October is the month I begin slowing my pace. August and September are a whirlwind of preserving, and by October, I'm pretty burned out. Thankfully, that's when the harvesting begins slowing down, too.
We got our beef in October (purchased from a local rancher, since we don't have any pasture to speak of on our homestead in the woods), and while we freeze most of that meat, I do take the time to preserve both the suet fat and the bones of the animal. (You can read how I render the fat to make a truly healthy cooking oil here. And how I turn the bones into nutrient-rich bone broth here.)
I also preserve some beets, cauliflower, green beans, and so on from the fall garden.
But I also spend a lot more time resting. Reading good books. Baking. Nesting. It feels good!
This heartwarming little book kicked off my cool weather reading.
The fall garden. |
Drying apples. |
Canning and freeze drying bone broth. |
Rendering tallow. |
October Produce Totals:
To learn more about how and why I am keeping these totals, click here.
A little note: While I make every effort to gather accurate numbers on my produce, in some cases, the numbers shared here are definitely a bit lower than the actual harvest. This is because my family steals fruit from the orchard :) and because I sometimes don't weigh leaves off main crops, even though we do usually eat them. (Example: Broccoli leaves aren't counted, just the heads, even though we eat both.)
Delicata squash 7 lbs. 11 oz.
Yellow summer squash 2 lbs.
Patty pan squash 11 oz.
Carrots and beets. |
Carrots 3 lbs. 10 oz.
------------> $2.17 conventional or organic
Turnip 7 oz.
------------> $1.05 conventional; no organic option available
Runder Schwarzer winter radishes. |
Winter radish 14.48 oz
------------> $4.48 conventional; no organic option available (My local Walmart doesn't sell winter radishes, so I compared to red table radishes)
Garlic 5 lbs 6.30 oz
------------> $25.88 conventional; no organic option available
Cauliflower. |
Cauliflower 1 lb. 14 oz.
Apples 20 lbs.
$132.73 if purchased conventional; $154.37 if I purchased the organic options available.
Saved in 2024 so far:
$2,134.27 if buying conventional and $3022.58 if buying organic.
2024 Gardening Expenses
Walla Walla onion starts: $4
Cherry tomato start: $5.49 (a single plant and a hedge because the new-to-me-variety of cherry tomatoes I started from seed were looking less than robust)
Potting Soil: $47.96 (primarily for potting up peppers in the greenhouse; some will get used for flowers, too, but I won't try to parse that out.)
Organic snail bait $17.96 (I had to use more of this than is typical because we had such a cool, damp spring)
Total gardening expenses so far: $75.41
Total savings minus expenses in 2024: $2058.86 if buying conventional; $2,947.17 if buying organic when available.
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