Victorious Green: An Interview with Morgan Carey
The following article, based on an interview with Morgan Carey, founder of Victorious Green, describes his holistic, healing perspectives on sustainable building, organic gardening, and permaculture principles.
During our initial interview, Morgan was candid about his childhood, speaking openly and plainly. Although he was born with cerebral palsy, grand mal and petit mal seizures, and scoliosis, he sees his childhood challenges as simply “inspiring.” The ensuing descriptions of his challenges and victories as a child were nothing short of mind-boggling.
Morgan’s mother also encouraged him as a child, fortifying him with the wisdom that “there was no such word as ‘can’t.’” He recalls her wise counsel: “She said I could achieve anything if I worked hard enough. I was ‘special’ and had ‘no limitations.’” Morgan’s mother not only honed his self-confidence through inspiration and guidance, but through action and discipline. Childhood violin lessons and judo training imbued him with an overall belief that he could bend reality to his will (a concept that served his super star younger sister, Mariah, brilliantly).
Morgan and Victorious Green were actually late bloomers. After graduating from high school, Morgan explored a diverse journey that included the halls of academia, the New York City’s insatiable night life, the baroque Italian fashion scene, the competitive music industry and the hardcore fitness consultation business. When I asked Morgan for the common thread, he explained that the consistent theme was his uncommon ability to “kill anything. Plants in my vicinity just died, even cactus!” I laughed, knowing that we share this trait in common.
Morgan came to shift his focus from treating his body as his enemy to thinking of it—and the world at large—as his friend. As he described, “Instead of making demands of my body, I started asking with kindness.” Similarly, Morgan sought harmony in his food gardens by minimizing his reliance on external organic inputs for fertilizer and pest mitigation, relying instead on biodiversity by planting Manzanita, Asclepias, Alyssum, Lavender, Bee Balm, and Nasturtium. By embracing the principles of permaculture—the design and use of land based on ecological and biological principles—he has adopted a much more balanced approach to life, nutrition, training, and Earth stewardship.
Today, Morgan’s gardens are sustainable building masterpieces. Outfitted with a water filter, timer, and drip irrigation, the design is visually compelling. The boxes are constructed entirely of biodegradable materials, made by hand with mortise-and-tenon joints that require no hardware or glues, sealed with beeswax and finished with food-grade hemp oil to enhance the wood grain’s natural luster. His gardens feature a discreetly hidden bamboo drip irrigation system. The north-facing sea grass trellis support expansive, vining bounties of squash, beans, peas, and melons. Morgan’s original 6'x4'design generally feeds a family of three, but a double-sized premium design is gaining popularity as is a smaller, apartment-sized terrace design. Victorious Green provides intelligent garden design based on permaculture principles and emphasizes vertical growth and biodiversity. Because Morgan plants space-efficient produce like melons and squash, the design is both beautiful as well as a high-volume source of healthy food.Morgan Carey could be easily described as an introvert and a philosopher, as are many artists. He admits that he feels most at home when surrounded by plants and animals, and he speaks of the “oneness” he experiences while he gardens—when he puts his hands in the soil—as an energetically and emotionally revitalizing experience. He reflects, “Colors become more vibrant, each sound crystal clear, the sun warms your skin and suddenly you are so aware of the majesty of nature and the interplay of all life great and small.” He asked me, “Have you read Rachel Carson?” I admitted that I had not and immediately scribbled her name in the left margin of my notes. I could hear Morgan smile over the phone, asking me what I’m planting, curious about my own projects. I described my xeriscape garden briefly, and then told him of my plans for a butterfly garden next spring, vegetables the spring after.
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Mon, Aug 29 2011 at 11:36 AM EST