Friday, July 1, 2011

And So It Begins


This is our fridge on the day we start not buying any food for three months. To be honest, it freaks me out a little. As you can probably tell, we didn't really stock up on fresh food beforehand. What's the point? It doesn't usually keep much longer than a week or two so we're just going to have to wing it.

For those that are new to the blog, we've been going without buying food from grocery stores, convenience stores, box stores and restaurants since October 1st, 2010. We've only been buying food from farmers' markets, direct from the farmer, through real butchers that only sell local, sustainably and humanely raised meat, real fish mongers, spice merchants, produce stands, a CSA that delivers locally produced, organic dairy, and a buying club/co-op for our dry goods. Besides that, we've been subsisting off of our quarter acre urban farm.

When we reached our 6 month mark we were cruisin'. It was pretty easy so we decided two things. The first thing was that we were going to continue with our project indefinitely with one caveat - we get one restaurant visit per month. I just don't want to give up sushi for the rest of my life and homemade sushi just isn't the same.

The second thing we decided was that we were going to attempt to go without buying food for the final three months - July 1st through October 1st. We wanted to force ourselves to try and live off of what we produce and raise. We also wanted to see how successfully prepared we are in terms of emergencies. How much food do we really need in case of an emergency? We live in earthquake territory, and while it's unlikely we'll ever need to go 3 months without any services if there is an earthquake, we do face uncertain economic times. If one of us loses our jobs, can we reduce our spending on food?

Our garden isn't as far along as we'd like, but it's starting to ramp up. We'll have to limit our fresh produce for a bit. However, I expect to get zucchini, cucumbers and beans this coming week or two.

Fruit is going to be the hardest thing for us. The weather really didn't cooperate this year. While our stone fruit trees were blooming it rained and rained and rained. The bees couldn't get to them. We got a very small amount of fruit only to be ruined by very late rains (completely abnormal here) causing all of it to split before it ripened. We'll have to salvage what we can, but I fear it won't be much.

We will be bartering - trading eggs, bread, labor and knowledge - for food we need. Unfortunately, most of our friends in the area have the same problem with their fruit trees. We'll have to figure something out, but for now we'll just have to go with the flow.

12 comments:

  1. Maybe a roadie to the central valley to barter labor for fruit?

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  2. Wait, sorry, I meant THIS IS ALL BECAUSE FASCIST LIBERALS VOTED IN A MUSLIM FOR PRESIDENT! If we just had prayer in schools, your fruit trees wouldn't have forsaken you!

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  3. Not sure about the previous comments, but this effort is truly commendable!!!! And crop shortages do happen, as I'm all too familiar with. :) Good luck!!!

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  4. Rachel, it's the single thing that makes me most angry about California's government. There's absolutely NO REASON why they can't cut their own fat from their salaries and parties to update all the dams and DIG MORE HOLES to catch all that run-off from all that snow in the mountains. What would be the possibility of y'all coming up with some sort of aerobic watering system to pick up the slack when all the rains cut back?

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  5. Bwahahaha! You guys are killing me!

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  6. I'm with you on the sushi. I tried to learn how to make it and it just ain't the same.

    I think that's so cool that you guys are trying to live off your land completely. We hope to try someday, but have a ways to go on that. If nothing else it would be good to know if it's possible or not, and give you an ideal of what you would need to do differently in order to live off your land if it doesn't work.

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  7. Will be watching eagerly - I think this is a super experiment.

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  8. Good luck! I'm following along and learning as you go!

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  9. You're such an inspiration! I love reading about your adventures in self-sufficiency and it's encouraging my husband and I to try more ourselves. We're currently in the very early stages, but we're figuring out what items we consume that we can do better at home. We're currently working on cheese, ketchup, pasta, among other things. Already doing ourselves: yoghurt, bread, wine, crackers.

    Now if I can just get my garden to be more productive! Of course, the biggest handicap there is me. I'm not very good at the planning ahead part. :-) I'm working on that!

    Keep up the good work!

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  10. I will be watching this closely! I'm curious about the creative solutions you and your family will come up with. Good luck!

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  11. Such an inspiration (yes, I'm back catching up on months of your posts) The fruit trees are a perfect example of gardening in general. It is NOT easy. One year I had such an egg plant crop it was amazing. This year zilch. Survivalists types who store seeds but have never gardened make me coo coo...one of my major pet peeves.

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  12. I know right? I iknow someone who has to deal with much harsher conditions than us, says that he'll just take it up when disaster strikes thinking it's easy and failsafe. I'm in California where growing food couldn't be any easier and we still have failures - and I know what I'm doing!

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