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Source: tomsguide.com

A Kitsap couple hooked on homesteading now teaches how to eat sustainably

Hidden within a dense forest of the Kitsap Peninsula is a quaint 1.25 acre homestead the houses chickens, rabbits, quail, honey bees, and a large garden filled to capacity with fruits and vegetables. Rainwater caught on the roof of the house is channeled through a gutter and collected into a barrel, providing a sustainable water source for the garden throughout the year. The scent of freshly baked sourdough bread floats out from the kitchen, enveloping the homestead known as Terranova Gardens in a welcoming ambiance.

Inspired by the effects of the Covid pandemic, Anita Terranova, a physical therapy assistant, and her husband, George Gasson, a grief counselor, decided to take steps to become more self-sufficient. That turned into running a permaculture homestead. Unbeknownst to them, their newfound passion for homesteading would pique the interest of others interested in a stronger connection to living sustainably. Soon, the couple’s hobby had evolved into a part-time business. 

The practice of homesteading, or living a lifestyle of complete or near complete self-sufficiency, has a lot of elements that may feel old-fashioned in today’s era of convenience. But in a pandemic world where food prices began to soar and supply chains were disrupted, the concept of being self-sufficient received renewed interest.

“People want to learn how to homestead… they want to learn how to be sustainable,” Terranova said, “…also the quality of our food just isn’t what it used to be.”

While Terranova and Gasson had always kept a garden, they didn’t start serious production until 2020. They also decided to start raising livestock, with the goal of being able to rely on their homestead for the majority of their food.   

Over the past four years they have worked to create a permaculture farm, using no pesticides or chemicals, and now process their own chicken and rabbit meat, gather eggs and honey, and grow a variety of vegetables and fruits. 

They began learning methods of production for the crops they produce, such as brewing beer and making sourdough bread. It was addictive, Terranova said: the more independent they became, the more self-sustaining practices they wanted to learn.

Friends took interest, sitting in on a chicken processing day or asking for basic homesteading advice. At the request of her daughter, Terranova taught a class on how to bake sourdough bread last April. The word quickly spread and requests poured in for more sessions. And an “Intro to Sourdough Basics” was born. 

Terranova Gardens is already far beyond just bread instruction, with a list of classes that includes mozzarella cheese and pizza class, beekeeping basics, jams and jellies, vermicomposting, beer basics and more. Classes are limited to a maximum of about eight people, to accommodate the intimate workspace and allow a more personalized experience. Each class costs about $50, though some combined classes (pizza making and beer brewing, for example) cost more. 

In tandem with offering homesteading classes, Gasson had been working on a platform called My Farm Trade. Tired of facing the difficulties when trying to connect with other small farms and homesteaders, the couple created a platform where customers and farmers can connect to sell or trade livestock, goods, and advertise their farm. 

This website, myfarmtrade.com, may be an instrumental piece in connecting local communities and encouraging small farms. The site’s most recent update allows the first 10,000 farmers that sign up to receive 4 free ads (to advertise baked goods, livestock, etc.), and these ads will last for one year before needing to repost for a small charge. 

“It’s not about the money, it’s about the community. We really need to get people back to growing their own food… (If everybody had a homestead), we could all have (local, fresh) food just by buying, selling and trading amongst ourselves…” Gasson said.

More information about classes, including sign-ups for courses this summer, can be found at terranovagardens.net or through their Facebook page. More information about My Farm Trade can be found at myfarmtrade.com. 

Source: kitsapsun.com

Homesteading Is a Viral Trend, but ‘Butchery Gone Awry’ Is Its Dark Side

Since the early 2020’s, the homesteading trend has exploded in popularity. Off-grid in theory, but often online in practice, millennials in particular have heeded a desire to move to the country to grow and raise their own food. Some romanticize a simpler, more traditional life (see the adjacent “trad wife” trend). Others are looking to reject the burdens of technology. The trend even got a boost from the backyard chicken craze, which is sometimes referred to as the “gateway animal” as more homesteaders are looking to farm their own meat. But the rise in homesteading has a dark side: countless stories of animal farming and butchering gone awry. Despite the wholesome fantasy you see on social media, experts warn would-be homesteaders that raising animals for meat is harder than it looks.

Push past the “cottagecore” Instagram reels and the “how-to build a chicken coop” YouTube videos, and you will find numerous online discussion groups and threads packed with homesteaders seeking how-to guidance. On Reddit, for example, the homestead subreddit currently boasts 3 million members, with questions about tree care, jam-making, weed control and tractor repair. But deeper into the subreddit, you will come across homesteaders asking more difficult questions — sharing their troubling concerns about animals, including sick livestock, wild predators and slaughter screwups.

‘Some of Them Went Quick, Some Did Not’

“Botched my first chicken slaughter,” writes one homesteader on the subreddit. “Knife was only sharp enough to hurt the chicken. Then we frantically ran around trying to find something to get the job done only to find not good options and hurting this poor cockrell [sic]. Finally, I tried to break its neck but couldn’t so I strangled it.” The lesson learned, according to the poster: “we both need to learn how to properly sharpen knives.”

“On butcher day we thought we were prepared,” writes another about slaughtering pigs, named Ham, Bacon, Sausage and Porky. “We had bought a .44 caliber rifle instead of a .22 just in case. The first 3 went down fine and were stuck quickly. The last one raised its head just as I was pulling the trigger and it hit her jaw. I felt gutted that she had to go through that pain and suffering till we could get her down.”

Some users are open to admitting their lack of experience. “I’d never slaughtered animals before,” laments one homesteader about killing ducks. “Some of them went quick, some did not […] some of the big ducks had a bad go of it.”

Meg Brown, a sixth-generation cattle rancher in Northern California, says she is surrounded by people jumping on the homesteading bandwagon, when many of them don’t understand just how hard it is to farm animals. “It looks a lot different online than it is in real life,” she tells Sentient. “It’s more challenging,” and not everyone has the knowledge or experience to properly take on the task.

“I had a friend that got a bunch of chicks and let her baby and her kid handle them,” Brown says, “and her kids got salmonella.” And many new homesteaders “want to get one cow or one pig, and they want me to sell them that, and I refuse to sell herd animals as single. I think that’s really cruel.”

DIY Homesteaders Turn to Youtube

Youtube has democratized how we learn, including endeavors as high risk and complicated as raising and killing farm animals. “I’ve been thinking a lot lately about raising animals for meat,” one Redditor writes, “learning the basics through YouTube videos, etc.”

Videos that tick off the steps of how to kill and butcher animals at home are abundant on the platform. Yet, even basic professional butchering courses take several weeks of study and often require hands-on training.

For those homesteaders who express concerns about butchering animals, including the guilt they might feel, members of the online community are ready with tips on how to get the job done.

“I just don’t know if I would be able to do it,” writes one Redditor learning with YouTube. “Raise an animal from a baby to adult and then, right at its prime, butcher it…Do you have to wrestle with any guilt?” There is plenty of advice: ‘just commit,’ and “pulling the trigger on an animal you have cared for for months is never easy, but we do it for the good of the family.” A number of Redditors offer tips for how to promptly cut the jugular vein. Others advise how to get animals accustomed to human interaction “in the months leading up to slaughter to ensure they are calm when we walk up to pop the shot.”

Meanwhile, even lifelong rancher Brown won’t slaughter animals herself. “I have a professional come and do it,” she explains. “I would mess up.” Many would-be homesteaders don’t realize that “animals have personalities,” she says, and you can get attached to them. “Then you have to kill them after you’ve raised them,” something she herself admits she does not want to do.

Different Paths to Homesteading

Researchers of homesteading say there are some differences between newcomers and homesteaders who come from a farming background. In his book, Shelter from the Machine: Homesteaders in the Age of Capitalism, author Dr. Jason Strange explores the divide between what he calls the “hicks” — more traditional homesteaders with rural roots — and the “hippies” who are newer to the lifestyle and tend to be motivated by more counterculture ideas.

Strange’s book looks at homesteaders pre-social media, mostly older generations, including those who began homesteading in the early 1970s. Yet Strange doesn’t see the so-called millennial homesteaders as all that different. Today’s homesteaders are still interested in moving away from mainstream capitalist culture, towards greater “authenticity” and self-reliance.

Legacy of Vegetarian Homesteaders

For many homesteaders, a core part of the journey towards self-reliant subsistence, says Strange, is eating the animals they raised and slaughtered themselves. The ability to feed homegrown meat to one’s family is celebrated as an important goal in many online homesteading circles — it’s called a “blessing,” and cited as the ultimate proof of a successful homestead.

But there is another subculture within the subculture — homesteaders who are doing it without animals, a microtrend with roots dating back to at least the 1970s. Even back in the early days of the modern homesteading movement, says Strange, “particularly amongst the counterculture folks, the hippies, you would have found folks who were intentionally [not raising and slaughtering animals].”

The more vegetarian side of homesteading is also thriving online, with some accounts touting the benefits of “meatless homesteading,” and tips on “how to homestead without animals,” or even ways to make money on the homestead without selling animal products.

Last year on r/homestead, a subreddit dedicated to homesteading, a would-be homesteader was struggling with allergies to farm animals and zoning restrictions. “Am I a ‘real’ homesteader without animals?,” retromama77 asked. “It’s not a prerequisite,” one Redditor responded. “If you’re making efforts to be self-sustaining you’re a homesteader,” answered another. After all, as yet a third homesteader admits, “It’s actually not fun to raise animals to kill them.”

Source: sentientmedia.org

Groundbreaking Discovery: How Zinc Could Change Farming Forever

Crops Growing Fertile Farm Land

A new study reveals zinc’s critical role in regulating nitrogen fixation in legumes through a sensor named FUN. This discovery could help improve crop efficiencies and reduce synthetic fertilizer use by adapting to environmental and soil conditions.

Researchers have found that zinc significantly influences the nitrogen fixation process in legumes, a discovery that could transform legume-based agriculture.

Climate change, drought, increased temperature, and other stressors challenge agricultural sustainability. Researchers have now made an unexpected discovery: zinc plays a pivotal role in the plant response to abiotic stress. This groundbreaking discovery not only sheds light on the intricate mechanisms of plant growth but also holds promise for revolutionizing crop resilience, especially in legume-based agriculture.

Lotus japonicus. Credit: Helene Eriksen

Discovery of Zinc’s Role in Nitrogen Fixation

Scientists have uncovered a vital role for zinc in the nitrogen fixation process of legumes. This discovery, paired with insights into the transcriptional regulator known as Fixation Under Nitrate (FUN), has the potential to transform legume farming by enhancing crop efficiency and decreasing the dependence on synthetic fertilizers. By delving into the mechanisms through which zinc and FUN control nitrogen fixation, researchers aim to boost nitrogen availability, improve crop yields, and foster more environmentally friendly farming methods.

Legume crops form a symbiotic relationship with rhizobia bacteria, which fix atmospheric nitrogen into root nodules. These nodules, however, are vulnerable to various environmental pressures such as changes in temperature, drought, flooding, soil salinity, and elevated soil nitrogen levels.

Breakthrough in Plant Micronutrient Sensing

Researchers from

Jieshun Lin showing the root nodules on a Lotus japonicus. Credit: Helene Eriksen

Unveiling the Functionality of the FUN Protein

In this study the researcher identifies that FUN is an important transcription factor that control nodule breakdown when soil nitrogen concentrations are high: “FUN is regulated by a peculiar mechanism that monitor the cellular zinc levels directly and we show that FUN is inactivated by zinc into large filament structures and liberated into the active form when zinc levels are low,” Professor Kasper Røjkjær Andersen explains.

From an agricultural perspective, continued nitrogen fixation could be a beneficial trait that increases nitrogen availability, both for the legume and for co-cultivated or future crops that rely on the nitrogen left in the soil after legumes are grown. This helps lay the foundations for future research that provides new ways for us to manage our farming systems and reduce the use of nitrogen fertilizer and reduce its impact on the environment.

Enhancing Agricultural Efficiency and Sustainability

The implications of this research are significant. By understanding how zinc and FUN regulate nitrogen fixation, researchers are developing strategies to optimize this process in legume crops. This could lead to increased nitrogen delivery, improving crop yields and reducing the need for synthetic fertilizers, which have environmental and economic costs.

Researchers are now investigating the mechanisms of how zinc signals are generated and decoded by FUN. They are looking forward to applying these new discoveries to legume crops such as faba bean, soybean, and cowpea.

The research team gathered at the lab facilities at Aarhus University. Credit: Helene Eriksen

Reference: “Zinc mediates control of nitrogen fixation via transcription factor filamentation” by Jieshun Lin, Peter K. Bjørk, Marie V. Kolte, Emil Poulsen, Emil Dedic, Taner Drace, Stig U. Andersen, Marcin Nadzieja, Huijun Liu, Hiram Castillo-Michel, Viviana Escudero, Manuel González-Guerrero, Thomas Boesen, Jan Skov Pedersen, Jens Stougaard, Kasper R. Andersen and Dugald Reid, 26 June 2024, Nature.
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07607-6

This work was supported by the project Enabling Nutrient Symbioses in Agriculture (ENSA), that is funded by Bill & Melinda Gates Agricultural Innovations (INV- 57461), the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (INV-55767), the Carlsberg Foundation grant (CF21-0139) and the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (grant agreement No. 834221).

Jieshun Lin, Peter K. Bjørk, Jens Stougaard, Kasper R. Andersen, and Dugald Reid are inventors on a filed patent that captures these discoveries.

Source: scitechdaily.com

Gardening Tasks You Shouldn’t Do If A Heatwave Is Coming – House Digest

It’s important to know when and how to water your plants. During a heatwave, the best time to water your garden is early in the morning, before the sun comes up. This will give your soil enough time to soak up that much needed moisture to sustain your plants throughout the day and reduce the amount of moisture lost to evaporation. Another great watering technique to use in your garden is to water your plants directly towards the soil, aiming at the root zone. You could also consider a drip irrigation system that would keep your soil well hydrated. During a heatwave, regulated and deep watering is preferred over shallow and frequent watering as the latter will draw your plants’ roots closer to the surface where they’ll be vulnerable to heat and diseases.

Your garden already struggles to retain moisture during a heatwave, so you want it to use the moisture it does have to sustain itself. That also means avoiding gardening activities like pruning and fertilizing that will channel your garden’s resources towards new growth. It’s understandable to worry about your plants absorbing enough nutrients, but overcompensating for that will only stress them out. Fertilizing and pruning encourages new growth that puts further strain on the roots that will need to work overtime to maintain the growing plants. The new growth also won’t be able to withstand the harsh sun, which can trigger scorching.

Source: housedigest.com

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