πͺ΄β₯οΈβ₯οΈπ₯°π₯°π₯°π₯° I love it. I am starting tiny gardens in childcare centers, all along hurricane and wildfire stricken land. I believe it restores trust in the world again. I love this idea of presence and belonging. Iβm going to share this with the teachers in hopes to inspire them.
You've sold me, thank you! I'd also like to suggest to those that will connect outdoors that they consider a Bee Hotel which could help w the pollination process.
Here's a link to a DIY plan to build a Bee Hotel of your own:
This is wordy and flowery and minty (basil is a mint-check out the tell-tale square stems) but on a deadly serious tack, we need to get very intentional about getting nearly every family onto enough land to have a garden, a few fruit trees, perhaps some chickens or a grazing critter or two. The gold standard for a family should be minimum, 1/3 of an acre. These parcels donβt need to provide a living for their owners. But people who own land tend to care for it. Regenerative practices require animals in the circle of production. Having a bit of land to plant a garden makes us much more aware of whatβs going on in the larger parcels near us. We watch the weather. We watch the eagles, the varmints, the predators. We become true environmentalists, not the kind that think everyone should be shoved into steel and concrete and languishing in front of screens. The shops and she sheds that spring up become micro manufacturing facilities. They test new ideas and tools. They generate wealth. They fill in gaps in supplies or tools that neighbors need on an emergency basis. They become the resilience in the network. They pass on knowledge to the next generation. They keep the kids off the screens.
πͺ΄β₯οΈβ₯οΈπ₯°π₯°π₯°π₯° I love it. I am starting tiny gardens in childcare centers, all along hurricane and wildfire stricken land. I believe it restores trust in the world again. I love this idea of presence and belonging. Iβm going to share this with the teachers in hopes to inspire them.
You've sold me, thank you! I'd also like to suggest to those that will connect outdoors that they consider a Bee Hotel which could help w the pollination process.
Here's a link to a DIY plan to build a Bee Hotel of your own:
https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/how-to-manage-a-successful-bee-hotel/appendix-4-building-plans-for-a-simple-bee-hotel-shelter
This is wordy and flowery and minty (basil is a mint-check out the tell-tale square stems) but on a deadly serious tack, we need to get very intentional about getting nearly every family onto enough land to have a garden, a few fruit trees, perhaps some chickens or a grazing critter or two. The gold standard for a family should be minimum, 1/3 of an acre. These parcels donβt need to provide a living for their owners. But people who own land tend to care for it. Regenerative practices require animals in the circle of production. Having a bit of land to plant a garden makes us much more aware of whatβs going on in the larger parcels near us. We watch the weather. We watch the eagles, the varmints, the predators. We become true environmentalists, not the kind that think everyone should be shoved into steel and concrete and languishing in front of screens. The shops and she sheds that spring up become micro manufacturing facilities. They test new ideas and tools. They generate wealth. They fill in gaps in supplies or tools that neighbors need on an emergency basis. They become the resilience in the network. They pass on knowledge to the next generation. They keep the kids off the screens.
I completely agree with you!!! I really love plants!!! Thank you for sharing this with us!!! I appreciate you!! I hope you have a wonderful day!!!πππππππππ©·π©·π©·π©·π©·πππππ©΅π©΅π©΅π©΅ππππβββββπππππ·π·π·π·