So this weather forecast just bothers me. I mean what is up with all this sun! The cold I can handle... but no rain? At the end of October! Going into November! This is just not what should be happening here in western Washington!
As a wild homesteader I watch the weather a lot. It really matters to how well my land can do--and this year has not been a good year. The sad thing is that this not so good year seems to be the new normal.
So far this month we are about 2 inches below normal here in terms of rainfall. That is after already being below normal for the year. Most years October is a much wetter month.
I don't like this!
So why am I writing about this? Well for one I just want to complain... I don't like this! But there is also a lesson here for all of us. Weather extremes are becoming the new normal due to the climate crisis.
One way to deal with this is to create systems that capture more water by slowing it, spreading it, and sinking it. This way when the rains do come more of the water is soaked into the ground where it can help your plants grow even during the dry times.
The rains should come again here--but the fact that the 10 day forecast shows virtually no rain after we have already gone days with no rain makes me worried. I keep hoping the rains will come back...
But since I know extremes are going to be more common in the future I'm doing what I can to slow, spread, and sink the water that does come.
Just yesterday I grabbed my shovel and expanded my existing large pond a fair bit and built a new dam upstream of it. I still need to finish the dam (mulch on the dam, some wood to support the downstream side and some rocks for the spillway and the exposed end) and I need to build an island that it will one day connect to.
Yup, I'm building a whole island (a blueberry island!) surrounded by an interconnecting series of ponds--but that won't happen this year.
It's amazing what you can do with just a shovel. But it's these types of land modifications that can help us all weather the extremes that are becoming more and more common.
I have more water work planned for this year but it will take years to finish it all. But every little step of the way means more water will be slowed, spread, and sunk into the land.
Now I'm just going to wait for the rains to return and the ponds to fill up again...
Check out my blog post --- 3 Ways You Can Store Water on Your Wild Homestead --- to learn more.
Follow me for more posts all about working with nature to grow your own food and build a natural life: @wildhomesteading
And check out my blog - www.wildhomesteading.com for weekly in-depth posts on how to work with nature, grow your own food, and build a wild homestead. When you work with nature, nature works with you.
We were talking about this on @pennsif's show today - about managing dry land, particulary @orlev with the new land they have in Portugal.
I don't like ANY of the weather we are having at the moment -- less rain than we should have had, freak days of unseasonably warm weather (all the tops of my broad beans were burnt off) and lots of wind. It is all rather ominous. We might need more than shovels.
You’ve been visited by @porters on behalf of Natural Medicine. Great tip for keeping the land healthy and productive even with these extreme weather conditions Thanks for sharing this along with the other tips for keeping the Earth healthy - Healthy Earth - Healthy Us!
Did you know that Natural Medicine now has it's own token, rewarding natural healing and health wisdoms? You can check out our front end, naturalmedicine.io If you've been involved in our community over the last year, check your wallets for LOTUS and stake them to start earning curation rewards!
Why your comments always have a very fine font size? I always have to zoom up to read it ...and I'm quite lazy at it ...fyi!
I have been complaining about the weather too! We were 28 degrees this morning here in NW Oregon, and that's way too early for that kind of cold. The sun is lovely and everything, but we're on a spring, and if it doesn't rain, we don't have water. I fear it's the new normal too, and I don't like it either. I haven't looked at a forecast for a while, but I imagine it's similar to yours. I love your water containment idea. I have a small field that is completely sodden during the winter months and only dries out during the very middle of the summer. Digging a moat around the outside might give me more room for planting by keeping most of the land dry enough that the plants won't float. Something to think about ...
Even tropical Thailand is stumbling out of the monsoonal rainy season with reservoirs less than 40% full. We are already on dry season water shortage alert.
Leading the curation trail for both @ecotrain & @eco-alex.
Together We’re Making This World A Better Place.
Click Here To Join the manually curated trail "@artemislives" to support quality eco-green content.
Same here, in East Crete, Greece. And from what I see in the comments it is the new normal all over the planet!
Storage of water is paramount to creating a thriving homestead. As you have shown in this wonderful post, there are many ways to accomplish this. When we first bought our property 40 years ago, my first concern was water. We buily our pond before building our home.
So wise of you!