Lori Erickson set a goal for this summer and fall: Buy no produce. That doesn't mean she won't be eating veggies. She'll be growing them -- all of them -- on her small city lot in northeast Minneapolis.
"I grow everything I can -- more every year," she said. Her homegrown vegetables taste far better than what's available in the produce section, she said, and she knows they're completely organic because she starts them from seed and uses no chemicals. "They're my babies," she said. "A lot of the plants from the stores have had chemical fertilizers."
Erickson, who chronicles her endeavors on her garden blog, is in good company this season. Urban vegetable patches are sprouting all over the Twin Cities, seeded by a perfect storm of environmental, cultural and economic factors.
"Interest has increased dramatically," said Paige Pellini, owner of Mother Earth Nursery in Minneapolis, who said many customers tell her they're tearing up part of their yards to grow vegetables this year.
"You can't control gas prices, but you can control your food sources," she said.
That's one reason Danika Hoffmann started gardening about three years ago, after buying her first house in Minneapolis' Bryn Mawr neighborhood. "The first year, I had flowers and one cucumber plant. I enjoyed being able to harvest something from my little garden," she said. "It feels so wholesome and satisfying to grow your own food."
Her garden now includes peppers, tomatoes, onions, herbs and parsley, and she enjoys checking her plants' daily progress.
"There's always something new happening," she said. "It's like having a little pet outside."