Tuesday, March 10, 2020
Grow Your Own Food - Eat Locally
My Buff Orpington layer flock (a batch of chicks I acquired in June of 2019), along with 4 Heritage Rhode Island Reds, and 3 Barred Rocks make a total of 25 laying hens. They are watched over by 3 Buff Orpington Roosters. This flock is about to be joined by 19 Buff Orpington pullets and 1 cockerel from the October 2019 batch of chicks.
I’m currently getting an average of 15 eggs a day. When the pullets begin laying eggs that will potentially double over time.
So far I only have one egg customer and am trying to use up eggs as quickly as I can. I also give eggs away to anyone who comes to visit. I’m hoping to get more paying customers in order to offset the cost of grain. I see people looking at the sign as they go by, but people have gotten into the habit of buying everything in one place, in large corporate owned warehouse or grocery stores.
That’s something we need to have a conversation about. If you’re my age, you remember that a lot of grocery stores were owned by people who lived in the community. Remember that? If you don’t it’s because the mom and pop stores of yesteryear are all but extinct. That actually came about from a corporate business practice of moving into a community and underpricing products to drive smaller businesses out. Once they have eliminated the local competition, they can now raise prices and offer products of their choice. Not necessarily products that people in the community want or need, or are good for the community. People get used to the “choices” that are being “offered” to them and eventually they will buy what they are “told” to buy. That’s why we no longer have fresh local bakeries, local butcher shops, and local grocery stores in every community. That’s why local nurseries have mostly disappeared. Book stores...All the local businesses that used to make up “Main Street” and “Downtown” in towns and cities, are all gone.
Okay, so what? Where am I going with this? This is not a nostalgic stroll down memory lane for me. There is a point to that last paragraph. The point is, what happens when we have a pandemic (like the one we’re facing right now) that impacts the supply chain of food? When people panic, they hoard. They stockpile. And that creates a problem because suddenly food becomes scarce.
So what to do now? Plant food. Right now. Plant in window boxes, on balconies, on patios, in gardens and vacant lots. Learn to forage. Get cities and towns to plant food plants instead of ornamentals all over the place. Trees that bear fruit. This is really important. When I went into town for my usual shopping trip, I wasn’t thinking about stocking up. But I noticed the shelves were a little barer than usual. When I started talking to someone stocking shelves at the co-op, he told me how Corona Virus was causing interruptions in the supply chain. I hadn’t thought about it. My response was to buy some quick growing cold weather crop seeds. It’s still cool here, but I could get seeds started and transplant them out. Things that grow at this time of year will be mature in 45 days. That’s mid to late April. I realized that there is no time to waste here.
So I want to encourage everyone who can to grow what they can. The smaller the space, the more intensive food production you can potentially get out of it. No space is too small. And we can all be a bit more creative about what we think of as a garden.
Why aren’t we growing more food locally?
Wednesday, March 4, 2020
Spring Chick Update
On Sunday I moved 35 Cornish Cross chicks outdoors. I had to do some repair work on their little house, because the nesting box portion of their house in falling apart. I got the house on Amazon, one of the last purchases I ever made from them. I had a gift card that more than half covered this house, but it’s the true definition of flimsy. Never the less, it does the job, as long as I stay on top of repairs. And it’s perfect for this batch while they’re still small and getting used to being outside. They will soon outgrow it. And as I’ve learned through experience, chickens get attached to their homes and don’t like to be moved. But for now this will do quite nicely.
The 15 Buff Orpington chicks and 1 (smaller than the rest) Cornish X were moved into the newly vacated brooder and are happy with their new space, it being double what they were in. The single Cornish X is starting to grow at last and getting feathers and will soon join the rest outside. The young Buff Orpington chicks will continue in the brooder for another two to four weeks depending on how fast they grow and weather conditions. Then they’ll go outside too, in the Birch Grove Cottage I built for the October Buff Orpington chicks, which are now 5 months old and are in the process of being integrated into the existing layer flock (Buff Orpington chicks from last June).
Everything cycles.
The 15 Buff Orpington chicks and 1 (smaller than the rest) Cornish X were moved into the newly vacated brooder and are happy with their new space, it being double what they were in. The single Cornish X is starting to grow at last and getting feathers and will soon join the rest outside. The young Buff Orpington chicks will continue in the brooder for another two to four weeks depending on how fast they grow and weather conditions. Then they’ll go outside too, in the Birch Grove Cottage I built for the October Buff Orpington chicks, which are now 5 months old and are in the process of being integrated into the existing layer flock (Buff Orpington chicks from last June).
Everything cycles.
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
An Alternate Reality: Episode 3-Making A Difference?
In episode 3 (recorded and posted on 3/3), I talk about the things I do to make a difference even when I don’t believe it will.
I didn’t go into a lot of detail in what I said about voting on the recording, mostly because I was having trouble with my recording tools and so I was distracted and didn’t say all I would have liked to on the subject. I’ve gone into a little more detail here.
I didn’t go into a lot of detail in what I said about voting on the recording, mostly because I was having trouble with my recording tools and so I was distracted and didn’t say all I would have liked to on the subject. I’ve gone into a little more detail here.
On Voting?
I don’t believe my vote actually counts. I don’t believe it matters who I vote for because I think the people who consider themselves “in charge of the political process” are going to pick for us because they don’t trust people to choose their own leaders and they think they know what’s best for us. Never the less, I still vote as if it absolutely makes a difference. So even though I don’t believe my vote means anything, I still vote as if it all depends on me.
Because I will not give in to those who think they know what’s best for me, or what’s best for all of us. They couldn’t possibly know because they can’t see through my eyes, or feel what I feel. They don’t live my life and they don’t live yours.
I will not make it easy for “an established political elite” to rob me of my voice or my right to participate in democracy. I vote because I think we can do better. I vote like I believe it will make a difference.
Because some day it might.
On Climate Change
Another topic I spoke on, was what I do to actively fight climate change on a personal level. I spoke at some length about that, so I won’t say more here. It’s about choices.
An Alternate Reality
You can listen to An Alternate Reality at this link.
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