Tuesday, July 1, 2008

This week has been

Busy and adventurous and it's only TUESDAY! Seems like my week started on Saturday though.

HAPPY JULY!!!!
I'm hoping to post up some pictures later today with some of the current projects we've done or are doing.

Hubby and I made 9 pints of Salsa on Saturday, we've picked blueberries and plums and the figs will be in soon!

The garden has been revamped in preperation for the fall and winter crops and some of that planting will have to be done soon. We've continued to collect harvest from the garden, as we will for the rest of the summer and into fall.
You should see the gourds! WOW! I've got tons and some are huge! I can't wait to play with those after they dry out. Bowls, birdhouses, planters...you name I'm going to try and make it. Give me some suggestions on what you'd make if you had gourds at your disposal. Would love some new ideas!

We've got a big weekend coming up, a bbq/cookout! The son and daughter in law will be in from New York on Thursday and the daughter and new baby will be up on Saturday along with other family members from in and out of state. It's COOKOUT time! I hope to get lots of pictures to share with you.

Till later, it's time to get busy here at the farm!!

Thursday, June 26, 2008

The Gas dribble

Is it gloom and doom to think ahead, or see what comes round the bend? Maybe, maybe not. I never believe it's gloom and doom to be prepared.

Let's talk about gas. The price of gas has skyrocketed to prices we never thought we'd see...but here they are, over $4 a gallon in most places. Staggering isn't it? (funny how gas and milk always seem to run about the same!)
I've read many blogs and forums where people are having a hard time dealing with these prices They are having to give up this or that in order to be able to fill their tanks to get to work! It's kinda scary.

So let's discuss some realities. I hear a lot of people screaming 'go green' so that it will lower our prices. I have nothing against going green...I was green when green wasn't cool..not to the 'enth degree' by any means. I do small stuff that suits our lifestyle. Green is not where it's at to reduce gas prices.
Will gas prices reduce?? Ask yourself why should it? If we as a society are willing to pay for it at these rates now, why would the gas companies reduce the rate? They won't. Face that fact, gas is never going to go down to what we'd all like to see it as.

Diesel...let's talk diesel. Just who uses diesel. Companies. Shipping and Trucking companies to be more specific. They are paying out the nose to run their trucks. What do those trucks do for us?
They bring all the supplies we use. ALL of them, from concrete to groceries.
In order to recoup their loss at the tanks, what are these companies going to do? Well, raise prices that's what.
Long haul or short haul trucks will never go green. They will never go 'electric' (at least not ANYTIME soon enough), so they will continue to have to pay the enormous diesel rates at the tanks. And in turn, you will pay for it at any counter where you purchase items. So here you are now paying more for your gas to get to work, and more for the stuff that you buy!

I don't even think we've seen the total fallback on the rising gas prices yet. I know I've noticed an increase in grocery prices for sure, but I don't think it's hit us as hard as it's going to yet.

We can sell the big cars we own and buy more economical cars, sure, but we'll still end up paying for someones gas elsewhere.
Have you thought about all the places the rising costs are going to show up?
Grocery stores (the cost to get the food to the store has doubled)
Restaurants (they face the same delimas you do with the grocery prices)
Shipping (Postal/trucking rates)
Taxes (the state has to pay for gas to fix roads, run the police force, school buses, etc)
Travel (all travel from cars to planes to trains)
This is a short list, but I'm sure you get the idea. You can add to it on your own and see how the higher gas prices are going to affect you.


Here's what I've noticed at the register:
The prices on all food has gone up. Fresh food has doubled since last years crop and corn has taken a leap due to the new 'biofuels' made with corn.

At the local restaurants, prices have risen or the portions have shrunk (not that this is a bad thing necessarily)
The postal rates continue to climb, and heaven forbid if you want to ship something to another country!
Taxes haven't hit yet, but they will. The state and counties HAVE to pay for things that specifically use GAS.. police cars, school buses, road upkeep, expansion just to name a few.

It's already expensive to travel, whether you do it by plane or by car because of the gas prices. Add in the extra expense now at restaurants and any 'counter' and you'll find that this years trip to visit the grandkids costs you twice as much as it did the year before

So what can you do to reduce your final costs, because in the end, this is where it will hit our pocket book the most. The key is learning to not use the things listed above.
We can't avoid the taxes of course not.
Buy local from the farmers, or grown your own.
Learn to put up food that you grow or gather from the farmers so that you can avoid the grocery store as much as possible. BUY ON SALE
Use email and avoid small shipments of anything, double them up and send more at once.
Avoid eating out.

It may be wise to consider "how" to create your own of everything now, from food to clothes!
Learn all you can, grow things, can things, freeze things, reduce your costs as much as possible.
Lower your thermostate by 5 degrees
Don't be afraid to hang your clothes on a clothes line, your grandmother and great grandmother did it, they didn't suffer and made it! (they didn't eat at McDonalds either!)

Each individual family will have to change some, how you choose to do it is of course, up to you, or maybe it'll be up to the gas compaines!

Good luck, and may your tank always be full!

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Want to see what I've been doing?

Well here it is. I started on Sunday, with just a few items (some of the blackberry jam), then on Monday and Tuesday I finished up everything else! WHEW! I'm tired.

I've canned and 'put up', blackberries (whole in syrup, jam and sauce), peaches, blueberries (whole in syrup and jam), dill pickles (spears and slices), bread and butter pickles, tomato's, jalapeno's, banana peppers and hot pickle mix.


Let me tell you, that's a lot!!! I've only put a bit of everything in the pictures, the rest is already on the 'larder' shelves. I've got one problem though. I'm now out of shelf space and harvest is only HALF OVER! I guess I'll have to empty some cabinet somewhere!
Besides all the canning, we've managed to get the pool up and filled, put the solar cover on and get it warm and today I turned on the pump and cleaned it out good. We are ready for a swim! I know I am!
Now, about that storm that we got on Saturday. Here I was just getting ready to start 'jammin' with some blackberries, and the storm starting coming up. So I waited. Then, out of nowhere, came a big lightening strike, and a huge pop in my house. It was just a little later when I went to start working on the jam that I realized we had no water. HUH? We go out and check the pool which we were filling, and nope, no water coming from the hose either. After some inspections and checking, we discovered the lightening had gotten the motor on our well pump! (it was the following day when I realized it got my coffee pot too!). So needless to say, the water that was in the pool came in very handy as we went without running water from Saturday night till Monday afternoon, when the motor on the pump was replaced. ((SIGH)).

I went ahead and did the first 'batch' of blackberry jam without running water, but I made it. We had to haul water from the pool to do the cleaning and such and went out and purchased drinking water for the weekend. Was it tough? Yeah, but it makes me appreciate my ancestors even more, those who had to haul water every day just to get through a day.
So that's been the last few days for me down on the farm, besides picking the blackberries and the blueberries and the rest of the garden bounty. Much of the 'summer' garden is almost done and it's time for winter planting now. I've got about two weeks left before we get into that! WHEW!

So, I could use some help, why don't you get on your work aprons, and meet me here..down on the farm! Till next time
Sage