The Deliberate Agrarian Blogazine
March 2011


Dateline: 31 March 2011
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“If You Detest Slavery......”
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Yours truly next to the evaporator pan in our woodshed which doubles as a sugar shack in the spring.  The red ladder visible in the bottom corner is leaning against our house. This operation is right outside the back door. Very convenient. (click on pictures for a larger view)

In the 1825 edition of the Maine Farmer’s Almanac, the Farmer’s Calendar essay for March offers this odd bit of advice:
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”If you detest slavery, preserve your sugar maples, keep them in good order, and attend seasonably with the fittest apparatus, to the making of your year’s sugar.”
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I assume that the almanac editor is referring to the fact that sugar plantations of the West Indies, which were supplying cane sugar to America in the early 1800s, were being run with slave labor, and boycotting that sugar, by making your own maple sugar, would be an economic protest against slavery.

But I think that old advice has a perfectly appropriate modern application too. After all, most Americans today are slaves to the industrial system, working for it and looking to the industrial providers to supply their food needs. Therefore, we could paraphrase the old admonition as follows: 
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”If you detest slavery, acquire some good land, along with the tools and knowledge needed to garden, and grow all your own food that you can.”
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I know, I say this sort of thing all the time. But food self-reliance and industrial-rat-race-independence is important to me—because I hate slavery.

All of which brings me to this year’s backyard maple syrup operation here at our little homestead in the Finger Lakes region of New York state. As you can see in the above picture, we keep it real simple. I find a particular delight in making maple syrup using inexpensive jerry-built equipment. We’ve made our own maple syrup this way for more that ten years (I’ve written at length about the specifics of our operation HERE).

In the early years, as we were developing our system and learning how to make maple, our three sons helped; it was a great family activity. But one son is now away in the military and the other two, at 16 and 20 years old, are away from home much of the time, pursuing their own pursuits. So Marlene and I made maple syrup by ourselves this year.
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Marlene is the fire tender and sap boiler. She can keep an eye on the status of the boil from a window in the house and easily add wood to the fire as necessary.
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I think making maple syrup together, on a small scale, right outside the door of your house, is good for a marriage. It is a lot of work but we've had fun. You can’t have this kind of marital cooperation, shared enjoyment, and satisfaction by handing over $50 for a gallon of maple syrup made by someone else.

My specialty is getting the equipment set up, tapping the trees (I tapped 32 this year), and collecting the sap. Marlene’s specialty is tending the fire and boiling the sap down to syrup, and she is very good at it. The hotter the fire, the faster the boil. The smaller the firewood pieces, the hotter the fire. So this year I was treated to something I’ve never seen before—Marlene splitting wood.

I took pictures of the occasion, but I am forbidden to show them here because Marlene does not want all of you out there to think she is some sort of an unfeminine he-woman. So no action shots are allowed. But I can show you this one...


Marlene discovered that splitting wood can heat a body up on a cold day. No need for the scarf when you get to that point (I love it when she smiles at me like that)

And here is a picture of the finished product...


This is freedom in a quart
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All told, we have made 9 gallons of maple syrup. It looks like we might get another boil or two in before the season is over.

Mr. Murphy & 
The Nuclear Hubris
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Thirty-two years ago I was a student at a New York State University. It was the 1970s. A heightened state of psycho-decadence prevailed on campus, but I made a conscious decision not to participate. I went to the library instead. No kidding. Marlene (then my girlfriend) will attest to this. I have an affinity for libraries and spent a lot of hours there. After all, it was college (a.k.a., “higher learning”). I wanted to know more and understand more about all kinds of things, and I had the time to spare (those were the days!). One of the things I remember wanting to know about was nuclear energy.

A couple years before, while attending the Grassroots Project in northern Vermont (now Sterling College), I knew a kid who went one weekend to protest at the Seabrook nuclear power plant, which was then under construction in southern New Hampshire. He never came back to school. The rumor was that he was in jail. I wanted to know what it was that motivated him to do that.

So I delved into the subject of nuclear power and learned all about the possible and probable dangers. I came to the firm conviction that nuclear power was a foolish and dangerous technology. This was before Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and the recent meltdown in Japan. I dare say, all of these disasters were to be expected.

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Anyone who honestly looks at the facts of nuclear power technology, and who understands Murphy’s Law, will come to the conclusion that nuclear accidents are inevitable.

And if the honest looker of facts cares to conclude one step further, he must decide for himself if the inevitable pain, suffering, death, and destruction caused by nuclear power accidents is justified. Amazingly, there are plenty of people who are of the mind that it is justified. They believe the “good” of the many outweighs the human rights of an unfortunate few. It’s too bad that we who disagree can’t opt out of the consequences; it would be far better if the anguish of nuclear power accidents befell only those who support the technology. But it doesn’t work that way.

One proponent of nuclear power who I recently spoke with defended the technology by reasoning that accidents happen with any technology. He asked me, if something went wrong with his car on the way to work, and he accidentally ran over a couple of people on the sidewalk, was that reason enough to not have cars?

I told him that if car accidents had the ability to sicken and kill thousands of people and render large regions of the earth a radioactive no-man’s-land for generations to come, then, yes, we should get rid of cars.

Then he told me America needs nuclear energy because we need more electricity in order to keep our economy expanding. I asked him how much is enough? I asked how long can an economy continue to expand in a world of finite resources? That was pretty much the end of the discussion. 

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He had thought I was a conservative-minded person, taking my mental marching orders from the mainstream (pro-nuclear) conservative talk show hosts of the day, just as he does (though he doesn’t look at it that way). Well, it so happens that I am a conservative in my thinking, and I agree with some of the things those people say, but I also disagree with some of them. I don’t toe to anybody’s party line. That’s the way it is when you hold to a biblical-agrarian worldview in the midst of an secular-industrial world. I don't fit in. In some ways I am a pariah.

The thought that there might be a limit to economic growth does not set well in the mind of most Moderns. It is almost too horrible to contemplate. So, as a result, people have a lot of half-baked notions about what Obama or the government in general should be doing to solve the problem of our economy going down the toilet. They think it is possible to crank up economic growth and prosperity like we once had in this country.

Clearly, America is in denial. That happens to be the first stage of the five stages of grief popularized by Elizabeth Kubler-Ross in her 1969 book, On Death and Dying. Although the Kubler-Ross model addressed the stages of grief a person typically goes through when confronted with something like a terminal illness, it also holds true for our industrialized civilization facing terminal illness.

After denial comes anger, then bargaining, then depression, then acceptance. Personally, I think I have pretty much skipped the first four stages and gone directly to acceptance. It’s not a bad place to be, though it makes conversation with those in denial difficult. But I digress. This is about nuclear power.....



It has occurred to me that nuclear power proponents fall into three categories. There are the Star-Trek-addled science worshipers, firmly convinced that we must go where no man has gone before. Then there are the many who, in some way or another, work in the nuclear industry (few people are inclined to bite the hand that feeds them). And then there is the vast ignoranti of sheeple propagandized by the powerful allied trinity of media, industry and government; our civilization has been superbly brainwashed for generations to believe that nuclear power is a clean and safe modern miracle.

And then, POP goes Fukushima. Now we have ourselves another perfectly obvious example of how nuclear power is neither clean nor safe. It never has been. That’s a lie. It’s a lie exposed. It’s a lie plain and simple. It’s a lie even without taking into account the even more obvious dangers of radioactive nuclear waste, which remains dangerous for thousands of years, and there is no safe way to get rid of it (how's that for a legacy to our children and grandchildren!).

To find some truth in this matter we need only to follow the money. The nuclear power industry is profitable to those who not only work in that industry (as I’ve already mentioned) but also for those who own stock in the corporations that build and operate the nuclear reactors. Most people can overlook a lot of unpleasant details when there is money to be made (and especially if it can be made without doing any actual work).

It is also profit without personal responsibility. Will individual stockholders in the Japanese nuclear power companies bear responsibility for the harm done by their nuclear power plant gone berserk? No. They will lose money, but they will bear no personal liability for their complicity. That is, of course, the “beauty” of corporations. Would stockholders invest in nuclear technology if they could be held personally responsible to the damages? Not a chance. Only a fool would do such a thing. And only a foolish nation would allow such a thing.

The fundamental problem we have here is not nuclear power as much as it is greed and hubris.

I’ve heard that the Obama administration is unwavering in its support for nuclear power as a solution to greenhouse gas emissions and America’s energy independence. Huh? What about defending the defenseless, punishing evildoers, and protecting individual rights to life, liberty, and property? Aren’t those the most important responsibilities of a legitimate government? But, alas, government is subject to corporate greed and hubris too.


So now, as radioactive contamination from Fukushima  continues to despoil the land, the air, and the ocean, the nuclear industry is in damage control. It’s time to round up the usual industry experts and fellow travelers to reassure the gullible masses that everything is going to be okay. There’s nothing to worry about. We will learn from the mistakes of Fukushima. We will tweak our systems to make nuclear power even safer. It can’t happen here. We won’t let it. We know best. Don’t worry. Be happy. 

This is, after all, what the masses want to hear from the great minds that lead them.

Of course, the Japanese nuclear industry, in cahoots with  government, gave it’s subjects exactly the same assurances—before Mr. Murphy showed up.
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How I Stopped The State of New York From Putting A Nuclear Waste Dump in Cortland County
(well, sort of)
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Who would want a nuclear waste dump in their neighborhood? Not me. Probably not you. And I’ll bet precious few of those people saying how safe nuclear power is would want a nuclear waste dump in their “back yard.” But back in 1989 the State of New York came up with a plan to build such a dump in Cortland County, which borders the county I live in. The small city of Cortland is only a half hour drive from my house.

The rural communities of America are considered prime locations for industrial-age dumps of all kinds, and such communities are often not very good at resisting the attacks once they’ve been targeted. But Cortland county was an exception. There was a groundswell of public opposition to the idea (Read This for some perspective).

At one point, the state had a public hearing at Cortland State college. Hundreds of people showed up, including me. Law enforcement was there in large numbers and everyone had to go through a metal detector. No guns allowed. Yes, indeed, people were upset.

I didn’t speak. I listened and watched and came to the same conclusion as most everyone else—the hearing was a sham and would have no bearing on the outcome. The state was going to do what it wanted, and it wanted to let the corporations put their toxic waste in Cortland County.

A few weeks after the public hearing, it looked even more like the government was going to do what it wanted. That’s when I got the idea to write a letter to the editor of the Cortland Standard newspaper. In my letter I presented a viable solution to the problem that I had not heard anyone publicly suggest.

The paper published my letter. A very short time later the State of New York announced that it decided not to go through with the plan. Coincidence? Yeah, probably. But I like to think that my letter had a powerful impact on the decision makers in Albany.

In my editorial I pointed out that the highest law enforcement authority in the county was the sheriff. I explained that the sheriff’s responsibility was to protect the people of his county, and I made it clear that the sheriff had the legal authority to deputize citizens to help him if the need arose. Then I suggested that if the Sate of New York went through with its nefarious intentions, the sheriff should deputize as many concerned citizens of the county as he needed in order to occupy and defend the dump site. I surmised that the sheriff would have no problem at all assembling an armed posse of local men who would be willing to defend the land, their homes, and their families against anyone who would attempt to establish a nuclear dump site.

There was not a doubt in my mind that a lot of men really would have been willing to do exactly that. And, though I will never know what impact my editorial actually had on the outcome, I like to think that any governor would throw in the towel if faced with an insurrection by angry citizens standing on the moral high ground. That’s what happened. That’s my story. And I’m sticking to it.


Panic Buying vs Prudent Buying
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Some controversial little pills!

The big Japanese quake hit on March 11. The next day I went on the internet to see if I could find out the expiration date on potassium iodide pills. I discovered it was seven years. So the stock of potassium iodide pills I bought for my family in 1998 were long expired. That being the case, I went to Amazon.com and found a supplier selling iOSAT brand potassium iodide tablets for seven dollars. That’s seven dollars for fourteen tablets, which is sufficient to protect an adult’s thyroid from radioactive iodine for two weeks. Seven dollars. I bought a fresh supply. No problem. Two days later, Americans had bought up all the available potassium iodide in the country. The only place with any potassium iodide to sell was Ebay, where the same seven dollar packets of pills were selling for as much as $300.

The media was apoplectic. Doctors were in front of the cameras and on radio saying these pills were absolutely unnecessary. They were concerned that people were going to be taking them when they didn’t need to be taking them. They warned that there were serious side effects. People who bought potassium iodide pills were characterized as foolish.

Well, I've got news for the media. All those people buying potassium iodide pills are not going to take the pills if they don’t need to. We are just being prudent. We understand that nuclear power is a dangerous technology and that nuclear power plants are not 100% safe, and practically everyone in this country is downwind from a nuclear power plant. And we realize that when something eventually does go horribly wrong in one of these facilities somewhere in America, government and industry will not tell us the truth. They have a vested interest in not telling the truth, at least not right away. Besides that, the government does not have enough potassium iodide to protect everyone who could be in danger.

The way it looks to me, the mainstream media gets a collective wedgie whenever people think for themselves and make decisions in their best interests, apart from what the manipulators of public opinion tell them they should believe.

I think this country would be better off if everyone kept a supply of their own potassium iodide. You can learn about the pills and purchase them from the manufacturer (for $10) At This Link.


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The Industrial Order 
vs God’s Order
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 Every so often I feel the need to reiterate and expound upon the differences between Christian agrarianism, which I espouse, and the industrial order, which I oppose. This is one of those times...

I see industrialism as a usurper, taking, reshaping and reordering all aspects of life as God designed it. The antithesis between God’s order and the industrial order is enormous.

Where God designed simplicity, the industrial order imposes complication. Where God established the beauty of diversity, the industrial order demands uniformity. Where God, for his own sovereign purposes, established inequity, the industrial order declares that there must be equality. Where God mandates decentralization, the industrial order mandates centralization. Where God has declared that man must work and live by the sweat of his brow, the industrial order endeavors to remove this requirement. Where God has said to look to Him as the source and provider of all good things, the industrial order supposes that it will supply all good things, and that all people must be dependent on the industrial providers. Where God thinks and acts multigenerationally, the industrial mindset cares little about the generations to come. Where God says for mankind to trust in Him, the industrial order says to trust in it. Where God has designed sustainability and economy within his creation, the industrial order disrupts, destroys, poisons and wastes creation. Where God created and defined what a family is and how it should function, to best serve Him, the industrial order has redefined and reordered the family, to best serve the industrial interests. Where God declares that a full and rich life does not consist in the accumulation of things and riches, the industrial order loudly declares just the opposite. And, finally, where God has declared what is good and evil and has decreed that there will be consequences for sin, industrialism neither recognizes sin nor believes it has any responsibilities under God.

Everywhere you look, and the closer you look, you will see that we in the industrialized nations of the world have been and are being manipulated by powerful industrial forces that are totally opposed to God’s order. The challenge, for those who care, for those who feel a higher calling, is to live as much outside and apart from the industrial paradigm as possible—to not be swept along in its tide, brainwashed by it’s reasoning, and consumed by its temporal pleasures. It’s a real challenge.


Agrarian Nation
A New Beginning
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The manuscript

As regular readers of this blog know,  I have been working since January to put together and publish a new book. That all changed in March. 

The book, titled Small Farm & Homestead Advisor— 1825 to 1900:  A Compendium of Wisdom For Successful Farming, Gardening & Living, Gleaned From 75 Years of Forgotten Farm Almanac Essays, will not be published in book form. It will, instead, be published in blog format, a little at a time.

This is a first for me. With every other book I’ve written I have latched onto it like a Pitbull and not let go until it was done. I assumed this book would be the same. But, with the project about 2/3 complete, I started feeling a strong conviction that I should NOT publish this book. When I told Marlene of my decision, she was surprised. She knows how I have been in the past with these things.
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So, I will publish the old almanac excerpts, along with excerpts from old agricultural journals, in a new blog which I am calling Agrarian Nation.  Tomorrow morning, Monday, April 1, 2011, I will post the first installment to Agrarian Nation. If you go to that link now, you can read the Foreword and Introduction to Agrarian Nation. 


New posts will be published at Agrarian Nation every Monday and Friday morning.
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Unlike the blog you are reading now (which will continue) Agrarian Nation will have very little of my personal exploits, opinions and ideas. It will, instead, focus primarily on unearthing and publishing excerpts from the old writings. It will aim to educate with original-source writings from 1825 to 1900. Sometimes I will provide a little commentary.


That's my plan, and I'm committing to do it for at least one year. After that amount of time, I will decide if I should continue or not, based on how popular the blog is with readers. Excerpt by excerpt, with occasional informative essays, I think I have enough material to publish the blog for many years, and I hope that will be the case.
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In time, if you enjoy the blog and find it worthwhile, I hope you will make a small donation to the effort. Unlike this blog, which has never solicited monetary contributions, I will welcome and appreciate them at www.AgrarianNation.com


Great Depression Cooking 
with Clara
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Clara is a 94-year-old woman who lived through the Great Depression and she is a YouTube star. She is featured there in many movies where she shows how to cook a particular dish that was eaten by her family during the depression years, and she tells stories of her life and family.

I don’t know how I happened upon Clara’s cooking movies but as I was watching one of them I couldn’t help but notice that she was using a bag of New Hope Mills flour. That really got my attention because I worked at New Hope Mills when I was a teenager and I know the family that owns the company.

Well, it turns out that Clara is something of a neighbor. She lives only 20 minutes from me in the town of Skaneateles. She is from the Chicago area but moved here in the 1980s, probably to be near her son and his family.

I think you will enjoy Clara’s movies.

My Belated Birthday Present
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As mentioned last month, I bought myself a birthday gift. It is, as you can see in the above picture, a shoulder yoke. The yoke is hand carved out of a section of walnut tree. It is not only a useful tool but a work of art. I’m sure it is well over 100 years old, though I’m not sure it is 300 years old, as the person who sold it to me speculated. I was disappointed to find out it was cracked, but it works fine and I used it to carry buckets of maple sap from the woods to the elevated barrel-as-a-sap-storage-tank by our backyard syrup evaporator.



A 5-gallon bucket of maple sap weighs around 40 pounds. I have carried two at a time from the woods by hand in past years. It is not an impossible job for a healthy man to make 5 or six such trips with the buckets, but I’ve always wanted to try a shoulder yoke. I can tell you this simple, primitive tool makes the job MUCH easier. I am now a big fan of shoulder yokes.

The word "yokel" is used to describe an unsophisticated country person. It is a derogatory term that was probably coined by urban people who fancied themselves sophisticated. Well, I'm a yokel with my own yoke. And this picture shows my three-bucket yokel carrying technique.

I’m so convinced that the shoulder yoke is a great low-tech tool for the homestead that I started working on my own shoulder yoke design. In a flash of inspiration I envisioned a completely new style of shoulder yoke that can be made with basic tools and standard lumber in about an hour’s time, and cost less than $25 for wood and hardware. I made a prototype, put it to work, and was well pleased with it. Then I made another, thinking I could improve on the first design. But the first yoke was better. I have a couple more ideas I want to try before I unveil my Planet Whizbang shoulder yoke (a necessary tool for all yokels). You will want to stay tuned for that.



Amish Pioneers
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I’ve mentioned here before that my maternal grandfather (the man on the cover of this book) was a potato farmer in Fort Fairfield, Maine, which is way up there in the northern part of the state. If you are not familiar with the area, you might think the land is all mountains and balsam forests, but it so happens that there is a lot of very nice farmland up there, and the countryside is beautiful.

Amish families from New York have migrated into the Fort Fairfield area in recent years. One of the first farms they bought was my grandparent’s place on Forest Avenue. My Aunt Carolyn recently sent me a 6-minute film clip about the Amish in Fort Fairfield. It is well done and provides you with some insights into the Amish, as well as a look at the countryside. Here’s a link to the movie: Bill Green Visits The Amish in Fort Fairfield


Industrialism, Feminism & Defending The Traditional Family
(a little history lesson)


This is Eleanor and Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1908 with Anna and James, two of their five children. Franklin is 26 years old in this picture . Thirteen years later, while vacationing at the family cottage in Canada, he suddenly and unexpectedly became paralyzed from the waist down. Eleanor and Franklin did not have the best of marriages. Nevertheless, they were advocates and defenders of the traditional family, and contrary to what many might think, Eleanor was not a feminist. She was a politically and socially active maternalist.

I have, by fits and starts, been making my way through The American Way: Family and Community in the Shaping of the American Identity. The book’s author, Allan Carlson, is a cultural historian who has authored several fine books, including The New Agrarian Mind, which was instrumental in helping to shape my agrarian understandings.

In Chapter Three of The American Way, Carlson talks about President Franklin D Roosevelt, his wife, Eleanor, and the New Deal programs of the Great Depression initiated by FDR’s administration.

I should preface what I’m about to write by reminding you that I define myself as a conservative (of the agrarian persuasion).  My opinion of FDR, who radically expanded the size and reach of government with his welfare programs (The New Deal), has never been very high.

Nevertheless, I have come to realize that many people (not all, but many) who are demonized by “The Right” actually have, or had, some halfway decent beliefs. I dare say, paradoxical, ironic, enigmatic thinking and actions are common to all men (and, of course, women). That is how it appears to me, though I’m sure there are some who would think that does not apply to them (!).

A case in point can be found in the aforementioned Chapter Three of Allan Carlson’s book. It was quite a surprise to me and if you continue reading, I think it may be quite a surprise to you. Here, from the beginning of the chapter is what Carlson has to say (the emphasis on the last sentence is mine):

”...the New Deal contributed the persona of Eleanor Roosevelt to American mythology, a prominent woman who is usually cited as blazing the trail for women in policy making roles. Husband Franklin, meanwhile, is commonly hailed as the very model of enlightened progressive liberalism. He also holds the role of chief twentieth-century villain in the American conservative narrative. Nonetheless, contemporary feminist authors find the couple and their New Deal work loathsome.

A person of “The Right” persuasion would naturally think that Eleanor Roosevelt, being a politically active woman, was a feminist, espousing equal rights for her gender. But, according to Allan Carlson, this is far from the case. He says of modern feminists, that their judgments of Eleanor Roosevelt "rest on barely contained fury.”

Carlson provides supporting quotes from several feminist activists, among them are one Gwendolyn Mink who asserts that leading New Deal women “collaborated with masculine policy makers in closing off [for women] the only avenues for independence in capitalist America; work and education.”

When Mink speaks of “New Deal women” she means Eleanor Roosevelt and a dedicated cadre of other politically active women who Carlson refers to as the “maternalists.” Of them Carlson writes:

”The American materialists of the 1920s were firm in their worldview. While accepting the inevitability of an industrial order, they endeavored to diminish its dehumanizing effects.”

These maternalist women, who Carlson identifies as primarily (though not exclusively) Christian, Protestant, and having a “Christian moral vision,” were persuaded that industrialization was destroying the traditional American family. That being the case, they stood as a bulwark against the feminist forces of that era.

As I read (and reread) the chapter, it became clear to me that the feminist movement of that day served the best interests of the industrial capitalists. It was they who stood to gain the most from more women moving into the job market. The industrial interests certainly had more to gain from the feminist movement than did children and families in general. One maternalist, Florence Kelly, said:

”If we value home life as we hypocritically say that we do, there would not be one of these young girls away from the family home in the dead of the night serving [as a phone operator], not because they serve it better than men would do, but because they are cheaper and because the interest of the stockholders and the bondholders of the corporation is of greater importance than the sacrifice of these young girls.”

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The maternalists charged that the major feminist organizations of the day—the Woman’s Party—was financially supported by the National Association of Manufacturers, and this was never denied.

The maternalists believed that young girls should be encouraged to be mothers, not workers in factories and other businesses. Likewise, they focused on encouraging stay-at-home mothers to stick with the important work of being a mother. Again, I quote from The American Way:

”Maternity was the most important of human tasks, a service to the nation, the giving of new life to society. Industrialism, the maternalists held, must not be allowed to intrude. This meant that the mothers of children under the age of sixteen should not be employed. As the U.S. Children’s Bureau explained, “the welfare of the home and family is a woman-sized job in itself.” The maternalists argued that the entire economic system needed to be channeled or regulated to protect the integrity of motherhood. Florence Kelly, for example, condemned “the monstrous idea of having a night nursery” for the babies of working mothers, adding: “The mothers of young children cannot be sent away from home to do such work without the gravest social injury.”
”This respect for the special gifts of women led the maternalists to reject sexual equality as a dangerous abstraction. “The cry Equality, Equality, where Nature has created inequality, is as stupid and deadly as the cry Peace, Peace, where there is no peace,” said Florence Kelley.”

In n1930, the industrialist/feminist alliance found a friend in the administration of president Herbert Hoover. He created a “Research Committee on Social Trends.” The committee was composed of prominent social scientists of the day. Allan Carlson writes that the chief researcher, William F. Ogburn ....
...compared the old family system—which stood as “the chief economic institution, the factory of the time... the main educational institution”—with the new order where “the factory [has] displaced the family.” Modern America saw a falling birthrate and emptying schools as industrialized families were reduced to “the personality function” alone, providing “for the mutual adjustments among husbands, wives, parents, and children and for the adaptation of each member of the family to the outside world.” Ogburn showed that all other tasks—baking, sewing, canning, laundering, cooking, health care, child care, care of the elderly, child protection, security, education, amusement, recreation, and even religious activities—had passed or were passing to industrially-organized bodies, be they corporate, governmental, or charitable in nature. Many American homes had already become “merely ‘parking places’ for parents and children who spend their active hours elsewhere.”

So we see that the proper industrial model for American families required that the centuries-long paradigm of family life be radically altered. That paradigm, referred to by social scientists as the “family economy” was clearly agrarian— a mother, a father, children and perhaps extended family members all working together to provide the needs of the family. The interdependence, self reliance, and productivity of the traditional agrarian family had to be replaced with a new kind of family— a family dependent on the industrial providers and held together with the “personality function alone.” This was not just radical social engineering to benefit the industrial order, it was all out warfare against the family.

The “new” family would look outward to the marketplace for its values and human bonds. Industry, rather than family and father, would provide sustenance and meaning. Family autonomy and parental authority would give way to universal adult employment and a consumption-oriented lifestyle guided by advertising, one compatible with feminist ambitions.

The allied forces of industrialism, feminism, and the Hoover administration were formidable but...

Against these trends and ideologies, the maternalists chose to stand and fight.

Maternalist victories started coming when FDR was elected in 1933. The most influential of the maternalists in the Roosevelt administration was Francis Perkins, U.S. Secretary of Labor through all 12 years of Roosevelt’s presidency.

Perkins deplored the industrialist “attack” on family life: “I have seen the factory invading and breaking down the home... The poor people have a right to their homes the same as the rich, and we should not be allowed to enslave them to the form of industry which refuses them not only their liberty, but the wage they ought to have in return for the labor they perform.” Perkins steadfastly refused to be dragged into the equity feminist worldview. . . . As the Depression worsened, she denounced the working middle-class woman with an employed husband as a “pin money worker, a menace to society, [and] a selfish shortsighted creature who ought to be ashamed of herself.” Meanwhile, she urged policy ideas that would encourage marriage, support large families, and promote population growth.

As for Eleanor Roosevelt, a friend and ally of the maternalists, she believed...

”That every girl ought to marry and have a family;” that “the first ten years of a girl’s marriage, broadly speaking, should be devoted to the home;” and that “mothers with children at home should be discouraged from outside employment.”

As for FDR’s New Deal programs, they were, to the chagrin of feminists, heavily influenced by maternalist ideology. I should make it clear that the feminists and the maternalists both advocated welfare-state programs, but the maternalists embraced and defended the idea of the traditional family, supported by a father making a wage that was fair enough to provide for his family, without the mother having to go to work too. On the other hand, the feminists looked for inspiration to the Swedish example:

Indeed, the emerging Swedish welfare state of the 1930s gave highest priority to the social liberty and equality of the individual, especially in matters of gender. In its ideal construct, women and men were to be independent actors, with no bonds beyond those of freely shared affection. Dependency would vanish from human relations; instead, all persons would be equally dependent on the state. This was a welfare state that a feminist could embrace with enthusiasm.”

There is much more to this story but I have, thanks to Allan Carlson’s book, belabored it sufficiently (this was from just a few pages out of the whole volume). My main point here is that corporate-industrial forces, with the help of government forces, have been working for a long time to destroy the family. And it would appear that the so-called feminist movement has been a useful tool to the industrial order. You get the idea, and now you have some historical understanding that you probably did not have before. 

This picture from 1909 shows women working at the H.J. Heinz can factory. The machines they are working at punch out metal discs for the can ends.
In next month’s Deliberate Agrarian blogazine, I hope to write about a little-known New Deal program (heavily influenced by the maternalists) that was profoundly agrarian and focused on preserving the traditional family. It was, unfortunately, another welfare-state scheme, and as such it was destined to failure, but among such schemes I think this one came closest to doing some genuine and lasting good. I dare say Thomas Jefferson would have been impressed. 

A Parting Quotation

"A person dependent on somebody else for everything from potatoes to opinions may declare that he is a free man, and his government may issue a certificate granting him his freedom, but he will not be free. He is that variety of specialist known as a consumer, which means that he is the abject dependent of producers. How can he be free if he can do nothing for himself? What is the First Amendment to him whose mouth is stuck to the tit of the “affluent society”? Men are free precisely to the extent that they are equal to their own needs. The most able are the most free."
–Wendell Berry, “Discipline and Hope” in A Continuous Harmony (1972)

The Deliberate Agrarian Blogazine
February 2011

Dateline: 28 February 2011

This Writer’s Life
or
“Ain’t No Sunshine....”

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I have heard of some book writers—the more successful ones— who have their own secluded writer’s cabin that they can withdraw to in order to better pursue their craft. And I’ve also heard that there are writers who will take a writing vacation to some beautiful, muse-inspiring place, like the oceanside, where they can better focus their creative energies. Those things sound mighty fine.

After eleven published books, I myself have not yet reached the level of success where I can afford to indulge in such a vacation. I just try to get a book written while otherwise trying to make a living and taking care of the already-busy routines of everyday life, and that is exactly what I have been doing for the last two months.

But this current book project has been a little unusual in that, for the first time ever, my wife, The Lovely Marlene, decided she would take a vacation while I worked on my book. She went to visit her sister in Arizona for eight days.

So, while I sat alone, disheveled and bleary-eyed in front of my computer, for hours, reading, rereading, typing, editing, and composing book pages, with snow storms howling outside the window, Marlene was basking in the sun, socializing, eating out, shopping at all the best thrift stores in Phoenix, and just having a grand time.

It was a first. Thirty years of marriage and she took off on her own vacation. Though I am glad she had a good time, and she certainly deserves a vacation, and she made sure I was well stocked with clean clothes and good meals for the duration, it sure was nice to have her home again. All the time she was gone, that old Bill Withers song, Ain’t No Sunshine When She's Gone,  kept playing in my mind (Oh, it’s so true). 


Here's a picture that isn't of me but I think it is a good representative picture of what I did during my wife's vacation:

A typical book writer at the end of a long day.
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As for the book, which I planned to have done and handed off to the printer by today, the last day of February, it is still undone. I am discouraged about that but, we lonely, struggling writers of the world are well acquainted with discouragement. I  take solace in the fact that discouragement, like pain, builds character, or so I’ve heard.

Now, with March upon me, I must set the book project aside, change gears, and devote the life force within me to another character-building endeavor—income taxes. It’s time for the annual gathering and tallying and recording of numbers which the government demands, with threat of ruination (that's not rumination, mind you, it's ruination) if I do not comply. 

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I will hand my numbers to an accountant who will charge me a lot of money and who will tell me that I have to send the government a lot of  money,  none of which came easily. And they will, of course, waste it like only Behemoth Government can do.  It’s the most dreadful time of the year, and it never fails to leave me in a foul mood. There. That was my annual tax rant. Now I won't bother you with such negativity for another 12 months. Thank you for your indulgence.

Once I have gotten beyond the evilness of tax time it will probably be spring here, with at least a few warm, sunny days, which will be nice. But who wants to sit inside working on a book when the weather gets nice? Not me. There will be maple syrup to boil down (see below) and I fully intend to get peas planted in March. They alone can tolerate very early planting, as long as the ground is no longer frozen.

Perhaps March will have its share of nasty days and I’ll have some more time to attend to my book project. I’ve purchased the domain name www.AgrarianNation.com for the book’s web site. That isn’t the name of the book but it relates to the book's content and www.AgrarianNation.com will be a place where I can post a continuing series of essays that expand upon what the book has to say. That is the plan. Stay tuned for upcoming details.


Here's An Actual Picture...
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Marlene on her 2011 Arizona Vacation.
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Surviving Off Off-Grid
(a book review)


Speaking of books, I have read a prepublication copy of Michael Bunker’s soon-to-be-released new book, Surviving Off Off-Grid: Decolonizing The Industrial Mind. Fact is, I’ve read most of the book twice, and underlined numerous passages. Yes, it’s that good.

I noticed that another blogger has reviewed this book and described it as “profound.” I thought that was an interesting conclusion because it was exactly the descriptive word that came to my mind as I was reading it. My dictionary defines profound as “penetrating beyond what is superficial or obvious,” and that certainly does sum it up.

The way it looks to me, there are three categories of people who will appreciate what this book has to say, and who will benefit from it. First would be anyone who is thinking of living off grid. Second would be anyone who has an interest in surviving economic and civilizational collapse. Third would be those people who have an interest in Biblical agrarianism and cultural separation. I suppose I would fall into all three categories, but my primary interest is Biblical agrarianism, so I’m going to focus on that in this review. I should mention that Michael makes the point that readers of his book need not be Christians to benefit from the practical outlook and ideas in the book. That is true.

In the foreword of his book Michael writes:
“it is our intention to offer a philosophy that, whatever may be said of it, stands Contra Mundum (against the world), and against the prevailing foundational philosophy of industrial consumerism, thoughtless consumption, and the dependence on systems that are contrary to our own best interests.”
.Look in the top right corner of this page and you will see that I say this here blog of mine is a "rich resource of contra-industrial thought...” It so happens that Michael Bunker and I are on the same page when it comes to seeing wicked industrialism for what it really is.

Our  disdain for industrialism comes from our scriptural understandings. We believe the Bible calls Christians to separate not only from common forms of worldly immorality, but also the more subtle immorality of worldly dependencies too.

Of course, those who hold to Christian-agrarian beliefs are not just a minority, but a minuscule minority. That fact is probably sufficient to discount the legitimacy of Christian-agrarianism in the minds of the majority. But God has always done his greatest works through a humble minority of faithful followers.

Nevertheless, I must say that I still find it amazing that mainstream evangelical Christianity, with its continual end-times observations and prognostications, doesn't seem to realize (or care) that its followers  support, and draw their sustenance from, a one-world, industrial-beast system, right here and now. They cleave to the system, and they love the system. Hello?

So it is that precious few people who consider themselves to be Christians see the corporate-industrial system as something to separate from. Their minds have been “colonized” along with everyone else’s. After all, no mainline denomination or popular televangelist is espousing separation from the industrial system. It’s not even on their radar screens.

Where Michael and I differ in our Biblical agrarian apologetics is in the ability to formulate a cogent and comprehensive contra-industrial argument. I only scratch the surface in my writings, while Michael Bunker digs deep. His new book makes this abundantly clear.

The other difference is the degree to which each of us has separated from industrial grid dependencies. I feel like I am physically positioned to live off-grid if/when the system crashes—not for a week or a month, but for the rest of my life. That isn’t to say I’m stocked with a good supply of batteries and fuel and survival food, because I’m not. I’m stocked with tools and hands-on experience for living very simply, and providing for my basic life needs apart from the industrial system. To this end, little by slow, I continue to make more progress all the time. I also believe that, by the grace of God, I have the spiritual resources to deal with the transition. But Michael and his family are already living off grid, or beyond off-grid, or, as the book says Off Off-Grid. So he is well qualified to write this book.

Fact is, he is uniquely qualified—no one else I know of is saying, or putting into words, the things Michael Bunker is saying in this book. It is an incredibly thought provoking read. And, as far as I’m concerned, what he is saying is not only contra mundum, it’s right on.

You should know that, regardless of the title,  this book is not so much about surviving the inevitable crash of the industrial nations, it’s about deliberately choosing to live apart from the industrial grid for philosophical and religious reasons, regardless of whether it crashes or not. The subtitle of the book, “Decolonizing the Industrial Mind” is really more to the point. 

 
I was struck by a biblical reference in the book under the heading of “Old Paths.” Much of Michael’s book is about thinking in pre-grid ways and dealing with problems creatively. Michael mentions Jeremiah 6:16. That verse and the idea of returning to the “old paths’ just happens to figure prominently in the book I am currently working on. Coincidence? Hmmm. Here’s what Michael writes:
Looking towards the old paths is not a melancholy dream, or some fantastical wish for a mythical bygone paradise. We don’t look to the past as if it was the perfect, idyllic, pastoral utopia. We know it wasn’t perfect. We look to the past for a few great reasons: Because the Bible tells us to (Jer. 6:16); because there is wisdom and reason in learning these old and valued skills; and because the way the world has chosen. though it seems to be right for a time, has wrought nothing but damage, destruction, intellectual and spiritual entropy, and mental colonization. The product of the modern way of doing things is spiritual emptiness and sadness, is fraught with disappointment and unrealized expectations, and creates a crazed urge to fill the void with consumption and “stuff.”
Surviving Off Off-Grid touches on many different specific subjects: debt slavery, acquiring land, off-grid heat, light & refrigeration, water, food, housing, and much more.


If you are a thinking person, if you don’t mind having your ingrained industrial-world suppositions challenged, if you are desiring to live a more genuine and satisfying life, if you are a person concerned about the coming collapse of western civilization, if you are looking for some rock-solid nuggets of real wisdom in the midst of a world that is blinded by fools gold, this book is for you.

In the final analysis, I’m not sure what category Surviving Off Off-Grid would fall  into. It is full of philosophy, psychology, sociology, religion (Christianity), history and (to a small degree) there is some general how-to. Perhaps it would best fit in the just-plain-down-to-earth-good-sense category. Contra mundum, of course.

Surviving Off Off-Grid has a real nice web site (Click HERE to go to the web site). If you decide to buy a copy of the book, please do so by Ordering Here on the official Book Bomb date of March 4th (Michael explains the book bomb on his web site). 


Even though I have a copy of this book, I’ll be ordering two more on the 4th. They aren’t for me. I have a couple of contrarian-minded friends who haven’t drank too deeply of the industrial-world Kool-Aid, and I’m sure they will be blessed by this book.
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My New Birthday Present

It will arrive in a big box, but I don't think it will be THAT big.

Last month I told you about getting another year older. And I told  you about buying myself a banjo a few years ago as a birthday present. As I explained, I am a failure as a musician. It's not an easy thing for me to deal with but I'll get through it. 
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In the meantime, to help assuage my humiliation and sorrow, I decided that I needed to buy myself another birthday present. No, I didn’t get a tamborine, as Marlene so wittily suggested. I bought a tool.  I have a much better track record learning to use tools than I do learning to make music.

I bought this tool on Ebay. The seller said it was a tool from the 1700s, and that it was therefore over 300 years old. I asked how they came to that conclusion and where the tool came from. I was told that the age was ascertained by the patina of the wood, which the seller believes is walnut. The tool was found hanging on the wall of an old barn in Connecticut.

Though it could be that old, I doubt it. More than likely, the tool is from the 1800s. It looks to be in usable condition and that is important because I intend to use it. Most people would think this thing should be in a museum, but I'm going to put it to work, just like people three hundred years ago (or whenever) did.

You are probably wondering what this tool is. Well, I bought it a few days ago (a belated birthday present) and don’t even have it yet, so I’m going to wait until next month to tell (and show) you. I think you need a good reason to come back here for next month’s blogazine installment and this is the reason...

Next month I will reveal to you what the 300-year-old walnut mystery tool birthday present is.

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 Cereal Revolutions
You may recall that there were food riots in poorer nations of the world in 2008. The situation is worse this time.

Last month I told you that the current Mideast turmoil was being sparked by food price increases and shortages. That is now something that’s being recognized more and more in the mainstream media. In a February 22nd article by Bill Bonner at The Daily Reckoning he coined the phrase, “Cereal Revolutions,” to describe what is happening. The word “cereal” meaning cereal grains, like wheat, corn, oats and so forth, not cereal breakfast foods, like Cocoa Puffs, Lucky Charms, Cap’n Crunch, and so forth.
The American press hallucinates that the people of North Africa and the Middle East have suddenly woken up...as if from 1,000 years of sleep. Stretching their arms and rubbing their eyes, they yearn for 'liberty' as though it were a cup of coffee. The Herald Tribune refers to "winds of freedom" supposedly blowing across the hot sand.

But here at the Daily Reckoning, we see the picture differently. These are 'Cereal Revolutions,' we say. The idea came to us from our old friend, Jim Davidson. He believes the real cause of the uprisings in the Arab world is the rise of cost of food....
For a more in-depth perspective on the worldwide food supply, here is a quote from a February 17 Bloomburg Businessweek article:
The hunger that has roiled the Middle East was not caused by the whims of autocrats and cops. It began last year with crippling drought in Russia and later Argentina, and torrential rains in Australia and Canada. The deluges in Saskatchewan were so sustained and intense that farmers couldn't plant some 10 million acres of wheat, according to the Canadian Wheat Board. "What is typically the driest province was never wetter," said the governmental agency Environment Canada. Shrunken wheat harvests in those countries, along with cool, wet summer weather in the American Midwest that delayed the U.S. harvest, helped drive wheat prices at the Chicago Board of Trade up by 74 percent in the past year. Corn traded in Chicago rose by 87 percent during the same period. More recently, grain prices have spiked even higher because of yet another drought, this one threatening China's wheat crop, the world's largest. In that country's eight major wheat-producing provinces, some 42 percent of winter wheat cropland has been hurt by a dry spell, according to Agriculture Minister Han Changfu.
So, there is a significant worldwide food crisis happening right now and it may get much more significant...
Whether the world tips into agricultural catastrophe this year depends on the fate of the wheat on the North China Plain. "You need two perfect harvests through the summer of 2012 to get stockpiles back to an acceptable level," says Jason Lejonvarn, a commodities strategist at Hermes Fund Managers in London. Unless sufficient moisture reaches the parched seedlings, a net exporter of wheat could become a net importer of wheat, further stressing world markets. Short of that, a Chinese ban on wheat exports would also send prices higher, meaning that global grain shortages—once thought to be a disaster of the past—could return. Even American commodities buyers are feeling the pinch. "There is not one crop you can point to that is without supply problems," says Steve Nicholson, a commodity procurement specialist for International Food Products in St. Louis. "Production is not keeping up with demand."
Two perfect harvests, eh? What do you think the chances of that are?
At the most basic level, the crisis is a test of mankind's ability to feed itself. Industrial agricultural techniques have boosted crop yields and kept food prices low for decades, but the era of predictable abundance that fueled the world's population growth to almost 7 billion people may be over. Relief agencies, already lashed by hurricanes, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and government budget cuts, are ill-equipped to handle severe food shortages.
In yet another article I read that there is currently only an 18-day supply of corn on the planet.  That doesn’t sound like much to me. To Bonner’s new term of Cereal Revolutions we might add another term....The Perfect Storm.  

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On a related note, a recent NPR news story about farming in Nebraska reported that farming there is very profitable right now. If I heard right, the average farm in that state is 3,600 acres, and to make a go of it, a farm there needs to be at least 800 to 1,000 acres. Good farmland in that state is now selling for more than $8,000 an acre. The same news program also reported that 150 bushels of corn an acre was once considered a very good yield, but with advancements in technology it is now possible to get over 200 bushels an acre, and they believed that 300 bushels an acre was only a matter of time.

Yes, indeed, industrial agriculture has wrung remarkable yields out of the earth over the past 50 years or so. However, this kind of farming is totally dependent on a plentiful supply of cheap oil. As Mideast stability disintegrates, plentiful and cheap oil will fade into history even quicker than it already was. One wonders if the first dominoes of a significant industrial-system collapse are starting to tumble?

As for the Cereal Revolutions, with all these people rising up and over throwing their governments in the Middle East, their fundamental problems of poverty and lack of food will not be solved by such uprisings. These nations will still be unable to feed themselves. They will still be nations of dependent people—dependent on the industrial providers.

Meanwhile, if that’s not crisis enough for you to wrap your mind around, we’ve got super serious problems of our own right here in the U.S. of A. Did you hear that well-paid, well-fed, public employees across the nation are facing the horrible reality of a decrease in their employment benefits!  It’s hard to sympathize with those Middle Eastern people when we have such hardships of our own to deal with.

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The Year of The Garden
I like this picture a lot. Prints are available at this link

I’ve said it before in the past but it bears repeating every so often: In the final analysis, there is nothing you or I can do to “solve” the major problems of the world. All we can do is try to understand how major and minor events will affect us. Then we can respond wisely by taking positive steps to adapt to emerging new realities. Personal agrarianism, in all it’s manifestations is, to my way of thinking, a tremendous positive step, and at the heart of personal agrarianism is the task of growing food.

If there was ever a time to have a garden, this is it. I mean a big garden—one that gives you lots of good food to stock the larder. My favorite larder-stocking foods are potatoes, onions and squash. Those foods require little in the way of processing to store them for many months. You simply dig, pull, or pick the food and put it away. It’s a real good feeling to have a few bushels of all three of those foods on hand through the winter.

Right here is a good place to recommend the best gardening book I’ve ever read: Gardening When it Counts: How to Grow Food in Hard Times, by Steve Solomon.

There are some people who don’t like Steve Solomon’s book because it is contrarian. One of his contrarian approaches to gardening is to discourage intensive (close together) plantings. Solomon takes a more “old fashioned” approach to planting and spacing his garden crops. He does this because such plantings require much less in the way of additional watering.

Solomon says that in “hard times” people may not have access to municipal water supplies and without that, intensive garden plantings will suffer. The old-timers didn’t have automatic drip irrigation systems and sprinkler systems and all that. Yet, they managed to grow very productive gardens. Gardening When it Counts tells just how they did it, and how you can do it too.

When I first read Steve Solomon's book, and his recommendations contrary to intensive gardening, I thought of the Dervaes family out in Pasadena, California. They have a 1/5-acre “Urban Homestead” on which they grow remarkably lush gardens and harvest admirable quantities of food. They have been looked upon as a shining example of “urban homesteading.” But their way of gardening, which is so dependent on the public utility water supply, doesn’t impress me.

Their web site says that they spend $600 a year on water. Take away the public water supply and their “square inch” gardening methods will fail.

Urban “homesteading” and urban “farming” is a great concept. It’s fun to see and I applaud those who are involved in such efforts. But these imitations of the real thing may not be sustainable in the years ahead.

By the way, if you have not yet read about the recent internet tumult regarding the Devraes' trademarking of the popular term “Urban Homestead” (so that other online folks can't use it) stop on over to Granny Miller’s blog and read her essay titled, St. Jules and Our Ladies of Pasadena

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A Seasonal Plug For My Planet Whizbang Wheel Hoe
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A homemade Planet Whizbang wheel hoe with an 8" oscillating stirrup blade. It's an incredibly efficient weed destroyer.

Some bloggers sell advertising space on their blog. I don’t do that. But I  do let it be known from time to time that I sell books and chicken plucker parts and other down-to-earth products.

That said, a couple years ago I introduced the Planet Whizbang wheel hoe that I developed, and I posted a step-by-step-build-your-own-wheel-hoe tutorial to the internet. 

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To make the job of building your own wheel hoe as easy as possible, I started selling 1.) parts specifications packages, or 2.) precut, bolt-together wheel hoe kits, or 3.) fully assembled and ready-to-go wheel hoes. Since then, I’ve sold just about 250 wheel hoes or parts kits  (You Can Read Some Really Nice Feedback Here).

The Planet Whizbang wheel hoe offers a low-tech, highly efficient way of keeping weeds under control in a traditional-style garden. THIS LINK tells how to use the wheel hoe. THIS LINK reveals the secret to easy weed control (with either a wheel hoe or a hand hoe).

I’ve decided to stop selling assembled wheel hoes this year and to sell only the kits and plans. I have only a few of the assembled units left in stock. The reason I’m not making the assembled units any more is that I need to cut back on some aspect of my Planet Whizbang business in order to have more time to work in my own garden. Making the painted-and-assembled hoes is the most time consuming thing I do. 

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It’s not a good thing when the guy who “invented” the Planet Whizbang wheel hoe has a garden full of weeds because he’s so busy making wheel hoes for other people that he doesn’t have time to use his own. No, that’s not good at all.

Wing Road Farm
Aaren Hatalsky of Wing Road Farm
with Planet Whizbang wheel hoe #119
(picture from the Wing Road Farm blog)
Every so often, while browsing the internet, I happen upon a farm that really strikes my fancy—a farm the likes of which I think would suite me just fine. Wing Road Farm is such a place. It is in Greenfield, New York. You can read about this small-scale, diversified farmstead at their web site, but I'm going to give you a link here that will take you to their Photo Gallery, where you will be treated to one of the most pleasant farm photo slideshows you'll ever see (I love the old house!). Click this link to get to the automatic slideshow: Wing Road Farm Photo Gallery.
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The Planet Jr. Mystery is Solved!
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Samuel Leeds Allen
(1841—1918)
Founder of the Planet Jr. company





While you’re over at the Planet Whizbang wheel hoe web site, check out my story about Samuel Leeds Allen, the man who made the Planet Jr. wheel hoe and so many other agricultural implements back in the 1800s. In my story about Allen, I say that I would like to know more about him, and I’d really like to know how in the world he came up with the “Planet Jr.” name.

Well, a couple weeks ago I got an e-mail from Leslie McManus, the editor of Farm Collector magazine, with the following information.
A Planet drill was developed by S.L. Allen from two washtubs riveted together, rim to rim, with a wooden tire and handles added in subsequent iterations. Allen, an amateur stargazer, noticed the device’s resemblance to the planet Saturn, hence the name of the implement. Later he developed a smaller version of that seed drill, and called it the “Planet Junior.”
For those who may not know, a “drill” is a tool for planting seeds, in the ground, in a row. Mr. McManus also told me the following...
Allen’s daughter, Elizabeth R. Allen, wrote a book about her father; the book (“Samuel L. Allen — Intimate Recollections and Letters”) published by Franklin Printing Co., Philadelphia, in 1920. Obviously small run and out of print but perhaps an eBay search will prove fruitful.
I checked and print-on-demand versions of that book are available at www.abe.com (you can get just about any used book you need there).


All of that was great to know but the story gets even better because four hours later, I got an e-mail from S.L. Allen’s great granddaughter:
Great grandfather invented a fertilizer drill for spreading guano.  He named it the "Planet Drill" because of its resemblance to the planet Saturn and its rings.  The seed drill that immediately followed was called "Planet Jr". These were the first of the Planet Jr. family.  This occurred in 1866.  Hope this helps your desire for information concerning the naming of the farm implement line.

Well, isn’t the internet just an amazing thing! I asked Mr. Allen’s great granddaughter a couple questions and she wrote back...
Great Grandfather had the first mail order company in the US.  The Brandywine Museum in Delaware has an exhibit which is interesting.  At one point, the farm implements were being pulled by water buffalo and camels as well as horses and mules--in other words--all over the world.

Elizabeth was never married.  Charles Jackson, the son, was my Gramp.  The book, which is on line amazingly, is a collection of letters and Elizabeth's recollections as well as others who knew him.  Hope you enjoy it.  I didn't know that copies were still available as it was a private printing by Franklin Press.  The book ends with tributes offered after Samuel's death.  I particularly like the Goethe quote at the end.  I also carry it with me.
So the book was online? I went looking for it, and FOUND IT HERE.


I have not read far into the book yet, but right in the beginning I discovered.... 



Precepts of Samuel L. Allen
(found among his earliest papers)

[slightly edited]

Acquire the Habits of : 
Punctuality in everything. Attention. Observation. Patience. Doing things systematically. Finishing everything undertaken. Untiring industry.

Cultivate the Habits of : 
Thoroughness in every study. Doing everything well. Learning something from everyone. Thinking deeply, powerfully, and comprehensively. Reviewing — remembering that next to perseverance it is the great secret of success as a student.

Cultivate the Habits of a Gentleman:
 
Politeness. Cheerfulness. Good humor. The memory, by observation, reading, conversation and  reflection. Command over my temper. The conscience.

Cultivate the Habits of: 
Daily prayer. Self-control of the tongue. Self-control of the feelings. Self-control of the thoughts. Self-control of the heart. Soundness of judgment. Humility and liberality of heart.

Beware of: Temptations: 
Light reading (which enfeebles the mind and corrupts the heart). Silly speeches. Silly acting. Fault finding. Bad company. The first step in sin. Secret sins. Bad books. Indulging in reveries of imagination. Contracting the habit of procrastination. Levity upon sacred subjects.

Do not refuse to walk in a difficult path of duty.  Never neglect any opportunity of self-improvement. Strive to improve thoughts when alone. Have a plan laid beforehand for every day. Have regard to the position of the body. Be simple and neat in personal habits. Treat properly my parents, friends and companions. Seek to " know thyself." Form fixed principles on which to think and act. Faithfully review my conduct at stated intervals. LiveNever neglect any opportunity of self-improvement. Strive to improve thoughts when alone. Have a plan laid beforehand for every day. Have regard to the position of the body. Be simple and neat in personal habits. Treat properly my parents, friends and companions. Seek to " know thyself." Form fixed principles on which to think and act. Faithfully review my conduct at stated intervals. Live to do good and make this my aim in company and conversation. Do not waste the company's time or my own by talking trifles. Do not endeavor to be a wit or punster. Do not view words in an unnatural light for the sake of smart sayings. Beware of severe speaking. Be careful in introducing topics of conversation. Say as little as possible about myself, friends, deeds, etc.
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Those precepts remind me of George Washington’s Rules of Civility & Decent Behavior In Company and Conversation, which he transcribed when he was a teenager. I’m thinking it may have once been popular for young men to put into writing some personal guidelines for how to best conduct themselves in life. What a fine idea. 
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Jennifer Needs Chicken Feathers...
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Do you know how many feathers are on a chicken?
Well, you're about to find out.

If you need yet another proof of how amazing the internet is, consider this question posted at the Yahoo discussion group, WhizbangChickenPluckers (2,888 members, and growing):
Hi!— I'm am with the University of Alabama, and we are doing a production of Big River. One of the characters needs to be tar and feathered. And I am looking for chicken feathers. Does anyone have any extra feathers? We're really hoping to get natural coloring.

Thank you!
Jennifer
A response...
How many do you need? Where should I send to? I can send you some once the feathers dry out after plucking.
And Jennifer from the University writes again...
I'm not sure how many I need... I need enough to cover a person. I'm using about 2 feather per square inch. And the body is about 2160 square inches, so that's roughly 9,000 feathers. According to the internet, a chicken has about 8,000 feathers. Does that sound accurate to you?

It would be awesome if you could send the feathers though! I can send you money for shipping, and if you want, I can send some photos of the costume when it's completed!

Our address is
University of Alabama
Jennifer Bronsted
Box 870239
Rowand- Johnson
Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-023
.

Maple Time
.
That's me and the late, great Annie collecting maple sap in back of our house a few years ago.

It is just about time around here to be making maple syrup. Last year was a poor maple syrup season here and our backyard syrup operation didn’t yield enough. We bought a gallon from our neighbor and it cost fifty bucks. So we’re very motivated to make our own syrup this spring. If you would like to read a series of how-to essays (with pictures) about our home-scale maple syrup system, you can do so AT THIS LINK.

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That's it for another edition of The Deliberate Agrarian monthly blogazine. Let's do this again next month. All the best to you and yours..... Herrick Kimball