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  3. Why don't Americans plant trees and bushes of stuff that they can eat in their houses instead of having useless grass?

Why don't Americans plant trees and bushes of stuff that they can eat in their houses instead of having useless grass?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Asklemmy
asklemmy
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  • ? Guest

    6? What are you trying to make an orchard? That's pretty aggressive. How big is your front yard? How long were you gone for to make the city take action? You wouldn't get one notice, then a day later, they tear up your yard. You had to have been gone for a long time.

    I have a fairly large front yard, and if I planted that many trees, yeah I'd get sited.

    It doesn't matter if you had fruit trees or not. That's not a "you can't plant trees in your front yard", thats, "this many trees in a relatively small area can cause safety issues"

    perogiboi@lemmy.caP This user is from outside of this forum
    perogiboi@lemmy.caP This user is from outside of this forum
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    wrote on last edited by
    #101

    Wow haha you must have been the city bylaw officer with the way you are so gallantly siding with the city and telling me off for planting 6 fruit tree saplings on 1+ acres of front yard. You must have been to some very small orchards! You sound very intelligent! I am truly humbled.

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    • confidant6198@lemmy.mlC [email protected]
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      wrote on last edited by
      #102

      In many cities having a lawn is required. It may be the HOA, or the zoning code

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      • B [email protected]

        I lived in a small city (~30k) in the middle of rural texas growing up, and our main wildlife was deer, squirrels, possums, foxes, armadillos, javalinas, and birds, although we also had the occasional ratsnake or raccoons or skunks.

        We didn't really have fruit trees, but we did have plenty of pecans and several gardens of all kinds of veggies, a fig tree that never seemed to bloom, and some assorted berrying bushes.

        We never experienced these plagues of infrastructural damage and diseases and hurt pets (4 cats and 2 dogs in total) that you describe. Idk where people get these horror stories from.

        I suppose it can happen, but that's probably in areas where such a yard is the only safe space for wildlife and people don't live with nature as a daily part of their lives.

        I s2g cityfolk act like getting brushed up against by a non-domesticated critter will give them an instant prion disorder.

        S This user is from outside of this forum
        S This user is from outside of this forum
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        wrote on last edited by
        #103

        that's probably in areas where such a yard is the only safe space for wildlife and people don't live with nature as a daily part of their lives.

        I think this is the case. In urban areas you get the rats and such nesting directly in people's homes because there's nowhere else for them to be, thanks to the absolute miles of pavement. When I've lived in more rural areas you would see a lot of animals all the time, but everyone was pretty much minding their own business. I think habitat destruction is the real problem.

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        • D [email protected]

          Trees in general do all of those horrible things you mentioned.

          I'm glad I don't live wherever you are.

          S This user is from outside of this forum
          S This user is from outside of this forum
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          wrote on last edited by
          #104

          I don't think that's the case, but trees in general are sadly not common in American landscaping, at least in my experience with urban areas. You tend to see newer (90's+) homes with very small trees that suggest the idea of nature without providing any shade or other benefits. I keep hearing about people buying older houses with big lovely trees and having them immediately cut down because it's disturbing the driveway or they're afraid of it falling in a storm. I think insurance costs may have something to do with these concerns, but it's really sad regardless.

          In California they're constantly giving out these little saplings that will grow into very functional and deep-rooted shade trees, but no one wants them because they aren't pretty and drop needles.

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          • perogiboi@lemmy.caP [email protected]

            Wow haha you must have been the city bylaw officer with the way you are so gallantly siding with the city and telling me off for planting 6 fruit tree saplings on 1+ acres of front yard. You must have been to some very small orchards! You sound very intelligent! I am truly humbled.

            ? Offline
            ? Offline
            Guest
            wrote on last edited by
            #105

            Yeah I would've been intelligent enough to look up my city's ordinance about planting multiple trees in my front yard. Especially if I'm going to be leaving for several months afterwards.

            Like it sucks you got your trees ripped out my dude, I'm sure you can try it again. Just search it up on the interwebs of your city. 100% you'll find it. If you want Ill search it for you. You can plant some awesome stuff in upstate.

            All the best to you my man.

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            • B [email protected]

              I lived in a small city (~30k) in the middle of rural texas growing up, and our main wildlife was deer, squirrels, possums, foxes, armadillos, javalinas, and birds, although we also had the occasional ratsnake or raccoons or skunks.

              We didn't really have fruit trees, but we did have plenty of pecans and several gardens of all kinds of veggies, a fig tree that never seemed to bloom, and some assorted berrying bushes.

              We never experienced these plagues of infrastructural damage and diseases and hurt pets (4 cats and 2 dogs in total) that you describe. Idk where people get these horror stories from.

              I suppose it can happen, but that's probably in areas where such a yard is the only safe space for wildlife and people don't live with nature as a daily part of their lives.

              I s2g cityfolk act like getting brushed up against by a non-domesticated critter will give them an instant prion disorder.

              N This user is from outside of this forum
              N This user is from outside of this forum
              [email protected]
              wrote on last edited by
              #106

              People are afraid of everything now. If you let your kids make their own way to school instead of driving them they may be kidnapped and murdered by the nonces hidden around every corner in your city, but also they may grow up to be independent self-reliant people.

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              • niquarl@lemmy.mlN [email protected]

                There is a pretty great website called Falling fruit to map trees and other plants that you can pick from freely.

                L This user is from outside of this forum
                L This user is from outside of this forum
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                wrote on last edited by
                #107

                I checked out my closest two locations on there. They were bith dumpsters... "Best to come after midnight".

                Not what I was expecting...

                niquarl@lemmy.mlN 1 Reply Last reply
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                • M [email protected]

                  Because having a big yard of grass that you have to mow every week while using up gasoline is the American dream and a flex for some reason.

                  ? Offline
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                  wrote on last edited by
                  #108

                  Don’t forget about the expensive chemical treatments to maintain it so the local groundwater can become contaminated …

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                  • L [email protected]

                    I checked out my closest two locations on there. They were bith dumpsters... "Best to come after midnight".

                    Not what I was expecting...

                    niquarl@lemmy.mlN This user is from outside of this forum
                    niquarl@lemmy.mlN This user is from outside of this forum
                    [email protected]
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #109

                    Yeah they do add dumpsters from shops that throw good to eat food. I know some people that lived in Danemark for a year and basically only ate food from dumpsters...

                    Maybe you could add some close to you?

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                    • N [email protected]

                      Hey. Thank you for sharing this.

                      Websites like this are the good part of the internet.

                      niquarl@lemmy.mlN This user is from outside of this forum
                      niquarl@lemmy.mlN This user is from outside of this forum
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                      wrote on last edited by
                      #110

                      You're welcome πŸ˜ŠπŸ˜˜πŸ€—

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