Cooperating Across Generations
Cooperating Across the Generations January 29, 2013 Tags: family farming, parenting Farming should be about making way for the next generation, as well as serving the needs of the present. If there’s a romantic image that tugs at our heart strings as much as the thought of homegrown tomatoes, it’s the multi-generational family farm. In […]
The Price of Corn
This past weekend I made a trek out to central Wisconsin to speak at the state’s annual grazing conference, which typically draws farmers from all over the Midwest. This was the second time I’ve been invited to join these folks, and I remembered it fondly from back in 2009, when the conference center was packed, […]
A Radical Homemaker’s Take on Investing
A Radical Homemaker’s Take on Investing January 15, 2013 Tags: gainful unemployment, radical homemaking, Tuesday Post Bob’s mandolin: Our idea of a “sound investment.” I received a phone call recently from someone in the media, who introduced himself by way of exclaiming “Is it true that you have a family of four and live on […]
Getting Saucy: Stretching Your Meat Budget with Gravies and Reductions
By Shannon Hayes I’m not sure where it all started. Maybe it was back during the Norman Conquest. But no matter how you look at, in spite of their relative cooperation and neighborliness since the Crimean war, the French and the English still have a major long- running dispute: the best way to dress a […]
12 Books for the Holidays
With Christmas right around the corner, a few of you may be looking for some possible gift ideas, while others of you might be looking for some good suggestions for library books to check out during your holiday break. The real cheap skates among you may even be looking for library book suggestions that you […]
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