Self sufficiency is the New Black

When I was a little kid, self sufficiency, in various degrees was pretty normal. Depending on the size of the backyard, people kept a few chooks for eggs (and occasionally for the table), had vegetable gardens, a few fruit trees scattered amongst the flower beds and a square of lawn for the kids to play on. But most homes in suburban Australia were on quarter-acre blocks then, so it wasn’t difficult to divide the yard into specific-use spaces.

It kind of fell by the wayside when local councils began meddling too much in what people did in their own backyards and while the veggie gardens and the fruit trees could more of less stay, chooks were out.

But the advent of swimming pools, decks, upgraded barbecue areas, outdoor kitchens, hot tubs, and trendy sculptured split-level outdoor living-spaces edged out the veggie garden over time. Supermarkets already had a foot in the door and produce started arriving in greater volumes from overseas and even the fruit trees vanished, except for those where the residents dug their heels in and kept at least one plum, apricot or mulberry tree. Either way, the kind of self sufficiency I grew up with was almost gone by the time I reached adulthood, which I always viewed as a loss. More people were opting to live in units too and balconies (if they had one) were for a table and a couple of chairs in the corner and perhaps a few pot plants of colourful flowers. Rarely a vegetable though.

Home renovation shows however, saw a resurgence in the humble vegetable garden, as it became de rigour to have one, and even the unit dwellers got in on the act with some of the flowers vanishing to make way for pot-grown tomatoes, potatoes, herbs and even the odd potted fruit tree. Green walls appeared in kitchens and before you could say “hey, lets take this further!” community gardens started sprouting up all over the suburbs. Councils, after a few mutterings, decided not to interfere too much with community gardens, even the ones that appeared on verges along community streets, so long as they were kept neat and a whole generation of new suburban gardeners thought they had come up with something that hadn’t been done before. Well okay, it hadn’t been done before along suburban footpaths, so I’ll give them that. But suddenly, food gardens were no longer viewed as the domain of grandparents, hippy communities and tree huggers in general. A lot of urban dwellers rediscovered the joys of growing their own.

And then came coronavirus, and with it came the panic shoppers all believing we were about to run out of food and toilet paper and after shopping their way through the shelves for non-perishables, they began hitting the fresh produce aisles. Then the nurseries for every vegetable seedling they could find. Extremely annoying, but the thing is, it has woken people up to the importance of being self sufficient. Really self sufficient, as in, being able to grow enough food to keep the family fed when a catastrophe hits.

Hence growing your own, along with “buying Australian” becoming the New Black. It appears that people have taken to the concept like ducks to water and this is not a bad thing. Anyone can grow a selection of their favourite fruits and/or vegetables. They can grow their own herbs. You don’t need a big backyard to do it in either, as they will grow just as well in a pot as they will in a garden and if you really want to go Next Level, you can opt for heirloom varieties. Suppliers of heirloom seeds and fruit trees can be found online and some nurseries even stock heirloom seedlings now. Check the credentials, but basically heirloom means the seeds, and fruit trees, are from varieties dating back over fifty years or so, before food plants were genetically manipulated to crop faster and mature more quickly to meet the growing demands of commercial markets. In a home garden situation, heirloom is a much better option anyway, as they have a longer cropping period, but just choosing them over later “re-designed”  stock helps to re-establish these lovely old strains that used to be staples in Australian backyards.

It’s not hard to do, it can be a fun family activity and a really practical one because you will be doing something that will go a long way to granting you a more secure future, food-wise. It might even save your life one day.

Maybe sooner than you think.

 

 

 

Buy Australian…

If there’s one positive thing that has come out of Coronavirus, it’s the shift towards buying food, clothing and whatever else that has been made here in Australia. From Australian products, produced on-shore by Australian-owned companies. This is a good thing.

For too long now, Australian companies have been either selling out to overseas investors or moving their operations to an off-shore location (often China or another Asian country) where they can get the work done far more cheaply, at the cost of their Australian workforce. Then they bring their products back into Australia but the price doesn’t come down so they are making huge profits. The items, especially clothing, are not as well made, yet customers are still paying top dollar for the label. But the ongoing selling of so many of our best assets to overseas interests is a national disgrace and the sales of large rural beef and dairy properties and our ports to foreign buyers is criminal.

Then there’s the companies labelling their products made in Australia, but from a high content of imported ingredients (visible only if you red the very tiny print on the back of the packaging).  A lot of Australians have fumed over this. They have been angered by the string of Australian-owned businesses, farms and other valuable assets that have had the green light to sell out to a foreign owner and it has become harder to find Australian-owned food and other products that are still produced and packaged here. It’s not beneficial for a country to be too dependent on another and even less so when the other country is allowed to buy up to much local real estate and so many local businesses. It’s just not good.

Like many others, I have often wondered why. Well yes, some people are just all about the money which tosses national pride out the window, but when you think about it, Australia can grow it’s own crops, it’s own beef, lamb, pork and poultry, even allowing for the impact on some industries due to drought. We produce some of the finest wool in the world, grow cotton, fruit and vegetables, so if you add all of that up it becomes obvious that we could easily sustain ourselves, just like Australia did decades ago. Certainly, trade is useful and often necessary, but it should not be used to supply the bulk of our needs when we can so easily do this ourselves.

And then came COVID-19 and everyone started to wake up to what a lot of us had already been thinking. Keep it local. Locally sourced, locally produced, locally made. Locally owned. This is what makes a country wealthy and sustainable in a situation like the one we are in now. It’s what keeps a nation’s citizens in employment and keeps the national debt to a minimum and stops the nation’s primary producers from going under, even in the event of drought or flood or other natural disaster. It’s what keeps a nation going in situation like this one.

So if every cloud has a silver lining, this could be ours, because the push to reject overseas imports for Australian owned, grown and produced products is not a bad thing. This should be our first line of supply and these products should be placed prominently on our supermarket shelves, on the racks in clothing stores and wherever else goods are sold. It should also apply to major industries too. Use Australian produced building products. If the Australian Government wants the country to survive the Coronavirus then it needs to put Australian businesses and their products first and promote them on a large scale. This will boost our economy because the money we spend on these products will stay here in Australia, not end up in the coffers of an overseas company.

It’s not difficult to do.