12 September 20XX
My Dear Lucilius:
A bit more of a
delay between communications. My apologies: our power has been a
bit more irregular and there has been a great deal to do in a short
period of time.
Our weather here has
taken a definitive turn for the cooler here – we got down to 39 F
at least once. So I have been busy. The quail have been moved into
the greenhouse for their Winter Quarters, although I have not sealed
up the greenhouse completely yet – still a little too warm yet
during the day – and I have started to lay out the planters for
Autumn (although I have not figured out the water just yet). I have
taken the liberty of inserting the hive entrance reducers into the
hive entrances, not completely blocking it to a single hole but
reducing the entrance.
I am sowing the
overwinter crops now – winter wheat, winter rye, winter barley,
garlic, leeks, greens. I have always done this by hand, so it is not
an unusual task with hoe, shovel, rake, and caster – although it
has seemed that I have paid a bit more attention to it than usual
this year. I will be honest that I believe it is one of my favorite
days of the year – and indeed, it consumes an entire day by the
time I am completed.
I am still pulling
items from the garden as I am able. At this point I have surrendered
the concept of dehydration (as we are effectively bereft of reliable
power) and am just eating as much of the fresh produce as I can and
feeding the rest to the quail. Somewhere in my notes I have
something about using a wood stove as a dehydrator – I am not quite
to the point of being able to burn it regularly, but should be there
soon (indeed, I have been using a small camping stove outside to boil
my water for coffee and oatmeal to put off heating up the house too
much.
With winter coming,
I have become quite a scrounger of anything burnable (my stove, you
remember, will accept smaller branches). I have constructed for
myself a pack reminiscent of an old Japanese wood collector: two
pegs sticking out at the bottom of a board with rope to put my arms
through and another set of ropes to tie off the bundle. On any walk
I take now – and I take more and more because soon enough the snow
will make it miserable to make any at all – I have my contraption
with me, diligent searching for fallen branches or even small downed
trees that I can come back later and cut up. Fortunately I live at
the north end of “town”; there are very few houses that way and I
am often the only person I see all day.
Protein remains my
weak point. The loss of the freezer means that I have limited
ability to store fish for the long term (my primary form of protein)
– unless, of course, I had a smokehouse, one of those 550 items
that I intended to build someday but never got to. It will have to
move to the top of the list.
For now, I have had
to be inventive. Salting fish has become the new smoking this year
(fortunately, I had enough of that to last a while). And I have
been trying to trade more for meat, although as turns out I probably
counted more on the ability to trade honey that I have been actually
able to do this year. I may need to try killing a deer myself before
the Autumn has fled. I have not done this in a while, so it may come
down to as much as luck as anything else.
I have made my
annual pass of the cabin and shed, looking for any holes that need
caulking or filling. I have also started to look at repair of the
outhouse for the upcoming winter. I am already shuddering at the
thought of trekking through the January winds.
Excluding protein
(and I am working to close that gap as quickly as possible), I
believe myself to be as ready as I can be, given the circumstances.
The thought of
winter has already become concerning, and it has hardly started yet.
I worry for us all.
Your Obedient
Servant, Seneca
A good reminder that sometimes the things we count on don't work out. Backups and a good attitude are important!
ReplyDeleteLeigh, a good attitude has probably gotten me through more situations than I care to admit.
ReplyDelete