by KaiserJeep » Mon 28 Apr 2014, 14:19:37
My earliest memories of my Grandfather's dairy farm are from before he got electricity in the 1950's. He never had any utility except electric power. No telephone, no city water, no sewer. The rest of the state was electrified in the 1930's, but after getting married he cleared the top of a mountain to start his farm, and waited for electricity for 22 years in that remote location - my Mother married and left home, never having had electric light. Electricity did not mean much except a bare bulb dangling from a pair of twisted, fabric-covered wires. They had a spring house instead of a refrigerator, and heated and cooked with wood. The biggest luxury of their lives was the electric fan that made Summer nights bearable. A similar luxury was replacing the kitchen woodstove with a gas range, allowing indoor cooking in the Summer. It was run off a huge tank of Butane gas in the side yard.
He did have 13 children, 11 of which lived, my Mother being the oldest. He had his cows and his draft horses and mules. Later in life he had one old pickup - actually a series of old pickups, and one very used and cranky Farmall tractor. He preferred to plow with horses or mules, because he bought food first and gasoline second. He sold his milk for cash money - never very much, because he had dirt floors in his barns, and thus was only ever given a Class "C" sanitation certificate, meaning his milk could only be used in cheese and other dairy by-products, and never drank - except by family members.
His 13 children and countless grandchildren were his labor force. He cultivated a couple of acres of vegetables, had fruit trees, and pretty much was a "subsistance" farmer. They paid cash money for bulk rice and sugar - grew sugar beets for molasses - raised chickens and hogs for meat and eggs - canned fruit and vegetables for the Winter, and everything from shoes to clothing homemade from feed sacks was passed down from kid to kid.
My Grandparents were "progressive", and proud of it. Which meant that they allowed the children to fill their plates first, before the adults. This at a time when in most families, the kids were only permitted to scavenge the remains of food after the adults had their fill.
They were grindingly poor, with no medical or dental care, and only had vitamins because the state was distributing them in rural areas. They probably lived closer to the off-the-grid, agrarian lifestyle that many here aspire to, than modern folks who are trying.
It's not any form of lifestyle that interests me. The socially beneficial aspects of such a lifestyle are available in small and medium sized towns, without the backbreaking labor, the chillingly high infant mortality, and the famines that will accompany crop blights without government support.
I think I've had a closer look at the post PO lifestyle than most of you, with my experiences in the 1950's. My description of "HOW IS AGRICULTURE GOING TO WORK?" is: Mostly, it won't. I believe that without cheap oil, we will struggle to grow and distribute enough food for the cities and suburbs. I don't think most of us will have jobs. Some of us will starve, mostly in the cities.
The Golden Age is ending. How many Americans even realized that they were living in the wealthiest country there ever was, in the time of the greatest prosperity there will ever be?
KaiserJeep 2.0, Neural Subnode 0010 0000 0001 0110 - 1001 0011 0011, Tertiary Adjunct to Unimatrix 0000 0000 0001
Resistance is Futile, YOU will be Assimilated.
Warning: Messages timestamped before April 1, 2016, 06:00 PST were posted by the unmodified human KaiserJeep 1.0