Gardening
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Time-proven tools, like this broadfork, will help you get your garden growing. Available at Lehmans.com[/caption]
Start small so you can figure out your challenges, whether it’s soil, pests, or climate. As you learn, you can expand your growing space. There’s nothing more satisfying than walking into a huge garden and picking dinner fresh from your own labors. Once a garden space is plowed, the vast majority of work can be done with the simplest of tools: rakes, forks, shovels, hoes, and the immensely useful hand weeder. (Don’t forget gloves!)
Raising Chickens
Chickens need a coop and perhaps a pen, but unlike larger livestock they don’t require heavy fencing or strong infrastructure, making them excellent beginning livestock. Make sure they have a feeder and a waterer, and they’ll reward you with fresh hen fruit and endless entertainment. There’s nothing more soothing than watching a flock of chickens.
Canning
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Find all the canning supplies you need at Lehmans.com[/caption]
Arguably the most versatile and useful food preservation skill, canning (both water-bath and pressure canning) allows you to preserve your garden’s bounty or take advantage of you-pick opportunities. Once you own the tools (such as a pressure canner and water bath pots), canning can be done almost free for many years. Jars, lids, a few accessories, a good reference book, a little skill – and you’re guaranteed shelves full of beautiful, gleaming jars of food.
With the holidays coming up, what better way to gift a family member than with tools for homesteading? The gift of self-sufficiency and independence is a gift that keeps on giving – for life.
Note: First posted in November 2018.
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