this post was submitted on 18 Jun 2023
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Vegan Gardening
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A community for vegan gardeners to share their successes and learnings.
Vegan gardening (or veganic gardening) is gardening without the use of animal agriculture including common inputs like manure, bone and blood. It also avoids chemical fertilizers and pesticides. Instead of these elements veganic gardening uses crop rotation, mulching, compost, green manures, etc to replenish the soil and minimize loss to pests.
Everyone is welcome to participate, but if you are not vegan or a vegan gardener, please refrain from posting about non-vegan practices or debating the merit of this method.
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What are some of the ways that you think do affect them or betray your morals? I have never looked at interacting with animals through this lens - I'd like to make sure I'm not inadvertently doing something harmful!
Oh I don't really have anything super concrete. Some of my personal feelings are along the lines of, I would love to have dogs in my life but feel bad about owning or controlling them despite the good life I would give (what is a natural or good life for an animal in this modern world?). Or I would love to have a homestead and do animal sanctuary work someday but would be concerned about my ability to care for them.
I've heard people say being vegan is the moral baseline and that pushes me to think and consider my morals beyond that even if just as thought experiments.
I think I understand!
Yeah, we can't share the space with animals due to by-laws, but I am not sure I trust myself to have an equal relationship with them yet. I would love to have a small sanctuary when we get a bigger property in the future, but I would have to be sure I was able to rid myself of thinking of them in terms of how they could be "helpful". For example, geese eat slugs and ticks, so if we welcomed a goose into our home it would have to be because they needed a stable home not because they needed a stable home and we wanted them to eat the slugs.
It's awesome you do these thought experiments. I'm sure it helps you be a kinder person.
That is excellently put and very much along the lines of what I was thinking. Like if I used the manure from animals I take care of I think I would feel conflicted but perhaps give some of that back to the natural land near me and make sure I have other plants sources of fertilizer. It seems like a big learning process that you can't really know the answers to unless you start trying situations like that, but still good to think about