Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Homesteading Where You Are Series-Raise


Welcome back to our Wednesday Series:




I'm daisy and I currently live in Central Florida.
Our family will be making the move later this year,
to a more rural spread in North Carolina.
For now, we share how we homestead in suburbia.

************
Today's topic is 
Raise.



~Raise awareness.
It's gotta start here.  
By understanding where we fit in the big picture,
we are able to educate ourselves to determine
where our priorities lie.
Attending workshops, reading and talking with like-minded folks
can all be invaluable methods for enlightening one's perception.
We've already decided that suburbia isn't for us,
although we are making the best in our current location.
If we hadn't had this experience,
we wouldn't have known what we really wanted.
It's all good...


~Raise standards for the quality of life we want to experience, 
as well as the impact we want to make on our world.
Knowing what we want and striving to make it happen,
whether it's growing it ourselves or supporting a local venue.
We tend to spend time, money and energy on experiences,
rather than material possessions.
Memories are priceless.



~Raise hopes when designing our future.
Our dreams can be as big as we allow them.
One great quote I heard recently was,
"You can't dream big enough."
This effort to live better is an innate longing.
We are the creators of our own lives,
and the motivation to strive for something better
can prepare all of those hopes for reality.
 



~Raise our own food so that we are less dependent on outer sources.
By providing the necessities for our family,
we are less reliant on outside resources
and retain more control of our overall health and well-being.
We currently have a small garden and a few avocado trees,
but are hoping to expand this effort when we move later this year.
Our long-range goals include tending  fruit and nut trees, 

a large vegetable garden, a beehive, and raising chickens for eggs.



~Raise up the local community.
For those items that we can't provide for ourselves,
we will patronize local farmers who are cultivating with a conscience.
Understanding that we're all in this together
and fostering the sense that 
we can thrive in an interdependent system
allows all involved to excel in their areas of expertise.
Learn, and be willing to teach.




~Raise the next generation,
including the role that homesteading plays.
Homeschooling is an outstanding opportunity
to instill homesteading and homekeeping skills.
In North Carolina, we hope to have a teaching farm,
so that others can understand how fulfilling and meaningful life is 
when one's passion is followed.
The intrinsic satisfaction of a job well done
is worth passing on to future homesteaders.
Whether it is learning to repair an engine,
cooking from scratch, or creating a family garden,
these skills should continue to be passed down
with all of the reverence they deserve.




Please visit the other gals sharing their ideas in this series:

*Jackie, at Born Imaginative, grew up as an avid 4-Her, on a 50 acre hobby farm, with parents who pursued a homesteading life. Now, with a husband and two small children of her own, she is bringing an 1880s farmhouse/30acre farm back to life in Southern Coastal Maine.

*Mary, at Homegrown on the Hill, lives in Southwestern Ohio with her family on a 5 acre homestead. Their goal is to be as self sufficient as possible. In helping with this goal, they raise a big garden and keep chickens, rabbits, and cattle for food.

*Staci, at Life At Cobble Hill Farm, was bitten by the homestead bug in 2006 and although she began her homesteading ventures in a rented condo, is now homesteading on less than an acre in Upstate NY.

*Sue, at The Little Acre that Could, shares her body with an auto-immune disease, and life with her husband. They live in a once-working Victorian farm cottage now bordered by a modern subdivision. She has dreamed of homesteading as long as she can remember and continues to strive toward that goal in rural Atlantic Canada.


Five bloggers, 7 weeks,
Big Ideas!
Join us every Wednesday!


Homesteading Where You Are-Intro
Homesteading Where You Are-Make
 Homesteading Where You Are-Grow
Homesteading Where You Are-Preserve
Homesteading Where You Are-Save












12 comments:

  1. Daisy, I'm so enjoying your group series on "Homesteading Where You Are". I have gardened in several different places with some success and many failures but always something learned. I for one am glad all of you decided to do this series.

    Raising awareness, standards, hopes, food, community, and next generations are all worth striving for. Urban living presents much opposition to all those areas. I am trying to impress on a nine year old grandson the importance of all those things but it's been an up hill battle for sure. I'm just hoping that some day the conversations we have had will come to the surface when needed to make a life decision.

    Have a great Raising day.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm sure that all you are doing for your grandson will make an impact. Sometimes we don't know how much we influence others until much further on down the road. Just keep at it!

      So glad you are enjoying the series.

      Delete
  2. I LOVE this post! Yes, yes and yes! You've captured in words the important facets of the term raise. Well, done!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'm with Sue - what a fantastic post!! I just love your take on the topic and the way in which you expressed it. :-)

    ReplyDelete
  4. I love your long term goal of raising chickens and bees :) I can't wait for you to experience the joys of chickens. And I strongly agree with raising awareness. It's so important to know and be aware of where our food comes from!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I have learned so much about raising chickens and bees from reading about it. It will be fun and exciting to participate in it!

      Delete
  5. oh my goodness, I love your take on this. As in love love love. It's beautifully written, makes you think and appreciate all we have thus far. Thank you for a great post!

    (And are you really going to homeschool? I keep thinking of it.)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Jackie.
      We've been homeschooling for 8 years and can't see changing it! I highly recommend it if you can do it. ;0)

      Delete
  6. Great sentiments, Daisy! Thanks for sharing on The HomeAcre Hop! Hope you can join us again today!

    ReplyDelete

Thanks for taking the time to leave your thoughts!