Posted on 03/02/2020 11:56:55 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin
Its time for another new year, and many people have set their sights on resolutionsthings to do differently and, presumably, better during the next trip around the sun.
For a good many people, this means learning new homesteading skills to become more self-sufficient. That may lead to leaving the grid for some, but lots of folks these days are just looking to do more for themselveswhether by becoming full-on, self-sufficient homesteaders or simply gaining a little more control over their lives and finances by picking up some new skills.
Are you among those people looking to gain some self-reliance this year? Great! Weve compiled a list of 20 homesteading skills to learn in 2020. Its by no means comprehensivehomesteading is a lifestyle, not a checklistbut these are some important skills for sustenance living.
1. Gardening
This ones at the beginning of the list for a reasongrowing your own food for the first time feels like a kind of magic. Whether you grow kale in raised beds, start a no-till tomato patch or raise peppers in containers, watching food grow and ripen under your care is an absolute joy, and its one of the most important homesteading skills you can learn.
2. Caring for Fruit Trees
Fruit trees need their own kind of care, and its important to know how and when to prune them as well as grafting techniques. If you have fruit trees (or are thinking about getting some) research proper care to maximize their yield come harvest season.
3. Cooking
After you harvest your gardens yield, youre going to need to cook healthy meals from it. Sure, you can nibble on carrots or cabbage raw, but cooking increases the bioavailability of certain nutrients, maximizing your energy takeaway from fruits and vegetables. Science stuff aside, a home-cooked meal is a satisfying and savory celebration of self-reliance.
4. Baking Bread
Most homesteaders will say you need to master art of making sourdough bread, a cornerstone of homesteading skills, and its true that youll probably want to eventuallycapturing and nurturing those yeasts is both economical and special. But sourdough can be intimidating for beginning bakers, so dont feel bad about buying some dehydrated yeast to get you started on your bread-making journey.
5. Making Butter
Is butter making one of the essential homesteading skills? Probably not (the book title Make the Bread, Buy the Butter comes to mind) but its pretty cool to see the cream pull together into a glob of yellow butter. If youre not up for working a churn for hours on end, a whisk attachment on a stand mixer does the job a lot quicker.
6. Preserving Food
Its difficult to keep fruits and vegetables producing inside over cold winters (and its not very economical, either), so youll need to learn to preserve your harvest to enjoy on snowy days. Canningeither water bath or pressurized, depending on the acidity of the contentswill keep food safe and fresh, but make sure you learn correct techniques, as bacteria is not the canners friend. Bacteria is your friend with fermentation, though, and there are tons of cool recipes for letting food spoil for delicious flavors and shelf stability. You can dehydrate almost anything either in a stove, dehydrator or the open air. And of course theres always the freezer.
7. Making Hard Cider
The home brewing movement has taught many of us to make our own suds, but for those who dont routinely brew their own beer, fermenting cider is a great entry into home-crafted libations. All you need is some cider, brewing yeast (I like champagne yeast, which yields a less sweet product), some honey (to increase the ABV) and some basic home brew supplies. While making alcohol may not the most critical of homesteading skills, theres no feeling quite like opening a bottle of homemade hard cider after a long day of work around the homestead.
8. Recognizing Good Firewood
Not all wood is created equal when it comes to heating your home. Learn to recognize different kinds of wood at a glance, and know which species of woods are best for burning. Even if you end up buying firewood to get you through the winter, youll understand what youre getting and know how long a particular piece of wood will provide heat for your home.
9. Safely Cutting and Splitting Firewood
If you have your own woodlot, it makes a lot of sense to cut your own wood to heat your home in the cold months. Depending on how many trees you have, you might be able to get by on naturally fallen trees, but its still essential to know the basics of safely felling trees. Youll also need to cut the tree into plugs and, once theyve cured, split the firewood youll need to get through the winter (whether by maul or by machine).
10. Cleaning Your Chimney
When an early cold snap hits, youll quickly learn youre not the only one calling the chimney sweep to clear out a ventilation system. Stay comfortable and save some money by learning to sweep your own chimney. You can purchase the right-sized brush and extension poles at the local hardware store, then its just a matter of scaling your chimney (carefully and with proper securement) and working the brush down until all the collected creosote has fallen down into your fireplace or stove. (A powerful wet/dry vacuum can be very helpful in the cleanup.)
11. Hunting
Gardening is great, but for practicing omnivores, theres a lot of protein to be collected in the local animal population. Learn proper hunting techniques for your preferred weapon(s), study the laws in your area, and always make sure youre practicing utmost safety while out in the woods looking for prey. And unless you plan on taking your kill to a processor, youll need to learn to gut, clean and butcher the carcass of whatever animal(s) you kill.
12. Foraging
If you like the idea of the woods providing food but maybe arent too keen on taking the life of an animal, the forest floor can source a plethora of edible items for your dinner table. Of course, proper identification is key to making sure you dont end up downing toxic plants and fungus, so take the time to learn, always carry a guidebook and rememberif youre not sure, leave it alone.
13. Using Herbs for Healing
When illness or malady strike the homestead, nothing beats homegrown healing herbs to soothe the suffering. Not sure where to start? Well, heres a good placeHobby Farms has tons of information from a handful of writers on what to grow to ease discomfort and improve human health.
14. Beekeeping
Bees are powerhouse pollinators, and providing shelter and care for the winged friends will reap rewards in your garden. And while native bees are arguably more beneficial than their European counterparts, honeybees make that sweet, viscous foodstuff thats long endeared their species to ours. Look for some classes offered locally to learn alongside a community of enthusiasts.
15. Chicken Keeping
This is one of the more obvious homesteading skills, right? While eggs are, admittedly, less critical than fresh fruits and veggies to ones sustenance, it seems kind of silly to go without when you get dinner and a showchickens are endless fun to watch and interact with. Youll need to provide shelter, as well as answer some basic questions about how youll deliver food and water. And theres some upkeep in terms of cleaning up poop and spent bedding, but, overall, chickens are a fun and easy addition to most homesteads.
16. Processing a Chicken
This may not be the most appealing of homesteading skills, but youre going to need to know how to dispose of a hen once its laying capabilities no longer meet your familys egg needs (or you need to deal with a surly rooster). Processing a chicken, as a physical act, is fairly easythough the killing part is emotionally challenging for some. After that, its a matter of plucking, gutting, rinsing and getting the body temperature down in time for safe storage (or you can just pop it in the oven).
17. Soapmaking
The further you go down the homesteading trail, the more critical soap becomesa hot shower is very important after you muck out a pig barn. So why not learn to make your own? There are varying levels of commitment to this task, from melting and pouring it into shapes, to making soap from fat and lye, to making your own lye with ashes from the fireplace. How you want to make soap is up to you, but nothing beats a homemade bar in the shower, and the extras can provide a nice source of income on the side.
18. Building and Maintaining Fencing
Whether you need to keep animals in or people out, youll need to be able to build a secure fence thats up to the task at hand. And there are so many ways to approach this taskpost and rail, chain link, electrical wire the list is long. Do the proper research to determine which style of fence meets your tactical and aesthetic needs, as well as what tools will allow you to do it efficiently, then get to work building (and maintaining) it right.
19. Playing an Instrument
Is this necessary? No, but if you want to be able to provide your own entertainment and while away the hours productively, its really hard to go wrong picking up a musical skill. Guitar, banjos and mandolins are staples of homesteading traditions for their portability and ease of maintenance but no ones telling you not to take up the zither if thats your hearts desire.
20. Talking to Your Neighbors
This is importantthere will come a time when you need your neighbors help, and you want to have established relationships long before this point. Also, if youre in an area attractive to fellow homesteaders, it wont take long for a neighbor or 10 to wander over to say howdy for an hour or two. The farther out you are, too, the more important neighborly relations areporch stories under a clear, starry sky can be the perfect ending to a long, hard day tending the garden, chopping wood and processing chickens.
That looks inefficient to me. Has anyone measured how much of the sugar gets thrown out with the unthawed ice?
Also, you do not need to raise sap to boiling point to evaporate it. It takes longer, but personally I avoid a rolling boil. This is even more important when you reach your higher sugar concentrations because you don’t want to risk carmelizing the syrup. But I do not know at what temperature ruins sap for bee digestion. Perhaps it’s not very high.
Letting the sap freeze is the way the native Indians used to make syrup in New England.
I used to make it all my former house. I used to tap 20 trees. Three of the trees were over 3’ in diameter. I would end up with about 4 gallons of syrup.
I would collect the sap in 5 gallon plastic jugs. That is about as much as I could lift when full. I would set these outside at night to let freeze. Then pour off the concentrated sap in the morning.
I got all of my materials from Bascom’s in Alstead, NH.
I used
Try Arnold Palmer 1 gallon ice tea containers. They are much thicker plastic. Plus they are clear.
I got all my other supplies from Bascom’s
Cider makers call eating apples "Water Bombs". On the other hand cider apples are not very nice to eat. So have a couple of each. Remember that some apple trees only produce every other year so select your variety carefully.
You will need a grinder and press to make cider but you can make the press fairly easily.
Yes, I do not have a press. I’ve looked into getting one in the past but the only apple trees I have on my property are growing wild, and they are probably terrible.
In point of fact, they’d probably work though, because all you really need is sugar water. But the result hard cider might be a little hard on the palette.
8. Making hard cider
As long as you’re harvesting apples & making hard cider...add making Apple cider vinegar to the list.
I can do all but the last 2. Can play anything and don’t like the neighbors or people in general.
21. Live close to an IGA or Food Lion.
That is carefully pruning them and the area around them over about a two to three year period to bring them back to full production.
And wild apples were what was used to make cider so they might be good.
We are working on clearing an old apple orchard and bringing it back to production. After two decades of neglect it is a major mess. We generally get about an acre and a half done a year. Bit by bit and little by little.
Years ago, a guy did his Alaska dream. Bought land and spent the Spring and Summer building his cabin and barns.
Come early Fall, a man came to his his place and said he was his neighbor, lived on the other side of the mountain. The man invited him to his annual Christmas party for December 25th.
The new guy said okay, what will it be like?
*Well, there's gonna be some drinking
*And maybe some fight'n
*And maybe some wild sex.
Oh? How many people are going to be there?
*Just you and me.
Used to play the oboe and guitar. Like my neighbors but they are all at least 1/8 mile away. I will say I am running into more friendly people in the last year than ever.
21. Generating heat and power.
22. Bartering
We looked at a couple houses in the Alstead area.
BEAUTIFUL part of the state.
Bttt.
5.56mm
Kapusta!
I haven’t heard that in lonnnng time. My Baltic immigrant grandmother made it good :)
I have 14 of those. I haven’t cleaned a chimney, or made butter or soap yet, but I know the theory. I have some fruit trees, but they pretty much take care of themselves, so I didn’t count that one.
The last two on that list I may never get to. I am not outgoing, and I’ve never been comfortable in social settings. I try, but it is not a skill I ever expect to develop. And while I would love to get back to learning the violin, it’s a low priority.
On the other hand, I’m learning to spin yarn and weave it into cloth. And I’m hoping to try growing my own fiber plants this year. I stumbled on a site that was selling heirloom cotton seeds and ordered a few, to grow along with the flax I’m trying out.
You’d think “Make and repair clothing” would be one of those essential skills.
I like that method!
If you have a lot of trees in close proximity, you could probably run the tubes right to the sugar shack.
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