What exactly does homegrown produce mean for you?
Comment on It is very therapeutic to garden, though.
FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today 6 months agoWho the fuck prioritized efficiency over quality in their backyard garden?
The Billions of human beings who rely on it to live.
Fenrisulfir@lemmy.ca 6 months ago
meep_launcher@lemm.ee 6 months ago
I think the imperative phrase here is backyard garden. They aren’t referring to a 40 acre field of wheat and potatoes, they probably are thinking a 10’x10’ raised bed.
FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today 6 months ago
Yes but both in the comments and the post I’m comparing low yield home gardens to large yield industrialized farming. If anybody is trying to derail the conversation away from the topic of the discussion then that is on them, not me.
enbyecho@lemmy.world 6 months ago
I’d urge you to consider what “yield” is and means and how “yield” plays out over the whole length of the industrialized food chain.
The classic example from a producer’s perspective is that commodity level production has to be sorted and doesn’t get equal value for everything produced. So you may only get top dollar for 25-50% of what you grew and far less - possibly even zero - for the rest. Incredibly, it really is sometimes cost-effective to let the produce rot in the field if prices don’t support a profit.
Then farther down the chain you have increasing losses and waste. By some estimates that’s as much as nearly 40% of all food produced. See also here.
These factors only very rarely are brought up in these discussions in part because folks have very narrow conceptions of what “yield” means.