Author Archives: theobill

It’s not about fear, it’s simple economics!

Table of contents for Act Now

  1. It’s not about fear, it’s simple economics!

I was talking with a friend this morning about the changes that are occurring in our world – such as the scarcity of food, rising fuel costs, farmland losses due to topsoil erosion, freshwater availability – and I was asking him how he was planning for the future – how was he going to mitigate any major changes that could cause “modern society” to come to a grinding halt.

I was speaking of course about becoming more self-sufficient, how did he plan to (as Farmer John says) “disentangle” himself from being only a tiny cog in the huge economic and agricultural machine that is todays world.  Did he have a garden?  What about a few chickens for his eggs?  How about planting some fruit trees so he could at least have fresh fruit for a few weeks a year?  Was he off the grid?  Did he have compact florescent as his light bulbs?  How about keeping his tires inflated or oil topped off so he used less gasoline?

These are all relatively harmless things that are becoming mainstream.  Not a huge leap.  It’s still allows a comfortable way of living.  However, he’s still in the middle of a big city, still buys 95% of his own food, 100% of his own fuel (car and electricity).  In a word, he’s still “dependent” on that giant machine called the global market!

I asked him to think back to this summer and how dangerously close we, as a country, came to loosing our food security.  We were down to less than a month of grain reserves.  That was the lowest we came as a nation in over 20 years to not meeting our own food needs!  That doesn’t count the additional cost we as a nation have to pay to transport and ship that food since we aren’t a local food producing economy.

If oil goes up, if food supplies go down, if costs of production rise (since fertilizer comes from natural gas, it will) what happens then?  What happens when supplies get slim and demand keeps up or raises (if the population goes up)?  You have runs on things.  Remember the articles about Costco and Sam’s clubs rationing wheat and rice sales to one bag per customer?

Well to be blunt, people begin to get desperate and buying up stuff which makes things MUCH more expensive!  If you believe in Peak Oil, if you believe that a higher demand coupled with a decreased supply equals worldwide problems, if you believe that honey bees are in trouble and having a harder and harder time doing their job, if you believe this is a throw-away society, then it’s not about fear!

It’s about being prepared for when things happen that are out of our control.  Buy seeds today – not in two years when they’re skyrocketing costs are prohibitive.  Buy those garden tools today – not when your worried about cutbacks at work and how you’re going to put food on the table.  Buy (or help to buy) land today – not when you’re 200 miles away sitting at a desk pushing papers – those papers will be there in two years, but the fertile land that has been worked for two years and produces beautifully will only be a dream.

Things take time to develop and grow.  Gardens take time to become fertile, water systems need time and several seasons to be prooven, housing takes time to construct, people need time to adjust to new ways of living.

If you’re not prepared today to move from the city and become a farmer, I understand!  There are those of us who are further along that path than you.  Let us pave that road for you.  You don’t have to do it now, but someone does!  If things aren’t prepared NOW, when things shift and change, they’ll be too expensive, or worse, simply NOT AVAILABLE!

As I said in the title, it’s not about fear – it’s about economics…what you put in today is an investment in the future.  Buy low today so that higher prices tomorrow won’t limit your choices.

What’s valuable to you?

In today’s world, there are many things that are called “valuable.” Some people call their stock portfolio valuable, some their TV. Others may say that their house or car is truly valuable. But what most people find value in lies in what others think is valuable. In other words, if society deems it of value, then so do they!

Click to continue reading “What’s valuable to you?”

Chores, chores, and MORE chores!

It’s not easy farming, which I’m slowly learning! The garden needs cleaning out. The chicken coop needs to be cleaned and new bedding put in. The eggs need to be collected. The rabbits have to be fed, watered, and their cages cleaned. The bees need checked or going on a swam call (yay!). The apples need picked, cleaned, cut, cooked and canned. The list goes on and on!

Click to continue reading “Chores, chores, and MORE chores!”

An Open Letter to Intentional Community Minded People

An Open Letter to Intentional Community Minded People

We believe in a smaller, more community-oriented, self sufficient society where as an individual or household, we live with as small a footprint as possible. We believe that as individuals, we have a responsibility to close the circle on our food consumption by growing as much as we are capable of growing, and by thoughtful raising of animals, we can give those animals the best life possible for them while they sustain us and we them.

We would like to:

  • Grow our own food for our own consumption
  • Grow our animals’ food if they are enclosed and encourage them to forage if free-ranging
  • Build or have built structures that are responsible and not wasteful of their energy requirements.
  • Use the gifts of the land upon which we live to their best and fullest uses, wasting nothing while taking no more than we need.
  • Take advantage of (in all possible ways) the gifts of the sun and wind in the form of heat, and energy.
  • Create lasting co-operative relationships with other people through trading and helping in tasks that we cannot grow or do not have the expertise ourselves.
  • Be a meaningful and productive member of that society.
  • Use wasteful and non-renewable products in as little a way as possible.
  • Create a safe and respectful community where each household gives and helps the other through sharing, cooperation, and community efforts.

We see this world as a decadent, corrupt, and consumerist society where the quickest, fastest, least efficient way is chosen. We build and manufacture items for a specified duration so they must be replaced, then throw away and waste the worn out items instead of building things to survive and be maintained as long as possible.

We would rather build, grow, or create our solutions ourselves and be enriched through the process while utilizing the advanced technology we have at our disposal to make the effort as simple, efficient, and easy as possible.

Ideally, we would like to be a member of a community on a piece of land that is large enough to support a minimum of 20 households and all that they require. That community would be one where each household or individual is allowed complete autonomy over their own actions unless they interfered with other households or they asked for help from the others. However, where community efforts are needed, such as grain or hay production, if each household wanted to use the harvest, they would have to participate fully in it’s creation. Members of this community would be allowed their own individual beliefs and allowed to make their own choices – the result of which is fully their responsibility (whether it leads to failure or success). Each household must not impact the community or land in a harmful way – there must be respect for the needs of the land and people of the community.

We would like to see as little government as possible, with as decisive and sober decisions as can be made while fully weighing the issues. Each member of the community is there at the request of the community at large – the safety and success of the community is valued above individual needs. All households in the community must contribute in a substantial way to their own needs, but also the rest of the community.

Welcome to the site!

Thanks very much to all of those who are new members and thank you so much for your kind words. This site is a work in progress, so please bear with us as we create this online community. We are going to be including lots of teriffic information from our own experiences, but we want to hear from you as well! Please comment on these posts…in the near future we will be inviting those who want, to contribute their own thoughts in articles as well.