Ready for change?

in #life5 years ago (edited)

Are circumstances in your life, forcing you to buy a cheaper home to live in and live off the land?

What are your options?

Have you considered living out in the country and running a smallholding farm? Are you thinking of growing your own vegetables, living close to nature and running solar heating, etc. 

Dream of homesteading?

If you think it will be cheaper to plant a garden and live off a parcel of land, let me fill you in with reality. My husband and I once thought that too. 

Warning bells:

It’s more expensive than you think.  It’s like throwing money down a deep empty well. 

Especially expensive if you work far from your little farm and trying to run it at the same time, after hours and weekends can be a nightmare.

It also expensive if you are far from shops, schools and hospitals, etc. You’ll have to transport your children to school every day, for sports events too, or if you put your children into boarding schools. 

It can become horrendous if you aren’t careful:

  1. You can’t run things half-mast, without the right buildings and machinery. 
  2. You need to buy good quality stock, cattle, sheep, etc. And that also includes vet fees. 
  3. Cattle, fowls, etc have to have fencing, housing and food rationing during winter. 
  4. You have to have McIver mentality when things break down. You live with what you have, making do for long periods, until you are able to drive into town for groceries, etc.
  5. Weather conditions and hard work are required to keep things running. For example fences to fix and chasing young cattle, to bring them in when it hails, etc. 

So when we saw new people buying land and start living in the community, we used to smile to ourselves, “Shame, poor things, they don’t know what they’re in for!” 

Let us look at it from another angle… here is a rural incident… 

From great assets to dearth conditions:

Here in South Africa, fully working flourishing farmlands were given to rural citizens to farm. The reason for doing this was due to the government trying to give back homelands. 

The new owners weren’t left without technical support and advice on how to run those farms successfully. 

But sadly after a short time, those farms were no longer working. Buildings deteriorated, trackers and harvesting implements went rusty. Crops weren’t planted and the vast open tracks of land went to weeds.  

How did this happen?

In the case I saw for myself on the Springboks Flats area north-east of Pretoria, the new owner’s family didn’t support him. They were too lazy to work the farm. There was no time or labour management. 

When these new farmers were confronted, as to why their farms hadn’t been productive, they were very angry, said their nation had always been good farmers long before modern technology came along.  

It seems they wanted to run the land again like the old glory homelands days, when herding and watching cattle and goats was sufficient! 

One day followed the next… until all was lost! And some went into the city to find factory work. 

Whichever way you look at it:

  1. Whether you are running a small holding or a big farm, you have to run it like a business to make it work! Have customer outlets, keep books and records. etc. 
  2. And to run a business, you must know HOW to run it. As to farms, you must know the deeper knowledge of agriculture and farming husbandry procedures. 
  3. You can’t `run it on a wing’! You have to have a regular income to make it work. 

Next post on homesteading:

Having experienced homesteading for 21 years, I can however give a lot of advice on how to start up from nothing. 

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You made it so details:)

Posted using Partiko Android

Very importan issues here. In many countries, including mine, governments are desperately trying to get people to cultivate the land. They see now the problems that over population in urban areas create and the devastating consequences of abandoning agricultural land.
It takes knwledge, hardwork, and (why not?) vocation to be a successful farmer.
My father was a national guard, but he came from a family of farmers. at the end of his military career he bought a patch of land along a river and started crating a cocoa farm.
He did a great job in turning that bamboo forest into a decent cocoa plantation, but he did not count on how much work keeping it clean and healthy would be needed. His sons were too busy going to school or away trying to make a living and local hands were too lazy adn concerned about other affairs.
Robbers did the rest. He ended up selling cheap.

Our own homesteading venture landed up similar to your fathers experience. When our children grew up they had to live closer to the work they found, because of the distance from Johannesburg and the cost of transport to buy and run, they couldn't continue living with us on our smallholding! And we sold the smallholding for a song because of theft! But you will hear how it all happened in the series I'm doing on homesteading.

Yes dear artguru went deeply to you and wrote about the boss owner. Really, the fact that technology is to be used for farming. The first people did not understand that they used to promote old ways. And it was not for a long time. And after farming, people started working in people and factories. But that's not good.It's going to be very bad. Creation for health and health is great.

Even though farming is a tough lifestyle, it's a healthy lifestyle as you said.

I already have a house with a large plot of land, I grow garlic for sale and have my own customer base. In fact, it is difficult to establish your business. If the harvest is partly dependent on the weather.

Yes, farming does depend on the weather. That is why one has to have more than one venture (business) working on the farm. But that I will talk about in one of my future posts on homesteading.

My person opinion is yes we grow some vegeatables at our home. I m also growing some vegeatable in my home like tomato, potatos,. Now i m thinking about to grow more vegeatables at my home. Vegeatables is very important for our good health. We daily eating vegeatables. Thanks for sharing this great post.@artguru.

We're no longer running our smallholding, and now live in town. But we still grow vegetables and fruit trees in our small garden, because to buy all our veg & fruit at the shop costs too much.

Hello @artguru? How are you doing? Your review is very useful, friend. In deciding to buy land where there are many factors that must be considered. Of course to be more effective in activities. Have a nice day, ma'am.

14.7 nature is the true friend of man..

To listen to the audio version of this article click on the play image.

Brought to you by @tts. If you find it useful please consider upvoting this reply.

Absolutely great nature post to share in this platform @artguru .. really good one..
Thanks for sharing..

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