Crops can blight, animals can get diseases. I don’t know much about hydroponics but I know that bacteria are a concern. What food source is the most reliable, the least likely to produce less food than expected?

  • Izzy@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I think the answer is potatoes. Other root vegetables might be equally reliable.

    • morhp@lemmy.wtf
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      1 year ago

      In spring, I put a few sprouting potatoes in the compost, waited a few month and since July or so I have a huge bucket of homegrown potatoes that I have problems to use up. So very easy food source. Can recommend. There were a few pill bugs/ potato bugs who love the taste of the plants, but their damage had not much effect on the harvest in the end.

    • Blizzard
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      1 year ago

      the answer is potatoes

      Aha! Poland will survive in the post-apocalyptic world.

    • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      Not what I heard from an Irishman…

      But jokes in poor taste aside, yeah. I’d have to agree. A lot of grains can also do really well, but potatoes are hearty, have a lot of what you need to live, and require no attraction work to make into food after you dig them out of the ground. Onions would also be high on the list, but aren’t as viable for keeping you alive as long when eating them, nutritionally.

      • cnnrduncan@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Kinda hard to have a stable food system when an imperial power is stealing most of your food in a rather genocidal fashion!

      • Alexander The 1st@mstdn.ca
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        1 year ago

        @ColeSloth @IzzyData As I recall, the issue with the potato famine was more that, if you’re *only* growing potatoes, while they grow just about anywhere, they’ll also get diseases really easily.

        Which is why on the Lemmy instance linked to, people mentioned a variety of crops is the trick.

        So, potatoes, but *also* onions, and *also* wheat, and *also* corn is the true answer, as I understand.

      • Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 year ago

        The problem with the potatoes in Ireland at the time is that they were basically a monoculture and all had the same susceptibility to the same diseases.

        If you grow them as they’re traditionally grown in Central and South America, you have hundreds (or thousands!) of varieties of potatoes planted in different climate zones by utilizing mountains. You have basically no risk of a total crop failure as long as it rains or you can irrigate them.