Many articles in SurvivalBlog discuss reaching the point of a new normal after TEOTWAWKI when society starts to rebuild and little communities pull together. However, the majority of articles focus on getting through the event itself and not how you are going to live beyond the event. To be successful in the post-TEOTWAWKI economy you will need to have the means to produce. Without petroleum-powered combines, chemical fertilizers, centralized distribution systems, and confined animal feeding operations the food system will fall apart. It’s all powered by (relatively) cheap fuel and transport. Your food sources will be mostly reduced to whatever can be grown, collected, or hunted within a 5-to-10 mile radius. Gardening/farming is the original means of production, and it is probably the most accessible means of production in terms of entry requirements. All you need is some dirt and some seeds and now you are a gardener. However, as you all know there is a lot more involved in being a successful gardener than just that.
In this article, I’m going to share the gardening principles I’ve learned over the past 11 years that have led to my gardening success. Early on in my gardening journey I stumbled on some of these principles by accident and found some successes. I just didn’t know why it was working. Now that I’ve rounded out my knowledge of these principles, I can better understand why a particular planting succeeded or failed (yes, I still have failures). But now the crucial question, why should you listen to me? It’s important that we answer this question now so I can potentially save you a lot of reading.Continue reading“Beyond Organic: Biological Systems Gardening for Food Security – Part 1, by Hobbit Farmer”