything it has come to represent.

Edible Estates reconciles issues of global food production and urbanized land use with the modest gesture of a domestic garden.

Edible Estates is an ongoing series of projects to replace the American front lawn with edible garden landscapes responsive to culture, climate, context and people.

Edible Estates is a practical food producing initiative, a place-responsive landscape design proposal, a scientific horticultural experiment, a conceptual land-art project, a defiant political statement, a community out-reach program and an act of radical gardening.

Our Lawn
Why do we dedicate so much land to a space with so little function that requires the consumption of so many precious resources and endless hours of maintenance while contaminating our air and water?

The American front lawn is almost entirely a symbolic gesture. Exactly what it represents has shifted from its ancestry in English estates to today's endless suburban carpet of conformity. Originally manicured by grazing animals, an ornamental sweeping lawn would occupy otherwise valuable farmland surrounding a manor estate, demonstrating the owner's wealth while keeping the production of his vegetable garden out of view. In this tradition, today's American lawn has become the default surface for any defensible private space. An occasional lawn for recreation can be a delight, but most lawns are only occupied when they are being tended.

The lawn devours resources while it pollutes. It is maniacally groomed with mowers and trimmers powered by the 2 stroke motors responsible for much of our greenhouse gas emissions. Hydrocarbons from mowers react with nitrogen oxides in the presence of sunlight to produce ozone. To eradicate invading plants it is drugged with pesticides which are then washed into our water supply with sprinklers and hoses dumping our increasingly rare fresh drinking resource down the gutter. Of the 30 commonly used lawn pesticides, 17 are detected in groundwater and 23 have the ability to leach into groundwater sources. The lawn divides and isolates us. It is the buffer of anti-social no-mans-land that we wrap ourselves with, reinforcing the suburban alienation of our sprawling communities. The mono-culture of one plant species covering our neighborhoods from coast to coast celebrates puritanical homogeneity and mindless conformity. Lawns cover 30 million acres of the United States while 349 million acres are used for crops.

Our Food
Meanwhile at the grocery store we confront our food. Engineered fruits and vegetables wrapped in plastic and styrofoam, cultivated not for taste, but for ease of transport, appearance and uniformity, then sprayed with chemicals to inhibit diseases and pests that thrive in an unbalanced ecosystem. Organic farming accounts for less than 1% of the United States agriculture output. The produce in the average American dinner is trucked 1,500 miles to get to the plate. We don't know where our fruits and vegetables came from or who grew it. Perhaps we have even forgotten that plants were responsible for this mass-produced product we are consuming.

This detachment from the source of our food breeds a careless attitude towards our role as custodians of the land that feeds us. Perhaps we would reconsider what we put down the drain, on the ground and in the air if there was more direct evidence that we will ultimately ingest it.

The Edible Estates Initiative
Edible Estates proposes the replacement of the American lawn with a highly productive domestic edible landscape. Food grown in our front yards will connect us to the seasons, the organic cycles of the earth and our neighbors. The banal lifeless space of uniform grass in front of the house will be replaced with the chaotic abundance of bio-diversity. In becoming gardeners we will reconsider our connection to the land, what we take from it and what we put in it. Each yard will be a unique expression of its location and of the inhabitant and their desires. Valuable land will be put to work.

The Edible Estates project will be implemented in 9 cities in the United States over the next 3 years. An adventurous family in each town will offer their typical suburban front lawn as a working prototype for the region. They will dare to defy the sweeping continuity of their neighborhood's green lined streets. Working together with the family and additional helpers the front lawn will be removed and replaced with an edible landscape. This highly productive garden will be designed to respond to the unique characteristics of the site, the needs and desires of the owner, the community and its history and especially the local climate and geography.

Each of the 9 regional prototype gardens will be sponsored by a local art institution and developed in partnership with a horticultural or agricultural research organization. Each garden will be planted in the spring and the first season's growth will be documented and displayed as a public exhibition.

A booklet will be produced specifically for each town and distributed for free. It will communicate to residents how they may go about replacing their lawn with an Edible Estate. The booklet will include listings of local nurseries, fruits and vegetables that are recommended for the region, native plants that are edible, local businesses that may assist with the labor and maintenance, basic gardening principals and further reading resources. This information will be assembled with the help of local specialists and also be available on the internet.

With the modest gesture of reconsidering the use of our small individual private yards, Edible Estates takes on our relationship with our neighbors, the source of our food and our connection to the natural environment.



GARDENLAB

The Edible Estates project is part of the Gardenlab program, established by Fritz Haeg in 2001. With the garden as a metaphor and actual laboratory, it supports ecology based initiatives in art and design. Past projects have included the creation of a community garden and memorial lawn on the Pasadena campus of Art Center College of Design. In fall 2004 'the gardenLAb experiment', a vast convention / fair / exhibition / happening about the ecology of Los Angeles brought together the work of Los Angeles based artists, designers, scientists, filmmakers and activists. It was staged in the Art Center College of Design exhibition hall, 'The Wind Tunnel'. In summer 2005 the Edible Estates initiative to replace American front lawns with edible landscapes was initiated in the geographic center of the country, Salina, Kansas. This first of nine planned regional prototypes was sponsored by the Salina Art Center. The next edition will be established in Los Angeles in spring 2006 and followed by an exhibition in the fall. In winter 2006 Gardenlab established a permanent student run community garden on the campus of CalArts in Valencia, California. The Gardenlab program was initially funded by an Art Center faculty enrichment grant, and has since received significant support from various sources including the Durfee Foundation, Armstrong Garden Centers, Ford Motor Company, the City of Pasadena, the LEF Foundation and the Wallis Foundation.

If you owned your home would you be willing to turn your front yard into a vegetable garden? Why or why not?

hummingbird521
08-23-2006, 12:53 PM
No way would I turn my front yard into a vegi garden. Now the back I might would consider. I have just spent four hours digging up shrub bushes I despise to replace them with flowers. I believe that a manicured front lawn represents the people inside. And I would hate to be represented by produce.

Kacie_bride
08-23-2006, 12:57 PM
No, we have a small garden in the Spring on the side of our yard. I don't know if we will do it next year or not, but we have the last 2 Springs. There are several problems with having your whole yard a garden.

1. Snakes and bugs and other pests are attracted to gardens.

2. To much to weed

3. Alot of it would go bad because I couldn't eat it all and I would not have enough time to get it all canned or preserved by freezing.

4. It would be very expensive to fertilize it all.

5. It would end up looking overgrown and with some crops you would barely be able to see the house. I.E. corn, okra

MOB Karen
08-23-2006, 12:58 PM
I would never do the front yard either. I wouldn't give my back yard either, because my dogs need the little bit of land I have back there. :)

ladymelissa
08-23-2006, 01:01 PM
I would, I think it's a great idea. It's useful, practical and more environmentally sound. Also the back yard is used most for entertaining or recreation, therefore one would have more room in the front for more vegetables and it wouldn't interfere with the pool or barbecues.

AngelinLove
08-23-2006, 01:11 PM
No, I wouldn't, but pretty much only because am a black thumb and everything I touch dies...so what would be the point!!!

LaceyinPgh
08-23-2006, 01:26 PM
No that is what they make grocery stores and farmers markets for. I have to desire to ever be farmer Jane.

cowboysbride
08-23-2006, 01:48 PM
No that is what they make grocery stores and farmers markets for. I have to desire to ever be farmer Jane.

You want me to send you some fresh veggies along with the tulip and lillies? ...Love farmer Ellen :bbeek: :bblol: :bbmrgreen:

cowboysbride
08-23-2006, 01:50 PM
My front yard is going to be a huge waste of money...ie: mulch, bushes, roses, flowers and rock gardens with ponds! My backyard is a field full of cows and horses and a barn....the side yard will be a garden with corn, beans, potatoes, tomoatoes and whatever else I think I can can or freeze!

SoontobeMrsClark07
08-23-2006, 06:17 PM
No, I like the look of a lawn and having bushes and flowers outline the pavement.

JennF
08-23-2006, 11:27 PM
Actually, I think it's a great idea. We used to live in a MIL apartment. There was no front yard or backyard really since the home was built into the side of a hill. So there were just two big garden plots. The landlady let me have one and we'd be out there gardening together a lot.

I'll never forget my summer spent battling the Rubarb that wanted to TAKE OVER THE WORLD!

I understand the urge to have a well kept lawn in front...we've all been raised with that mindset..and there's nothing wrong with it. I like green lawns too. But realistically they are pretty useless. And they take a lot of water and fuel (think lawnmower) to maintain considering that they're only aesthetically useful. Most of us don't actually do anything with them. At least if you're watering vegetables we're producing something. And well chosen crops could look great too. We don't have to plant sunflowers (even though it looks pretty neat. A house down the street did that.)

Another alternative would be to put some thought into choosing native species for the front garden. Think about encouraging local wildlife. Native species gardens are pretty big up here, so if anyone wants information I could probably dig something up. Just IM me. :)

SerendipityCrafts
08-24-2006, 04:54 AM
You want me to send you some fresh veggies along with the tulip and lillies? ...Love farmer Ellen :bbeek: :bblol: :bbmrgreen:

OH oh oh! I will take some! I can't say that our yield is that large from our apartment's window box! *** I so want a home just so that I can play in the dirt again!***:bblol:

bnd94
08-24-2006, 05:40 AM
I already have a big garden out front. We turned our backyard into a flower garden with walkways and a stone patio cause I hated mowing it. Working on a waterfall out there right now. Veggies from a garden are soooooo much better than anything you could get from a grocery store. No comparison for me. :D

WebLady
08-24-2006, 12:34 PM
I've always wanted to have a little herb garden, but I don't think I'd want a full on garden. Like Lacey, I have no desire to be a farmer ;)

LaceyinPgh
08-24-2006, 01:17 PM
I've always wanted to have a little herb garden, but I don't think I'd want a full on garden. Like Lacey, I have no desire to be a farmer ;)
I have a little herb garden on the side of the patio. I planted the stuff a few years ago and have left it to its own devices. It comes back every year. It is kind of handy to have.

ladymelissa
08-24-2006, 01:21 PM
Everyone is entitled to their opinion, but the "I don't want to be a farmer" line confuses me. Even with a lawn, you, your DH or some service you pay for is putting in just as much, if not more maintenance into something that is not useful and requires more harmful chemicals and water to maintain.

As far as aesthetics go if you click the link to the website I have sited in the OP there are some pics of some that are done very nicely. You can have the vegetation arranged so that it looks good as well; some of them look over grown, but others are very nice. Like Jenn said, we have pretty much been raised in the lawn mindset, but it is not the best use of our limited resources.

Just a little bit of help from everyone really can make a difference. In the same newscast that I saw this, there was a story about the ozone layer. Since companies and consumers around the world have stopped using CFCs and such the hole in the ozone layer has stopped growing and we are actually on track to have it completely back by 2070.

LaceyinPgh
08-24-2006, 01:27 PM
Everyone is entitled to their opinion, but the "I don't want to be a farmer" line confuses me. Even with a lawn, you, your DH or some service you pay for is putting in just as much, if not more maintenance into something that is not useful and requires more harmful chemicals and water to maintain.

As far as aesthetics go if you click the link to the website I have sited in the OP there are some pics of some that are done very nicely. You can have the vegetation arranged so that it looks good as well; some of them look over grown, but others are very nice. Like Jenn said, we have pretty much been raised in the lawn mindset, but it is not the best use of our limited resources.

Just a little bit of help from everyone really can make a difference. In the same newscast that I saw this, there was a story about the ozone layer. Since companies and consumers around the world have stopped using CFCs and such the hole in the ozone layer has stopped growing and we are actually on track to have it completely back by 2070.

Allow me to clarify. As of right now we don't have a "lawn". That is one of the perks of city living. Should we ever move to the suburbs and get that lawn, I am not growing vegetables. I don't have the time to maintane them. We aren't home enough to actually use them. It just isn't something that I would be willing to devote time, energy, money, and thought to. I want a perfectly green flat, landscaped front yard with flower gardens. It fits my personal style quite well. As for the landscaping and maintence there of, we would hire someone to do that. I would also be worried about how an untraditional front yard would affect my property value and that of my innocent neighbors. (Should I actually have neighbors that I like and care about.) On top of that a lot of neighborhoods and home associations have very strict rules about what you can and cannot do to your home. (Do I agree with that? No. Do I see the reasoning behind it? Yes.)

Kacie_bride
08-24-2006, 02:28 PM
I am with Lacey on this one.

And a garden, in this part of the country, requires much more water than the lawn does. We never water our lawn and it is always there. It rains enough here for grass. Now a garden has to be watered. We also do not fertilize our yard and it looks fine. We fertilize and put more chemicals on our little garden to the side. And if my whole front yard was a garden a lot of food would go bad. In our little garden we had enough veggies that even after giving it away to people some of it still went bad. We couldn't can fast enough or freeze it either. A whole yard would cause a lot of food to rot.

WebLady
08-24-2006, 04:50 PM
The whole garden thing is just something that doesn't sound appealing to me. I am not much of an outdoorsy person ;) I don't even like many vegetables ;) :p

JennF
08-24-2006, 07:58 PM
Yeah, I think it's fair to say that if you're not into gardening you shouldn't have to have a garden. :)

There's nothing wrong with having a front lawn as long as you keep it responsibly. And I have to admit that I have fond memories of playing on our front lawn (but then we almost never played in the backyard because that was for the gardens and the dogs.)

But I do think it's fun to think about the alternatives.

Also, I think its entertaining to see how attitudes are different in the various parts of the country. In certain neighborhood here an alternative garden would get as much or more respect as a verdant green lawn. Of course, in other neighborhoods here the exact opposite is true.

The front lawn garden is also not a new idea at all. There was a big drive to do this in the 70's. And in fact one of the best british comedies ever (in my opinion) dealt with exactly some of the things we've been hashing out in this thread. The Good Life (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0075511/) was all about a couple that decided to drop out of society and turn their comfortable suburban home into a self sustaining farm. I highly recommend it no matter what your take on the whole lawn thing. It's a lot of fun. :)

mariaandmanish
08-25-2006, 05:01 PM
Not my front yard, but an area of my backyard, I defintely plan on doing that when I have a backyard.