Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Lizzy Mellady's avatar

When we moved from New Mexico to Maine a few years back we brought thousands of pounds of meat with us that we had raised. For the next year we slowly ate the meat imbibed with our previous home's energy. As the next growing season came to a close and we harvested meat from our new home, we slowly weaned off the meat we had brought as we wittled away at our stores. It was such a beautiful experience. I chose to move but still missed my old home dearly. I got to bring a part of her with me and she helped me grieve and transition in my new surroundings until one day I only had nourishment infused with the qualities of my new farm. I too eat mostly from my own land and I too feel the dissonance eating something from afar fills me with. Especially with meat. It feels exponentially wrong to me to eat an animal I don't know. Its such an intimate thing to take in another's flesh and make it your own. Eating is more intimate than sex in some ways and eating faceless meat feels similar to one a night stand at best or prostitution at its worst. To lovingly prepare a meal with the body of a beloved beast I helped usher into the world, then tended to with such devotion and then helped lead to the afterlife is nothing short of holy. Spending hours, or sometimes days, sorting through its flesh, reading its hidden stories with every knife stroke. Smelling the scent of cherished forage on its fat and then carefully tucking it all away in a subzero bed to wait until the time comes to nourish my little one's bellies. That experienece isnt something you can buy. I have never felt closer to whatever God might be since I started homesteading almost a decade ago. Hoemsteading is the closest thing I have found to religion and truly being apart of the natural cycle of things has nourished apart of my DNA I didn't knoe exhisted, let alone needed love and healing.

Expand full comment
Mike, Lambs Quarters Farm's avatar

"regeneratively farmed" has now been greenwashed and captured by the corporations. Predictable. I think it's better to just not use any labels to describe your farming practices, because if they become popular and sought after, corporations will capture it for profit. Permaculture will be next ... toss in a comfrey plant near the CAFO and the label will read "raised on a Permaculture farm".

Expand full comment
39 more comments...

No posts