Agriculture

AWARD-WINNING VISUAL ARTIST IS ALSO AN URBAN GARDENER

- BY YVETTE TAN

MORE AND MORE PEOPLE are falling in love with growing their own produce. This includes city dwellers whose day jobs have nothing to do with agricultur­e.

Bru Sim, who runs the award-winning graphic design studio Electrolyc­hee with her husband Marcus Nada, is an example.

Sim describes herself as an “artist and lazy gardener” whose interest in urban farming started when she, her husband, and their daughter moved into their own place in a treelined village between Cubao and San Juan. “I decided to make our backyard my experiment­al ‘farm,’” she says.

“Our garden is maybe 3x9 meters,” she says. “We halved the garden with a neighbor. It was just grass with border planters, but we enjoyed planting herbs and veggie seeds from grocery produce.”

Her first success was being able to grow a basil plant from a cutting taken from a Vietnamese restaurant. “The original cutting came from a pho side dish, and its grandchild­ren are still producing food for us eight years later,” she says.

The couple also acquired a small property in Rizal a couple of years ago that they are developing into an agroforest­ry farm. “To learn more, I joined the Philippine Native

Tree Enthusiast­s (PNTE) group and attended seminars PNTE and our forester recommende­d, such as the free ones at the Agricultur­al Training Institute (ATI). (I) also invested a lot of hours on Youtube,” Sim shares.

CHOOSING TO PLANT HERBS

AND VEGETABLES

The artist chose to grow plants that the family could also eat. “Though I do enjoy all kinds of plants because they ground you, prioritizi­ng edibles is more gratifying than growing ornamental­s. So much so that to maximize our grow spaces, I’ve replaced our existing

ornamental­s with, say, blue ternatea and native mulberry (morera),” the artist shares.

Another major reason Sim chose to grow edible plants is because she was inspired by the resilience of her parents and grandparen­ts during WWII and after. “I’m third generation Filipino-Chinese and my boomer parent, growing up with her WWII parents, hoarded everything. I think living sustainabl­y (composting, segregatin­g, growing your own food) is a positive reworking of my parent’s learned habit,” she says. “That’s also why I, now officially a crazy plant lady, walk around with secateurs, pruning overgrown bougainvil­leas and snipping off dama de noche cuttings.”

SOME EDIBLE PLANTS THAT CAN GROW

IN A CITY GARDEN

Sim thinks of the garden as both an experiment and a work in progress. “It looks a mess but my husband is helping me organize it,” she says.

The garden is “a 4-foot deep lasagna garden layered with lots of organic matter: 20 sacks worth of coconut husks, months’ worth of collected leaves, wood and twigs, kitchen waste, and ordered soil.”

There are a lot of things one can grow in a small plot of land. Sim lists what they have in their less than ten-foot garden:

“Organic plants that we eat and use. Potted herbs (tarragon, mints, basil, stevia, rosemary and lavender), medicinals (red days essentials like sambong and mugwort a.k.a. damong maria—every woman should plant these two, oregano, lagundi-which can be grown as a shrub in a container, blue ternatea, roselle), fast-growing leafies that grow from cuttings (moringa, talilong, alugbati, kangkong, talbos ng kamote).”

Also,

“other edibles: banana, papaya, calamansi, peppers, turmeric, pechay, lowland kale (got free seeds from Joy of Urban Gardening center inside QC City Hall compound before lockdown).

“Small trees: balimbing (starfruit/carambola), madre de cacao, and an overgrown aratilis— trying to dwarf this because cutting off branches will just make the tree coppice and grow more,

but for now it provides much needed summer shade to our dischidias, native tree saplings, and two raised veggie beds.”

Whether newbie or expert, gardeners will always encounter challenges. Sim shares some of hers: “I think the fertility abundance might be taking a toll on our malunggay, papaya and kakawate trees though, they’re not looking so great despite being easy growers. On the other hand we got a lot of recruited plants due to the added fertility: gabi and other elephant ears, ferns, aglaonemas and edible mushrooms.”

SHARING THE LOVE OF NATURE WITH

THE NEXT GENERATION

Sim is conscious about sharing her appreciati­on for nature and growing one’s own food with her daughter. This starts with food and goes all the way to foraging. “Our entire household eats the same food. So what we eat, our toddler eats also,” Sim shares.

“Did you know that kids now are so deficient in nature that some don’t even know how to walk on grass? Ever since (our daughter) was a baby we made sure that the outside is part of her environmen­t, with us around she has a safe place to run, touch, smell, taste and feel.”

So far, the results have been excellent: “She’s 3.5yo now and we’re happy she has a sense for the world. Having access to a little green is important to human developmen­t. Our foraging expedition is a game; a nature walk where we engage our senses and identify plants, insects and animals we see en route.”

Sim shares her gardening victories and discoverie­s on social media, particular­ly her Instagram account, @halabruha/. She also talks about her adventures in foraging for edible plants around the metro. (Photos from Bru Sim)

 ??  ?? The family invested in their garden soil. “First we had the old house’ foundation removed (which caused our garden to flood during the rainy season). There were 2-3 truckloads of constructi­on debris removed,” Sim shares.
The family invested in their garden soil. “First we had the old house’ foundation removed (which caused our garden to flood during the rainy season). There were 2-3 truckloads of constructi­on debris removed,” Sim shares.
 ??  ?? Sim’s daughter poses in the family’s backyard before they turned it into an edible garden.
Sim’s daughter poses in the family’s backyard before they turned it into an edible garden.
 ??  ?? The family harvested two veggie bed’s worth of pechay and mustasa in early March.
The family harvested two veggie bed’s worth of pechay and mustasa in early March.
 ??  ?? Back in 2019, the fami family’s backyard was just a grass area bordered by planters.
Back in 2019, the fami family’s backyard was just a grass area bordered by planters.
 ??  ?? Sim also has potted herbs and ornamental bananas in front of the house to maximize their urban garden area.
Sim also has potted herbs and ornamental bananas in front of the house to maximize their urban garden area.
 ??  ?? Roselle is one of the edible flowers that grow in the garden.
Roselle is one of the edible flowers that grow in the garden.
 ??  ?? All that organic matter attracts beneficial insects, frogs and birds.
All that organic matter attracts beneficial insects, frogs and birds.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines