No news, to speak of; God help us all.
We’re finally getting some timely rains, which the weeds love. Broccoli, kohlrabi and green beans are coming on strong, and we’ve enjoyed the first ripe tomatoes. The fall crops have been planted. There is so much to do around here that I decided making a list and setting priorities was the only way I’d get it all done. Writing a blog isn’t even on the list.
But how could a guy like me, who keeps saying most people don’t where their food comes from, resist commenting on something like this?

Supposedly, this appeared in a San Francisco newspaper. Because I try to look kindly on all of God’s creatures, my first reaction was that this was one more of those all-too-common internet spoofs: nobody could be that stupid. (On the other hand…)
Or maybe it was meant as satire. You know, a hunter makes this ridiculous statement to point out just how foolish some anti-hunting arguments can be. The trouble is, most people don’t get satire, and one like this, that could be serious, loses some punch because it leaves some doubt.
Whoever started this out took it at face value with the heading “Unkilled Hamburger” and the standard web put-down for such items: “Folks, remember as you read this, this person probably drives and votes AND may have already reproduced! God help us all…”
And then there was the news that the chemical BPA, which recently created such a stir for being in plastic baby bottles, is (and has been) present in almost all cans of food on the supermarket shelves (and in your pantry). Just about everything you eat that comes out of a can contains bisphenol A, which slowly leaches into the food and water. It’s a key compound in the epoxy linings that keeps the canned food fresher longer, and keeps it from interacting with the metal and changing the flavor of the food. But it has also been blamed for cancer, obesity, diabetes and heart disease. So far, no one has found a substitute. Think of the homestead implications I could write about on that one.
Or how about that report on the dwindling nutritional values of fruits and vegetables? Somebody compared USDA data on 43 fruits and vegetables over the years. For example, in 1950, broccoli had 150 mg of calcium: today it has 48 mg. There are reductions in vitamins, minerals and protein, across the board. The reason, some say, is technological industrial farming where selective breeding and synthetic fertilizers are used to increase size and to speed growth. Another study showed that organic tomatoes can have as much as 30 percent more phytochemicals than the industrial kind.
Followers of J. I. Rodale — and I used to think that included most homesteaders, but now I’m not so sure — knew all of this many years ago, so what else is new?
None of this has much to do with homesteading, per se, but it does reflect on life on Spaceship Earth. In this vein we could also talk about the report that 3,100 firms (and roughly $40 billion a year — just for “intelligence”) are involved in the “war on terror.” Add in all the other expenses, along with the inconveniences and in some cases downright loss of freedoms, and it’s hard to tell who’s winning. One thing’s for certain: the terrorists got a lot of bang for their buck. The implications for self-sufficient living? Hmm.
A family in California made news by telling how they survived — in spite of turning off all of their telephones, computers, and televisions — for one whole day. And the people who think that’s really something special drive, vote and have reproduced. God help us all.
Then there’s the continuing flap over the global warming scientists, the news that China now uses more energy than the U.S., and that China’s population might actual decrease in the years ahead. That one tickles my imagination. Couple that with another recent population figure: The average Amish family has around seven children. The Chinese population dwindles, the Amish population doubles every 23 years — eventually there are more Amish than Chinese — just think of the implications for sustainable living! What a great speculative fiction story that could make!
But as I said, I have too much to do already, and even writing a blog isn’t on the list. At least I have plenty to think about while I do those homestead chores, beyond the sidewalks. — Jd Belanger
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July 23rd, 2010 at 10:56 am
Hey Mr Belanger – I’m making a move to a very rural part of KY soon. At the beginning of August I am going to meet with a Mennonite family to see if they will rent their one-room cabin with a loft to me. It’s sits so far back in the woods that you can’t see any house lights during the evenings. No indoor plumbing, no electricity. I am slowly preparing just in case they decide they like me enough to rent to me. I figure if I can make it thru the winter, with just a wood cookstove to heat and eat, I can make it thru anything. I have a friend who asked me, “This is just temporary, isn’t it?” I’m not so sure. There are a number of Amish farms in the area for sale that would really be to my liking. I’m just hoping for an icebox, and a tub to bathe in, and it would be a real treat if there was a gas powered Maytag wringer washer – but I’m not getting my hopes up! Ha Ha. It’s going to be a challenge for me to can on a wood cookstove, but not impossible. I’ll still keep up with my blog – but just once a week or less depending on when I can get to town to the library for wireless Internet. I’m not even sure I can get cell phone reception out there – time will tell. Wish me luck. I love your blog today, and all Fridays. Take care, from Kathy in KY – soon to be living in Casey Co KY.
July 24th, 2010 at 7:34 pm
Sounds terrific, to me. Lots of luck!
July 25th, 2010 at 10:33 am
Seen on a wood heating stove “Caution hot when in use”. They are making everthing idiot proof and now the idiots are breeding. God help us all.
August 1st, 2010 at 4:44 pm
One of my favorites is a toilet seat that attaches to a truck’s rear bumper, for hunters. The warning: “Do not use when vehicle is in motion.” But I happen to know the guys who make the thing added that after they saw a truck going down the road with their product attached (probably as a joke), and started worrying about a lawsuit. This is common, and gives me another opportunity to blame the lawyers (and their suit-happy clientele) for at least some of the idiocy in our world.