How green is my balcony!


"We have been farming for a year," To reveals. "Allan likes to help me catch worms. We can be there for an hour and don't realize the time passing. We grow choi sum, papaya, beans, pea shoots and carrots, and use egg shells and tea bags as fertilizer. It's all organic."
Nowadays, To grows enough fruits and vegetables to meet her family's needs, but says she is into farming primarily for the pleasure of it. "It's therapeutic," she says. Farming has led to greater community bonding, she adds, as neighbors often exchange seedlings. It's also fun to watch what the person next door is up to, "such as our Indian neighbors tending the
herbs they use in their cooking."
Pryor agrees that successful urban farms strongly emphasize community building. The biggest challenge, he says, is for urban people to have a sustained interest in farming. As farming is an everyday activity, people who participate need to take ownership and responsibility. "Farms need constant gardeners," he says. "We saw a lot of HKU students interested but when exam time arrives, they all disappear."
- China records surge in holiday travel during the eight-day break
- Top court warns against farmland encroachment, illegal mining
- Wenchang Aerospace Science and Education Center upgrade nears completion
- Chinese Navy hospital ship completes medical service to Fiji, heads for Tonga
- Visa-free entry policies boost inbound tourism during National Day holiday
- Two giant pandas debut after quarantine in Beijing