Most Effective Way of Producing Food during a PO Crisis
Gardening
60%
[ 21 ]
Hunting
2%
[ 1 ]
Fishing
8%
[ 3 ]
Gathering
8%
[ 3 ]
Government Foodstamps
8%
[ 3 ]
Looting
11%
[ 4 ]
Total Votes : 35
Author
Message
gego Light Sweet Crude
Joined: Mar 03, 2005 Posts: 1334
Posted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 5:32 pm Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
Today I had a conversation with an old man about raising food.
He told me when he was a kid they had no electricity or indoor plumbing. They kept warm in the winter with the wood they cut in the autumn with cross cut saws and axes. They carried in their water every day from a spring house, and beginning in the spring all though the summer and into the fall they spend every day from sun up to sun down working, much of the time hunting, gathering, gardening, raising hay, milking cows, and canning or smoking food for the winter.
He said they always had enough food and were warm enough, but they looked a little ragged. Family was important and they depended on each other. He said winter time kept them indoors so they made things, did repairs, played music, and read. He considered it a good life, but doubts that people could easily learn today what they need to know to go back to that type life.
One thing he mentioned is that when he was a kid there were plenty of year round springs where people could get water, but with the ground water now mostly depleted, those springs no longer flow.
Joined: Mar 04, 2006 Posts: 269 Location: La Crosse, Wisconsin
Posted: Thu Oct 12, 2006 6:01 pm Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
Loki wrote:
I voted for gardening. I think in a post-collapse scenario, hunting and fishing will be played out within a year. The only thing left might be rodents and carp (nothing seems to get rid of these suckers around here). But it probably depends on the region. Here in western Oregon, which many might think of as being super-productive, salmon and trout populations are almost completely dependent on hatcheries, which are expensive to run. If a major depression hit, hatchery production would be reduced and/or eliminated. We don't have a lot of other freshwater game fish-- there are some bass, walleye, etc., but not in the abundance of the Northeast and South.
I know for a fact that Oregonians ignored hunting laws during the depression of the 1930s, but that was when our population was significantly smaller, so game populations weren't destroyed. With 3 million people now, deer, elk, and game bird populations would be decimated in short order. Gathering I think is more viable, but still not something most of us could rely on. Prior to white settlement, Native peoples in this region relied on plant gathering for about 50% of their calories. There were maybe 100,000 people in OR and WA then. There are about 9 million people now. Gathering ain't gonna cut it. But it might be OK to supplement your diet. There is basically an unlimited supply of blackberries here, and a fair supply of other berries. There are root foods, too, if you know what to look for, and since most people don't, they would probably last longer than game animals.
I have thought this about hunting for a long time now. I could see the exact thing happening in my area--in a year everything would be virtually wiped out. Living on the Mississippi and with other rivers and lakes around, fishing is a good choice, but how long would that be sustainable with the increased numbers taken with no limit? If it gets bad enough, even gardening will be tough. As a kid I can remember going on garden raids as a lark, not to get food to survive. You might need to have somebody stand guard over your garden when it is harvest time, which would vary for different things throughout the season. The same thing goes for fruit and fruit trees.
Posted: Thu Oct 12, 2006 6:50 pm Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
elocs wrote:
If it gets bad enough, even gardening will be tough. As a kid I can remember going on garden raids as a lark, not to get food to survive. You might need to have somebody stand guard over your garden when it is harvest time, which would vary for different things throughout the season. The same thing goes for fruit and fruit trees.
This is a good point. Xerces mentioned that kids have already raided his garden. I know my tiny little container garden is vulnerable--it would take one kid about 30 seconds to ruin it completely. There's a community garden a block from me that could easily be destroyed, or the food stolen. I read a thread in another forum about a lady who got her urban garden completely destroyed, a garden she had worked for years to cultivate. Not stealing anything, just mindless destruction.
I guess it depends on how bad society disintegrates. One of the many reasons I'd prefer to get out of the city. Not that being in the country is 100% insurance against this sort of thing, but there's at least more land to shovel after the shooting. SSS.
Joined: Mar 04, 2006 Posts: 269 Location: La Crosse, Wisconsin
Posted: Thu Oct 12, 2006 7:00 pm Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
Loki wrote:
elocs wrote:
If it gets bad enough, even gardening will be tough. As a kid I can remember going on garden raids as a lark, not to get food to survive. You might need to have somebody stand guard over your garden when it is harvest time, which would vary for different things throughout the season. The same thing goes for fruit and fruit trees.
This is a good point. Xerces mentioned that kids have already raided his garden. I know my tiny little container garden is vulnerable--it would take one kid about 30 seconds to ruin it completely. There's a community garden a block from me that could easily be destroyed, or the food stolen. I read a thread in another forum about a lady who got her urban garden completely destroyed, a garden she had worked for years to cultivate. Not stealing anything, just mindless destruction.
I guess it depends on how bad society disintegrates. One of the many reasons I'd prefer to get out of the city. Not that being in the country is 100% insurance against this sort of thing, but there's at least more land to shovel after the shooting. SSS.
Let me add that the garden raids we did when I was a kid were not malicious--it was more about grabbing something without getting caught, or running like crazy and laughing when the lights came on and the old man started yelling at us to get the hell out of there. Damn, I'm almost an old man now. How did that happen? That's the trouble with getting older--there's a lot of it going around. Beats the alternative though.
Posted: Fri Oct 13, 2006 6:52 am Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
Loki wrote:
Xerces mentioned that kids have already raided his garden. I know my tiny little container garden is vulnerable--it would take one kid about 30 seconds to ruin it completely. There's a community garden a block from me that could easily be destroyed, or the food stolen. I read a thread in another forum about a lady who got her urban garden completely destroyed, a garden she had worked for years to cultivate. Not stealing anything, just mindless destruction.
On the other hand, if gardening became a major source of food, you'd expect harsh punishments for those caught raiding gardens to become acceptable. Which should bring the raids down.
Posted: Mon Oct 16, 2006 4:39 am Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
Concerning raiding, you might see big fences going up. Where I live, suburban Stockholm, there are a few allotment areas nearby. This is near suburbs with apartments and lots of kids, and quite a number low-income people. The allotments have tall fences with locks - to keep out both four-legged (deer) and two-legged raiders.
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 8:12 pm Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
I've harvested at least another 40 pounds of green tomatos before the first frost hit. They are now ripening indoors. At this point, my squre meter of land is blossoming with turnips and kale. If I can just take down a deer or two with the bow, this self-sufficiency stuff may compose a significant portion of my diet this year.
One thing that I have been pondering about is whether game depletion will really be that easy. Hunting large game is a very difficult skill, even with a rifle. It usually takes years before a man can bag his first deer. To consistently be able to hunt successfully takes much longer. In a fast crash(which is unlikely), can we really assume that most people will pick up these skills so quickly, when there are other easier ways of getting food?
In a slow decline, the vast majority of people would more likely opt for food stamps and soup kitchens than go hunting in the country, if the great depression is anything to go by. Most game depletion occurred right around the beginning of the industrial revolution here in America, when there was a huge rural population, this wouldn't be the case in either a fast or a slow crash.
Joined: Mar 04, 2006 Posts: 269 Location: La Crosse, Wisconsin
Posted: Sat Oct 21, 2006 7:09 pm Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
xerces wrote:
I've harvested at least another 40 pounds of green tomatos before the first frost hit. They are now ripening indoors. At this point, my squre meter of land is blossoming with turnips and kale. If I can just take down a deer or two with the bow, this self-sufficiency stuff may compose a significant portion of my diet this year.
One thing that I have been pondering about is whether game depletion will really be that easy. Hunting large game is a very difficult skill, even with a rifle. It usually takes years before a man can bag his first deer. To consistently be able to hunt successfully takes much longer. In a fast crash(which is unlikely), can we really assume that most people will pick up these skills so quickly, when there are other easier ways of getting food?
In a slow decline, the vast majority of people would more likely opt for food stamps and soup kitchens than go hunting in the country, if the great depression is anything to go by. Most game depletion occurred right around the beginning of the industrial revolution here in America, when there was a huge rural population, this wouldn't be the case in either a fast or a slow crash.
If things do get bad I can see in my part of Wisconsin the game being decimated within a couple of years. It is not a large metropolitan area and there are many hunters who are limited now by game laws. There certainly would be more game available in the sparsely populated nothern Wisconsin, but people are not likely to want to travel far distances from their homes to hunt. You certainly would not see a squirrel or a rabbit within the city limits. There certainly are fish, but their population would also be impacted by disregarding limits.
Posted: Sun Oct 22, 2006 12:28 am Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
This idea that larger animals will somehow become decimated seems silly to me.
First of all, hunting laws do not keep people from killing massive amounts of animals. Poachers -- the ones that kill animals and export them to rich people -- kill the most animals, and the effectiveness of authorities stopping them is minimal. "No Hunting" signs won't fine, arrest, or shoot them, and they know it. During collapse where rich people are no longer relevant, I suspect the existing markets for such animal products to be terminated, along with the incentive to deliver such products.
Of course, general industry destroys everything in sight, so if this were to slow down to negligble levels, everything that is trying to live under its relentless extermination will actually be able to do so.
I agree with what xerces said about people preferring soup kitchens than attempting to hunt. I laugh at the thought of some bald, dougy, worker with a bad back being able to take down a stag and do what is needed to eat it. I would also like to add that modern hunters often times travel great distances by automobile to designated hunting grounds, where they ride around on ATVs to and from their locations, and then drive back to a house after a few days.
Joined: Nov 24, 2005 Posts: 743 Location: The ever shrinking wilds of Norway
Posted: Sun Oct 22, 2006 3:15 am Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
Hi Itch
Some large animals are likely to become extinct, or at least extirpiated from some areas.
Deer of course, is primarily a solitary animal. It lives in the forest where it is easy to hide and many of the species is extremely numerous. Also many of the species are to be found in enormous areas. They are highly unlikely to become extinct in any case as some individuals will survive one place or another.
Buffalo on the other hand, is a herd animal that lives in the open. You can kill lots of them quickly. They are not very numerous any more and exist only in a few areas. Unless someone protects them with violence they are surely going to become extinct.
Norway's situation:
Moose survived, though just barely, the high hunting pressure in Norway in the 19th century and it seems extremely unlikely that there will become fewer than that.
Wild reindeer. Potentially a very easy game (with guns). Their range and number has been greatly reduced. Unless protected during collapse, they will almost certainly become exterpiated.
The red deer and roe deer is probably safe from this fate.
Bear, wolf, lynx and wolvarine will most likely survive, because they are not considered food and are hard to hunt.
Still, relying on hunting would require you to have a head start on everybody else. Game will become rapidly more scarce and shy as the hunting pressure increases. Start practising today! (I know you already are, Itch ) _________________ http://livingprimitively.com/
Posted: Mon Oct 23, 2006 1:10 pm Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
My plans include the assumption that in the post-crash world there will be many more people hunting, not just for the luxury, but to supply essential food for themselves, their families and friends, but also to generate resources they can trade for other things that they need. I assume that because of this the wildlife populations will crash very quickly after people begin relying on them.
I also assume that people will be raiding for food and also pillaging in order to force others into starvation (so they won't be around to compete with later). Thus gardens will not be safe immediately post-crash.
To ensure survival in such a world, should it come about, I plan to be physically remote, but no so isolated as to be pratically excluded from resumption of trade when it occurs, and I plan to stockpile food and supplies that will be necessary to make it through the population die-off that will occur in the worst-case scenerio. During this time I will have intensive pot or small plot based gardens that are portable, so they can be moved inside at night or in the face of an impending raid. These will suppliment horded food and vitamin supplies for the first year or two.
Eventually the wildlife will return and so hunting will become a viable food source, but I expect that for the first 3-5 years hunting will be very difficult and unnecessary. Difficult because the few animals left will be few and far between as well as wary of hunters and unnecessary because for quite some time post-crash horded supplies can be used instead of animal products.
I'm hoping that the 'crash' will be more of a gentle slide into a civilization of sustainable lifestyles, but in the event that it all comes down hard I will be prepared with the knowledge, supplies and skills that will get me through the worst (survivable) events and into the future (I'm not planning for nuclear winter, supervolcanos or meteorite strikes though, you have to draw the line somewhere ).
Posted: Mon Oct 23, 2006 2:33 pm Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
Quote:
This idea that larger animals will somehow become decimated seems silly to me.
Go visit Africa if you believe the animals will survive. When I was working in South Africa. I noticed that all the game parks were surounded by massive electric fence systems. It wasn't to keep the animals in, it was to keep the people out. If not strictly controlled, the local people would poach every wild animal in no time. Outside of the game parks in South Africa, there are basically no wild animals remaining.
If electric, gas and food distribution go down in the US, there won't be an animal larger than a squirrel alive in this country in 2 years.
Joined: Nov 24, 2005 Posts: 743 Location: The ever shrinking wilds of Norway
Posted: Mon Oct 23, 2006 2:53 pm Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
[quote="markam"]
Quote:
If electric, gas and food distribution go down in the US, there won't be an animal larger than a squirrel alive in this country in 2 years.
Of course there would, but they would become substantially fewer. In a fast crash, people just don't have the time to become good enough hunters to hunt the species to extinction before they die themselves.
Also, I would assume that the down to earth skills (including hunting and trapping) are being kept at a substantially higher level in much of Africa than in the US of A.
Also, without transportation and lots of extra food supplies, going into the remote areas would be extremely risky of two reasons:
- Dangerous and desperate people may reside there.
- The risk of starvation before you get a kill.
In other words: Big game will survive in the areas that are considered remote. These places will serve as a genetic pool to repopulate the rest of the country. _________________ http://livingprimitively.com/
Posted: Mon Oct 23, 2006 5:06 pm Post subject: Re: Experiment in Food Production Methods
Quote:
In a fast crash, people just don't have the time to become good enough hunters to hunt the species to extinction before they die themselves.
They wouldn't have too. I am sure that large groups of poachers would be more than happy to clear out all the animals to sell to the starving masses.
Even without organized poachers, there are literally hundreds of millions of guns in the US, and the truly remote areas in the US don't have many animals (they are remote because people (and animals) can't live there easily).
At least for North America, the only hope for avoiding a mass extinction would be the remote areas of alaska and canada. However, I would not want to be a deer in Pennsylvania.
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