Quote:
Luckily many people have not forgotten, and while I applaud him trying to grow vegetables he misleads people into thinking he was "living off the land". I am sure he did not grow his own animal food, which makes having a chicken dinner NOT count. I could have eaten off my garden and chicken eggs last month and fed the chickens home grown food, granted with some different choices in food than what I actually ate, and that is just with normal gardening. I have calculated that I could actually live off our land (40 acres most of it unusable) if we invested in solar panels for the well. Our diet would change a lot, winter squash, corn, beans, the traditional native diet. Plus we would have eggs and I would buy a cow for milk, and we have a greenhouse to help with fresh things in the winter. While this was a fun intillectual experience, I don't have any desire to try it. I already spend a great deal of time gardening and preparing home made food from scratch, putting home grown food in proper storage, getting up three times a night in winter to put wood in the stove.... I understand the time committment involved in being self-sufficient and I don't want it. I don't want the stress of worrying about crop failure. I have talked to my ancestors who homesteaded in this area, and they went hungry at times. I think having this guy spend so much money to try the experiment is a sad commentary on our times.
Luckily many people have not forgotten, and while I applaud him trying to grow vegetables he misleads people into thinking he was "living off the land". I am sure he did not grow his own animal food, which makes having a chicken dinner NOT count. I could have eaten off my garden and chicken eggs last month and fed the chickens home grown food, granted with some different choices in food than what I actually ate, and that is just with normal gardening. I have calculated that I could actually live off our land (40 acres most of it unusable) if we invested in solar panels for the well. Our diet would change a lot, winter squash, corn, beans, the traditional native diet. Plus we would have eggs and I would buy a cow for milk, and we have a greenhouse to help with fresh things in the winter. While this was a fun intillectual experience, I don't have any desire to try it. I already spend a great deal of time gardening and preparing home made food from scratch, putting home grown food in proper storage, getting up three times a night in winter to put wood in the stove.... I understand the time committment involved in being self-sufficient and I don't want it. I don't want the stress of worrying about crop failure. I have talked to my ancestors who homesteaded in this area, and they went hungry at times. I think having this guy spend so much money to try the experiment is a sad commentary on our times.