Posts Tagged ‘Solar shower’

Winding Down

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

The weather has shifted and things are getting downright cold around here.  The first frost is just around the bend and our tomatoes don’t look happy about it.  It’s been pretty overcast and the solar shower just isn’t cutting it anymore so we’ve been taking showers at the truck stop.

Visitor Lodge Fall '09The metal roof has been installed on the straw bale visitor lodge and it seems to be working like a charm.  It’s already weathered several intense storms without a sign of leakage.  Standing back and looking at the place I can’t help but be proud of myself.  I know we were aiming to get the entire place done this year, and we certainly could have gotten farther with different weather and more help, but somehow it’s hard to believe we’ve done as much as we’ve done.

We’ve started packing everything up and taking down Tarpopolis for the winter, after all, the tarps would collapse under any kind of snow load.  Liz has cleaned up a large chunk of the garden.  I’ve still got a few more things to do like tarping up the walls of the straw bale place and putting a metal roof over the composting toilet.  The cold makes it hard to get up in the mornings, but it certainly motivates to get as much done as possible.

We had a busy weekend with a photo-journalism student coming out to do a project about us, and a couple from Kansas City came out for a visit as well.  Justin and Melainia came out Sunday too and Justin helped us slaughter and butcher the guineas.  In reality, he did all of the slaughtering by breaking their necks in what appeared to be about as quick and painless a way imaginable.  The bodies still flopped around afterwards in a grotesque nervous system dance.  After watching Justin clean and butcher 2 of the 3 guineas I did the last one to get my hands dirty and really learn how to do it.

I’m not quite comfortable with the neck snapping, killing the animals is by far one of the more difficult and emotionally taxing things to do, at least for most people.  I’m concerned about hesitating and not doing it hard enough to kill them and having them suffer, the opposite is doing it too hard, in which case you pull the head clean off, which Justin did on the first one since guinea necks are weaker than chickens’ and he’d never done a guinea before.  I’m thinking I’d like to try making a chopping block out of a stump with two nails that you bend over the neck to hold it still and cutting the head off that way.  I’m sure that will cause the birds more anxiety, although I’d know I could kill it quickly and surely that way.  Gruesome trade-offs, and I may end up snapping the necks, but either way I know the birds had a good life, and that’s really the most important thing in my opinion.

We would have also slaughtered the last chicken but the night before Justin came out, a fox or some other critter made off with her.  All that remained was a pile of feathers and a bent fence where whatever it was climbed back over the fence.  Surely the way we choose to slaughter our animals is less painful and drawn out than what nature would do otherwise.

We cooked the meat over the fire and served it with some boiled carrots and potatoes from the garden.  The guinea meat was somewhat darker than chicken meat and had a slightly gamy flavor, which was actually very enjoyable.  The leg meat was a little chewier, but again, it was enjoyable.  I say that not just because it was personally satisfying to have raised our own meat, but because I objectively thought it was tasty.

Tao and Liz enjoying the guineasOur goal is to be providing ourselves with all or most of our own meat, which will undoubtedly be much less than the average American consumes.  It will also be healthier meat without all the antibiotics and elevated levels of saturated fats that confined animals end up with.  Not to mention our animals will be living happy lives doing what they instinctively want to do, and in the process providing us with much more than just meat and eggs.  We’ll be using goats like lawn mowers, using manure as fertilizer, guineas and other animals to get rid of pest plants and insects, all the while providing the pleasure of their company.

We recognize that the shear fact that we will be killing most of these animals near the end of their useful lives may seem brutal or inhumane to some people.  However, the more I observe and live closer to nature and read varying perspectives on animal husbandry, I’ve begun to see it as a symbiotic relationship.  These animals have evolved to depend on humans for their care and continuity as a species, in return they provide us with a host of services and ultimately even their bodies.

The alternatives are either to not have animals at all, which seems like a huge loss once you begin to recognize the immensely useful goods and services they provide, or to take care of them long past their useful lifespan until they die of old age, which is simply a fool’s errand.  I certainly will not enjoy killing them, but I will do it with somber respect and gratitude by doing it as quickly and humanely as possible and being as wasteless as possible with what they have provided.

In this last week, my mother will be coming up and we’ll visit the sustainability fair in Columbia, MO as well as just showing her what we’ve done and enjoying each others company.  Liz is heading out on Saturday I believe and I’ll finish up a few things and follow her a couple days later.  It’s sad to be leaving all of what we’ve accomplished but we’ll be back early next year and then we’ll be permanent residents.  I’m definitely looking forward to hot showers whenever we want and not dreading pulling off those covers in the morning.

I’ll continue to post blogs, I may even convince Liz to start posting as well.  We’ll spend the first month or so in Virginia doing some minor improvements to Liz’s house there and then we’ll head off to visit different intentional communities, as well as friends and family on a winter voyage in a small cheap tow-behind camper.  I’ve already got a few questions for each place we go, and I’m excited to see what other golden bits of wisdom they can bestow upon us and thus our blog readers as well.

Groundbreaking Developments

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

The Solar Shower

I know it’s been too long between blog posts, but better late than never.  I loath using the generator and it seems like we’re constantly busy with something.  Such as…

The solar shower has been done for awhile now.  It works great, the water can even get a little too hot after a sunny day, but for the most part it’s perfect.  I’d like to get a shorter hose from the water barrel to the shower head so there’s not 2-3 minutes of cold water before the hot gets there.  Also, it’d be nice to have a solar panel up there and a couple batteries so we didn’t have to lug the generator up there.

The Solar Shower Room

In the shower room we modified a pallet and dug out a french drain to divert the water away.  I’d have like to divert it towards the garden but the land slopes the other way and it’d need to go through a greywater pond first anyway.  I also built a small bench out of a pallet and hung up a rope and some hooks.  We put some mulch down but we’d really like to get some old carpet turned rubber side up, but we haven’t come across any yet.

We’ve also put in 3 keyhole garden beds using a sheet-mulching technique.  It gives us about 550 square feet of garden right now.  We’re a little late planting some things, and the aged horse manure may be a little strong this first year, but we’ll probably have some good eats in a couple months.  I found a local source for the horse manure if we ever need any more.  The guy, Sam, also told me to stop by for a cold one some time.  We’re making friends already.

The first garden bed, before we put it in 2 more

Liz is still trying to get a chicken to sit on guinea hen eggs.  The kind of hens we’ve got are good for going broody, i.e., sitting and hatching eggs, but they’re too young.  We didn’t realize that they usually don’t do that until they’re a year or more old and ours are still in their first year.  She’s still looking for someone to buy an older broody hen from. Also we had a large animal break into the coop and eat our rooster about the 3rd night we had them. We moved them down to the camping area and haven’t had a problem so far. Liz is reinforcing the coop.

We had some great help from Justin a couple weeks ago, he spent 5 days out here and helped with a bunch of tough jobs like shoveling gravel for the garden road, digging some french drains around some bad areas of the camping area, etc.  Daniel has also been mulching like crazy and made the mulch for all the garden beds and covered the main tent areas really well.

The cleared rubble and cement posts

I’ve also built a new tent platform and hung a tarp over it for visitors when they come.  The platform is 8’x8’ which is about the size of a regular square 4-person tent.  I also hung a big tarp over the shower area so now hopefully we can collect some water for the shower and the garden when it rains.  Right now we’re filling 55-gallon drums at the city power plant where you put 25 cents in a machine and it floods out about 75 gallons in a few seconds.  It’s pretty impressive really, although the water has that chemical city taste so we’re using a Brita for drinking water.

We’re researching plans on how to build a bio-sand gravity fed water filter.  It seems pretty simple, we mainly just need to spend the time to do it.  The rain water we’re collecting right now is brown with pollen from the canopy of oaks we’re under.  We’re trying a couple of ways of filtering the water before it even gets to that point so we can use it for dish-washing and things like that.

Dragging away the cement pillar after being wenched

Also, I guess the big news is that we’ve finished clearing the building site out and are now in the process of digging the rubble trench.  That’s right, we’ve broken ground!  Clearing out the site was quite a task.  After removing all of the buried bricks and flag stone and then cutting back a lot of the trees and shrubs, we had to dig out about a dozen cedar posts and 6 cement foundation pillars.  I don’t know how we would have done it with out the come-along and chain graciously donated by my dad.

The digging is going better than expected since there are hardly any rocks at all, the roots are a little annoying but not too bad.  After almost 2 full days of digging, Daniel and I have the rubble trench about 80% dug, but it still needs to be level and tamped down.  We also need to dig the sub-floor and level it, which is probably going to take at least a couple days.  We decided to do a split-level floor so that we wouldn’t have to dig nearly as much dirt since one corner of the building site is about 2 feet lower than the upper corner.

Daniel looking over the first section of the rubble trench

Once it’s all level and tamped down good we’ll put down the drain pipe and tamp down gravel until a several inches below the surface and then start on the stem wall.  It’s amazing how far behind schedule I thought we were going to be right now but it’s looking like we’re only about 5 days behind schedule at most.

I also spent a day and cleared out about half of the tour route trail.  I got half way through the field slinging the weed whacker before I finally wore myself out.  It’s hard to say when I’ll get back to finish it.  It’ll probably be before one of the Saturday tours that have a lot of people.