The Homesteading sites on Pinterest are really interesting to me.
Thirty-five years ago, we lived in the
country. I was a part time worker, part
time college student and full time mother.
We had a small kitchen garden next to the house for squash, tomatoes,
onions, cucumbers and greens. We also
planted about two acres of corn, peas, potatoes, okra, watermelons and
cantaloupe in our big garden. We raised chickens,
turkeys, guinea fowl for eggs and meat.
We would feed out a pig or two, have it butchered and smoked for the
freezer. I would put down” two freezers
full of meat and vegetables each year, plus canned over two hundred quarts of
jams, jellies, green beans, homemade soups, sauerkraut, pickles and canned soup
beef each year. Our grocery list was
mainly pantry staples we could not produce on our own: flour, corn meal, sugar, coffee, tea, baking
products, paper supplies, cleaning and laundry supplies. When Hubby’s job moved us across the state,
we became town dwellers and our gardening came to a halt. Once we ran out of our canned and frozen
foods, it was an eye-opener to purchase all the groceries we needed to feed our
family of four.
In recent years, we were fortunate to purchase the lots to
the North of our home, thus giving me some garden space again. I have harvested enough asparagus so far this
spring to pickle three pints and have roasted asparagus. Hopefully, this next week, I will get to put
vegetable seed in the ground. Our last
frost date here is usually about April 19, so I don’t want to get in too big a
rush. Last year, we had an unexpected
freeze one night in early April which killed almost all my tomato, cucumber and
okra bedding plants in the green house.
I did not turn the thermostat on the heater up high enough to prevent
freezing. That freeze also got every
bloom on my peach trees, not a single peach did we get. Thank goodness, the previous two summers were
bumper crops of peaches. I am still using the peaches put down the
previous year to make jams, butters and an occasional cobbler. I know that the literature available says
fruit is only good frozen for six to twelve months, but I have found that
properly packaged and sealed fruit can last longer. Yum
Yum!
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