There is a best-selling book by Elizabeth Gilbert with the simple title of, Eat, Pray, Love. I haven’t read that book (and probably never will) but the title caught my eye and got me to thinking.... If I were to write a book about my personal journey from wage slavery to full-time, home-based, self-employment, I would title it Pray, Work, Wait. It would be a story about delayed gratification and the satisfaction that comes only from praying, and working, and waiting, for many years, before a dream that was once so distant became a sweet reality.
That gratification came for me this month. I have finally quit my job as a civilian employee at a maximum security state prison. I started the job in May of 2000. In the nearly eight years of blogging here, I have written about my prison job only once (Here). I ended that essay with this statement:
“...when God makes it clear to me that I should leave, I will leave. I will shake the dust of that place off my feet and never look back.”
And that's exactly what has happened.
I was able to leave that job because I am not in debt, I live simply, and I’m persuaded that my home business, Planet Whizbang, will now support my family. I’m persuaded of that because it has done so for the past two years. We have lived entirely off the Planet Whizbang income while saving every cent from the prison job. That’s how we had the cash to buy 16 acres of land with the house on it right next to us last year (another dream come true).
My income will be slashed considerably now that I have left government employment. There will be no more steady paychecks. Perhaps the home business will earn additional money to offset the loss, but that is not a guarantee, and it isn’t important.
I am 55 years old. It is not unusual for someone who is 55 to retire after having made and saved a lot of money working in a high-paying job. But that is not my situation at all. I will, without a doubt, work harder now and in the years to come. And I will never retire (unless my body or mind fail me). But I will now be doing creative, productive work without leaving my home and land. It will be a much more satisfying lifestyle, and it should be a healthier way of life. Yes, it’s a deliberate agrarian dream come true.
Many people have a similar agrarian dream, of enjoying the freedom that comes with living debt-free on a piece of good land, with a home business that pays the bills, without being a wage slave. I offer my example as proof that it can be done. It can be done without following many of the industrial world expectations and assumptions.
But, having said that, I need to make some things clear...
First: I’m not exactly a young man anymore. Though I have been self-employed in the past, I have submitted to being an employee for a lot of years before breaking free.
Second: I have had an entrepreneurial mindset since I was in elementary school. I’ve had more money-making ideas in my lifetime than I can remember. I pursued several of them in years past, and all of them were pretty much failures.
Third: God took me through a time of extreme failure and monetary loss. I came to the realization that I had failed financially because I had strived for success with pride and arrogance in my heart, and I had made an idol of my dreams. I don’t think that I was ever outwardly prideful, but God knows our hearts.
Only when I was humbled by failure did I surrender my hopes and dreams to God. It was then that I truly trusted Him to provide, in His time, according to His sovereign plans, not mine. Only when I came to a point where I was content in Him, content in the sufficiency of His blessings, content even if none of the dreams I had ever came to fruition, and no longer striving as I once was, did the desires of my heart eventually become reality. My point is, there was a spiritual repentance and reformation in my life, and that was no small matter. Bible verses come to mind....
“Commit thy works unto the Lord, and thy thoughts shall be established”Proverbs 16:3
“Trust in the Lord with all thine heart and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge Him and He shall direct thy paths.” Proverbs 3:5-6
Fourth: though I stopped striving for success, and had a different spiritual mindset, I never stopped working. There is a difference between striving and working.
Have you heard the saying that God gives the birds their food, but he doesn’t throw it in the nest for them? God is a worker and a creator. We are made in His image. We are made to work and create. It is a blessing to be able to work. Adam's curse was not that he had to work, but that work would be hard. I would rather work in my shop, or garden, or in the woods than take an ocean cruise, or sit on a beach, or play some game. Yes, of course, there needs to be balance in life; there are times and seasons for work and play. But I believe our modern culture emphasizes play, amusement, and leisure while downplaying the importance of productive, creative work.
As so many of you who have read my writings here over the years already know, I wrote and self-published a chicken plucker plan book back in 2002. It’s an amateur but earnest book that delivers the information. I invested less than $1,000 (which was a very large amount of money to me back then) in getting the first copies of that book photocopied and comb-bound at a local quick-print shop. It was a small beginning, but it was the genesis of the home business I now have.
I never invested any other money beyond that initial $1,000. The business grew and prospered slowly for the first six or seven years. I plowed profits from book sales into publishing more how-to books, and then into making and selling various project parts.
I don’t think the average person who has never built a small business can truly understand the incredible amount of work and focus that goes into such an endeavor. Only my wife, Marlene, really knows the hours I’ve put into Planet Whizbang. Keeping up with the time demands of the home business (while still working the prison job) has been an enormous task, especially the past few years, and I couldn’t have kept it together without Marlene’s help.
But there is an energy that comes when you are pursuing an entrepreneurial project—especially when you see it bearing fruit, and realize it may be the means by which God brings you out of slavery to a dreadful job.
Planet Whizbang is not a large company, and I never envision it being a large company, though some people have suggested to me that it could be much bigger and more profitable. Marlene and I now run it, with occasional help from our boys. I like it that way. Perhaps, in time, one or more of our children, or grandchildren, can come into the business. But to grow Planet Whizbang into something beyond what our family can operate ourselves, right here on our land, would be to adopt the industrial-world business model. I am mindful that the modern approach to building a business places an emphasis on growing the business ever bigger to to achieve more profits. Such a goal is typically achieved (or attempted and never achieved) at the expense of marriages and family relationships, not to mention poor health as a result of stress. I’m a big advocate of free-enterprise entrepreneurship, but not success as defined by modern, worldly standards. I’m convinced that a small, home-based, hands-on business is all that God desires for me to pursue. And I am ever so thankful to Him for it.
My Next Project
Whizbang garden tote holding a just-dug clamp of carrots (and a few potatoes)
I am now at work on my next book. I started it last winter but did not get far before the demands of springtime came. I hope to have the book finished by the end of March (at the latest). It will be titled, The Planet Whizbang Idea Book For Gardeners. Subtitle will be: An eclectic selection of inspiring project plans, tips, tricks, and how-to advice for people who grow their own food. Among many other things, the book will tell how to make a Whizbang garden tote like shown above (UPDATE 4/14: inexpensive plans for the tote are now available at This Link). And it will explain exactly how I make simple garden clamps. I'll also have a short chapter about measuring Brix with a refractometer. Brix is a gauge of nutrient density. Those carrots in the tote above (harvested on January 30) had a Brix reading of 8%. That's half way between average (6%) and good (12%), but a long way from excellent (12%). The fact that my carrots, grown by organic methods, are only 8% Brix underscores the fact that organically-grown food is not necessarily nutritionally superior just because it's organic. And you can't judge a carrot's inward nutritional value by its outward appearance. Another chapter in my book will discuss how I intend to increase the Brix content of my homegrown fruits & vegetables in this year's garden. And I will chronicle my progress in the blog I will be publishing for readers of the book.
Gun Laws
A Ruger Ranch Rifle
I feel sorry for myself, living in the absolute worst state in the United States for personal freedom. The imperial governor of New York labeled me an “extremist” this past month because I believe the 2nd Amendment rights guaranteed to me by the Constitution should not be infringed by him and his laws. He thinks that the 2nd Amendment to the Constitution was put there to guarantee the rights of hunters. There was a time in this country when such thinking would never be taken seriously, but that is no longer the case. Prior to the governor and his people railroading their restrictive new laws into effect, I wrote a letter to the editor of the Syracuse, NY newspaper. They didn’t print it. This is what I said:
To The Editor:
When a law-abiding citizen is faced with the threat of lethal force from a person with a gun—and SECONDS count—the police will be MINUTES away. And when they finally show up, they will be armed with high-capacity, semi-automatic guns.
It is high-capacity, semi-automatic guns that give the police a fighting chance. Likewise, the same weapons give law-abiding citizens a fighting chance.
If I have, as the Declaration of Independence asserts, a right to my life, then it naturally follows that I have a right to defend my life. High-capacity, semi-automatic firearms are effective tools for defending life. That’s one of the reasons I own such guns.
When politicians pass laws restricting gun ownership, and the ability of law-abiding citizens to effectively defend themselves, the government abdicates its responsibility to protect individual rights, and it becomes an agent of tyranny.
I have nothing but contempt for any politician who is on board with any gun control law that makes it harder for law-abiding people to protect themselves. These politicians are either naive fools, lily-livered, or wicked connivers. They base their restrictive gun laws on some half-baked concept of compassion for children. If they truly cared about children (and other innocent victims of gun violence) they would acknowledge the fact that law-abiding gun owners use their firearms to protect and save far more lives than a few deranged murderers have taken with their so-called “assault” guns.
I would like to think that everyone in the world is good. Or, I would like to think that law enforcement is always going to be there in time to protect innocent people when they are threatened by bad people. I would like to think that our government will never become an oppressor of law-abiding citizens. I would like to think that this nation will never be invaded by a hostile enemy. But to believe that, I would have to totally ignore the realities of human nature, and the history of the world.
If Americans trade their 2nd Amendment birthright for the pottage of illusions offered by social engineers and media manipulators it will set the stage for a future tragedy of epic proportions. Have you heard of the Hegelian Principle for bringing about social change?... Thesis. Antithesis. Synthesis. Translation: Manufacture an issue or problem that "must" be addressed. This is often done after some sort of "convenient" crisis has occurred. cultivate a discussion about the problem, involving fear, panic and emotion. Demand a solution. Provide a solution that advances the social change you wanted to make. Such solutions will almost always involve more laws, more government regulation, and less personal freedom. Manipulating the masses of media-addled Americans is now an efficient science employed by the ruling aristocracy of corporate finance and government to advance their agenda and emasculate American freedoms. This current gun control grab is a textbook case of the Hegelian Principle in action.
If you want to know the truth about whether guns kill people or people kill people, just ask a few convicted murderers. They ought to know, right? I did that before leaving my prison job. Every murderer I asked told me that people kill people. And they knew that taking guns away from law-abiding gun owners will not solve the problem of people murdering other people.
I can assure you that all the murderers and potential murders are not in prison. They live among us. If some Americans want to ignore that reality and not own guns for self-defense purposes, that is their choice, and I don’t have a problem with it. I understand that most of those people just don’t like guns, and that’s fine too—people are entitled to their opinions. But when those people work to take away the longstanding, Constitutionally-guaranteed individual rights of fellow citizens, that’s just plain wrong. Sheriff David Clark of Milwaukee County, Wisconsin understands that people have a right to protect themselves, and he is encouraging them to do so. Good man, that Sheriff Clark!
Have you seen This YouTube Video of the police in New Orleans going into the homes of law-abiding citizens and confiscating their firearms? They disarmed the law-abiding people while armed criminals were running free and terrorizing communities. There was no due process in the taking of the guns. In one instance police tackle and drive to the ground an old lady in her home who admits that she has an unloaded handgun. That video should make every freedom-loving person in America very angry.
In the midst of discouragement, I am encouraged by the number of county sheriffs in America who are taking a principled stand agains the tyranny of irrational gun control. This List keeps growing. You can learn more about the power (and responsibility) of sheriffs to stop tyranny by watching This YouTube video of Sheriff Richard Mack. And if you live in New York state, read This Letter that I sent to 50 newspapers in New York (I think it was published in 8 papers). If you agree with it, print a copy and send it to your county sheriff with a note asking him to take the issue seriously.
The Freest Place
To Live in America
A lot of New York residents are so upset with the new gun laws that they are seriously thinking of moving out of this state. I’ve been thinking more seriously of it myself. And I’ve been researching on the internet where a freedom-thinking person can go and still be free. I found my way to This 2011 Study. You can go to that link and click on the interactive map to read about freedom in any state and see the state's ranking. New York is the least free state. No surprise there. But the freest state in the USA is New Hampshire. How can New Hampshire be the freest state when it’s surrounded by unfree Northeastern states?
Upon further investigation, I found my way to 101 Reasons You Should Move to New Hampshire (if you love liberty). That list is a part of the Free State Project, which is a movement among freedom-loving Libertarians to bring more freedom-loving people to New Hampshire, so it remains a freedom-loving state. I’m intrigued. I like Libertarians. I may not agree with all their thinking, but their emphasis is on individual freedom and individual responsibility, and I can overlook a lot of other things when that's the primary objective.
I would like to live in a place where the 2nd Amendment (and all the rest of 'em) is understood, honored and protected. I would like to live where state government is limited, where homeschooling laws are limited, where building code laws are limited, where there are no appreciable oil and gas reserves (no hydrofracking), low property taxes, no CAFOs, low income taxes, a good supply of clean water, where there is affordable land, and the land is good for farming, and there are hardwood trees along with a change of seasons.
Unfortunately, New Hampshire doesn’t meet all those criteria. I spent some time looking for land or homes on land of 15 to 50 acres and New Hampshire looks like a very expensive state.
Then I saw that Missouri is #5 on the list of freedom-loving states. I spent a lot of time researching Missouri, and settled on the south-central region of the state, around the counties of Webster, Wright, and Douglas, east of Springfield. It’s the Ozarks. I was ready to take a trip down there until I found out that the governor of Missouri is a liberal and believes that so-called assault weapons should be outlawed. Huh?!
Austerity USA?
I don't have to tell you that America is in trouble. We're going down, and the rate of decline seems to be accelerating. Our debt is unpayable. Do you realize what happens to a nation when it can't pay its debts? According to Oliver DeMille, author of the book, Freedom Shift, nations that can't pay their debts have, since 1944, been bailed out by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. He writes...
"In return for such benefits, the borrowing nation submits to "Austerity Measures," under which the IMF closely watches national policy and government institutions to ensure that the nation does nothing to jeopardize its ability to pay back its loans. This system has certainly had its successes. But Austerity also amounts to a virtual transfer of sovereignty from national government to IMF regulators—well beyond the citizenry to require accountability to effect remedies."
Think Greece. This scenario does not seem too far fetched. The snare is closing. Here's Oliver DeMille again...
"...an economic team of regulators will run our national economic policy and make our economic decisions. If Americans are frustrated with Congress, imagine their frustration with a group of international bank officials running our economy—bankers who may not have as their motive either to see us out of debt to them..."
DeMille makes the point that "economics and freedom are directly linked. A debtor nation is less free than a solvent one."
Freedom Shift
I purchased a copy of the book, Freedom Shift, on the recommendation of a friend. It is a book that covers a lot of ground, introducing a lot of ideas about where America is headed, and why, and how to preserve freedom. Many of the solutions offered reflect agrarian principles.
Chapter 5 of Freedom Shift is titled, “Hamilton vs Jefferson” and begins as follows:
“Thomas Jefferson envisioned a nation of small farm and shop owners that spread around leadership and prosperity, while Alexander Hamilton preferred a mercantile system with a few wealthy owners employing the large majority of the populace.”
I don’t have the time to go into more commentary on Freedom Shift, but I encourage you to check out Oliver DeMille’s Web Site and peruse some of the articles. Also, be sure to sign up for his newsletter and he will send you links to some podcasts.
Oliver DeMille also has a website named Four Lost American Ideals. While perusing the articles offered there I came upon Time to Get Out The Spinning Wheel, written by Stephen Palmer. Please read that article. It reiterates much of what I've been saying in this blog for many years. Self-reliance and personal responsibility is the key to individual freedom and national restoration.
Alternative Soda Pop
Though I almost never drink soda pop, I would make an exception if a store like this was in my neighborhood. This is a great entrepreneurial story. (Note to Lisbon Falls Moxie Festival Coordinator, Julie-Ann... they sell Moxie.)
===============
That's it for another month. Thanks for stopping by.
I (Herrick KImball) have been blogging here about Faith, Family & Livin' The Good Life since 2005. Browse down this column and you will discover a rich resource of contra-industrial thought, down-to-earth inspiration & useful how-to information.
CLICK HEREto view the archive of links to past Deliberate Agrarian monthly "blogazines."
My Stewardculture Magazine Interview (Part 1)
Click The Picture For Details
Delmar Ain't So Stupid...
Click on Delmar and read why I think he's the smartest of the three characters in the "Oh Brother Where Art Thou" movie
Aphorisms Of The Fathers...
And The Mothers (click the picture)
My New York Times Op-Ed Article
The Jeffersonian Solution (click the man and read the article)
Check Out My New Whizbang Gardening Facebook Page...
(click the picture to get there)
Reestablishing The Family Economy—Part 1
It's A Biblical Imperative (click the picture)
Reestablishing The Family Economy—Part 2
We Are Not Called To Be Slaves (click the picture)
Reestablishing The Family Economy—Part 3
Profile of a Free Man (click the picture)
Reestablishing The Family Economy—Part 4
Sage Advice For Would-Be Farmers (click the picture)
Corporationism vs Independent Patriarchal Units
Lyberty Hyde Bailey (1927) Read it and weep. (click the picture)
Read The Book— Writings Of A Deliberate Agrarian
…Now available as a PDF download for only $4.50 (click the picture for details)
Farming 1.5 Acres...
…And Making A Good Living. (click the picture)
Goodness, Beauty & Loving The Earth
A Christian-Agrarian Missive on God's Creation
Reading Agriphemera
We can learn a lot from the old agricultural writings (Click the picture for more details)
This Man, Now Deceased, Predicted The Economic Decline of America Back in The 1950's.
Click the picture to read about Professor Walter Prescott Webb's Boom Hypothesis of Modern History, and where we are headed from here
Agrarian-Style Economic Self Defense...
I posted this to the internet in early 2008. It is still the most practical advice you'll get for dealing with the harsh economic realities that we face now and will face even more in the years ahead. (click the picture to read the essay)
Modern Banking is An Evil System of Economic Oppression
Click the picture for details
The Coming Pension Crisis...
...And what you can do about it. (click the picture)
How To Get Through The Coming Hyperinflation
click the picture to read the 6-part series
Have You Considered Deflation?
Martin Armstrong seems pretty sure of himself (click the sign for details)
The Christian Doctrine of Work
Something's Missing in The 10 Commandmants as it is commonly known. (click the picture)
Scott Nearing's "Horse Chow"
A Four Part Series (click on any of the raisins in the bowl)
Mr. Tesoro's Story
(click the picture)
Blessed is the Man...
Reflections on "tax day." (click the old paper)
City Living?
Some Thoughts on Christian-Agrarian Community (click the picture)
A Herod Nation
Is that What America Has Become? (click the picture)
How To Remember (And Teach Your Children) The 10 Commandments
click the sad bath
Light in Our Dwellings...
Christianity + Agrarianism = Hope In the midst of a dying industrial culture (click the light)
Have You Seen My Whizbang Gardening Book?
5 stars at Amazon. Click the cover to learn more.
New From Planet Whizbang... The Old-Timer's Poultry Library
A rare and fascinating resource for the poultry lover (click the picture for details)
Take A Short Tour Of My Garden...
Strawberries From My Garden!
Grown the "E.P. Roe Way" (click the picture to learn more)
Rural Americans: Cannon Fodder For The New World Order
Click on Sergeant York to read the story.
Freedom Isn't Free (And Other Propoganda)
(click the picture)
Esther Stermer Was A Conspiracy Theorist!
Obviously the woman was a little crazy.… Right? (click the picture for the story)
How Free Men Become Slaves...
A Contra-Industrial Parable From The Okefenokee Swamp (click the pigs)
I Make Classic American Clothespins
click the clothespin and learn all about them.
Have You been to The Agrarian Foundation Article Archives?
(click the picture and go)
What Would an Agrarian Monetary System Look Like?
Well, for one thing, it would NOT be based on paper money. Click Andy Jackson for some details.
Thomas Jefferson's Warnings About Government Debt (Then and Now)
Read it and weep (click the president)
How Farmers Became Slaves To The Corporate Masters
Click on the mostly forgotton 1937 book by Professor Walter Prescott Webb and learn the sad story
Why Food?
A Christian-Agrarian perspective (click the picture to read the essay)
The Puritan Theology of Suffering...
An excellent treatise on a difficult subject. (click the picture to learn more)
A Missive On The Prosperity-Driven Life
"The desire to be rich, to have an abundance of possessions and money, is the keystone of our modern, neo-Babylonian culture." (click the picture for my perspective)
Prosperity Gospel/ Prosperity Idolatry
Click the picture to hear John Piper's powerful 2.5 minute condemnation of the modern prosperity gospel
Homo-Tyranny
... And Me (click the trap)
Agrarian Nation
Another of my online projects (click the picture)
Have You Been To Planet Whizbang?
It's my deliberate agrarian home business. Click the beet and check it out.
NEW…. Whizbang Notes
These delightful little notebooks are a great down-to-earth tool. Click the beet to learn more.
Have You Seen The Planet Whizbang Wheel Hoe I Invented?
Click The Picture For Details about the hoe and the inexpensive wheel hoe kits I sell
I Invite You To Read My Online Gardening Essays
Click on that beautiful handful of sifted compost.
The Wife Of My Youth...
A Blessed Man's Reflections on Young Love (click the happy faces)
Eulogy For Evelyn
She was my mother-in-law. (click the picture)
Ken Badman's Good Example
Actions Speak Louder Than Words. (click the picture)
Backyard Sugaring
We make our own maple syrup. Click on the picture for complete how-to details.
Have You Seen Leo Sprauer's Handcrafted Hop Hoe?
Click the picture to learn more.
Learn About Whizbang Bucket Irrigation...
(click the trickle valve)
Have You Read Roe?
E.P. Roe, that is. Click on his picture to read some excerpts from this remarkable Christian-agrarian author of the 1800s.
Masonry Stove: Tests and Tweaks
-
After stove construction was complete, it was time for a breaking-in fire
to test for leaks. And this is where the adventure began. We knew from
Permies ...
Crazy house
-
Older Daughter came into the living room the other day, laughing her head
off. It seems she had been scrolling around the website Realtor.com and
stumble...
I want to be an Ube farmer
-
This spring, I planted 120′ of Ube yams. Ube yams are prized by the…
The post I want to be an Ube farmer appeared first on The Survival Gardener.
Half of One
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Thoughts After Attending a Wedding
*Image by prostooleh on Freepix*: Image by p
In my five years as a widow
I’ve attended many weddings—
siblings, nep...
How to Make Dehydrated Apples
-
The perfect fall snack, these Dehydrated Apples are easy to make at home
and result in healthy chips with the perfect snap. Eat them plain or add
cinnamo...
I am moving to Substack.
-
Just popping in to say farewell to this era and to invite those interested
to follow perhaps a bit more controversial and challenging stream of
writings ...
Automatic Chicken Coop Door Review
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An automatic chicken coop door eliminates the need to be home at night to
close up the chickens or getting up early to let them out. Here is my
review of...
New Era Resolutions – 2024
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America continues down the path to a new era – an era characterized by an
extreme cultural split on a massive scale. Our task as Southern Agrarians
is to m...
The Homeschool Years
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I’ve wanted to homeschool our children since I carried that first precious
life in my womb. Those earliest years went fast and smooth, just these two
lit...
Delicious Recipes With Apples
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As fall apples reach their prime, take advantage of them in these tasty
sweet, savory, and comforting recipes! From drinks and salads to main
courses and...
Fall Projects
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Fall is a busy time of the year. The leaves are beautiful when they
display their colors but piled up on my decks, sidewalks and doorways not
so much. ...
David's Digest: Do We Have Our Own Gourd?
-
[image: Jonah's Gourd]
Jonah 4:5-11:
*5 So Jonah went out of the city, and sat on the east side of the city, and
there made him a booth, and ...
Choosing A Painter And Decorator Dublin
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A home painter and decorator is someone who is employed by a contractor to
paint and refurbish homes, and is also referred to as a home painter and
decorat...
The Biggest Thing Since Sliced Bread….In Bioweapons
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Often times, those on the ground, digging for things, come up with pretty
viable connections that those who are just trying to stay on top of
things…Miss. ...
Manitowoc Calling
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For the last three weeks, I’ve received an unknown call on my cell phone.
The call comes in at the same time every day, but I never answer it.
Manitowoc C...
Linthead Stomp, Act Three
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ACT THREE Scene One Setting is a drab sparsely-furnished millworker
house in Leaksville. On the wall is a 1930 calendar and a poster for The
North Caro...
The Last Farmer
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An Interview in 2001 with Marvelous Marv Grabacre From Gene Logsdon {Thanks
to Pamela Smith, an Editor with The Progressive Farmer, we are posting an
artic...
Best Home Canned Tomato Soup Recipe
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This is our favorite tomato soup recipe for canning. This recipe makes a
tomato soup concentrate canned in pint jars
The post Best Home Canned Tomato Sou...
Do you need a Water Well Bucket?
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As if the threats of war, terrorism, economic collapse, natural and
man-made catastrophes, plagues, solar flares and EMPs are not enough to
consider, we no...
Herrick Kimball Is Now Blogging At Heavenstretch
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Dateline: 23 June 2019
I've blogged on this Blogger format for 14 years. Blogger was a good place
for me for most of those years. But it has become so p...
Go Up On A Tall Mountain
-
Go up on a tall mountain,
like where your ancestors
once sacrificed to idols
and learn that you are nothing.
The post Go Up On A Tall Mountain appeared fi...
Monday walk to the barn
-
Aggy went for a walk to the barn and a doe was watching her from near the
creek. She had probably never seen a dog spinning around in a circle and of
cou...
it's summer...
-
jambaoney here!
it's summer!!
Well it has been a LONG while since i posted anything here. i was really
caught up in work over the winter and into the sp...
Three Vintage Hogs!
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Photo from "Connecticut and the Hog."
Click the picture for a larger view.
If you like pigs, you're going to love this collection of three rare,
vintage, ...
A Tribute to Dewayne Block
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This tribute was posted to the Standing Stone Honey Products Facebook page
this week. Something you find with a home business is that many people
have he...
Upcoming Farm School!
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If you’ve made it this far on this blog, you deserve a pat on the back… it
took real patience and perseverance to make that happen! The reality is
that I d...
January
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OK, so January has rolled around. The heat is here, not as bad as some
years and bringing a decent amount of rain too. The grass has come on and
the cattle...
2017 CSA Season
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Yep. I'm still here. Christmas and New Year's have past. January is time
to start thinking about taxes and gardens. Let's just think about the
gardens a...
Please don't waste your Tuesday!
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Let's set the mood first...
Okay... for those of you who don't know, I am a conservative Christian. I
have mixed feelings about the Republicans and have ...
Local and Love Pets?
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Essential Oils for Fido and Felix! Bill and I love animals and we like to
support their health as naturally as possible on our homestead. Would you
like to...
Giveaway #6Gardening When It Counts(three winners)
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This is, without a doubt, my favorite gardening book. I'm giving away three
copies of *Gardening When It Counts* to three fortunate people in this
conte...
Storing Food and Possibly the Coolest Thing Ever!
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Food storage is imperative on a homestead. You might think that goes
without saying. While I can freeze quite a bit, it is not
sustainable...meaning if t...
Here's how to subscribe via e-mail at the new site!
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Hi, Florida Survival Gardening subscribers!
Many of you asked if it was possible to continue receiving my posts on a
daily basis since I switched over to a...
Rabbit and Kraut
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David asked for a rabbit dish with sauerkraut. I didn’t have a particular
recipe, so I looked over my cookbook library and pulled a
Russian/German/Polish...
Goodbye Granny Miller
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If this weblog were one of my sheep or cows, it would have starved from
neglect! I have been meaning to post about a couple of things, but real
life somet...
boys room . . .
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The boys room, on the other hand, had paper. And lots of it! Some of it
was peeling off already, so it made it a little easier to peel the rest of
the pa...
Yeomen don't buy furniture. They make their own. (click the picture)
Yeoman Furniture (Part 2)
Waste Not, Want Not (click the picture for the story)
My Amazing Whizbang Apple Grinder
You can make awesome apple mash, ready for pressing, in no time with this homemade device. Click on the picture to learn more
We Make Apple Cider
You can too (click on the picture to learn how)
Twelve Years Old Today
He's actually 22 now, but my prayer is the same
This is William Kimball (Him An Me Is Kin)
Click on the picture for William's Story
Homegrown Poultry
Click on the picture and I'll show you how to butcher a chicken
The Lovely Marlene With A Homemade Whizbang Garden Cart
Anyone can make a Whizbang Garden Cart. Click on the picture to learn how.
My Whizbang Row Cover Hoop System
Finally Online as of 1/29/10 (click the pic)
Have You Seen Jax Hamlin's Chickens?
Click The Chicken!
This Blog Promotes Personal Responsibility And Traditional Concepts of American Liberty
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"If a community, or a section, or a race, or an age, is groaning under industrialism, and well aware that it is an evil dispensation, it must find a way to throw it off. To think that this cannot be done is pusillanimous. And if the whole community, section, race, or age thinks it cannot be done, then... it has doomed itself to impotence."
—Twelve Southerners
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The Christian-Agrarian Exodus of 1620
The Pligrims did NOT come to America for religious freedom. (click the picture)
Vacuum Bottle Thermos Cooking
Learn how to prepare and cook simple, inexpensive, wholesome meals (click the thermos bottle to read)
The Sermon I'll Never Forget
Pastor West was at Iwo Jima (click Mt. Suribachi)
Planting Potatoes With A Little Girl
"I must admit that four year old girls were once something like aliens to me." (click the pic)
Boys Will Be…. Warriors
Swinging homemade maces at each other can be great fun! (click the warriors)
Benny's Grandfather Was A Ditch Digger
And He Grew Tomatoes (click the Big Boy)
Backyard Poultry Processing With My 11-Year-Old Son
If he can do it, so can you. (click on the smiley face)
Another Summer Evening's Meal
This is the kind of food we dream about in the depths of winter. (click on the picture)
Pickled Garlic Scapes
Click on the silly boy's nose for a pickled scape tutorial
"Every Bean's A Blessing, Boys"
Dried beans present an opportunity to teach important things to my children (click the beans)
Hay Hooks
I bought my sons hay hooks, and they have gotten a lot of use since I wrote this essay