this post was submitted on 20 Sep 2023
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I was having this conversation with a friend and we both got some useful ideas from each other (cancelling various underused subscription services, making use of libraries, more home vege gardening etc) - curious to know what else people are trying.

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[–] Dave 3 points 1 year ago (12 children)

I should really post up a picture of our vegetable garden - we’ve got a couple of hundred square meters of vege garden as well as a 30sqm greenhouse, and we grow everything from seed so we’re quite set up for it. We do live on a lifestyle block though.

Home gardening at scale can definitely be cheaper than store bought. But as you've said, most people don't have the space.

I’d also be shocked if we only got 1kg of courgettes from each plant too. Last year we had 3 and couldn’t give them away quickly enough to keep up while also eating them everyday.

Yeah you'd probably get more than 1KG per plant. They grow so much so fast.

Some with cucumbers.

I must be doing something wrong. Half the time I only get one cucumber from a plant. Sometimes I'll get a good plant and get three cucumbers. Never more or faster than we can eat though. But I'm only planting a couple of plants.

We’ve also got about 40-50 brassicas in the ground, and are on our 3rd year of our own garlic and onion supply, and aiming to survive on our own potatoes only this year as well - last year harvested about 100kg worth and this year aiming to 3-4x that. We’re definitely keen gardeners though so I know that’s not for everyone.

Do you manage to stagger or store a lot of it so it can last you through the year?

And do you have a good way to deal with pests? One issue we have is caterpillars in the broccoli, so we tend to only grow it over the winter.

[–] ciaocibai 4 points 1 year ago (5 children)

On the pest front my old man (who used to be a commercial market gardener for a few years) recommended derris dust for the brassicas. We haven’t used it (and there is mixed opinions on its health impact online) but that’s potentially an option. Insect netting is the best for us though.

We’re currently planting to build a fully netted area in our garden around 50sqm for that reason.

[–] Dave 4 points 1 year ago (4 children)

I think the netting option is best. I've heard of people building frames over their gardens for the netting (it sounds like that's what you're doing).

To be honest I'm going off growing brassicas, in favour of things you can't get for dirt cheap. It's hard to make growing broccoli worthwhile when you can get giant ones for $2 at the right times.

[–] ciaocibai 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Fair enough too. Probably depends on motivation as well - we grow our own for many reasons including a goal of self sufficiency and a better understanding of what’s in the food we eat so it’s not just economics for us.

We’ve obviously invested a fair bit in getting the garden set up, but once you can grow from seed (and especially saving your own seed) it might be just a few dollars for a few hundred seeds (depending on the crop) and some plants (beans, tomato’s, watermelons etc) that are super easy to save seed from. We’re even self sufficient for things like popcorn (and have a couple of kilos worth of seed left - some which we’ll still eat) so that makes a difference too.

Lastly though we just love gardening, and I really enjoy showing my kids the lifecycle and getting them involved in the process. They get to choose and manage some crops of their own, and always speak with pride when we eat the things they’ve contributed to.

[–] Dave 2 points 1 year ago

That's really cool. If we had more space I'd like to think we would grow more.

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