
Many of my ancestors worked the land. Out of necessity, out of profession, out of love for it. I am slowly finding something in myself that I didn't realize existed. A desire for a more simple, more healthful, more organic way of life, that is sustained from the home, rather than from the nearest Save-On Foods.
I know in this day and age, living in a city, this is very complicated and nearly impossible. I just want to do it as much as it is possible.
I've been totally inspired by one of the books in this stack: homegrown, pure and simple, by chef Michel Nischan. Here are some excerpts:
Michel was raised in a small house in a suburban area where his mother planted vegetables all through the back yard up to the sliding glass doors! I love the dedication in that!
"In late spring, summer, and fall, we harvested fresh vegetables; in early spring and winter, we ate the canned, preserved and frozen vegetables and fruits Mom had put up in the fall."
I would LOVE to be able to do this!
"In those days, most people exercised similar common sense when it came to feeding families. For one thing, more families still farmed or were close to farming roots. Convenience foods may have been making inroads, but the way Americans actually cooked in the 1950s and 60s was pretty close to how they had cooked in earlier decades. Freezers were not as efficient, kitchens had no microwaves, and supermarkets didn't offer the staggering array of packaged, prepared foods they do now. Takeout was not a noun, and a delivered pizza was still a novelty.
In two short generations, we find ourselves removed from farming and the concept that goes along with it, which is one of frugality amid abundance. It is a way of life that not only makes good sense but also promotes good health."
I love love love that bit about the mindset of frugality amid abundance. Are you inspired to start your own vegetable plot yet? I am!
2 comments:
totally sis. definately something up our ally as well. (add in a couple chickens and a goat to milk and we'd be a happy little commune, eh?) haha.
anyway. good luck with this venture. i hope our next home has better soil, and space and sun for a good garden. :)
lots of work. lots of fun. i've always loved veggie gardens!!
from su.
Vegetable gardens are great fun, though lots of work weeding and watering and such. I find it much more difficcult now than I did when I only had one child! :) Gardens are a good family friendly project too. This year, my hope is to have a small garden that is just for the kids so they can plant whatever they want and care for it and pick it themselves. We'll see how that goes.
Have fun,
Christa
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