I would personally like to see a resurgence in the victory garden movement. H.O.A.'s shouldn't be able to require residents to only have monoculture lawns dependent on fuel consumption for mowers and blowers, and chemical fertilizers, herbicides, pesticides, and fungicide. The more communities change from that outdated enculturation, the more abundance there will be to share among communities. This is essential for areas with food deserts as well, when the only options are fast, processed, and junk "foods,"
I would personally like to see a resurgence in the victory garden movement. H.O.A.'s shouldn't be able to require residents to only have monoculture lawns dependent on fuel consumption for mowers and blowers, and chemical fertilizers, herbicides, pesticides, and fungicide. The more communities change from that outdated enculturation, the more abundance there will be to share among communities. This is essential for areas with food deserts as well, when the only options are fast, processed, and junk "foods,"