Homesteading is important to me because.... -- Homesteading Challenge 1steemCreated with Sketch.

in #homesteading7 years ago (edited)

With the name of Haphazard Homestead, you might guess that homesteading is important to me. You’d be right about that – but why is it important to me?

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All this came from my homestead - and went into a 100% free homestead smoothie.

This post is an entry into the homesteadingchallenge 1 being run by @kiaraantonoviche. The challenge is to finish the sentence, “Homesteading is important to me because…” I was encouraged to do this challenge by @lyndsaybowles. Otherwise, I don't talk about this very much.

Homesteading is important to me because it helps me live a self-determined life grounded in stewardship to a piece of land that provides for me and my community.

Let me break that down into a few pieces. None of this is meant to be judgmental of anyone else. I’m very clear – this is the “Haphazard” Homestead, not the “I Have Got It All Together All The Time” Homestead. Like Fiona Apple says, “My method is uncertain. It’s a mess, but it’s workin’.”


Self-determination

I’m under no illusion that I will ever be completely self-sufficient, independent, or secure from hazards, threats, or annoying rules and regulations.

Early in life, I had views that I needed to prepare for societal breakdown. I think it’s a personality trait – as a 5th grader, I bought the US Army book on “Survival, Evasion, and Escape”, along with a big buck knife and a backpack. Those were the first big purchases I ever made as a kid! I have no idea why, or where that drive came from.

Before too long, though, I realized that medical issues, environmental hazards, job loss, job demands – or even opportunities that take complete family commitment – are the common risks. And they can push people right to the edge of a financial or lifestyle cliff, if not over it.

Homesteading gives me enough security and independence to take risks and make demands in life that, for the most part, have paid off. That sense of security and independence came from being able to easily get most of my own food under most any circumstance, and having no debt, once I had paid off my first homestead, in my 20s.

Rather than trying to avoid working for someone else, homesteading has allowed me to have a rewarding career, on my terms, in a highly competitive field where conformity rules. I’ve had the career that I want, rather than being defined and confined by my career. I’ve been able to take multi-year breaks, work at home, and work mostly on projects that I created and wanted to work on. And that’s rare in my field.

With a homestead, no matter what happened in my career, I have had a place to retreat, be grounded, restore my energy and attitude, and provide me with enough food and money that I could get back on my feet, if I needed it. My homestead could take care of me, if I took care of it.

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Knowing that my homestead can support me, has helped me be more self-determined in other areas of my life.


Stewardship - A Connection to the Land

A connection to the land around me has always been a big part of who I am. That’s one reason I like to forage for food and crafts. It connects me to the land, where ever I am. On public land or rented land, it always seems like I’m taking advantage of the situation, since I’m not putting back into that land over the long run.

With a homestead, that connection to the land becomes a real commitment. My homestead will take care of me, if I take care of it. But it’s more than that. My land has nature and it has a history.

A couple lived here for over 60 years, in this house on this land, supporting 10 kids and a mother-in-law, all on production from 1.3 acres and the income of a small-appliance repairman. They grew almost all their own food, including a cow and calf every year, and preserved it, too. Before them, this place was a walnut and prune plum farm. Before that, native people lived from the abundance of the wild plants and animals here.

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This rosebush is an old homestead rose that's been here for decades.

Stewardship means that I honor the agriculture and homestead legacy of this land and work to bring back some of the native plants, too. The town has grown around my place, so I have close neighbors, who are in the city boundary. But my place is still classified as a country farm, so I have a lot fewer rules to watch out for than my neighbors. This land has Class I soil - while there is soil equally as good in other places, there is no soil better, anywhere!

So my responsibility is to keep my footprint on this land small, to keep the soil healthy and productive, and to keep nature going strong. And if I’m smart, I can arrange to keep this place as a retreat for nature and producing food, long after I’m gone.


Food And More

I’ve been a food provider as long as I can remember. I helped my dad forage wild food and tend the garden even at seven years old. Even in my early 20s, sharing rental homes with several housemates, I gardened every possible inch of the property and foraged a lot of food from a wide territory. I enjoy growing and finding food the way other folks enjoy making music or art.

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My homestead provides me with a lot of food.

Having my homestead makes it easy for me to eat well, all year long. I grow fruits, nuts, and vegetables. I store and preserve a lot, too – canning, freezing, dehydrating, fermenting, and pickling. And I eat my yard, foraging a lot of wild plants, including weeds, flowers, seeds, and tree leaves.

I like being able to eat many more kinds of plants than are common in grocery stores. There are so many kinds of plants that are good to eat - and so many parts of food plants that are often ignored, but really good, too, like the buds of sunflowers or rose petals!

I know many people struggle to eat fresh, healthy, affordable food. Gardeners have a strong tradition of sharing what they grow. Homesteading lets me help my community by providing hundreds of pounds of produce to my local food bank.

My homestead produces more than food, though. It provides me with firewood, craft materials, poles and stakes to use in my gardens, well water, food for wildlife, beauty, and so much more.

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I like bringing some of my produce to my local food bank.


What Do You Think?

Well, that’s way more about myself than I usually write about. I know I’ve been fortunate in my life and could not have set up my life this way without the help of other people over the years. Having a homestead isn’t everybody’s goal. But it would be nice if everyone had access to plenty of good food, and enough security and independence to have a self-determined life.

  • What is the history of the place you live?
  • Do you grow or forage any of your food?
  • What does homesteading mean to you?
  • How do you connect to nature where you live?


** Haphazard Homestead **

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*** foraging, gardening, nature, simple living close to the land ***

All content is 100% Haphazard Homestead!
My YouTube channel: Haphazard Homestead

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Self Determined Life, I like that. Upvoted and Resteemed...."I am here to help preppers by upvoting and resteeming survival, preparedness, and sustainable living content. Don't forget to use the #preppers tag in your posts. If you are on facebook, you can also share your posts in this group so our members can help upvote and share your posts. https://www.facebook.com/groups/steemitpreppers

It took me awhile to sort out the difference in my motivation from security and independence. I'll change one of my tags - thanks for the suggestion!

You have a wonderful story, it is so awesome that you love the land as much as the family that lived there before you. You are caring for you little piece of the world in an admirable way. Respect for nature and honoring your life's path is tops in my book. Great post.

Thanks, @sunscape! I've been fortunate, that's for sure.

Beautifully written, very inspiring.

Thanks! Glad you enjoyed why homesteading is important to me.

Que bueno

Wonderfully written; inspirational.

It is in God's hands

Thanks. I know I'm fortunate. My grandma always said, "God may plant the flowers. But somebody has to pull the weeds." Then she would have me pull the weeds, lol! ; )

My grandson is here visiting for the week. May I quote your grandmother to him?

haha -- yes, indeed! I heard it a lot from her, and it only brings me happy memories. I hope your grandson enjoys the saying as much!

How is this post not more popular? All of the good reasons!

Thanks for those nice thoughts! I homestead for the happy reasons. And it keeps me off the streets, lol. ; )

:P

Thank you so much for your post I am a homesteader in the very early stages and many of your pictures excite me. I have followed you and look forward to your future posts.

Glad you enjoyed my photos. I like how my homestead supports me with so much great food, that's for sure. I hope your homesteading is going great, too! Good soil and water helps a lot!

Dear
Dear thanks for reciving me in this red, i am not sure about what could do or what write
But you inspired me to writte about the foraging, every people should practice this, as a life style
My parents teach me the importance of the natural and fresh food and it is the foraging collect or catch your food by ourself.
I am very pleasure with you for sharing our life style, i hope continuing share and enjoy great and wonderfull ideas, recipe and post, as you say our career some times changed our lifestile but we should our pasion as you.
Thank you so much

Thank you for such nice words, @galberto! That connection with the land around us, and the bounty of nature, is wonderful to experience. I'm glad that your parents taught you that, too! Happy foraging!

:) :)

I enjoyed every word of this. Your way of living is an inspiration! Thank you for being such a great steward of your land and please do preserve it so that when you're gone it lives on. What do you do to your soil to keep it at Class 1? (Also love the fiona apple reference :) she was my jam in middle school) Resteemed!

Thanks, @jaymorebeet, for the resteem, too! This place will make a good pocket park with community gardens after I'm gone, and I volunteer for a local group that can make that happen. But I hope that's still a few decades away, lol!

Class I soils are so forgiving. They structurally have great drainage, yet can hold moisture well, too. They aren't subject to erosion. They are deep soils. They have good mineral composition and structure. My soil is a silty-clay-loam. I have never found a subsoil layer -- according to soil information for my property, my topsoil is more than 12 feet deep. Topsoil! Even if it gets compacted when it's wet, it recovers quickly -- in months or even weeks. The worst thing I could do is cover it with concrete or buildings! I do keep putting organic matter back into my soil, but the Class designation has to do with its basic physical characteristics.

And I'm happy to know another Fiona Apple fan! She's still one of my very favorites. : )

Now you've got me interested in the class of the soil around my neighborhood...Probably a 100. Hah! - Man that amount of topsoil is amaaazing!! Also.. i made a decision to do karaoke on a cruise to F.A.'s criminal. Oh boy....

haha -- I had to laugh about the karaoke. It would be hard for anyone to sing any of her songs!

It's so informative to find out about your local soil. I'll put that on my list of posts to write and maybe even make a video. I can't get to that until mid-August, I don't think. But there's a lot of information about our soil, thanks to the old USDA Soil Conservation Service (now the Natural Resource Conservation Service).

Yeah I can kiiiind of laugh about the karaoke - but then the laughter turns to tears when I realize that I let myself do that....oh boy....
Looking forward to your local soil post!!

Thanks for a most wonderful post on homesteading. I love your take on all of this. The idea of the stewardship of the land, and beyond the food aspect of it. Which is also important. Thanks for putting out a great post about your world of the gardening/gathering life.

Thanks! It does go beyond gardening. It's tempting sometimes to put buildings on this land, but it's such good soil! And it's a little retreat from all the town around it now. So I want to keep it that way.

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