Saturday, October 12, 2019
The end of the harvest has finally arrived. Once again I am relieved but saddened at the same time. I will miss the wonderful sweet taste of a red juicy tomato freshly plucked from the vine. I will also miss evening walks through rows of soft dirt freshly hoed between plants and the smell of tomato vines. I harvested enough to make tomato sauce,salsa, ketchup,BBQ sauce plus some soups for the year.
I was fortunate enough to get several bookcases many years ago to store the canned goods. They once belonged to a lawyer in Greenwich Village ,NYC that my father's Aunt Hattie worked for as a legal secretary. That was in the early 1900's. They have sliding glass doors that help to protect the jars from cellar moisture and dust and they also look nice.
I still have to dig up our potatoes but that can wait for another week or two.The soil protects them from deteriorating until the cellar is cold enough in the fall for storage. Once they are harvested the garden clean up begins. Uggghhhhh ! I'm not looking forward to that.
Each year I try to learn something new or at least perfect something I couldn't get the hang of in the past. Last year I finally found a recipe for ketchup that actually had true ketchup flavor. This past year I succeeded in making apple cider vinegar and it tastes and smells great.I used Cortland apples which are the only apples that I know of that don't turn brown. The apples remained white and the vinegar a lighter color. Since I can't test the pH I can't use it for canning but I use it for other things.
This is also a time of year to save seeds. My window sills have been a ripening spot in my kitchen for tomatoes and now have seeds scattered and drying . Soon the sills will have new basil plants growing into the winter and in late February egg cartons will rest upon them as starter beds for tiny new tomato plants. I'll transfer them them to the greenhouse in the spring once the temps rise above freezing.
So, what will I be doing the remainder of the year and winter ? Well, I will probably sew. I learned to make puppets for Junior Church Bible story lessons and VBS last year. I will probably make a few more. It's fun. We live on a farm. There is always PLENTY to do.
Monday, January 21, 2019
Caring For Our Fellow Man in disaster Part 3 :Food Source management
In the previous 2 blogs I addressed some ideas of water and sanitation management and what we could possibly do to help others with our own resources.In this section I want to address HELPING OTHERS HELP THEMSELVES when it comes to food provision. Our own foodstores will be limited and will only last so long. I'm thinking of long term ideas for replenishing food . Chickens can be reproduced quite quickly if you have an incubator but since electric might not be an option, does anyone have any ideas of how to make an incubator in a way that the temp could be maintained ? (God Bless broody hens. You can barter her chicks later for needed resources you don't have).
Meat on the menu will have to be a thing of the past ,at least for awhile.Don't kill the goose that laid the golden egg.Chickens can forage the woods & sustain themselves and they provide an egg every day or 2 depending on the season and availability of enough light hours. Vegetables would be the smartest way to go. Eggs & beans are a good source of protein. Cabbage & potatoes & beans will keep you alive in a famine.Potatoes , beets and other root vegetables can be grown along the border of the woods as long as there is enough sunlight. The plants would appear to be weeds and remain hidden from possible thieves.
Beef cattle should not be slaughtered , if possible. As long as enough pasture is available they should be allowed to reproduce and just enough milk taken off the cow for cheese making and some milk for drinking until the calf can hold its own. Rural areas will have to revert back to where we were 100+ yrs ago with small farms and a cow , goats , chickens in the yards. Calves , chickens, goats & sheep can be sold off or bartered to the next guy down the road or neighboring communities.Manures will be needed for fertilizer . Horses would revert back to their original purpose... transport.A good community security system will of course be necessary.That's where community militias will come into play.
Heirloom seeds should be started in the house the end of February for tomatoes ,peppers and other plants that do better if started ahead of time & transplanted when warm. Half an egg shell makes a perfect starter pot for seeds and fits nicely in an egg carton.Two or three egg cartons ( lids cut off & placed underneath for extra support) fit nicely on windowsills and will give you a nice tomato crop. Start more if you have the seeds for others who may need plants.Every tomato, every cucumber, every pepper will have tons of seeds. Remember others.
Solar methods of dehydration to preserve your harvest should be checked out , copied and kept on the shelf for needed reference.
Any other thoughts on this ?
Sunday, January 20, 2019
2. Caring for our fellow man in disaster
WATER:
In the previous blog I discussed helping others in a disaster situation. In the event of an E.M.P. attack or any prolonged electric grid failure , water will quickly become a problem. City water will eventually give out as pumps from reservoirs fail. Well water from rural areas rely upon electric water pumps to draw the water out of the wells. I am mainly addressing rural home dwellers that have access to well water or some other water source. Youtube has some great sites teaching you how to access your well for water with some very simple methods. We will need water for drinking and water for sanitation. Once we know how to go about accessing it and have the simple gear to do it we should share this info with neighbors & friends for preparedness before the unthinkable happens.However, not everyone thinks on this wavelength assuming that electricity will always be there for them. Therefore, having access to water is important and sharing it is not only merciful but necessary to keep panic levels and violence at bay.
When I finish 2 L. bottles of soda or juice I rinse them out and fill them with water. I store them away and cover them with plastic to keep dust off. These can be shared with others and they can keep the vessels for refills.
Visit the neighbors and show them how to access their water. If they have the equipment laying around to make their own access, (PVC pipe, etc.~ see Youtube videoes), then encourage them to show others.
Creek, pond & lake waters can be used for non drinking needs. If you have access to this water share it and pass along to others who don't. If you have a lid on your septic tank you can dump human waste down there or use a 5 gallon bucket of water to flush your toilet.
I also think about those people who will be traveling the roads on foot and will need a water source. Some sort of a set up should be available to them along roads for drinking water as well as for washing. Any ideas ?
Water purification methods ,boiling, etc are readily available on prepper sites, Youtube, etc.
As long as you have ice or snow you can distill water by placing a pyrex bowl inside a larger pot of water. Make sure there is a few inches of space between the walls of the bowl and the walls of the pot.Bring water to a boil and cover the pot with an upside down cover with ice or snow on it. This causes condensation from the evaporating water as it boils and will drip into the bowl.
In the previous blog I discussed helping others in a disaster situation. In the event of an E.M.P. attack or any prolonged electric grid failure , water will quickly become a problem. City water will eventually give out as pumps from reservoirs fail. Well water from rural areas rely upon electric water pumps to draw the water out of the wells. I am mainly addressing rural home dwellers that have access to well water or some other water source. Youtube has some great sites teaching you how to access your well for water with some very simple methods. We will need water for drinking and water for sanitation. Once we know how to go about accessing it and have the simple gear to do it we should share this info with neighbors & friends for preparedness before the unthinkable happens.However, not everyone thinks on this wavelength assuming that electricity will always be there for them. Therefore, having access to water is important and sharing it is not only merciful but necessary to keep panic levels and violence at bay.
When I finish 2 L. bottles of soda or juice I rinse them out and fill them with water. I store them away and cover them with plastic to keep dust off. These can be shared with others and they can keep the vessels for refills.
Visit the neighbors and show them how to access their water. If they have the equipment laying around to make their own access, (PVC pipe, etc.~ see Youtube videoes), then encourage them to show others.
Creek, pond & lake waters can be used for non drinking needs. If you have access to this water share it and pass along to others who don't. If you have a lid on your septic tank you can dump human waste down there or use a 5 gallon bucket of water to flush your toilet.
I also think about those people who will be traveling the roads on foot and will need a water source. Some sort of a set up should be available to them along roads for drinking water as well as for washing. Any ideas ?
Water purification methods ,boiling, etc are readily available on prepper sites, Youtube, etc.
As long as you have ice or snow you can distill water by placing a pyrex bowl inside a larger pot of water. Make sure there is a few inches of space between the walls of the bowl and the walls of the pot.Bring water to a boil and cover the pot with an upside down cover with ice or snow on it. This causes condensation from the evaporating water as it boils and will drip into the bowl.
Caring for our fellow man post disaster
One thing I have noticed on "prepper sites" when discussing SHTF scenarios is a lack of prepping for "the other guy". "What is the first thing you would do?", was the heading of one of the worst case scenario discussions. Amazing how many, after gathering their loved ones, would head for the house, lock the doors, pull down the blinds and poke the barrel of their shotgun out of the corner of the upstairs window.
In the event of an E.M.P. attack , which would take down the grid and incapacitate most vehicles, those survivalists away from home would immediately recognize what was happening and grab their bugout bag and either head for home or the hills to get out of the city. Wide sweeping panic would hit the general population There would be a run on banks for cash, grocery stores for all they could carry and beer & liquor stores would very quickly have empty shelves.Looting would become the general mode of payment since electricity had ceased functioning."It's all about me and my family" as we enter survival mode. The streets of cities, interstates and rural areas will be filled with vehicles that came to a sudden stop . Bewildered passengers would begin wandering off highways in search of help after they realized the futility of trying to restart their engines. Other immediate disasters will quickly follow, but let's not go there now.
What about our fellow man? What about "Love thy neighbor?" How should we react? In the beginning of panic situations you will have to exercise great caution . Help where you can but watch your back.What I would like to address here is, let's say you got lucky and are at home . Since I live in a rural area of the mountains in the midst of farmlands I already have a head start on survival and we planned it that way years ago. I'm not sure what I would do if I lived in the city, in an apartment building.So, I am considering what do those that have some semblance of control over their environment do for others ? What will be their immediate needs? Sanitation, water, food, shelter, warmth. Not in that order necessarily.
1. SANITATION
Public privys will need to be erected quickly or people will defecate along the roads , as we have seen happen in areas where the homeless take residence. Human waste has been a problem in third world countries without sewerage systems.Disease quickly will become epidemic Bangladesh has ventured several years ago on a project that places 3 privys in neighborhoods, holes in the ground away from drinking water sources , that are moved and then composted into. Public outhouses could be erected along roads , maybe every 2,000 ft or so against a wooded area that could be easily dug.Those large laundry detergent containers with spouts can be set up in them for running water for hand washing. ( This would also help to ward off wandering populations from knocking on your door to use your bathroom).
In the next blog I'll address water . Does this sound crazy ? Nope, it's not.
In the event of an E.M.P. attack , which would take down the grid and incapacitate most vehicles, those survivalists away from home would immediately recognize what was happening and grab their bugout bag and either head for home or the hills to get out of the city. Wide sweeping panic would hit the general population There would be a run on banks for cash, grocery stores for all they could carry and beer & liquor stores would very quickly have empty shelves.Looting would become the general mode of payment since electricity had ceased functioning."It's all about me and my family" as we enter survival mode. The streets of cities, interstates and rural areas will be filled with vehicles that came to a sudden stop . Bewildered passengers would begin wandering off highways in search of help after they realized the futility of trying to restart their engines. Other immediate disasters will quickly follow, but let's not go there now.
What about our fellow man? What about "Love thy neighbor?" How should we react? In the beginning of panic situations you will have to exercise great caution . Help where you can but watch your back.What I would like to address here is, let's say you got lucky and are at home . Since I live in a rural area of the mountains in the midst of farmlands I already have a head start on survival and we planned it that way years ago. I'm not sure what I would do if I lived in the city, in an apartment building.So, I am considering what do those that have some semblance of control over their environment do for others ? What will be their immediate needs? Sanitation, water, food, shelter, warmth. Not in that order necessarily.
1. SANITATION
Public privys will need to be erected quickly or people will defecate along the roads , as we have seen happen in areas where the homeless take residence. Human waste has been a problem in third world countries without sewerage systems.Disease quickly will become epidemic Bangladesh has ventured several years ago on a project that places 3 privys in neighborhoods, holes in the ground away from drinking water sources , that are moved and then composted into. Public outhouses could be erected along roads , maybe every 2,000 ft or so against a wooded area that could be easily dug.Those large laundry detergent containers with spouts can be set up in them for running water for hand washing. ( This would also help to ward off wandering populations from knocking on your door to use your bathroom).
In the next blog I'll address water . Does this sound crazy ? Nope, it's not.
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