by patience » Thu 04 Dec 2008, 09:09:39
What can you remember from what survivors of GD told you, that would help us plan and dig in to make it through the current hard times? Not everything is relevant, but I think not much of our needs have changed regarding how we live, cook, stay warm and dry, dress, and get food.
Old folks I grew up with were fond of homely proverbs. Waste not, want not. Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. Save everything; it will come in handy. Save some money for a rainy day. Such sayings typified how they lived their lives.
A lot of handicrafts and DIY skills were popularized then, such as quilting, whittling, carpentry, weaving (rag rugs, especially), and simple metal work. Even my old Aunt could solder a hole shut in an old pan. Grandma stuffed all the red peppers she could in an old Dr. Pepper bottle (sense of humor there), and filled it with vinegar to make hot sauce for otherwise bland meals. Grandpa cut up an old tin can and following a cardboard pattern he'd worked out, soldered together a small funnel to save a dime. He was a furniture maker, and begged old apple boxes and crates for material to make some homely items like shelving, and birdhouses. In a tiny backyard, they grew tomatoes, and salad stuff. They shut off unused rooms in winter, and never heated bedrooms.
My farmer uncle, after losing one farm when his cannery customer went bankrupt, saved and bought another very poor 40 acres. The ground lacked any fertility, so he and the boys took the farm truck, some barrels, and a big seine to the river and brought home a couple truckloads of fish. The good one went into his pond for future meals, and the trash went onto the corn field for fertilizer, which he plowed under ASAP. Next, he volunteered to clean the houses at the local chicken broiler enterprise, and got several truckloads of free chicken manure. The result was a fine corn crop on what everyone said was a "wore out" farm.
When WWII came along, he needed a tractor, but none were being produced. He built his own with the front half of a Model A Ford, and the back half of a 1 1/2 ton truck, retaining both transmissions to gear it down for slow plowing speeds. Tires were rationed, and expensive, so he used the bald ones he had, and wrapped them with log chains for traction.
Another aunt started a dressmaking business with only a needle and thread, graduating to a treadle sewing machine in a few months. When the brass plating wore off the metal doorknobs in her house, she spent 15 cents on a small bottle of gold paint to spiff them up. A widow, she did everything herself, including making patches for window screens that developed holes. Oatmeal was standard for breakfast at her house, 20 years after she had no pressing need to save money. She squirrelled away money in cash, hidden in vast bookshelves of dress patterns she had collected. My folks found over $500 in $1 bills there, and wondered what they missed.
What ways have you heard, of how people coped back then? Should be instructive for us today.
Local fix-it guy..