Tuesday, July 15

Spotlight: Roger Doiron

Roger Doiron is a leading figure in propagating and inspiring others in the benefits of local, organic gardening. Earlier this year, as you may have seen on the timeline, Roger came to speak at the local Yarmouth auditorium. Although I was not able to make an appearance, apparently the event was both entertaining and enlightening.

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:

Anonymous said...

congratulations to all involved in the Yarmouth School Garden- great stuff!