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Homesteading Questions: There Are No Dumb Ones

Homesteading Questions: There Are No Dumb Ones

FromA Farmish Kind of Life


Homesteading Questions: There Are No Dumb Ones

FromA Farmish Kind of Life

ratings:
Length:
24 minutes
Released:
Mar 22, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

When we decide to jump into the homesteading life, it makes a lot of sense that we would have a lot of homesteading questions. A. lot. It's important for all of us to realize that a) questions are great and b) there aren't any dumb ones. We need to ask all the homesteading questions that we can!

(Don't want to read all the words? This blog post is also a podcast—just press the triangle play button on the little black bar at the top of this post!)
Homesteading questions: "This might be a dumb question, but..."
Many farmish adults of today didn't grow up in farmish families. They did not come from parents who lived as homesteaders. Or back to the landers. Or preppers. They were not raised in a household where everyone knew how to can. Or grow tomatoes. Or butcher a chicken. Or sew a quilt.

Which means lots of people (author included) need to learn how to do stuff. We need to learn about all those homesteading things.

So we need to ask homesteading questions. We need to ask questions without feeling that they are dumb. We need to have a community where people can ask "what is this type of weed that's taking over my garden?" without being laughed off the internet.


Homesteading questions: "You're the only person I can ask this..."
Now that I've been living the farmish life for some time, I get asked about lots of "dumb questions". People email, message, or in real life ask me at least 20 times a week, "This is probably a stupid thing to ask but..."

You guys, stop telling me your questions are "dumb". They aren't dumb. Who is it that decided what questions are and aren't okay to ask?

These questions, which I have been asked in the past week, are not dumb:

is an air pistol is a good decoy for home defense? (no, please don't use a "decoy")
how do chickens mate? (the roo jumps on the hen's back)
how big is a cord of wood? (4ftx4ftx8ft)
is a maple the only tree you can tap? (no)
do hens need a rooster to lay eggs? (no)
why do you need a boy goat if all you want to do is milk the girls? (because like women, goats need to give birth to have milk)
how does a kill cone work? (you put the chicken in head first, pull their head down, and cut their jugular)
do your kids have to take standardized tests as homeschoolers? (depends on what state you live in; here in MN, yes)
how do I attach chicken wire/netting to posts? (staples for wood posts or zip ties for metal/plastic posts)
are chickens vegetarians? (they are omnivores)
is there a difference between jelly and jam? (jam has seeds, jelly doesn't)

And on and on and on.
Homesteading questions: Y'all, none of these are dumb questions.
 



Now. Lest you think that I'm a constantly bubbling fountain of knowledge, there are a billion things I don't know. I'm still learning every single day.

Want to hear my "dumb questions"? Most recently:

I asked for identification on a "pretty flower" on my Facebook page and the comments immediately exploded with "MILKWEED. DON'T KILL IT." I've lived around milkweed my entire life but had NO idea THAT flower was MILKWEED.
I washed a rag that was soaked in paint thinner in the hopes of re-using it because I was trying to save money. I found out you don't wash paint thinner rags, you throw them away. (I had to wash that load of laundry three more times before the smell of paint thinner even thought about coming out of the clothes...)
I had never used a lawn tractor until age 36. Had no clue how to use one. I am 36 now, if that gives you any clue as to how new this revelation was.
I still don't know how to read a sewing pattern but I have this huge fantasy that I'm going to make my own clothes.
I can run a chainsaw. I can weld. But hand me a weed whip? Clueless.

And on and on and on.

This. This is milkweed.
Homesteading questions: "So, I've always wanted to know..."
Ask "dumb questions". Homesteading is not some secret club where only the cool kids get to know the code....
Released:
Mar 22, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Welcome to A Farmish Kind of Life where we talk about the how to of homesteading and the deep thoughts that come from it!