• @[email protected]
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    42 hours ago

    In my city, olive trees thrive like mad. I could probably start a business selling a few tons of brined and jarred olives a year entirely on free produce.

    Lemons, too. I could go for a 15 minute walk in any random neighbourhood and come back with 10 pounds of lemons.

  • @[email protected]
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    72 hours ago

    The town I grew up in had several public apple trees. I have fond memories of climbing the trees with my friends to get apples.

    Maintenance is a thing, though. If not properly maintained, the apples will often grow too densely, yielding only small and sour apples. I would never consider the apples in my home town to be filling food - at best it would be a small snack. It would require a lot of labour to maintain a tree to the point where it would feed people in need.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 hours ago

    We’re banned from planting fruit-bearing trees in our Florida neighborhood due to pest problems.

    This sounds outrageous from outside the state… turns out, it’s not. Oh, it is not, you have no idea. Planting those on main street would be a catastrophe.

    What I’m saying is this sounds nice in theory, but there are all sorts of knock-on effects that have nothing to do with humans, and you’d have to at the very least tailor it to the local environment and climate.

    Maybe its better in like boulder or San Francisco?

  • @[email protected]
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    143 hours ago

    I can’t recall the source, but I remember hearing that the Amazon, generations ago, was farmed. The trees aren’t distributed naturally, or something like that, we see signs of intentional crop management. However, it was done in a symbiotic way with nature so that it almost looks natural, until you look closer. With lots of fruit trees and food sources so that food was an abundant free resource.

    Wish I could remember the source for this, sounds like heaven on earth, working with nature is all we need to rediscover freedom.

    • Track_ShovelOPM
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      93 hours ago

      You’re thinking about indigenous groups that farmed parts of the Amazon. You want a rabbit hole? Google Terra preta. See you in a few years ;)

  • nifty
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    94 hours ago

    Urban planning is tricky, some times nice ideas have super tricky executions. Planting fruit/food trees in public spaces also accounts for rodents and pests, and managing disease vectors. Was just reading about fruit bats and Marburg virus spread in Central Africa…, regardless, just something that needs to be done with planning and consideration https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2013/04/23/178603623/want-to-forage-in-your-city-theres-a-map-for-that

    • @[email protected]
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      3 hours ago

      I used to live in a peaceful, quiet suburb. Eventually, a Panera appeared, as one does. At the end of each day, the Panera had a load of bread that was uneaten and un-purchased. The employees decided that the right thing to do was to give away the uneaten and un-purchased bread at the end of each day. I got some of it. Others did as well. It would be a waste otherwise! It would go into the dumpster, if nobody were to eat this delicious bread!

      Those who were the most needy eventually got word of this free delicious bread. It began attracting ruffians. Travelers. Hobos, you know—homeless people. They traveled from the deeper parts of the city to seek this golden mana.

      The locals didn’t approve of these dirty people migrating to our alcove and congregating about the back of the Panera every day. For some mere loaves of bread! It was depressing, and more importantly, it could affect our property values! What if they linger about and people think our city was one that not only catered to the lower people, but harbored them? And so, it was dealt with. The police helped to put a stop to it, bless their souls. We thank them for their service.

      Now, the citizens of this peaceful city no longer have to view the sad visages of those who never learned how to play the game of our society. The excess bread may rot locked away in that dumpster, but it is the price we must pay for the cleanliness and uninterrupted peace we enjoy.

      BIG /s. I typed this out so somebody may see how fucked-up this line of thinking is.

  • @[email protected]
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    33 hours ago

    The park that I live next to has 3 apple trees (I’m in USA). These are not grocery store apples, they’re small and riddle with bugs, this isn’t an orchard.

    When the apples are ripe, they’ll get picked by kids and familes for a couple weeks. Nobody hordes them, nobody sees it as stealing, they’re cool, and great for the community.

    I’m just sad that they’re getting old and about to die. There used to be 5 just a couple years ago. I think they may have planted a couple new saplings, but I’m not an arborist.

    Fruit trees typically don’t live as long as other trees, that’s probably why parks and rec usually don’t plant them. Having to replace an apple tree every 25 years as opposed to a Maple, Oak, Sycamore, Pine, Elm, Cedar every 100-200+ years, kinda an easy choice. With that said, I like it, and think it’s worth. More parks should have a handful of them.

  • @[email protected]
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    -22 hours ago

    it costs money to take care of trees like that. There’s a lot of work you need to do to make sure the fruit comes out the correct way.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 hours ago

        How about we just tax every billionaire by 2% of each of their total income, capital gains included and use that money on food banks and to give every law abiding homeless person a home?

        Instead of weak half-measures like throwing free food out into the streets

  • @[email protected]
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    197 hours ago

    Lol lmao. The right to the fruit of something is literally one of the kinds of Roman property law that informs European ideas of property rights.

    Fruit trees are mostly just expensive to grow vs other kinds and can be unappealing if fruit spoils or attracts other animals. E.g. you probably wouldn’t want to play on the grass underneath an orange tree on all the little bits of orange after possums have at it.

    • @[email protected]
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      145 hours ago

      Visit Portland. Lots of neighborhoods grow fruit trees.

      And the fruit falls to the ground.

      Nobody is going around selling them.

      • ✺roguetrick✺
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        23 hours ago

        Watching the tree to see when the fruit is ripe and then carting around a ladder to pick it? That sounds like a fucking job.

      • @[email protected]
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        55 hours ago

        As someone who lives in Portland, yes.

        People stealing fruit from trees is the least of my Portland worries.

      • Waldowal
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        35 hours ago

        How acceptable is it, if you can reach a plant / tree from the sidewalk, to pick someone else’s fruit? Would that be considered weird, or totally acceptable behavior?

        • @[email protected]
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          22 hours ago

          In Hawaii it’s quite funny to see, because it if can be reached, it can be taken. So there are these hilarious fellas who have these baskets on long poles, and at the end of it there’s this little hand/grabber thing. They reach out as far as they can over the fence, press the button at the bottom, and fwoomp! There goes the fruit from the tree into the basket. I remember my cousin staking out avocados waiting for them to get ripe.

          • Waldowal
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            34 hours ago

            And I mean just like 1 or 2 pieces. Not backing up a truck or anything. In case that changes your answer. Thanks

            • @[email protected]
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              24 hours ago

              My dream is that people could live in supportive communes or whatever, so this seems fine to me.

        • @[email protected]
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          13 hours ago

          If it’s overhanging public property it’s fair game. The owner has plenty of fruit on their side too I’ll bet. If they take issue with it they can guide their plant so it’s confined to their property. That being said I wouldn’t be reaching over the fence to yank a cucumber or apple.

    • @[email protected]
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      246 hours ago

      No offense to you personally, but I hate this kind of premature defeatism. Like… yeah, some people are jerks and try to take advantage of things. Put rules in place and enforce them as much as the people in charge care to.

      I know it’s strawmanning to bring this up, but people use the same argument to say "We shouldn’t have food stamps for hungry kids or welfare for needy families or subsidized housing for people without homes because people will abuse it. Yeah. Some people will, and others will suffer because of their greed. But so many more people will continue to suffer if we don’t even try because we are too scared of The Undeserving boogeyman. Not every tree will be taken advantage of, and as the sense of outreach and community grows, abuse of it will fall and it will be worth it. I guarantee it…

      • @[email protected]
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        35 hours ago

        Honestly it’s really telling on them.

        Like you can’t do nice things because X. So they don’t do it.

    • M137
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      55 hours ago

      In the US, probably.

      Here in Sweden, there are public fruit trees and bushes, herbs etc. all over the place, and very very rarely does that happen. I live a 15-minute tram ride from the centre of the second-largest city and have within a 10-minute walking distance of my apartment several kinds of plums, cherries, currants, apples, pears, other berries and most common herbs, edible flowers and so on, all in random public places. We also have several “fruit groves” around the city, larger green areas specifically for publicly available fruits and more.

    • @[email protected]
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      135 hours ago

      This sounded plausible until she said they poured bleach on the ground. Then it had the smell of bullshit.

  • AnimalsDream
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    208 hours ago

    I’ve been told that this is a no-go for city planners because the sheer quantity of fallen fruit can be a walking hazard, and no one wants the legal liability. What it comes down to is that “free” fruit trees would require additional ongoing maintenance costs. Nothing nefarious, just logistical issues.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 hours ago

          As opposed to the neighborhood dogs shitting all over?

          And yeah having pollinators back would be helpful.

          Bringing nature back is a good thing.

    • stebo
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      97 hours ago

      what if the trees are planted in a park, far from the road?

      • Track_ShovelOPM
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        177 hours ago

        How fucked is it that our first thoughts are about cars and sidewalks?

        • stebo
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          12 minutes ago

          Because fruit on a grass field isn’t a hazard? Also who said anything about cars? Cyclists use tge road too and it’s a much larger hazard for them than for cars. You’re the one thinking about cars here, not me.

          • Track_ShovelOPM
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            74 hours ago

            No doubt, but look at the black and white thinking in this thread. We can’t have fruit trees at all because they might interfere with sidewalks, or because city planners might get in a huff.

            I’m not discounting the legitimate concerns of trafficability or zoning, but to write it off completely for these concerns is trash. If we can engineer a tailings dam and plan for 100 year floods that might ruin it, then we can figure out a way to permit fruit bearing trees in cities.

            • @[email protected]
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              12 hours ago

              I think people are thinking more that if you want to feed people just give them food you buy is more cost effective.

    • @[email protected]
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      48 hours ago

      I imagine if there were trees all over every street in town there would be a lot of mushy ass fruit swarming with flies on the ground.

      It’s not a stable enough logistics chain to be viable, like, If I think “I’d like to possess a bowl of apples” I’m not going to like, patrol the streets and pick apples to that end.