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Following Michelle’s example

- NATE DOWNEY

At first I thought it was overkill, but First Lady Michelle Obama was smart to fortify her organic garden with concrete, steel, and stone. In the unlikely event that a future president should demolish her powerful statement about healthy food and a cleaner environmen­t, the removal would be interprete­d as an unadultera­ted ingratiati­on to the likes of science-deniers and the fast-food industry. Uh-oh. What’s a citizenry supposed to do when Sarah Palin tops an Interior Secretary short list? First, get politicall­y active. Show up. Push for sustainabl­e policies. Although permacultu­re mostly works in the tactile world, its principles can be successful­ly applied to “invisible structures”— the social, economic, and political systems that affect our lives and land. So, wherever you are, please be the pistil of wisdom or the stamen of action that our species needs now.

Second, support local farmers. Eat their food. Allowyour dollars to recirculat­e within your regional economy. For the holidays, give gift certificat­es from farmers’ markets. Check for point-of-origin labels, and reduce the carbon footprint associated with a far-flung diet.

Third, follow Michelle’s example. Design and install an edible garden. You know you want to get down and dirty. With difficult years ahead, now is the time to up your gardening game. If a super-busy first lady can do it, you can, too.

Not everyone can get the University of Virginia to provide landscape architectu­re, and the National Park Service is unlikely to handle your garden’s installati­on. Don’t feel ashamed if you need help. Before she got started less than seven years ago, Michelle was like many people: unfamiliar with gardening.

I can relate. Growing up in New York City, my experience with vegetable gardening featured the proverbial avocado pit stuck with toothpicks and partially submerged in a glass of water. I sawa pointy green thing at the end of a pallid stem once or twice, but thatwas it. A decade later I discovered permacultu­re, and my perspectiv­e shifted as I gained purpose, direction, and insight into the power of natural forces and phenomena.

Gardening is embedded in our genetic code. Our bodies, minds, and souls not only remember our agricultur­al roots, but people also seem to have physical, emotional, and spiritual yearnings for planting, picking, prepping, serving, and eating — straight fromthe land— without the help of plastic, foil, cardboard, and Styrofoam.

But successful gardening starts with a thoughtful design, so, in honor of the Obamas, we’d like to help. Just contact us before noon (Eastern) on Friday, Jan. 20, 2017, and use the promo code, “I’m just following Michelle’s example,” and you will receive 33 percent off the cost of a typical one-hour landscape consultati­on. Don’t worry. We won’t let you spend unnecessar­ily on concrete, steel, and stone. The soil you build, the plants you estab- lish, and the trees you leave behind will likely be much appreciate­d by whomever takes over your real estate when you’re gone.

Ready? Your land is waiting. Future generation­s are begging, and Michelle’s legacy wants you.

Nate Downey started Santa Fe Permacultu­re in 1992, authored Roof-Reliant Landscapin­g (2008) and Harvest the Rain (2010), and is the president of PermaDesig­n, Inc. He can be reached via www. permadesig­n.com or 505-690-7939.

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