Craig Schaaf

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since Nov 07, 2025
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Biography
My name is Craig Schaaf. I have been homesteading off grid for over twenty years. I make my living growing vegetables for a restaurant in Traverse City Michigan. I specialize in season extension practices. I also enjoy developing new varieties of vegetables.
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Recent posts by Craig Schaaf

Since I am new here I want to make a post to introduce you to my garden. Our farm is named Golden Rule Farm. I refer to my present garden as the Quilt Garden. It is truly a labor of Love. I have to pinch myself sometime as I am working there. It is deeply satisfying in so many ways. I would not be the gardener / farmer that I am if it were not for Eliot Coleman and John Jeavons. Both of these men mentored me and gave up precious time twenty years ago to teach me. I have spent time with both of them at their farms and they put up with many phone calls from me. Anyone that is familiar with their methods will recognize their influence in the things I share. They are also the reason I share so freely the things I have learned. They gave so freely to me, I desire to do the same for those that are just getting started as well.  I look forward to sharing with you the many ways we can nurture our growing areas and make them truly bountiful!

Jon Hanzen wrote:In NW Montana where morel mushrooms are common to be found I ordered spores by mail and planted them at the border of my property noticing it as an ideal location. I wasn't there long enough but the spores weren't as expensive asa petrol to and from remote locations and it added to local food security at my location.



Thank you for commenting. I feel very fortunate that I have Morels in two different parts of my homestead. Whenever I can I will incorporate mushrooms into the homestead environment. I have Wine Caps in my garden and have done log culture with other species. Generally when I forage, it is when I have other business, like delivering vegetables to the Chef I grow for.  Many places are close to that driving route. Many of my best foraging areas are fortunately very close and can often be checked while I ride my bike as well.

Very often I will take some of my wild harvest mushrooms and spread them in my homesteads forests. That is a great way to establish new species over time. In fact one of my friends would always wash his Morels and take the rinse water and spread it in the same location next to his home. Over time that location became a great location to harvest from as well. Fortunately Morels are not quite as picky when it comes to relating to certain species of trees, as some mushrooms are. In fact I am often surprised the places I find them. Unlike some species like the Birch Bolete that only relates to Birch trees. Often when I am foraging, I am hunting for trees first. Then after finding the trees, I begin to look for certain species of mushrooms. Sometimes this can be very predictable.
15 hours ago
Years ago I was talking with an elderly man that had spent his entire life here in northern Michigan. We were discussing homesteading and he was remarking on all the incredible resources we have available in the local area. Water, forests, cold.... Wait what? Cold? Yes he said when he was young most all the local homesteads had ice houses. When you realize the amount of energy that is used annually in northern regions on creating cold during the warmer months for refrigeration this really starts to sink in. When we first established our homestead twenty years ago there were no Amish in our area. Now there are over thirty families. Most of those homes have ice houses. Some homes with businesses have a couple. Sometimes though several smaller families will share a larger one. If you enjoy community this is the ticket. The Amish will cut ice once the ponds have frozen and work together as a community to harvest it and haul it back to their homes with their horse teams. It is really fun to take it all in. When these families first started moving in they were bringing in semi loads of ice houses at a time to supply everyone. I asked one of the families I had gotten to know if I could order one as well, and they were glad to include me.

In the olden days ice was stored in sawdust. A friend of mine inherited a marina close to Lake Michigan many years ago, and was telling me that when he took over the marina, there was a building that was on the property that had previously been a massive ice house. It was used to store ice to ship locally caught fish in the summer time to Chicago. It hadn’t been used in over twenty years. They went in with big front end loaders to remove the mountains of sawdust that remained. Under the sawdust they still found chunks of ice and the ground was still frozen. The footprint of the building was so large, and had been used for so many years, the ground had a permafrost that had developed that the mountains of sawdust had continued to protect. He was astonished.

Today the modern ice house is a marvel. They are designed with eight inch high density foam. Because they are so well insulated, they no longer require sawdust. Therefore you can pack it full of just ice. You want to be careful to only open the door during the coolest part of the day. I will go to get ice first thing in the morning when it is needed. I use a large Yeti cooler as a refrigerator.

I chose to take a different rout though in regards to harvesting ice. I was visiting one of the Amish families one day before I got my ice house and they let me take a peek inside theirs. It smelled strongly of a pond of course. Not the most pleasant smell, especially to be placing with your food. in your refrigerator. This got me thinking. I have a friend that makes commercial quantities of jam. She has white four gallon buckets that she gets frozen fruit in, and then sells them to me to use on the farm. When I can see in the weather forecast that we will be having nights near zero I started filling these buckets up with water, within about two inches from the top to allow for expansion. It usually takes several days for them to freeze solid. I use to take the buckets into my seedling greenhouse and let them thaw just enough so I could get the ice out of the bucket, then carry the ice to the ice house. I no longer do that. I had so much ice left over the following fall I decided to put the ice in, in the buckets. The first year I did this I made a mistake though. I put the buckets in facing up. This didn’t allow any of the melting water to move away from the block. You see an ice house will have small weep holes in the floor to allow all excess water to flow outside. Ice sitting in water melts much faster. I was out of ice in late August. Then I turned the buckets upside down the next season. Bingo. The ice stored beautifully. Because I am not taking it out of the buckets my labor is a fraction of what I had been doing. Compared to the labor the Amish are expending to get their ice, there is no comparison. I almost feel guilty because of how easy it is, and my ice is pure enough I could drink it after it melts.

I am convinced that ice houses could be used in areas that traditionally they have never been. I know someone that has a heavy rubber pond liner that they put out and put just a few inches of water in. It freezes much faster than my buckets. It wouldn’t need a deep cold spell. After it freezes they bust up the ice in chunks and put it in the ice house. This could definitely be accomplished in areas where lakes and ponds do not freeze thick enough to work on. I believe ice houses could be possible as far south as Tennessee, if the pond liner was large enough, and the timing was good. It just needs to be below freezing for a few days.

There is one more application that I want to explain to you. There are several Amish families that purchased large ice houses, much larger than they needed, in order to make a walk in cooler. I have been in these rooms. It is amazing. When they are butchering livestock in the summer or have a large amount of produce that needs refrigeration. They have insulated adjacent rooms that the ice house door opens into. All they have to do is crack the ice house door a small amount and it fills the room with cold air. This is only possible though with a much larger unit.

In the late 1800's one of the local lumber Barrons in our area had an underground pipe installed from the huge city ice house to his home down hill. His mansion was fully air conditioned with that setup. That home no longer enjoys that possibility though because the large ice houses are no more.

I hope this article is a blessing too many, and food for thought. God bless your homesteads!




19 hours ago

Nancy Reading wrote:Thanks for sharing Craig. That is an impressive temperature effect!
I guess having lots of small jars makes them easy to reposition keeping the space multifunctional. Did you experiment with different colours in the water?



Thank you Nancy. I am new here so I am not sure how to do everything yet.

Yes having the heat sink be 1000 gallon jars makes it very flexible. In fact I will take jars into the garden and put them around many of my cold sensitive plants. Here in Michigan the summer evenings will often get down in the fifties. That can be problematic for melon pollination and pepper fruit set. My pepper plants are loaded though because I put four jars around each plant, and they are bathed in warm air over night.

I chose red for the liquid color because research from several universities have shown that red light around tomatoes and strawberries can increase their yield by 25%. I am not claiming that the jars are for sure doing it for me, but I do specialize in heirloom tomatoes for an Italian Chef. My plants do respond well to the warmth at night. If I used a black liquid it would run about 8 degrees warmer, but during the day that could be too warm for some plants.

I love the fact the those jars are all recycled. I have been using them for over a decade.
1 day ago
How many of you have learned your local grocery store so well you can just quickly run inside and know just where to go to quickly get what you need? You even know how to pass by the produce and figure out as you are passing through if certain fruits are in season and are in stock.

I have gotten to know some of my foraging locations so well that I just know where to quickly look to find what I need. Last summer I was finding plenty of Chanterelles just where I expected. But as I was going through the "store" I was careful to see if the Hedgehogs and Black Trumpets were "in stock" yet.

With mushrooms I wait to go out until a day or so after a good rain. I can make these stops as fast as you can run into Walmart to get a few things. The great thing is the day I was looking for Chanterelles, I came out with $30 worth of free gourmet mushrooms. I didn't spend money, I gained it.

Sometimes when the mushrooms are very prolific I will spend some extra time "shopping" for new spots. To get to know other areas. All of this is an investment that really begins to pay off over time. It really has to become part of your lifestyle though. Even if my hunt is not as successful as I would like, because they were "out of stock". I still get a great walk, and a time of solitude.
1 day ago
This is a picture of the inside of our original seedling greenhouse. (I am in the process of doing a major renovation this winter.) I’m standing inside of what I refer to as my inner cover. The wooden structure you see on the ceiling is actually a greenhouse inside of another metal bowed hoop house. The boxed in area where you see all the seedlings I refer to as my inner cover cold frame. This large cold frame has insulated covers that I slide over the 2x’s that run across the top to help to hold in heat at night. Inside that cold frame I have around 1000 gallon jars that I have recycled from a bakery a friend of mine use to own. I put water with a teaspoon of red food dye in each jar to help collect heat from the sun during the day and release it at night. So why have I done all of this? Every layer, like a hoop house, that you put over your plants gives you approximately one and a half garden zones of protection. So I’m in a zone 5 most years. One layer takes me to zone 6.5. Two layers. A hoop house inside of another hoop house takes me to a zone 8. Now add my cold frame with the insulated covers and jars and I have achieved a level of protection against the cold that Haiti can’t touch. In fact the lowest temperature we have recorded on our farm was -44 below zero F. It was February. The day before was sunny. The jars heated up to about 70 degrees F. In the morning when I came down to open up the covers I started a fire in a wood stove under the second layer just to take the chill out of the air so I could take the covers off the third layer. When I opened it, the third layer was still 58 degrees F. That’s 102 degrees warmer than outside! My material cost to build that insulated cold frame was $500 at the time. I have used it for about a decade. If I were to try to use propane or firewood to achieve the same outcome it would cost me thousands of dollars a year to pull it off. This photo is from a past year. Hope this helps. God bless your day!
1 day ago