With all the extra time spent at home and uncertainty with COVID-19, now is the perfect time to be planting a victory garden.
Victory gardens were dug during World War I and World War II as a way to supplement rations and to raise morale among citizens. It was a way to feel like you were contributing to society during the uneasy time of the war. You can find old war posters encouraging people to grow food with sayings like "Sow the seeds of victory! Plant and raise your own vegetables."
The COVID-19 pandemic has put a lot of people in difficult positions whether they have been laid off, have to homeschool their children while working from home, or having to work in the stressful environment of a frontline job. People are stressed out. Spending time with your hands in some dirt is a great way to relieve stress for many people.
It can be so satisfying to grow your own food even if it is just one easy crop. If you are new to growing food, start with just a couple things. You can grow things in pots, in a 4x4 ft bed or, of course just straight in the ground. If you live in apartment you can grow food in containers. If you don't even have room for that, you can grow sprouts on your kitchen counter!
As many of us here on Thriftyfun know, growing your own food can help cut your food budget tremendously, especially if you know how to preserve your crop by canning, freezing, or drying.
Uprising Seeds has a program called Grow It Forward that allows people with a little extra money to buy seeds for someone who doesn't. This link to were you can get a bundle of 5 seed packets for free (actually they have to charge you $1 as required by their shipping service).
I have started planting my garden and have gotten my kids involved with helping in the yard. It is a great way to get out of the house and away from the screens. Who else is growing a victory garden this year? What are you growing?
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I had a victory garden in a school garden that we had before WW II
Sponsored by the public school for grades kindergarten through 9th grade. Then I worked there as a student assistant helping the younger children. By then the war was on and people had a garden in an area furnished by the city, if they did not a space where they lived. It was a wonderful thing to do.
Your picture of the vegetable Garden is great. Is it your garden? I was wondering about the size of it. We have been talking about doing that this year, because of the what is going on in the world.
This is very cool. You have done a great job if this is your garden.
I'm pretty sure we bought that photo as it was published in mid-April. A little too early for such a bumper crop of lettuce. :)
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