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đŸ’„ 10 Crops You Plant Once That Feed You FOREVER!

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Httraj
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Published on 12/22/25 / In Homestead & Agriculture

When the collapse lasts years—not months—the only people still eating are those who planted perennials. Not annuals you replant every spring. Perennials that produce food for 20+ years with zero maintenance.
Most survival gardeners waste time on tomatoes and beans like it's a hobby. But perennials are survival infrastructure.

Plant once, harvest for decades. No reseeding. No tilling. No dependency on supply chains that won't exist.
This video breaks down the 10 most critical perennial crops for long-term food security—chosen because they survive neglect, produce serious calories or nutrition, and work in growing zones 3-7 (most of North America):

→ #10: Siberian Pea Shrub (nitrogen-fixing protein source for 50+ years)
→ #9: Sea Kale (three vegetables in one perennial plant)
→ #8: Jerusalem Artichoke (perennial potato producing 5-10 lbs per plant) → #7: Asparagus (20 years of spring harvests from one planting)
→ #6: Rhubarb (indestructible cold-hardy perennial + natural mulch)
→ #5: Chives (flavor, nutrition, immune support forever)
→ #4: Perennial Kale (year-round greens for 5-10 years)
→ #3: Good King Henry (out-produces annual spinach, never bolts)
→ #2: Egyptian Walking Onions (self-propagating, never needs replanting)
→ #1: American Groundnut (native perennial with 15-17% protein)

These aren't garden decorations—they're permanent food systems. When seed companies sell out, nurseries close, and fertilizer disappears, these crops keep producing. But perennials take 2-3 years to establish. If you wait until collapse is obvious, you're already too late.

The time to plant is now—while you can still get crowns, cuttings, and tubers. In three years, when everyone else is desperate for seeds that don't exist, you'll already be harvesting.

#perennialvegetables #survivalfood #foodsecurity #permaculture #homesteading

Sources:
USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map & Growing Guide https://planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/ (Official USDA resource for plant hardiness zones and perennial crop viability)
Cornell University Cooperative Extension - Perennial Vegetable Gardening https://cceonondaga.org/resour....ces/perennial-vegeta (Research-backed guide on establishing and maintaining perennial food crops)
Mother Earth News - Perennial Vegetables for Year-Round Harvest https://www.motherearthnews.co....m/organic-gardening/ (Comprehensive resource on perennial crop cultivation and long-term food production)
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service - Native Edible Plants https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/cons....ervation-basics/natu (Government documentation on native perennial food crops including American groundnut)
Penn State Extension - Asparagus Production Guide https://extension.psu.edu/asparagus-production (Academic research on perennial crop establishment, maintenance, and long-term yields)







⚠ Disclaimer:
This video is for educational and entertainment purposes only. I am not a financial advisor. Nothing in this content should be taken as financial advice. Always do your own research and speak to a licensed professional before making financial decisions.

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