This is my other find. I've been wanting a woodstove for a long time. Currently our only heat is propane, and that is not sustainable long term. Also I don't have any way to cook in the event of a power outage, and I'd like to have one. A woodstove fulfills both these purposes. It's a little rusty, but I can clean that up and paint it with the special woodstove paint. It's been sitting in some guy's garage for about ten years and now he's tearing down the garage. He says it was in perfect working order when he put it out there. It only cost me a hundred bucks, so I can't go too far wrong. The only question is where and how to install it. But that is for another day. Getting it into a pickup, hauling it home, and getting it out of a pickup and into the playroom was enough work for one day.
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Steps Toward Sustainability
This is my other find. I've been wanting a woodstove for a long time. Currently our only heat is propane, and that is not sustainable long term. Also I don't have any way to cook in the event of a power outage, and I'd like to have one. A woodstove fulfills both these purposes. It's a little rusty, but I can clean that up and paint it with the special woodstove paint. It's been sitting in some guy's garage for about ten years and now he's tearing down the garage. He says it was in perfect working order when he put it out there. It only cost me a hundred bucks, so I can't go too far wrong. The only question is where and how to install it. But that is for another day. Getting it into a pickup, hauling it home, and getting it out of a pickup and into the playroom was enough work for one day.
Posted by Aimee at 8:40 PM 5 comments
Labels: homesteading, self-sufficiency
Friday, November 27, 2009
Local Thanksgiving A Success!
My local thanksgiving feast was a great success. The turkey, although admittedly a bit tougher than a conventional bird, was delicious, and exactly the right size. The beef roast my brother-in-law brought was terrific. These were the big ticket items, and they were both raised within a few miles of me (the beef across the street).
Posted by Aimee at 11:12 AM 2 comments
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Now What?
Posted by Aimee at 6:52 PM 3 comments
Labels: fall, locavore, recipe, self-sufficiency, trade
Monday, November 23, 2009
Gentlemen, Start Your Ovens!
The cooking has begun. Today I am baking pumpkins and making puree. I decided on a pumpkin custard (made with goat's milk) for the no-gluten/cow milk people. Also I will have a regular pie.
Posted by Aimee at 11:08 AM 10 comments
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Giving Thanks: Not As Simple As It Seems
I am hosting Thanksgiving this year, for the first time in about six years. In my family, there is always a tussle for the right to host major holidays. My mom, although it is beginning to be a bit of a strain for her, would still like to host Thanksgiving, Easter and Christmas every year, and sees it as her matriarchal right to do so.
Posted by Aimee at 4:37 PM 10 comments
Labels: self-sufficiency, winter
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Look! Up in the Sky! It's a Bird, It's a Plane, It's.....
Posted by Aimee at 1:12 PM 7 comments
Monday, November 16, 2009
Homebrewers Make Good!
Hooray! Several weeks ago, a couple of college age homebrewin' boys came to press apples with me. Even though I have burned in the past by homebrewers who take all my juice and never deliver the promised cider, I decided to take a chance on these boys. What the heck, I already had a freezer full of juice. So instead of taking 50% of the fresh juice (my usual take), I asked for 25% of the finished product back. I figured odds were 50/50 I'd never see them again.
Friday, November 13, 2009
I Can't Believe It's November
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Goats Are Pure Evil
Sure, they're cute, but in fact they're pure evil
Just as I was arriving at my sister's house for a visit this morning, some twenty miles away from my house, I got a phone call from my neighbor. It seems he had ten goats in his front yard eating his flowers.
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Houdini Goats
They are escaping again. I understand this is a common and recurring issue with goats... although clearly not the brightest of domestic animals, they seem to be savants when it comes to escaping. Not that we have the very best of fences...
Monday, November 9, 2009
Frugal Winter Fare (i.e., Leftovers)
Winter in my part of the world is not a lot of fun. We rarely get snow, and when we do, it's usually the heavy, wet variety that is not much of a pleasure. Winter mostly means month after month of short dark days filled with stinging rain or sleet, combined with high winds that chill one to the bone as one is trudging through the semi-frozen mud to feed the animals twice a day, and brief, infrequent glimpses of the sun between thick, ominous grey clouds.
Posted by Aimee at 12:24 PM 2 comments
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Homero's Favorite Sandwich
As promised, here is the recipe - if you can call it that - for my husband's favorite sandwich.
Posted by Aimee at 1:30 PM 6 comments
Labels: husband, mexican food, recipe
Saturday, November 7, 2009
Armed And Kind of Sort of Ready
I bought a handgun today. The husband of a good friend of mine, who is an expert, has been guiding me through the process, from choosing the type of gun I wanted to finding the exact one. Alas, he lives too far away to actually come show me how to use it.
Posted by Aimee at 5:39 PM 2 comments
Friday, November 6, 2009
Winter Preparedness
There was a big windstorm yesterday. We didn't lose power here (there are few trees up here to interfere with the power lines) but my sister lost hers for most of the day. She is better set up to weather a storm than we are: she has a woodstove to provide heat and cooking facilities. I've been meaning for years to get a woodburning insert for our fireplace so that we can have heat in an emergency, but of course an insert won't address the cooking issue. Unless perhaps I can find one that sticks out a ways from the fireplace. We do have a wide stone shelf in front of the fireplace that would work. Or maybe I need to get a freestanding woodstove and put it somewhere else. I haven't got it figured out yet. There's also the second fireplace in the playroom we could cook on if need be.
Posted by Aimee at 1:44 PM 3 comments
Labels: preparedness, self-sufficiency, winter
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Salvage City Gumbo
When you are trying to be self sufficient, you can't countenance much waste. When you've spent several hot hours back in August pickling okra, as I did, you don't want that effort to go to waste, even if your pickled okra turns out to be so salty as to be completely inedible.
Posted by Aimee at 4:21 PM 2 comments
Labels: fall, recipe, self-sufficiency
Speak of the Devil....
No sooner do I post that nothing is going on than I discover that the black hen has hatched out two chicks. Being up in the hayloft, they would fall down and die if I didn't remove the whole nest, so I cleaned out the rabbit hutch and gave her a nice cozy nest to hatch out the others in - if there are any others. She has six more eggs. I'll keep y'all updated - I know you're on pins and needles!
Posted by Aimee at 1:58 PM 2 comments
Quiet Days on the Homefront
I'd be writing more, but there's just not that much to write about. This is the quiet time of year. We still have the rent-a-buck here, and we are still living in a faint miasma of funky goat ball pheromones and watching the goats butt heads and tails together, but other than that, there's not much going on.
Posted by Aimee at 11:58 AM 5 comments
Labels: brewing, butchery, cider, goats, self-sufficiency, winter