A new journey into homesteading "pic heavy"

Chic Rustler

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Even after the sheep grazed it HARD, there was still lots of humus for the soil.

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A hard grazed pasture still had a lot of humus to improve the soil. If you were able to plant clovers and let them grow to full height, then mow it down, you would have a LOT of mulch and humus for your soil.

Ley your clover grow to this, then mow and mulch it.

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The clover will fix nitrogen in it's roots and improve the soil.



Love that pic!
 

Chic Rustler

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Been working all day on this. 7 gallon size freezer bags of tomatoes condensed down to 3/4 of a pot of spaghetti sauce. Maybe enough for 3 or 4 quarts. So 3 or 4 meals for the family.

We eat pasta every week. To make that much sauce i would need around a thousand tomato plants and a week to cook it all. So we probably wont be "pasta self sufficient" any time i the forseeable future. :gig


That being said, it all came from the garden. The tomatoes, herbs and garlic. I will enjoy these three meals!
 

Mini Horses

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Love fresh tomatoes and fresh sauce. Me -- I grow the paste type for a little more substance but, the regular types for slicers & chopped/canned. I "may" get sauce sufficient, but only ONE here :lol: Doesn't take so much. Yeah, I remember when there were kids at home, friends of kids, etc. HUGE meals were needed. $$$ My gardens helped then, too. Even "some" help is better than none :old Keep at it. You're doing great.
 

Chic Rustler

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Love fresh tomatoes and fresh sauce. Me -- I grow the paste type for a little more substance but, the regular types for slicers & chopped/canned. I "may" get sauce sufficient, but only ONE here :lol: Doesn't take so much. Yeah, I remember when there were kids at home, friends of kids, etc. HUGE meals were needed. $$$ My gardens helped then, too. Even "some" help is better than none :old Keep at it. You're doing great.



Aint that the truth! Anything from the garden helps!
 

wyoDreamer

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I am not a big fan of raw tomatoes - so I grow mostly paste tomatoes. I found that dehydrated tomatoes will help thicken the sauce when you are cooking down fresh tomatoes, so it takes less time. I had some leftover dehydrated tomatoes that I wanted to use up, so I added them to my pot of slicing tomatoes I was trying to make sauce out of. I hope to have my solar dehydrator built by tomato season so I can dehydrate a lot of stuff.

Last fall, I sliced and dehydrated all the overripe and otherwise "not good enough tomatoes" to give to the chickens this winter. They are really loving them, especially when I rehydrate the tomatoes in warm water on the negative temp mornings. They slurp them down in no time. They love the treats and the yolks stay dark and delicious.
 
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