Three Goals and Three Skills for 2021

Listening today to Jack Spirko's episode of Miyagi Mornings, his short morning videos that he does during the week, he posed the question "what three goals do you have, and what three skills would you like to develop in 2021?" I figured that'd give me a good prompt to write on, and a good way to give him an answer on another decentralized platform.

I think this is a good idea, as I need to be doing a better job of setting my intentions.

My goals and skills in this list will be in line with the things I've already been doing. As Jack said, it's easier to continue in a vein you're working in than it is to switch gears entirely. At this point, I think it's very late to be branching out and going deep in new things. Just a hunch. So as I continue on my path, I'm deciding to deepen what I've started.

Three goals for 2020:

  1. Raise more meat to eat.
  2. Establish a blackberry patch.
  3. Preserve more harvest.

Three skills to develop for 2021

  1. Rabbit processing.
  2. Active composting.
  3. Canning.

As you can see, those all go together and running line with my main direction over the last few years. Canning is something that has been on my mind since we lost all of our frozen green beans from last year's garden. We lost power while we were living at my parents during the home repairs, and we lost some groceries. Not a lot, but some. Since I'll be growing on more space this year, I'd like to make good use of that with canning and preserving my harvest. The rabbits are going to start being a significant source of food for me. With three does, and infrastructure and bloodlines that can facilitate fast and easy scaling, this may end up being one of those things where I just eat rabbits and eggs as my exclusive meat sources, but we'll see. Daddy loves some bacon. The composting and berry patch are simply more effective and involved processes than I've used before. I've got blackberries, and I've been making good use of my rabbit poo, but now that I have such an enormous source of fresh local wood chips, I want to start seeing how far I can push this fertility operation.

Did I make a post about my wood chips? I don't think I did. I got a HUGE load from a crew that was working in my neighborhood last week, they dropped me a pile bigger than my truck! So now I've offered some to all my friends and started mulching my beds with that, rather than using the ply wood. Now I can use the ply wood to expand my rabbitry, I've got some plans for that that I'll be running here soon.

signal20210114172803.jpg

It's not a great picture, but that pile is nearly a meter tall, and maybe two meters wide by six or so meters long. Plenty of carbon, and I've been using it well.

I might actually prep another bed or two since I have enough mulch now... Maybe try some corn again this year. Or maybe I'm getting ahead of myself, I'll do a little thinking on it, cause I'd like to have a kick ass year and not have to worry about overdoing it. Whatever, I'm rambling, so I'll call it a wrap for today.

Do you have any specific goals or skills you're developing in 2021? Maybe Jack's episode from this morning can give you some inspiration too.

Love from Texas

Nate 💚

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Do you have any specific goals or skills you're developing in 2021?

Goals:

  1. Finish at least one abstract music visualizer video piece per week.
  2. Pace my creative work/releases more sustainably instead of posting something the instant it's "completed."
  3. Continuing to figure out how all hobbies/skills can become integrated into a lifestyle that makes me feel genuinely excited about life.

Skills:

  1. Video-editing in Final Cut Pro
  2. Foreign language studies (probably Tagalog since I recently made many Filipino friends)
  3. Automation of Advertising/Communications systems for corporate clients.

Just a few things I can think of off the top of my head. I envy your focus on homesteading/the natural world! That's also a HUGE goal: move out of the suburban apartment I currently live in and relocate somewhere I can be more in touch with the natural world again. I miss it sooooo much!

Peace and prosperity to you Nate (also from Texas haha)

Dan/@d-pend

Oh cool, another Texan! Whereabouts?

McKinney (Dallas area.) You?

Decatur, just west of Denton!

Basically reiterating what we chatted about, but this mulch is a great excuse and a cover for a takeover of the front yard! Cheers mate!

I'm using it first to make more efficient use of the back yard. A lot the garden space I used last year, I'm moving to the food forest. I haven't been using that space well.

I really support self-sufficiency in food! I am very excited to see your post here.

Even better than self sufficiency, I'm part of an intentional community that's working on community sufficiency in food. 💚

Do you garden?

I'm really curious to know more about, the food sufficiency, community you are a part of.
Yes, I live off the ground, I just love working with soil and I also forage the forests a lot. I think it's very important to get connected with your food on an energy level.

 3 years ago  

That's a good one - looking at your goal ( or intentions as you use) and also the skills that possibly would help you reach those goals.

Love seeing your movement to more self sufficiency unfold!

Now that i am retired I'm looking to make my land as productive as i can and I'm developing a new garden plot (on top of the other 6 plots I already have). While I'm doing that I'm offer others to work with me and together we can develop our gardens, having a gardening mentoring program. I'll be starting to post about that soon.

Happy growing!

That's a big pile of wood chips!

Your post reminds me to set a few goals and skills I want to learn this year as well, I have plenty, but failing one in December made me realize I should use a different approach this year. Thanks for the reminder :)


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