7.30.2007

Saddling Pita, Slow-Time, and Agrarianism

7/30/07 - 2nd Day - After Breakfast. Yesterday after fellowship Chris Woods and I saddled Pita for the first time. Pita is our mixed breed calf (1/2 Longhorn, 1/2 Watusi). Many of you may remember that Pita was my first calf born here at the ranch almost exactly 1 year ago to the day. Here is a picture of her when she was 9 months... she's much bigger now:


She's quite a big heifer now, so we started getting her ready to be saddled and ridden. We put a blanket on her, then strapped on the saddle. She really handled it quite well, and didn't protest much at all. The saddle was a bit loose and big for her, so when we started walking her by the lead, she tried mildly to toss it off, and it would go crooked on her. We are going to work on either making one of Chris's saddles fit, or we are going to buy a small saddle to fit her. After we can get it to stay on her, I will leave it on her a few days to let her get used to it. Then I will stap some bags of weight on her for a few days. After that, I will try to ride her. She is quite calm, and still leads well. I will keep you updated on our progress.

We have received some rain over the past week. Not much that was really measurable, but a smattering every day; which is great in July. The temps have been spectacular, and we have really no complaints at all about this great summer. We have rarely reached up into the mid-90's this summer, and most days have been in the high 80's up to 90. The last 8 mornings we have had 69 degrees, which is beautiful, and actually causes me to cover up a bit in the morning to stay warm. The humidity has been high, but that is what happens when you have good moisture. I went back through last years temps on Wunderground.com, and we were 100+ (actually about 105+ here at the ranch) for almost every day of the summer, up until September, when it was still in the high 90's.

Our garden is still doing well. The children will be picking green beans again today for us to can, and we are canning tomatoes as well several times a week. On the Lord's Day fellowship we had some incredible food yet again. We had smoked turkey, potato casserole, that fruit salad with marshmallows, garlic bread, pinto beans with ham hocks, toffee brownies, and spice cupcakes with frosting. Is that decadent or what? It is a great exercise in overcoming the natural man, moderation, and self-control. I have to tell myself to eat reasonable portions, and not to fill up. The Lord's Day before that, when we went to the park, I backslid and ate so much I was sick and miserable for a whole day. So I have been concentrating on eating reasonable portions, and not having seconds. I'm afraid if folks found out how well we eat around here on the Lord's Day, our cup would runneth over with new Agrarian converts.

I should have a Q&A Fridays out sometime today (Monday) which shows you how little we emphasize days out here in slow-timeland. For those of you who are new to the idea of slow-time, it is defined thusly:

Slow time is the Agrarian counterpart to the way the world keeps time. The only "days" we really focus on and differentiate are the Sabbath and the Lord's Day. In the industrial world, events, meetings, etc. are identified by "fast time" or the actual time on man's clock that such events occurs; so you would say "I will meet you at 1 p.m.". In slow-time you might say, "I'll be in the garden after dinner (or lunch)", or "in about an hour or so". In slow-time you might hear, "We'll be by after supper, when it cools off". Slow-time works better when both parties are Agrarians. If you use slow-time with an industrial dude, he might get frustrated. When my dad is up in the high mountains of New Mexico, he calls it "
mañana time" and he finds it very frustrating. If he contracts with a couple of guys to come cut firewood, they may say "We'll be there on Friday", but what they really mean is "we really, really, really intend to get there and cut that wood... some day". They may show up in another week on a Monday. We try not to be like that here, and Agrarian slow-time does not mean LATE or "whenever". It merely attempts to remove the industrial clock from our lives and conversation with one another.

Anyway, one of the Q's I got for Q&A Fridays was actually a statement from a man who is finding it hard to believe that the Agrarian life can actually be lived today:


Michael,

We would love to live off-grid, and people like you make it sound very enticing. But we cannot afford it right now. I don't know if we will ever be able to afford it.

Thank you for your question...er.... statement. I do not generally accept the notion that someone cannot afford to move towards an Agrarian life – even an off-grid Agrarian life. My position, which I believe I can prove in virtually any individual case, is that people who say they cannot live “off-grid”, or that they cannot afford it:

1. Are already spending more money each month than it would take to move off-grid pretty immediately.

2. Have amplified the consequences and hindrances to moving out of the system, while they have ignored or rejected the solutions.

3. Are generally (not in every case, but in almost every case) still too in love with the world and the things of the world to let them go – thus they choose their first love, or that thing that they love more, and then rationalize that choice with excuses or “reasons”.

In fact, most people (not all, but almost all) who ask this question have a failsafe, lock-solid, loop error in their thinking, that inevitably determines for them that they cannot do what they claim they want to do. First, we have to explain what we mean about “off-grid”. When most new folks say, “We would like to live off-grid, but we cannot afford it”, what they actually mean is “we would like to life off-grid IN THE SAME MANNER WE LIVE NOW, with the same conveniences and the same lifestyle, according to the same rudiments, and with the same comforts – but we cannot afford it”. Well, duh. Only about 1-3% of the population can afford to live an industrial/consumer lifestyle completely off-grid. Check out Home-Power magazine, which caters to those who desire to “save the planet” while living a comfortable, western, industrial, consumer lifestyle. I don't know anyone who can fork over $25,000 for a solar power system, and another $25,000 for other off-grid “necessities” (composting toilets, large propane freezers and refrigerators, etc.). This does not include the hundreds of thousands of dollars to plan and build a modern energy-efficient home with all the comforts and doo-dads of modern living. When I explain to them that this whole concept is completely foreign to the culture and lifestyle we propose, and that it is their THINKING and lusts that they cannot afford, they usually kind of dismiss my objections as an extreme example, and assure me that they weren't considering that kind of life. Well... I can't afford half of that lifestyle either. Or ¼ of it. So, I ask, how much of that stuff do you need? How much do you want to live “off-grid”? Define it for me, and I'll tell you that if you define the Biblical Agrarian life properly, and according to the standards of Biblical communities and cultures in history, that you probably can afford it right now. Now the tough question. If I could prove that you could do it, and that you could do it with much, much, much less expense then you possibly can imagine, WOULD YOU DO IT? That is the question to answer. Our website BiblicalAgrarianism.com is about these solutions. There are cheap ways to procure land, to build dwellings, to begin farming, to husband animals. These things have been done for hundreds and thousands of years. It is the modern colonized mind that doesn't conceive of it, not because it cannot, but because it will not. Meaning that it is not a problem of ability, it is a problem of desire. It is easy to say “I want to go back in time and live like my ancestors – with less dependence on the world, and more dependence on God”. It is easy to say, “I want to separate from ungodliness and separate to a more Biblical way of living”. Those things are easy to say, but they are hard to WILL to do. You can easily separate from some comforts and some of the old lifestyle, but the most difficult thing in the world to separate from is yourself and your sins. Sinful dependence on the world, lustful desire for unlawful things, concupiscence, sloth, and idolatry are all sins that are coupled with the carnal man. For man to separate from those things, he must begin to kill the carnal man. That old man must die daily – meaning steadily and increasingly. It is easy to live with 40 acres and a mule (or even 5 acres and some chickens), but it is very difficult to live with these things AND hair dryers, blenders, and air-conditioners.

The most difficult lies to detect are the lies we tell ourselves. Some of you really don't want to live an Agrarian life, or if you do, you want to hybridize it with the stuff you love in the world. Hey, we all love some of that stuff. Some of us have a love/hate relationship with those things. They are tempting, but they ultimately kill us. Last year we ran our air-conditioner in the cabin. It was brutally hot for 6 months, and for those 6 months we spent well over $300 a month on gasoline for the generator. This year I gave the air-conditioner away. Don't want it. God has been gracious, and we have had a preposterously cool summer this year. All the while, I am planning and working to not ever use air-conditioning at home again. The first large-scale electrical air-conditioning was used in 1902, meaning that we have only had it available for a little over a hundred years. Most of our grandparents never had air-conditioning until the 50's, meaning that in our own heritage air-conditioning is only about 60 years old. Somehow, for almost 2000 years, most people lived without electrical air-conditioning. It is only the slave mind that requires it, and we ought not be victims of a slave mind.

We have learned, in trying to live this life, that many “hybrids” are not good at all. They are sinful man's way of trying to do better than God. We are raising non-hybridized pure Longhorn cattle, because we want the best homesteading cow we can get. Mixing the pure with the profane does not make the pure thing better, it only eventually ruins it for what it is truly for. Trying to hybridize Agrarianism with the modern industrial/consumer life will not work. You are right... If that is what you want, you cannot afford it. However, if you want to separate from the world, and live an increasingly Agrarian life as your mind is retrained by God and His way of doing things, then you have to move that direction by faith. Like the Gospel, Agrarianism can be agreed with and pandered to, it can be easy on the lips and sweet on the tongue; but if you really, really believe it, then you can afford it – or God is a liar. And God is not a liar.

If you would like to read the rest of Q&A Fridays, it should be posted on BiblicalAgrarianism.com and my other blog.... sometime today... maybe after dinner?

Your servant in Christ Jesus,

Michael Bunker

7.25.2007

Figgering

7/25/06 - 4th Day - After Breakfast. We received a little more rain yesterday, which was nice, bringing out total for the last week to about 3/4 of an inch. Everything is still really green and our humidity is high. The gardens could still use some more rain, but we are doing really well so far. We will be canning another load of green beans today, along with some more tomatoes and some peaches.


FIGS!

Ok, Danielle and I picked some figs off of our fig tree the other day. I have never had a fig tree and I have never eaten fresh figs before. It was quite a treat. I had the children come up on the porch and I popped a fig into the mouth of each one of them and they each pronounced them "delicious". Figs are allegedly very prolific, and if they do well in our climate and soil we should get a lot of them. The story is that figs were introduced into England about the time of the Reformation and in only a few hundred years had elicited the saying "I don't give a fig", which emphasizes that figs were so abundant that they were considered almost worthless. Contrarily, in more recent times, figs were so valuable in Columbia and places in South and Central America that they were selling for upwards of $8 a pound! So if you told someone in Columbia "I give a fig", it would mean "I really, really do care". I am excited about having figs as a part of our orchard, and I'm excited about introducing a classic (and Biblical) fruit and flavor into our diet. Now if only I could get some olive trees to survive here.

I hope all is well with you all out there, and, I really do give a fig about that.

Michael

7.23.2007

Out of Touch Update

7/23/07 - 2nd Day - Afternoon. Not much to report here. We received a touch of rain last week (about 1/4 inch), but we are still in need of some more. I've been pulling water out of the creek to water the cows and pigs and the creek is really getting low. There is a pretty big storm heading at us right now from the northeast. I don't believe I can remember a storm from the NE in the summer before, but maybe it has happened. We'll see if we get any rain. On the Lord's Day the whole fellowship met over at the park in Santa Anna, which was great. We had a horseshoe tournament which Logan won. We have to call him "Big Tuna" until the next such tournament.

We're still getting a pretty good supply from our gardens. Today Tracy canned 7 quarts of green beans and a couple of quarts of tomatoes. I will be planning on putting in some fall stuff in the garden here in a week or so.

We talked to Robert and he is having fun with his grandparents at the family reunion in upstate NY. He said he was ready to come home though. He's not scheduled to be back until mid-August. We miss him.

Hope all is well with you all.

Michael

7.18.2007

Update and Garden Hint

7/17/07 - 4th Day - After Breakfast. Greetings Brethren,

Hope all is well with you all out there. Things have been pretty quiet around here. I hope to get part 4 to the What is the Gospel? series sent out today. I hope you all have read it all - it is a critical study. I am considering adding an introduction and putting it out as a small paperback that can be handed out as tracts. Garden is doing well here, though we could use a bit of rain. The prognosticators are calling for some over the next few days.

Things were so tight in June that we basically just hunkered down and didn't go anywhere or do much of anything. It is nice that we have the food we grow and that we don't have utility bills, so we can pull in our sails and just wait if things get real bad.

Ranchfest is coming up October 5th through the 12th. If we have not heard from you then you need to email us soon if you are thinking about coming. I hope to have a good showing this fall, and I hope to see a lot of you here. You can camp out here on the land for free, or you can get a room in Santa Anna or Coleman for not much money. Don't know yet what project we will be working on, but as soon as I do, I'll let you know.

Just a pic and an update on our garden. Our garden is not doing too bad. We still have some pretty bad soil, and this is only our second year gardening in this spot, and it will take some years to get some good productive soil in th garden. Some of the other folks in the community have better soil, but we will try to build the soil every year. Anyway, we are doing far better than last year, and the bugs haven't been as much of a problem.


Monday and Tuesday we got about 13 quarts of green beans and we canned 5 quarts of tomatoes. So far we have done the best with green beans, though our okra, squash, and tomatoes are doing marginal.

I would suggest Okra for first time gardeners. I have heard that it will grow and produce well in any soil, and I was not surprised to see it do so well here. When some of the other plants are wilting or suffering from bugs - the okra just took off and hasn't slowed down. Last night we had breaded and fried okra and jalapenos. EXCELLENT. Today I will be making and canning some salsa from the garden. I also hope to start planting a row or two for the fall garden. This year we have had a cool and wet summer (thank the Lord). Last year at this time the gardens were starting to dry up and shrivel away. By the end of July and early August there wasn't much garden left.

Anyway, my suggestions for new gardners. Zucchini and crookneck squash, Okra, and Green Beans (I use Blue Lake Bush beans). Our first year with a garden I did blackeyed peas. Wow. We got a huge crop and then the plants died in a month or so. So I planted them again and we got another huge crop and then the plants died. So I planted them again in the middle of the summer. The third crop did really well too. I would have planted again, but didn't need any more. We dried the beans in the pods and put them in mason jars. We used them for seed and for food for about 2 years after that.

We grew Hubbard Squash for the first time this year. They get huge (up to 15 pounds, or even more) and we have heard that they will store in the root cellar all the way until Spring.

Enough for now.

Michael

7.16.2007

I'm an Inventer Too

7/16/07 - 2nd Day - After Breakfast. Our good friend Herrick Kimball has a great blog post over on The Deliberate Agrarian blog where he describes how he invented the granola bar. Excellent story, and I laughed because people have always given me a hard time for my inventions. Many of you may know the stories, but I have had some pretty good inventions that got picked off by someone else. Mine aren't quite as provable and certified as his, but they are true just the same. Here's one:

The Denny's Orange Juice Carafe

I invented the orange juice carafe, the type now ubiquitous around the world at every 24 hr. breakfast place in the world. Many, many years ago, while I was still working in the world and when I still loved basketball, I went to the Southwest Conference Championship tournament in Dallas. That tells you this was quite awhile ago, since Texas Tech was still in the SWC and that conference went away in '96. Anyway, my folks were staying at the Denny's on Stemmons Freeway down towards Reunion Arena and every morning of the tourney we would meet for breakfast at Denny's next to La Quinta. Every morning I would order orange juice, and every morning they would bring me this little 4 oz. shot glass of OJ. It was ridiculous, but that's the way they used to do it at almost every restaurant back then - you'd get this tiny midget glass of OJ like they were afraid you were going to OD on OJ. Anyway, after 3 or 4 days of suffering through the tiny orange juice delivery, I finally confronted the waitress. Very calmly I said, "I want a LARGE orange juice". She looked at me like I had asked for a glass of diamonds and said, "Oh, this is the largest glass we have for orange juice".

"Hmmm..." I said, "surely you have more orange juice?"

"Oh yes."

"And surely you have large glasses?"

"Yes, but this is our largest orange juice glass."

"But I want more orange juice."

She looked at me like I didn't just want a glass of diamonds, but now I was asking for the whole diamond mine.

"I don't know what to do to help you, sir."

"Here's what I want you to do. Go back there in the back and find me a large container... a jug or vase or something. Fill it with orange juice. You can measure it out with this little shot glass you brought me and charge me for however much I drink. But I want you to come back with a bunch of orange juice, got it?"

She stumbled around in confusion and finally slipped away. I really didn't want a vase of orange juice. I expected her to come back with a large glass of orange juice, like the glasses they use for tea or coke. I mean, is this rocket surgery?

She comes back a few minutes later with a beautiful carafe of orange juice, the kind of bottle in which they used to deliver milk back when they delivered it to your porch. I was beaming. I said, "Excellent work. This is a beautiful thing. When you get the opportunity, send your manager over so I can thank him."

She looked at me like I had just landed in a space ship, nodded and slipped away again. Later, her manager came to the table and I explained to him that there really was no proper explanation why the whole world seemed to believe that orange juice must be served in 4 oz. glasses. "Why not give people the option to order more OJ and then charge them for it if they want it? Doesn't that make sense?" He nodded at me, clearly deep in thought. What I didn't know is that Denny's has an internal program to reward beautiful ideas like that.

Many months later, I was traveling and I went into a Denny's and I saw the beautiful carafe there, already on the table, with a full-color printed cardboard ad inserted into it advertising the great benefit of being able to order a full carafe of orange juice for the table! Years later when I was traveling on speaking tours, I would see the handy orange juice carafe in Denny's style restaurants all over the country. What an innovation. And I didn't make a dime from it.

So, whenever you go somewhere to eat breakfast, and you see the handy orange juice carafe - give me a think, and raise a cold glass to ol' Bunker.

Your servant in Christ Jesus,

Michael Bunker

7.13.2007

Canning this and that

7/13/07 - 6th Day - After Breakfast. Preparation of the Sabbath. The prognosticators are calling for the weather to turn wet again for the next week. As I type this there are storms way out to the west that are heading our way. The gardens could use the rain, and hopefully the change will cool it off some.

Yesterday Tracy and I canned tomatoes and green beans. We still haven't canned that much, but we have already canned more green beans than ever before - which isn't saying much. Chris Woods is supposed to be getting two goats and we are going to butcher them and can most of the meat for this winter. Don't know exactly when that is going to happen, but we'll see.

Logan and I walked down to the pigs yesterday and we are both getting the sinking feeling that our pigs are not pregnant after all. Won't know for 1 more month, but we thought they were going to drop piglets a month ago, and they are not looking any more pregnant. We'll see on that too. If our pig (Luella) is not pregnant she will go to the butcher at the end of August. That is our way of encouraging pig pregnancy - get pregnant or go to the butcher. Everyone else is doing fine here. We miss Robert already. He left for his one month trip yesterday.

Your servant in Christ Jesus,

Michael Bunker

7.12.2007

Yankee Shine

7/12/07 - 5th Day - After Breakfast. I haven't posted much this week. I've been taking a bit of a break. It's been pretty hot here (actually seasonal, but very humid) and I haven't really been doing too much.

Today our son Robert (age 8) leaves to spend a month with his grandma and granddad, heading to a family reunion in upstate New York. Here is a snippet of an actual conversation at our breakfast table this morning:

Sarah (age 3): "Mommy, is New York far away?"

Mommy: "Yes Sarah, it is, and that is the way we like it"

Daddy: "Yes, because they have Yankees up there. Yankees everywhere"

Sarah: "And bears?"

Mommy: "Yes, Yankees and Bears"

Sarah: (after a pause to think) "Mommy, are Yankees monkeys?"

Mommy: "There is a question for the ages! But technically, no dear, they aren't monkees"
I hope our Yankee friends don't get too offended, but I just report the facts, and I hope you all are thankful that we told Sarah you aren't monkeys.

My mother and sister were here for a few days and my mother is picking up Robert to haul him off for the long reunion trip. They rented a lake house on Lake Brownwood, so yesterday we had a picnic out at the lake. The children had a great time swimming and playing.

I hope to get part 3 of the "What is the Gospel?" series posted on BiblicalAgrarianism.com today. I hope you all will read all three of the current parts and let us know what you think.

I hope all is well with you all.

Your servant in Christ Jesus,

Michael Bunker

7.10.2007

Fellowship and Fun

7/10/07 - 3rd Day - After Breakfast. In this wonderfully and strangely odd weather year, we had one of our first "normal" days yesterday. It was hot and sunny, which is what we usually expect this time of year. Because of all the rain, it was very humid too, which is not altogether normal, but still... it actually felt like July in Texas yesterday. The prognosticators are calling for another hot one today, and for the next few days before it is supposed to cool down over the weekend.

We had a great weekend here at the ranch. The sabbath was nice and restful, then, that night we had some guests from Coleman come out for Q&A. Q&A didn't last long and then we sat out and talked on the porch for a few hours, which was nice. The Lord's Day was great too - the singing was fun and we are learning some new songs, and then we had a dynamite meal:

Smoked Brisket, jalapeno potato salad, broccoli rice casserole, corn bread, brownies, and cookies.

That night we had a sermon and then we stayed around and talked some more in the Ante's house, which was nice.

I have been busy doing a lot of writing, and haven't been as busy on the ranch as I should be. The garden is doing fairly well, and I have learned a ton of things I need to do to make next years garden better. I really need to do a bunch of work on the soil, and hopefully I will begin preparing a new area for a larger garden sometime this fall and winter. It takes years to build up good soil, and we have barely begun the process. Today I will be processing some tomatoes.

My mother and sister are coming today for a few days. They have rented a house out at Lake Brownwood for a few days. On Thursday, Robert is leaving with my mother and heading up to upstate New York (the Saranac Lake area, where my Dad is from) for a family reunion. I am not able to make it this year. My family are not Agrarians so they plan these things for the summer when a farmer is tending his crops and animals. Robert will be gone for almost a month.

Ok, enough for this time.

Michael Bunker

7.06.2007

Quick Update and Some Stuff to Read

7/06/07 - 6th Day - After Breakfast. Preparation of the Sabbath. Well, we are still getting some rain every day, but not in bulk like we were last week. I think it rained every day this week, but most of the time it was just a brief downburst. Yesterday we had a pretty good drenching, but it probably only amounted to 1/4 inch. Just enough to keep the ground muddy and to keep it quite humid.

I posted an answer to a question on the Confederate Battle Flag yesterday, and today I posted the first Q&A Fridays issue since December 8th.

I certainly didn't get as much done this week as I would have hoped, so there hasn't been a whole lot to write about here at the ranch. Logan Ante and his children will be back home here at the ranch (or should already be back home), so we will be back to our full attendance at our fellowships this weekend - which will be nice. I am planning on reading Herrick Kimball's Writings of a Deliberate Agrarian this weekend (DV), so if I get that done, I'll report back next week.

Hope all is well with you all,

Michael Bunker

7.04.2007

Short Note

7/04/07 - 4th Day - After Breakfast. We made it through the prognosticators prophecy of 90% probability of rain yesterday evening with nary a drop. They have it pegged at 80% today, but we are dry so far and pray we will remain so.

Yesterday I replaced the roof on a rabbit hutch we found a month or so ago, and today I have been digging post holes for fences and working a bit in the garden. Our temps remain unseasonably cool, though the humidity is very, very high.

I hope to get some writing work done today, and to start work on the sermon for Sunday.

Just a short note to say hi.

Michael

7.03.2007

Interesting June and Possible Q&A Friday

7/03/07 - 3rd Day - Mid-day. More rain started at about 3 a.m., so once again I was up a good portion of the night. Don't know how much we received but it wasn't much, which is good, but there are storm clouds all around us as I write this around mid-day.

June was interesting to say the least. We received well over 13 inches of rain in June, probably more, and July is starting out pretty wet too. The great blessing is that it remains very cool. Our temps have remained in the 80's, very rarely going into the 90's. June was our worst month financially since we started the ministry back in 1998, but our minimalist lifestyle, off-grid power, and food production has made it far less painful. We haven't been to a grocery store in several weeks, which is kind of cool in a strange sort of way. In June we lived off of what most people pay in car insurance. Maybe July will be better.

I have received a few interesting questions this week, and wanted to let you know that if I got maybe 5 more or so that I would put out an issue of Q&A Friday - which used to be a regular feature at BiblicalAgrarianism.com, but which was discontinued for lack of interest. Email questions to editor(at)lazarusunbound(dot)com.

Everyone in the community is doing fine, and we are all staying busy doing what we can working around the mud and water. Our creeks, ponds and catchwaters remain full - which a great blessing here in the summer. We should have some more calves born this month, as well as our pigs, which still have not dropped. I was WAY off in estimating how pregnant they were. Oh, and I forgot to mention that I picked up 3 more Californian rabbits for Tracy... or maybe I did mention it and forgot that I did.

Hope all is well with you all, and I pray for you.

Michael Bunker

7.02.2007

Agrarian Books

7/02/07 - 2nd Day - After Breakfast. Well, we finally had a couple of days without significant rain. We had a few short downbursts on the 6th day as we prepared for the Sabbath, but most of the Sabbath and the Lord's Day were sunny and we've dried up a bit. There seems to be more rain on the horizon, and there are storms threatening to head this way from up north, but we'll see.

We haven't gotten much work done on the ranch for some time due to the mud and rain, but I hope to get some things done this week. I have some materials to build with, and I have things to build, so maybe I can work that out.

I published the second part of the What is the Gospel? series yesterday. Here are the links for those two sermons:

What is the Gospel, Part I - The Righteousness of God Revealed

What is the Gospel, Part II - The Gospel Hidden

I received a nice package of books from Herrick Kimball - The Deliberate Agrarian, for which we are very grateful. He sent me the whole Whizbang Books catalog of books. I gave Tracy (my daughter, age 14) his most recent book Writings of a Deliberate Agrarian to read because it immediately caught her eye when I was opening the box, and she really, really wanted to read it. Apparently she has been reading it to the other children because they were walking around all day talking about the stories in it and doing something they called "a farmer handshake", which is apparently something they read in the book. Tracy said the book is great and she is going to do a book report on it.

Ok, here is your project for today (or sometime this week). We want to encourage this type of Agrarian writing, so why not order a copy of Writings of a Deliberate Agrarian? It looks like a great book, and maybe if you bought a copy or two (one for you, and one to give away) we can increase the body of information out there on agrarianism. Click on the following link to get a signed copy from Herrick:

http://www.thedeliberateagrarian.com/buyasignedcopy.html

I look forward to reading it soon. I gave the Whizabang Garden Cart book to Elder David to read (he reported that it was very good). I already read his The Complete Guide to Making Great Garlic Powder, which was an excellent book and has inspired me to plant a lot of Garlic this fall. After reading the chapter about what is wrong with commercial garlic powder I walked out into our cabin's kitchen and my eye immediately fell on our large container of commercial garlic powder (shudder). I think I will be trying to buy some organic garlic powder from Herrick or from some other provider if Herrick is sold out this year. I also read the Whizbang Chicken Plucker book, which was very interesting too, and it is something I intend to look into when I get some meat birds. We raise a lot of chickens, but primarily for eggs, and only occasionally kill a bird for meat. But I would like to get into pastured poultry more intensively and will look forward to making one of these chicken pluckers. I'll just have to run it using alternative energy since many of Herrick's great ideas are not particularly directed to the off-grid user; maybe one day he'll design one of these with a handcrank for us non-electric folk.

Anyway, thanks to Herrick Kimball for the books. Buy all these books for yourself, they are definitely worth it, and pass the word. Oh, and don't forget we are supposed to all buy two copies of Swarms of Locusts by the end of this month. Our goal was to sell 100 more copies, and I don't think we are halfway there.

Your servant in Christ Jesus,

Michael Bunker




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