pink jacketBack to the Land

A friend asked me this week, “What did you learn from living on the land that would help me cope if I’m stuck at home for two weeks with my children?”

An interesting question.  I of course immediately began trying to work that out. What did my children do for entertainment, and how did I keep from going ga-ga? What did we do for food and water?

Favorite Toys

During the years we had no electricity or running water, our children out of necessity learned to entertain themselves without television, electric appliances like record players, tape decks, or the new electronic consoles appearing in the market place. I do remember Rubik’s cube and the battery-operated Speak and Spell and Merlin toys being popular with my son, but soon the batteries went dead, or he lost the cover to the battery case or got sand in the works.  However, we had books, board games, and building toys like Lincoln Logs, Tinkertoys, Erector Set and Legos, (introduced in the USA in 1972). Dolls and stuffed animals lived in or climbed the structures the children built.

Speak and SpellI don’t expect the Coronavirus to impact our electricity service, but those are still the types of toys that can keep youngsters occupied for hours.

Keeping Busy

Our children participated in all the chores on the land – washing dishes, wiping tables, feeding animals, weeding the vegetable garden. They kneaded bread, chopped vegetables, iced cakes. We made our own wrapping paper by saving the folding computer paper their dad brought home and decorated it with potato prints. Papier mache butcher paper muralwas popular. We made puppet heads, sewed bodies, made a puppet theater, and staged plays.  On warm days, they liked painting outdoors on long strips of butcher paper fastened to a fence. Hand prints, murals, life-size drawings of their bodies. On inclement days I read long chapter books, sang songs, set up my one table as a craft workshop. We played with clay, paint, corn husks, yarn, fabric – whatever we had on hand.

You could institute some of these practices in your own home now, so that they will feel normal if your children are suddenly restricted to the four walls of your home. And – guess what – you might even enjoy them!

Food Storage

Because we had no refrigeration other than a tiny propane RV fridge, we stocked up on home-canned food, dehydrated food, and dry goods such as beans, rice, powdered milk, corn, nuts.  That is still a good strategy – none of us knows when PG&E will declare another fire emergency and cut our power for several days, or when a storm will do the same. It’s a good idea, too, to plan grocery shopping more carefully to reduce our reliance on running out to Burger King or Safeway on a moment’s notice. We had hand-crank grain mills to make the grains and nuts more palatable, and those mills still exist. A hand-cranked ice cream maker may seem like a strange thing to purchase today with electric models in the marketplace, but making a batch of hand-cranked ice cream can use up a couple of hours.

We grew most of our own vegetables. Before we had a water tank and a hose full of water, we collected water in 5 gallon jugs at the well, and stored several of them in a shed for watering the garden when it didn’t rain. I still grow herbs and salad vegetables, and have just sown additional plants in my suburban back yard in case our farmers’ market shuts down due to the virus. I don’t expect to lose water service, but you never know.

Looking at our life on the land and our life today, I can see that there we learned some rather basic habits that we still carry on today. Recycle, conserve water, cook from scratch, grow your own veggies, keep an emergency stock of basic foods, lots of water.  Reduce screen time.  Talk to one another. Play with one another. Sing together. Read.

Nothing you haven’t heard before, but now might be a good time to include some of these practices in your own life.

Have fun!

Marlene

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