The (Early) Education of a Homesteader
I have heard several questions along the lines of, “how did you learn how to do that,” “where did you learn to do that,” “when did you learn to do that,” or “did you grow up on a farm,” and so on. The short answers to the “where and how” questions are, between the covers of books, on YouTube, or by trawling the internet, and by asking folks who know more than I do, either in person or in on-line forums. The answer to the “when” question is, recently, in most instances. And to the final question, the answer is “no.”
In fact, in my inaugural post I stated: “I also realized that what I do for money, provides directly for precisely none of my or my family’s needs, in fact I am quite practiced in doing nothing that can be bartered for anything, except for money. This last piece of the puzzle is tantamount to having one’s “man card” revoked, or at least it was in my opinion. Until 1995 I had never had a vehicle in a repair shop, I had never had a maintenance man of any sort in a home I owned, I had never paid anyone to mow my lawn, I was a fairly proficient welder with oxygen and acetylene, and could recharge my air conditioner properly with Freon, I had fairly recent memories of successfully hunting and fishing, and if I dug deeply enough, trapping. Until only recently though, I had done none of that for the better part of 20 years. And for food that is grown from the earth, I was almost completely blind to its sources; I didn’t know that broccoli was a seed head, or that Brussels sprouts were a bud and the plant a cultivar of the cabbage group, and worse.”
So in short, my ignorance, and lack of skills, or at least a lack of recently practiced skills, were key to my decision to homestead.
Read more