I think this is the beginnings of an economy based on perpetual growth and fossil fuel energy running headlong into geological energy constraints. Basically I see an undulatory downward path for the rest of my life. From here out, I think any rallies in our economic condition are going to be met with spiking commodity prices that knock us right back down.
Joined: Feb 26, 2005 Posts: 107 Location: By the river
Posted: Thu Jun 02, 2005 5:35 am Post subject:
Wednesday wrote:
ludi i am curious how you solve this problem too, i will be raising meat rabbits at some point
i dont know if this city girl could strangle a rabbit
little bitty .22 pistol to back of skull???
For rabbits most people club them in the back of the head which will either kill them or knock them out, then you decapitate them. I would hate to try and break their neck and not be able to do it quickly or properly. Clubbing them seems cruel, but better to get it over with quick.
I agree with two sets of leather gloves for squirrels, they can be nasty!
Joined: Mar 06, 2005 Posts: 306 Location: Elliot Lake, Ontario
Posted: Thu Jun 02, 2005 10:42 am Post subject:
What will happen to us if we get these seeds and they are usually not a part of our normal diet and the pooh does hit the fan and we grow them and then start eating them, how will our bodies adjust..just curious..
i think a lot of people are expecting some cataclysmic event to signal the "beginning" of the peak oil crisis
i say its already here and im making changes accordingly
in the meantime, im striving for a more self sufficient life and learning to enjoy today, right here, right now
i will admit, some of my friends find my new interests rather odd, i focus on "preaching" self sufficiency and manage to talk about gasoline prices without ever mentioning the words "peak oil"
one of my friends asked me "are you preparing for a war?"
i answered, "sort of, im preparing for a recession"
people dont need a name for it to realize their money isnt going as far
im taking baby steps to my new lifestyle and its enjoyable so far, i find its good for me, im healthier and more active since i started growing some of my food
its also good for me spiritually, as i find green growing things make me reflective and thoughtful
i eat from my stockpile now! and follow the creedo "store what you eat and eat what you store"
if the SHTF, who really knows? i might die, but i was going to do that anyway, someday
if we lose the electrical grid, its going to be tough on all of us, thats just a fact that none of us can escape, but even tho some people on this forum would label me an "optimist" im still making adjustments to my lifestyle that will serve me well in "war time"
After reading this thread I decided to try planting some garlic. I ate a clove in the process just to see how I'd like it and; wow, it almost killed me. I suppose it wasn't so bad once the fire in my mouth went out, but I'll definitely have some adjustments to make if I ever need to eat the stuff regularly.
I've started a small garden this year (tomatoes, beans, carrots, peas, potatoes, squash, zucchini, lettuce, and garlic). It's not nearly enough to live on or even to make a sizable dent in the food budget (I don't have that much space), but I'm learning new skills and it feels really good to be doing something instead of just fretting all the time.
Joined: Apr 17, 2005 Posts: 2750 Location: Vancouver Island
Posted: Wed Jun 08, 2005 3:12 pm Post subject:
Grimnir wrote:
After reading this thread I decided to try planting some garlic. I ate a clove in the process just to see how I'd like it and; wow, it almost killed me. I suppose it wasn't so bad once the fire in my mouth went out, but I'll definitely have some adjustments to make if I ever need to eat the stuff regularly.
Heh I like garlic, and I eat a fair amount of the stuff. Having said that I've never eaten a whole clove of garlic raw and by it's self. I chop it real fine and mix it into everything else that I eat instead. There isn't a sauce, stirfry, soup or salad that can't be improved with garlic is my thought. _________________ shame on us, doomed from the start
god have mercy on our dirty little hearts
Joined: Apr 03, 2004 Posts: 6943 Location: My Grandkids' Farm
Posted: Wed Jun 08, 2005 3:20 pm Post subject:
kelee877 wrote:
What will happen to us if we get these seeds and they are usually not a part of our normal diet and the pooh does hit the fan and we grow them and then start eating them, how will our bodies adjust..just curious..
If you are used to eating frozen pizza, nachos made with Cheese Whiz, extra-double choco-choco sundae ice cream and triple double frapamocachino fizzies; your body may simply implode!
Seriously, a change from your regular diet to wheatberry gruel, boiled beans and wilted mustard greens might cause some distress (to put it mildly), not to mention the morale issue, especially with small children.
Again, probably better – if you think there is a possibility of the need at some point – to start growing and eating that rabbit food now, especially the things you already buy and eat. It’s kind of habit forming and cheaper than a tanning salon!
Joined: Nov 09, 2004 Posts: 1248 Location: Big Rock Candy Mountain
Posted: Thu Jun 09, 2005 3:36 pm Post subject:
I would also recommend putting in some nut trees. Nuts are the major source of vegetable fat for us in the Northern temperate zone(too cool for soy). For nuts in a hurry try filberts(hazelnuts) or Chinese chestnuts(zone 5, native American hazels are hardier but produce small nuts). Get the most mature plants you can afford-4 year old at least. You can harvest worthwhile crops in 2-3 years. Nuts like black walnut, hickory, pecan, can take 7 years. I doubt that we have 7 years of business as usual. Ungrafted butternut is hardy to zone 3 but slow growing.
Joined: Sep 30, 2004 Posts: 975 Location: On one of the blades of the fan
Posted: Fri Jun 10, 2005 11:42 am Post subject:
Sorry, I actually came to make a post, not trade smarty remarks. tee hee.
Hope this isn't off-topic.
I have started container vegetable gardening in my flat (apartment).
For 2 reasons:
To start to learn some horticulture skills.
To have some fresh, organic, non-air-miles produce available.
I don't expect to live off the produce, obviously. It's a nice treat.
My flat has a shady balcony which faces East, and indoors a (sunny)south and (moderately sunny)West facing window.
Here's the energy lesson for me: seeds planted at the same time grow well in the South window, medium in the West but struggle to grow in the shady balcony, and the major difference is Solar Energy.
BUT WHAT BUGS ME IS THE BUGS!
I have conceived a virulent hatred for APHIDS (black/white fruit, and indeed vegetable, flies). They seem to multiply indoors and out with frightening speed.
I want to garden organically.
So to kill them the options are:
Conventional pesticides - which I am loathe to use. Why go to all this effort when I could just go to the supermarket?
"Organic Natural sprays" - seem to contain pyrethrin...modest effectiveness if I keep up spraying.
Soapy water - totally ineffective.
Natural predators - Lacewings and Ladybirds (Ladybugs): I can buy these with their own little house:
Green Gardener
And I can certainly see myself marshalling my insectoid troops with stirring rhetoric, "Gentlemen, Ladies, Hermaphrodites, lock and load your mandibles, the only good aphid is an eaten aphid."
However I think they will fly away (deserters!), not being in a garden as such.
Even inside my flat, if one or two fruit flies get in there are soon lots more of them which is icky.
Joined: Dec 27, 2004 Posts: 13064 Location: naive idiot fantasy world
Posted: Fri Jun 10, 2005 11:48 am Post subject:
You might try getting some Reemay or other plant covering fabirc, drape it over your plants, and release the ladybugs under it, to keep them from flying away. It isn't the most attractive stuff in the world, but I'm thinking of getting some of it to cover some of my plants in the garden which have been especially picked on by bugs this year.
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