You have! And I agree that sharing this carries a long lasting impact to those who accept this information. I have shown more than a few people that the "time issue" is virtually nonsense (excuses) in many cases. I have people say it takes too much time - we are talking about 3 hours per week of work for a small garden 20ftx10ft.
When you do the math, more people spend three and four times that watching television per day!
Starting a garden from scratch can be the more intensive portion, but even that has products that offer greater convenience pre-built indoor units, pre-built garden houses, windowsill boxes... There is a way to grow almost anywhere and with limited resources and tools. How do you think these plants survived for so long? They want to grow and they will if you plant them..😉
Your reply reminded me of something I learned recently, and I was curious to get your feedback and opinion on it. Apparently mushrooms grown without UV/sun light do not have vitamin D in them? I've been researching the best ways to get it from food, and some people say salmon, other fatty fish, and mushrooms. When you look at containers of food for them though, no vitamin D is listed. Weird, right? Sure, the best way for us to get it is to get sunlight and have our bodies naturally produce it, but I'm looking for ways to get it without sunlight. Any ideas?
That is also apparently true of eggs. If you want yolks with vitamin D in them, you need to have cage free chickens that roam in the sunlight.
Yes, that is true time wise. There is no good excuse. :) This reminds me of making mead as well. I put it off for a very long time because I didn't know what I was doing. Once I did it though, I was surprised how easy it was. The same applies to gardening I would suspect. People see it as something new, and they avoid doing new things. Are we programmed not to perhaps? It is definitely a strange typical human trait. I like to say everything is hard until it is mastered. ha ha Obvious, sure. People ask me how I became a PI and are not happy when I give them my entire history and all the little steps that got me to where I am.
It's still possible though. Just like becoming a growing professional, it can be done. You just have to take one step at a time until you eventually master the skill as you have!
Now that is interesting! Something I never considered to boot. I'll have to dig into that, @finnian. You can school me in discord or steemitchat hopefully..haha
It does make sense that sunlight plays a role in the production of vitamin D in living organisms, whether an egg or mushroom.
As far as the 'programming' goes, that is partially thanks to the mega-money food industry - they tend to share more info about the dangers of your food you grow, than the stuff they sell..Ironic isn't it? It is a skill that is looked at as 'you have it or you don't' but that's long since been true. Maybe before the Internet, but there is so much info daily available for anyone that seeks it out, it is there!
Just about every household around me grows a garden in some capacity - flowers, food, or just a couple plants in pots. Yet, they all approach it differently. What I mean is they all have differing methods, but generally the same results, regardless of methods and practice. They ignore very simple knowledge that experts have shared and is a search away from their eyes. I approach gardening as if I am a student, not a master. I accept that I do not and cannot know all I need to know and I seek ways to improve. I never say "well, I got 29lbs of tomatoes off of one plant, but the avg is 10 so that must mean I have maxed out the yield". I say "29 is good, but 60 has been done. Let's try for 60" 😉
I hit 52-53 last year. Better make it 70 lb /plant this year because I saw a guy doing 90's with similar practices. There is always improvement and likewise a challenge to accept.
Start small and build up your knowledge and tools..once you have those, you see far less resistance in growing. Once you can grow plants, say a tomato plant, and eat your first fruit - that is going to fuel your desire to continue. Once you grow so many others start telling you how delicious they are - that is going to spark something that one can easily use to create business.
Anything is possible. If Disney can grow 60k tomatoes on one plant, I can too (just working on getting that budget up there..hahaha)