Self-Sufficiency Tips from the Great Depression | What My Grandparents Raised

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  • čas přidán 26. 05. 2020
  • Being raised by a father who lived through the Great Depression shapes how you see things. These are tips we use on our homestead and were passed down from my Grandmother and dad, with Great Depression meals and foods they consumed the most and crops to raise. Listen to the live interview with my dad "17 Self-Sufficiency Tips from the 1940s and Great Depression Era" melissaknorris.com/17-self-su...
    Get my from-scratch buttermilk biscuit recipe melissaknorris.com/how-to-mak...
    Low sugar NO pectin strawberry jam recipe melissaknorris.com/strawberry...
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    Howdy! I'm so glad you're here. I'm Melissa from Pioneering Today and a 5th generation homesteader where I'm doing my best to hold onto the old traditions in a modern world and share them with others.
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Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @MelissaKNorris
    @MelissaKNorris  Před 4 lety +370

    Thank you for watching! Do you have any recipes or tips passed down from your family from these times? Are you changing any of the things you're doing this year?

    • @foster3316
      @foster3316 Před 4 lety +26

      I'm a big fan. You and 1870s Homestead helped me discover Ruth Stout garden methods. I wrecked my garden last year by over tilling in a really wet season here in East Texas. You helped me get back on track.

    • @WeWillServeJehovah
      @WeWillServeJehovah Před 4 lety +21

      We are blessed to be getting our 5 acre homestead!!! Thank you for all the videos and resources. I've learned so much from you.

    • @himsworthhavenhomestead1936
      @himsworthhavenhomestead1936 Před 4 lety +23

      My grandmother’s mother had to make a quick batch of homemade noodles when more company showed up for Christmas dinner than what was expected. We’ve continued that recipe with every turkey dinner!’

    • @maryjane-vx4dd
      @maryjane-vx4dd Před 4 lety +23

      @@joannathesinger770 maybe compile a depression cook book and sell?

    • @amandaburger2506
      @amandaburger2506 Před 4 lety +20

      My grandmother was born just after the depression, but her family was very poor and she was the second youngest of 8 children. She and my grandfather were both quite poor when my my mother was a child and they definitely lived mostly off their livestock and garden. They didn't get indoor plumbing until '72, when my Mom was 7-years-old. Biscuits were a big staple in their household and I've had the recipe memorized since I was 8. I also still use the same pie crust recipe my grandma passed down, though I'm pretty sure it's just the one from the tub of crisco.
      I've been gardening and canning for years, but I'm really stepping up the game this year. I had 3 raised beds and several pots for veggies last year, but I've added 5 more beds this year. Tomatoes, beans, and root veggies will be my primary crops this year. We've also got an apple, chokecherry, nanking cherry, and an apricot tree along with a few haskap berry bushes.
      I'm very interested in foraging and have cooked up bellflower root, made dandelion coffee, used dandelion greens in salads, and have a bowl of dandelion petals steeping right now for dandelion jelly.
      I've also begun the licensing process to own chickens within my city, but that probably won't happen until next spring.
      I'm loving your channel and all the homesteading tips, especially for colder weather!

  • @dnsmithnc
    @dnsmithnc Před 3 lety +1070

    Knowing what she knows is much better than having most four year college degrees. This is the stuff we should know and maybe, one day soon, will need to know.

    • @abbybonecutter8529
      @abbybonecutter8529 Před 3 lety +11

      I agree!

    • @tatianacomeau7244
      @tatianacomeau7244 Před 3 lety +51

      They've made pp dependant on the system and soft and now engineering to choke the food supply

    • @ritascott4040
      @ritascott4040 Před 3 lety +6

      I keep thinking she is breaking the heck out of the eggs she’s carrying!!lol!

    • @WithmeVerissimusWhostoned
      @WithmeVerissimusWhostoned Před 3 lety +57

      one of natural tendencies of governments is to steer people towards dependency, not help people become independent...

    • @Hy-Brasil
      @Hy-Brasil Před 3 lety +36

      Thats because government needs people to exist. Truth is society does better with small government and strong military. Let the people govern themselves and enforce constitutional rights. Anything more than that is overreach nanny state bullshit.

  • @rebeccapettifer6553
    @rebeccapettifer6553 Před 3 lety +7

    I have the receipts from Norton's Store in the little town of Orion, Il. that my mom and dad sold eggs and cream to the local store during the 40's. Another thing that I found so sweet is when my parents were married in 1944 my mom's parents gave them a heifer that grew into an adult cow + was breed to my grandparents bull. That was how my folks started their herd and got their milk cow. They bought 150 acres across the road from my grandparents that they finally paid off when I was 18. On that farm was an old falling down farm house in the middle of the 150 acres. They tore that house down board by board and kept the good wood, pulled the nails and hauled the wood on the hay wagon to the front of the farm closer to the road. Dad dug the basement using the tractor and then for the finer points dug it by hand. He drew the plans for the house, bought the cement blocks and uncles came and helped him lay the block for the basement and helped at different times building. One of my uncles built the kitchen cabinets. We lived in a garage on the property until I956 when the house was done. Dad was born 1914 and mom 1923. They lived through the depression and my childhood was terrific. My mom and we girls gardened and canned everything. I worked the farm along with my parents, brother and sister and was the happiest time of my life except when I had my children. I own the farm now and my husband + I farmed it for 35 years. My son farms it now. The house still stands and is in perfect condition and my son lives in it now with his family. Well I got a little long winded but everything you said in this video resonates with me. Thank you for bringing back so clearly the beautiful memories.

  • @Diniecita
    @Diniecita Před 2 lety +71

    Something not many people realize is that the depression took a long time to be “over” and was different in each place. Most places weren’t back to normal for 12 years after the government said it was over. So this became a way of life for so many people.

  • @Brisbanesdaddy
    @Brisbanesdaddy Před 3 lety +265

    On your pears.... add a couple of orange wedges to each jar. The citric acid will keep them bright white and improve the flavor! Its an awesome way to can pears. My great aunts all did this (they would all be well over 100 years old) They were old time country ladies. Give it a try!

    • @RjGold5.12
      @RjGold5.12 Před 2 lety +16

      Sir, thank you for telling us. Blessings to you and your loved ones...

    • @Noname-cn4ly
      @Noname-cn4ly Před 2 lety +11

      I’m in my late 60’s and have always added orange slices to my canned pears, but I learned it from my mother and grandmother.

    • @rubiejones1897
      @rubiejones1897 Před 2 lety +1

      That’s smart!!

    • @foreveryoung-vr1kh
      @foreveryoung-vr1kh Před 2 lety +1

      Thankyou

    • @MarianRehersals
      @MarianRehersals Před rokem +2

      My mom used lemons.

  • @margaretd3710
    @margaretd3710 Před 3 lety +618

    My parents went through the Great Depression and we had a farm when I was growing up, so we had a large garden, a milking cow, 2 nanny goats (my chore to milk those), chickens, hogs, beef cattle, etc. I remember coming home from school crying that other kids were having hot dogs for dinner and we had to eat steak yet again! My parents just laughed and told me that when I was grown I'd look back and think how great we ate. Yep! I never ate better - we grew "organic" before it became a thing. It was just the way you grew your garden. -- So now I'm a grandma and putting in a garden (I hated all the work of it when I was a kid!) and loving all the memories that it brings. As well as food that's so much better than you can get in the stores.

    • @user-dp4bu8jy4b
      @user-dp4bu8jy4b Před 3 lety +14

      Now we know a plantbased diet is best for our heart..unlike meat, fruits and veggies dont cause cancer

    • @springcreek2561
      @springcreek2561 Před 3 lety +10

      I grew up on a farm in Wi and joined the Air Force, at school (Lowry AFB CO) a bunch of us went out to eat on payday and I couldn't understand why all those other people were wasting their money on steak. lol

    • @joeygibbs4775
      @joeygibbs4775 Před 3 lety +13

      For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.“Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost

    • @thunderusnight
      @thunderusnight Před 3 lety +31

      @@user-dp4bu8jy4b .........
      Meat doesn't cause cancer. It can cause heart problems if you have genetic dispositions, and it can increase your chances of getting cancer *Slightly* but it can't CAUSE cancer.

    • @Misswho5
      @Misswho5 Před 3 lety

      What a great and sweet story! Thank you for sharing

  • @Lisaairbnb
    @Lisaairbnb Před 4 lety +419

    My grandparents lived in great depression and lived to 96 and still never ate fast food. All home made

    • @WykedRuby
      @WykedRuby Před 3 lety +8

      I have a 96 year old great grandmother who would eat a McDonalds fish sandwich several times over the last few years. She did eat some "junk" like sugary cereal.

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Před 3 lety +15

      Part of the reason they lived so long, similar with my dad's parents and they remained frugal long after they were prosperous.

    • @mweber5459
      @mweber5459 Před 3 lety +35

      Probably were not over vaccinated either

    • @ariloves10
      @ariloves10 Před 3 lety +6

      Cheers to Gramma and Grampa 💜❤🙏

    • @astrolabium88
      @astrolabium88 Před 3 lety +4

      Same with me for great grandparents, with property.

  • @simplypatti6705
    @simplypatti6705 Před 3 lety +148

    Living like this is so good for the spirit. To work for your own existence, without dependence on needed cash and transportation to a store; it’s so empowering.

    • @ramalingamsadasivan2835
      @ramalingamsadasivan2835 Před 2 lety +8

      Also very healthy.

    • @sarahs7751
      @sarahs7751 Před 2 lety +5

      If only we could actually own land...wed have it made

    • @mal35m
      @mal35m Před 2 lety

      @@sarahs7751 Marxists don't think peasants owning land is a good idea.

  • @edwardpaty7420
    @edwardpaty7420 Před 3 lety +11

    My momma and daddy lived thru the depression in Arkansas and didn't have refrigeration. My momma's family did have spring house and my daddy's family had a root cellar and they taught me how they used them to preserve food. They didn't do a lot of salting of their meat and fish, instead they smoked and dried most of their meat and fish. My daddy and his sister survived the 1918 influenza pandemic, losing their parents and a sister to the influenza, and the aunt and uncle that took them in and raise them were 'Por' they were so poor, they couldn't afford the second 'O'. They were so 'Por' they didn't know there was a depression till it was over. But they never went hungry because they chickens and raised a slaughtering hog each year, and my daddy's uncle was a good hunter, trapper and fisherman and he taught my daddy to hunt, trap and fish, and they had garden with a long growing season. According to my daddy his aunt was good cook and she had 2 specialties:
    1. Vegetable Delight, because they were delighted they had vegetables.
    2. Meat Surprise, surprised we have meat. That meat might be chicken or pork or venison,... Or it might be a squirrel or rabbit,... Or even a possum.

  • @gracenjuguna7292
    @gracenjuguna7292 Před 4 lety +589

    Many of us in Kenya live like this except we don't preserve stuff. We don't have winter. I eat maize, beans and grind maize flour to make ugali which is staple and wild greens esp at the coast where I live. I use solar though... Would love to learn how to can

    • @madamsophia1503
      @madamsophia1503 Před 3 lety +19

      Look into fermenting, too.

    • @hemanginipr6974
      @hemanginipr6974 Před 3 lety +81

      Please, I urge you, make a channel and show us your ways.

    • @iammarklynch
      @iammarklynch Před 3 lety +13

      Just learned to can last week Grace, it was nice to have my Mother show me how. The catch is right now in all of this uncertainty canning supplies are are scare a lot of places.

    • @debbiedebbie9473
      @debbiedebbie9473 Před 3 lety +2

      www.africanbites.com/ugali-corn-fufu/

    • @klantifashakur9894
      @klantifashakur9894 Před 3 lety +6

      Show us your ways!

  • @deebaker9961
    @deebaker9961 Před 4 lety +505

    I grew up with my Great-Aunt and Great Uncle in Michigan. They were a young married couple with 3 small children during the Great Depression. I remember her saying that they were excited when they got to the end of the week and still had $0.05 for a pound of bologna. When I lived with them, we had 3 gardens that were almost an acre each. My Great-Uncle would start planting 2 long rows of corn when “the oak leaves were the size of baby squirrel’s ears” and then plant 2 rows every 2 weeks until the first week in August. We had fresh corn until the first of October. We canned all vegetables all summer.

    • @sandrajohnson9926
      @sandrajohnson9926 Před 4 lety +20

      Wonderful! Great memories of hard work & love.

    • @anastasiahicks9451
      @anastasiahicks9451 Před 4 lety +22

      Wow, what precious memories! You should write this into a children's book!

    • @stringjamgirl
      @stringjamgirl Před 4 lety +40

      Dee Baker my grandmother used to tell me they would run out of fresh food and money at the end of the week and have popcorn for supper. Everyone loved the treat. My grandfather was lucky enough to have a job at a grocery store back during the Depression, but it was very difficult getting by. Grandpa always had a garden to supplement. My grandmother had to find creative ways to make ends meet. She used to make sandwiches for supper and they would go to the beach once a week for a cheap and fun supper. We live near the coast. I know it was stressful for my grandparents, but they found ways to enjoy life just the same.

    • @vernareed2692
      @vernareed2692 Před 4 lety +23

      I'm from arkansas,& my grandpa would plant corn when oak leaves size of squirrels ears. They always had big garden that did well. Loved when we'd go visit them in usually june & the wonderful fresh vegetables,homegrown & butchered meat, & good food! They had milk cows,made butter,cottage cheese,thick cream! Fresh cherries,strawberries grandma made into preserves as well as fresh & pies. She dried fruit-apples,peaches.

    • @bartpowers9972
      @bartpowers9972 Před 4 lety +21

      Dee I come from KyOut of a family of ten children we grew ever thing we ate two big garden’s 8 pigs 3 beef my papa use to warn us kids not to stand still to long around grandma are you will be looking out of a jar she can every day vegetables meat she even can eggs. We ate a lot of chicken We never went hungry

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Před 3 lety +186

    Great vid. I think a lot of people misunderstand when someone says "life was hard, but it was good". They might think that our ancestors enjoyed the suffering they went through, that's not it. Life was a challenge, but they had the knowledge and skill to overcome those challenges which made them feel free and proud. On top of that you would rely on your family a lot more, forming a tight bond, which people also enjoy.

    • @sandramkettner3506
      @sandramkettner3506 Před 2 lety +15

      You also had great neighbors who helped anyone in a pinch.

    • @faramund9865
      @faramund9865 Před 2 lety +4

      @@sandramkettner3506 I still have them! But I live in the countryside.

    • @kourtneyw8442
      @kourtneyw8442 Před 2 lety +12

      I think people were less hedonistic back then as well. The simple things made them happy.

    • @stvsmith1791
      @stvsmith1791 Před 2 lety +4

      Why it's almost as though you get out of it what you put into it...
      *disappears in ninja fashion

    • @1x0x
      @1x0x Před 2 lety +1

      they were definently happier than the social media age tho...

  • @rosimeiredemelo4898
    @rosimeiredemelo4898 Před 2 lety +95

    By reading the comments I felt like I lived in a depression times, although I have not, I grow up in a very secluded country farm in Brazil with no access to health care (would take 10hrs with horse carriage) to get to the closest pharmacy. Then I have learned all about growing fruits, vegetables, caring for the animals. When I first came to the US felt like I want to forget about my difficulty childhood, now that I am old I know how fortunate I have been and wants to have a piece of land to do this.

    • @festuswilliams4138
      @festuswilliams4138 Před 2 lety +1

      Hi Rosi.

    • @kayhollings1777
      @kayhollings1777 Před 2 lety +8

      This was a great comment. There seems to be a demonisation of any form of poor today. Unless you grew up with a 6 bedroom house, a pony and gold bed sheets you needlessly suffered and your life isn't worth anything. It's craziness! Who ever grew as a person, learned real life values because they never suffered and had everything they ever wanted on cue? All that breeds is narcissism and/or depression. Not to mention the skills that develop when you need them!

  • @payghbrozny1111
    @payghbrozny1111 Před 3 lety +457

    Using dehydrated orange peel that you grind to a power with a coffee grinder makes natural pectin

    • @melrose4429
      @melrose4429 Před 3 lety +28

      Wow thanks for sharing!

    • @m.k.1543
      @m.k.1543 Před 3 lety +12

      I assume its just the peel with the pith removed, is that correct?

    • @athenac2696
      @athenac2696 Před 3 lety +3

      Thanks!

    • @victoriabulcock8823
      @victoriabulcock8823 Před 3 lety +67

      Going along with that, if picking berries to make jelly or something, put a bit of the almost ripe ones in there. Their pectin content is pretty high and the sugars arent quite fully formed into long-chain carbs yet so it jells nicely!

    • @johoney5458
      @johoney5458 Před 3 lety +31

      how did you learn this and how much do you use per pint jar? I have so much to learn and I feel like I am so behind on everything. Thank you for sharing.

  • @treebeard7140
    @treebeard7140 Před 4 lety +372

    Hardships make farmers out of all of us. The farm supply section is picked clean and it makes me happy people are getting the big picture.

    • @sandrafrancisco
      @sandrafrancisco Před 3 lety +27

      it's illegal for me to raise chickens in my city on my quarter acre (it's a small suburban city too). many americans don't own enough land to feed themselves or their family a healthy diet (lack of clean water will probably get people first though). that's why it's important to manage the government properly or there will be mass death. and before the mass death happens, there will be a bunch of armed, desperate, and starving people doing everything possible to stall death for just another day or so.

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Před 3 lety +8

      I haven't even noticed the farm supply section as I've been building slowly toward self sufficiency (to some degree at least) for over a decade. Had all the tools I need long ago.

    • @granmabern5283
      @granmabern5283 Před 3 lety +15

      Shaun Go to city council meetings and get the bylaw changed. Start a petition. Make a few copies, with a nice picture of a cute chicken tractor on it... Post the petition at a few health food store and corner stores..with permission from managers. Chicken tractors make city chickens attractive and practical. Also, having a couple could be legal as pets. Roosters are probably not possible. They squawk too much.

    • @laurakelso9652
      @laurakelso9652 Před 3 lety +18

      @@sandrafrancisco exactly!! This horrific mess has been planned for years and 5g in connection with so called Vaccines are designed for mass depopulation !! And of course the lack of food, water, utilities will be used as weapons against humanity!! Another weapon is DIVISION amongst the people!! Too many people don't even see what's happening, by design!!

    • @sandrafrancisco
      @sandrafrancisco Před 3 lety +3

      @@laurakelso9652 hah, okay honeybuns.

  • @ideoformsun5806
    @ideoformsun5806 Před 3 lety +27

    This is the BEST comment section!
    I love all the stories and memories. And the tips.

  • @NoBody-ij9dj
    @NoBody-ij9dj Před 2 lety +18

    My fiance and I are terrified by what's happening in America today. We are going to move to Alabama or Georgia soon with hopefully 5-10 acres. We know nothing about living on a farm but are willing to learn. I thank you for your videos and they will be very helpful. I hope we can make things work.

    • @amykruse6887
      @amykruse6887 Před rokem +3

      Homestead Heart
      Homesteading Family
      Both good channels for beginning homesteading. I'm year 20 into homesteading and still learning.

    • @A-G5518
      @A-G5518 Před rokem +4

      Definitely check homesteading family channel for their video on what to know before buying a homestead (or raw land, not sure what they titled it), as well as others who talk about buying land to homestead. I live in SE GA and finding land that big corps aren't snatching up (or price gauging to the point of impossibility) has been a horrible issue. We've been looking daily for over a year. If you find land for a decent price you have to dig and find out why. Is it in a wetlands area? Is it zoned for homesteading? It is right next to an undesirable upcoming plan? (Areas here are for sale right around a potential upcoming spaceport and that's not a good place to homestead, for example). Best of luck!

    • @NoBody-ij9dj
      @NoBody-ij9dj Před rokem +4

      @@A-G5518 Good advice and thank you. We couldn't find the land in our price range but decided on North Florida instead due to family. Probably not far from you in fact. We have a house with an adjacent lot and a greenhouse. It's not big but it's a start.

    • @A-G5518
      @A-G5518 Před rokem +2

      @@NoBody-ij9dj oh nice!! Congrats! 💜 Totally didn't even realize your original comment was 6 months ago 🙈

    • @NoBody-ij9dj
      @NoBody-ij9dj Před rokem +4

      @@A-G5518 No worries at all. We actually had a home with 6 acres that would have been perfect in Alabama but a cash buyer snatched it out from under us. I really wanted that house and land but it wasn't to be. We are going to have to make due with this for now. It's not our dream home but considering current events that's not important.

  • @suellenw561
    @suellenw561 Před 4 lety +255

    I came across a guy selling "home-made" jams & jelly at a farm market that insisted you can't make jelly w/out store-bought pectic. I couldn't convince him that I never buy pectic & have great jelly. Glad to hear someone else knows that, too.
    I inherited my Mom's recipes. The one for strawberry preserves was "strawberries & sugar ... cook til thick." That was it.

    • @kathrynronald9365
      @kathrynronald9365 Před 3 lety +40

      I make great strawberry jam without pectin as well. 4 cups of mashed strawberries, 2 tablespoons of lemon juice, 1 cup of apple sauce or apple purée and 3 cups of sugar. Slow boil for 25 mins. So good 😊

    • @JennaDanelle
      @JennaDanelle Před 3 lety +12

      Jams made w sugar are often called conserves and they are my favorite, plum is super delish if you can get a plum tree! I have never used pectin in jam, ever, always just fruit and sugar.

    • @victoriabulcock8823
      @victoriabulcock8823 Před 3 lety +15

      Blueberries especially have a high pectin content when about 5 days from peak ripeness! The sugars also arent fully formed into long-chain carbohydrates yet which gives it a nice jell and a nice sour contrast to the super sweet ones

    • @athenac2696
      @athenac2696 Před 3 lety +2

      Anyone know how to use honey to make Blueberry Jelly?

    • @elainebaird2091
      @elainebaird2091 Před 3 lety +2

      @@kathrynronald9365 Hello, Kathryn, thanks for the recipe. Have you tried to freeze it, and if so well well did it freeze?

  • @genefoster9821
    @genefoster9821 Před 4 lety +156

    Hi, I’m from central Virginia. My father grew up during the depression. He said that they did not know they were poor because all their neighbors were in the same situation. There were 14 in the family, so the only things they bought were shoes, salt, cloth, they actually raised their own wheat. He said they ate a lot of beans. He taught me a lot about gardening. Also, he would not buy anything unless he could pay for it. One of his favorite expressions was: If you don’t owe anyone you can’t god broke.

  • @dianehall5345
    @dianehall5345 Před 3 lety +95

    Good morning Melissa. My mom was also raised through The Great Depression. And her mother, Grandma Hazel, was my babysitter! Gram lived next door, so I heard her stories and advice from birth. It was one of the greatest gifts she gave me that sustains me and my husband to this day. Gram's brother, Ray, owned an egg business, so we always had fresh eggs and chicken.
    Gram's New Englander house was originally a farm that became the edge of the suburbs in Manchester, New Hampshire. Ray's farm was in the bordering town of Bedford. Our city did not allow chickens, but Gram had a Victory garden. Gram canned foods and taught me the OLD NEW HAMPSHIRE WAYS. The first recipe Gram taught me was baking powder biscuits. Tapioca pudding was a staple desert after school. Melissa, please press home the BARTERING. This is one way we can get a variety of foods today. We raise beef cattle, but buy and barter meats and vegetables we don't have, with our neighbors. We also barter work. Neighbors would help us hay and in return we gave them bales of hay in payment or a combination of money and hay or firewood. All I can think of is the fairytale story of STONE SOUP. The town was on the verge of starving. A stranger came into town and said he could feed the town with the help of his magic stone. He placed the stone in a large iron kettle and asked if anyone in town had carrots. One family did and added them into the pot. Another family came forward with potatoes, followed by cabbage. Each family added one food item to the pot. Soon there was a meal to feed the entire town. A wonderful story of everyone working together to help each other.

    • @charlottehayward5943
      @charlottehayward5943 Před 2 lety +3

      My dad told that story. He was all about people working together and helping each other.

    • @wintersprite
      @wintersprite Před 2 lety +2

      Stone soup is similar to Hobo Stew. People would contribute what they could into a pot and share the soup/stew.
      I’m from NH. New England brown bread is great as well. And Marshmallow Fluff is a New England staple.

  • @hermittao
    @hermittao Před 3 lety +5

    My mother grew up during the depression as well. She grew up on a farm in rural Tennessee, and said the depression didn't affect them much. Coffee and to a lesser extent sugar had to be purchased. When they visited neighbors, it was usually for several days, as travel was difficult. It just occurred to me, she never complained about hardships growing up. Medical services was the main difficulty, and even easily treatable illnesses now could be a death sentence then. Religion played an important part in their lives and a chance to visit with neighbor. Thank you for bringing back memories.

  • @bellachi9575
    @bellachi9575 Před 4 lety +502

    This is an excellent resource. And it gave me an “aha” moment. My grandmother never made bread, but biscuits or cornbread were at every meal. Because it was more efficient time and material use! This makes me want to get chickens again, and maybe a couple of milk goats(less feed and work for dairy than a cow). We as a nation have been spoiled by consumerism. We need to get back to producing our own, for ourselves and to share with our community. True happiness comes not from what we possess but from what we produce.

    • @beckysmuck8771
      @beckysmuck8771 Před 4 lety +21

      So excited for you! Get them goats! I have laying hens and three roosters. Three milk goats. Only two are in milk right now. Already harvested the meat chickens this year... We have five pigs... Two cows... a meat goat... We also hunt Deer, Elk and antelope. We have two raised garden beds and two large in ground gardens. I can and or freeze everything I can get my hands on.

    • @woodspirit98
      @woodspirit98 Před 4 lety +12

      Wise words. Happiness from what we produce. I would add..what we give to others also.

    • @whosedoingwhat
      @whosedoingwhat Před 3 lety +3

      I would get those chicks fast. The predictions for Aug. Sept. are unnerving and who knows if they will lock us down for good! They are sure pushing that scenario. When we bought them ev. Chicks related was selling out fast, & still is. Ours are a month from producing. We bought 2 Rhode Is Reds we lost one and replaced lost that one also😢 think poopy butt got chilled after washing, we also bought 2 Australorps, and 2 Silkies forgot zoning said 4🤫 they are so darn cute getting their personalities of sort and the variety is entertaining along with the big egg producing A & RIR, Silkies less but so cute! Here’s the easiest bread (link) you’ll ever make👍🏻 open his site for more type breads rolls m.czcams.com/video/OnPQP-dHFmg/video.html

    • @SirenaSpades
      @SirenaSpades Před 3 lety +9

      Not spoiled by consumerism, but marketing/media convincing people of the need to buy things. My grandmother ALWAYS made bread, that's a regional thing, I'm in New England, never had corn bread until maybe 7 years ago :)

    • @valerieschauber1544
      @valerieschauber1544 Před 3 lety +3

      I share my eggs with my family and friends

  • @shirleydrake1602
    @shirleydrake1602 Před 4 lety +84

    In Alabama, they often had dances. The musicians were local and some family or another would host the dance. Furniture was pushed out of the way to clear the floors for dancing. My parents courted at those dances, as late as the 1940s. My father and his brothers were the band. People pitched in whatever they could to give the players so they could cover their gas. Those young men were the rock stars of their day.

  • @lethalbilly4270
    @lethalbilly4270 Před 2 lety +26

    I wish we were taught valuable things like harvesting and preserving foods at school. That's a lot more important to me than calculus or analyzing poetry (though those things can be interesting). I look forward to watching more of these videos!

  • @sbell9989
    @sbell9989 Před 2 lety +12

    "It was a hard life but it was a good life" I remember, was exactly what my mom said to me. The Greatest Generation...they were a different breed, we will never have again.

  • @jennhill8708
    @jennhill8708 Před 4 lety +54

    My Dad was born in 1922, the youngest of 5 living children. By the time he was 8, he was working before & after school. His Dad lost the ranch trying to save his oil leases, which he also lost. His Dad was a carpenter, by trade & fell from a roof, breaking his back. The oldest boy carried his Dad's dreams, but my Dad was close to his Mom. He always felt responsible for the family.
    He moved West & learned to mechanic (heavy equipment) & weld, really good skills for life.
    He joined the Marine Corps before WWII & fought on Iwo Jima.
    In the boom following the War, he was set w skills that kept us comfortable as a family, when I was growing up.
    It's interesting to listen to yr stories. Similar to how we lived in the 60s.

  • @wendellbell6164
    @wendellbell6164 Před 4 lety +131

    I also live in Washington state. My dad lived in south Dakota during the depression, then was a POW for a short while in North Korea. He killed his way out of that prison but could never remember how many days he ran to get back to friendly territory. He had PTSD but handled it quite well I thought. We had milk and beef cows , pigs and made our own butter from the cream, chickens for meat and eggs, raised gardens that my mother canned . Mom would gather us kids to go pick straw berries and make straw berry jam by the quart and pour hot paraffin wax on top of the jam to seal it up. We would reuse the wax. We had alot of bacon , eggs, fried potatoes, drop biscuits and white sauce gravey for breakfast. It was really good. My brother thought we had a bad childhood but I thought it was great. 4 kids in my family. We all worked hard and advanced in life pretty well. We are still a close knit family. I now live in a log home with a wood cook stove 50 plus free ranging chickens depending on the varmints. I built a big root cellar a few years ago, still figuring it out for temp control. I learned to graft and grow about 70 fruit tree's and put up 80 to 100 tons of hay per year. I like gardening but run short on time. Raise honey bees for fun but they are not easy to keep alive. Growing fruit trees and cattle has been the best effort for gain for me. Honey bee's increase your fruit production by about 30%. Farming keeps me alittle to busy but is rewarding and the pandemic doesn't slow me down much. I built homes for a living and farmed for entertainment and self reliance. Thanks for your video, please make more.

    • @jeanetteinthisorn4955
      @jeanetteinthisorn4955 Před 4 lety +13

      Look up Paul Stamets on how bees need certain types of fungi to thrive - they use it like a pharmacy. You can grow them yourself near the bee houses. If you see lionsmane in the wild, there is a good chance there is a wild swarm nearby.

    • @DChristina
      @DChristina Před 3 lety +1

      You were so blessed!

    • @jeancassup8878
      @jeancassup8878 Před 3 lety +2

      You should blog about these things.

  • @trishshahtegardens
    @trishshahtegardens Před 2 lety +10

    My grandfather walked from Missouri to California on the Oregon trail. Walked! I just think that's wild. The best stories came from Grandpa.

  • @denisebrady6858
    @denisebrady6858 Před 3 lety +5

    Melissa I am the youngest of 10 children & I am 69yrs of age so I can associate with everything you were saying in this video. I have to say though we had a Wonderful Life & growing up was just magic- it was different here in Australia because we were still such a small Country. Thank you for making younger people of today realise how tough it was then. Cheers Denise - Australia

  • @debramossbrook6510
    @debramossbrook6510 Před 4 lety +142

    My Dad grew up in rural PA in the Great Depression. When lock down started (I'm in NJ) , i ran to the store and bought flour and yeast. Then, I ordered seeds online. My sister called me the same day, and said she had done the same. The lessons our dad taught us about survival suddenly made total sense. I have a much smaller garden, but I enjoyed this video very much. God Bless the WWII generation. Thank you.

    • @treebeard7140
      @treebeard7140 Před 4 lety +4

      Valuable lessons everyone seems to be more inspired for self sufficiency. the food supply chain is unsustainable

    • @ashleybosvik3031
      @ashleybosvik3031 Před 3 lety +2

      I did the same thing, I bought 4 bags of flour 10kg for 3 dollar each and 3, 2lb bags of yeast for 6 dollars each

    • @rebeccashetter2309
      @rebeccashetter2309 Před 3 lety +15

      @@treebeard7140 I talked to food managers and people who have the wholesale food warehouses. They told me the same; the warehouses are becoming empty.. they are ordering food.... but not coming in. I remember reading years ago that China needs food for their population and had been buying all our farmland. They bought over 58 percent of our good farmland before, we stopped them. They were selling us the food; but not anymore; all is being exported back to China. The largest meat processing company just closed down and went back to China. I honestly think if you don't raise or grow it...by, next year you are going to go hungry. People are so caught up in their TV and phones they don't have a clue what is going on. I see the stores becoming empty... where their was huge amount of food behind each item. That food is spread out in front by four or five and nothing in the back of the shelves. I had to use the bathroom at a grocery store and the back was almost completely empty. It was a scary sight. I would buy what you can while you still can..I am here to learn.. God bless and stay safe everyone.

    • @ourfamily3570
      @ourfamily3570 Před 3 lety

      @@rebeccashetter2309
      THANK YOU FOR THE WAKE UP CALL!!!
      o7

    • @digsindirt4490
      @digsindirt4490 Před 3 lety

      Same here. I was able to stock up on flour and sugar and vegetable plants. We also purchased fresh fruit which I processed and froze.

  • @angieriggins7366
    @angieriggins7366 Před 3 lety +32

    My grandparents had an out house when I was little. They had a word stove that we had to take a bath by. I was born in 67. I would not trade them days for the world.

    • @trickstothetrades1801
      @trickstothetrades1801 Před 3 lety +2

      Same with my grandparents. And to drive to the house u needed to cross the creek (god willing and if it didn’t rise ha ha). In which case we used the scary swinging bridge. It was in West Virginia.

  • @nicemomasmr
    @nicemomasmr Před 3 lety +26

    My daughter is 3 years old, I'm always teaching her things. I hope she grows up to be like you. Using all the knowledge you've been given to honor your parents and yourself, it touches my heart

    • @amyclark959
      @amyclark959 Před 2 lety +1

      One of my kids is 4 and while putting out some seeds in our humble garden I was impressed with how many he knew. I always encourage my kids to come and "dig in the dirt" with me.

  • @kelleyjerred8032
    @kelleyjerred8032 Před 3 lety +17

    I was fascinated with my grandmas GD stories out of everything she keptes saying SAVE YOUR MONEY!!!!! the stories she told me I really don't blame her. At the ripe age of 45 I finally learned how to budget paid off all my debts including house as a single women kids grown. So finally I listened to that amazing women and im saving 70% of my income 🙌

  • @amotowngirllivinginasouthe1158

    Because of flour being so hard to come by my grandma would make Peanut butter cookies with one cup of PB, One cup of Sugar and 1 egg put it in the oven at 350 degrees for 15 min
    My other grandma would use 1 can of cherry coke with a cake mix to make her cakes with . So she could save her eggs for other things

    • @comfortworm3202
      @comfortworm3202 Před 3 lety +1

      my great grandma did that too, the are very delicious

    • @genal5808
      @genal5808 Před 3 lety +1

      Yup best cookies and so easy to make.

    • @amotowngirllivinginasouthe1158
      @amotowngirllivinginasouthe1158 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, Gena they are the best

    • @danielstrother2494
      @danielstrother2494 Před 2 lety +1

      Cans of cherry coke didn’t come out till the 80s

    • @danielstrother2494
      @danielstrother2494 Před 2 lety +1

      Sorry that was off topic. Thank you for your grandmas wisdom. You also brought me back to when I was a kid and cherry coke came out (obviously t was added to fountain pop for years).

  • @williamroche3539
    @williamroche3539 Před 4 lety +196

    I remember my grandfather talking about the bread lines and people boiling shoes and belts to make a kind of soup or stock. I also remember them talking about making dandelion soup and using acorns as a food source. My grandmother always insisted on a well stocked pantry and a garden out back. I picked up a lot of good habits from those great people and am thankful for their wisdom. People used to think I was strange for keeping things stocked up but not anymore. Hopefully one of the positive changes from this crisis will be that people will be better prepared and self sufficient . Thanks for the video.

    • @sophie3869
      @sophie3869 Před 4 lety +29

      Similar story here. We moved a few years ago and found out our new house's foundation was unstable so we had to rebuild the house. We redesigned it to have a big kitchen with a lot of storage and an underground pantry. The pantry is mostly filled with jams, jellies, pickles, etc and flour/sugar. We also put a standing freezer in there. We have a garden and chop our own firewood from dead trees our neighbors cut down. My freinds thought we were extra and weird for stocking up, making most things from scratch and learning survival skills (foraging, fire/shelter building, sewing, tool making, preserving, etc). I really hope that this crisis makes people more in touch with nature and helps people return to a simpler way of life.

    • @debrajabs9523
      @debrajabs9523 Před 3 lety +8

      @@kellygarland6196 I believe the point of boiling the leather would serve 3 purposes: disinfect, soften the leather and release the proteins. If you have ever eaten spam you would be familiar with the clear jelly like substance that is in the can as well. That is pure protein that is gelatinous until you heat it up. Meat flavored jello. It holds the chopped meat together.
      Things are pretty dire if you are boiling leather. Rice and dry beans like pinto beans supply all the essential amino acids you need when eaten together.

    • @dianehall5345
      @dianehall5345 Před 3 lety +16

      William- My Grandmother Hazel also kept her pantry filled and had a Victory Garden. She taught me how to live well from the land. I am now living her 1935 lifestyle, complete with the 1930 kitchen wood stove! I am now 70. We are a working farm. What we don't grow, our neighbors do. We co-op. Not rocket science. We have beef, but place our orders with other
      local farms in for chicken, eggs and pork. We trade off what the gardens produce. Its called communication.

    • @williamroche3539
      @williamroche3539 Před 3 lety +4

      @@dianehall5345 There's some places like that here in Maine. A lot of homesteaders and off grid folks. It looks like a good, simple way of life.

    • @dianehall5345
      @dianehall5345 Před 3 lety +7

      William Roche- Yes, I am native New Hampshire. Our 350 acre working farm is 4th generation. All college educations are not equal. If you have a degree in Agriculture, your mindset is in that direction. My career was manufacturing engineering. My co-workers were brilliant in their fields, but many had no clue how to garden and live sustainably. Thank God for my grandmother! I teach rural New Hampshire lifestyles from 1920 to 1940, either on or off grid, but only to the local residents. These You Tube channels are lifesavers. They can show how to live by your own hand. Today's society has not done us any favors in that respect.
      But you do not have to live on a farm to learn the basic skills of pressure canning and dehydrating foods. I was also a corporate Sr. Buyer in high tech. People can form neighborhood co-ops to have more buying and acquisition power for foods and goods. This winter could become a challenge in the cities and suburbs. In the 1970s, we formed neighborhood food co-ops. The Erwon & Llama wholesale companies dropped off tractor trailer loads of food at our town community center and we broke up of 100lb bags of organic flour and boxes of raisons, etc. Once a month, we gathered and put an order togeter. There are wholesale companies out there that should sell a minimum dollar amount in order to qualify the buyers for a "drop off". I wish the town councils would step forward to assist, but individual citizens can accomplish this on their own.

  • @RjGold5.12
    @RjGold5.12 Před 2 lety +6

    This was my first time to watch your channel. My parents lived through the Depression and I remember growing up NW Arkansas in the 60's-70's. Dad would slaughter a hog every fall, use sugar cure and smoke in the smoke house. Mom would can vegetable soup and everything from the garden that we didn't eat. Sometimes, they'd have to buy an extra hundred pounds of potatoes to store under the house, so we'd have enough for the winter. We'd pick wild blackberries and muscadines for jelly and she'd can pickled, sweet Indian peaches. Through the fall and winter we'd eat pinto beans, with a carrot chunked up in them, fried potatoes, turnip greens, cornbread and maybe an onion cut in wedges. Thanks for sharing your video. Blessings to you and your loved ones...

    • @pauldonathan5316
      @pauldonathan5316 Před 2 lety

      Awesome, love that area of Arkansas, I can just smell that hog right now...I grew up in Little Rock, Fort Smith, born in Memphis

  • @johnmcdonald1306
    @johnmcdonald1306 Před rokem +2

    Born in 1959 I had to ask my Dad what it was like in the depression. It was depressing to here his family of eight was poor with dysfunctional parents and brothers and sisters went to orphanage's and a couple fostered into good families. My dad stayed with his dad who was a drunk living above a bowling alley and was 8 yrs old during the depression in the city He said he did stand in soup lines and had to sell newspapers on the street and was a pin boy at a bowling alley. To live like this growing up I could not imagine and asking him this I realized why he did not believe in wasting anything.
    after he became the father of six kids just him telling me this made me realize that I had everything I got to be thankful for and work hard to get everything I could. The best advise he said to me was no matter what job you have do your best and eventually it will pay off. Now we were poor and got government cheese that was great and peanut butter in a gallon can with a half inch of oil on top and I didn't know what Kraft was until I was 12 and went to a friends house. But I learned latter how blessed I was to have a Mother and Father and a family . I wish I knew how to attach a black and white picture of us kids around a home made birthday cake that people see that are shocked. But you see me smiling at 6 years old not caring how the cake looked

  • @VideoCreators
    @VideoCreators Před 4 lety +226

    Wow, so much to learn here. Thanks so much for sharing your dad's stories. Fun to see how you're taking his stories and living them out yourself now.

    • @joeygibbs4775
      @joeygibbs4775 Před 3 lety +8

      For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.“Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost

  • @gardenbun
    @gardenbun Před 4 lety +77

    You are so incredibly knowledgeable! I can't imagine what 'nutcases' gave you a thumbs-down! I am a lifelong vegetarian, but I found your talk and tour fascinating. I had a grandma from Germany and she told me many similar stories/techniques. Most people in the US do not realize how fortunate/spoiled we are to have an over-abundance of more food than our ancestors could have envisioned!

    • @free2binnh
      @free2binnh Před 3 lety

      I just could not slaughter the animals she talks about. I could embrace a diet with limited dairy and eggs and some meat.

    • @deltadawn679
      @deltadawn679 Před 3 lety +1

      I don't know who could give her a thumbs down? This was wonderful!

    • @melissasmomglam
      @melissasmomglam Před 2 lety

      @@free2binnh oftentimes we don’t know what we could do unless we are faced with that situation.

  • @lindseyt240
    @lindseyt240 Před 2 lety +6

    Just found your channel! My great grandma was born in SW MO in 1910; oldest of 12 kids. Lives through flu epidemic (lost 2 kids), 2 world wars, depressions, oil crisis, and more. She helped with the garden until she was 96, and green beans were very important! She dried them because as a child they didn’t have enough canning supplies for 14 people all winter. They called them “Johnny’s jumpers” and added them to boiling water to make protein in soup/ stews. It stretched her meat and veggies at the end of winter. She would make a couple biscuits to go with. This brings back memories for me!❤️❤️❤️

  • @lesliekendall2206
    @lesliekendall2206 Před 3 lety +16

    I just listened to your interview with your dad. I'm just now drying my tears. We had recordings of my dad. Oh sure, everyone has photos. But when you play it after he's passed, it's like he's still right there next to you. A treasure you won't realize till you experience it. 💕

  • @jesshothersall
    @jesshothersall Před 4 lety +54

    My father was born in 1904, and they had an old black iron cooking range. His widowed mother would put bake potatoes in there ready for the morning, and the three children would be given a big hot potato each to put in their pocket, to keep their hands warm as they walked to school in winter (Scotland) and then it was their lunch too. After living through the being a single parent household and the depression, he never wasted anything. Always saving things "in case they come in handy" they often did eventually, and I still save things for later. He was a Merchant Seaman though, so never got into gardening beyond mowing. I'm having to learn the gardening/growing part of making do and mend. Loved the history in your video, thanks for making it. In the UK we call it bottling as cans here are made of metal. When you first mentioned canning, I thought you must actually be using tins, until you showed us the bottles. I have 2 pear trees, which never last long, so having seen yours, I now realise I must preserve my pears this year, thanks for that :)

    • @stanleypennock2118
      @stanleypennock2118 Před 3 lety +4

      My mom told about the same story as your father even though she was a few years younger. She grew up in Southeastern Ohio here in the US. There were 8 of them and older children got baked potatoes and the little ones got hard boiled eggs. I asked why not give them all the same thing? She said that they ran out of potatoes early spring but usually had plenty of eggs so it was really just to ration the potatoes.

    • @shirleylake7738
      @shirleylake7738 Před 3 lety +5

      My Dad was born during the great depression. One of three children. His dad left when my father was 2.5 never to return. My dad and his older sister used to sell soft pretzles,pencils and apples on the street corners of Philadelphia Pa. They had stale pretzles and oat meal for a couple of Thanksgiving .Living The city w as difficult . My grandmother took in laundry and did ironing for a few professional people. She saved thread from old clothes and wound it to a ball. She would save tin foil the same way after she washed and dried it.

    • @ourfamily3570
      @ourfamily3570 Před 3 lety +2

      @@shirleylake7738
      That sounds like what happened to my father-in-law... 1 of 3 to his parents... his father left...
      We found someone with the same last name... apparently a set of 3 half cousins... whose father was born before our family's set... that knew what happened to the guy.... died by himself in CA of heart attack at age 58 I think it was.

  • @rwatts2155
    @rwatts2155 Před 4 lety +28

    WOW! What a great video!! I grew up in Arkansas in a small rice farming community. We were not farmers but we did raise and grow much of our food. Fishing and hunting rounded out the meals. I learned to cook, bake bread ( yea biscuits ! ) . Of course we had black and white television until we upgraded to color by
    Scotch Taping red, blue ( for skies ), green ( mid screen for grass and trees,and yellow( for added interest I guess ). That upgrade lasted about as long as the pet sea monkeys that we bought from ads in the backs of comic books. Don't waste your 10 cents...the "monkeys" are some kind of amoeba and don't look a thing like the little smiling animals that are sketched in. My favorite pass time was listening to my parents, grandparents, and my great aunts and uncles recount the stories from their lives at the turn of the 20th century and the Great Depression and the prohibition. Yep! my grampaw was a very spiritual man. In fact, you could say he was a spiritual leader in the south. Grampaw was heavily in the distillation and distribution of fine spirits. In fact, his distillation and distribution enterprise kept a lot of people fed and clothed at the time. There were not only his family and employees fed but there were local and state police, judges, and politicians whose families benefited from Grampaw's fine liquors but that's another story for another day.
    Thank you for making and sharing your beautiful video with us and keep up the good work!

  • @bettyc.parker-young1437
    @bettyc.parker-young1437 Před 2 lety +4

    Rice pudding was a real treat for us too! My mom and dad were born in the 1920's and they taught me so much! I have also inherited kitchen non electric appliances from my mom since her passing. I feel so rich! We had a large family and always had a big garden. Until my dad bought a tiller we used a neighbor's mule. He used to give rides on Old Dan. Love your video and it has brought back many memories. Thank you.

  • @PlanetMojo
    @PlanetMojo Před 3 lety +3

    Our cookbook was passed down from my grandmother who raised my mother during the great depression and it is chock-full of depression era recipes. My favorite is chicken noodle soup with dumplings. Grandma made it with chicken stock, eggs, and the flour came from home grown grain. Grandma was a school teacher back then and walked to the little school house she taught at. She hunted rabbits and turkey on the way home.

  • @victorwadsworth821
    @victorwadsworth821 Před 4 lety +15

    I can remember my old granny churning butter, my great granddad was happy to see my dad as granny fond of dad was the only time she would cook steaks from the cows they grew. Great granddad paid of his land during the depression by digging up huge slabs of limestone, transporting them and selling them. He feed many of the hungry around him & somewhere I have a poll tax bill of his for less than two dollars with his signature on it. We sat in the late evenings, churning ice cream, sitting on either rope chairs or chairs made from the hides from Great granddad's cows. I hated the outhouse as there were always wasp buzzing around in it. His well water was a horrible metalic tasting thing, but great granddad had those small bottles of Dr. Pepper for us kids to drink. Both granny and great granddad dipped Garrett's snuff, his name by the way was A.F. Garrett & I have one of his old snuff bottles in my window seat. On hot summer nights, they would pull their iron bedframes and mattresses out on the grass to sleep under the stars. There home was built from local rock early during the great depression in Milsap, Texas.

  • @guydesnoyers8417
    @guydesnoyers8417 Před 3 lety +24

    Thank you for sharing these valuable perspectives in such detail. I'm sure your Grandmother would be in disbelief that nearly a half-million people were influenced by her work!

  • @sillililli01
    @sillililli01 Před 3 lety +11

    There is so much we can learn from our elders, if we only took the time to listen to their stories of survival through the great depression era, etc. We could put to use what we learn from them into our own lives. Thank you for sharing your Dad's story with us. It is inspirational.

    • @jakefilmore
      @jakefilmore Před 2 lety +1

      My Nana grew up in England during the war, it was rough, Neighbors Wld add their baking supplies together for special occasions.you never threw out anything, old bits of cloth & bones from your dinner went to the Rag & Bone Man who would sell on to poor. She told me about the bombs that dropped before they hit about a mile above it would whistle then go silent to terrify the ppl, she came out of her bsmt after a raid & both houses on either side & ppl were hit & just rubble.

    • @sillililli01
      @sillililli01 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jakefilmore My father who will be 97 this year, is a WWII Veteran. The stories he tells of the war are quite something. He spent some time in England during the war.

    • @jakefilmore
      @jakefilmore Před 2 lety +1

      @@sillililli01 Is he wondering why they ever fought another richer men's war after all this BS? Thank him for his service from a Canuck. My Papa was in WW2 in Scotland, he survived also but never spoke about it.

    • @sillililli01
      @sillililli01 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jakefilmore My father landed on Juno beach, two days after his B-Day, a teenager. He said, he saw things no young man should ever see, that day. The Canadians were fierce, they made in-roads further than anyone. By the end of the war, he realized just how political war is, so yeah, he figured it out, real quick.

  • @MinkesMom
    @MinkesMom Před 3 lety +7

    # Melissa K. Norris Tell your Dad I RODE WITH THE LONE RANGER!! I grew up listening to the LR on the radio & then watched on tv. In the 70's the Lone Ranger came to Corning, NY to advertise their sunglasses after a company refused the LR using his mask on his tours. The Lone Ranger led a parade through the main street of Corning. My daughter's pony--Pokey--was a White Welsh Mountain Pony & I dressed her to look like the LR. The LR wanted my daughter to ride beside him, but Pokey would not leave my Appaloosa mare so we rode behind the LR .

  • @decastring
    @decastring Před 4 lety +5

    Amen to "it was a hard life, but it was a good life"!

  • @tilmonhensley443
    @tilmonhensley443 Před 4 lety +77

    Melissa, I remember the fresh buttermilk fresh butter. and corn bread, pickled green beans, Or fried ham from the smoke house home made gravy and hot biscuits from the wood cook stove, Going to the barn to geather eggs. Or milking the cow, God i hated milking the cow, But it was my job and i loved hateing it. but never knew any one dieing from hard work, Girl im so proud of you and your videos, and what a smart women u are, and the work u put in them, GOD BLESS YOU GIRL Love from North Carolina.

    • @mattandmegandiercks8809
      @mattandmegandiercks8809 Před 4 lety +5

      My wife also hates milking the cows but I cannot complain for her practice has really paid off and so I try to beat my wife to that chore quite often so I can say to her “I’ll take a rain check for when I’m ready”

    • @meditation9666
      @meditation9666 Před 4 lety +1

      I can't find the recipes. I really enjoyed you show.

  • @strutt01
    @strutt01 Před 3 lety +7

    There was a blessing to beans and cornbread our people didn't realize. There is lots of protein in corn, there's lots of protein in beans. But we cannot digest it unless you mix one of the 3 types of proteins together in a meal. Legumes(beans) grains (corn) nuts( from trees or peanuts) when you mix two of the three groups together, you get a complete protein , hence beans and cornbread made for some extremely healthy and strong people. Cheapeast food in the world, also the healthiest.

  • @msmintjuleps
    @msmintjuleps Před 3 lety +6

    Loved that I found this show. I've been thinking about all these goodies you mentioned. I am also looking forward to the talk with your dad. How incredibly interesting. You are so lucky to have your dad. Thanks!

  • @Keyspoet27
    @Keyspoet27 Před 4 lety +19

    Both my mom and dad grew up during the Depression; my dad in NE Texas and my mom in New Mexico, and I saw my maternal grandparents and my great-grandmother every summer growing up, learning a lot from all of them in the process.
    Then, when I was seventeen, we visited his cousin in southern Oregon, and she was all about homesteading, self-sufficiency, and growing and preserving the vast majority of their food.
    We lived in suburban L.A., but had about a third of an acre on a pie-shaped lot, at the end of a cul-de-sac overlooking what had been Coyote Pass (now Monterey Pass), where my mom grew a large variety of fruit trees and a few vegetables, plus a large strawberry patch, all fed from her ever-present compost pile.
    And, growing up in earthquake country, we all learned to be prepared in case of disaster, so as my sisters and I each moved out on our own, we developed our own ways of being prepared and making certain that we had more than enough food and water to carry us through anything life could throw at us.
    After twenty-eight years in Florida, I'm now in Middle Tennessee with my husband, on an acreage that we bought specifically to start an organic farm and orchard. Our garden is way late this year, as we had a series of storms and tornadoes rip through here in March and April, but in the past eight years we've planted over 100 fruit and nut trees and bushes, and I've got several dozen more that I've grown from seeds and cuttings that are ready to go into the ground.
    We have a number of mature and producing fruit and nut trees in our woods, along with five chicken hens and a rooster, two Muscovy duck hens, and we're hoping in the near future to add several varieties of quail, along with milk goats, sheep, possibly guinea hogs, and definitely a milk cow.
    My husband is from Poland, and grew up visiting his own grandparents' rural homestead there, so we both love cooking from scratch, and have both done fermenting, dehydrating, canning and other forms of food preservation since childhood.

    • @rebeccacampos5217
      @rebeccacampos5217 Před 2 lety

      I grew up for awhile in Monterey Park. Went to Brightwood. Did you go to Brightwood or Highlands? Your place in Tennessee sounds amazing! After my husband retired we moved to New Mexico and we love the rural life. ❤

  • @sandrajohnson9926
    @sandrajohnson9926 Před 4 lety +12

    My dad was born in April 1929. We had a beautiful garden growing up. The best corn around. Peanuts, potatoes, okra, tomatoes, onions, on & on. I didn't like weeding, but I loved the rest.
    My husband & I continue growing & expanding our gardens. Now we raise bees as well. Chickens again soon.

  • @dclaet1135
    @dclaet1135 Před 3 lety +7

    I loved listening to the interview with your dad. It was just fascinating to listen to. What a great guy! Thanks for sharing.

  • @shannonspoelman4139
    @shannonspoelman4139 Před 2 lety

    It is so important to keep these stories of our heritage alive!

  • @dianegramelspacher8959
    @dianegramelspacher8959 Před 4 lety +22

    Melissa, I think this is one of my favorite videos you have made. I love them all, but most of all, I LOVE listening to how people lived "way back when". I am 65 now, my parents are gone, but I remember my Mom telling me how she went to school in a one room schoolhouse, and she brought fried potato and bread sandwiches for lunch. I would LOVE to hear even more stories from your Dad, about the OLD way of life! Can't wait to see your canning videos!

    • @1jmass
      @1jmass Před 4 lety +1

      Diane Gramelspacher My grandmother made the best cookies, and my mom said she would always get one of the “town kids” to trade their store bought cookies for her homemade ones at lunch. We truly seldom appreciate what we have because there was absolutely no comparison between the two kinds of cookies.

  • @kan-zee
    @kan-zee Před 4 lety +91

    wow….thanks Mr Tom..
    You awoken alot of my own childhood memories of late depression times.
    .
    Hunting , setting Fishing nets, Trap lines were a huge part of our survival in Northern Ontario..We never had the Homestead animals like you mentioned in your experience..but we did alot of fur trading and crafts.. for canned goods, and ammunition and supplies
    .
    We weren’t allowed farm animals / it was against the law for us northern First Nations to have multiple farm animals…so we were dependant alot on our traditional ways for survival
    .
    If there was a Native family whom wanted to start up a homestead with animals..the laws back then required that family to give up all their native rights and become fully assimiliated into white man’s society. All future children would have no native rights.
    Today their are many families trying to get their Native Status back due to homesteading or Franchising.
    Collecting wild edibles was a must-do activity (family berry picking was a good time) and smoking meats and lots of barn building for our staples of flour, Sugar, coffee, lard etc…
    Many natives had home gardens and would be operated sorely on man power. Their were some families whom would barter with off reserve white families, for a horse in exchange for labor on their farm or clear cutting and logging....
    Never was their a locked door to the log homes...and everyone knew everyone's business..lol...clothing was always church donations and hand me downs, yet alot of women , were seamstresses and would trade their skills for food from the church....The churches got rich with alot of native artifacts, through unfair trades...knowing the families were desperate for food and supplies.
    .
    Back in the younger days...You had to have permission slips from the government Indian agent to leave the reserve to get work , or go to the white town for shopping ...or you'd get arrested for leaving your reserve and fined.
    .
    Alot of families had bootlegging business's (moonshine ops) in the bush, also , cause it was against the law to sell booze to natives...
    .
    It wasn’t till the late 1950’s that farming was introduced for many natives and it took off….Alot of first Nation tribes, excelled in apple orchards, grains, potato production and many other crops…but were still not allowed by the government, to have access to machinery till 1970’s ..
    .
    I recall the times of the outhouse and cold windy trots out in the winter..We used scraped cedar bark ...it was soft and is antimicrobial ...great bum cleaning stuff, the women loved it for the absorbency of it, with their sacred moontime. Then we too eventually , started using cut up newspaper, and catalog pages and the women adapted also .
    .
    I remember the fish camps, hunting camps, seasonal activities of harvesting morels, leeks and dandelions, Cattails, wild ginger, stinging nettles, chicory , red clover, spring plantain, Burdock etc.. for suppers with our mix of flour and birch bark for baked or fried bread...
    .I remember tapping maple trees for maple syrup and trading it for supplies and ammo.
    Getting hair cuts from a couple of the neighbourhood grandma's in exchange for some basic labor work of repairing a chimney or splitting wood pile...I remember the collecting of garbage, with horses and wagon..to deliver to the dump for burning.
    I recall bow hunting for salmon and rabbits/partridge and other small game...and getting my 40% of the catch ...canned up by great aunties (they got their 60% of the meat ..lol )
    .
    I remember doing deer runs, to the open fields and open frozen lake, so that my older cuzzins could take that bow shot and stock up on winter meat...
    .
    I remember building a dozen smoke houses and smoking meat and fish from the nets, for weeks.
    Duck, Goose, wild turkey were favorite times as well
    .
    I remember the long winters, when we were snowed in..and our only entertainment was our elderly storytellers...boy they could tell great legends , and educational , history stories that kept the imagination burning and will to live going.
    .
    The Trap line was my favorite time...always we had fresh meat, and working the hides for trade was a bonus. Harvesting Cedar bark, spruce roots and birch bark for new creations of baskets,
    …thanks again for awakening some of my own memories through your recollections.
    .
    Everyone from early teen years to elderly, had hunting skills, canoeing skills, knew which plants were edible and medicinal, trapping and snaring skills, gardening skills, tool making , a good relationship with the land and wild animals and knew the seasonal activities that needed to be done.
    .
    If a crime (eg: theft) was committed it was handled by the elders , chief and family members...the only prisons we had, were Old potato cellars (holes dug in hills) , I recall that some mental ill members ended up in these for a time, and were isolated and treated by elder medicine people and family members , till they got through it.
    .
    It was rare that criminal activity occurred...but when it wasn't resolved by the tribe..the perps were banished from the community....this was a death sentence for some, whom knew their survival was dependant on community unity...solo was a terrible thing, and many starved or got killed in white towns.
    .
    when a big sickness came through the land...we isolated our sick to an island, where a big lodge was build for them ..and supplies were taken out to them daily , for their survival..
    It wasn't till I was separated from my mother by the government courts and church , that I was put on a Work Farm and made into a full time laborer and god fearing follower....that I experienced most of what Mr Tom mentioned in his life telling...and experienced a different diet, different lifestyle....
    ..
    Great job Melissa with the interview with your pops

    • @tinekarmannnielsen3249
      @tinekarmannnielsen3249 Před 4 lety +8

      Wauw, so interesting reading, thank you. God bless you!

    • @tbpc800
      @tbpc800 Před 4 lety +12

      Very interesting! I hope you write a book of these things

    • @kan-zee
      @kan-zee Před 4 lety +4

      @@tinekarmannnielsen3249 Many thank you's...and May God keep you & family well.

    • @kan-zee
      @kan-zee Před 4 lety +15

      @@tbpc800 A tall order indeed to write a book...but I have my community today...whom I get to share my elders and my own life with, in our winter time story tellings and sacred gatherings. thank you for your kind interest.

    • @happydays1336
      @happydays1336 Před 4 lety +11

      It's so sad that you had to experience such bigotry. I hope it's better for you now.

  • @frankgiunto3600
    @frankgiunto3600 Před 3 lety

    This is a great concept for a show. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. Thank you to your Dad for living through that time and passing down to you and eventually to us. God bless you, your Dad and your family. Be safe

  • @greenwichhillhomestead
    @greenwichhillhomestead Před 3 lety +3

    Love this! Great info! In 2020 we decided to grow and raise our own food thanks to you for inspiring us. We’re really enjoying it

  • @michalbarkai3736
    @michalbarkai3736 Před 4 lety +42

    My mom literally told me this week that they didnt have a lot of money, so rice in milk and sugar was their special treat. My mom was born in 53.

    • @farmoboy83
      @farmoboy83 Před 4 lety +1

      My favourite desert is sweet rice :)

    • @debralev
      @debralev Před 3 lety +3

      My mom used to make us that as a treat. I call it now my poor mans rice pudding. I use Brown rice, non dairy vanilla milk and cinnamon. It’s so good.

    • @debrajabs9523
      @debrajabs9523 Před 3 lety +1

      @@debralev Add maple extract instead of vanilla for a yummy twist.

    • @debrajabs9523
      @debrajabs9523 Před 3 lety +1

      My mom was born in 41. She said they got boiled rice with milk and cinnamon and sugar for a treat. I think that it was probably a way to get them to eat rice.

    • @michalbarkai3736
      @michalbarkai3736 Před 3 lety +1

      @@debrajabs9523 my mom said they didnt have enough so it was a cheap treat.

  • @will2-b150
    @will2-b150 Před 4 lety +155

    … Well somebody told us Wall Street fell
    But we were so poor that we couldn't tell.

    • @CantrellLeatherGoods
      @CantrellLeatherGoods Před 4 lety +2

      Will 2-B great song and true words, we had no idea. We were poor before and after so no change. 🤔😌Grew up listening to Alabama.

    • @will2-b150
      @will2-b150 Před 3 lety +5

      montanadoctor Just some lyrics from an old song, no correlation to my finances. Appreciate the concern though.

  • @durwoodfoote9607
    @durwoodfoote9607 Před 2 lety

    Even after the Great Depression, rural areas didn't have electricity until the REA and TVA came onto the scene! Lighting was by kerosene (coal-oil) lamps and if a family had a radio, it was battery powered and Mama controlled its use by day and Papa controlled it in the evening before bedtime which was soon after the sun went down.... lots and lots of quality time! And no surprise, in the large families, one or more members learned to play a musical instrument, guitar, mandolin, violin, piano, harmonica, or Zither! Yes, times were hard, but families were strong and well loved! And that's what made the "good old days," the good old days!!! Loved your video! Thanks.

  • @winterwoodcottage3657
    @winterwoodcottage3657 Před 3 lety +3

    Great content. My grandmother grew up in the great depression. We could learn so much from these wonderful resilient family members.

  • @timz1280
    @timz1280 Před 4 lety +22

    I live in MN, and grow a lot of vegetables. We grow enough to feed ourselves year round and have some left over to give away so we have a fresher crop come summer time. We can stewed tomatoes, and make pizza sauce. We're trying a few new things this year, such as making ketchup and salsa, using onions and peppers we grow in our recipes. We've also staggered our corn this year so we don't get hundreds of ears at the same time. Otherwise we freeze corn, beans, carrots, peas, peppers and onions. We store potatoes until they turn into seedlings. I also deer hunt, so most of our meat annually is from venison. It's tons of work, but it's nice to depend on yourself for food and other needs.

  • @sandramort37
    @sandramort37 Před 4 lety +24

    I got my first chickens when I moved out of NYC a few years ago. What did I know? I never even had a parakeet before. Well, apparently 140 chickens is a lot. Who knew? LOL!!!
    Fast forward a few years, we're raising them again. We got 20 straight run dual purpose birds, so we'll keep 10 laying hens and one or two roosters to protect the flock, plus the rest go to 'freezer camp'.
    I'd like to also get some Texas A&M quail, both for the eggs & the meat. Unfortunately, dairy animals aren't an option right now, but someday.
    Then there's the garden, but that's for another day. I'm going back to your video now!

  • @beeback4
    @beeback4 Před 3 lety +2

    I love hearing how they did things back then. Thank you so much for sharing this with us.

  • @Lou.B
    @Lou.B Před 3 lety +2

    Love "Depression" wisdom - Thanks Dad! I'm really enjoying your channel!

  • @Sh4peofmyheart
    @Sh4peofmyheart Před 4 lety +19

    I'm just a few short months away from 50, and my folks had me later in their lives (I was a change of life baby). Both of them grew up/were young adults, during the great depression. I learned everything I know about gardening and animal husbandry, food preservation, self-reliance, sustainability, and cooking, from them. I've forgotten much of it, or thought I had, but it's coming back quickly. My garden is growing, and I look forward to all of the good things we'll be eating.

  • @coryernewein
    @coryernewein Před 3 lety +9

    We had 100 acres when I was a kid, now I have 6 acres and am showing my son how to get back to our roots. He was 5 when we moved here so he should have some good work ethics instilled

  • @GreeneGene33
    @GreeneGene33 Před 3 lety +5

    `Love to see others out there preserving this way of life and sharing the knowledge . It really gives riches to one's life beyond words!! Good job sister, thrive on...

  • @kwranchandkitchen4655
    @kwranchandkitchen4655 Před 3 lety +7

    I absolutely love your videos that talk about the depression era. I was raised by my grandparents whom I thought were my parents but my mom was born in 1933 so she grew up right during the depression times so everything was made by scratch in our home but she had stopped canning by the time I came around. I wish she talked about it more often then she did.

  • @lindamickel8545
    @lindamickel8545 Před 4 lety +18

    My parents were born in 1930 and 1931. My dad rarely spoke about it but my mom did. She would tell about here in NJ making margarine and using a capsule and breaking it open to color the margarine yellow. Their gardens consisted mainly of squash and green beans. Going through my folks stuff we actually found their ration cards. You reused everything and never threw anything away. My grandparents had ice boxes, coal for heat root cellars. Newspaper was an insulator. Many lessons learned. Something big out here was chipped beef and sometimes it would be creamed with flour and water.

    • @fireofevender5515
      @fireofevender5515 Před 3 lety

      My husband asked for creamed chipped beef on toast a few weeks ago. I got the Buddig beef from the grocery store & we had gravy on toast. Delicious! His Mom (now 70) learned this recipe from her Mom. Great depression recipes usually involve gravy & bread. Yum!

    • @annettesegal9585
      @annettesegal9585 Před 3 lety

      Thanks for the memories! When I was young margarine or oleo as we knew it was illegal in the state of Wisconsin (until 1967)! My Dad and uncles would make an oleo run across the Illinois border in November for Christmas baking. I laugh and tell people my Dad was an oleo smuggler.

  • @winnie2379
    @winnie2379 Před 3 lety +27

    My dad was a child and young adult during the Depression, and he was the only son of tenant farmers. It was a incredibly difficult way to live. Plowing was done by walking behind a horse. At age 12, he was doing the work of a grown man. He was an organic gardener before anyone else was, and he was a great cook too. He taught me about Sorghum, which was important to his family, and I don’t ever hear folks mention sorghum☺️!

    • @lorimangold2890
      @lorimangold2890 Před 3 lety +3

      Winnie,I eat sorghum, but it doesn't grow around here, farmers grew it when I was a kid, but not now, Wow Winnie, your Dad grew up tough, my Dad had to do that too, he said, that they chopped corn with a machete corn knife,

    • @amiegamble1678
      @amiegamble1678 Před 2 lety +2

      My grandma is from Kentucky. She has sorghum in her pantry. I was raised knowing about sorghum. She uses it sparingly.

    • @jenmailsouth4155
      @jenmailsouth4155 Před 2 lety +3

      I'm in KY. Sorghum is in the grocery here, local made.

    • @amiegamble1678
      @amiegamble1678 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jenmailsouth4155 My grandma and mom are from Greenup.😊

    • @jenmailsouth4155
      @jenmailsouth4155 Před 2 lety +2

      @@amiegamble1678 I'm in Mayfield.

  • @denisebrady6858
    @denisebrady6858 Před 2 lety +1

    Melissa still a fantastic video- Thank You.

  • @donebysix4579
    @donebysix4579 Před 3 lety +5

    Wow, love this! I can't imagine living through the Great Depression, but it's great to know it's possible... and how to do at least some of it! Thanks Melissa!

  • @Freeagent-4-life
    @Freeagent-4-life Před 4 lety +18

    My Dad and his siblings were raised on a hand to mouth existence in Australia (He was born 1929). Many today would no believe the difficulty of their life.

  • @lindsayg8224
    @lindsayg8224 Před 4 lety +9

    I know I've enjoyed learning the same things from my grandma. So thankful for that generation of hard working people.

  • @JohnDoe-wb4iv
    @JohnDoe-wb4iv Před 2 lety +1

    Mom often made great north beans n cornbread she called it a poor man's meal I loved it

  • @oilinmylamp
    @oilinmylamp Před 2 lety

    You're so sweet to share all of this valuable info.

  • @jimmyhvy2277
    @jimmyhvy2277 Před 3 lety +30

    as a young boy , my job at home was to milk our two house cow's by hand , before and after school everyday . Plus tending to the crops , we also had horses that we would brake in to riding and pulling cart's ,it made me a strong and well coordinated young fellow .

    • @lynnbea491able
      @lynnbea491able Před 3 lety

      Thank you soo nice, Bravo! Have a great day 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @Lisaairbnb
    @Lisaairbnb Před 4 lety +7

    I loved hearing the stories of my grandparents during the depression. She used to tell me that they went to the but hers and asked for the head of a cow, which the but hers threw out. He carried it home in a sack and made lots of meals from that. Today most wouldn’t eat it and i agree were spoiled. She said the tongue made a roast, the cheek was tender, made omelettes with brains. They wasted nothing. Canned everything. Big vegetable garden. Tomato sauce, fruit, eggplant, etc. Made lots of home made pasta! Im wanting to get back to my roots and going to start and can.

  • @tomsalzer535
    @tomsalzer535 Před 2 lety +1

    My name is Pam. I use to raise chickens, collect eggs. A tip for bright orange yolks was that the chickens got into my flower garden and chowed down my marigolds and zennias. I had a great garden with hearty shelves I did all kinds of fruit, veggies. and I froze my corn on and off the cob. I had geese, turkeys, ducks, guinea hens, rabbits. We hunted venison as well. Chickens love table scraps. I love to bake bread.

  • @freedomacresfarm5881
    @freedomacresfarm5881 Před 2 lety +4

    Loved listening to your podcast while working out in the field of a local organic farm, learning ALL the things. Now, we have our own 50 acres that we are homesteading, just a year and a half after really diving in. I'm so thankful to have your channel to help guide us on our journey. Cheers!

  • @brett76544
    @brett76544 Před 4 lety +9

    My grandfather and grandmother live through the depression and her father also told me about it, plus what live was like in Germay 120 years ago. The apple or pear trees or the odd peach tree, berry picking (black, blue and raspberry), the garden vegetables (peas, beans, broccoli, tomatoes, different squashes), Growing items for pickling, like thime. There were wild strawberries, blue berries, cranberries, elderberries. Then nuts from the forest chestnut, hickory, beach then some walnut if it was there. Then wild grapes, mushrooms. One thing, Sheep or goats. Some people used the goats for milk instead of a cow. Then there is the Apple butter! On my dads and moms side all grew enough to sell items. Be it wool, caned items. Then in season the main crop along with some extra vegetables. Then the Maple syrup or maple sugar. Then remember for hunting there was not the game like today. In PA you could only shoot bucks, if you even saw a deer, but there was more grouse, rabbits and people even shot crows to eat. There were a few turkeys in PA, in very remote places that ended up being used to repopulate the state.

  • @ecocentrichomestead6783
    @ecocentrichomestead6783 Před 4 lety +42

    it is interesting to watch videos like this. Most people seem to think anyone in the nation can just go buy food whenever they want.
    That's not the case. The great depression issues are real to many people today.
    I run on $600/month. If I were to buy all my food, that would be $450/month in itself.
    Lucky for me, I live on 7 acres on the far side of nowhere. I garden and forage most of my food. A weasel killed my hens this past winter.
    Ohh! Rice pudding! One of my childhood treats! another was sugar and cream on home made bread.
    I've never used pectin. I like the texture of jam without it.

    • @dana102083
      @dana102083 Před 3 lety +1

      hey lady, I just wanted to pipe in as this has saved me money. I started a ketogenic diet about 2.5 years ago and ate around 500/month in food or more. Now I'm at 200/month! I only ate twice a day usually and aimed for snacks but now I just eat once a day of very good quality meat and veggies.. that's it! Because it's high fat, it keeps me full and I burn body fat when I don't eat. I'm at my body weight that's normal for my size and still ok eating this way. I wanted to pipe in as people think keto is expensive, but if you have weight to lose or health issues, I'd challenge you to take a look at the information. Dr Box, Dr Berry and Dr Eckberg are my go to's for info.. oh and Dr. Fung! Grains are starvation foods and why they were used widely in the war times, our ancestors before that have eaten fatty meat and foraged for life! We are the same people. Sent with love!

    • @colleenkaralee2280
      @colleenkaralee2280 Před 3 lety +1

      Before I got pensioned off I fed on $3 daily buying one large $6 watermelon all summer - it was delicious and filling and lasted for two days and never got tired of it and never wanted anything else.

    • @dana102083
      @dana102083 Před 3 lety

      @@colleenkaralee2280 but zero protein. :/ being in ketosis spares protein at least..the difference between starving on sugar metabolism and starving on body fats metabolism

  • @michaelfredt573
    @michaelfredt573 Před rokem

    you're such a delight to watch and listen to.
    thank you. you're wise and wonderful.

  • @aliyannajoy1607
    @aliyannajoy1607 Před 2 lety +5

    My dad and mom went thru the Depression, too. Both of their families were 7 or more kids...so yeah big families. When they moved up North to WA state....besides beans...they had lots of taters and apples. I have a larger family....and when my husband was out of work....we went gleaning for potatoes and apples and those were a big part of our meals. Some of the apples weren't meant for cookin..mostly for fresh...but with a little sweetening and lots of cinnamon...lol it was great applesauce. Gleaning (with the owner's permission) made a big difference for us. We have often gone to wheat ranchers during harvest and bought our wheat for a year and it cost us less than a few bags of flour or gleaned enough potatoes to keep us (husband works construction....so times are always changeable) We bought local honey from orchardist who used the bees for pollinating and would sell the honey to cover costs.....always great honey and local honey is so good !! You look to be on the other side of the mts from us....we live close to the Columbia.

  • @davidnorton7037
    @davidnorton7037 Před 4 lety +4

    I just noticed your green clothes line. Bet a lot of people didn't even see it or they know what it was. It seems your life now, was how I grew up. Truly the best times of my life. Thank you for bringing those memories back to me.

  • @jasongentry7405
    @jasongentry7405 Před 4 lety +20

    Love the video. Just as an add-on: Honey can replace sugar in recipes...even canning. If I am not mistaken 3/4 to 7/8 cup honey replaces 1 cup of sugar. My grandfather used to follow honey bees from a water source and then go back and cut down the tree they were in.

  • @rebekahspahn2638
    @rebekahspahn2638 Před 11 měsíci

    Oh my goodness, what an inspiration you are, Melissa!

  • @scummings9878
    @scummings9878 Před 3 lety +3

    I am so glad I found you! You are a great speaker and so easy to follow. Just purchased my first canner. Look forward to catching up on some of your previous videos. Thank you for sharing your wealth of knowledge and experience ❤️

  • @srg6532
    @srg6532 Před 4 lety +24

    Different breeds of milk cows give different levels of milk fat, protein, etc. It helps to know what what final products one wants, to aide in the selection of the breed of milk cow. Breed also affects flavor, in my opinion. Wild onions are to be avoided around milk cows due to altered milk flavor also.

  • @saraanderson8458
    @saraanderson8458 Před 3 lety +5

    My mom lived on her grandparents farm during part of the Depression. They grew all their own vegetables, and raised chickens to eat and collect the eggs & feathers for pillows.

  • @gailclay4905
    @gailclay4905 Před 2 lety +1

    I have so been wanting to learn about how people lived back in hard times etc. Thank you for taking the time to explaining and loving it like I would so so so cool!!! May you be blessed in all you do…

  • @dille249
    @dille249 Před 3 lety

    This video was wonderful. Thank you for sharing. I'm excited to follow along on your journey!

  • @scottwilliams5196
    @scottwilliams5196 Před 4 lety +47

    I don't normally comment, but I really really enjoyed this one. I wish I could hear more stories like this.

    • @MelissaKNorris
      @MelissaKNorris  Před 4 lety +10

      I'm so glad you commented! I'm still trying to get my Dad to come on camera but don't know if he'll give in, lol but I love to listen to the stories too.

    • @marirose756
      @marirose756 Před 4 lety +2

      Melissa K. Norris - Modern Homesteading I’m glad that you’re listening to his stories and sharing them with us.

  • @growinginthecountry646
    @growinginthecountry646 Před 4 lety +13

    What a great video. We really need to return to a little bit of the mindset they had back then. We've just moved to our own place in the Irish countryside. I'm setting up my veg garden at the moment, and have plans for a wildlife garden and orchard. Looking forward to a bit of self sufficiency and making lovely jams and preserves!

  • @jeanlanz2344
    @jeanlanz2344 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for sharing your Dad and Grandmother's experience and expertise. You are very knowledgeable and it is kind that you share your expertise with others.