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12 Steps to Whole Foods

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Reaping a Gardener’s Rewards<br />

Be sure <strong>to</strong> wash produce, especially conventionally grown selections, very well with lukewarm water (cleans<br />

best and doesn’t damage enzymes) and vegetable soap in a spray bottle. I use Shaklee Basic H (a gallon lasts<br />

me a decade), but a variety of options exist online and in s<strong>to</strong>res.<br />

In 2011, I discovered an exciting appliance for the kitchen that uses superoxygenation<br />

of water <strong>to</strong> eliminate pesticides, herbicides, and bacteria from<br />

plant foods. A cycle takes about 4-5 minutes, and extremely pesticideheavy<br />

produce such as soft-skinned fruit may take more than one cycle.<br />

But the water ozonation technology, which has been used in many other<br />

industrial applications for years (carpet cleaning, for instance), is now<br />

available, affordably, for home kitchens. I have a YouTube video<br />

demonstrating its use, and you can read more about it under “Robyn<br />

Recommends” (the <strong>to</strong>pic “Eliminate Pesticides”) on<br />

GreenSmoothieGirl.com. It’s called the Lotus Sanitizer. It is tremendously<br />

helpful for people who cannot afford <strong>to</strong> grow or buy all their produce organic—and that’s most people. It will<br />

give you some very helpful peace of mind. Even if your Lotus doesn't register 100% elimination after a couple<br />

of cycles (for strawberries or grapes, for instance), you can rest assured that the vast majority of chemicals<br />

have been eliminated.<br />

Why Should I Consider Square-Foot Gardening?<br />

For limited spaces, or <strong>to</strong> make the most of the space you have, I highly recommend square-foot gardening,<br />

which maximizes the yield per foot of space. You are gardening based on squares instead of rows, which lets<br />

you get twice the amount of produce out of half the space.<br />

In one square foot, you might have nine beets, or four lettuce heads, or one corn stalk or <strong>to</strong>ma<strong>to</strong> plant. This<br />

method is eco-friendly, because you use much less water than with traditional gardening. You also have less<br />

weeding and a space designed for better access, since the grow boxes are up off the ground. The author of the<br />

system says that square-foot gardening uses 80% less space, time (especially weeding), water, and money than<br />

the traditional method.<br />

I also recommend that you plan ahead <strong>to</strong> stagger plantings (planting hardier greens and vegetables as early as<br />

possible) so that your harvest doesn’t come all at once, providing much more than you need. With staggered<br />

plantings, you enjoy vegetables for an extended period of time. Square-foot gardening is the perfect way <strong>to</strong><br />

achieve that: I go out every Saturday from April onward, planting just a few squares each week of greens,<br />

beets, corn, and some other crops that I like <strong>to</strong> extend.<br />

If you live in climates that are cold and snowy through the winter, you can plant a few crops as early as 3-5<br />

weeks before the last spring frost, as indicated below. In Utah, we plan on that being May 1, though on a rare<br />

occasion is it later—if you’re new <strong>to</strong> gardening, you’ll have <strong>to</strong> get used <strong>to</strong> the fact that you have no guarantees<br />

in nature! Warm-weather crops are planted on May 1 (and then hold your breath and cover your <strong>to</strong>ma<strong>to</strong>es if the<br />

forecast calls for a freeze). But these are a few exceptions:<br />

You can plant these as early as the first week in April:<br />

Peas and spinach from seed; broccoli and cabbage from seedlings<br />

130 <strong>12</strong> <strong>Steps</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>Whole</strong> <strong>Foods</strong><br />

© Copyright Robyn Openshaw

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