Dumbest Things People Have Said About Your Chickens/Eggs/Meat

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My grandfather was born in the late 1800's and lived to be over 100 years old. He farmed along with my grandmother. They only had my dad and his older sister and never had hired help. He raised meat birds, Angus cattle and hogs. He ate big meals, fried foods, liked a few sweets, always had tea cookies in the cookie jar and some of those soft peppermint sticks in a box he gave the grandkids. Nope, no hired help here. And he stayed on that farm until late in his 90's, way after his wife died, all alone, until he became almost deaf and a tad feeble and his daughter insisted he go live with her in Alabama. I think that pretty much killed his will to live. He probably would have made it a couple of years longer if he hadn't left the farm. He walked everywhere with his walking stick, wearing a flannel shirt, overalls and a pith helmet, rarely still for a minute.
 
My grandmother lived into her 90s, never had hired help ( no farm either )
My grandfather (still kickin in his late 80s ) grew up on a farm no hired help
My good departed friend Jean lived into her 80s. no hired help, a family of 4 as a child. when she took over the farm latter in life with a family of five, you guessed it no hired help and they owned (and and her son still owns) 1005 acres ( yes no help 1005 acres) they did dairy, beef, chickens, veggies, logged, hunted and trapped. Jeans mother kept books for a logging company and kept the house.
My DHs grandparents... And their 11 kids never had hired help either, some of those kids now in there 80s you guessed it no hired help. Just thought if say my bit too. And the other grandparents?( husbands and mine) Way to poor to own a farm or hire help.
 
Quote: That would be a misconception that the poor didn't have farms. Many, if not most, poor did farm if they didn't live in the cities, at least to a degree. My grandfather had only about 50 acres, which were dirt cheap when he got the place, and he ate what he grew, had very little money, wore ragged clothes. Owning a farm is not an endeavor for the well off, but farming on small scale, which mine did, was rather a necessity in order to live. The day will come when someone owning 5 acres like we do is considered rich. And maybe even a little mistrusted, if they aren't already.
 
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My dad's family lived in a tent for a portion of his childhood... In this case too poor to own a farm is not a misconception. Possible in my DH grandparents case that I have a misconception though.
 
My dad's family lived in a tent for a portion of his childhood... In this case too poor to own a farm is not a misconception. Possible in my DH grandparents case that I have a misconception though.

In that case, of course, you're right. It's just that some people think of owning a farm as a rich person's thing, you know? My apologies. Living in a tent would be a far cry from owning land, unless you were camping on a big plot of land you owned.


And we're still off topic, LOL.
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While I don't know if it's 100% correct, it appears that the total number people in the country at that time who owned slaves was 1.4%. The population in 1850 was 23,191,876. So if those numbers are true, there were approx 324,686 slave owners (probablye not the exact number, 1.4% is very vague).

It's a small number compared to the totalpopulation, but it's still a lot.

I didn't mean to imply ronott1's ancestors had slaves, which is statistically false, I just stated that a lot of people did.
Gimme, One is too many as far as I'm concerned. Peace to ya
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I got my information from history books, early information published by the USDA on dietary recommendations, books, both fiction and nonfiction, and personal experience. My personal experience was 1940's rural. I know what was put on farm tables back in the 40's because as conscripted child labor it was my job to help set the table, clear the table, and help wash dishes. Don't know what it was like in town because I wasn't there.

Prior to WWI there was a large pool of cheap domestic help available because of the immigrants from Europe. If you were even lower middle class you could afford at least some domestic help. After the war this was no longer true. Try reading some books published in the 1800's. Not currently written historical novels but books about daily life that were written then. As for cookbooks, there are cookbooks and then there are cookbooks. Some are written with the aim of putting on a feast for company and special occasions. Some are geared for regular day to day meals. I have both kinds. My 1919 cookbook is of the pedestrian type written for a household of modest means. It tells how to clean an ice box, how to draw poultry, it has a section on suggested weekly menus, proper nutrition for children, and recipes for feeding the frail and the ill.

People doing heavy physical labor require a lot of calories. Read Two Years Before the Mast and you will see what I mean.
 
Dumbest thing I've ever said aloud here about my chickens: They have slaves (me!) Well, I'll let them think they're living the entitled life...until a turn of events leaves them realizing who really owns who. ("...and then tragedy struck. And it was at that moment Pat realized his destiny was not to run the roost but to be pot pie.")

Strangest looks related to chickens: I was in Lowe's getting stuff for the being-built chicken coop and had an array of vinyl tiles laid out. I actually asked the salesclerk which patterns did they think chickens would like better. (Never ever give me more than a few options as it confounds me...)
 
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