There's a difference between a woodstove, and a wood cook stove. A wood stove -- excuse me, some wood stoves have ample space on top to use pots and pans, which would amount to the cooktop part of a modern stove/range/oven/whatever you call it in your neck of the woods.
But that's about it...
The word of the day is "monopsony."
A monopsony is basically the exact opposite of a monopoly; many producers, one consumer. In your case, the consumer was whoever operated that elevator.. They were buying from you, and the next guy, and the next guy, and pretty much could offer you whatever...
In Kentucky, the generally accepted stocking rate for cow/calf pairs on clear pasture is 2.5acres per mama cow...so, 7.5 acres of actual pasture.
As for hay, around here, the generally accepted figure is that you need one big round bale of hay per head per month...and we feed hay about five...
Generally speaking, it's phosphorus that causes problems in males.. Blood phosphates, to be more specific. Extra phosphates are filtered out by the kidneys and sent into the bladder.
Grains of pretty much any kind are PACKED FULL of phosphorus.
If the urine pH is too high (too base/not...
Alright, so...here's what I'm taking from this thread.
1) To be "self-sufficient," on this forum, doesn't really have that much to do with actual self sufficiency, where one would have the ability to live without outside aid or input of any kind. It simply means trying or actually being...
What does it mean, then? Super curious to hear this...... :pop
I'm not suggesting it...the term "self sufficiency" does.
I'm actually suggesting that true self-sufficiency is practically unattainable.
I'm also really amazed at how many people are coming back at me with pretty much exactly...
Why? Because that's where most food comes from these days?
Oh, wait.
No, it doesn't.
You missed the point again.
The point was to compare what most folks do to what we strive to do, with regard to sustainability.
From a sustainability standpoint, yeah.
So far, so good.
You're doing...
Really? Because, if you notice, quite a few people have jumped in and said they agree with my assessment of what it means.
Soooo... :hu
Thanks! :D
..oh.. :(
Is it nitpicking vocabulary if someone looks out across the ocean and says "Wow, look at that water-car!" and you say "Uh, that's a...
FWIW, I don't think that being self-sufficient means removing yourself from society.. I simply think it means having the ability to remove yourself from society, if necessary.
And I think that because...yanno...that's actually what it means. :D :gig
I work for a living, and my job pays the bills and buys the stuff we need.
Would you consider me to be self-sufficient right now, because frankly...I don't.
At least, bot in the sense we're talking about here, anyway, whether people wanna own up to the kind of self-sufficiency most of us are...
It's the only logical interpretation I can think to assign the phrase within the context of growing one's own food, cutting one's own firewood, canning one's own veggies, etc..
I mean...if we open the door to the possibility of bartering and buying things we need...well, hey, most of us are...
I agree, and I do the same thing.
Not so much because it will help in a SHTF scenario...though it would...but because it keeps me out of the vet's office and saves me money.
Another example of self-sufficiency skills driven by practicality.
Actually, I'd say the "us" has a misconception of self-sufficiency.
It's not about being a hermit, either...not necessarily, anyway. But if you're self sufficient, you could be a hermit if necessary. If you couldn't be a hermit...that is, if you had to come out and do a little business with...