Adrien (ex-nico239) wrote:But strangely, I have the impression that it comes up against (the majority?) psychology, which finds it difficult to: accept non-work (we had explored the theological bases of this in the past) but also "dirt" ( to use the term of the video) that it generates and which is perverse because it affects not only the gardener but also those around him.
for me non-working is not the goal, I will rather talk about non-turning the soil, such as digging, a light surface tillage makes things much easier for me sometimes so I agree
Adrien (ex-nico239) wrote:Shared garden when this is the case: in which this type of gardening is not always accepted
Even the spouse of the gardener who does not always see with a good eye this "brothel" far from the images of Épinal or the commonly accepted notions of "order"
why should this be a mess? my PP with his hay is clean as a penny, there is hay everywhere between the vegetables, not a weed manages to point its nose, I draw lines when I transplant, I organize, so the image of the vegetable garden brothel, that I discovered permaculture, is for me a bad thing, because this brothel does not bring anything and therefore in an allotment garden a well-covered PP will not be a brothel, but something just as clean as in the ground naked, except that there we will be in straw soil