by patience » Fri 18 Jul 2008, 22:44:05
I'll be 67, and having been on Social Security for 5 years, not getting near enough to get by, so I'll still be trying to eke out a living working the home business. Assuming my health holds up, I would nonetheless be somewhat less productive at machine work.
Early mornings in warm weather I'll be in the garden, orchard, and tending chickens, unless it is the monthly shopping day, when we will take our much modified VW (50 mpg, on gas) to town, 5 miles distant, followed by a one-wheel trailer so we can shop for at least a couple neighbors, who may ride along.
Mail and package deliveries will be a big deal, having much less communication, and that powered by our solar system. We'll be sweating how to pay for replacement batteries, and wondering if the rejuvenating (desulphating) will work one more time. I'll be online on a solar powered computer searching for the latest energy saving/producing tricks, and listening to FM and shortwave radio for news. My wife will cut into my web surfing time to use our one low-draw laptop for business records and accounting. Every effort will be made to keep our power draw low, to extend the battery life by limiting the depth of discharge. One CFL at a time, and a few LED's to keep from stumbling into things at night.
The daily repair shop work will be mostly manual labor, and forge work, with limited grid electricity for shop power, at a premium cost. During blackouts, if a customer wants welding done, he'll have to bring his own gasoline for the welder, with a bit extra for me. Acetylene torch work will be quite expensive. Steel orders will be limited to once a month, instead of weekly, with a minimum order amount and a big fuel surcharge. Thus, scrap steel will be getting precious, and hoarded like other metals.
Once a week, on a weekday to avoid the Saturday crowd, I'll take the bike and trailer to the water-powered grist mill we helped restore back in 2008. I'll get 15-20 pounds of wheat ground into flour, for our bread and kitchen use, along with 20 pounds of cornmeal, some for us, and some for the chickens, who mostly free-range in the garden and orchard, yet provide an excess of eggs in warm weather.
Eggs provide much needed protein for us old folks, and our younger daughter and her husband (childless) who lost everything in the San Diego collapse of real estate and banks. They moved back to Indiana with little more than their clothes, and now help raise food and do some part time work. The son in law is a chiropractor and nutritionist, now studying herbal medicine, and busily processing herbs from our garden into remedies he trades for meat, milk, butter, and grain from the neighbor farmers.
Our older daughter and her husband are pretty self-sufficient in their off-grid, super-insulated home, but they are over 10 miles away,so we don't see them much. He does welding and repairs, too, in their area, along with building windmills for sale. She is the family herbalist, and advises her brother in law as he learns. She also makes jewelry of copper, brass, stainless, and aluminum as she can find it, the sale of those bieng limited. She has a foot-powered lapidary setup to cut and polish local stones, mostly for wire-wrap mountings. Her stuff brings a premium at the saturday farmers market and swap meet in the county seat, where they trade it for needed items.
We have a supply of clothing we accumulated back before the crash, but my wife stays busy doing mending on her old treadle sewing machine. She also does canning, cooking, baking, writes an online meditation blog.
Our younger daughter (at home) does a lot of cooking and cares for chickens daily, but her back injury limits her work. So, she takes care of inventory for us, helping plan meals and food storage, checking on the condition of root cellar items and food ready for eating or preservation. She has a degree in Communications, and is the resident electrical geek, monitoring our solar system for optimum performance and longevity, and solving computer problems. She has a part time job for the local internet provider, answering his phone via internet to do customer service.
Once every couple months, our clan gathers in the county seat and hops the bus for the big city, always going in a group to avoid trouble with the riff-raff. This is the outing to get items not locally available, since most local retailers are gone.
Altogether not a bad life, more interdependent, and rewarding for that, but with the frictions one could expect. We like it.
Local fix-it guy..