bobcat
Well-known Member
- Location
- Northern Calif
It seems more people in the U.S. tend to plant and maintain lawns than gardens. Lawns are a hallmark of American suburban culture, symbolizing neatness and community appeal. A lot of effort can go into lawns with watering, fertilizing, weeding, edging, aeration, mowing, and sometimes reseeding, but you can't eat a lawn. Nevertheless, they are extremely prevalent, and if you want a lush one, it can be very demanding.
Both require work, but the payoff is quite different. One is for aesthetics, and the other is nourishing vegetables. I imagine in some countries they would never trade the appearance of a lawn for food. There is also the personal satisfaction of enjoying food at your fingertips that you grew yourself. It's sometimes strange the things we value.
Both require work, but the payoff is quite different. One is for aesthetics, and the other is nourishing vegetables. I imagine in some countries they would never trade the appearance of a lawn for food. There is also the personal satisfaction of enjoying food at your fingertips that you grew yourself. It's sometimes strange the things we value.