This article is an excerpt
from The
Self-Sufficient Life and How to Live It, written by
the late John Seymour and first published by Dorling Kindersley in Britain in
1976. The book has become a treasured classic for back-to-the-landers and is
now available in a beautifully illustrated 400-page edition.
Expert advice on how to establish
self-sufficient food production, including guidance on crop rotations, raising
livestock and grazing management. Your 1-acre homestead can be divided into
land for raising livestock and a garden for raising
fruits, vegetables, plus some grain and forage crops.
Everyone
will have a different approach to keeping a self-sufficient homestead, and it’s
unlikely that any two 1-acre farms will follow the same plan or methods or
agree completely on how to homestead. Some people like cows; other people are
afraid of them. Some people like goats; other people cannot keep them out of
the garden. Some people will not slaughter animals and have to sell their
surplus stock off to people who will kill them; others will not sell
surplus stock off at all because they know that the animals will be
killed; and still others will slaughter their own animals to provide their
family with healthy meat.
For
myself, on a 1-acre farm of good, well-drained land, I would keep a cow and a
goat, a few pigs and maybe a dozen hens. The goat would provide me with milk
when the cow was dry. I might keep two or more goats, in fact. I
would have the dairy cow (a Jersey) to provide the pigs and me with milk. More
importantly, I would keep her to provide heaps and heaps of lovely cow manure
to increase my soil fertility, for in order to derive any sort of living from
that 1 acre without the application of a lot of artificial fertilizer, it would
have to be heavily manured.
RAISING A DAIRY COW
Cow or no cow? The pros and cons are many
and various for a self-sufficient homestead. In favor of raising a cow is the
fact that nothing keeps the health of a family — and a farm — at a high level
better than a dairy cow. If you and your children have ample good, fresh,
un-pasteurized, unadulterated dairy products, you will be well positioned to be
a healthy family. If your pigs and poultry get their share of the
milk by-products, especially whey, they likely will be healthy, too. If your garden gets
plenty of cow manure, your soil fertility will continuously increase, along
with your yields.
On the other hand, the food that you buy for this family cow
will cost you hundreds of dollars each year. Compared with how much money you
would spend on dairy products each year, the fresh milk supply from the cow
plus the increased value of the eggs, poultry and pig meat that you will get,
along with your ever-growing soil fertility, will quickly make a
family cow a worthwhile investment. But a serious counter-consideration is
that you will have to take on the responsibility of milking a cow. (For
different milking plans and estimated savings, see Keep a
Family Cow and Enjoy Delicious Milk, Cream, Cheese and More.) Milking a cow doesn’t take
very long — perhaps eight minutes — and it’s very pleasant if you
know how to do it and if she is a quiet, docile cow — but you will have to do
it. Buying a dairy cow is a very important step, and you shouldn’t do it unless
you do not intend to go away very much, or unless you
can make arrangements for somebody else to take over your milking
duties while you’re gone. So let’s plan our 1-acre farm on the assumption that
we are going to keep a dairy cow.
1-ACRE FARM WITH A FAMILY COW
Half of your land would be put down to
grass, leaving half an acre arable (not allowing for the land on which the
house and other buildings stand). The grass half could remain permanent pasture
and never be plowed up at all, or you could plan crop rotations by plowing it
up, say, every four years. If you do the latter, it is best done in strips of a
quarter of the half-acre so that each year you’re planting a grass, clover and
herb mixture on an eighth of your acre of land. This crop rotation will result
in some freshly sown pasture every year, some 2-year-old field, some 3-year-old
field and some 4-year-old field, resulting in more productive land.
GRAZING MANAGEMENT
At the first sign the grass patch is
suffering from overgrazing, take the cow away. The point of strip grazing (also
called intensive rotational grazing) is that grass grows better and produces
more if it is allowed to grow for as long as possible before being grazed or
cut all the way down, and then allowed to rest again. In such intensive
husbandry as we are envisaging for this self-sufficient homestead, careful
grazing management will be essential.
Tether-grazing on such a small area may work better than
using electric fencing. A little Jersey cow quickly gets used to being
tethered and this was, indeed, the system that the breed was developed for
on the island of Jersey (where they were first bred). I so unequivocally
recommend a Jersey cow to the 1-acre farmer because I am convinced that, for
this purpose, she is without any peer. Your half-acre of grass, when
established, should provide your cow with nearly all the food she
needs for the summer months. You are unlikely to get any hay from the half-acre
as well, but if the grass grows faster than the cow can eat it, then you could
cut some of it for hay.
INTENSIVE GARDENING
The remaining half of your homestead — the
arable half — would be farmed as a highly intensive garden. It would be
divided, ideally, into four plots, around which all the annual crops that you
want to grow follow each other in a strict crop rotation.
An ideal crop rotation might go something
like this:
— Grass (for four years)
— Plot 1: Potatoes
— Plot 2: Legumes (pea and bean family)
— Plot 3: Brassicas (cabbage family)
— Plot 4:
Root vegetables (carrots, beets, and so on)
— Grass again (for four years)
Consider the advantages of this kind of
crop rotation. A quarter of your arable land will be a newly plowed-up
4-year-old field every year, with intensely fertile soil because of the
stored-up fertility of all the grass, clover and herbs that have just been
plowed-in to rot with four summers’ worth of cow manure. Because your cow will
be wintered on purchased hay, and treading and dunging on purchased straw, you
will have an enormous quantity of marvelous muck and cow manure to put on your
arable land. All of the crop residues that you cannot consume will help feed
the cow, pigs or poultry, and I would be surprised if, after following this
crop rotation and grazing management plan for a few years, you didn’t find that
your acre of land had increased enormously in soil fertility, and that it was
producing more food for humans than many a 10-acre farm run on ordinary
commercial lines.
HALF-ACRE CROP ROTATION
Some might complain that by having half
your acre down to grass, you confine your gardening activities to a
mere half-acre. But actually, half an acre is quite a lot, and if
you garden it well, it will grow more food for you than if you were
to “scratch” over a whole acre. Being under grass (and grazed and dunged) for
half of its life will enormously increase the half-acre’s soil fertility. I think
you will actually grow more vegetables on this plot than you would on
a whole acre if you had no cow or grass break.
TIPS FOR THE SELF-SUFFICIENT
HOMESTEAD
A dairy cow will not be able to
stay outdoors all year. She would horribly overgraze such a small acreage. She
should spend most of the winter indoors, only being turned out during the
daytime in dry weather to get a little exercise and fresh air. Cows do not
really benefit from being out in winter weather. Your cow would be, for the
most part, better if kept inside where she would make lovely manure
while feeding on the crops you grew for her in the garden. In the summer
you would let her out, night and day, for as long as you find the pasture is
not being overgrazed. You would probably find that your cow did not need hay at
all during the summer, but she would be entirely dependent on it throughout the
winter, and you could plan on having to buy her at least a ton. If you wanted
to rear her yearly calf until he reached some value, you would likely need a
further half-ton of hay (much more for Kooskia Idaho). I have kept my cow on
deep litter: The layer of straw gets turned into good manure, and I add more
clean straw every day. I have milked a cow this way for years, and the perfect
milk made good butter and cheese, and stored well. Although more
labor-intensive, you could keep your cow on a concrete floor instead (insulated
if possible), and giver her a good bed of straw every day. You would remove the
soiled straw daily, and carefully pile it into a muckheap that would be your
fount of fertility for everything on your acre.
Pigs would have to be confined in a
house for at least part of the year (and you would need to provide straw for
them), because, on a 1-acre farm, you are unlikely to have enough fresh land to
keep them healthy. The best option would be a movable house with a strong
movable fence outside it, but you could have a permanent pigpen instead.
The pigs would have a lot of outdoor work
to do: They would spend part of their time plowing up your eighth of an acre of
grassland, and they could run over your cultivated land after you have
harvested your crops. They could only do this if you had time to let them do
it, as sometimes you would be in too much of a hurry to get the next crop in.
As for food, you would have to buy some wheat, barley or corn. This,
supplemented with the skim milk and whey you would have from your dairy cow,
plus a share of the garden produce and such specially grown fodder crops as you
could spare the land for, would keep them excellently.
If you could find a neighbor who would let
you use a boar, I recommend that you keep a sow and breed her. She could give
you 20 piglets a year, two or three of which you could keep to fatten for your
bacon and ham supply. The rest you could sell as weanlings (piglets eight to 12
weeks old), and they would probably bring in enough money to pay for the food
you had to buy for all your other livestock. If you could not get the service
of a boar, you could always buy weanlings yourself — just enough for your own
use — and fatten them.
Poultry could be kept in a permanent
house in one corner of your garden, or, preferably, in mobile coops on the
land, so they could be moved over the grassland and improve soil fertility with
their scratching and dunging. I would not recommend keeping very many birds, as
just a dozen hens should give you enough eggs for a small family with a few to
occasionally sell or give away in summertime. You would have to buy a little
grain for them, and in the winter some protein supplement, unless you could
grow enough beans. You could try growing sunflowers, buckwheat or other food
especially for them.
Goats, if kept instead of a dairy cow (or
in addition to), could be managed in much the same way, however you would not
have as much whey and skim milk to rear pigs and poultry on, and you would not
build up the fertility of your land as quickly as you could with a cow. You
would only get a fraction of the manure from goats, but on the other hand you
would not have to buy nearly as much hay and straw — perhaps not any. For a
farmer wanting to have a completely self-sufficient homestead on 1 acre, dairy
goats are a good option.
Crops would be all of the ordinary garden
crops (fruits and vegetables), plus as much land as you could spare for fodder
crops for animals. Bear in mind that practically any garden crop that you grew
for yourself would be good for the animals too, so any surplus crops would go
to them. You would not need a compost pile — your animals could be your compost
pile.
Half an acre, farmed as a garden with
wheat grown in the other half-acre, is worth a try if you kept no animals at
all, or maybe only some poultry. You would then practice a crop rotation as
described above, but substitute wheat for the grass and clover field. If you
are a vegetarian, this may be quite a good solution. But you could not hope to
increase the soil fertility, and therefore the productiveness, of your land as
much as with animals.
Most
of us living in Kooskia have more than just one acre to work with, so by just doubling the
acreage to 2 acres from that which presented in the above article one should find adequate success. It is no secret that the vast majority of the acres in Kooskia may be on a hillside or at least sloped but with a little dozer work and some ingenuity, we too can attain our goal of a self-sustaining homestead; especially if high tunnels (hoop houses) row covers and cold frames were
employed instead of the conventional plowing and planting method. I have always loved sitting on a tractor tilling the ground (as a hobby), I have also believed that it was just the way things ought to be if one wanted to produce an abundance of food, but even old dogs can learn new tricks. Personally I have been amazed at my results using the no-till gardening process; additionally I am greatly pleased with the water conservation and nutrients offered by the use of wood chips as mulch! Just think about it, no back breaking labor with a rototiller, maintenance and fuel of a tractor, the saving of our precious water resources (especially for those whose only supply of water is a spring) and the financial savings by not using soil damaging chemical fertilizers, it all just makes sense to me.
No comments:
Post a Comment