
US hydroponics gardener teaches how to grow organic produce
Today we meet a hydroponics expert from the U.S., Anthony Owens. He gave up a career in international trade to dedicate himself to hydroponics with his Taiwanese wife. It began with just one greenhouse. But as his produce began to spread, more and more people wanted to buy it. Then came the opportunity to teach what he knows. Owens is thrilled to have found such a meaningful second career.
Here in the greenhouse, Anthony Owens grows organic hydroponics, including lots of veggies that you won’t find in most stores. He started because every time he came here to visit his wife’s family, he smelled a strong scent of pesticides in the air, which made him start thinking about what farming vegetables without toxic chemicals might be like.
Anthony Owens
Gardener and American immigrant
We also do it in gardens at community colleges. It went really well when we first began, and we got more and more produce. We couldn’t eat it all ourselves. So we gave it to friends and family, and they gave it to their friends, and in the end, people were asking me, “Can I buy your vegetables?” I thought, “What? You want to buy them?” “Yeah, they’re delicious and healthy!” I said, “Okay, I’ve never thought of selling them, but sure!”
Owens’s friends say he has green fingers, and everything he grows flourishes. That talent gave him the courage to pursue his gardening dream, renting a disused greenhouse and renovating it. In his first year, however, he encountered a greenfly crisis which destroyed all his hard work. But he and his wife never considered quitting. They now provide food and farming education to raise awareness about hydroponics.
Anthony Owens
Gardener and American immigrant
I’m so happy working on it. I listen to music. I can control the temperature – I’m very happy. Maybe other kids will see it and think “I could do that!” We’ve done the right thing. Whatever I think, kids, I’m doing the right thing now – it’s helping the environment, the individuals, families, and the whole world. We’re absolutely tiny. I hope we can get bigger and bigger.
Owens has come from life as a businessman in the U.S. to a farming life in Taiwan. It was a life change he never saw coming. But he loves his new work and is confident it’s the right path. Not only is he growing healthy food for his loved ones, he’s also spreading his knowledge, lesson by lesson.
This story was provided by the program "We Are Family"
Funded by New Immigrant Development Fund
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2024-03-05