Category Archives: Soil Building

Social Soil Building – How’s Your Roots?

The very hardest part of any building project is soil-building…laying the foundation. The reality is that if you don’t have a strong and healthy foundation, the project will not be successful in the long run.  Of course, it may succeed short term, but that can be deceiving.

It’s easy to assume that a project will keep going indefinitely when it is in fact losing momentum and running down…falling apart. (Take our planet for example!) To continue, we have to find a way to infuse energy back into the project, nitrogen back into the soil, health back into the system.

We know that organic patterns have counterparts in society. And patterns that we see in society have their counterparts in nature.  What does this mean for us?    Is it possible to study what happens in the garden to solve our social problems?  It’s an interesting idea.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The image above shows the roots of a cover crop. The little white nodes are nitrogen. The plants are putting nitrogen back into the soil so that the soil is healthier for the next crop.  Once the cover develops the nitrogen nodes, the greens are cut off at the soil line, or turned in lightly, and the next crop is planted.  The crops are rotated; each is there for a season and then is grown again in another space.

How does soil building apply to our lives?  What is social soil building?  Perhaps it means that as we grow, we should maintain our roots to benefit the next generation.  As we mature, we should develop valuable resources for others to use for their own healthy growth.  It could mean that we should move between spaces, but purposefully.

The key to building healthy soil is diversity. If you think about a healthy community, you realize that it is not a group of people who all think alike.   A healthy community is a group in which everyone has different interests, different skills, and different perspectives, each contributing something of value, each putting valuable nitrogen back into the soil for the next crop.

How do we go about getting started?  That’s another story…

Happy Homesteading,

T.

Year 6 Summer 2019

Time marches on and the work on the farm never stops. It is sad to realize what we have sacrificed in the name of convenience – our communities, our families, and our own health and peace of mind. It is even sadder when we don’t realize what we have lost, when we don’t see the importance and the urgency of passing on a sustainable lifestyle to our children and grandchildren.

It requires us to learn about nutrition and re-examine our unhealthy diets. It requires us to reconsider our sedentary lifestyles. If we understand how both of these factors contribute to obesity and dementia, physical and emotional illness, we can circumvent these issues and improve the quality of life for our families.

Nurturing a homestead is hard work, but worth it as a legacy to future generations.

Happy Homesteading,

T.

Tea @ 3:00 Event

Register for the “Tea @ 3:00” Event on Tuesday, September 4th.    Bring your favorite Tea Pot with Cozy (if you have one). We’ll have a selection of our own herb teas, hot and cold, for you to sample…and some tea cakes…you get the idea…

Here is a flick about one of our teas…

Sign up for the Tea @ 3:00 Event below. See you then!

Happy Homesteading,
T.

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