One of the activities the Harvest Stewards program will undertake (I hope!) is the creation of garden plots for those who wish to grow produce for sharing with others but don't have the time, inclination, experience or other sort of wherewithal to have gotten a garden together already. I don't know how feasible this will really be, so I have twisted the arm of a good buddy of mine and he's letting me use him and a little bit of his yard to pilot this project. This experiment will test the feasibility of "fire and forget" garden plotting as well as the scalability of such a project in an economic dimension. I have to think that, in principle, the "fire and forget" path can work, as is evidenced by the fairly recent trend of guerilla gardening.
The economic outlay per plot is, as yet, unrealized, for the obvious reason that I've not yet completed one. But I've begun collecting the stuff I'll need to set it up. First in my basket of stuff to foist upon my friend was a string trellis ($4). I've used these before and they are so quick and easy to hang. The next item reflects the need to strike a balance between ease of use and cost. I want these plantings to be water-wise, so I'll be using drip irrigation; ideally I'd install a really nice dual-outlet timer- so that the gardener doesn't have to worry about watering at all once a suitable program is established- but the cost of such multiplied over only a few garden plantings gets to be prohibitively expensive. So I've gone with something a little less expensive and a little less convenient: one of those mechanical tap timers ($15).
Next on the list are hose, fittings and drip emitters.
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