Independence Days: My First Challenge
Sharon April 29th, 2008
I’ve quoted Carla Emery’s wonderful passage about Independence Days and how she plants on this blog before, but it bears repeating. She wrote,
All spring I try to plant something every day – from late February, when the early peas and spinach and garlic can go in, on up to midsummer, when the main potato crop and the late beans and lettuce go in. Then I switch over and make it my rule to try and get something put away for the winter every single day. That lastas until the pumpkins and sunflowers and late squash and green tomatoes are in. Then comes the struggle to get the most out of the stored food – all winter long. It has to be checked regularly, and you’ll need to add to that day’s menu anything that’s on the verge of spoiling, wilting or otherwise becoming useless.
That was Carla’s version of “Independence Days” – a world where every day was part of the food cycle. She wrote more about this in one of my favorite
People have to choose what they are going to struggle for. Life is always a struggle, whether or not you’re struggling for anything worthwhile, so it might as well be for something worthwhile. Independence days are worth struggling for. they’re good for me, good for the country and good for growing children.
Now there’s a Declaration of Independence for you. Or perhaps the Constitution of the United Food Sovereign People of the World. It is so desperately needed that we do declare our independence from the globalizing, totalitarian, destructive, toxic, dangerous agriculture that destroys our future and our power and pays to destroy democracy. And so, when in the course of human events it becomes necessary for people to divorce themselves from a system that has become destructive, and thus:
We the people, in order to form a more perfect union of human and nature, establish justice and ensure food sovreignty, provide for the common nutrition, promote the general welfare and ensure the blessings of liberty, for ourselves and our posterity do ordain and establish this constitution for the United Food Sovereign People of the World.
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I’ve never really run a challenge before on this blog, but I thought I’d start one – the Independence Days challenge! We’re already sort of doing this over at the food storage group (if you want to subscribe send an email to sharonfoodstorage-subscribe@yahoogroups.com), but I thought I’d bring it here, because I think it is a thing worth struggling for.
I challenge myself and all of you to work on creating food Independence Days this year – that all of us try to do one thing every day to create Food Independence. That means in each day or week, we would try to:
1. Plant something. Obviously, those of us who live in the Northern Hemisphere and having spring are doing this anyway. But the idea that you should plant all week and all year is a good reminder to those of us who sometimes don’t get our fall gardens or our succession plantings done regularly. Remember, that beet you harvested left a space – maybe for the next one to get bigger, but maybe for a bit of arugula or a fall crop of peas, or a cover crop to enrich the soil. Independence is the bounty of a single seed that creates an abundance of zucchini, and enough seeds to plant your own garden and your neighbor’s.
2. Harvest something. From the very first nettles and dandelions to the last leeks and parsnips I drag out of the frozen ground, harvest something from the garden or the wild every day you can. I can’t think of a better way to be aware of the bounty around you to realize that there’s something – even if it is dandelions for tea or wild garlic for a salad – to be had every single day. Independence is really appreciating and using the bounty that we have.
3. Preserve something. Sometimes this will be a big project, but it doesn’t have to be. It doesn’t take long to slice a couple of tomatoes and set them on a screen in the sun, or to hang up a bunch of sage for winter. And it adds up fast. The time you spend now is time you don’t have to spend hauling to the store and cooking later. Independence is eating our own, and cutting the ties we have to agribusiness.
4. Prep something. Hit a yard sale and pick up an extra blanket. Purchase some extra legumes and oatmeal. Sort out and inventory your pantry. Make a list of tools you need. Find a way to give what you don’t need to someone who does. Fix your bike. Fill that old soda bottle with water with a couple of drops of bleach in it. Plan for next year’s edible landscaping. Make back-road directions to your place and send it to family in case they ever need to come to you – or make ‘em for yourself for where you might have to go. Clean, mend, declutter, learn a new skill. Independence is being ready for whatever comes.
5. Cook something. Try and new recipe, or an old one with a new ingredient. Sometimes it is hard to know what to do with all that stuff you are growing or making. So experiment now. Can you make a whole meal in your solar oven? How are stir-fried pea shoots? Stuffed squash blossoms? Wild morels in pasta? Independence is being able to eat and enjoy what is given to us.
6. Manage your reserves. Check those apples and take out the ones starting to go bad and make sauce with it. Label those cans. Clean out the freezer. Ration the pickles, so you’ll have enough to last to next season. Use up those lentils before you take the next ones out of the bag. Find some use for that can of whatever it is that’s been in the pantry forever. Sort out what you can donate, and give it to the food pantry. Make sure the squash are holding out. Independence means not wasting the bounty we have.
7. Work on local food systems. This could be as simple as buying something you don’t grow or make from a local grower, or finding a new local source. It could be as complex as starting a coop or a farmer’s market, creating a CSA or a bulk store. You might give seeds or plants or divisions to a neighbor, or solicit donations for your food pantry. Maybe you’ll start a guerilla garden or help a homeschool coop incubate some chicks. Maybe you’ll invite people over to your garden, or your neighbors in for a homegrown meal, or sing the praises of your local CSA. Maybe you can get your town to plant fruit or nut producing street trees or get a manual water pump or a garden put in at your local school. Whatever it is, our Independence days come when our neighbors and the people we love are food secure too.
I’m not suggesting you should do all these things on any day (heck that’ s impossible) - but every day try and do one of them – or every week, or every weekend, if that’s what your schedule allows. It takes practice to live and grow and eat this way – so let’s do it now while we’ve got the time and energy and each other for support.
I’m going to try to do this, starting now, and running all year long. If you sign up in the comments section, I’ll try and set up a cool sidebar thingie, like all the funky challengers do. We’ll do weekly updates, and I want to hear how you are doing too! Who’s in for in Independence Days?
Sharon
- Independence Days Challenge
- Comments(155)
i’m in for doing something every week from at least one of the categories!
I’m in! Sounds great!!
I’m in! Two things a week for me (otherwise I’d just cook something all the time and that wouldn’t be much of a challenge!).
I’m in! I’m going to try for something every day.
One thing to add to the challenge: “Compost something,” or “Give something back to the land.” While planting, harvesting, and preserving are important, none will be possible for long if we do not replenish our soil. By remembering to compost, we remember to give back to the land, from whence our nourishment came.
I’m in! Great idea!
I love a challenge. I’m definitely in! I will try to do something every day.
I’m in! I am going to shoot for one a day, if I miss at least I will be doing something most days.
I’m in!The sun returned these last two weeks, the snow is off the ground and I feel like the busy ant. It rained today but I planted basil inside(because the dog dumped the last ones I started).
Now…must go count canning jars!
I had a little Independence Day two days ago.
Last fall I decided to try overwintering carrots and parsnips in the ground, although I was skeptical about it working in Zone 3.
When I pulled them Sunday after the snow had finally melted, about half the carrots had frozen and rotted, but half were fine and all of the parsnips were great!
Count me in, too! Yesterday, I harvested spearmint from my garden to dry (it isn’t drying, it is sitting in the fridge, but maybe I’ll get to that tonight). And I’ve started a local slow food group recently; we’re talking about holding canning and cooking classes, and trying to start a winter farmers market. And bought a second apple tree, two blueberry bushes, a black currant and a gooseberry, and strawberries (all but the strawberries have been waiting a month and a half for me to Plant them) … but, however inefficiently, I am trying to make us more independent. This post reminds me to try to focus on the goal every day, in at least a small way.
This summer, one of the preserving projects I want to try is making vitamin C syrup, instead of relying on vitamin pills when we feel a cold coming on; anybody have any thoughts on that? I thought it could contain strawberries, red currants, maybe, maybe rosehips … all very high in Vitamin C. Trouble is, heat destroys C, and to keep year-round, it would have to be processed in a water bath canner (or frozen, but that would be kind of a nuisance). So I need to figure out how much C the syrup would actually retain after cooking and processing, and I’m not sure how to do that.
[...] Pantry and Menu and Wendell’s Wisdom They’re all saying it. Now Sharon’s challenging us to do [...]
umm . . . obviously I’m in. My blog made a comment before I could do it here though.
Kim
NM I think Carla Emery Ha a rosesip extract in her book. I made some this past summer and would sneak a little in every one’s herbal tea in the evening.
I’ll give it a go!
I’m with Hamster, I’ll try and incorporate a non-cooking one weekly as well.
Good challenge.
Sharon, you got me going outside in the rain just now to pick something. Wow, there’s so much green already. Spinach and some bunching onion tops are out there. The mints are up, as are most of the other herbs. There’s strawberry and raspberry leaves for tea…..Oops, I forgot the wild sorrel in the raspberry bed. A little of that goes into the spinach salad too….and a few johnny-jump-ups for garnish. There’s probably a bunch of other stuff too, but I’m not observant enough to see.
Of course there’s lots of dandelions, but I have to admit that I’m not much a fan of those, even if I do get them before they flower – something they have already done now. They do look beautiful, though, with their bright yellow punctuating the rain-intensified green of the grass between the garden beds.
Anyhow, at the risk of being too self-congratulatory and otherwise full of myself, I did see a neighbor that I don’t know outside earlier. Her house is across the small pond that is in the middle of several houses at my development. She was out there earlier, when the sun poked out, a big green and yellow gallon bottle of “Ortho Dandelion” something or other in hand, wandering around, spraying this wonderful carpet of yellow in her back yard. Mind you, the dandelions are the *only* growing thing in her back yard besides the grass and one or two nursery bushes besides the patio. Her yard is otherwise a virtual desert of a lawn, and a pretty decent-sized one at that. Nature does her best to try and bring something back to the yard, the only blooming thing really, and this neighbor is out there running hodge-podge around it, attempting to eliminate the only flowers her yard has. There’s also a fairly new kid’s swing set in the yard. After school today, the rain is forecast to move out of here and I should think that the kids would love to wander among the flowers and taste a few green, bitter fingers before bringing a dandelion bouquet into the kitchen for Mom. Silly, sentimental, nature-wacko me thinks of such things. *sigh*
I won’t even more than mention that this woman sprayed the herbicide in between showers even though it was well-forecast that one last batch of downpours had to move through in the morning…..washing G-d knows what from that bottle into the pond….wasting her efforts….and money…..and possibily sicking herself and/or her kids and/or the snappling turtles, muskrats, fish, frogs…! She’ll probably kill a bit of all that, yet not affect the dandelions.
And she did this because…..? …..because she, like many others, including once yours truly…has been brainwashed into what constitutes a proper, beautiful flower, and what is to be considered a noxious weed. She has in her mind, in our newish subdivision, this completely modern idea of what a proper yard is to look like, and in reality, her yard is all the poorer for it.
I’d say something, but maybe instead I just continue with what food and fruit raising I dare in this community (food raising, while not explicity banned, is frowned upon, and I didn’t exactly ask permission to alter the landscaping of my “limited common area” as I was supposed to have done.) Maybe people will notice. Maybe they’ll notice that one patch of my grass isn’t grass at all but rather spring wheat….some of the stuff that they heard CNN say is in short supply. Maybe.
Stephen B.
suburban MA
I am really going to do this! I’ve never commented before, but I just had to say that reading MSNBC lately is just like reading your blog. “Regular people” are waking up – I hear the moms at school talking about food prices, gas prices and they are worried.
Thanks for all you do!
elle
ps – what do you do with dandelions?
I’m in! I’m going to try for every day, which means I’ll actually probably hit maybe 3 times a week or so.
Karin,
Oh, thank you! I have Emery’s book; I will have to go look that up.
Stephen, that’s such a sad story. I have a neighbor who does that sort of thing, too. When we first moved in, he helpfully sprayed Roundup along our curb strip, and was very surprised when I asked him to never do that again. But another neighbor, whose politics I believe we don’t share at all, grows a big garden and huge amounts of blueberries and raspberries, that he generously shares; he has been kind of an inspiration. I’m hoping to eventually change our (weedy!) front yard into a little woodland area with things like native red huckleberry and evergreen huckleberries and other good edibles, ferns, etc.; it could be very pretty.
In the town I work in, the native plant society convinced the city to let them plant a native plant garden at the public library. The parks director hates it; thinks it’s a “bunch of weeds.” He likes formal gardens with azaleas and things. But it’s been there for years, showing people what can be done.
And I read more and more articles about people discovering (!) how pretty “edible landscaping” can be, tucked among the flowers instead of grown in formal “vegetable-gardeny” rows. Red frilly lettuce, rainbow chard or kale for texture and color; eggplants and peppers that look like jewels; bright blooms of scarlet runner beans, or dangling purple bean pods. Blueberries have gorgeous fall color. And elderberries and persimmons are also gorgeous in the late fall; big bunches of silvery blue berry clusters, or bright orange fruits against a deep blue sky. Or golden pears espaliered against a wall like something out of a medieval illustration of paradise, or apples, which have beautiful pink and white blooms, and then such pretty fruit … so maybe your edible landscaping can inspire people with its beauty, as well as its practical uses. I love the idea of growing wheat instead of lawn grass — and it is really pretty, too; nodding heads of silvery blue-green — wow.
A Master Gardener in another town nearby grew way too much chard and kale and couldn’t bear to throw away the thinnings. He just happened to work for the city public works dept. — so he went around planting them in all of the street medians and other landscaping areas. Sometimes they’re just stuck in there in bunches, sometimes they’re in big, decorative circles … it’s pretty funny — and really pretty, too.
I’m in! I’ll certainly try for something every week, and I hope to do more than that.
Count me in too! This is a wonderful challenge!
I’m in – shooting for every day. I should come close. We already do something like that nearly every day, seems like.
Elle,
People eat dandelion leaves as greens before they start to flower, and in late winter before they come up, they dig up the crowns and wash them (Really thoroughly! Removing the worms and the slugs …) and cook them. Dandelion greens are extremely rich in vitamins and minerals. Some people roast the roots and grind them for coffee. And you can make wine out of the blossoms.
I’m in. Asparagus that I planted two years ago came up in the last few days for the first time. It was so delicious that I’m going to rip out even more grass to make room.
Good Morning America this morning showcased families who have planted all their green space and are selling the bounty. That should get a few more gardens growing. Our neighbor’s back yard is entirely devoted to food which, unfortunately, doesn’t generate the type of respect you’d hope for.
I am in. My trunk is full of tomato plants, peppers, herbs, grape vines, gooseberry, & blueberry bushes. I was sick about our winter squash going in the garage to rot last winter. I want to improve this year.
I’ll try to do something from one category each day. I’m adding Learn: a new skill. I need to learn to sew and skin a fish (actually remember how), for example.
I live in a city and I rent, so I quickly run out of room for everyday planting, even with containers. But I took an Independence step today and looked up the date and rules for our local tax sale. I am going to try to buy a vacant city lot to farm.
I’m in! I will try to do at least two or three things a week. Two things might be a realistic goal.
And I’ll post a link on my blog, so my Swedish readers can join the challenge if they want to.
Sharon – I’m in, too! With the addition of Ethan’s “compost something/give something back to the land” (7a) and Leslie’s “learn a new skill” (7b) – I’m going to try, no DO each of these at least once/week (“Do or do not – there is no try” Jedi Master Yoda). And looking back to last Friday, I can check almost everything off the list at least once, as long as pulling a leaf of sorrel and trying a leaf of volunteer spinach – both for immediate consumption – can be counted.
Working on this list of Independence Day goals with really help on those days when I feel overwhelmed about the entire global situation (the whole food & agriculture/fossil fuel/economy/etc. mess) – usually after reading your blog!
Carla in North Idaho
Absolutely! I guess I actually signed up last week when during our Passover seder we were talking about how we were going to leave our own personal Egypts this year, what kind of new freedoms we were going to be trying to make for ourselves. “Food independence” is what I said I wanted–freedom from buying corporate food not just during the growing season but during the rest of the year, too. How great to have the support from one of the people who helped me see the links between Passover and food issues to begin with!
Sharon, can you get one of those doohicky, widget things like Crunchy does so we all have a picture for our blogs? Now there’s a challenge for you!;-}
NM, on Vit. C liquid–herbalist Rosemary Gladstar also has some fabulous concoctions in her books. I preserve my “potions” and syrups with a little brandy, but I do think you still have to refrigerate it. But then maybe cold storage like a root cellar would work too.
What do all of you plan to do with your gooseberries? We just received one from a neighbor who no longer wanted it. Besides jam, I’m not sure what to do with the berries when we get some. I just love the name “Gooseberry” though!
Lisa in MN
I’m in. It’s the single daily action that makes the difference between where we are now and where we want to be. Today I will unpack the plants that just arrived from Raintree Nursery and call the “Call before you dig” folks at the utility so I don’t electrocute myself while planting the fence line.
Oh and hey! I started the challenge today doing two preps:
I went to the hospital and got a couple of 55 gal. barrels to make rain barrels with. The laundry dept. gets their detergent in them. Voila! Free!
Then driving home from there I saw a recycling box out with two 2-liter soda bottles in it. Feeling rather idiotic but determined nonetheless to get them for water storage, I stopped and picked them out of the box. I did open my passenger side window and parked right in front of the box, trying to hide what I was doing. I just threw the bottles into the car through the window. heehee!
Mmm – gooseberries! Jam to put on freshly made whole wheat bread for a Sunday breakfast, of course. Pie. Gooseberry compot ringled on vanilla icecream. Pickled gooseberries are really good. Really, really ripe berries are good to eat raw, but they have to be very soft. Mix with red or black currants and make a jam that is great on pancakes.
Must-plant-more-gooseberry-bushes-now!
I happened across this fellow’s recipe for dandelion syrup a little bit ago, and thought it was really interesting.
http://fxcuisine.com/default.asp?Display=78&resolution=high
I don’t know how to make a widgety picture thing for this challenge – I’m pretty technically challenged. Anyone out there know how and want to design one (and give me stupid proof instructions for putting it up on wordpress?) Sorry I can’t be more helpful here – luddite technomoron again
.
Sharon
Add me for twice or three times a week. (Of course, more may be done in one day than one item, and nothing done the next…. But, that’s life.) I can’t pledge to EVERY SINGLE day, but 2 or 3 days a week, that’s doable. First thing this evening after work, I’ll be out checking on my rhubarb and checking to see if the ground is thawed enough for my sugar-snaps.
Blessings!
I’m in. Like Bess, I’ll try for every day and probably hit 3 or 4 times per week. Just to keep myself honest, I’ll tell friends and family what I’m up to and keep a log of my efforts so they can harass me when I fall off the wagon, which I inevitably will…
I try to do this anyway. A little accountability will help keep me on track!
Love the dandelion syrup recipe, too. I’m going to try that as soon as the dandelions bloom. It will be easier than wine, which I don’t have equipment for – yet.
we’re in with the addition of the composting and new skills ideas too.
i’m in.
i’m doing some of these things already, but this will give me some extra motivation to do them more consistently.
I’m in – every day, something or other. Will we have a weekly check-in here to discuss and share ideas?
I’m in.
Can’t think of a challenge more likely to have real, lasting impact. There are so many things I want to do on a grand scale…committing to do “just a bit” every day will be helpful to stop the overall scope of my plans from keeping me in a state of overwhelmed inaction.
I’ll try. I dried pineapple and bananas the other day, we always compost, have water storage in rainwater tanks of 30 000 plus litres, tend the garden. we ate our first lettuce and radishes of the crop last weekend, and endless egg meals – we’d never survive on it in a crisis though…….. preparing for the future is a bit more tricky. stockpiling ‘stuff’ goes against the grain a bit. we are teaching the kids a lot of skills, and preparing them in ever so subtle ways about dealing with reduced food supplies
I’m in too — I really need the kick in the pants!
Count me in too! I think its a great idea!
I’m in for a daily effort, too.
I’ll join maybe it will get me doing some more personal prep besides just CSA prep.
I have been washing and organizing bedding that is scattered about the house
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Beth
Me too! I’ll go for a daily effort — it will help lift me out of my half-lethargy, half-overwhelm that I’m currently struggling with. For the next few months, at least, it seems it shouldn’t be that hard — if nothing else I can plant something each day. And since much of my this-year’s garden effort is intended to contribute to the burgeoning local-food movement in my community (growing extra to bring to farmer’s market), I think every day that I do anything to forward that aspect of the garden counts!
Thanks Sharon
Thanks for the dandelion ideas!