Sugar peas, butter lettuce, red and white Spanish onions, cauliflower and other veggies filled the 4-by-8-foot planter boxes, which Lozano gave them. With four children of their own, the Lopezes live in a small house with two other families, 14 people in all.Who will be the Raul Lozano of Lowndes County? Continue readingThe modest harvest won’t eliminate Lopez’s trips to the food pantry, but it does save the family the cost of fresh vegetables it would otherwise have to buy at the market.
“This is saving us quite a bit of money,” said Arturo Lopez, a wall-framer who hasn’t worked since injuring his back last year. “Our children are eating better. They come back here and eat a leaf of lettuce like candy.”
Backyard Gardens for Community Self-Sufficiency
If they can do this in Silicon Valley, we can do it here.
Joe Rodriguez writes in the San Jose Mercury News that
“Latino theater director quits the limelight to help poor people grow food at home”: