Added: 5 years ago
From: treehuggertv
Views: 18,671
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:
see all

All Comments (17)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Very pleased to see this

  • Reply to the comments re the homeowners association. If you are at cross purposes, you may consider some decorative edible trees and plants (fruits trees), grapes & the like that can be seen mostly as greenery and still provide a "harvest"...it will hardly be noticed by the association, and if no one says anything, other things can be added gradually.

  • i love the idea but you must! do a soil test for heavy metals first.

  • Imagine if one whole block grew fruits and vegetables, in the front and back yards. Can you imagine how much food that would be? Then, if they put in back yard canning kitchens, a stove and a sink, and they all got together and canned...

  • Great Idea although I saw a video of a lady that did the same and was fined by her local council for growing veges in her front yard.Have you had any problems with council regulations?

  • 5 dislikes...Why??

  • in areas where people are not friendly do you educate on edible pretty flowers?

    feed the people and keep annoying neighbours at bay?

    love the idea - just found this so am away to look for an update hope all went well and the neighbours have edible gardens now too.

  • This would be awesome,but then there's the problem of animals, and Homeowners Association, and vandalism. This can ONLY work in some specific suburbs without Homeowners Associations breathing down their neck. I know, my mom tried to make a garden once, they shut her down very quickly.

  • Would love for you to do a review of our seeds:)

  • Great that Fritz is getting the word out, one family, one world.

    Only two bummer points on this video:

    1. Where does the grass and soil go from the old lawn? Landfill, presumably. Green waste recycling will not take soil. How about sheet mulching? Did see some Bermuda Grass in there though. Hmm...

    2. Is that Cocoa mulch they are using? Tsk, tsk! Methyl-Bromide fumigated, tropical country transported, Cocoa mulch? Say it isn't so!

    Otherwise, garden on! Peace.

  • Fan-friggin-tastic!!!

  • That's a fantastic idea I work in the office next to our local non-profit environmental group and across from our local non-profit eat-local group and we are the local non-profit community economic development group This gives me and idea for a partnership program! Thanks.

  • i did this 9 years ago and there is a much better and easier way to do it, the permaculture way, you take old cardboard and place it on top of the lawn and then put good soil on top of that, that way you do not waste the old lawn and save a lot of energy digging it up

  • Plus, you can bring in soil that is ready for vegitable gardening and free of years of lawn chemicals to put on the cardbard.

    Good Job keep up the work!!

  • Thanks! New subscriber and very happy to have found you.

  • Back in the seventy's when we had the vietnamese infux,our new neighbor's the hungfulung's moved in and right away killed the lawn and planted a garden,At the the time I thought it strange,But hindsight being twenty-twenty they wre a little smarter than us Hey it's beautiful! and you can eat it!

  • nice job...first

Loading...
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more