From growing a variety of fruits and vegetables like brinjals, tomatoes, lemons, potatoes, chilies and others; the urban gardeners are also looking at ways to popularise the practice of organic farming as a way of life.
"My mother had an ornamental garden. After the birth of my child, I decided to add vegetables to it. I want that at least my child should be fed on fresh, home-grown vegetables. The burgeoning rates of food combined with their poisonous components have forced me to think otherwise," says 40-year- old Ashish Agarwal, a freelancer.
"You can use kitchen waste and composorb, an organic composting aid, to grow plants even in your terrace. The process of cultivation is very easy and the cost is also very low," environmentalist and bio-manure expert Narender Kumar told PTI.
Kumar, who works as a waste expert for Tihar inmates, is of the view that waste management should be the next step to the widely popular 'Swachch Bharat Abhiyan'.
"At Tihar, the inmates produce 4-5 tons of organic waste. They sold the compost they made out of kitchen waste as manure to the farmers last year," says the environmentalist.
Moving beyond the minimum required space of 50-80 cm for organic terrace farming, the gardening enthusiasts are experimenting with variety and venue.
