http://www.urbanhomestead.org/
See what can be done even on a small city lot!





efarmer wrote: Most Americans
cannot do tribal or village very well, and no they will not adopt it until they absolutely have
to because it is less comfortable and known to them. I
But the suburbs are catching up in the race to the bottom, and there are currently more suburban residents than city dwellers living below the poverty level. Per CNN Money’s story about the Brookings Institution’s analysis, there were 15.4 million suburbanites living in poverty in 2010, compared to 12.7 million living below the poverty level in cities. Whereas poverty levels rose 11.5% from 2009 to 2010 in the suburbs, they inched up 5% in cities.
Read more: http://moneyland.time.com/2011/09/26/su ... z1c5a2NwRu





pup55 wrote:Urban homesteading...
When I was a youngster, and we are talking about the mid 60's, everybody around us, plus us, had some little plot of land they grew tomatoes and cucumbers on, someone on the block had a chicken coop or rabbits, and the ambitious ones had enough of a surplus to do canning, or otherwise sell it.






Pops wrote:efarmer wrote: Most Americans
cannot do tribal or village very well, and no they will not adopt it until they absolutely have
to because it is less comfortable and known to them. IBut the suburbs are catching up in the race to the bottom, and there are currently more suburban residents than city dwellers living below the poverty level. Per CNN Money’s story about the Brookings Institution’s analysis, there were 15.4 million suburbanites living in poverty in 2010, compared to 12.7 million living below the poverty level in cities. Whereas poverty levels rose 11.5% from 2009 to 2010 in the suburbs, they inched up 5% in cities.
Read more: http://moneyland.time.com/2011/09/26/su ... z1c5a2NwRu

Crusty wrote:"Urban Homestead", put a Patent on it, Protect your intellectual Property, you can use it if we like you, BUT IT'S OURS DON'T FORGET AND YOU MUST PAY!!!....Jeez, this guy is part of the Problem, not the Solution. He's just growing vege's and raising Chooks like most people in the town I live in and half the posters of this site!!


jdmartin wrote:I've always said the suburbs would be the new slums. It only makes sense. As transportation costs climb, people that can afford to live closer to work will, and those that can't (or don't have jobs) will be pushed further to the periphery. This is the way it's been for millenia, with the exception being that the uber-wealthy have always had their country manors for summer vacation.


Pops wrote:jdmartin wrote:I've always said the suburbs would be the new slums. It only makes sense. As transportation costs climb, people that can afford to live closer to work will, and those that can't (or don't have jobs) will be pushed further to the periphery. This is the way it's been for millenia, with the exception being that the uber-wealthy have always had their country manors for summer vacation.
Quite right, the flight to the 'burbs was all about excess energy; personal transportation, single family detached homes, distribution of goods instead of concentration of buyers, etc.




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