If it was a Thursday morning and I was at home, I could get the neighbours bins in as well as my own.
Can’t have standards slipping even in the face of thermonuclear death.
That is *so* impressive! What length of time does that cover, Adjee, if I may be so awful as to ask?Adjee wrote: ↑Mon Sep 15, 2025 7:40 pm Started slaughtering the surplus goats and various birds to get down to next years required breed groups. Still harvesting from the field and preserving (made a large batch of tomato and chili paste today). Started cutting and quartering the winter firewood. Bred some rabbits and set a few of the incubators going for the last time this year (Ducks for canning, Chickens for replacement layers and canning, Turkeys for egg production and meat). Removed the last frames of honey from the hives and started feeding the bees along with ordering the winter food slabs and cutting and preparing the winter insulation for them. Finally put the posts in the ground to attach the snow netting to as and when required over winter. Roll on winter, I need a break!
Not really impressive (but thanks for saying so!), just our way of living, if you do not do it yourself, plan and prepare months and years ahead you go hungry and get cold as we live on what we produce and procure by bartering and selling any surplus. The tasks listed are for this week though most are now done except the slaughtering and wood which are on going. The slaughtering as all the meat is left to rest (not sure if that is the right word) for a minimum of 24 hours before butchering then we have to preserve it and the wood as after quartering I move it from its outside location and stack it inside the barn next to the house to be accessible when the snows come.