Shiloh Acres
Lovin' The Homestead
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- Jun 29, 2010
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Growing up we went through ice storms that knocked out all utilities for maybe weeks at a time. That wasn't so bad as we had wood stove for cooking and heat, and it was simple enough to go out and scoop up pans of ice to melt for water. Had plenty of candles and a stocked pantry. Other than going to bed a little earlier and washing in less water, and the roads being impassable, not too big a deal.
Loved camping as a child too, and did a lot of camping as an adult, so I'm ok with cooking outside, hauling water, and all that. For that matter, I grew up in old farmhouses with a manual pump out the back door, one with a manual pump in the kitchen, and one with a well with a lowered bucket.
Rode out lots of hurricanes as an adult. You learn to prepare with those. Food put back, water stored for washing and flushing as well as drinking. The really miserable part of it for me was being pregnant in summer in the south with no ac or fans for a couple weeks. THAT was the hardest, LOL.
I never really considered it "preparations" but I always try to have food on hand and make use of everything. Buy on sale cheap and let nothing go to waste. The economy plus a few other issues hit me HARD a few years ago. Basically I was pretty much unable to buy many groceries for the better part of a year. But I still ate VERY well.
I guess that's the main time it saved me. I bought poultry feed and the flocks supplied my family and pets with extra protein too. I've only been at my new place a few months, but I have enough of most things to stretch for probably almost a year. My big expense even now is animal feed, and I try to take advantage of other options for them as well. They REALLY love Osage Orange leaves (goats, llamas, and geese) and I have a lot of them.
Loved camping as a child too, and did a lot of camping as an adult, so I'm ok with cooking outside, hauling water, and all that. For that matter, I grew up in old farmhouses with a manual pump out the back door, one with a manual pump in the kitchen, and one with a well with a lowered bucket.
Rode out lots of hurricanes as an adult. You learn to prepare with those. Food put back, water stored for washing and flushing as well as drinking. The really miserable part of it for me was being pregnant in summer in the south with no ac or fans for a couple weeks. THAT was the hardest, LOL.
I never really considered it "preparations" but I always try to have food on hand and make use of everything. Buy on sale cheap and let nothing go to waste. The economy plus a few other issues hit me HARD a few years ago. Basically I was pretty much unable to buy many groceries for the better part of a year. But I still ate VERY well.
I guess that's the main time it saved me. I bought poultry feed and the flocks supplied my family and pets with extra protein too. I've only been at my new place a few months, but I have enough of most things to stretch for probably almost a year. My big expense even now is animal feed, and I try to take advantage of other options for them as well. They REALLY love Osage Orange leaves (goats, llamas, and geese) and I have a lot of them.