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Hey everybody, Rob Greenfield here.
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Today, I'm going to talk to you about
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the survival garden.
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What I mean by that is a garden
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where you don't have to go to the
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grocery stores or the restaurants, and
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you can live off of this. It can
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produce your calories.
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It can produce your nutrients.
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At the very least, it can get you
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through weeks or months
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of not having to go to the grocery store,
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so this is the survival garden.
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Okay, so why would I be the one
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to talk to you about the
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the survival garden?
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Well, I recently finished a year-long
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project of growing and foraging
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100% of my food.
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So, for one year, every single thing
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that I ate either came from my
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gardens or that I foraged from the wild.
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Down to the salt, the oil, all
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my calories, my nutrients,
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my protein, my fat.
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You name it.
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So I have quite a bit of experience
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and this survival garden that I'm
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going to be talking about today is
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specifically going to be for where I did
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this project, which is central Florida.
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This survival garden is more
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for a warmer climate, but
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there's a lot that you'll be able
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to learn from this video,
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no matter where you are,
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and, most importantly, wherever you are,
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you can grow an incredible amount of food.
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It's just a matter of adapting to
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the correct plants that are
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designed to not just survive,
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but thrive in your area.
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So, I'm going to start off
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right away with calories.
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#1, I'm going to share sweet potatoes.
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Sweet potatoes are a truly amazing crop.
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A lot of us know sweet potatoes
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for the potato itself, but what a lot of
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people don't realize
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is that the greens are edible as well.
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Between the nutritious greens
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and the calorie-dense tubers,
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they're one of the most important
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crops that can be grown as far as
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putting out an incredible amount
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of calories and nutrients.
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I probably grew 600 pounds of
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sweet potatoes in my year
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of growing and foraging all my food.
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I'm just blown away at how much
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you can grow.
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Now, a lot of people imagine these
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little orange ones at the grocery store,
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but they come in all shapes and sizes.
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I've seen sweet potatoes that are
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up to 13 pounds
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and I've been blown away
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at how much sweet potatoes
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you can grow in a
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relatively small amount of space.
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In a standard front yard,
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it's possible to grow
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all of your calories.
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Let me say that again.
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It is possible,
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in a standard front yard,
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to grow all the calories you need
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you need with different tuber crops.
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So, the second one
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that I'm going to talk about
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is called cassava or yuca.
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For those of you who still haven't
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heard either of those words,
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it is what tapioca is made out of.
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This is the true survival food.
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Over a billion people around the world
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depend on it for their very survival.
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It's twice as calorie-dense
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as sweet potatoes,
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at about 700 calories per pound,
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is what I've read,
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So, it is truly, truly calorie-dense.
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A couple of pounds of this per day
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meets your calorie needs.
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That said, it doesn't have a lot of
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nutrients, but we'll get into the
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nutrient crops soon.
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So, the beautiful thing about cassava
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is you literally just take a stick of it,
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a branch, you take that branch,
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you stick it into the ground,
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come back 12 months later and you've got
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yourself a whole cassava tree or bush
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or whatever you want to call it,
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with the tuber under the ground.
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You don't plant it like a potato.
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You plant it with a little cutting,
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basically, and you can actually
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eat the leaves as well.
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Now, cassava, or yuca, has cyanide in it,
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but a lot of foods have cyanide in it and
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it's just a matter of cooking it
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the right way.
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Again, a billion people live on this
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around the world.
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You just have to cook it.
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So, that's yuca, or cassava.
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One plant can put out 10, 20 pounds
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of tubers from one plant.
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The average one that I've gotten
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in central Florida is probably
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around 5-10 pounds of tubers.
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So, that is cassava or yuca.
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That's #2.
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#3 is another really great tuber,
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another calorie-dense crop,
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and that is yams.
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The genus and species that I've
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worked with is Dioscorea alata,
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if that's how you pronounce it.
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In Florida, this has actually
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become invasive. It has made
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it out of cultivation.
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I believe it's originally from Asia,
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possibly Africa too,
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and it's a commonly grown crop
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for many people around the world.
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Now, when I say yam, a lot of people
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think of the orange ones
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that you get at the grocery store,
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which we call sweet potatoes and yams,
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interchangeably. No.
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A yam, the largest one that I've ever
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harvested was 150 pounds!
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Imagine, I weigh about 150, 155 pounds.
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The one I harvested, the biggest one
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was 157 pounds, so the size of me.
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They get massive.
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An average one might be
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10, 20, 30 pounds is not abnormal.
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And the beautiful thing about all
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three of these first crops is that,
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most of them, you can largely set them
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and forget them,
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especially yuca or cassava.
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Those are drought-tolerant.
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They don't need a lot of nutrients
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and 12 months later, you come back
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and you can have a whole survival garden.
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You can do your fence around your property
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all with yuca and yams, and just have
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a living fence of serious calories
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to be able to come back to
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when it's needed
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or just when it's desired.
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But, back to the big yam, the average one,
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10, 20, 30 pounds, they're delicious.
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I actually prefer them over potatoes and
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they are a vining species,
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not an edible leaf, unlike the
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yuca and the sweet potato.
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Both of those have edible leaves,
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but this is just another
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beautiful calorie crop.
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Now, another calorie crop
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that I want to mention is potatoes.
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The crops that I'm talking about
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are a little bit more for
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the warmer climates, although
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sweet potato is something that's
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grown throughout, but potatoes
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are a standard that can be grown
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all across many climates.
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It's not one that I have a lot of
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experience with. I have grown it
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in Florida, but that is a really wonderful
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crop that you can grow in huge volumes
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as your calories.
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So, those are four calorie crops.
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The next one I want to get into is,
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indeed, a calorie, but it's also
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a delicious fruit and a favorite food
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of many people around the world,
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and that is bananas, and I'm also
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going to talk about plantains.
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Bananas are a true survival food.
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You can take one --
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bananas, by the way, you don't
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plant them from seeds.
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You plant them from a pup,
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which is basically a small plant.
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How bananas work is they send up
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babies or pups, little shoots
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out the sides. If there's
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a huge stand of bananas, you can just
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dig one of those up with
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part of the corm, plant it,
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and in a few years' time,
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you can have a whole stand of bananas.
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So, bananas in central Florida,
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where I did my year, for example,
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within about 12 months,
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they can be starting to produce.
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Within a few years, you can be
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talking about huge quantities
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of bananas and plantains.
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Now, bananas can be eaten green,
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fried, for example,
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or you can wait until they're ripe
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and you can eat them
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as a delicious banana.
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You can also actually dehydrate the skin
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and the banana, whole,
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dehydrate it and then blend it
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to make a flour.
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Then, of course, plantains
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are a staple of many, many, many
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people all over the world.
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Those can be eaten ripe,
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as a delicious sweeter flavor,
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or they can be eaten savory,
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when they are still green.
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So, that is the banana.
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You can grow hundreds
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and hundreds of pounds of bananas.
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You can start it with something
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that you can get for $10 or $20,
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or for free.
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The next one that I want to
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go into is papaya.
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Papaya is extremely versatile.
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Papaya is a tree,
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but it's not your typical tree.
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They will last, generally, about
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maximum seven years.
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3-5 years might be pretty normal.
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They're a very soft tree.
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You can basically push them over.
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You can cut down the papaya tree
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just with one swipe of a machete,
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but the fruit is a beautiful fruit
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and it's very versatile.
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So, of course, you can wait
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until it's ripe and then it's
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a nice, sweet orange,
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or you can eat it
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while it's green,
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more as a vegetable.
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I make sort of like a sauerkraut
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with it, a papaya kraut
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by fermenting it.
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Then, people all over the world
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use it green, as a vegetable,
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whether pickled or sauteed or raw.
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What's commonly known is
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Thai green papaya salad, for example.
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I love to make a coconut curry
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out of my green papayas.
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If you're dealing with wasps,
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a pest that often comes for the papayas,
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then the best thing to do is not wait
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for them to get ripe and eat them green.
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So, this is a great staple crop,
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not as calorie-dense as the
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earlier calories I mentioned,
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but very filling and very much
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has calories to it.
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Now, in a colder climate,
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something that actually
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somewhat resembles, in my mind,
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the papaya is the zucchini.
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Zucchini, in a colder climate,
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is a true survival crop.
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I hear stories all the time about
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people saying that,
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in the northern climates,
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they have so many zucchinis
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that they have to put them on
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their neighbors' doors
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to try to get rid of them,
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but their neighbors hide from them
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because they don't want them
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because they have so many.
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The reason it reminds me of papaya
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is because they can grow very large
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and in extreme abundance, and
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they can be cooked in a similar manner,
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and they don't, again, have
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an incredible amount of calories,
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but they have a large amount
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of sustenance and can
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really fill you up.
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So, that's the papaya and,
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for some people, the zucchini.
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Speaking of zucchini, what I have
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to mention for the survival garden
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that I'm talking about is a
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heat-loving, heat-tolerant squash.
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For me, that is the Seminole pumpkin.
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It's amazing what you can do
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with one seed.
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Most people, with their pumpkins
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and with their squash, when they
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buy them at the grocery store,
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what do they do?
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They take those seeds out and they
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throw them in the garbage.
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At the very least, you
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could compost them, but what
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you can actually do is plant them
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especially if they're a
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local variety.
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When I had dinner with a friend,
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I took home the pumpkin seeds
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from Seminole pumpkins.
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From two pumpkins,
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the seeds of that turned into
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hundreds of pumpkins,
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many, many, many meals to come.
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The Seminole pumpkin is
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my favorite pumpkin, personally,
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my favorite squash.
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Wherever you are, your survival garden
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can definitely include squashes.
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The next thing that I want to move on to
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is talking about a little bit of protein.
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For me, one of my favorite sources
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in the garden is pigeon pea.
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Now, pigeon pea is a perennial crop.
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It's not a bean that has to be planted
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year after year. It's actually
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a tree that will continue to put out
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pigeon peas and sometimes
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multiple times per year and
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even throughout the year.
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They're a truly delicious --
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they're called gandules.
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They're very popular in Puerto Rico
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and other parts of the Caribbean,
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other parts of Latin America as well.
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They are truly, truly delicious.
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I have eaten a large amount of them
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and have never once got
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sick from them at all.
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In fact, my friend and I actually even
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made tempe from them.
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So, there's a lot that can be
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done with them.
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So, that is pigeon peas and,
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along those lines, the next one
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I want to talk about is ground cover
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beans or peas.
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For me, my favorite one
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is the southern peas.
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Now, there are many types of
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southern peas. You've
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probably heard of
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black-eyed peas, for example.
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There's many different types of these
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and I don't know the names of
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all of them, but
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we're talking about spreading the seed
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on the ground.
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It creates a wonderful ground cover
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and it produces a lot of
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healthy food.
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It can also be used
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as a cover crop
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and as a nitrogen fixer to
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add nitrogen to your garden.
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Now, these can be eaten fresh or they
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can be left to dry on the vines,
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harvested once they're dry,
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and they can be stored.
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The same goes for the pigeon peas as well.
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So, talking about survival,
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these are foods that, when dried,
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you can have these lasting in your pantry
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for years. That's an important part
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about this, storage.
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Now, in the warmer climates,
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like Florida, for example,
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you can grow food year-round.
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In the northern climates,
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the key to success with
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the survival garden is producing
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as much food as you can
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during that window of time that you have
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and then preserving it for the fall.
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Now, for all the people out there
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who are saying, "Oh, you can only
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do this in Florida,"
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I have to say, the most extreme abundance
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that I've ever seen
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was in the fall in places like
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northern Wisconsin, where I'm from.
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The abundance of nuts and different
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fruits, like apples and plums
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and pears and berries,
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is incredible -- so much more
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than I've ever seen in
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some warmer climates,
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so you just have to work
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with your area.
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So, those are a few examples
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of protein. We've covered calories.
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We've covered some protein.
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Now, I want to get into some of
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the very nutrient-dense foods.
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The really good news is that
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a lot of these nutrient-dense foods,
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whether you want to be self-sufficient
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and being able to exist without
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a grocery store or restaurant at all,
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these nutrient-dense foods
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are a no-brainer for everyone
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because they take very little work.
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They can save a lot of money.
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They're some of the healthiest foods
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out there that you can eat and,
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environmentally, they're one of
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the most logical things to grow at home
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because shipping greens is one of the
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least efficient things that we can ship.
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So, I'm going to talk about
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perennial greens and the first one
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that I'm going to talk about
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is moringa. Now, moringa is
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also called the vitamin tree
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or the tree of life, and it is
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truly the tree of life.
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it's one of the most nutrient-dense
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plants on Earth.
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Supposedly, it's about 20% protein
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by weight, as well, so a lot of
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greens and vegetables actually
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do have a lot of protein in them
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as well.
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Moringa is a perennial.
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You can start it either from seed or
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you can take a cutting, stick it in
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the ground and have a moringa tree.
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You can make a wall around your
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property with moringa.
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You can dry moringa leaves,
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turn it into a powder, and
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you have your own multivitamin
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that you can travel with, and
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it's also a really great crop
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that you can trade.
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You can trade others this
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nutrient-dense powder that you make
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for other things that you need,
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or you can actually make a little
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business out of it and sell it.
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The next green that I want to talk about
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is katuk.
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Katuk is another perennial green.
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By perennial, what I mean is you plant it
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and it produces year after year
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after year.
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Up in a northern climate,
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a beautiful perennial is rhubarb.
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An average rhubarb plant can last
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for 25 years!
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Imagine you plant it and 25 years,
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every spring, it just keeps coming back.
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Annuals, you plant once
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(for example, carrots)
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and when you pull it, you eat it,
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and it's dead.
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Then, in between perennials and annuals is
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self-seeding annuals.
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These are ones that you let go to seed
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and they keep spreading their seed
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and they keep coming back.
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Once you've got them going,
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you've got them going.
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So, in the survival garden,
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I highly recommend working with
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perennials and self-seeding annuals
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as much as possible.
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So, I mentioned katuk and the next one
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that I want to talk about is chaya.
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Chaya is an ancient food.
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It's been eaten for thousands of years.
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I don't remember if it's the Mayans
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or the Aztecs, or possibly both,
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that have had it as a staple part
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of their diet.
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It is also called tree spinach.
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Very calorie-dense.
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This one also has to be cooked because
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it has cyanide in it, just like
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I mentioned with the cassava or
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the yuca, but again, it's just
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a matter of preparing food right.
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All things have to be prepared right,
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whether it's coffee or chocolate
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or the way you're producing your
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beverages, like beer and wine.
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Once you start to connect with
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your food, you see there is a process,
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a way of doing things.
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But chaya is a beautiful one.
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This is one where you can literally
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just take a stick of it,
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put it in the ground and,
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after you have a few trees of chaya,
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you can be spreading chaya to your
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entire neighborhood.
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Another one that's very drought-tolerant--
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With the survival garden, the key is
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planting things that are
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very tough, that don't need to be
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consistently watered,
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that don't need a lot of nutrients,
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that don't have too many pests,
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and all of these things apply, generally,
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to perennials over annuals.
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So, the survival garden is one that
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you can walk away from and,
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three months later, you come back
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and your food isn't gone;
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you have more food than when you left.
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So, that is chaya.
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The next thing I want to get into
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is another green and that is
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perennial spinaches.
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So, there are all sorts of
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perennial spinaches.
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There's Brazilian spinach and
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New Zealand spinach,
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Okinawa spinach, longevity spinach,
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just to name a few.
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Malabar spinach is another one.
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There's probably a good dozen or so that
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are grown in the area where I have done
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most of my growing.
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Again, these are perennials that you can
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plant once and they can keep on
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coming back and coming back.
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So, with those perennial spinaches
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and the chaya, the cassava leaves,
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the katuk, and the moringa,
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that right there is quite a bit
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of diversity in itself.
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So, there is a saying and that is,
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"Let thy food be they medicine
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and let thy medicine be thy food."
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Now, in 2020, that is,
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"Let your food be your medicine
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and let your medicine be your food."
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Pretty basic.
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Now, the beautiful thing is that,
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yes, our food is our medicine,
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but there are some especially
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medicinal plants that we can grow
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to really give ourselves
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that important immune boost and to really
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just take care of ourselves.
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I'm talking about holistic medicine,
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holistic healthcare, taking into
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account everything that we're doing --
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our food, our water, the way we move
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our body, the way we live our lives,
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but we can grow
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a lot of our own medicine.
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The #1 that I recommend in
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this survival garden is turmeric
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and ginger.
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Turmeric, you take those little rhizomes,
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you stick them in the ground, and
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7-9 months later, you'll have
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a lot more turmeric.
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Most of my friends' gardens,
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who have turmeric,
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they have more than they
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can deal with.
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Ginger takes a little bit longer.
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It takes more like, I think, about
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a year and a half.
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I've successfully grown ginger,
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but it takes longer to get it
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to be a large amount and to get a lot
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to harvest, but very, very easy to grow.
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So, turmeric and ginger, very easy to grow
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and very, very important medicines.
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There are many different medicines.
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One that I recommend growing
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is elderberry. Along with honey
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that you can get from your bees,
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you can make elderberry syrup and this is
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one of the most incredible
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natural medicines
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that prevents cold and flu.
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I like to take a spoonful of
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my elderberry syrup
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every single day.
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It's one of my favorite things and
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it's also an extremely delicious treat.
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So, I've covered calories,
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I've covered some protein,
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and I've covered greens as nutrients.
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Those three things right there
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can take care of a massive, massive
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amount of your entire needs.
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You could probably live just off of that,
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but there's no need to because
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there's such an abundance
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of other foods.
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I'm going to name a few other things
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right now that are really easy
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and important to have as a part
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of this garden.
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That would be peppers.
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I grew serrano peppers,
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starting from one seed
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from a pepper from my friend's garden.
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I, for a year and a half, had
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a serrano pepper plant that put out
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well over 1,000 peppers.
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Wherever you are, there are peppers
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that will survive and thrive.
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Peppers are a great part of any garden.
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Then, herbs.
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Herbs add flavor to your food.
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Living off of your garden does not
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in any way mean not eating delicious,
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delicious food. In fact, it's often
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far more delicious.
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Some of the absolute survival herbs
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that I've grown would be Cuban oregano.
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Grows like crazy.
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It's a huge oregano leaf.
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Then, there's lots of other ones.
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African blue basil grows into shrubs,
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brings in an incredible amount of
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bees and pollinators.
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So important to have different plants
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that can bring pollinators into
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your garden and herbs are
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one of the easiest things to grow.
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You have cilantro and basil and dill,
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just to name a few.
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Herbs are a very easy beginner plant too.
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If you're just getting started, herbs are
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a really great place to start.
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I'm going to mention just two more,
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even though there are so many
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more plants that I would
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love to talk about, but
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a truly amazing one
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is daikon radish.
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We're talking about a radish that can
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get this big, that can become
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self-seeding, that's coming back,
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that creates a great ground cover,
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that can be chop and dropped,
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and you can ferment this
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and make a wonderful radish kraut
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or mix it in with your different krauts.
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It's delicious, it adds a lot of value
-
to meals, and you can produce
-
incredible quantities with it.
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That's the daikon radish.
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Wherever you are, radishes can be a
-
part of your game and radishes
-
are one of the fastest foods to grow.
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You can get them in about 30 days.
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Now, a garden could be complete
-
without tomatoes, but tomatoes
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add such an incredible value to life.
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Where I did my survival garden,
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that would be the Everglades tomato.
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In really hot climates, it's often the
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very small tomatoes that you
-
want to work with,
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not the really big ones,
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but in northern climates,
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you can produce so much tomatoes that
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you could not possibly eat them.
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So, tomatoes are just a beautiful,
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beautiful thing to have
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in the garden.
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Then, one last thing that I'm
-
going to mention is garlic or onions
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really add an incredible
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amount of flavor.
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Garlic is also a great antimicrobial
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and antibacterial, a really important one
-
for fighting off sicknesses.
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In central Florida, my big ones
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would be garlic chives and then
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society garlic.
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These are perennials
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that do really well.
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I also grew garlic.
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That's harder in the southern climates,
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but I did it successfully,
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but in the northern climates,
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garlic is an easy one.
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So, that is my survival garden.
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I've covered your calories, your protein,
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your greens.
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There are more things than that;
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however, if you have just this going
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and you work with the perennials
-
over the annuals, we're talking about
-
almost never having to take a trip
-
to the grocery store.
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This is my tips, especially focused on
-
a warmer climate.
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In future videos, I will have some
-
that are specifically focused on
-
colder climates, so make sure
-
you come back and
-
tune in for that.
-
If you got a lot out of this video and
-
you found it to be really useful,
-
then definitely I encourage you to
-
subscribe to this channel.
-
If you have questions or comments,
-
put them below.
-
Hit that Like button to make this
-
get out into the world so people can see
-
that it is possible to live without
-
grocery stores and without
-
restaurants, and live in a way where
-
we are working with the Earth,
-
rather than against it and
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where we can live happily and healthfully
-
with food sovereignty
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right in our own communities.
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Love you all very much.
-
See you soon.