Posted on 08/20/2005 9:03:36 PM PDT by nickcarraway
For a year five experts ditched theory for practice, running a Welsh farm using 17th Century methods. What lessons for modern living did they learn?
The BBC series Tales from the Green Valley follows historians and archaeologists as they recreate farm life from the age of the Stuarts. They wear the clothes, eat the food and use the tools, skills and technology of the 1620s.
It was a time when daily life was a hard grind, intimately connected with the physical environment where routines were dictated by the weather and the seasons. A far cry from today's experience of the countryside, which for many involves a bracing walk ahead of a pub lunch.
While few would choose to live a 17th Century lifestyle, the participants found they picked up some valuable tips for modern life.
1. Know thy neighbours. Today it's possible to live alone, without knowing anyone within a 20-mile radius (the same goes for townies). That was simply not possible in the past - not only did the neighbours provide social contact, people shared labour, specialist skills and produce. "And women were judged on good neighbourliness," says historian Ruth Goodman. "If you were willing to help others - particularly during and after childbirth - then others would be more prepared to help you in times of need."
2. Share the load. It was nigh on impossible to run a 1620s farm single-handedly, and the family - either blood relatives, or a farmer, his wife and hired help - had to be multi-skilled. Labour, too, was often divided along gender lines, but at busy periods, such as harvest time, it was all hands on deck.
3. Fewer creature comforts have some benefits. No electricity meant once daylight faded, work stopped in favour of conversation, music-making and knitting. And no carpets meant fewer dust mites, which are linked to asthma and allergies. "They scattered herbs on the floor which released scent when trodden on - this drove out flies and other insects," says Ms Goodman.
4. Eat seasonally. Today it's because of "food miles" and the inferior quality of forced products. In the 1620s, it was because foods were only available at certain times of year - and not just fruit and veg. Mutton, for instance, was in abundance in spring, soon after shearing time. This was because a sheep's wool quality plunges after eight years - thus animals of that age were killed after their final fleece was removed.
5. Tasty food comes in small batches. Today farmers' markets are a tourist attraction and many delight in regional specialities. For these producers play to the strengths of their ingredients, unlike, for instance, the makers of mass-produced cheese. This has to taste the same year-round, despite seasonal variations in milk quality. "So high-quality milk in the spring is downgraded so the finished product is consistent throughout the year," says Ms Goodman.
6. Reuse and recycle. Today we throw away vast mountains of packaging, food, garden waste and other materials. In 1620s, there was a use for everything, with tattered bed linens made into fire-lighters and animal fat into soap. Even human waste had uses. Faeces was a fertiliser, and urine was stored to make ammonia to remove laundry stains.
7. Dress for practicalities. Today fashion and social convention dictate our wardrobes. While polar fleeces and high-performance tramping boots may be all the rage when going rural, the wardrobe of 400 years ago proved more comfortable. "While the crew shivered in their modern garb, we never felt the cold in just two layers - a linen shirt and woollen doublet," says archaeologist Alex Langlands. Breeches meant no wet and muddy trouser legs, and staying covered up - rather than stripping off in the heat - prevented bites, stings, sunburn and scratches.
8. Corsets, not bras. "By that I don't mean Victorian corseting," says Ms Goodman. "Corsets support your back as well as your chest, and don't leave red welts on your skin like bra elastic does. They made it hard to breath walking up hills, but I get short of breath doing that anyway. And most people feel sexy in a corset."
9. Biodiversity protects against unforeseen calamity. While the developed world no longer counts the cost of crop failure in starvation and mass migration - the result of Ireland's Great Potato Famine in 1845 - the 2001 foot-and-mouth crisis decimated farms up and down the country as animals, the farmers' livelihoods, were put to death. The 1620s farm had grains, fruit and vegetables, and a range of animals - if one failed, alternatives were available.
9. Reliance on any one thing leaves you vulnerable. Hence the country ground to a halt during the petrol blockades of 2000, and a shortage of coal during 1978-9's Winter of Discontent caused electricity shortages. On the 1620s farm, when oxen used to plough fields fell ill, the implements were reshaped and horses did the job instead.
10. No pesticides means a richer variety of birds, butterflies and other insects, many of which feast on pests - a result as desirable for the gardener as the farmer. And the hedgerow and fields of wild flowers of the past are today making a comeback, as these provide habitats for these creatures and allow edible plants to flourish.
\Tales from the Green Valley will be broadcast weekly on BBC Two from Friday, 19 August, at 1930BST.
I posted #75; you didn't. I'm assuming that you made a typo and "for" was meant to be "from". And yes, it was a "nice" reply, as have been all of my other ones. But you keep on pushing and I finally push back. Don't like it? TOUGH !;^)
But yes to the first part of your reply.
As usual you started the "pushing" when you so snidely accused LJ of not reading the article. I alerted you to your error but as is so typical of you, you couldn't admit you were wrong. Good thing I know you so well and wasn't holding my breath. : )
I did tell LJ ( and since when did YOU become that person's protector and avenger ?) to read the article. He said that the floor was bare, when it clearly stated that it was not. A "BARE" floor would be devoid of any covering,nude, naked, bereft of anything whatsoever upon it.
Finish reading. The animals that were slaughtered after the shearing were eight years old and their fleece was no longer of any quality. Why have and otherwise worthless animal eating food that could be used by productive animals? Kill the critter, age the muscle meat, tan the hide and make sausage out of most of the leftovers.
Yeah, I notice that every one of these points is completely generic--if you'd asked me for a list of liberals' advice for life, I could have given a similar list without doing the 17th-century Walden thing for a year. If that's all they "learned", how disappointing!
Just efficiency: they spend those six or eight months eating. Why go to the expense?
Anyone on the board want to confirm the average life expectancy of these Stuart era citizens?
Anyone on the board want to confirm the average life expectancy of these Stuart era citizens?
Bump up for better comments than mine.
Most of these rules held true on the farm till around the 1920's or so.
Just curious....what do you know about lavendar & eucalyptus as flea repelents?
Compared to today where the woman lives and the child is killed (abortion).
Carolyn
People lived longer in the Northern than in the Southern colonies. One reason was diet: tons of lentils and beans and abstemious Puritan veg up north, plus hard water (minerals); down south, hams and cookery with lots of sauces to clog the arteries, starchy foods and low-mineral soft water, plus warmer ambient temperatures more nearly ideal for incubating things that would kill you or make you sick.
An offshore drilling contractor acutely interested in reducing communicable disease in their living quarters found that setting the A/C to 66 degrees F greatly reduced common medical complaints like colds, flu, assorted kinds of The Crud. At that temperature, their onboard safety/health officer explained to me, common pathogens are a lot less active than at the mid-70's daily low temps that are the rule in the South in summer. (Last night, the 10:30 PM temperature in Houston was 84F, the low predicted to fall in the upper 70's.) Sounds like a key to me.
Life expectancy was such in the colonial South that English colonists who got married (the men usually waiting until their 30's -- as opposed to teens or early 20's in Puritan, kick-'em-out-young New England) could only expect an average of seven (7) years of married life together "until death do them part". This had consequences -- the South has always featured larger, "blended" families, step-relations, and uncles and aunts "living in" to help out after a spouse had died. Southern blended families with Negro mammies produced a very different worldview than nuclear Yankee families, which are the default model in the U.S.
1 in 4 women died from birthing. A problem birthing usually meant cutting out the child sacrificing the poor teen wives.
The icky dying processes and the dead was much more a personal experience for them than we 21st Century sorts. The deaths of so many children and child brides must have been overwhelming for survivors.
A show I saw (on PBS, of course) explained that in an outbreak of plague, the Yersinia pestis pathogen actually makes the fleas themselves sick, and alters their biting behavior radically, as well as their readiness to migrate from host to host.
Therefore the most salient fact of a plague outbreak is that the fleas fall ill and become voracious, hyperactive biters, spreading the pathogen rapidly.
The Welsh are WONDERFUL!!!! They're directly responsible for Catherine Zeta-Jones!
Mark
HA -- I'm not falling for that "be nice to Welshmen" buncombe!
I used to work for a Welshman, a bootstrapper from Wales itself. Guy left a trail of bodies and corporate wreckage behind him......but he's pulling down $4 million/year now, and all the people who know where the bodies are buried are long gone. I described this guy to my English cousin once, and he replied -- "yes, he's certainly a Welshman, all right!" Case closed. A pox on you all! Hiss, boo! on Welshmen! And that's not "prejudice", that's experience talking -- call it "postjudice" if you like, but it's the Real World. Never work for a Welshman!
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