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Old 07-30-2012, 12:54 AM
 
Location: The end of the road Alaska
860 posts, read 2,056,836 times
Reputation: 1768

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Hmm, I'd miss a few things but I think I'd be fine. At present, literally all my vegetables come from my garden or gathered in the wild, I harvest all my own meat (well, now I have grandsons big enough to do that for me), I subsistance fish for all my salmon & halibut ( I just took the last of 6 cases smoked sockeye out of the canner). I have great friends who bring all the crab & shrimp I can use but if they quit I have my own pots. I harvest and use nothing but wild medicines & creams. I always tan my deer hides (and anyone elses who'll give them to me) , sew my own furs, raise my own chickens. I make my own wine from wild berries, beer from bulk grains, and make enough wild berry juice to last the year, still have the same sourdough starter given to me in '82 for bread.
I'd miss spices, dried grains, powdered milk & such once the supply runs out but that'd take a long time.
But I gotta tell you, it's a full time job and a half livin' easy.
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Old 07-31-2012, 12:12 AM
 
Location: Kasilof, Ak/NCa
339 posts, read 588,665 times
Reputation: 208
Makin me hungry, Gramma. I grow most of my own spices. Would miss Cocoa. Haven't managed to grow that yet.
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Old 07-31-2012, 10:13 AM
 
Location: The end of the road Alaska
860 posts, read 2,056,836 times
Reputation: 1768
Yeah, hot chocolate and warm brownies would sure be missed come winter time!
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Old 07-31-2012, 11:22 AM
 
Location: Florida
1,329 posts, read 2,944,830 times
Reputation: 631
Quote:
Originally Posted by GrammasCabin View Post
Hmm, I'd miss a few things but I think I'd be fine. At present, literally all my vegetables come from my garden or gathered in the wild, I harvest all my own meat (well, now I have grandsons big enough to do that for me), I subsistance fish for all my salmon & halibut ( I just took the last of 6 cases smoked sockeye out of the canner). I have great friends who bring all the crab & shrimp I can use but if they quit I have my own pots. I harvest and use nothing but wild medicines & creams. I always tan my deer hides (and anyone elses who'll give them to me) , sew my own furs, raise my own chickens. I make my own wine from wild berries, beer from bulk grains, and make enough wild berry juice to last the year, still have the same sourdough starter given to me in '82 for bread.
I'd miss spices, dried grains, powdered milk & such once the supply runs out but that'd take a long time.
But I gotta tell you, it's a full time job and a half livin' easy.
But I could not imagine a more rewarding life. This would have been my choice for life if I were younger. You live a lost art, one of self sufficiency, and certainly have my admiration (and more than just a bit of jealously )!
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Old 08-01-2012, 01:12 AM
 
Location: The end of the road Alaska
860 posts, read 2,056,836 times
Reputation: 1768
Quote:
Originally Posted by lyoness View Post
But I could not imagine a more rewarding life. This would have been my choice for life if I were younger. You live a lost art, one of self sufficiency, and certainly have my admiration (and more than just a bit of jealously )!
Trust me, there times I wish I could just crank up the thermostat instead of heading out in the wind, rain and snow for firewood or head to the nearest burger joint when I'm too tired to cook a real meal. I'm just too independent to live by someone elses clock for a paycheck, no talent involved. Younger sounds good.
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Old 08-01-2012, 02:44 AM
 
Location: Ostend,Belgium....
8,827 posts, read 7,330,462 times
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I love reading your post, GrammasCabin, I wish now that I had tried such a selfsufficient life years ago ..now I could never even start it...and to think most of my healthproblems are due to stress from years of rat race..
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Old 08-18-2012, 12:49 AM
 
Location: Kasilof, Ak/NCa
339 posts, read 588,665 times
Reputation: 208
What happened to this thread? Let's bring it back to life. Maybe drift it towards what you do to live off the land. You know how we prepare for winter, gardens etc. I don't know but this was an interesting thread so let's get it up again
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Old 08-18-2012, 11:21 PM
ZBs
 
6 posts, read 11,649 times
Reputation: 16
Assuming the apocalypse affected and prevented travel to other places, the simplest thing to do would be hunt your neighbors as soon as possible for meat and to remove competition and threats. Anchorage only has 2 days of food at any given time; it would be chaos. After hunting your neighbors, you'd get to stockpile all of their food and weapons. After that, eat moose.

It's possible.
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Old 08-18-2012, 11:54 PM
 
26,639 posts, read 36,737,386 times
Reputation: 29911
Quote:
Originally Posted by ZBs View Post
Assuming the apocalypse affected and prevented travel to other places, the simplest thing to do would be hunt your neighbors as soon as possible for meat and to remove competition and threats. Anchorage only has 2 days of food at any given time; it would be chaos. After hunting your neighbors, you'd get to stockpile all of their food and weapons. After that, eat moose.

It's possible.
I rarely look at recent replies on this thread even though I'm the one who created it.

However, this was not meant to be Anchorage-specific, but rather asked of those who lived in rural/bush areas of the state.

Alaska is not synonymous with Anchorage.
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Old 08-19-2012, 03:20 AM
 
Location: interior Alaska
6,895 posts, read 5,865,819 times
Reputation: 23410
The plot of land I live on is pretty arid and rocky. There are a few berries and edible plants, but not enough to live off of. Maybe enough to stave off scurvy...enough animals come though that a person could probably get sufficient calories if they were lucky, and if people weren't hunting the surrounding land heavily. It's definitely apparent why the people who lived here earlier in history were mostly nomadic and lived in fairly small groups
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