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What do you do for work?

 
pollinator
Posts: 361
Location: Klumbis Oh Hah, Zone 6
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Thekla McDaniels wrote:You don’t have to bend down,  there is crawling the rows, sitting on a stool or seat or kneeler or something.  Raised beds… just do it however it works for you!


I sorta covered this already: https://permies.com/t/287474/work#3242603

Gardening has never been something I'm really into. I enjoy helping my wife with our garden as her manual laborer and compost expert, and I adore my ever-growing collection of houseplants, but my thumb turns rapidly brown beyond that.

Besides, homesteading includes lots of activities--not just growing plants, but also making and fixing your own stuff and being generally self-sufficient. As I said in that comment upthread, I get savings and/or satisfaction from doing some of those activities, but not all of them, and in those cases I'm fine buying instead.

I don't do nearly enough self-sufficiency activities to call myself a "homesteader" and I don't feel any impulse to change my lifestyle so I can describe myself as one.

Anyway, that covers the "aspirations to homestead" part of the topic!
 
master rocket scientist
Posts: 6745
Location: latitude 47 N.W. montana zone 6A
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For over twenty-five years, I have been a member of the IUOE International Union of Operating Engineers.
I am now retired!
Working at first as a heavy equipment operator, then a short stint as a crane mechanic.
I have spent the last 23 years holding a national crane operator's license and working on large heavy construction sites around the North West.
Before that, I was many things, from a logging surveyor, to washing dishes at an Italian restaurant at 13 years old for $2 hr cash under the table.
 
Posts: 72
Location: Somewhere with too-long winters.
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I’m surprised nobody replied “housework” or “foraging” A combo of these is what I do. I also cut firewood and pick up odd jobs. Right now, i have a seasonal kitchen job in a diner. I basically try to live like Thoreau.
 
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Location: St Croix, US Virgin Islands
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How fun to see what everyone does for work!

I own and manage niche dating sites, including GreenSingles.com. It's gratifying work. 25 years.
 
Posts: 119
Location: Nuevo Mexico, Alta California, New York, Andalucia
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Hydrology & horticulture design, rainwater catchment systems, drylands/ temperate Edible Plantscapes, rare variety fruit/ nut/ berry collecting/ nursery/ orchards, hardwoods & fire regeneration forest management, site assessment/ precision LIDAR/ individual tree management GIS, most childcare/ kitchen/ domestic duties, all homestead cultivation/ repair/ maintenance/ upgrade works, etc.   Having four decades ago taken vows of poverty + to design interaction with nature, most of my potential + need for earning have been obviated, especially in working & living around subsistence threshold.  I do my best quite well to keep my little family modest in needs, wants, desires, appetites, ambitions, expenses.  
 
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I carry the world on my back.
 
pollinator
Posts: 2167
Location: Big Island, Hawaii (2300' elevation, 60" avg. annual rainfall, temp range 55-80 degrees F)
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Sure, I’ll jump in………

Veterinary medicine was my lifetime passion until 9/11.  Veterinary medicine provided an excellent education and experience that I still value today. But 9/11 hit me to my core, so I decided to retire and take up homestead style farming, build our own house, feed ourselves (hubby and I), and escape from the madness of the Eastcoast (Washington DC to New York City corridor).  Farming was what I had always wanted ever since I was a kid. Even tried talking my parents into letting me attend agricultural high school, but alas, that was forbidden. But I never lost my love for growing things or for learning about old style homestead farming.  

Transitioning to our current lifestyle was difficult and challenging. And most difficult of all——we had to lower our expectations and  shed most of our Eastcoast lifestyle.

So now I homestead. It supports us just fine and provides enough extra for us to be comfortable. The farm isn’t fancy. We don’t have lots fancy toys, but we don’t desire them. Nothing is fancy in our lives, but that’s not what our lives are about. Hubby helps out when needed on the homestead, but he keeps himself busy having a private cat sanctuary.

When not otherwise occupied, I volunteer at the local dog & cat spay/neuter clinic each month. And I put about 20 hours a week into volunteering for my community by growing veggies (not on my farm), manning a booth at the town farmers market, teaching home food production, and helping at the local food hub (soup kitchen, food giveaways, etc).
 
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30 year IT person here for a Fortune 500 company specifically teaching DevOps.  

We don't really have a "homestead" only 1/4 acre but we have peach and pear trees that we process and pressure can the juice, jelly, and butter off of.  We have some small garden beds and a 10 x 30 ft green house.  No livestock, possibly quail in the future, just not sure yet.
 
I've got no option but to sell you all for scientific experiments. Or a tiny ad:
Learn Permaculture through a little hard work
https://wheaton-labs.com/bootcamp
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