Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Rob Kay's avatar

We have 400 year old farmhouses going to ruin here in much of rural Scotland... nobody wants the hassle or cost. But they are lovely.

I hand grow veg and fruit, I have raised hens, but the economics of it are shocking: this is a hobby, not a business.

Expand full comment
Sukey Watson's avatar

Many people think they need the perfect land for a homestead. Not true. I live on a steep rocky and ledge ridden slope in NE VT. I terraced land for nut and fruit trees as well as annual vegetable gardens. I built up the soil with what was available on 'y own land and what neighbors offered me on their land ( I.e.they let me scythe their fields down and ai collect the hay for mulch and soil building). My water is well water but that is not secure enough for me. I installed a large cistern, enclosed it, and also use that space as a root cellar since water is such a good capacitor. That enclosure is underneath a small room we had added on and both the room and enclosure are fully insulated. We plumbed the cistern to be able to get water out with a hand pump should we need to do that and also,plumbed it to run into the pressurized system and through the filters. We don’t have suitable pasture for large livestock, but we can run pigs, goats, and chickens. We only heat with wood and in winter cook on the wood cook stove. We are developing coppicing stands to make firewood easier especially if we have to some day resort to hand saws only. We built carts that can be easily operated by hand to move heavy things like tree trunks and large rocks, one just has to understand the principals of leverage. We keep it simple, use what we have, make as many hand tools as possible ( a good skill ) and of course can, pressure can, dry food ( in the barn attic on racks, or in the greenhouse,mor on the rack system that fits over the wood stove - all of which we designed and built ourselves; each place takes the same standardized racks 2’x4’ that we built. So we turned hard scrapple land into productive land. The tractor was a big help in the initial stages when we were building terraces. We trade for raw milk and also have 900 tapped maple trees for maple sugar which we can also sell and trade, even though Vermont is now making that business very difficult because they do not want people using their diesel boilers due to “climate change”. Of course they would like the farmers to stop raising cows, beef cows…also due to the religious fervor promulgated by the climate fear mongers….

Expand full comment
109 more comments...

No posts