Amish Men Help Raise the Rafters :: Day 3 02/10/2012
A week later on Friday, October 8, 2010, a group of Amish men from the community over in Unity, Maine came over to lend us a hand in getting all our rafters up into place. Andrew was planning on using a chainsaw wench to hoist the rafters (these are rafters that he milled out himself with the chainsaw mill, by the way) up onto the ridge pole. However, these Amish men said forget that. We'll just pull them up by hand, so that's what they did. If you feel like all you're looking at is pulling, tugging, and more pulling, that's because it's all they did the whole entire day....pull, tug, and pull again. The kiddos thought this was great fun. They'd ruuuuun from one side, and when that rafter was up, they'd all ruuuuuun to the other side....ready to go again! I had the fun task of having to feed all these hungry men...and kiddos myself on this day. No help from all my wonderful hostesses like I had for the Harvest Party....and in the tiny cramped camper no less. But it all worked out fine and by evening, all the rafters for our roof were silhouetted against another beautiful Fall sunset. Once again we were so incredibly grateful for all the help we received in bringing our log home project along. It was such a great feeling to get to this point! Add Comment Roof Raising & Harvest Party :: Day 2 02/10/2012
This is a slideshow of Day 2, Sunday, October 3, 2010, of our Harvest Party & Roof Raising Weekend. We were camping out in the camper while some of the kiddos slept in tents. Sunday was a bit overcast and cool but by the evening ,we saw our new roof line silhouetted against a beautiful Fall sunset! This was very exciting. We greatly appreciated the fantastic turn-out we had for our little event....not only the muscle-power but the wonderful support, teamwork, and encouragement. We also had a delicious spread with homemade, farm fresh soups, sandwiches, rolls, pickles, and preserves....and of course desserts! Andrew also managed to get one of our huge turkeys butchered and smoked in his rigged-up fridge smoker before the party. The meat came out unbelievably tasty. Stay tuned for Day 3, the following Friday, when some Amish men lend us a hand in getting all those massive rafters up in a day! In Ocober of 2010, we had our first Harvest Party and Roof Raising for the log home we were building ourselves on our 40 acres in Maine. The above is a slide show on Day 1, Saturday, October 2. It took much longer than anticipated to hoist the ridge pole into place...but when it's a ridge pole of those proportions and using only pulleys and man-power, I guess that's to be expected. Actually gettinng a ridge pole up by hand in one day is doing pretty good. Stay tuned for Day 2. The New Settlers 04/02/2010
What I want to know is this: Where are these people today? They must be in their 50's or 60's by now. Did they disband? Are there still some surviving 'settlements' tucked away somewhere? Did they sell out? Did they somehow mix or morph into the generic 'green' movement that's happening today? If anyone has some insights here, please come forward. We settlers of the next generations need you! ![]() The excerpt below is taken from a book we checked out from the library, Home Work: Handbuilt Shelter by Lloyd Kahn. The New Settlers of New Mexico During the cultural revolution of the '60's, many young people with inquiring minds and adventurous spirit set out to create new lives in rural areas of America. New Mexico, with its open spaces, cheap land, and sparse population, drew thousands of new settlers. It was a time of optimism, faith, and yes - drugs - but also a lot of hard work building and repairing adobe houses, raising children, tending animals, and living communally in the psychedelic years. Irwin Klein was a photographer from NY who shot black and white photos with a Leica during five visits of about three months each to NM from 1966-71. he was working on a book he called The New Settlers of New M.exico. Irwin died a tragic death in 1974. Here are excerpts from the introduction to Irwin's book, along with his beautiful photos. This will bring tears to the eyes of many who were there in those years, a time before the harsh realities of life intruded on youthful idealism and gentle optimism. Though some photographs were shot on communes, most of them are of people living alone, in couples, families, or small groups in the little Spanish-American towns in the backcountry. It is sometimes hard to distinguish between a group of friends who share certain resources and spend a lot of time together and a commune, but I think that a commune has to have a sense of consciously shared responsibilities and probably, a certain formal structure. Most of my subjects live in what I would call settlements rather than communes. Many of these people are children of the urban middle class who have abandoned the drug ghettos of large cities, though some come from rural backgrounds. There are dropouts from the universities and relatively ‘straight’ walks of life and a few old beatniks. As I explored the evolving situations, certain patterns and themes unfolded. There seemed to be a rite of passage from innocence to experience, and a development away from the image of the hippie toward older American archetypes like the pioneer and the independent yeoman farmer. Some might look upon this as just a photo collection of hippies. While it’s true that the pictures reflect the style and décor of a particular moment which is already passing, what interested me more was that the adventure I depict is part of a timeless movement, the perennial attempt of human beings to renew the pattern of their lives. My subjects are trying, with varying degrees of seriousness, to develop a viable way of life outside our urban technological complex, drawing whatever resources they can muster from our common past and disintegrating culture. [Italics mine] My own role was as much that of a participant as an observer. I came to NM with much the same motives as the people I photographed. In almost every case a certain bond of friendship or intimacy was established before I began working. The New Settlers is part family album, part document, part myth. I consider it as much a collective expression as my own work. [Perhaps these are the first contemporary Green Pioneers!] Victory Over NAIS! 02/12/2010
From the Farm and Ranch Freedom Alliance: The USDA has announced that it is dropping NAIS! 2/5/2010 This is a major victory for the grassroots!! Thank you to the thousands of people who called, wrote, organized meetings, and more. Dozens of organizations, from across the country and the full range of the political spectrum, worked together on this common cause. And we succeeded in making our voices heard. USDA has stated that it is refocusing its efforts on “a new, flexible framework” that will apply only to animals moved in interstate commerce and encourage the use of “lower-cost” technology. During today’s conference call with USDA, I asked whether the agency would continue using federal funding to pressure states to adopt the program through cooperative agreements. In response, Secretary Vilsack stated that USDA has gotten a “failing grade” on NAIS and that he does NOT intend to try to implement it through the back door. You can read more details from USDA at: http://www.aphis.usda.gov/publications/animal_health/content/printable_version/faq_traceability.pdf We still have more work in front of us. As USDA develops its new framework, we must be involved and vocal, so that agribusiness does not develop yet another high-tech, big-industry boondoggle. We must be active at the state level to ensure that the state agencies do not implement unnecessary and burdensome rules. And we must work to roll back the unfair requirements that have already been implemented in Wisconsin and Michigan. Ultimately, it is up to us – as animal owners, homesteaders, farmers, ranchers, and consumers -- to build a positive vision for our farms and our food. Thank you all! Support Our Work Please help us be a strong voice for independent agriculture by joining or donating here And more from OCA: Victory of the Week USDA Drops "Big Brother" National Animal ID Program Under pressure from small farmers and organic consumers, the US Department of Agriculture announced on February 5, 2010, that it is suspending its controversial National Animal Identification System (NAIS) and offering a new approach to tracking animal disease and food contamination. This is a major victory for the Organic Consumers Association, our allies, and organic farmers and ranchers, who have complained that the USDA's goal of tagging every farm animal in country wouldn't do anything to prevent disease, would be unnecessary and expensive for small and organic farmers, and couldn't be enforced without violations of privacy and religion. Already, the implementation of NAIS in Wisconsin has resulted in an Amish farmer and a small-scale cattle rancher being charged and fined for not registering, and in Michigan a cattle farmer's herd was put under quarantine and forcibly tagged when he wouldn't submit to the state's mandatory NAIS program. Go to OCA's No NAIS campaign page for more information | " Quote "Opportunity is missed by most people because it's dressed in overalls and looks like work.
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