
Mr. Doiron has also been the leader of one of the most original and progressive gardening ideas I have heard yet: to put a vegetable garden on the White House lawn. The garden would serve as a positive, worldwide role model in an era of global warming and pesticides. Apparently, as Mr. Doiron writes, it is not the first time an idea like this was put in action:
One of the first things President John Adams did upon moving into the White House in 1800 was to plant a vegetable garden. In 1917, President Wilson brought in a herd of sheep to mow the lawns as a way of conserving resources - human, financial and fuel - for the wartime effort. In the 1940s, Eleanor Roosevelt grew a Victory Garden inspiring countless others to do the same.This is from a facebook group about the issue, seen here.
For more information, you can also visit the
official "eat the view" website (with a petition that all you loyal readers out there should sign)
or
the official "on day one" campaign idea website (of which it is the most popular first-day presidential campaign idea)
or
the "kitchen gardeners" website (about Mr. Doiron's steadily-growing group of people who believe in local gardening, globally)
Finally, here's a fantastic Boston Globe article about him, his story, and his superb idea.
So what does this have to do with our Yarmouth School Garden? Well, it brings to light a revolutionary notion; we are part of a global movement to support local gardening, to subvert transportation costs of non-domestic goods, to help individuals in need, and to share positive ideas to a starving earth by means of grassroots.
Or, to be especially clever: by means of vegetable roots.
And that, my friends, was a horrible joke.
1 comment:
congratulations to all involved in the Yarmouth School Garden- great stuff!
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