Saturday Tweets: Peppercorns, Fig Trees and Your Inner Cleveland

...failure of farm-to-table dining — http://t.co/dIOdK0W7u2 — Root Simple (@rootsimple) December 24, 2014 “Imagine Freeways Completely Devoid Of Cars” 1973 Oil Crisis, Netherlands http://t.co/B9oVPMXvJZ pic.twitter.com/vtHPIxpeW1 — BIKES vs CARS (@bikes_vs_cars) December 20, 2014 Pink Peppercorns: A Gourmet Spice Growing in the Backyard http://t.co/5olACbGKof from Garden Betty by Linda Ly pic.twitter.com/zuR8Z9aQTF — Adam Cortell (@adamcortell) Dece...

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Breaking News

...foreground of the picture above–laid her first egg–that is, our very first homestead egg. Go Stewpot! Of course this event would happen when Mr. Homestead is out of town & in possession of the camera. The lay site was a difficult to access cranny behind the coop. It may not have been photograph-able anyway, but I will report that the egg was deposited quite attractively in a shallow bowl of yellow and brown leaves. I got it while it was still warm...

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Getting Out

...n prepare called Getting Out, Your Guide to Leaving America. We completely understand the sentiment of wanting to get the hell out of this proto-fascist banana republic we live in and we endorse this book for those who don’t want to hunker down and do the homestead thing. SurviveLA even has a former colleague in Chanai India who got out of the US several years ago and now has an interesting job and his own ultra low-cost homestead. Despite the all...

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Essential System #9 – Hydration

...ust a few hours without it. We’ve got a number of water sources around the homestead, with a few more back-ups in the works. First off it pays to have some plastic water jugs around – figure two liters a day per person minimum. There are stricter standards for tap water in this banana republic we call the USA than for bottled water so don’t go wasting any money on boxes of Evian. The Red Cross recommends changing out the water every six months. Wh...

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Climate Change and Personal Responsibility

...en so much positive change on this front, even just in the last few years. Urban homesteading, slow food, organics, bikes, car share, DIY, all of it — it’s blossoming. It’s very hopeful. I’m going to put the next part in italics because it’s so important: The pleasure and satisfaction that we all receive from living this way is the positive counterspell to the dark enchantment of consumer culture. When we live this way, we become positive examples...

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