The Deliberate Agrarian Blogazine
March 2013


Dateline: 31 March 2013

March was snowy, cold and grey.  This is 12A, the wagon I made from an old New Idea manure spreader last year. When the weather warms up, ol' 12A will be getting a lot of use.

Dear Friends & Other Readers,

There is an old agrarian admonition that you should make your hay when the sun shines. The opposite is true if you are an agrarian trying to write a book—you should make your book when it is cold and wet and dreary outside. That pretty much describes this past March. So I’ve been racing against time, trying to finish my book before the sun and warmth (and many outdoor demands) of spring arrives. The good news is that I’m pretty much done.

The Planet Whizbang Idea Book For Gardeners needs a cover and I will meet with my graphic designer about cover design on the 9th of April. The 124 pages in the book will also need to be electronically formatted for the printer. This book was made the “old-fashioned” way, with each page being a collection of hand-drawn artwork and quite a few cut-and-paste inserts. It was an intimate and time-consuming creative process. Most of the book was written over a year ago (I started it last winter), but illustrating and composing an average page literally took hours. It was not unusual to spend three days putting together a 4-page chapter. 

Meanwhile, I had to take time off to figure my income taxes early in March (a dreadful task, made much easier this year by Marlene's help with the bookkeeping), and keep the Planet Whizbang mail-orders shipping out promptly. A typical day in March had me taking care of the mail order business obligations from 7am till noon, and then focusing on the book until 9:00 at night.

As a result, I’m throwing this month’s blogazine together the day before it is due. Please forgive me if this is a bit of a ramble.

More About The Book

I don't have a cover from my new book to show you yet, so I'll show you my earliest "Whizbang" book. This is one of the first 100 copies of the plucker plan book that I self-published back in 2002. They were photocopied at a local quick-print shop. I've lost track of how many copies of this book have now been sold, but it is over 25,000. And I've packaged up and mailed out nearly every one. My next book will feature the whimsical Planet Whizbang logo of a leafy beet with golden Saturnal rings.

I would guess that it will be a couple months before The Planet Whizbang Idea Book For Gardeners is finally in print and ready to ship. I was hoping for sooner, but these things take time. I’m just glad the hardest part is behind me. When this book is published, it will be my 12th book. The first three were published by a big-time publisher (The Taunton Press), and the others have been self-published. At this point, I can’t feature myself ever writing a book for a book publisher other than myself.

I’m a seat-of-the-pants self-publisher. The plan books I’ve put together are clearly amateur productions. If there were a beauty contest for books, mine would be disqualified. But they deliver useful information, along with a measure of inspiration, and, overall, they have been well received. 

However, I’ll never forget the e-mail I once got from a reader of my chicken plucker plan book. The guy informed me that the book would have been a lot better if someone who knew how to write did the writing, and someone who knew how to draw, did the drawing.  And that particular book is, far and away, the best-selling book I’ve ever written.

I’ve read that the largest special-interest group in America is gardeners (there are more people who are interested in gardening that in plucking chickens). So I hope this next book will prove to be a good seller. There is a LOT of competition in the genre of gardening books, but my book will be very different from any other gardening book I know of. 

The Planet Whizbang Idea Book For Gardeners will have plans for making solar pyramids, which are astonishingly effective cloche structures. There will be specifications for making the Whizbang wheel hoe, and the Whizbang wood-&-wire garden tote. You’ll also find plans for making a simple, inexpensive Whizbang shoulder yoke. I’ll explain how I make biochar and how I steam fryalize compost on a rocket stove (with plans for a unique, easy-to-make rocket stove). I’ll tell you about Steve Lonsky’s amazing siphon-tube rain barrels (they really are amazing!). I’ll present E.P. Roe’s excellent advice (from 1886) for "growing strawberries of the largest and finest quality" (I’ve heavily edited his wordy 17th century prose for clarity and easier reading). I explain the most excellent garden trellising system you've ever seen, and I reveal a much easier and better way to trellis indeterminate tomatoes (better than a wire cage). I tell how to find and restore a classic old garden hoe. I tell how to make “forever” plant tags, an excellent “pocket cultivator,” and a downright nice hoe hanger. I reveal my system for growing “easy carrots.” And I also discuss "tri-growing" carrots which is an absurdly nifty idea that I guarantee you have never seen before in your life. And that’s just some of the chapters in my new book.

Scattered throughout the book are ideas, advice (advice is a form of idea), insights and gardening commentary from the gardeners of yesteryear, which is to say, gardeners from over 100 years ago. I’ve selected many choice excerpts from my collection of old farm almanacs (from the 1800’s), and Cultivator & Country Gentleman newspapers. Those old-timers were serious gardeners, and resourceful people, to say the least. 

You will want a copy of this new book because, when you get done reading it, you will be a smarter, wiser, more-clever, and better gardener than before you read the book. Your life will be enriched by the experience, and you’ll be inspired—I think it’s a very inspiring book.

I will be offering my new book for $19.95 (postage paid) to anyone who buys a pre-publication copy (that offer is for U.S addresses only). It will sell for more than that when it is finally in print. I will have an online ordering button for pre-publication purchases starting about one month before the book is in print. If you are not yet on the Planet Whizbang e-mail list, you can Sign Up Here, and you will be notified when the book goes on sale.

Making Maple Syrup 2013

This is Marlene tending her sap evaporator. I put the 1/2-gallon jar of 2103 maple syrup in there to show you the golden goodness that comes from all the time and effort.

I decided that I would not have time to make maple syrup this spring. Focusing on the book project was more important. But that didn’t stop Marlene from taking on the task. She harnessed two of our sons to help her some. But she has done the lion’s share of the work, collecting sap and boiling it down. Two years ago we made 12 gallons of maple syrup. That was a good year. This year Marlene will make 5 or 6 gallons.

Click Here to read all about how we make maple syrup.


The Steve Solomon Interview


If you have read this blog for long, you know that I’m a fan of Steve Solomon’s book, Gardening When It Counts. Last September I posted here about Steve’s newest book, The Intelligent Gardener (note: for some reason Amazon.com is currently selling only the Kindle edition of the book. You really should have the paperback). It wasn’t even published but I was recommending it, and I confidently ordered a pre-publication copy.

Well, I wasn’t disappointed with The Intelligent Gardener. Fact is, it may be the most important gardening book I’ve ever read. It is all about intelligent remineralizing of garden soil to achieve greater nutrient density in the food you grow. Greater nutrient density translates into more nutritious food. More nutritious food leads to healthier people.

After reading the book, I decided that I had to include a chapter in my next book about remineralizing garden soil. It is just a 4-page chapter that introduces the concept of intelligent remineralization and provides insights into what is involved. But you may not want to wait until my book comes out to learn about this subject. You might want to go right now to Jordan Marr’s excellent podcast interview with Steve Solomon at THIS LINK.

I should warn you that there is one place where Steve Solomon uses the “f” word. That incident aside, the rest of the interview is very interesting, at least it is from my perspective as someone who has gardened for a long time (nearly 40 years) and who has grown up in the organic paradigm.

Solomon comes through as an intelligent authority on gardening—perhaps the most intelligent authority I’ve ever heard (or read). He is refreshingly honest, readily admitting mistakes he’s made in the past, and giving credit where credit is due for much of what he has learned (particularly about mineralization). He is also something of a curmudgeon, which makes for good listening. 

As I listened to the interview, It occurred to me that Steve Solomon is much like the little boy in the Hans Christian Andersen story of The Emperor’s New Clothes

You may recall that the Emperor’s new clothes were nonexistent. He and all the people were scammed into believing that the clothes existed, and that they were beautiful. So the Emperor paraded in his underwear through the town showing off his fabulous new clothes. The charade falls apart when a little boy exclaims that the Emperor doesn’t have any clothes on.

When it comes to Steve Solomon, the Emperor is the organic movement as it was established and defined by J.I. Rodale and his magazine, Organic Gardening & Farming, back in the 1940’s. I grew up gardening in the J.I. Rodale organic paradigm. I still adhere to it, but not quite as much after reading and listening to Steve Solomon. Solomon equates Rodale’s compost-only organic philosophy to a fundamentalist religion. That isn’t to say Solomon is against the concept of organic gardening, because he isn’t. But he sure does have an insightful perspective on J.I. Rodale!

Steve Solomon’s interview is interesting to me because he exhibits a lot of qualities that I admire. He is a contrarian, not accepting the industrial world’s explanations, nor its expectations of how a person should live their life. He is largely self-taught. He is an entrepreneur, but not focused on making a lot of money. He lives relatively simply. He is compelled to teach others about what he has learned. And he’s a gardener.

On the other hand, Solomon's got his quirks, the oddest of which to me is his use of cannabis. In the interview he says he doesn’t think anyone under the age of 30 should use cannabis because he did and it wasn’t a good experience. But he uses it now, and I can’t help but wonder... if it’s not a good thing for someone under 30, how can it be a good thing for someone over 30? 

The interview is long (1 hour & 22 minutes), it tells much of Solomon’s life story (and it sure does ramble around) but I found it all of interest, and I think you might too.

By the way, if you do listen to the interview, you will hear Steve say that the book has only one typo that he knows of. It’s one number on one form. I know exactly where that typo is because I’m the one who found it and brought it to Steve's attention at his Yahoo discussion group. If you have the book, go to page 107. The number 6.2 on the bottom of the form, next to “zinc,” is incorrect. It should be 62. Me finding that typo is pretty amazing because I was born without the math gene. But it gives you an idea of how closely I read the book.

A Voice From My Past

My Grandmother Kimball, visiting Hollywood, California, in 1967


Imagine for a moment that you are sitting at your computer and you receive an e-mail from someone you don't know that contains a link to a voice recording from 40 years ago of someone who was very special to you, but has been deceased for eight years. You haven't heard this loved one's voice for a long time, and there it is, unbeknownst to you, on the internet!

This happened to me this last month when a woman in Maine, while researching her family’s history, came across a recording of my grandmother, Mary Towle Kimball, of Fort Fairfield, Maine (thank you , Sheila). The woman remembered that my grandmother was Mary Towle from some blog posts I had published here a few years ago. 

So I clicked The Link, and I must say it was a profoundly emotional experience for me to hear my grandmother’s voice again. You will understand why when you read What My Grandmother Did For Me, which I posted to this blog back in 2006.

The online recording was made around 1972. I would have been 14 years old and she would be 64. My grandmother is reading a letter from 1888 that her grandmother, Mary Estes Towle, had written to her grandmother. Since she is reading, it is not my grandmother's normal conversational way of talking, but the voice and the way she pronounces some words are uniquely hers. 

Mary Estes married LaForest Valdessa Towle in 1865. He was a farmer and a deacon in the Baptist church. They lived in Fort Fairfield, which is way up in the northern region of the state. It was wilderness back then. LaForest cleared his land and built a home before he married. Mary Estes and LaForest’s son, Hiram, would grow up to be my grandmother’s father. He was also a farmer in Fort Fairfield.

Most anyone listening to my grandmother read the old letter would not think much of it. But if it’s your grandmother reading a letter from your great, great grandmother to your great, great, great, great grandmother, it’s downright interesting. And, it turns out, it was a blessing to, because, 125 years later, it provides insights into the Christian faith of my kin. Here is an excerpt from the letter:

“I should like to see you and the rest of the folks. If we do not meet on earth, I hope we shall meet in heaven, where there are many dear friends. I think of you very often and think you must be lonely, but I know you have a Dear Friend that is always with you. I often think, what should I do without that friend. When I look over my life and see the crooked paths I have made, I think what would my life have been without His help. I try every day to trust Him more and to say, what shall I render unto God for all his goodness to me? I feel he has followed me all the days of my life.”


The Rural-Urban Dichotomy 
A Fundamental Problem

Election results 2012 by counties. The red counties voted Republican and the blue voted democrat.

Thank you Lyle S. for sending me a link to The Disenfranchisement of Rural America at the  Hoover Institution web site. If you are a conservative-minded person living in a rural area of America, feeling more and more politically impotent, and watching your country slowly but surely relegate itself to the ash-bin of history, you ought to read the article. It’s very insightful and something that needs to be better understood, especially by rural folk.

The map above comes from the article. It reveals that most of America is conservative (to some degree), as shown in red. Even the states that voted Democratic in the last election are largely red if you look at it from the perspective of how the counties voted. But the urban centers, with their dense populations, determine who wins elections and who makes the laws that rural people have to live by.

This explains why 51 out of 62 county legislatures here in New York state have passed resolutions opposing our governor’s heinous gun control laws that were passed only a couple months ago.  The majority of the people in the majority of the state want the law repealed, but the larger minority in the smaller area of the state gives the governor his political power.

The same thing is happening in states where rural communities are being hydrofracked,  and forced to suffer with the manifold problems that particular technology brings. They have no effective political voice to oppose it. 

Yes, I know that America needs energy, and every so-called Conservative talking head is on the fracking bandwagon, but this isn’t a conservative/liberal issue—it’s a human rights issue. It’s a rural human rights issue. The vast majority of people living in rural areas do not want their communities hydrofracked. People in favor of hydrofracking would think very differently of the issue if it was happening next to their home and impacting their family. (Read This for more of my perspective on “hydrofracking & the mind of a true conservative.”)

This dichotomy between rural people and the urban masses also explains the radical social changes we are seeing. Take, for one example, the whole gay marriage debate. Generally speaking, rural people recognize the sanctity of traditional marriage, and they do not support the novel new concept of gay marriage. But gay marriage is an issue on the forefront because it is primarily driven by urbanites. And you can't have a civil discussion (or even just politely disagree) with gay activists—you must either accept their demands and conform to their way of thinking, or keep your opinions to yourself. But I digress....


Back to the Hoover Institute article....

"With each passing election, rural and small town Americans have ever less influence on their state and national governments and ever declining control over the governance of their own communities. Their lives are increasingly controlled from distant state capitals and from the even more distant Washington, D.C., by politicians with little incentive to pay attention to their country cousins. To some extent, their disenfranchisement is the inevitable result of a century of urbanization and economic centralization."

So on the state level we have a tyranny of the majority (and the monied interests) over the rural minority. 

But it wasn’t always this way. 

According to the Hoover Institute article, prior to a 1964 Supreme Court decision, most state legislatures included one house apportioned on the basis of population and a second chamber apportioned on the basis of counties or other geographical regions.”

The article further states:

“While one person/one vote was widely accepted as the appropriate standard for lower state legislative chambers, most states defended their geographically apportioned upper houses by drawing a parallel to the U.S. Congress in which the Senate is apportioned on the basis of states rather than population. The Supreme Court rejected their argument...”

And as a result...
"Inexorably, the values and ambitions of urban America have been imposed on small town and rural communities. Despite the often broad agreement among their citizens, the rural communities of red county America have gradually lost control of their own destinies at the hands of statewide majorities marching to a different drummer. In many states, rural areas have become playgrounds, refuse dumps and planning laboratories for urbanites at the expense of viable and prosperous local communities."

Question Authority


I don’t wear t-shirts with slogans or advertising on them. That’s just not me. But a lot of people do, and I knew a guy (many years ago) who wore a t-shirt that said “Question Authority.” That shirt got me to thinking...
When it comes to government, politics, and manmade institutions I think it is imperative that all thinking people continually question those authorities. Question why they do what they do. Question the veracity of every word they say, of every statistic they quote. Question their right to do what they’re doing. Question their ulterior motives. Question their allegiances. Question who stands to benefit financially from decisions they make. 
Question it all, because it is the nature of the government and politicians to lie. They routinely manipulate facts and figures and draw perverted, self-serving conclusions. I'm not talking about just Democrats, or just Republicans. Anymore, there is little difference between the two parties. Question them all.
And don’t just question the political authorities. Question the media authorities. Question the scientific authorities. Question the medical authorities. Question the educational authorities. Question pop culture. Question the establishment. Question the whole industrial system. Question everything they say and do for all the same reasons you would question the government and the politicians.
And what of religion? Should we question religion? Sure, why not? There is nothing wrong with questioning religious authorities. There are all kinds of religious authorities. Even those who espouse atheism are religious (because they believe, by faith,  in the non-existence of God). 
We should question the actions and words of men and manmade institutions in order to discern truth. I am not saying we should question all authority as an act of continual rebellion or disobedience. We should do it to determine if the authority is legitimate and deserving of our trust. To critically question and seek the truth is a key element in thinking for ourselves. It is what free men and women do. And it is necessary for a nation to survive, especially this nation at this time in history. 
Ben Franklin (and every other founder of this nation) questioned authority. Here's what he said...
“It is the first responsibility of every citizen to question authority.”
I'd like to see a picture of Ben Franklin wearing a t-shirt that says "Question Authority." 

Why Do We Need 
Economic Growth?

If you listen to the news you'll hear talk about "economic growth." It's a big topic of concern with economists and government people. Everyone seems to agree that economic growth is important. Economic growth is continually being evaluated and gauged. But why is economic growth so important?

I mean, why can't we just have an economy that chugs happily along at a steady pace, without needing to continually grow and grow?

Well, the reason that continual growth is necessary is that we have a debt-based economic system.  With our fractional reserve banking system, all money is loaned into circulation, but  the interest to pay for the loans is not. Thus, in order to make the money to pay the debt, the economy (which is the total volume of sales and income earned from economic activity) must continually expand.  

Check out This YouTube Video for an engaging and entertaining explanation of how fractional reserve banking works and it's evils.




How To Always Be 
In Easy Circumstances

The following excerpt comes from the Maine Farmer's Almanac of 1849. That was 164 years ago! But the advice is pertinent to our day and age.


Would you like to know how you can always be in easy circumstances? If so, here—take the recipe: 
Subdue every unnecessary want or desire, and buy only such things as will add to your real comfort and convenience. It is the extreme of folly to think you must buy every thing you see or have everything that some of your rich neighbors have.
If they have attained their wealth by their vices, their exhortations and rogueries, do not try to ape them, but despise alike their means and their ends. If they have acquired their riches by their virtues, their fair dealing and activity and honesty, in business, as only the truly self-made men, the great and excellent of the earth ever do, they deserve your regard and esteem—they are to be honored—they are worthy of their success, and the community at large will benefit from their prosperity. You will not envy them, but pursue the even tenor of your way in right-thinking and right-acting, as these noblemen have done before you.
The frog, in trying to swell to the size of the ox, burst— a certain end to all artificial greatness. Whenever you find you can curtail your expenses, you must summon the resolution to do it.


March, 2013, on our new land.








The Deliberate Agrarian Blogazine
February 2013

Dateline: 28 February 2013



Dear Friends and Other Readers,

For the first time ever, I have come to the last day of the month without a blogazine to post. Nothing. This letter will have to suffice.


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The picture above is not of the best quality but it blessed me to see it. That is my now-10-month-old grandson, Jaxson. He is "reading" my book, Writings of a Deliberate Agrarian

As I was putting that book together I thought to myself that maybe someday my grandchildren (and maybe even great grandchildren) would read it. And there is grandchild #1.

Jaxson & his parents are in Oklahoma. When I see that little guy on Skype I am simply amazed because he looks exactly like me when I was little. He looks more like me than any of my three sons did. It is uncanny. I wish my mother were alive to see him.

Later this year my son, the US Army soldier, will be discharged and return home with his wife and Jaxson. I am looking forward to getting young Jaxson started on his Christian-agrarian studies. :-)


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There is no carefully-prepared blogazine this month because I've been focused on getting my next book finished. It's slow going. I have 78 pages done. There are a lot of illustrations to do. That, and the page layout is taking a lot of time. I'm shooting for around 120 pages. It will be the biggest book I've ever self-published. I have to get it done and handed off to the printer before the end March. If I can do that I'll be making it available for pre-publication ordering at a reduced price next month when I post here.

The Planet Whizbang Idea Book For Gardeners will be a unique gardening book. There is nothing else like it on the market, and there probably never will be again (unless I publish a 2nd Volume). You won't get a book like this from the big publishing companies. It will be loaded with ideas. If you like to garden, I guarantee you will like this book. You will learn things that no other gardening book on the market will learn you.


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I managed to post a single excerpt to my Agrarian Nation web site this month. It's from the 1873 Cultivator & Country Gentleman newspaper. Here's a link: The Kerry Cattle


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I have been listening to computer radio programs while working on my new book. And today I heard an interview with Allan Carlson that was excellent. I've mentioned Mr. Carlson and some of his books here in the past (more than once). For those who don't know, Allan Carlson is a historian. I think it's safe to say he is a Christian-agrarian historian. I encourage you to listen to the interview at this link:  Who Killed Family Economies in the 20th Century?—Capitalism or Communism.


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Last month I told you about the tyrannical new gun restrictions that were passed in my state. When I went to my February town board meeting I took a resolution for the board to consider passing. The resolution calls for the governor and Legislature to suspend and repeal the new laws. The town board passed it unanimously. The best politics is local. Here is what it says:


Resolution by the Town Board of Sempronius, New York
Dated February, 18, 2013

Whereas, the Right of the People to Keep and Bear Arms is guaranteed as an individual right by the Second Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and the Constitution of the State of New York, and:

Whereas, the right of the people to keep and bear arms for defense of life, liberty, and property is, and has long been, an inalienable right of the people of the Town of Sempronius, New York, and;

Whereas, the Sempronius Town Board, being elected to represent the People of Sempronius is duly sworn by their Oath of Office to uphold the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the State of New York, and;

Whereas, the New York State Senate and Assembly has passed a gun control Bill (S.2230), known as the NY SAFE Act, on January 14, 2013, and;

Whereas, the NY SAFE Act Bill was passed in haste, without regard to the usual legislative procedure, without public hearing, and without input from the People and various law enforcement agencies throughout the state, and;

Whereas, the NY SAFE Act clearly infringes on the right of the people of Sempronius to keep and bear arms, and bans possession and use of firearms now employed by individual citizens of our town for defense of Life, Liberty, and Property, and would ban the possession and use of firearms that have long been used for safe firearms recreation, hunting and shooting within the Town of Sempronius,

Therefore Be it Resolved, that the Town Board of the Town of Sempronius, in the County of Cayuga, in the State of New York does hereby call on the Governor of the State of New York and the New York Legislature to suspend and repeal the NY Safe Act, and to enact laws that do not infringe on the individual Constitutional rights of the citizens of our town.

Be it Further Resolved, that the Town Clerk send a copy of this resolution to each of the following: President Barak H. Obama, Vice President Joseph Biden, United State Senator Charles Schumer, United State Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo, New York State Senator James L. Seward, New York State Assemblyman Gary Finch, and Cayuga County Legislator Steven Cuddeback. 



There is a growing grassroots uprising in New York state against the NY SAFE Act. As I write this, 30 out of 63 County legislatures in New York have passed resolutions calling for repeal of the new gun restrictions. 21 other county legislatures have resolutions pending.

My town is the first in our county to pass such a resolution, and we passed it before our county government passed theirs. Others will surely follow. If you live in New York and are concerned about this issue, This Link will keep you informed on the status of repeal resolutions. If your town has not passed a resolution, ask them to consider doing so.

As far as I know, this kind of groundswell reaction against a new law is unprecedented for New York. Something very significant is happening.


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Marlene and I have been reading about the health benefits of coconut oil. I am now taking a tablespoon of virgin organic coconut oil every day. I take it in my coffee. 

It is my custom to drink a single cup of coffee every morning and for the past couple of months I've made my cup of coffee as per the following "recipe".....

To one cup of caffeinated coffee, add: 1 tablespoon of coconut oil, heavy cream to your liking, maple syrup to your liking, a good dose of ground cinnamon. Blend to a froth. Enjoy.

Marlene says it has too many calories for her.... so she sips some of mine.


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(click to see an enlarged view)
And finally, if you would like to see a bird's-eye view of what America looked like 150+ years ago, when we were an Agrarian Nation, go to Google Maps and type in "Amish Road, Gap, PA." Then back the view out so you see more countryside, and scroll around.

You will see a patchwork of carefully-managed small fields and farms. They are family farms, worked with horses and mules. It is quite a sight.


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That's all for this month. This post is a gift to those readers who complain that my regular blogazines are too long. :-)
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The Deliberate Agrarian Blogazine
January 2013


Dateline: 31 January 2013

This is where I worked. But no more.

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.” 

You can read Chapter 5 of the book at this pdf link titled: Overcoming Hamilton’s Curse.

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.


Liberation 
Through Self Reliance
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.)


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That's it for another month. Thanks for stopping by.