Daily Green - Cheapskate

The $0 tomato: Discover "No-Cost Gardening"

I hate reality shows. However there's one that's just kicking off out in San Francisco that I'm looking forward to watching. You might call it "The Frugal Farmers" or "Gardeners Gone Wild."

The challenge: Raise half the food you eat this year in a garden that costs absolutely nothing to maintain.

gardening

Anneli Rufus and Kristan Lawson are the authors of The Scavengers' Manifesto, and are the brain-trust behind what they call "No-Cost Gardening." They're taking the challenge themselves and have thrown down the gardener's gauntlet for you to do the same. They'll be reporting their progress -- the good, the bad, and the arugula -- on their website, and I plan to check back in with them periodically here at The Green Cheapskate to see how their garden grows.

Anneli and Kristan describe themselves as full-time scavengers. "We've made a lifestyle out of getting stuff (legally) without spending a cent," they say. My Inner Miser applauds them for helping to show people that gardening need not be expensive. Sadly, what started out as a way to save money (i.e. growing your own food) has, in our uber consumer society, morphed into a $40 billion annual industry of specialized gardening tools, overpriced seeds and nursery stock, and even stylish garden apparel. Do you really need a special wardrobe to dig in the dirt?

Here are some of the tips from Anneli's and Kristan's website for getting plant seeds for little or no cost:

  • Saving the seeds from store-bought produce. It's amazing how often this works and yet how few people do it.
  • Seed swaps. Various clubs and cliques of gardening enthusiasts hold "seed exchanges" or "seed swaps," in which a group of like-minded individuals get together to trade seeds.
  • Saving the seeds from the plants we planted last year. We always try to let at least one plant of each type "bolt" and go to seed, so we can save its seeds and start the cycle all over again the following year.
  • Get old packets of seeds for free or cheap, then plant more than you need, taking into account the fact that only half of the seeds at most will ever sprout.
  • Seed sales at discount stores. If you're lucky, you can catch the right moment when some discount supermarkets drastically lower the prices of already-cheap seed packets as they approach their expiration date.
  • Buying expired and old seed packets at garage sales for very little money. Old seed packets don't crop up too often at sales, but when they do, you can often get them for ten cents or twenty-five cents a packet.

Check out their website for the details, more tips, and info on the No-Cost Gardening challenge, and stay tuned for regular rutabaga reports here at The Green Cheapskate.

Learn more about starting a garden from seeds.

Jeff Yeager is the author of the book The Ultimate Cheapskate's Road Map to True Riches. His Website is www.UltimateCheapskate.com.

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Reprinted with permission of Hearst Communications, Inc

 

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comments from our community

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  • Posted by bambi Tue May 5, 2009 10:17pm PDT
    Like to say you can get seeds m0st anything from veg. to flowers for 10 for a $1O for the year is is at the time it is or 5 for a $1 for date of two years.You can get these at a Family $ store,Walgreens,099 stores.If you plant marigolds in and about the garden.there good for bugs and butterfly' they will go there in stead of you veg. plants.plant Sunflower seeds for filtering the hot sun and there good for you and to save for the birds.what grow's on the ground like Sq.,cucumber,watermelon, under tall plant helps to hold water and saves space.garlic if from groc. store plant by if self can cause problem with other plant in garden.I made plant boxes out of old wood I found in side of road & made 1 1/2 some 5ft long for carrots radishes,onions,garlic.because my ground in not good for under ground plants. You have any tips. bambijomiller@yahoo.com have a great day
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  • Posted by Amy Tue May 12, 2009 7:38am PDT
    I recommend the "Family Dollar Store" or any Fred's and/or discount or second hand thrift stores. I can usually score 3 packets of seeds for $1 or .99 cents. It's an excellent steel and if you buy later in the season they may even be lower than that! My flowers and garden are coming along nicely this year!
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  • Posted by David H Tue May 12, 2009 7:43am PDT
    How can anyone take someone seriously when they can't spell and English is that of a 2 year old.
    Report Abuse
  • Posted by Luz Tue May 12, 2009 8:50am PDT
    thanks for the informative items!
    Report Abuse
  • Posted by moonlight10_2 Tue May 26, 2009 2:55pm PDT
    I've once planted a couple of canteloupe seeds from one that I just finished from the market, it really works!
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  • Posted by moccoliciouse Sat Jul 11, 2009 8:06pm PDT
    i planted about 6 mangoosten seeds a while ago, and now got two little mangoosten "trees" (about 2 inches high). lol too bad they might take as much as 10 years to actually grow those delicious fruits.
    Report Abuse
  • Posted by moccoliciouse Sat Jul 11, 2009 8:06pm PDT
    oh and the seeds where from fruits i bought and ate.
    Report Abuse

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