Beekissed
Mountain Sage
I am the youngest of nine children, my parents came from large families as well. Both parents came from physically abusive alcoholics on the father side and long-suffering, hard-working women on the mother side. My parents did not drink, smoke or swear and when I was about 4 they started going to church. We've always lived in rural areas, towns or country, and my paternal grandmother and stepgrandfather had a farm. Grandma's was my first taste of homegrown foods and left a deep impression on me about how cool it was to have all your foods at your fingertips instead of on a store shelf.
My maternal grandmother was shot three times in the head by her second husband~who then killed himself~ and was paralyzed on one side and nursing home bound while still in her early fifties.
When I was 10 we moved way back in a holler and started to homestead on 110 acres, built a two room log cabin in about 3 wks. time and lived there for the next many years without running water or electricity. It was about a mile to the bus stop...and yes, it WAS uphill both ways, as anyone who has ever lived in WV will know, this is a distinct possibility!
During our time on the homestead we built another, larger cabin, two different cellars and went from hauling water in milk jugs from a spring to pumping it from a hand dug well. We had a milk cow and calf, a couple of groups of pigs, chickens, turkeys, ducks and even a horse at one time. We grew big gardens and our meat was harvested from the land~we processed several deer each season and spring turkeys were taken each year. My dad, brothers and eventually my sons are all avid and skilled bowhunters, so we never lacked for deer meat.
We worked hard, lived on little-all my clothes would fit into a cardboard box under my bed, and it was healthy living. Some of my sibs didn't like it, but it was fine for me. My bed was built from logs and was a full-sized bunkbed that I shared with my sister on the bottom bunk and my brother slept on the top bunk. All of us slept in one room and the second room housed the wood cookstove and our small kitchen. By that time there was just four kids living at home but usually another older sib would be living there as well when they got out of the military, marriages, jobs or homes and had to live back with the parents.
The folks didn't get electricity back that holler until I was about 22 years old and they never had running water put in. My mother did a lion's share of work and spent her days isolated from anyone or anything except dad and us kids, but she was cheerful and diligent in all weathers. Dad was a bit of a slave driver but it didn't hurt us one bit and I could do with some of that hard physical labor right now, judging from my body.
My mother learned many of her country skills from granny, who had them all in spades, and developed many skills on her own through trial and error. As the youngest, I was exposed to most of these skills for a longer time, and then, when my folks watched my kids for me later, my kids benefitted from the knowledge as well. My boys learned to hunt, gut, skin and process their game from about 7-8 years on and are proficient at it today. I added a few things to their knowledge base as well, such as making their own bread, cooking their own meals from scratch, basic animal husbandry and frugal, make-do livin'.
My mom still lives on some 15 acres attached to the old homestead~ long ago sold to others~ and she still has a cabin that Dad built onto the front of a trailor. She enjoys having a washing machine and dryer, as well as refridgerators, but she still has an outhouse, gardens extensively and still cans her produce. She is getting a hand pump placed on top of her well, as she has found that it sure comes in handy to have a water source that doesn't depend on electricity. She heats with wood still and still works harder than most~can work circles around all of us kids~has her own chainsaw now and is skilled in the running of it and all her power tools. She will be 77 this month. Dad has Alzhiemer's and is in a nursing facility but at 80 years old is still looking and moving like a young man~ his mind wore out before his body, sad to say. He still talks about his cabin but thinks he hasn't finished it yet...
My maternal grandmother was shot three times in the head by her second husband~who then killed himself~ and was paralyzed on one side and nursing home bound while still in her early fifties.
When I was 10 we moved way back in a holler and started to homestead on 110 acres, built a two room log cabin in about 3 wks. time and lived there for the next many years without running water or electricity. It was about a mile to the bus stop...and yes, it WAS uphill both ways, as anyone who has ever lived in WV will know, this is a distinct possibility!
During our time on the homestead we built another, larger cabin, two different cellars and went from hauling water in milk jugs from a spring to pumping it from a hand dug well. We had a milk cow and calf, a couple of groups of pigs, chickens, turkeys, ducks and even a horse at one time. We grew big gardens and our meat was harvested from the land~we processed several deer each season and spring turkeys were taken each year. My dad, brothers and eventually my sons are all avid and skilled bowhunters, so we never lacked for deer meat.
We worked hard, lived on little-all my clothes would fit into a cardboard box under my bed, and it was healthy living. Some of my sibs didn't like it, but it was fine for me. My bed was built from logs and was a full-sized bunkbed that I shared with my sister on the bottom bunk and my brother slept on the top bunk. All of us slept in one room and the second room housed the wood cookstove and our small kitchen. By that time there was just four kids living at home but usually another older sib would be living there as well when they got out of the military, marriages, jobs or homes and had to live back with the parents.
The folks didn't get electricity back that holler until I was about 22 years old and they never had running water put in. My mother did a lion's share of work and spent her days isolated from anyone or anything except dad and us kids, but she was cheerful and diligent in all weathers. Dad was a bit of a slave driver but it didn't hurt us one bit and I could do with some of that hard physical labor right now, judging from my body.
My mother learned many of her country skills from granny, who had them all in spades, and developed many skills on her own through trial and error. As the youngest, I was exposed to most of these skills for a longer time, and then, when my folks watched my kids for me later, my kids benefitted from the knowledge as well. My boys learned to hunt, gut, skin and process their game from about 7-8 years on and are proficient at it today. I added a few things to their knowledge base as well, such as making their own bread, cooking their own meals from scratch, basic animal husbandry and frugal, make-do livin'.
My mom still lives on some 15 acres attached to the old homestead~ long ago sold to others~ and she still has a cabin that Dad built onto the front of a trailor. She enjoys having a washing machine and dryer, as well as refridgerators, but she still has an outhouse, gardens extensively and still cans her produce. She is getting a hand pump placed on top of her well, as she has found that it sure comes in handy to have a water source that doesn't depend on electricity. She heats with wood still and still works harder than most~can work circles around all of us kids~has her own chainsaw now and is skilled in the running of it and all her power tools. She will be 77 this month. Dad has Alzhiemer's and is in a nursing facility but at 80 years old is still looking and moving like a young man~ his mind wore out before his body, sad to say. He still talks about his cabin but thinks he hasn't finished it yet...