Episodios

  • [170] Now Hiring! SHTF Positions - Men's Forum
    Jun 25 2024

    "you are not your f*cking khakis"

    or are you?

    when the SHTF, what's your role? where do you bring value? are doomed to just roll over and die?


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    Homestead Padre website

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    FarmHopLife website

    FarmHopLife #20x23project

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    1 h y 2 m
  • [169] Social Break - Men's Forum
    Jun 11 2024

    When was the last time you intentionally stopped using social media? It's not as important as you think.

    Homestead of Payne on Twitter

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    Homestead Padre website

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    FarmHopLife website

    FarmHopLife #20x23project

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    59 m
  • [168] Kids Are NOT Alright - Men's Forum
    May 21 2024

    Another student suicide, this time by a 10 year old boy. Did the parents do enough? What are some other options?

    DeweyLikeDonuts on TikTok

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    Homestead of Payne on Twitter

    Homestead of Payne on Tiktok

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    FarmHopLife website

    FarmHopLife #20x23project

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    1 h y 18 m
  • [167] Starting Out Growing Behind - Men's Forum
    Apr 30 2024

    It's the end of April, are you already behind on your plans for this year? What the hell happened?

    DeweyLikeDonuts on TikTok

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    DeweyLikeDonuts on Youtube


    Homestead of Payne on Twitter

    Homestead of Payne on Tiktok

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    Homestead Padre website

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    Caylon DePalma on Twitter

    Six Day Acres Farm on Facebook

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    FarmHopLife website

    FarmHopLife #20x23project

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    1 h y 4 m
  • [166] Common Strife to Unprepared Life- with Josh Centers
    Apr 25 2024

    Growing concerned over the Ferguson Riots, Josh started to think and respond differently to how to better prepare himself and his family should anything happen. He writes a great Substack called Unprepared.Life and even the free content is worth subscribing

    Unprepared.Life

    Josh Centers on Twitter/X


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    1 h y 10 m
  • [165] How to Grow HUGE Profits - with Caylon DePalma
    Apr 16 2024

    Started in 2020 and tired of hustling for pennies at the farmer's market, Caylon found a shortcut to maximize profits on specialty crops selling to.... grocery stores! Plus his journey to quickly ramping up production on his farm.


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    FarmHopLife #20x23project

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    1 h y 14 m
  • [164] Refocus - Men's Forum
    Apr 9 2024

    we're back and it's been weird being gone. but it's also good to take some time and figure out what you SHOULD BE DOING instead of just going through the motions and following a path to no where or somewhere you don't want to be


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    1 h y 21 m
  • [163] Masanobu Fukuoka - Famous Farmer
    Feb 29 2024
    you're trying to do too much againtime to learn about Masanobu Fukuoka, Japanese farmer who pioneered the "do nothing" method by listening, trusting, and working with natureLets goFukuoka was born on Feb 2nd, 1913. His father was an educated man, completed an exceptional eight years of schooling, and the local leaders repeatedly selected him mayor. His mother was of Samurai descent and also well-educated. The land had been in the family for over 1400 yearsa troublesome student, he angered the teachers, and one day his music teacher broke the village organ in frustrationHis father sent him to Gifu Agricultural College for higher education to prepare for inheriting the family farmIn 1934, Fukuoka secured a role in Yokohama Customs Office's Plant Inspection Section. Working in a hilltop laboratory, he delved into studying diseases, fungi, and pests on imported plants"in amazement at the world of nature revealed through the eyepiece of the microscope"His third year at Yokohama, Fukuoka battled acute pneumonia, enduring harsh treatments like exposure to wintry air. Isolated, friends shunned him due to contagion fears. Even nurses fled after temperature checks, leaving him sick, lonely, and fearing for his life at 25After recovering, Fukuoka, haunted by his brush with death, obsessively pondered life's meaning. During a solitary walk, he reached a cliff's edge, contemplating the impact of his death. Realizing his lack of true friends, he collapsed in a deep sleep under an elm treeWaking to a heron's cry at dawn, he watched the sunrise through mist, birds singing, realizing"all the concepts to which he had been clinging were empty fabrications. All his agonies disappeared like dreams and illusions, a something one might call 'true nature' stood revealed"Fukuoka quit his job the next day. For months he lived on severance pay proclaiming "everything is meaningless."Dismissed as eccentric, he returned home, retreated to a mountain hut, and entrusted with his father's citrus grove. Testing his revelation, he began doing nothing.He let meticulously pruned fruit trees go wild. Insects attacked, branches interlocked, and the orchard withered. His father's grove taught Fukuoka a crucial lesson: abrupt changes harm cultivated trees, realizing the importance of gradual adaptation to natural farmingHis odd behavior concerned his parents and as the mayor's son, "hiding" wasn't acceptableIn 1939, he was offered the chief role at an Agricultural Experiment Station, he accepted at his father's wishes. He moved to Kochi and was expected to increase wartime food productionIndependently, Fukuoka conducted studies comparing yields from chemically enhanced crops with those grown naturally. He scientifically established natural farming's superiority over chemical aids, building upon his earlier revelation that "doing nothing was best""I just emptied my mind and tried to absorb what I could from nature"Instead of asking "how about doing this?"ask "how about not doing this?"Over the years, as a more natural ecology was re-established, the less he did, the better the land respondedFukuoka observed, "The earth cultivates itself" Recognizing roots, worms, and micro-organisms thrive, he saw no need for human intervention. Plowing alters the environment and encourages weed growth.His first principle: No plowing or soil turningChemical fertilizers aid crops but harm soil. Nature itself can do better than compost and chicken poop (which can cause rice blast disease). Instead, use cover crops like clover as a natural fertilizer.Fukuoka's second principle: No chemical fertilizers or prepared compostPlowing stirs deep-lying weed seeds and chemical herbicides leaves poison. Weeds don't need to be eliminated, just suppressed with straw and ground cover, plus timely seeding to eliminate intervals between crops is crucialHis 3rd principle: No weeding by tillage or herbicidesPests and diseases attack the weakest plants, allowing the strong to survive. Chemical solutions, though effective in the short term, are hazardous in the long run, leave weak and chemical-dependent plantsFukuoka's 4th principle: No dependence on chemical pesticidesO-bon festival is when ancestors return to earth for 3 days to visit the living. On the 3rd night the ancestors go back with a sendoff of songs and fireworksMasanobu Fukuoka, author of The One-Straw Revolution, passed away on Aug 16, 2008, on that 3rd day of O-bonHe was 95Thank you very much for listening. Links in the show notes for the articles and videos referenced here. Image credit: farmerandchef.co.ukIf there’s another farmer you’d like me to cover, send me a message! @farmhoplife on all the social medias or matt@farmhoplife.comGo feed yourself.
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    6 m