It's cool working on a small scale with a decentralized intentional community of like-minded people. It has a few drawbacks at times, but I obviously think the benefits are stronger.
A few weeks ago our community pig farmer, the friend I bought Buddy and Scooter from, shared with us an email he got from the local feed mill: feed prices are up nearly thirty percent from the start of the year.
I've been monitoring our feed consumption more closely since getting the pigs. In the first week on the good feed, the pigs ate fifty pounds, roughly three and a half pounds apiece daily. Recently, they're up more than double that. The rabbits as a whole consumed a forty pound bag, a smidge over a pound apiece for the week, not counting the ones that aren't weaned yet. I found out that Sam was far under feeding the grow outs, they're nearly double that now as well. Glad I checked in on that. The chickens, in a month, have consumed a bit over half a bag. We don't have many chickens to eat a lot of feed. As a side note, I think for labor and price, a laying flock is the most effective food animal to raise on a home scale.
When we were talking about feed cost in the chat, we came to the quick decision to start a grain growing co-op between whoever wanted to produce some. As of now, we have three people signed up to split the bag of sorghum seed we bought. The decision was made, and I went to pick up a bag the next morning. I had traded my friend a lawn mower the weekend previous, and he hadn't paid me for it yet. We worked it out that my pay would be for him to cover the bag of sorghum seeds for the group, and so the wealth was kept in our community of friends and growers.
Sorghum coming up, alongside wild blackberries and more bermuda
Sorghum is a small grain, similar in nutrient to corn, but it grows better in our Texas heat with less irrigation and the stalks can be used as fodder. My original intent was to get as many of us as are willing to start growing milo (another name for sorghum) to help our egg farmers. I doubt we'll get to significant scale this season, but it's a quick and inexpensive start. None of us has mass acreage yet to devote to a large scale grain operation, but I'm optimistic on the fodder we can raise from stalks.
Milo is a big portion of every soy-free chicken feed I've found, though certainly not a complete ration. Everyone that raises chickens in our group though, raises them in a polycultural environment with access to excessive forage and bugs. Feed is largely a supplement for our happy happy chickens. Learning that the stalks are commonly used as a hay product is awesome. Combined with a bit of comfrey, it looks like we can make a complete rabbit feed on top of the grain harvest. Everyone interested in the project has rabbits too, it's kind of a Man Scouts cultural thing (in the trinity camp anyways) to have rabbits for home scale meat production. These are my people.
The size and economic development in our intentional community here makes for easy decision making and quick action. The decentralization though does delay action a bit. The decision was made pretty fast that evening, and the seeds were acquired the next morning. My seeds were planted a couple days later when we had a sunny day, but I haven't been able to get the other seeds distributed to the guys that want to grow. That's the biggest stumbling block of being over half an hour between us all rather than a more centralized community, but here we are, making it work.
One of my small sorghum beds
I'll be the first to admit we're late to the grain game, and that we likely won't grow enough to cover anybody's yearly feed, but we're starting. With fifty pounds of seed, we'll have plenty for next year's planting should harvest not happen, and we're starting now to looked at broader sowing options and other grains. I'll probably be the smallest grower this year, with around 250 square feet sowed so far. I won't plant any more after memorial day weekend because it's really getting late now.
It's strange to me on a personal level, getting involved in grain agriculture. A couple years ago, I damn near swore off and dismissed it, somehow not making the connection of having chickens and buying feed for them. Now, I'm starting to open up and imagine ways to grow this stuff in a polycultural system like mine. This year, being an afterthought, I'm just doing a few separate beds that I barely reclaimed from piles of ragweed and bermuda; the remnant of last year's community garden beds. As I watch the stuff grow, I'll be thinking on more places to put it next spring. Observe and react, right?
Seeds en route to a friend, memorial day weekend
So for now, we're just getting acquainted with the plant; how it grows, where it likes to be on our properties, how we can use it and incorporate it in our systems, et cetera. Eventually, my dream would be for some folks to grow a plot of sorghum or some other grain in exchange for eggs or rabbit meat. Like ten pounds of milo grain for a couple weeks worth of eggs for a family, or two bales of sorghum stalks for five butchered rabbits, some kind of economic system that benefits each party in a food production system, because eventually our growers are going to be getting maxed out with what they can grow. I know I can only do so much here on my heavenly half acre. If I could get more friends on board, and produce a product that they would want to trade, that would be really ideal. Self-reliance can go somewhere else; I want community reliance.
What can you do with your friends to help lessen the effects of the great reset and the economic crises that are coming? Are you and your freedom cell doing anything? Maybe growing, maybe talking to your farmers, maybe canning whatever you can buy in bulk? Let's talk more! I think it's high time we start calling each other out on what we're doing to make our communities better off. Bounce ideas off of each other and how you're making your intentional communities more internally reliant and more resilient overall. What's your next project?
Love and resolve from Texas
Nate 💚
P.S.
All the seeds are now delivered, and I think everyone has at least part of the crop sown now. Rolling right along, now we just need some sunshine...
I love keeping the money in the community! So simple, and so important...
Money and resources.
We've started using crypto between a few of us to trade and barter things. That way the money and the resources stay local. I bought some gunpowder from one of the guys and paid in crypto. The money keeps increasing in value, and I'll increase the value of the powder by making ammo that'll be sold within the community. Now that is economic development!
I wish more people thought like this, we'd all be much better off.
I've started to think like this, especially regarding loans. Lend to each other instead of going to a bank. Fewer fees, less paperwork, lower interest rates, money stays in the community. We've been conditioned to think that we should not have money transactions like these among friends, but if it increased the money among all of us thereby, there would also be less strife. I have one mortgage that I've paid to a friend for 25 years now. No problems at all, even when I couldn't pay for half a year. We need to transform the financial systems ourselves, on small scales. So happy to hear others making inroads on this.
Awesome move. Allowing the community to participate and benefit from every point of the value chain will ensure that your wealth is not only preserved but increased by the time you sell the livestock. Amazing
Just remember, it's a balanced daily diet that keeps animals in captivity healthy.... It's not just a few components, but also the supplementation that is carefully added to commercial feed. Without a balanced diet, growth is inhibited and diseases and pests appear. It's VERY hard to make a balanced feed on your own....
What makes it so hard?
Getting the correct balance for each animal. If pigs don't get the correct amount of lycine, they don't grow well. Chickens can not make an amino acid from plant protein, so must have animal protein. Too much animal protein and other things could be off, like not enough calcium for shells (in chickens). I don't know what rabbits need, never raised any. It's very difficult to get the protportions right, so that all the feed can be utilized. It's much like balancing soil, too much of one thing can inhibit the use of another even if it's there, and the plant shows the deficiency. In animals, it's poor growth, poor feathers or fur, or disease.
The nutritional needs vary according to age, development, or what the animal is used for. In the wild animals instinctively eat what they need when they need it. They will seek out what they need. But when they are confined, they must rely on us to provide exactly what they need when they need it. That's one reason I dehydrate 42 different herbs and forbs for the chickens. They take what they need from the mix when they need it.
Right now the rabbits are my main concern for home feed production. After your first comment, I started asking around and I've ordered a book specifically on growing and producing a balanced rabbit feed. I'm goin to be working on that as my next project. They're costing about $100/month to feed right now, which is a killer. That's with feeding a bunch of babies though, so it'll go down a lot shortly.
Being able to make a complete ration at home will be a real game changer in the rabbit operation. Even moreso if I can save seeds from whatever we end up needing to grow, but we'll do it one step at a time for now.
The reasons I'm wanting to focus the majority of my own efforts on the rabbits is because they're here to stay. The pigs likely won't be a permanent fixture, maybe every other year. And the chickens don't need as much feed as the rabbits, so even if their feed cost goes up, they still don't cost a lot to maintain.
Kinda my thinking at the moment.
Read book. Plant seeds. Make food for food. Eventually get free food.
A very interesting read, Nate :<)
also, as I studied film and my brain thinks in movies, I had to ask if you've ever heard of and or seen The 1988 "Red Sorghum"?
It's a great, Asian, movie classic by a famous Chinese director ), who broke through internationally / went more mainstream with movies like Hero ( 2002 ) and House of Flying Daggers ( 2004 ). I also read the book that it's based on, inspired by. An impressive story.
In the area in Portugal where I am living, there's more and more community exchange coming up. I get eggs and veggies from my twin sister's land and, up till now, I mainly spend time with her kids in exchange for this or help her with crypto, as I described in my post from a week ago: The Power of Crypto - How it has helped my twin sister and her family to change and improve their Life.
Come to think of it, I'm pretty much the go to guy for crypto in my area, and have been so since I arrived 3 years ago. That and the favorite 'uncle' of a bunch of kids and favorite babysitter of a bunch of parents haha.
I don't have a plot of land of my own, as of yet, as I lived in a house without land that is now for sale and I'm renting now and not sure how long I can/ will stay on this plot.
I can't wait to grow my own food though, even if it's just a little bit and might start on a small scale, for the time being.
All the best!
Small scale food production is really cool. Some folks say that true creativity comes from having rigid limits, like the structure of a sonnet or villanelle. I've been thinking on small scale meat production, and I think you could do quite a cool job with just 3m² of balcony or porch space breeding rabbits, probably yielding around 20kg per year. Or potato buckets, which can yield something like 2kg of potatoes from a 20L bucket. You could fit something like 25-30 potato buckets in the same space. That's a bunch of potatoes.
Sorry if my math is a bit off, I'm working on my metric adaptations lol
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