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Could you feed your family from your farm.

  • 20-09-2019 2:26pm
    #1
    Posts: 0


    This is connected to another thread.

    If technology got distributed or society started to collapse some way.

    Would you have the knowledge skills and abilities to feed your family from your farm?

    Is there still a race memory of how grow potatoes, keep chicken, and a few pigs or is all to specialised for that.


«13

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,428 ✭✭✭epfff


    Yep


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,345 ✭✭✭Grueller


    No. They live on avocados and mangoes


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,994 ✭✭✭✭Danzy


    Have ducks,chickens, few pigs and bees.

    Plenty of Apple trees, can still snare a rabbit, looting.

    Bad eating in bees but the honey makes up for it.

    We'd be grand I think.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,597 ✭✭✭kerryjack


    That stood out to me the other day a farmer on the picket line on RTE news said sure we might as well starve here in the picket line than to starve at home it says a lot about Irish farmers and the way they have gone.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,994 ✭✭✭✭Danzy


    kerryjack wrote: »
    That stood out to me the other day a farmer on the picket line on RTE news said sure we might as well starve here in the picket line than to starve at home it says a lot about Irish farmers and the way they have gone.

    Figure of speech.

    Let them eat cake.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,891 ✭✭✭Bullocks


    We grow a few spuds and keep a glasshouse. My parents do most of the work in fairness. We don't grow or kill a fraction of what my grandparents did but I'd say I could if I had to or wanted to. There would be nothing in the short-term if something happened to our food supply though bar a few tins of kipper fillets. It would be one thing growing but we would want to be able keep stuff well through the winter aswell which is another part of the skill


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Lots of people young farmers included would be consulting the farmers in their 80s on how to dig potato pits and store food without modern appliances or electricity.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Just remember this my ex-husband is friendly with a farmer in Spain he raiseds chicken and produced eggs, less than 20 years ago they were still killing a pig on the farm and making ham and salami both the parent and parent in law spend their days with their children minding their grandchildren raising the pigs and growing a huge amount of vegetables and fruit and packing the eggs they all lived beside each other as well.

    The parents and parent in law had never been outside the local village except to go to the hospital.

    They only went to the supermarket once a month and purchased olive oil and wine by the gallon from the local coop.

    A family like that would have a much better chance of surviving if anything happened.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,174 ✭✭✭✭Muckit


    mariaalice wrote: »

    Would you have the knowledge skills and abilities to feed your family from your farm?

    You forgot the most important parameter..... time


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,181 ✭✭✭Lady Haywire


    Currently? No.
    If I had to? Yes.

    Can grow all sorts of veg- spuds, onions, peas, carrots, turnip, courgette, broccoli, cauliflower, chard, spinach, lettuce, etc. Usually grow veg most years but a hectic spring/early summer curbed us this year.
    I can also make jam/chutney & can store fruit in jars using sugar syrup (have some apple in spiced jelly from last Sept which is divine in porridge)
    Know how to make cheese & butter, just not been bothered, but would have milk if needed. Plus beef & our own hens. And live next to a lake, can gut & clean fish too.
    Think I'd be ok, though you wouldn't want to like bread too much :pac:

    Wild stuff I actively eat- blackberries/raspberries/strawberries/bilberries/ peas/crab apples/sorrel/hazelnuts


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,718 ✭✭✭✭_Brian


    Obviously less bananas and oranges but we could do fine.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,079 ✭✭✭Castlekeeper


    mariaalice wrote: »
    This is connected to another thread.

    If technology got distributed or society started to collapse some way.

    Would you have the knowledge skills and abilities to feed your family from your farm?

    Is there still a race memory of how grow potatoes, keep chicken, and a few pigs or is all to specialised for that.
    There'd be a bit of a re-learning curve, and a person would want to be on good terms with the neighbours.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,807 ✭✭✭Birdnuts


    I'd make a good go of it - plus I have shoreline for a tasty bit of seafood in season;)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,264 ✭✭✭✭Nekarsulm


    If technology got disrupted, dairy farmers would have to sell off all their cows bar the dozen they and their family could milk by hand themselves.
    Every farm would be back to having a cow or three.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 734 ✭✭✭longgonesilver


    I would know how to grow fruit and veg. Seeds would be the major stumbling block especially the first year.

    Time of the year would be important too, not a lot you could do at this time of the year except prepare ground for next year. We would have to survive on beef.!!
    Electricity to run freezers would be very helpful. Not many would eat something preserved in salt anymore and even fewer would know how.

    Spray for blight could also be problematic. Who would inspect the sprayer?

    My father was born in 1915 so was only one generation removed from people born around the time of the famine. He could name every plant and weed in both Irish and English and whether they were edible or not, how to cook them. He showed me the best places to snare rabbits and how to make traps for songbirds, quite acceptable and necessary when he was young.Different times, practical education.older people passing on knowledge in case.....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,181 ✭✭✭Lady Haywire


    Can't bluestone & soda sub in for blight spray?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 734 ✭✭✭longgonesilver


    Yes but what is soda?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,181 ✭✭✭Lady Haywire


    Yes but what is soda?

    Bread soda! What we'd also need for baking our hypothetical bread after the apocalypse
    Tough dunno what I'd do after my couple of bags ran out....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 734 ✭✭✭longgonesilver


    You can make bread without breadsoda, it's the small things that would make this difficult, salt, seeds, medicines, replacement tools,


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 3,358 Mod ✭✭✭✭K.G.


    mariaalice wrote: »
    This is connected to another thread.

    If technology got distributed or society started to collapse some way.

    Would you have the knowledge skills and abilities to feed your family from your farm?

    Is there still a race memory of how grow potatoes, keep chicken, and a few pigs or is all to specialised for that.

    Most of the replies have missed one point--no Google, now go and feed yourself
    Also where the seeds going to come from


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,264 ✭✭✭✭Nekarsulm


    Always seem to have a dozen or so packets of seeds that don't get planted.
    A half dozen ewes would be an excellent resource too.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,181 ✭✭✭Lady Haywire


    Seeds would be the most difficult here at least. Have packs upon packs in the drawer never used so wonder if any would sprout after the bb date?
    All digging here is done with a loy cause we're stone age :pac: Loys can be made of wood so no issue there.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,079 ✭✭✭Castlekeeper


    Nekarsulm wrote: »
    If technology got disrupted, dairy farmers would have to sell off all their cows bar the dozen they and their family could milk by hand themselves.
    Every farm would be back to having a cow or three.
    Depends on the price of milk/labour. One person would handmilk 5-7 cows. Milk would then have to be processed.

    On another note seeds will last forever once dry.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,633 ✭✭✭✭Buford T. Justice XIX


    There'd be a bit of a re-learning curve, and a person would want to be on good terms with the neighbours.

    The tradition always was to take turns to kill a pig around with the neighbours and divide out the different cuts among them all with a small bit of swapping done for favourite cuts.

    If it came to it, country folk would survive through swapping labour and resources but urban folk wouldn't have much of value to trade with for food.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,457 ✭✭✭✭Base price


    As a young child I remember that my Grandparents only purchases were flour, sugar, tea and salt, oh and pint bottles of guinness for Grandad. Everything else was sourced from the farm/garden, lake or from neighbours through bartering. The house only got electricity installed not long before I was born and there was a light bulb in every room, nothing else.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,891 ✭✭✭Bullocks


    Nekarsulm wrote: »
    Always seem to have a dozen or so packets of seeds that don't get planted.
    A half dozen ewes would be an excellent resource too.
    Great eating in a lamb . I'd have to get a sow aswell for a few bonhams to kill , I'm woeful reliant on ham and rashers !


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,122 ✭✭✭Who2


    I’d want to be next to starved before I’d eat lamb. One of the most disgusting foul meats out there. And there isn’t much I wouldn’t eat. We don’t appreciate the little things anymore and spend half our lives chasing our tails working to buy things we think we need. Processed crap food the new car, sky packages we don’t even get time to watch and insurance packages to ensure our insurances. I for one wouldn’t mind a bit of the simple life where we get back to looking after ourselves and get time to enjoy things in between.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,718 ✭✭✭✭_Brian


    Bullocks wrote: »
    Great eating in a lamb . I'd have to get a sow aswell for a few bonhams to kill , I'm woeful reliant on ham and rashers !

    Couple of pigs are easy reared and savage feeding from them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,748 ✭✭✭ganmo


    Who2 wrote: »
    I’d want to be next to starved before I’d eat lamb. One of the most disgusting foul meats out there. And there isn’t much I wouldn’t eat. We don’t appreciate the little things anymore and spend half our lives chasing our tails working to buy things we think we need. Processed crap food the new car, sky packages we don’t even get time to watch and insurance packages to ensure our insurances. I for one wouldn’t mind a bit of the simple life where we get back to looking after ourselves and get time to enjoy things in between.

    Theres no need to attack lamb like that. Taste is personal and that's the way you should talk about it.

    We've raspberries and rhubarb in the garden so deserts for the summer and jam for the winter


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,742 ✭✭✭lalababa


    Wouldn't be a great fan of lamb either as I was raised on tastier mutton. "You like what you know"
    I'm in Cork City and most of what I see is the younger generation chasing their tails for shinyer cars & houses.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,221 ✭✭✭davidk1394


    Used grow vegetable plots here for lettuce, carrots, onions and potatoes. Had a few apple and pear trees but they died because they weren't looked after. Have hens here aswell, put a few lambs in the freezer and half a heifer. I know how to grow vegetables but didn't do it in a fresh years because of wire worms and nematodes in the ground


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,268 ✭✭✭✭uck51js9zml2yt


    Grueller wrote: »
    No. They live on avocados and mangoes

    That's them blow ins from Dublin giving them " notions"

    Coming from the capital myself I have veg growing and chickens. Probably enough to keep me going till spring and it's only my 1st season.

    My son planted an egg..I told him we'd get egg plants :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,201 ✭✭✭amacca


    I couldn't feed myself from my farm I'm ashamed to admit or at least it would be a very steep learning curve.

    Knowledge and skills would be the first barrier....they would be minimal especially when it comes to storage/preservation...I can grow some veg, I grow peas some years as supermarkets don't really seem to stock peas in the pods here that much, but butchering and preserving meat I'd only have a rough sketch of a idea, as for making cheese, butter etc and storing apples etc Id surely make a balls of that........give me a load of sugar though and Id make you a nice batch of jam.

    Seeds might be a problem if were going full metal apocalypse here

    It would depend on what time of the year civilisation shuts down too....coming into spring I might have a chance....if I had an internet connection or some survival/homesteading books

    Freezer, solar panels and some leisure batteries could come in handy.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,194 ✭✭✭foxy farmer


    Can't remember the exact words but I remember hearing a saying once about owning an acre of land. Something along the lines of
    You'll never make a living off an acre of land but you could certainly live off it. In other words growing your own food.
    The give a fish/ teach how to fish saying also comes to mind.
    I grew up in a housing estate outside Cork city. We had a fairly substantial garden. Both parents came off farms. We had a few drills of spuds cabbage parsnips peas beans lettuce onions rhubarb apples.
    Now I have land aplenty and cattle aplenty and every scrap of food is bought. Not a single item in the house is home produced. Bloody sad state of affairs.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,597 ✭✭✭kerryjack


    Your not late yet foxy, start small is the key to success a few raised beds 8 by 4 and away you go.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,268 ✭✭✭✭uck51js9zml2yt


    amacca wrote: »
    I couldn't feed myself from my farm I'm ashamed to admit or at least it would be a very steep learning curve.

    Knowledge and skills would be the first barrier....they would be minimal especially when it comes to storage/preservation...I can grow some veg, I grow peas some years as supermarkets don't really seem to stock peas in the pods here that much, but butchering and preserving meat I'd only have a rough sketch of a idea, as for making cheese, butter etc and storing apples etc Id surely make a balls of that........give me a load of sugar though and Id make you a nice batch of jam.

    Seeds might be a problem if were going full metal apocalypse here

    It would depend on what time of the year civilisation shuts down too....coming into spring I might have a chance....if I had an internet connection or some survival/homesteading books

    Freezer, solar panels and some leisure batteries could come in handy.

    My wife is eastern European and her dad has a small sheep farm.
    She has knowledge of wild herbs and flowers that are edible. Some mushroom skills and know how to milk a goat, make cheese, look after chickens and preserve veg in jars.

    Her dad also kills his own sheep and makes sausages.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,742 ✭✭✭lalababa


    You can't butcher anything here AFAIK. I think you can kill a pig with a permit .... anybody know?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,146 ✭✭✭Hard Knocks


    Her dad also kills his own sheep and makes sausages.

    Do they have the same red tape there as we do here for slaughtering?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,457 ✭✭✭✭Base price


    I used to enjoy (yet at the same time cringe) watching the RTE/TnaG ? programme (can't remember the name) about the ICA trying in vain to educate young women (men weren't allowed to participate cause it was the ICA) on how to prepare and cook meat/fowl/game/veg for the table, knit and stitch a button on a blouse/shirt etc.
    Maybe it's time for a new TV programme like it but targeted at the next group of youngsters.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,268 ✭✭✭✭uck51js9zml2yt


    Do they have the same red tape there as we do here for slaughtering?

    I'm sure they do but the traditionalists just ignore it.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,358 ✭✭✭kollegeknight


    Have some basic skills in growing veg it I’m trying new things when I can and can rear animals. My dad was great for rearing animals but the one thing he couldn’t do is kill them. (Although he used kill turkeys) A lad called the captain used come to kill the pig for us. I’d be the same. I would find it difficult to be the executioner.

    I plant berry bushes and fruit trees whenever I’ve money, at moment it is for the birds but when they are plentiful, I will take some too.

    I have a friend who is unreal at jams, preserves and ciders. Her black pudding is divine.

    My FIL in Australia butchers a pig he buys and makes sausages and salamis but I know very little of that also.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,201 ✭✭✭amacca


    lalababa wrote: »
    You can't butcher anything here AFAIK. I think you can kill a pig with a permit .... anybody know?

    I don't know for sure but I heard you can't be stopped killing a pig for personal use...........apparently its EU law ??????

    could be nonsense but if true it would mean much less red tape....id imagine if it was a case of providing for yourself nobody would pay too h=much heed to regulations anyway.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 886 ✭✭✭bb12


    if society got that disrupted you'd also have to have a plan in place on how to protect those veg you're growing and cows your milking etc. the starving hordes wouldn't allow you to carry on regardless.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,963 ✭✭✭CelticRambler


    You'll never make a living off an acre of land but you could certainly live off it. In other words growing your own food.

    Could certainly feed a family of six off it! Been there, done that (up to a point). But as someone said above, it takes a lot of time.

    After a few years of working away too much, I put a about 500m² to the metaphorical plough this year, and despite the (severe) drought, it's been great to see kilos of veg coming through the back door every few days. Having lost a lot of (shop-bought) stuff due to powercuts while I've been away, I'm making a determined effort to improve my non-electricity-dempendent storage. Plum chutney is all bottled, currently pickling a load of beetroot, have a batch of figs sun-drying for the last week or so, early spuds are bagged up and in the dark, late spuds will stay in the ground till October or November.

    The farming genes skipped over my parents, but somehow I managed to absorb a "feel" for the land from the cousins&uncles, and my mother was a great wan for making jam. So between that and a good gardening book and a decent cookbook and fair knowledge of science, I reckon I'd be grand without th'internet. Now if I could just land a job that allows me to work from home, I'd get a few chickens - really miss having them around. :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,201 ✭✭✭amacca


    Ill start whittlin a good knobbly hawthorn stick/club for myself

    theres a birch tree in a nearby field I've being eyeing up as a possible long bow candidate


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,980 ✭✭✭Genghis Cant


    amacca wrote: »
    Ill start whittlin a good knobbly hawthorn stick/club for myself

    theres a birch tree in a nearby field I've being eyeing up as a possible long bow candidate

    Forget about the birch. Elm was the wood of choice for the English Longbow.
    I used a beaut of a selfbow ( home made bow) made from native Ash. Lovely bow it was too.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,994 ✭✭✭✭Danzy


    Forget about the birch. Elm was the wood of choice for the English Longbow.
    I used a beaut of a selfbow ( home made bow) made from native Ash. Lovely bow it was too.

    Black alder is great as well.

    The Irish short bow was often made with it


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,201 ✭✭✭amacca


    Forget about the birch. Elm was the wood of choice for the English Longbow.
    I used a beaut of a selfbow ( home made bow) made from native Ash. Lovely bow it was too.

    interesting ...theres lots of ash around here....I thought it wouldn't be great for a bow at all.

    haven't seen elm locally.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,264 ✭✭✭✭Nekarsulm


    I always thought yew was the ultimate wood for a long bow?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,122 ✭✭✭Who2


    Nekarsulm wrote: »
    I always thought yew was the ultimate wood for a long bow?

    Yew holds the cursed souls in a graveyard , or so I was told but beautiful timber. Elm is extremely hard got here due to Dutch elm disease. I could see ash being suitable but I know nothing about bows.


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