Thursday, April 30, 2009

Hand Sanitizer

Thank you, Anonymous Commenter, for pointing out that to be effective, you need 60 percent alcohol.

If you hadn't been so quick to share some apparent mistake on my part, you might have read the entire post and the part about another blogger's research showing that very same thing.

I just put what I came across on my blog. I'm sure the base recipe can be adjusted and tweaked to be effective.

As with ANYTHING posted ANYWHERE folks need to research for themselves and determine what is good and what is useful. I'm just sharing what I find myself -- you have to do your own footwork toward your decisions.
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one more thing...about snakes...

I love this...

Ignorance can temporary and can be fixed. Stupid is forever.

THAT should be the motto hanging on my wall here. I need to stitch that up....for all of the children's hope chests, too!

I have killed 2 snakes this week. One I shot. Yes, he was one of the "good" snakes, according to Dewey. He was rather upset that I had one of those 'totally feminine city girl' moments and shot first, worried about identification later.

Can't help it. I was raised in "the city" more or less. And up north, to boot. Snakes aren't common up there. Not where I come from. Sure, a pretty little green garden snake now and then...I remember once, much in my childhood, my cousin and I found a garden snake in my Grandmother's front yard. My aunt came out and well, she didn't have a shotgun, but she took care of the snake.

The other snake...well, he was caught under the wheel of the lawnmower and seeing as I wasn't about to shoot my lawnmower, I took the ax and did a number on him. I have no idea what he was, aside from dead.

Snakes give me the heebeejeebees big time. Not that I much care for mice or those R things either! I am slowly learning that perhaps there is a snake or two I wouldn't mind having around...as long as they go their way and I can go mine and our paths don't need to cross....at least where I know they do.

Anyway --
I used to be one of those people who thought "the only good snake is a dead snake", but I cannot tell you how horribly wrong that is.
Several years ago, a guy said that to me, and I replied, "Let me ask you a question, would you rather have rats and mice in your house, even though rats and mice
are known to carry a dozen diseases that can be fatal to humans; diseases which are even spread through the dust when their feces dries up and breaks apart? Or would you rather have in your house a snake that is afraid of you, that is completely harmless, doesn't eat or poison your food, or whose bite is like getting a tiny splinter or a slight abrasion?"
If you say "mice and rats" you are too stupid to live, and people like you were the cause of many millions of people dying from the plague in Europe. Ignorance can be temporary and can be fixed. Stupid is forever. Most spiders, snakes, etc. are actually very beneficial for humans, and you would much rather have them around then the things you WILL have around if you kill all the spiders and snakes.



Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Done for the Day, I promise...

Just some thoughts...

Maybe Alan Keyes was on to something who knows all I know is he warned of an attack and with the Obama-gedddon trying to push his socialist healthcare plan through maybe he was correct after all. This Pandemic certainly has the potential to change everything. The Democrats are blaming America just like they did with the AIG bonus's and later we found out they knew all about them and approved them so is blaming America for the flu even though it is a Mexican flu a tactic or is Alan Keyes correct?

Former presidential candidate Alan Keyes has given perhaps his most dire warning yet, saying that the Obama administration is preparing to stage terror attacks, declare martial law and cancel the 2012 elections, which is why they are demonizing their political enemies as criminals and terrorists.

Keyes said that Americans should be thankful if they even see another election in 2012, stating, "If we don't wake up and work to see that it happens, we will not see another election."

"The minute they think they can get away with it, they will end this system of government and that is their intention," added Keyes, noting that everyone acting as if the time we are in was just "business as usual" reminds him of the attitude of politicians in the Weimar Republic when Hitler was rising to power or eastern Europe when the Communists were taking over after the second world war.

Keyes said that because the majority of people are decent-minded, they believe others will play by the rules when this simply isn't the case, warning that this attitude will allow evil to take over before we can do anything about it.

"It is so clear hat we have now put a faction in place - they are not playing by the rules and they don't intend to play by the rules - if they were playing by the rules they wouldn't have tried to identify their opposition as criminals," added Keyes, making reference to the recent controversy surrounding the release of the MIAC and Homeland Security reports, which implied that Americans who exercise and are knowledgeable about their constitutional rights are a threat to law enforcement and potential domestic terrorists.


Oh, and I want to apologize to all the pork producers out there. I was reading several notes today that say it's "polictically incorrect" to be calling this flu-demic by it's news name, swine flu. It isn't actually related to the consumption of pork or any of its related by-products. Pork prices are dropping, pork sales are dropping, pork exports are dropping. It's unfair to pork producers, unfair to people who like their bacon and chops, and apparently unfair to the WHO who is having trouble labeling this outbreak in the first place. No pig/hog/swine has had the flu, thus it simply shouldn't be called swine flu. Make sense?

So, what should we call it?

Just Another Pig Tirade...

Yes, I'm goofy in the morning...I'm sharing more links and resources on the swine flu.

Yes, I have had already had "that obligatory conversation" with a couple of friends and assorted 'disinterested others' about how this whole swine flu thing is getting out of control. If we were all in truly serious danger, we would be getting more information from the news sources, not just bloggers.


Well now...all I can really say to that is obviously I am not the only one living in the cave with the rock pulled tight in. If you are one of those who believe you are getting all the necessary information for daily life from your local, network or cable news sources, you would most likely find many more things up your alley over at someone else's blog. I am not a "news fan" on any level and I'm not much for candy-coating and fluff, sorry. But, hey, never fear...there are literally millions of bloggers out there more than willing and able to feed your mornings with that stuff.

Now back to my own blogging...do I think this swine flu "pandemic" is being blown out of proportion? No, actually I don't. I don't think we are looking at SARS again...yet...but I do think some of the more survivalist-minded sorts are preaching the hunker down and go bush hype right now.
Mexico, obviously has outbreaks...but so does the US and Canada, Australia, New Zealand/Auckland, Spain, Austria, Belgium, France, Israel, Germany, Europe in general...even the Czech Republic. The list is rather lengthy, actually. And they hesitate calling it a pandemic, right?

Before that comment gets my mailbag singed, let me explain. Some blogs are really pushing the panic and conspiracy theories behind government control of this H1N1 virus (Baxter is already prepared with a starter vaccine? kind of quick, isn't it?) and its more intentional spread. They are jumping on the panic extreme half of the wagon. Local and network (government-led, mind you) news sources are on the other end of that wagon...the let's-wait-and-see-what-this-turns-into end. At least, that is how they are presenting it in the media that most folks are watching. Reality, I believe is a bit different....they are just waiting on opportunity to put into active force their MSEHPA. And if that doesn't raise a few hairs on your neck, you really do need to go visit another blog. I don't like what I've read, blogs, PDF's and other sources, about the MSEHPA at all. It's just way too much government in my face kind of stuff, but maybe that's just me. I just don't have that worm, fuzzy, feel-good sort of comfort when the government decides what is best for me and my family, and then puts things in place to force ensure my compliance with those things.

Now, all that aside, I do think it's just plain stupidity to not be watching this flu unfold over the next year. Yes, I said year, not season. I fully agree with those looking at this in the wave theory. It's just beginning. It will be something tucked away in the news after a short while, but watch for it again this fall when the more 'traditional' flu season begins making it's presence known. It's going to get far worse before it's over.

We are a preventative family here, not a call-to-action sort of family. I don't wait until someone starts sneezing and coughing to worry about our health. Your health is an ongoing thing, not something you just pop into at will persay. You have to have common sense practices inyour family to maintain any level of health. Basic things like stop eating crap and packeaged garbage. Most folks get sick because they eat the wrong foods for any level of health. When something even benign like a simple cold comes around, bingo, they drop like flies with every symptom imagineable. Develop a routine of healthy practices in your family....sneezing? cover your mouth and nose each time, then go wash your hands. coughing? cover your mouth and nose with something other than just your hand...then throw it away and go wash your hands. wash your hands often and for a standard amount of time. I've seen folks wash their hands...it's funny. They splash some water on them, maybe dab a little soap, don't work up any lather at all, then splash more water on...and usually wipe them on their clothes. yeah, you're clean and germ-free. stay away from me, thank you.

See a trend here...and on just about everyone else's blog out there right now speaking about this? WASH YOUR HANDS.

What about the herbal stuff to help boost your immunity? Well, depending on where you go, who you talk to, there is a mixed decision on that right now it seems. There is something called a cytokine storm that seems to be a big issue this time around the flu circuit. And Elderberry extract/syrup is leading the pack on hot topics. First off, read the facts out there about Elderberry extract...do your research. There are certain forms of it you are wanting...don't just go grab the first thing you find...do some reading folks. You need to be as informed as you can be, and that means you need to look for things on your own, searching out whatever you read and making the best decisions you can based on the best information you can at the time. That's all anyone can do in that respect.

That original question from those friends...I pray you don't have to find our first hand how serious this flu strain can be. As for me and my house, we will be vamping up the storage supplies here and thinking over any trips off the homestead a second (and third and fourth) time. I can't control much outside my homestead, but I do have a pretty good grip on what happens around here (well, most days, anyway). The problem with being out and about with the world-at-large is you lose all that control completely. I don't know where you've been, or who you've been around...and the lineage of that goes a long way.

In a nutshell, is a trip to WalMart worth my health or that of my children's, even if a fairly remote possibility? I don't think so.



Get this Widget

Elderberry FAQ's are here and here
Swine Flu Tracking at Google Maps
Helpful Resource with all manner of links related to Swine Flu, Pandemics, Herbs, etc.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

More garden pictures

See how promising this looks from a distance?

I know I'm whining. I know I'm indulging in a pity party. I'm stumped completely trying to find something to make it work now while my plants sit and suffer.

We did work good stuff into the ground with the last garden and I know I should have paid someone to come tear it up last year with or without a garden, but I thought it would still be ok this year, maybe just need *some* extra work.

Breaking plows, disks and tillers should be plenty I'd think :o(

I miss my black rich Illinois soil real bad this year.
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This was in my reader this morning

And how much more truth can you get?! I loved this article and had to share it...yeah, I know...it's coming from my own Blackberry SmartPhone...the phone that I don't know how tpo remove that idiot tagline from


We all know that families are falling apart at an alarming rate. And it's hard to pinpoint exactly why that is.

But the opposite of an "apart family" is a "together family". So the simple answer to "why families fall apart" has a lot to do with the fact that they are not nurturing unity–togetherness. And boy  is there a  pile of things that discourage unity among families!

I wonder if we would be wise to be more careful and guard our family's unity against seemingly harmless activities? Technological advances have got to be one of the biggest enemies of family unity. Isn't it ironic?

Advancement is supposed to be better. But how often does the advancement require a sacrifice? Yes, it's nice every member of the family has his or her own cell phone.

But now with the advanced gadgets beyond basic convenience when you're broken down on the side of the road (isn't that why we have them?), cell phones alone can rob us of so much time. Besides that, I've witnessed teenagers live an alter life at home through their cell phones alone.

(Funny story: I did break down on the side of the road a few weeks ago, and we only have one cell, of which my husband usually carries for work. So I had to stop at a church to call him. I kept thinking they looked at me oddly when I asked to use the phone…then it dawned on me and I said, "Oh…yes…I am one of the few Americans left who doesn't actually have a cell phone–*sheepish smile*)

And then there are the hand-held games–go ahead and chuckle, because I don't know the names.  The last one I remember is "Game Boy"…I know, so five years ago.  (For the record:  none of our children have any of these.  I'm imagining that if 7 children each had a private game/gadget, there would be NO relationship.  But, they don't know they're missing anything and they love  playing together)

And let's not forget our favorite gadgets–the television, the computer and the telephone.  All of us can be guilty of indulging too long in these conveniences that so easily shut out the rest of our family. What's the saying?  "It's the little foxes that spoil the vine."  Guard your family's unity with your life!   Satan hardly has to work to tear them apart anymore.

Bottom line:  families need tremendous amounts of time TOGETHER.  Talking, laughing, telling  jokes and stories, good old fashion walking, sharing ideas, dreams and plans, looking at each other's faces–those little things that are so easily taken for granted are the stuff of life that holds us together.

Go out and have a picnic!
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Mary Mary Quite Contrary, How Does Your Garden Grow...

It doesns't :o( I hope this picture comes through (if not I'll add it later).

This is my clay this year. Oh sure, it looks sort of dark and like it has potential, but it's all fake.

Those clods you see right there with the tiller -- they are larger than gravel but smaller than a serious "rock". My entire garden space, some 50x60 area, looks like that. It's clay enough you can't break them up past this stage...and hard enough they won't allow planting anything :o(

This garden, over the past 2 weeks total so far, has been broken up with a breaking plow twice -- and he went every which way with it, lengthwise, widthwise, criss-cross...everything short of circles! After it dried out some again, he came back with the plow and did it again.

Then we disked. Same thing -- long ways, across, corner-to-corner, you name a direction and we disked it. It really looked like it has some great potential.

Now, I've been out there everyday since Thursday last week and this is the best I have still. It's insane. We have had 3 gardens here since moving. Last year without any tiller I didn't stand a chance of doing any breaking, so it sat alone. But we've had one before -- I just don't understand it.

I tried setting out some plants...the clods are hard and won't settle around them. Seriously, it's like trying to plant a tomato in my gravel driveway :o(

I'm going to find a place I can put at least a few of these plants in and the rest I'll give away. I have a lot of cukes, straight-neck squash, okra, bell and banana peppers ,d my heirloom tomatoes...all dying a slow death on the porch with no soil to go into. Even my onion sets are looking dry :o(

I'm ready to move. I'm tired of the heat and humidity. I'm tired of dead calm summers without a breeze up here. I'm tired of torrential rains that flood out everything on the property and can't flow off or sink in due to the clay barrier. I'm just plain whiney and tired.
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Monday, April 27, 2009

That Homemade Hand Sanitizer...

One recipe:

First I gathered up all my ingredients: Bragg’s Raw Apple Cider Vinegar, Aloe Vera Gel, Witch Hazel, Rosemary oil, Lemon oil, sweet orange oil, Lavender oil, tee tree oil and grapefruit seed extract (citracidal), a bowl for mixing and easy pouring, and some little squeeze bottles.

These are approximate measurements.

4oz aloe vera gel

less than 1/4 c witch hazel (I filled the 1/4 c about 2/3 full with witch hazel and filled the rest with the cider vinegar)

1 to 2 T Raw Apple Cider Vinegar

at least 40 drops of grapefruit seed extract

20 drops tee tree oil

and 20 to 30 drops of the remaining essential oils. I added more of the orange for scent. I mixed it all up well and poured it into the little bottles. An easy way and natural way to fight those germs!

**Lavender oil is an antiseptic, disinfectant, bactericide

**Lemon oil is an antiseptic, disenfectant, insectiside and fungicide

Added by Deanna here....the grape seed extract is a powerful germ killer in its own rights according to what I've read up so far.

Grapefruit seed extract (GSE) is truly a broad-spectrum natural antibiotic, capable of killing a wide variety of pathogens. Highly active against protozoa, bacteria, yeast and some viruses, it has been used for quite some time in the treatment of parasitic infections. It is nontoxic, generally hypoallergenic and can be administered for up to several months, which may be required to eliminate stubborn infections. source:


Another recipe:

I love the portability of hand sanitizer. I don't love the price it can cost! Courtesy of Focus on the Family magazine, I now have this recipe to make my own:

1 c. aloe vera gel
1 t. rubbing alcohol
2 t. glycerin
8 drops of tea tree oil or a favorite scent

I am putting mine in small squeeze bottles. I may try making a big batch and putting it in an old ketchup bottle so I always have some on hand.

****Please note that this recipe contains Tea Tree oil as well as Alcohol, both of which kill "bugs". When making your own, feel free to adjust the amounts of germ killers!****

And a note from another blog:

A few months ago, I came across a recipe for homemade hand sanitizer on a blog. I'm not sure how I originally found the recipe, but I bookmarked it for the day when Joshua's little bottle was empty.

Last week, I purchased some aloe gel to make the sanitizer. I tried to get a more natural kind (though I know it still had some weird ingredients in it...) and it cost more than I had planned to invest... but, oh well. ($3.97 for 24 ounces)

Before I made my sanitizer, I decided to google for more information. After all, it never hurts to have several recipes to compare, and find the best way to do something before you even start, right? :)

After reading this informative article from The NY Times, along with a few other random links, I realized that the homemade hand sanitizer, which has 1 teaspoon of rubbing alcohol per CUP of aloe gel, wasn't going to come close to 60% alcohol content(which is the minimum amount needed), and wasn't going to sanitize.

I returned my unopened, unused aloe gel, and instead bought an even bigger bottle of Germ-X hand sanitizer for $4.97.

This amount will probably last us years, which is great, since I'm sticking to good old soap and water in our home! :)

It's nice to feel frugal, and it's fun to make homemade. It's great to save money, but it's best to do some research first!



There you have it. Some recipes and a link that disputes most recipes. Do your homework, study what you are wanting to do and make your decisions ;o)

Prepare for Flu Pandemic....or so they say quietly

Our alerts from the WHO are up to Level 4 now...at six someone "officially" slaps a label on the swine flu pandemic. Yeah, I'm just an alarmist; a panicky little homesteader. Financial crisis, slumped over dead economy, swine flu...I live in a panic bubble. But I have a stubborn streak a mile wide and 2 miles deep...we'll just spend our days here on the homestead, happy and sneezey-free for a while and watch the sick world drift on past I think. Hmmm...where's that homemade hand sanitizer recipe???


WASHINGTON – Confirming at least 40 cases of swine flu in the U.S., the Obama administration said Monday it was responding aggressively as if the outbreak would spread into a full pandemic. Officials urged Americans against most travel to Mexico as the virus that began there spread to the United States and beyond. President Barack Obama urged calm, saying there was reason for concern but not yet "a cause for alarm."

Yet just in case, administration officials said that they were already waging a vigorous campaign of prevention, unsure of the outbreak's severity or where it would show up next.

U.S. customs officials began checking people entering U.S. territory. Millions of doses of flu-fighting medications from a federal stockpile were on their way to states, with priority given to the five already affected and to border states. Federal agencies were conferring with state and international governments.

"We want to make sure that we have equipment where it needs to be, people where they need to be and, most important, information shared at all levels," Janet Napolitano, head of the Homeland Security Department, told reporters.

Her briefing came shortly before the World Health Organization raised the severity of its pandemic alert level to four from three on a six-point scale. Level four means there is sustained human-to-human spread in at least one country. Level six is a full-fledged pandemic, an epidemic that has spread to a wide geographic area.

"We are proceeding as if we are preparatory to a full pandemic," Napolitano said.

She said travel warnings for trips to Mexico would remain in place as long as swine flu is detected.

Dr. Richard Besser, acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said that so far the disease in the United States seemed less severe than the outbreak in Mexico, where more than 1,600 cases had been reported and where the suspected death toll had climbed to 149. No deaths had been reported in the U.S, and only one hospitalization.

"I wouldn't be overly reassured by that," Besser told reporters at CDC's headquarters in Atlanta. He raised the possibility of more severe cases — and deaths — in the United States.

A European Union official warned against travel to parts of the U.S. as well as Mexico, but Besser said that seemed unwarranted.

State Department spokesman Robert A. Wood said the EU commissioner's remarks were his "personal opinion," not an official position, and thus the department had no comment. "We don't want people to panic at this point," Wood said.

Still Besser said of the situation, "We are taking it seriously and acting aggressively. ... Until the outbreak has progressed, you really don't know what it's going to do."

The U.S. stepped up checks of people entering the country by air, land and sea and issued a new U.S. travel advisory suggesting "nonessential travel to Mexico be avoided."

The confirmed cases announced on Monday were double the 20 earlier reported by the CDC. Besser said this was due to further testing — not further spreading of the virus — in New York at a school in Queens, bringing the New York total to 28.

The CDC reported 40 cases: 28 in New York, seven in California, two in Texas, two in Kansas and one in Ohio. Other information suggested three cases in Texas and eight in California, bringing the total to 42.

Besser said other cases have been reported in Ohio, Kansas, Texas and California. He said that, of the 40 cases, only one person has been hospitalized and all have recovered.

Countries across the globe increased their vigilance amid increasing worries about a worldwide pandemic. Obama told a gathering of scientists that his administration's Department of Health and Human Services had declared a public health emergency "as a precautionary tool to ensure that we have the resources we need at our disposal to respond quickly and effectively."

"This is obviously a cause for concern and requires a heightened state of alert, but it's not a cause for alarm," Obama said. He said he was getting regular updates.

The Senate has yet to confirm a secretary of human services, a surgeon general or a director of CDC. The absence of those officials left Besser and Napolitano to brief reporters on the swine flu outbreak.

The quickening pace of developments in the United States in response to the spreading new flu strain was accompanied by a host of varying responses around the world.

Mexico, at the center of the outbreak, suspended schools nationwide. China, Taiwan and Russia considered quarantines, and several Asian countries scrutinized visitors arriving at their airports.

U.S. customs officials began checking people entering U.S. territory. Officers at airports, seaports and border crossings were watching for signs of illness, said Customs and Border Protection spokesman Lloyd Easterling.

While "the borders are open," Easterling said officials were "taking a second look at folks who may be displaying a symptom of illness."

If a traveler reports not feeling well, the person will be questioned about symptoms and, if necessary, referred to a CDC official for additional screening, Easterling said. The customs officials were wearing personal protective gear, such as gloves and masks, he said.

The CDC can send someone to the hospital if they suspect a case, but no one is being refused entry. Also, the CDC is readying "yellow cards" with disease information for travelers, in case they later experience symptoms.The border monitoring resembles that done during the SARS epidemic earlier in the decade.

Multiple airlines, including American, United, Continental, US Airways, Mexicana and Air Canada, said they were waiving usual penalties for changing reservations for anyone traveling to, from, or through Mexico, but had not canceled flights.

Napolitano urged Americans to take "common sense" precautions.

"Common sense means washing hands, staying home from work or school if you feel sick, covering your mouth if you cough or sneeze. These are straightforward and simple measures, but they can materially improve our chances of avoiding a full-fledged pandemic," she said.

Administration officials said about 11 million doses of flu-fighting medications from a federal stockpile have been sent to states in case they are needed — roughly one quarter of the doses in the stockpile.

While there presently is no vaccine available to prevent the specific strain now being seen, there are antiflu drugs that do work once someone is sick. If a new vaccine eventually is ordered, the CDC already has taken a key preliminary step — creating what's called seed stock of the virus that manufacturers would use.

A private school in South Carolina was closed Monday because of fears that young people who recently returned from Mexico might have been infected. Officials of Newberry Academy in Newberry, S.C., said some seniors on the trip had flu-like symptoms when they returned.

State Department of Health and Environmental Control spokesman Jim Beasley said test results on the students could come back as early as Monday afternoon. To date, there have been no confirmed swine flu cases in the state.

Stock markets fell overseas and in the United States out of concern that the outbreak could derail economic recovery. Airline and other travel-related stocks suffered the sharpest losses.

The New York City school where 28 cases have now been confirmed was closed Monday and Tuesday.

Also, 14 schools in Texas, including a high school where two cases were confirmed, will be closed for at least the next week. Some schools in California and Ohio also were closing after students were found or suspected to have the flu.

In Mexico, the outbreak's center, soldiers handed out 6 million face masks to help stop the spread of the virus.

Spain reported its first confirmed swine flu case on Monday and said another 17 people were suspected of having the disease. Also, three New Zealanders recently returned from Mexico are suspected of having it.

Season of Ticks

Yeah, I know...disappear for a long time, then flood you with my chatter in one day.

It's tick season. At least it is here. After not really dealing with many the past 2 years, they are coming back with force this year it seems ;o( We have them daily...between ourselves and the animals, we spend alot of time just tick picking it seems.

Obviously, you don't want a tick left on you. Down here, we have an abundance of those barely-see-em sorts of ticks. LOL....not that I'd prefer a larger tick, mind you, but still, those tiny teeny ticks are a big nuisance just the same. At least the larger ones can be more easily dispatched.

I was amused by the article I read on a group about vaccinating wildlife to prevent the spread of Lyme Disease. LOL....vaccinating wildlife. I'd love to see that in action. The Yale School of Medicine did just that -- they trapped and vaccinated 1000 white-footed mice.

Ahh, grant money at its best.

The Ancient Tick was rather amusing as well:
Carios jerseyi is an argasid, or soft tick. The tick, estimated to be anywhere from 90 to 94 million years old, was fossilized in its larval stage. Entomologists know more about hard ticks (or ixodids) because of a more extensive fossil record. Still, the age of the oldest hard tick on record is a mere 35 to 40 million years.
See the pitfalls of evolution at work in that one.


Ok, Lyme Disease in a nutshell:

Research in the eastern United States has indicated that, for the most part, ticks transmit Lyme disease to humans during the nymph stage, probably because nymphs are more likely to feed on a person and are rarely noticed because of their small size (less than 2 mm). Thus, the nymphs typically have ample time to feed and transmit the infection (ticks are most likely to transmit infection after approximately 2 or more days of feeding).

Tick larvae are smaller than the nymphs, but they rarely carry the infection at the time of feeding and are probably not important in the transmission of Lyme disease to humans.

Adult ticks can transmit the disease, but since they are larger and more likely to be removed from a person’s body within a few hours, they are less likely than the nymphs to have sufficient time to transmit the infection. Moreover, adult Ixodes ticks are most active during the cooler months of the year, when outdoor activity is limited.

Ticks search for host animals from the tips of grasses and shrubs (not from trees) and transfer to animals or persons that brush against vegetation. Ticks only crawl; they do not fly or jump. Ticks found on the scalp usually have crawled there from lower parts of the body. Ticks feed on blood by inserting their mouth parts (not their whole bodies) into the skin of a host animal. They are slow feeders: a complete blood meal can take several days. As they feed, their bodies slowly enlarge.


HOW TO AVOID TICK BITES

When out of doors several precautions can minimize your chances of being bitten.

  • Tuck your pant legs into your socks and your shirt into your pants.
  • Wear light colored clothing. Dark ticks are more easily spotted against a light background.
  • Inspect clothes often for ticks. Have a companion inspect your back.
  • Apply repellents according to label instructions. Applying directly to clothing appears to be most effective.
  • Upon returning to the home remove clothing and wash or put it in the dryer for 30 minutes to kill any ticks.
  • When you get in from the field shower and inspect your body thoroughly. Especially check groin, navel, armpits, head and behind knees and ears. Have a companion check your back, or use a mirror.
  • Inspect children at least once daily for ticks. When in heavily infested areas inspect children every three to four hours.
  • When hiking stay in the middle of trails. Do not bushwhack.
  • Clear brush from around your premises and keep grassy areas mown.
  • Avoid plantings that especially attract deer and other animals.
  • Limit watering of lawns.
  • Judicious use of environmental insecticides to kill ticks may be necessary in some areas.


  • We have, in years past, when the ticks were really heavy, and our land was still rather "bush" like instead of usable space, sprayed the clothing we wore with a DEET spray of at least 23%. I don't like chemicals one bit, I really don't like DEET at all, but we had to do something here when we first moved in. They were bad -- I swear, they might say they don't ambush you and jump on you as you pass, but we were plain covered up in ticks here! They seemed to literally fall out of the sky on you when you dared to step outside.

    Luckily it's much better now. Now our biggest issue on the homestead is fleas. Out of the frying pan and into the fire as it were. We try to prevent as much contact with either as we can, but there is only so much you can do, and none of it is really preventative.

    Before venturing into tick-infested territory, you used a topical repellent on exposed skin and outer clothing. When you returned, you did a body check and threw your clothes in the wash. But clean clothes may not be tick-free clothes.

    When he found a live lone star tick (Amblyomma americanum) on the agitator of his washing machine, Agricultural Research Service (ARS) entomologist John Carroll decided to find out how tough ticks are. So he bagged up nymphs from two species—the lone star tick and the deer tick, (Ixodes scapularis), the creature that transmits Lyme disease—and put them in the washing machine.

    Carroll used a combination of water temperature settings and detergent types to wash the ticks. The majority of lone star ticks survived all the water-detergent combinations with no obvious side effects. Most of the deer ticks lived through the cold and warm water settings as well. But when one type of detergent was used with a hot water setting, only 25 percent of the deer ticks survived.

    When it came time to dry, all the ticks of both species died after an hour of tumbling around at high heat. But when the dryer was set to "no heat," about one-third of the deer ticks and more than half of the lone star ticks survived.

    Carroll placed the ticks in mesh bags, which kept them from draining away during the rinse cycle and perhaps increased their odds for survival. However, ticks might also survive a sudsy interlude by sheltering in the folds and crevices of a typical load of laundry. Some tick species have been observed to survive hours of submersion in fresh water.

    Both adult ticks and nymphs can transmit disease. Carroll’s research reinforces recommendations by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to wash and dry clothes at high temperatures after spending time in areas known to harbor ticks.

    Tick-borne illness is neearly 10 times more likely in children between the ages of 5 and 14 years old. In 1991, fewer than 10,000 cases of Lyme Disease were reported. The numbers now go well over 20,000 annually. Gee, that's over half my family here.


    What about location? Seems most regions are good breeding grounds for the complete cycle of ticks, thus higher rates of tick-borne illness, such as Lyme Disease. The Midwest it seems is the better area. The cycles are closer together, and there isn't enough time for diseases to sustain in the tick.

    I need to move back up north it seems :o) I knew the bugs weren't as vicious up there!

    Some more notes on ticks and some somewhat-preventitive measures:

    Daily tick checks (self examination for ticks)

    Use of repellent containing 20 percent or more DEET

    Selective use of insecticides that target ticks

    Avoidance of tick-infested areas.

    Removing ticks within 24 hours of attachment greatly reduces the likelihood of disease transmission.

    Tick populations around homes and in recreational areas can be reduced 50 to 90 percent through simple landscaping practices such as removing brush and leaf litter, and creating a buffer zone of wood chips or gravel between forest and lawn or recreational areas.

    The full report, "Lyme Disease - United States, 2003-2005," appears in this week′s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (June 14, 2007) and is available online at http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr.

    Additional information about Lyme disease can be found on the CDC website at http://www.cdc.gov/lyme, and about other tick-borne diseases at http://www.cdc.gov/Features/StopTicks/.

    Herbs and Any Flu....preps in general

    Say this turns into a pandemic. We are overdue for one, and honestly, people are flat out lazy when it comes to trying to prevent anything anymore. Look at all those who were at church yesterday while sick.

    First tip: STAY HOME. If you are sick, whether you think it's the flu or not, stay home. I don't want your germs. You don't want my germs. Let's agree to keep it that way.

    Second, learn to wash your hands. Teach your children to wash their hands. Use an alcohol-based sanitizer and spend some time working at cleaning your hands. Germs are invisible, you know. Standard practice for good, clean hands is to sing "Happy Birthday" 3 times while you wash. Not while the soap sits useless on your hands...scrub them bubbles around! After you wash with the sanitizer, wash with plain old fashioned soap and water. The sanitizer isn't going to get all the little areas of your hands. Keep those personal sized bottles of hand sanitizer well, handy, and make sure everyone has one...and uses it.

    Use and teach your children good manners. Cover your mouth when coughing and sneezing...then wash your hands. Don't wipe your nose with your arm, your hand, your whatever...you folks know who you are :o)

    When someone is sick, has a runny nose, etc. the name of the game is Clean, clean clean. Keep surfaces wiped down. A simply mixture of 1 tsp bleach to a gallon of water will keep surfaces sanitized. It will only hold its strength for one day, so you will need to mix a new batch daily. A spray bottle will allow you to clean all surfaces...doorknobs, your house and cell phone (wipe with a towel dampened with the solution...do not spray the phones directly!), wipe the shopping cart at the grocery store...common sense folks. Germs are everywhere.

    Prepare to be at home more. You should be at home taking care of business anyway. We all have things we need in town, places to go, things to do, and folks to visit, but learn to find contentment at home more. You can't spread diseases if you are at home. Neither can I. In the event of a true pandemic outbreak, HOME is going to be your safest place.
    Influenza viruses can be directly transmitted from pigs to people and from people to pigs. Human infection with swine flu viruses are most likely to occur when people are in close proximity to infected pigs, such as in pig barns and livestock exhibits at fairs.

    Human-to-human transmission of swine flu can also occur. This is thought to occur in the same way as seasonal flu occurs in people, which is mainly person-to-person transmission through coughing or sneezing of people infected with the flu virus. People may become infected by touching something with flu viruses on it and then touching their mouth or nose.

    See? Right back to practical common sense. Wash your hands often...stay home more.

    If you were to stay home, how would you fare? Do you have a supply of daily needs to get you through a period of time? Even if you aren't part of the whole Be Prepared lifestyle, you should have at least a month's supply of necessities, minimum. Honestly, 3 months would be even better.

    Keep it simple and easy to follow...plan your menu and take those meals and repeat them for the 3 months. A fellow blogger suggests choosing 5 main meals (don't forget you need breakfast and lunch, as well as some snacks...but for case of example, let's use the 5 main meals here...) if your family eats, say spaghetti once a week and it takes 3# of pasta for your meal, you are looking at having 36 boxes on hand. Figure the same way for the other ingredients...sauce, cheese, garlic bread, etc. Now repeat this for other meals and get a plan estimate of what you should have in that pantry for a 3 month stint.

    You should, given the number of diseases that make the news (and the ones that don't), have some N95 masks and surgical gloves on hand as well. The "N" stands for NIOSH (The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health) and the 95 stands for 95% of particles 0.3 microns in size, or larger. They are not perfect, they will not protect from everything, but they are better than a wide open nose and mouth. Folks down here use them all during pollen season while working in their yards, bush hogging, mowing, etc. They are available at just about every hardware store and such, and aren't expensive. If there is even a slight chance they will help, what are you out by getting a few and keeping them handy? Remember the SARS outbreak a few years back? All those media photos that scrolled along the newscasts, those were N95 masks and surgical gloves you were seeing on folks.

    Build your immune system and keep it strong. This is an all-around thing to be doing. Eat right (cut out, or at least back, on the packaged crud you already eat and opt for some whole grains, raw fruits and veggies, less red meat), get enough sleep (which means most likely getting more than you are currently getting!)

    There are some herbs called adaptogens that work to bring your body back in balance. They help your body adapt to the stresses of every day life which helps strengthen the immune system. Adaptogenic herbs include ginseng, shiitake mushrooms, reishi, ashwaganda and astragalus.

    Garlic is one of those herbs that can be used in cooking. It helps your body deal with infection and also has some Vitamin C and quercetin--antioxidants that can help your immune system.

    Simple tonic herbs also help strengthen your body and make it healthier. These herbs are best taken in tea form. Try stinging nettle, oatstraw, lemon balm and mullein.

    Sage is an herbal antibiotic and is also very useful during flu season because it can help with coughs, sore throats, and even fevers. Keep this herb around and drink two to three cups of tea a day when those around you seem to be getting sick. Sage may just prevent you from getting it.

    Increase your intake of Vitamin C. This not only boosts your immune system, but in higher dosages has been shown to be an antiviral as well. The recommendation is to dramatically increase your intake at the first sign you may have been exposed to the flu. Search for "the Vitamin C Foundation" to find an effective dosage for you.

    Add green tea or green tea extract to your diet.. Several clinical studies have shown that the polyphenols within green tea have strong antiviral and therefore anti-flu properties. There have been many other health benefits linked to green tea as well, so this supplement should be a must have.

    Spice your foods with turmeric. Curcumin, the active ingredient in turmeric, has both antiviral and antioxidant properties to help your body ward off any viral infections.

    Ensure you are getting enough vitamin E in your diet. There has been at least one clinical study completed that links adequate vitamin E intake with reduced viral activity. Studies have also shown there may be a link between vitamin E and a reduced duration and severity of flu symptoms.

    Add a whey protein shake or two to your diet. Not only is whey protein a great source of protein and essential amino acids, but it also directly boosts glutathione levels in your bloodstream. Glutathione is a strong antioxidant that directly supports your immune system. Having increased levels of glutathione increases your ability to fight off infections and illness.

    Bedtime Needs To Be Strictly Enforced-Children need more sleep than adults. Make sure your child gets a minimum of eight hours each night, even more; Lack of sleep helps to break down the immune system in a hurry.

    Make healthy meals for everyone in the family-this can be very challenging if you have a picky eater, but don't let your child dictate to you what they'll eat every day-You are not a restaurant...Your are the parent.

    Eat plenty of fruits and vegetables-There are various ways to fix and prepare them. Start learning how to get the most from your fruits and vegetables. Get plenty of phytochemicals into your system with dark green, red and yellow vegetables.

    Play!-Make sure both you and your child get plenty of exercise; this'll help to boost your immune system. Take away the video games and the computer, at least for a little while; get outside to play.

    Drink More Water, Less Juice-Toxins build up and can weaken immunity when there's not enough water in the diet. Sugary drinks can actually dehydrate and increase your child's need for water.

    Sambucol For Kids (www.sambucol.com) consists of black elderberries, which are unsually rich in antioxidants (They help support the immune system to fight viruses). It tastes good (like grape jam or jelly), is very safe and is specially formulated for ages two and up. Elderberry extract syrup, or Sambucol, has been shown by repeated scientific studies to fight standard strains of influenza. As I discuss in a recent article, elderberry has natural compounds-- which are safe for children and even infants-- that appear to reduce the duration of colds and flu by several days. This means Sambucol is a must-have for surviving pandemic flu.

    More importantly, studies of elderberry syrup's efficacy have specifically focused on H5N1 bird flu, one of the core components of the swine flu pandemic's biology. Laboratory trials have confirmed that elderberry extract effectively defeats H5N1 avian flu with up to 99% efficacy. If it has nearly this rate of effectiveness in combating the similar strain of swine flu, Sambucol may prevent fatalities during a swine flu pandemic.

    **Note: Nature's Way was the original manufacturer and still makes this product. They sell the same Original Syrup, and now one more syrup called "Black Elderberry Immune System Syrup" but because of patents, are unable to use the brand name Sambucol anymore.

    Elderberry Syrup Recipe: To make ANY herbal tincture you just fill a glass jar about 1/3 full of dried herb or 1/2 full of fresh herb, add at least 80 PROOF vodka to the top of the jar, or thereabouts, cap, shake, put in a cool dark place for 7-10 days, strain and viola!! herbal tincture. Very easy, folks have been doing this for 100s of years.
    Here is a link to a post with another, more descriptive recipe...post #44

    Vitamin D -- Many Americans, especially young children, are alarmingly deficient in vitamin D. In addition to being absolutely essential for the proper function of the bones and central nervous system, vitamin D plays a critical role in enabling the immune system to successfully defeat viruses of all kinds. One 2006 study hit headlines when it concluded that vitamin D is extremely effective in fighting standard influenza strains.

    A general PDF on Colds and influenza can be found here.


    Bottom line, you can't wait until a flu outbreak or anything else happens close to home to get ready for it. Live right daily, eat healthy and stop buying into the whole sales and marketing hype, treat your body the way you would a fancy Lambourghini...instead of like some second-hand Yugo (I'm not knocking your Yugo...but let's face facts, it's not a Lamboughini, now is it? Even the little mechanic cars in the movie Cars knew class...are you a Ferrari). If you feed your body juk, work it hard and long, skimp on sleep and so forth, you will get sick. No amount of last-minute prevention is going to be of much help to you.

    An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Rather in the same way a penny saved is soon a dollar :o)

    Swine Flu Common Sense


    It's me... under that rock again, here in my cave.

    Here's some information on Swine Flu from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
    Here's the CDC page where they are Investigating Human Outbreaks
    I have truly just heard about this and paid much attention to it. We don't do TV, and as you can see, I'm rarely online these days, either. Cave and Rock living has its advantages really.



    First off, a couple of friends emailed and asked what we are doing in terms of the Swine Flu. LOL...not to make light of it, but at the time, I just laughed and said I have no swine and when we did, they weren't flying. But, honestly, this is just as serious as the SARS pandemic a few years back. It needs to be taken seriously

    If you are a homesteader, health nut or a Prepper, you've been preparing for such as this for a long time. You already know what to do...what you should have been doing all along. It's a serious flu, certainly, but it's still the practical common sense things that help prevent it.

    WASH YOUR HANDS. Use alcohol-based sanitizer, and THEN wash with soap and water. That sanitizer isn't getting into every crack and crevice on your hands, and most likely you aren't even washing properly in the first place. You should learn how to properly wash, and TEACH YOUR CHILDREN how to do it properly as well. Sing 'Happy Birthday' completely through while washing with the hand sanitizer. Then sing it again while you wash with the soap and water. Goodness, folks, look at how most of us wash our hands every day. Would you want your surgeon to wash that haphazardly before he opened you up? It's called common sense, folks. Use a little of it.


    Keep up with the CDC site as far as tracking. Don't trust the mainstream media...they aren't about to start something that might be seen as a "panic" among the populus.

    From the World Health Organization - Mexico apparently had cases under surveillance as early as 18 March 2009

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
    The reason there is growing concern about this at the Centers For Disease Control and the World Health Organization is that this particularly nasty strain is hitting otherwise normal, healthy people - in Mexico those with this illness are sometimes on a respirator within 48-hours of becoming ill. Also, this particular strain is a combination of swine, avian (bird) and human influenza and is a strain that has never before been seen in man or swine - this is something that definitely bears our very close attention.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
    WASHINGTON, April 24 (Reuters) - The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Friday it was too late to contain the swine flu outbreak in the United States.

    CDC acting director Dr. Richard Besser told reporters in a telephone briefing it was likely too late to try to contain the outbreak, by vaccinating, treating or isolating people.

    "There are things that we see that suggest that containment is not very likely," he said.

    Prevention Guidelines from the CDC are at the link.
    You might want to consider stocking up on some Vitamin C, masks (N-95 particulate one), fever reducer (tylenol), gloves, over-the-counter and/or homeopathic flu relief medications, bleach and/or other disinfectants for washing clothing, bedding, mopping floors, cleaning bathrooms.

    This is also a good time to make sure you have your food and water preps in order just in case you find yourself needing to stay at home for an extended period of time. The best 'plan' would be to figure up 3 months worth of your menu and stock at least those items. Don't forget the fun stuff...Jello, snacks, etc.

    Remember any of the past flu outbreaks that made news?

    Health officials have been warning that a new strain of influenza that can pass easily from person to person could spark a pandemic, a global epidemic that could kills tens of millions of people. Experts agree another flu pandemic is overdue.

    Here are some facts about past flu pandemics and pandemic threats:

    * The 1918 Spanish influenza pandemic is the benchmark by which all modern pandemics are measured. Some 20 to 40 percent of the worldwide population became ill and more than 50 million people died. Between September 1918 and April 1919, it killed more than 600,000 people in the United States alone. In a normal flu season, about 36,000 people die in the United States, and 250,000 to 500,000 globally.

    * While the very young and the very old are most at risk with seasonal flu, the 1918 pandemic primarily struck young adults. It disrupted the global economy. Many small businesses, which were unable to unable to operate during the pandemic, went bankrupt.

    * The virus that caused the 1957 Asian flu pandemic was quickly identified, and vaccines were available by August 1957. The elderly had the highest rates of death. The Asian flu killed 2 million people globally, according to the World Health Organization.

    * The 1968 influenza pandemic was first detected in Hong Kong. Those over the age of 65 were most likely to die. It killed an estimated 1 million people globally, according to WHO, making it making the mildest pandemic in the 20th century.

    * In 1976, a strain of swine flu started infecting people in Fort Dix, New Jersey, and worried U.S. health officials because the virus was thought to be related to the 1918 Spanish flu virus. Forty million people were vaccinated but the program was halted after several cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome, a severe and sometimes fatal condition linked to some vaccines, were reported. The virus never moved outside the Fort Dix area.

    * H5N1 avian flu is the most recent pandemic threat. It first surfaced in 1997 and continues to infect humans who have direct contact with chickens. The H5N1 or avian influenza virus does not spread easily from one person to another.

    * Since 2003, H5N1 virus has infected 421 people in 15 countries and killed 257. It has killed or forced the culling of more than 300 million birds in 61 countries in Asia, the Middle East, Africa and Europe.

    * WHO has six pandemic stages. A full-blown pandemic requires sustained, human-to-human spread over many countries of a new and serious virus.

    -- Sources: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; World Health Organization


    Tuesday, April 21, 2009

    The Tightwad Gazette...remember that?

    I bunny trailed while looking up herbal treatments for Mastitis. I don't know that we are dealing with that just yet, but I think that's where we're headed. I am certainly not interested in chemical treatments with my family consuming the milk. Sort of defeats the whole purpose of having the goats to milk in the first place.

    Either way, I strolled here and there and came across a link (could have been from Dana's blog....?) to Like Merchant Ships blog.

    Remember Amy Dacyczyn and The Tightwad Gazette books and newsletters from the 90's? I still have a whole stack of her newsletters from the beginning. A treasure trove for penny pinchers :o) But, I'm sure some folks think now, as they did then...she's way over the top on pinching pennies. She's a freak of some kind. Good ideas, but she takes them way beyond the scope of common sense and decency for families.

    Yeah, and folks don't like Dave Ramsey either. He's too in-your-face when you call and ask a question. LOL...think about it...folks who get irate over his responses aren't really wanting to make life changes and buuild a future. They want to keep all their toys and still play as though they have money to burn. Heaven forbid someone tell them they can't keep the toys. You don't get the cake and get time to eat it, you know.

    Hands-down, Dave Ramsey...and Amy Dacyczyn...have hit the nail square on the head with families and budgeting and saving money. As I said in an earlier post...I don't want to be lumped in with 90% of the world. I want to be different. I like being weird :o) Weird moves me to be debt-free. Weird motivates my every daily trek on the homestead. Weird keeps my using cash only and not falling for the credit card trap that is sucking the life and futures out of that 90% group. Weird is a good thing. There's a prettier view on this side of the fence. The grass isn't only greener, it's thicker and more lush, too.

    Here is an article to share:

    'Tightwad Gazette' author drove frugality in the 1990s but now Amy Dacyczyn worries about massive U.S. debt

    Posted by Paula Gardner | Michigan Business Review March 02, 2009 21:24PM


    Paula Gardner is editor of Michigan Business Review in Ann Arbor, Oakland and Tri-Cities.

    Amy Dacyczyn may still call herself a housewife from Maine as part of her disclaimer that "I'm not an economic expert," but Monday's stock market plunge to under 6,800 points pushed me to call the woman who launched a national frugality movement.

    As the editor of "The Tightwad Gazette," Dacyczyn spent the early 1990s promoting thrift as a viable alternative lifestyle to over 100,000 newsletter readers and hundreds of thousands more who read the compilation books.

    She may have retired in 1996, but that doesn't stop her advice from resonating today - a time when the economy is imploding and both businesses and consumers are retrenching.

    So, I figured as I dialed her number, I can't be her only fan who wonders: What on earth can she be thinking right now?

    Moreover, what should Americans think, I asked, when the country seems to demand higher consumer spending to launch us into economic recovery - yet spending less, by necessity or caution, is ruling so many of our wallets?

    "I believe that what's best for the economy is that every individual and individual family unit is in the best financial health possible," Dacyczyn said.

    In "The Tightwad Gazette," Dacyczyn touted money-savers like homemade popsicles from leftover grape jelly and reusing aluminum foil that earned her a reputation as "too extreme" among some non-readers.

    But the themes in the newsletter have an enduring richness that go beyond simple tips. Articles researched cheapest options - to the penny - for breakfast foods, water consumption, even making popcorn. They showed readers how taking the time to figure out the problem would yield both the solution and the inspiration to apply the skill to another problem set. That's why her fan base remains strong.

    And the articles encouraged values like recycling, giving gifts from the heart, making efficient uses of resources (both time and money) all the while urging all readers to live well under their means.

    Today's problem, Dacyczyn said, seems to be part of a cycle that goes back to the Reagan era when Americans also were urged to spend their way to prosperity.

    "It sounded backward to me," she said. "... We can't be a financially healthy country if this debt load that we've had continues."

    And the stock market fall is just another sign that something needs to change.

    "Everyone over spent ... what we're seeing right now is just a big correction," she said. "We're probably seeing an overcorrection.

    "And a lot of the rhetoric from politicians is not very helpful. It's helping to drive the panic."

    Dacyczyn paused to note again that she's not an economist. She's not advocating that people turn entirely self-sufficient: "I don't think that's good for the economy at large."

    Her spending values still align with buying locally or buying American-made products.

    "If I can spend locally, I will because I understand that my neighbors are hurting," she said.

    Yet today's pain may not result in lasting changes to how Americans consume. We're seeing a wave of media coverage that urges frugal choices; but we're also seeing the government expand its own debt and, along with it, the expectation that we'll eventually get to spend more and freely when this all wears off.

    "Americans are pulling back," she said. "They're shocked right now. But I don't know if people will ever become more financially responsible."

    It's the individuals who made bad financial choices causing a collective problem of people being overextended on mortgages, she said. And that element of choice drove much of the mortgage meltdown, she says.

    "I have little patience with people who talked about predatory lending," she said. "No one put a gun to their head (for a bad mortgage)... People took out a second mortgage, spent the money on consumer goods, and then when the housing market collapsed, they ended up upside down in their mortgage."

    The spending cycles couldn't last: "We've been overextended for a long time."

    Now spending turns to the government. What does she think about the bailouts?

    "Government intervention is probably not helpful," she said.

    Propping up already-inflated housing prices won't let them come to a more realistic level, she said. And she's concerned that in the long-run, that won't solve the problem - particularly when the government steps in on individual mortgages.

    She also questions the automotive bailout. Her objection centers on the pay scale for U.S. workers and how it sets U.S. automakers at a competitive disadvantage. "They want (the government) to support automakers at this inflated pay scale."
    This economic meltdown marks a turning point for Dacyczyn, because she's getting very few media calls. In the past, she said, "I could gauge the health of the economy by the number of phone calls I got ... people thought, 'Now's the time for people to get into saving money.

    "I think people should do that all the time."

    Because, she points out, if everyone had behaved in a financially responsible way, by showing spending discipline, "We wouldn't be here right now."

    That attitude means that, like in her 1990s article "Whoopee, we can spend again!" the nation may just ride out the recession by spending less, then turn on the shopping faucet when the economy improves.

    Which brings her back to her fundamental point: Americans need to spend less than they earn. And by maintaining a consistent lifestyle, they'll build the financial stability to withstand downturns - while, it's likely, re-setting lifestyle expectations to what an income can support.

    "Families that spend a lot in good times, then when their incomes go down, there's a constant expansion and contraction of a budget - it's very stressful on a family," she said.

    "It's just better to always live significantly beneath your means at on a very constant level. Then when there's an economic downturn, it doesn't really change anything."

    The Dacyczyn family's spending was very public during the newsletter years. Their habits have not changed much, even as her children prepare for college and weddings. We talked as her husband, Jim, prepared a dinner of scratch macaroni and cheese, one of their favorite low-cost meals.

    The family closed off part of their large farmhouse to save heating oil this winter. They've stopped tracking the family food expenses, but still follow their "pantry principle" and don't splurge on steaks and other expensive food. They don't indulge in new clothing, but do have an $8 per month Netflix account, aiming for fast turnaround so they get the per-movie price below $1.

    At one point, Dacyczyn said that people probably aren't ready to go "hard core." What exactly does that mean to her today? Trash picking. Gardening in a major way. Wearing second-hand clothes.

    "Most people think they're thrifty, but they're probably not," she said. "... They do some things, ... and because they clip coupons, in their mind they're thrifty. But it's not in a holistic way through their whole budget."

    Dacyczyn said her needs are simple: "As long as I'm warm and have food, I'm good."

    She doesn't want to sound callous or flip. She knows she's talking from rural Maine, while other parts of the country feel the recession more acutely.

    But she also thinks that some of the things that people mourn as lost - the ability to buy steak, for example, over hamburger - simply aren't important on a bigger life scale.

    "It's hard to be cold. It's hard to be hungry. It's hard if your vehicle is unreliable," she said. "But if we have all of the basic things met, life is OK."

    The recession might let people "rediscover what's already under their noses," she said.

    Her family enjoys doing jigsaw puzzles together. She recently read some old books passed down through the family. She enjoys finding new foods to cook. She's using fabric scraps to sew baby doll quilts for future grandchildren. The entire family recently got into serving daughter Becca and her fiance a candlelit Valentine's Day dinner at home.

    "There are a lot of things you can do that are fun and interesting and rich that don't cost a lot of money," Dacyczyn said. "That would be fun for people to rediscover."

    "... For me, it's fun to take money out of the equation. That's when you invent new things."

    She's also watching her own investments and hoping that even more significant value drops won't have to force the family to re-think where daughter Laura goes to college next year.

    And she's spending time considering how today's economy will impact the future. She's now hearing Dave Ramsey's message as he preaches the frugal message to national audiences. And she's been reading John Stossel's blog, where headlines like "Real Jobs Create Wealth" catch her attention.

    "We're going to go through some pain," she said. "I don't know if there's any way around it."

    Eventually, she said, spending will increase. That's when we'll see if Americans internalize any of the messages about balancing spending against income.

    "One potential scenario is that we go through a long rebuilding process and people ... become more careful with their money again," Dacyczyn said. "But I don't think that'll happen."

    Some miscellaneous pictures

    Just some pictures from schooling. These are some of the sheets we laminated for the extra workboxes. Everyone wanted to work on some today -- ahhh, the "newness" factor ;o)

    Jacob hates writing. He doesn't like printing letters at all. Hates copywork and anything to do with pencils and paper and lettering. He used to enjoy it a bit more, but after being burned, he's just not interested at all now. I think part of it is because at first he couldn't write. He lost a lot of 'skill' last year and is still a bit discouraged by it all.


    Abigail and KatiAnne are just doing routine copywork...letttering, copying pages, etc. We laminated some of the youngers' 2nd grade school paper. That's what they grabbed...it's that newness factor...
    Even Emily had fun...although following the maze wasn't exactly her skill, she had fun drawing with the erasable markers ;o)



    This is our turtle. He used to be about the size of a silver dollar, fitting in the cup holder of the van console nicely.


    Now, he is around 3 or 4 years old and has grown out of 2 aquariums. He needs a larger one now, but 10 gal. is what I have currently.
    He's out in the front yard for his photo shoot...with several watchful cats lingering off to the sidelines, waiting to see if we forget him out there.


    We have no idea what he/she is. Maybe a slider? He has the similar markings and coloration, plus those red bars behind his eyes...but we aren't sure at all. He's just a turtle that lives on the island in the house. Do you know what he is?

    Go Momma, Go Momma...

    ....go Momma to the HOUSE, is more like it!

    Let's set some ground rules for this post....
    Nature-loving animal activists need comment.

    Yes, I know there are snakes in this world considered a good thing. Some are even desired on a homestead.

    I'm sorry to offend anyone. Really, I am.

    I'm all city-girl when it comes to snakes. Uptight, white bread, suburban city-girl.

    The only 'good' snake in my eyes is one that is
    A) on someone else's property, the farther from mine, the better; or
    B) dead, cut into parts, disposed of as quickly as possible from my eye sight.

    I don't like snakes. They give me the creeps clean through to my bones. I don't like them under things when I am not expecting them, I don't like them crawling along my yard, I don't like them in my chicken coop...

    I just plain don't like them. Don't know what Eve saw in that one...eewwww...just makes my skin crawl!

    The photo isn't the best quality, partly due to being my cell phone, but mostly due to the fact I was shaking enough to churn milk while trying to take the picture :o( I'm still creeping out and it's been a good half hour now. Oh man I don't like snakes.

    Ok, yes, I shot the snake. Perhaps overkill (not that I think you can overkill a snake...) considering he wasn't but a foot long. Still, that's a 22 hole in his side there. Wasn't my best shooting I suppose, but it did the job and that's all I needed. I wouldn't have minded the 410, but they brought the panicky momma the 22 instead.

    He is just a Kingsnake, you say. Small and harmless.

    Yes.

    He was.

    He's a cat toy now.

    Well, part of him is a cat toy. The other part is tossed into the timber away from the rest of its body.

    I had chores to tend outside. I was going to finish trim mowing around the barn. Now? Well, I'm sure there are enough tasks to keep me occupied INside the house. Mowing is rather over-rated, I believe. And the barn...well, who's to say those taller weeds aren't actually helping the barn stand tall and strong? I say they are.

    Monday, April 20, 2009

    Monday's Here and There's Work To Do...

    Yesterday it stormed pretty good. I was just about dried out here, but we're back to floating on the lazy river as it were. We can float to the barn, float to the mailbox, float to the chicken coop.

    ::sigh:::

    The joys of springtime.

    The chicks are doing great in their brooder. I'll try to remember to get some pictures of them today. The puppies are waiting to be introduced around the homestead. Every time we open the door out there, they come tumbling out. Lady, their momma, seems interested in letting them check out the world outside barn now, so maybe today we'll let them take a stroll. The room they are in is set up where they can't just come and go as they please, so we are in-charge of their adventures. I need to find somewhere else to set them up I guess.

    The goats are doing well. We have built them up to a good amount of milk daily now. This morning's milking gave 6#! I'm totally tickled. Neither seems very interested in eating their grain while milking, and honestly, they aren't eating the amounts they should just yet, but we''ll get there. I know they shouldn't be left to feed their own grain, but in our defense, they are only getting about 5# between the two of them in a day, and what we've had to do is simply leave their feed bucket in there after evening milking. They eat it all by morning. I'm hoping they will come to the idea that eating while milking is the way to go.

    That and getting an interest in the milkstand. Leah will jump right up there, happy and content to spoke her face into the grain bucket she refuses to eat, and stand there to be milked. Happy New Year, however, is another story altogether. She takes encouragement to get on the milkstand. Lots of it. We basically have to lift her up there. She's a bit of a nervous nelly with milking and likes to bump the bucket the whole time. We haven't resorted to a hobble just yet, because I'm not losing any milk, but she might need it. Right now, we are simply working on their good manners and hoping they have a bit of common sense to them :o) Not that I have that sort of experience with Nubians :o) Ours back north were rather like Divas!

    This lovely lady is Happy New Year: She's definitely a heavy milker. She doesn't fill up much at all on her right side and always looks very lopsided with such a huge and full left side, but I can live with that :o)

    This pretty young lady here with her doeling is Leah. She's not as large as Happy, but has a great looking bag and is a very even milker.

    We were blessed by a neighbor yesterday with a beautiful 2 year old Great Pyrnese. Her name is Cotton. We're hopeful she will take an interest in Buddy...the 3 year old Great Pyr we already have :o) Maybe next year we'll have some Great Pyr puffballs to sell :o)

    Well...off to laminate some sheets for schooling tubs. I was reading Debi's plan and following some links for Workboxes. While I definitely don't think this is something I will use for the children actually doing school work and text work, I can see great potential here with the youngers just coming into schooling. David and Emily need something to occupy them while we school with the middles, and I like them to learn something along the way, not just use up time. I am laminating some sheets for them to work on, and wwe will do a couple box ideas for the middles for free activities related to something from our school plan.

    I don't see this working for our regular school time at all, but apparently many other moms have made it work. I am very much a seat-work and discipline trainer here. There's no reason a child cna't learn to sit for their school work, at least not here. Even Wild Child sits for his lessons. For us, it's a discipline and character training issue. Children need structure in their day. They are always going to have structure, and most likely, by others...when they begin working, they are not in charge of how their day goes, when they arrive, or go home, how they do what they are told to do, etc. Even McDonald's is structured :o) Children need to learn to accomplish their goals within a time frame, and most often this time frame will be set up by someone else. That's just life for 90% of the world.

    Not that I want to be part of 90% of the world, mind you. It's just how things are. Our free activities, craft projects, etc. come after the assigned schooling of the day is completed. Math and English lessons are mainly textbook. History and Science have a lot of lee-way for fun and creatvity. Hey, I'd like to spend my day doing fun stuff too, but that's just not how homesteading works :o) I've got goats to milk now, animals to tend, a garden to plant or we'll be eating those critters come winter when the pantry is bare but for cobwebs! I'd love to sit and crochet, or sew just for the sake of sewing, but instead I make sure I find pleasure and joy in the tasks that I *have* to do...and once completed, I am treated to the fun things I would rather do :o)

    I suppose some would call that a sort of bribery for getting school work done. Perhaps it is. Kind of like a paycheck is bribery for the work week being over :o)

    Here are some other bloggers using Workboxes:
    My Life and Homeschooling
    Musings Along The Way
    Small Things With Great Love
    Joyful Mother of Six

    As I said, the concept sounds like a great one and I certainly can put it to work here in part. maybe you can find some useful thoughts for your own homeschooling as well.

    Jer.6:16

    Jeremiah 6:16
    Thus saith the LORD, Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls.

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