Saturday, August 29, 2009

DIY

(I thought I'd cross-post this here--it's also on my blog, Milk and Ink. My husband, whom I am still teaching the fine art of email (for over 6 years...), sometimes get struck with the urge to do a blog. Anyone who knows my blog, or Blake himself, knows his style: direct, to the point, with a twist of dry humor. He recently attended a chicken butchering class and it spurred this post. Without further ado, here is Papa Nomad's second-ever blog:)


Poppa Nomad Speaks:
DIY--That Shit Don't Grow on Trees!

Since moving to Portland over two years ago, escaping the imploding Death Star of Bend, and since the economy has gone to shit, our family has engaged in a profound paradigm shift: a (our) new model of urban sustainability. More specifically, our redefinition of essential life practices and values. In our disposable, instant-gratification McCulture, a culture of consumption without actual necessity, we’ve all but forgotten what it means to “Do It Yourself”. I refer primarily to the life sustaining act of eating. Sure we all have material wants (even the more Zen among us), and all consume and use up resources...but can we breeders rekindle the fires of the ancients AND sustain ourselves and our families? With three kids can we be in it, but not of it? (A question I have posed to various monks, sages and other Buddhist-oriented teachers). Our family is blessed with a small urban farm that is our model for future sustainability; a living, changing daily mantra that we and our three children “meditate over” on a daily basis. For us and our little tribe, knowing where our food comes from is an integral part of that mindfulness.


We are a race of modern humans who purchase our boxed and frozen cubes of processed, modified, manipulated, and irradiated food from big box stores. We are scarcely aware of the process of growing and cultivating; farming. Victims of progress, we are frighteningly disassociated from the seasonal cycles. Really, I have not been Mr. Righteous my whole life, but our belief that the kids are greatly enriched by participating in the process that puts food in front of their mouths is an edict I now stand firmly by. Let it be said that I have a profound appreciation for Leah who daily prepares multiple organic, gourmet meals for our family. Meals that take into account personal taste, nutrition, our respective allergies...her awareness of the seasonal and sustainable is profound. As the once-in-a-while Chef in our house, I would like to note the extreme satisfaction associated with preparing food to sustain the lives of one’s family. I can only imagine how it must be for Leah, as she has been doing exactly that for what will soon be a decade for our growing family. She is quite the gourmet chef now.


As husband and wife we are fairly traditional: I hunt and gather, and she tends family and hearth. More recently we both have poured our blood and sweat , literally, into our garden. Those of you who know me know I am an “All or Nothing” personality type. In that spirit, my most recent experience of killing and consuming the food we raised was that reconnection the the ancient I spoke of. As an omnivore, I am mindful of how our ability to hunt compels protein and master fire enabled humans to evolve; as a species, we would have perished long ago if it were not for meat (and agriculture). I’ll spare the readers with my diatribe on “Freegans and Hippiecrite” practices, as it does come down to personal choice, but most of us, if faced with starvation would put aside our PC affiliations and consume meat to avoid death. Few political choices are stronger than the will to live. Personally, I grew up in a “gourmet” home....I love food and meat (and get debilitating headaches without my complete proteins)...my mother was a good cook...she was friends with James Beard and Julia Child. James Beard, in fact single-handedly defined the modern American palate. Both made being a chef cool for millions; everybody could do it, we just had to enjoy food. In James and Julia’s day, the advent of technology for the nuclear family of the 50’s and 60’s made for an uphill battle: canned and freeze dried, instant and (later) microwavable. Teaching the modern housewife that fresh was better, would take some time to realize.


Hunting, gathering and farming are the quintessential archetypes for tribal survival. Consumption of complete proteins (not found in plants) play an essential role for the development of synaptic pathways of young human brains. That being said, my recent butchering class with my brother-in-law Michael tested my resolve in a new way: looking into the eyes of your dinner before killing it. (It should be noted that the birds we slaughtered came from our farm: we knew them; we raised them, we named them.) It was overcast and raining. Our class, filled with people of various levels of personal conviction was conducted by a mindful farmer who instructed us to "thank the chicken for giving it’s life”. Like any new practice, some were more adept than others. I found myself annoyed at the “timid butchers” among us; there is much to be said for doing it humanely; quickly and efficiently. “Don’t torture the poor beast”, I thought, “Just Do It”! We learned the finer points of bird preparation, after the deed was done....careful excision of the anal cavity, so as not to rupture intestines...gutting and removal of the internals (which were equipped with eggs in various stages of development, like that frog back in seventh-grade science class). A hot-dip and feather removal, cutting off of the head, and legs at the knees, and appropriate gland removal, so as not to leak bile or other toxins into the bird and spoil the meat were some of the procedural highlights. On the drive home, Michael and I were quiet with our two birds on ice. I was not in the mood for a chicken dinner that night, and for several days saw my beloved family members as piles of guts; an existentialist twist on a factual condition. Leah complimented me on my work as we cooked Obama, remarking how she looked just like as if we had gone to the store and bought a chicken for dinner. Its the in-between process that most of us are disassociated from. That was the big enlightener here.




20+ years ago, I lived on a sailboat (commuted to work as a sailing instructor on my rowboat) and fished daily for my meals for some two years. I slept on the sea and ate from it. Yet, fishing and slaughtering a higher life form (that you raised, fed and interacted with on a daily basis) seem quite “different animals” to me. Hunting or fishing to survive is something few of have ever had to do, yet it is the reason why all of us are here today. It is my belief that this skill is something all modern humans should again nurture. Few understand the difficulty and complexities of cultivating even simple rice and beans; making tofu. Fewer still could do it even if it was a matter or survival.


Urban Farming is the new cool thing to do (especially in PDX). Just listen to NPR and pay attention to media. For me, it’s more than a PC trend; I want to practice what I preach, as it were. I’d be a total “Hippiecrite” if I wasn’t willing to kill, then pull the still-pulsating guts from the abdominal cavity of a chicken (or any other farm animal I keep) in order to feed our family. Truly, being a butcher is a fine art, and I have renewed respect for those who prepare our meat. Presently our survival is not based on my hunting and slaughtering skills, but it may one day be. This felt very different from the catch of the day provided by the ocean so many years ago.



Last year, I cooked eggs from our chickens with potatoes that we grew on our wood burning stove with wood from our property that I cut and split myself...oh yeah, and the stove heated our house, too. This meal had a profoundly different feeling associated with it. DIY never felt so good. Caveman DNA runs deep. Thank you eternally to my wonderful wife for her hard work, constant growth and nurturing of our family. I never wanted children until I met Leah, and now fatherhood is the greatest gift three times over on top of our marriage. The daily practice and ritual of farming and gardening engenders discipline for children as well as adults; mindfulness of the cycles of life and death; growth and change. Self sufficiency: something that you can’t buy at the supermarket. That shit don’t grow on trees!


~Poppa Nomad

Friday, August 28, 2009

Living Light~With Less


Not sure why I haven't documented this here yet, but wanted to share our latest journey.  We have come a long way since I wrote 

this post for the local BG Green blog.  And while we still have a long way to go, we at least feel as if we are on the right path.

We are in the beginning of making the transition towards living lighter through buying less.  What that looks like for us may be different from what it looks like for you, but we feel like it is a necessary change.  The Compact was one of the original groups to actually challenge lasting change.  Here is a quote from their site.

1) TO GO BEYOND RECYCLING IN TRYING TO COUNTERACT THE NEGATIVE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIOECONOMIC IMPACTS OF U.S. CONSUMER CULTURE, TO RESIST GLOBAL CORPORATISM, AND TO SUPPORT LOCAL BUSINESSES, FARMS, ETC; 2) TO REDUCE CLUTTER AND WASTE IN OUR HOMES (AS IN TRASH COMPACT-ER); 3) TO SIMPLIFY OUR LIVES (AS IN CALM-PACT)

What started as thriftiness has evolved into stewardship.  

STUFF
After reading this book I began to question where my stuff came from, who made it, why I bought it and if I really needed it to begin with.

The first step for me has been to bypass Target and head over to local or handmade vendors like you may find at SKY Farmers MarketETSY, and the Kentucky Guild.


The library is a great way to borrow things and then give them back.  

FOOD
Re-thinking our food is another way to live lighter (possibly literally).  Not only is a large amount of the food we purchase wasted and even thrown in the trash but it is often covered in tons of paper and plastic.  Then we wrap it in more paper and plastic to take it home.

Buy Local-when you purchase food directly from local farmers and producers you most often take home just food without the trash.  Or they will most likely be packaged in recycled materials. 

Buy Fresh-The more processed a food item is the more waste goes into producing and packaging that item.

Upcycle-You can do this yourself by creating something new from your trash (the kids and I are working on a large play house made from recycled items) or visit Terracycle for ways others can re-use your trash.

Re-usable Bags-you can get these everywhere now and they make a huge difference.

THRIFTING
Clothing-Repets Thrift and  Lil' Angels Attic are a few of my favorites because their mission is bigger than just offering STUFF. 

Gifts-See if you can find others to trade with you (it may be easier than you think), learn a craft and make something rather than buying something new.

Cloth Diapers-There are so many reasons to use cloth diapers.  Besides the multitude of envionmental reasons you can also trade or sell your diapers for other things.

GIVE
There is so much stuff out there that we are hoping to trade or give away.
As you begin to evaluate your stuff you realize how much you have and how much others need.  You begin to realize what is really important in life:  family, friends, our world. 
I am posting more about this HERE.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

What's in Your Backyard?

It is a wonderful time of year to be a gardener. So many things are growing and producing right now. All of the hardwork we have done preparing beds, planting seeds, and weeding are now rewarding us with feasts for our tastebuds as well as our eyes. So tell me, what is in your backyard?



Sunday, July 26, 2009

Preservation

The summer time in our home is our busiest time of year. We are usually found out in the garden or in a u-pick field somewhere. Then its home and into the kitchen to preserve or bake with all the goodness we've harvested. Peaches, pears, cherries, apples, tomatoes....the list can go on and on. What are some of your favorite things you preserve? Do you have any family recipes or tried and true tips you'd like to share?

Here are a few family recipes and tip we have in our family...

First, when canning things to be picked. We use 2-4 freshly picked grape leaves at the bottom of the jar in the place of alum. It helps keep the pickled crunchier.

Second, our favorite salsa recipe that has been handed down over the years:

5lbs tomatoes
3 cups chopped onion
1 cup chopped hot peppers (use whichever variety for the level hot heat you like)
1 cup cider vinegar
3 1/2 teaspoon salt
1 large bunch of cilantro

Combine all ingredients except the cilantro and boil. Reduce heat and simmer for 30+ minutes. Add cilantro and ladle into hot pint jars leaving 1/2 inch headspace. Put lid and ring on and process in hot water bath for 15 minutes.

We love this recipe so much! Its great on homemade tortilla chips too!!

And another yummy recipe is for any variety of berry buckle:
1/2 cup butter or shortening
3/4 cup sugar or sweetner
1 egg
2 cups flour (both white and ww work great!)
2 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup milk or alternative

2 cups fresh or frozen berries
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup white flour
cinnamon
1/4 cup butter

Thoroughly cream butter/shortening and sugar; add egg and beat until light and fluffy. Sift together 2 cups flour, baking powder and salt. Add to creamed mixture alternating with milk. Spread in greased 11x7x2 pan; top with berries. Mix remaining sugar, flour and cinnamon. Cut in butter until crumblu and sprinkle over berries. Bake at 350* for 45 minutes. Great with freshly whipped cream or vanilla ice cream!

Enjoy!!

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

A Lighter Load: A Lotta Links


In an effort to live lighter I am getting rid of a lot of things in my house.  If I don't use it, need it or desperately want it then it's out of here!  So it just occured to me that I have way too many bookmarks on my computer and they need to go too.  But many of them are great links to simple living so I thought I would pass them along.

Learning at Home
Rocks in my Dryer shares a lotta links on educational sites for kiddos listed by age groups.
Homeschooling Today has great information.  Including homesteading, simple living, the list goes on and on...a really great magazine.
Kindergarten Homepage has great information on for those pre-schooler's or those starting Kindergarten.
The Little Experience has fresh and fun ideas for kiddos.  I especially love their recycling ideas!


Faith
Rachel gives a great testimony as she prepares herself for dying.  She makes faith simple.  Know God, Know Yourself, Know the Gospel and Know your Purpose.  
Sarah at Walk Slowly, Live Wildly shares a lot of ideas on Following Jesus.  Her thoughts on Excess are great!
This is a great article that discusses a movement towards family worship.  Spending more time at home and less time dividing and conquering!
The Shorter Catechism is a great place to start with your children on learning biblical truth.
A great online Bible tool with translation parallel's.
Raising Godly Tomatoes has great inspiration.

Blog Tools
The Blog Frog is a great way to organize "friends" in the blog world.

Large Families
Need to upgrade or condense to one super large vehicle to fit the entire family?  Here is a great option.
A blog for large families.

Natural Childbirth
Hypnobabies was a great birthing tool during my last birth.  You can read my birth story HERE.
My favorite natural childbirth blog is Bellies and Babies!
Visit Silent Voices for hard to find information on Natural Family Planning.

Frugal Living
P & G eSaver  download coupons to your grocery card.
Swaddlebee's Outlet Store is a great place to buy seconds and discontinued cloth diapers.
Super Easy and Cheap Recipes!

Simple Entertaining
You can always skim through my {Fresh Floral Art} blog for tons of organic, veriflora, natural floral ideas.
Blumebox's are perfect for simple entertaining.  They are easy to use, fold down flat and you can recycle them!
Order Organic flowers that are more beautiful than you can imagine!
A floral designer who grows all of her flowers herself-all while homeschooling her children.

Random
A huge amount of site links all on one page.
DIRT by Amy Stewart.  All the dirty secrets of the florist industry that you have always wanted to know.

I will be back to post more later.

Michelle @ {Life Is Good}
p.s.  listen to the first song at my blog-i think you all will like it!

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

The Summer Party {Mama Nomad}

My two girls both have their birthdays in the summer, one month and one week apart. Since little, little kids are not aware of the birthday expectation yet, and Mayan's birthday comes first (our oldest) there were a few years there where we'd have a party for her, and then end up doing something simple for her younger sister a month later. The year Mayan turned four, I spent months planning an all-out Wizard of Oz party (her favorite movie)--we had handmade paper poppies, melted witch punch, a throw-the-apple-beanbag-at-the-tree game, even a fallen "house" with whithered witches legs underneath.
(Grandpa helps lay the yellow brick road while a lollipop guild munchkin explores)

It was SO much fun! We asked our guests to dress up as well, but of course there could only be one Dorothy....and Mayan played the part perfectly in her dress, ruby slippers, and basket with Toto I had found on eBay. At the end of the hot July day we were surprised by a double rainbow in the sky! That is the type of birthday magic that you cannot buy anywhere....



(Blake was an Emerald City Guard and I was Aunt Em)

By the time Isadore's birthday came around a few weeks later, I was exhausted of planning and we didn't do much, but she was two and was happy with a cake and a new dress.

The year after that we had just settled in Portland and it was the first year we decided to combine the parties. I know, I know they say this scars children for life, right? They will spend years in therapy talking of how all they ever wanted was a party of their own....especially Isadore, living in the shadow of the epic Wizard of Oz bash of 2006.

Somehow I don't think that is the case for two reasons: one is that the summer party is FUN! The girls talk about it all year long, and the focus is really not about birthdays at all, but family and friends, freedom and food, games and laughter--celebrating summer and life. The other is that the girls get to choose what they do on their own special days--where we go (beach, zoo, a play....) and where we eat. We rarely eat at restaurants, so the birthday dinner is an exciting choice. They can eat anywhere they wish OR I can make them any dinner they wish. Its a tough call and they also begin discussing their thought processes at least 6 month in advance.

So this will be our third Summer Bash and we have our special traditions down already. The greatest appeal to me is the "old time" games. We have a nice big backyard--the inspiration for the party in the first place--and the kids do the classics: egg-on-a-spoon race (cost: one dozen eggs, you provide the spoons), potato sack races (sacks available for a $1 a piece at your local feed store!), three-legged race (silk scarves or bandanas work well), a pinata (filled with treats of choice--they can be as healthy as you choose) and last year, the big hit, a treasure hunt.

(This was one exciting, neck-and-neck race!)

(Blake explains the rules of the egg-on-a-spoon race to some eager participants)

My brothers and sisters used to do treasure hunts for me when I was little: hand me a clue which led me to another clue, then another until I found my "treasure" (we were very poor so this would usually be my sippy cup.) For last years party, I laminated cards with rhymes on them (these were so much fun to write!) and sent the group of kids, ranging from age 2 to 10, all around the property from the garden, through the house, out the front and eventually to the hidden far side of the house where everyone had an "X" marked bag with their name on it, containing books I had spent weeks gathering from thrift stores (picked for each child specifically), stickers, and a sweet. It was so much fun to watch them, and the kids took turns reading the cards to each other.

Here is an example of the clues I left:

"The place to wash away your troubles...
Do you like rubber ducks or bubbles?"
(this of course led them to the bathub)

The final clue:

"Alright, Crew, this clue's your last
The treasure is within your grasp!

Out the door and down the steps

To the side of the house that faces West"

(a guest just happened to have a compass on her and helped the kids find west--impromptu navigation lesson!)

("X" marks the spot!)

Summertime food is another great feature of the summer bash; the best part being it can be very easy. If its afternoon, we don't have to feed our guests lunch so an array of popcorn, pretzles, peanuts, and watermelon is just fine. The highlight the first year was turning our giant kitchen counter into a make-your-own-sundae buffet. I collected ice cream dishes from thrift stores a few weeks before, for about $1-2 a piece, and they gave the sundaes an old school touch. I added the scoop of cold ice cream and let the kids add bananas, nuts, chocolate chips, or berries. To mix it up last year we had root beer floats (optional: chocolate stout floats for the grownups, too)--it was a perfect (and inexpensive) summer treat.

(Time to make sundaes!)

I like to give our house a simple, festive feel as well. Nothing says birthday party like a bunch of balloons. One year I hit a great party shop near the waterfront and had them make me four big helium-filled balloon clusters in simple colors, some had polka dots--each bunch had about 8 balloons in it...and I only lost one to the great big beyond when I was unloading them from the Suburban when I got home. Oops. The party guest kids got to pick one out before they left. I also hung simple paper party balls along our back patio, sprinkled paper dots on the countertops, and had fresh cut flowers from our yard on every table. I gave some chalk to my sister-in-law to decorate the cement pillars out back with some of her lovely flower drawings. No cartoon characters, no "themes," no princesses or dump trucks--but very charming. A little Beatles music in the backround pleased guests, yound and old.

(The house is ready to recieve guests--lots of seating indoor and out for the grownups, and I also used brown grocery bags to cover the tables along with tins of crayons for guests to leave their mark)

This year our new garden takes up about half of the lawn, but I purposefully left enough space for a sack race. Maybe we will do something new like Twister or a slip and slide....how about a bubble gum blowing contest...(growups will have to participate too!) The best part about the summer bash is how flexible we can be and how we can work with whatever we've got and still have as much fun as ever.


Sunday, May 24, 2009

Summer Activities

Since we unschool our summers really do not look much different than the other seasons. Its a bit warmer and we bring out the pool more. lol


Some of the summer specific things I do look forward to are:


The MDC summer picnic/BBQ. This will be the 3rd (2nd??) year we have gotten together for a BBQ including the dads too. Normally its just the moms and kids playing together and I really enjoy our potluck get togethers.


The kids held a pool party last year for their friends and have decided they want to do this every year.


Yardsales I know its not a get together or anything but yardsales!!!


Going to the beach is also a favorite summer past time of our family. Joe and I honeymooned on the Oregon coast so we really enjoy going back now that we live closer to it.


We are looking forward to camping this year as well.

This year some close friends are coming down for the Fourth of July. We are all really looking forward to this visit.

Thats a few of our summer specific activites.