Free food

Sitting on the couch late in the evening, drowsiness coming on when a nearby gunshot pierces the air.  The dogs go on alert and I am up on my feet.  Probably neighbor poachers, but I need to have a look around anyway.  My nearest neighbor is more than half mile away.  The road is several hundred yards from the house, so I don’t get a lot of extraneous noise.  Walking out onto the front porch I see the lights from three police cars lined up along the highway about 100 yards apart.  Spotlights and flashlights were scanning the area, both toward and away from me. Weird stuff happens and I seem to be a magnet for crazy so my first thought was some sort of manhunt.  Very awake now, I drive up the driveway toward the police.  It would normally be a walk but I didn’t think it wise to come out of the dark toward a bunch of cops in the grass.

Luckily, I was completely wrong.  It turned out that two cars traveling in the same direction simultaneously hit two bucks crossing the highway.  The gunshot I heard was an injured buck being put down.  The spotlights and police were looking for other possible injured deer.  When I got to the road, one of the officers recognized me and said the magic words, “would you like one of these deer?”  The only right answer is “hell yes, let me get a knife.”  I was tired, it was late, but even a damaged deer is a gift of food.

I don’t like to butcher beat up meat.  And this was the first road kill I did on my own.  A cleanly killed animal is much easier to disassemble as you don’t have to work around bruising and broken bones.  That stuff is edible but not very good.  Survival food only for me.

However, dogs aren’t picky.  They like it nasty.  Good dog food is expensive so I decided to harvest as much meat that I couldn’t butcher cleanly into stew meat for the dogs.  They love me.

Click the image to see more of the processing.

Now the bad part was that I had to work my day job and the light is still a bit short this time of year.  I worked as I could, letting the carcass hang about 15 hours before butchering.  In the end, we maybe got 30 good pounds of human food including two beautiful tenderloins, a few small roasts, and a lot of stew meat.  As a bonus, the hide was in excellent condition and I was able to pull it off with only a few small cuts at the neck, legs, and tail.  Although not large, the antlers are beautiful so I sawed off the top of the skull to deal with them later.

I am of the school of thought that it is everyone’s right to make his or her best effort to feed themselves and family.  Due to many reasons, including the stupid human factor, this needs to be regulated in the modern world.  This makes it difficult to hunt, especially in places like New Mexico with less than easy hunting regulations.  After living on either home-grown cow or wild game for quite some time, the last few years have been a let down, having to buy commercial meat.  I’ve seen the feed lots and I don’t want to contribute to those companies any more.  Luckily, some free food came our way last week.

Tiny Homes: Simple Shelter

I received an advance copy of Tiny Homes: Simple Shelter when I went to my post office box today.  I have been thumbing through it all all evening, looking at the photos and pondering the meaning of Shelter.

Maybe the tides of change are subtle in the beginning.  But I never thought I would be part of a movement when I began to sketch out plans for a tiny, mobile shelter for myself almost ten years ago.  I am honored to be included amongst these great constructions in Lloyd Khan’s newest book about Tiny Homes.  I am awed and inspired by so many great approaches to scaling back from the obnoxious sprawling but soulless houses of the last few decades.

The photos are beautiful and the layout is very well thought out.  Like all the Shelter Publications, it will become an important and classic work to those of us outside the mainstream.  Tiny Houses my be the flavor of the month to the media at the moment but will always be important to real people in need of real shelter.

And to keep up-to-date on interesting architecture, skateboarding, good music, and a host of other interesting topics, check in to Lloyd’s Blog from time-to-time.

New High Tops

Determined to get the pattern right once-and-for-all I have been slaving away on a new pair of shoes.  As a matter of fact, I think these shoes are completely slave-labor-free.  The leather upper and mid-sole are oak tanned leather (Hermann Oak), and the rubber soles were cut from SoleFlex sheeting.  The laces were made from brain-tanned elk hide I processed myself.

The gent’s shoe as worn.

Outside heel stiffener.

Trousers cuffed to show height of shoe.  I live where the plants are unfriendly to bare skin.

The pattern was created without a last based on previous turn-shoes and a mock-up done in heavy canvas.  The shoe has no heel or shank as I am very used to walking barefoot or in sandals and moccasins.  A little more on shoes I have made here at: Footwear.  And some other leather work here.

Beer & Running

Staples of the ancestors.

I have been away from the wagon quite a bit lately while brewing and bottling beer, traveling to see family, and dealing with a fairly ridiculous amount of hours of low paying work.  All while trying to keep current in anthropology by reading recent research and keeping up with playing music when I find time.

On the fun reading side, I was truly impressed with Christopher McDougall’s Born to Run.  If you want to know about research on humans as runners, think the athletic shoe industry is a bunch of soulless racketeers, or just think the Tarhuamara Indians of Mexico are cool, then this is a pretty good read.  If you are interested in the ever-growing barefoot or minimalist shoe movement, Barefoot Ted’s is a good place to start.