Lazy Gardener
Super Self-Sufficient
A few SS members have mentioned that they are limited by physical disabilities. This has an impact on allowing them to follow their dreams to living a more sufficient life style. Even without severe limitations, we all have days when we pay dearly for our homesteading activities! (with joint and muscle pain at the end of the day)
This thread is dedicated to these issues. How to set up your homestead, manage your garden, tend your animals, do your daily chores with the least negative impact on your physical well being.
So, fire away. What have YOU found that makes your life easier? (don't forget to include what works with gardening, animals, in the kitchen)
I'll get things started:
1. Never carry a load when you can slide it, or roll it. I use a well balanced 2 wheeled wheelbarrow during the grass season. During the snow season, I use a plastic child sized toboggan. Tarps can be used to drag leaves, grass clippings, weeds.
Take lessons from the Egyptians. They moved massive stones over incredible distances and up steep inclines using only man and brain power. Use levers, rollers, ramps to move loads that you can't move with brute strength and ignorance.
2. Take a lesson from God. Every season, deciduous trees shed their leaf canopy to provide a luscious sheet compost over the rich, dark, friable soil underneath them. Likewise, perennial weeds die back, leaving their leaves and stems behind to nourish the soil for the next season's growth. Compost in place when ever possible. Why carry your garden debris to a distant compost bin, only to have to turn around and carry finished compost back to the garden??? Trench composting allows me to get rid of my daily kitchen debris without having to maintain a summer compost pile. Got an area you want to "tame" or keep from growing up to weeds? Consider sheet composting. Keep that soil covered!!!!
3. If you do keep a compost pile or bin, remember: Compost happens. Take the lazy man's approach and simply toss your debris into your bin or pile. No need to fuss about turning it. At the very most, you may need to wet it down if God does not supply the needed moisture.
4. In the coop/run: Deep composting litter saves money. No need to buy shavings. If you don't compost in your garden, toss all that debris into the chicken coop or run. Your birds will reward you by turning that material, while adding their own nuggets to the mix. You will be rewarded with a cleaner yard, decreased feed bill, happier chickens, and black gold. They will be rewarded with: improved gut health, improved viability, increased B vitamins, gleanings from the greens and beneficial insects. Your chicken run soil will be healthier: beneficial microbes and insects/worms will result in friable soil, decreased parasite issues, and deep healthy compost instead of the often seen fecal compacted dust bowls/mud pits seen in many chicken runs.
Nature abhors a vacuum. So, keep all areas of your yard covered with SOMETHING! Even layers of cardboard, while being a bit unsightly are of huge benefit to the soil. If you use green manure crops, consider annual rye. The plants winter kill, leaving behind a thick mat of mulch. No need to cut and till in the debris, as you would need to do if using other green manure plants.
5. Scale back. Realize you don't need to do it all. Less garden space. Less animals. Concentrate on the things that are important to you. Let the rest go. Save it for an other day. Or realize when it's too much for you to do, and get the needed help. Better to do a little and do it well, than to have a lot taking ownership of your time, mind, and energy.
This thread is dedicated to these issues. How to set up your homestead, manage your garden, tend your animals, do your daily chores with the least negative impact on your physical well being.
So, fire away. What have YOU found that makes your life easier? (don't forget to include what works with gardening, animals, in the kitchen)
I'll get things started:
1. Never carry a load when you can slide it, or roll it. I use a well balanced 2 wheeled wheelbarrow during the grass season. During the snow season, I use a plastic child sized toboggan. Tarps can be used to drag leaves, grass clippings, weeds.
Take lessons from the Egyptians. They moved massive stones over incredible distances and up steep inclines using only man and brain power. Use levers, rollers, ramps to move loads that you can't move with brute strength and ignorance.
2. Take a lesson from God. Every season, deciduous trees shed their leaf canopy to provide a luscious sheet compost over the rich, dark, friable soil underneath them. Likewise, perennial weeds die back, leaving their leaves and stems behind to nourish the soil for the next season's growth. Compost in place when ever possible. Why carry your garden debris to a distant compost bin, only to have to turn around and carry finished compost back to the garden??? Trench composting allows me to get rid of my daily kitchen debris without having to maintain a summer compost pile. Got an area you want to "tame" or keep from growing up to weeds? Consider sheet composting. Keep that soil covered!!!!
3. If you do keep a compost pile or bin, remember: Compost happens. Take the lazy man's approach and simply toss your debris into your bin or pile. No need to fuss about turning it. At the very most, you may need to wet it down if God does not supply the needed moisture.
4. In the coop/run: Deep composting litter saves money. No need to buy shavings. If you don't compost in your garden, toss all that debris into the chicken coop or run. Your birds will reward you by turning that material, while adding their own nuggets to the mix. You will be rewarded with a cleaner yard, decreased feed bill, happier chickens, and black gold. They will be rewarded with: improved gut health, improved viability, increased B vitamins, gleanings from the greens and beneficial insects. Your chicken run soil will be healthier: beneficial microbes and insects/worms will result in friable soil, decreased parasite issues, and deep healthy compost instead of the often seen fecal compacted dust bowls/mud pits seen in many chicken runs.
Nature abhors a vacuum. So, keep all areas of your yard covered with SOMETHING! Even layers of cardboard, while being a bit unsightly are of huge benefit to the soil. If you use green manure crops, consider annual rye. The plants winter kill, leaving behind a thick mat of mulch. No need to cut and till in the debris, as you would need to do if using other green manure plants.
5. Scale back. Realize you don't need to do it all. Less garden space. Less animals. Concentrate on the things that are important to you. Let the rest go. Save it for an other day. Or realize when it's too much for you to do, and get the needed help. Better to do a little and do it well, than to have a lot taking ownership of your time, mind, and energy.
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