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Monday, November 14, 2011

Travel and living arrangements.


Housing, and travel.Needs are a whole lot different then Wants.



  
What I want is a small RV; not much just a 18-24 footer. I'd like: shower, toilet, a kitchen/living room, and a few beds. I would want to be comfortable, heating and air would be nice. Unfortunatly it is not fiscally sound. Theres no way we could afford that with this life style. With gas prices, this baby gets like 6mpg! Plus it costs an arm and a leg to purchase one.



78 VW bus




 The next step down, a old school VW bus. It has a bed and a small kitchen. No bathroom but a place to sleep and prepare small meals. The down side to this one is it can't go faster than 45 mph. On second thought thats not all that bad, travel accross the country taking back roads? Hmmmm..... But still these buses are really hard to come by.
We were also thinking about getting a small 4x4 suv, nothing to large, just something that will store what we need, a back seat that folds down to make a little bed. Anything bigger than my compact car!



Sierra camping tent
  If we keep my car though (which might be our only possibility) we will be tenting it. This is the last resort, so hopefully the wwoofing hosts will have a room/building for us to stay in. But if not, we have a tent, a blow up mattress, a a couple of tarps. It might be a hard way to live, but it is competely do-able.


Wwoofing with a Toddler?!

  How do I plan on Wwoofing with a toddler? What will we do, how will get get anything done? Isn't it risky? What if he hurts himself? Will he be happy? What will I need? Do I really think this is a good idea? Oh gosh so many questions! If you can think of more, please do ask. It will help me plan better.

Getting work done.
  The way I would think would be to start with a clear understanding between me and our host. Of course tell them Buga is with us, let them know his personality. Find out their expectations of me; how many hours they expect us to work, and when and how long breaks are. I also will use a wrap to wear Buga on my back whenever he lets me. Of course he wont want to be carried all the time so when he is down I'm hoping we will be delegated duties that he can "help" with. I imagine these tasks would be any sort of digging, weed pulling, washing vegetables, stacking firewood, feeding animals, etc. Another thing would be splitting up the work between me and MrMan. Say for the first half of the day I'm the parent that has one eye on Buga and MrMan works without worrying about his child. Then we switch after lunch, MrMan will keep track Buga and I'll work.


Buga loves being wrapped!

Physical and Emotional health.
  There are going to be risks. Its a farm, there will be so many risks its unbelievable. I believe that falling down is good for little kids; it gives them confidence when they get back up. I'm going to let him run and play, but still be attentive which will hopefully keep him away from most major mishaps. All minor accidents I will have a first aid kit and some love to solve the problem. If something serious does happen he will have major medical insurance. We qualify for Peachcare which is a Georgia lower income family health care.
  As far as emotional goes Momma and Poppa (MrMan) will always be there for him. He'll wake up every day next to us and fall asleep next to us. He'll know that when he ventures off Momma will be waiting, if he falls down Momma will kiss his booboos. But deeper than that we will have a set aside time every night to cuddle and read and be together as just us three. I plan on going to farms that agree with a one week trial before we launch into a long stay. That way if Buga doesn't get a feel for that farm we can leave.

What to pack?
I will be adding to this as I come up with them.

Clothing
cold weather hat
sun hat
gloves
Insulated toddler coveralls
duck canvas coveralls
medium jacket
light jacket
2 sweatshirts
3 shirts
2 pair of jeans
2 comfy pants
shorts
2 sets of long underwear
24 cloth diapers
36 wipes
4 soakers
10 covers
10 pairs of socks
boots
water shoes


Toy stuff
shovel
rake
hoe
bucket
dump truck
watering can
durable books
quiet book
ball
teddy bear
favorite blankets

Everything else
sun screen
aloe gel
first aid (band aids, saline spray, Neosporin, gauze, baby Motrin, ice pack)
wrap
identity documents

http://www.wrapyourbaby.com/ - Site I recommend if you want to learn how to use a wrap for baby wearing

http://didymos.com/ - A company that sells fertilizer/pesticide free hand picked cotton wraps of great quality.

http://www.peachcare.org/ - Government funded health care for lower income families

http://www.wwoof.org/WWindynews/feature/feature15.htm - An article about Wwoofing with a 1yo.

http://www.wwoof.pt/about/articles/articles/228/?cHash=f21ea2b13f - An article about Wwoofing with a 3yo and 1yo.

http://thenewsbase.com/2009/12/wwoofing-with-kids/ - Another article about Wwoofing with kids.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Who we are, Why we Wwoof.

Wolf, Buga, MrMan



Me.
 I'm a 21 year old female. I'm a friend, lover, mother, sister, and daughter. I hate living in suburbia or the city; to much hustle and bustle. To much emphasis on what car you drive, clothes you wear, and the latest fad restaurant/bar/club you went to. All the clothes I wear are second hand and I like it that way. I live in a beat up trailer, its not a grand place, actually its quite crappy, but I like it. Its set back on a gravel drive, I can't see my neighbors from my front porch.
 Yet still I feel boxed in here.
 I don't have many close friends, and the friends I do have I don't ever see face to face. My hands go unused except for cleaning up after my son. My mind is thirsting for knowledge, it is dormant from this ho'hum lifestyle I've been living.
I'm bored and restless; like a caged tiger pacing behind its zoo walls.
 Here in Georgia, where I've been the majority of my life, is not where I want to stay. I'm living on ground that I can't fix to be better, to be how I want. I'm not meeting new people, seeing new places, learning new things. Sure I could meet people at bars, or fitness centers, or clubs; but those aren't my type of people. I don't drink, I don't work out, and I don't like loud social settings. I could learn by going to school; but I don't want to learn from a book something, anything, just to get a piece of paper.
I'm a gypsy soul I tell you!

MrMan
 MrMan is the love of my life; I love every minute I get to spend with him. There is nothing I'd rather do all day then have deep meaningful conversations in bed with him. Sadly, right now in life I only get him 2 days a week; the rest of the week he's somewhere else doing IT work for gas stations. To say I hate it is putting it lightly. He hates it too. Well no, I'll take that back. He loves working with his hands and his mind at the same time. He likes that its a challenge sometimes and takes problem solving, troubleshooting, ingenuity, smarts and luck. He hates that it takes him away from his wife and son.
 He's a real smart guy, able can do anything he sets his mind too. A fast learner MrMan was in the army as a driver, has done plumbing, general contracting, flooring, restaurant jobs, and IT. He has a strong work ethic that I hope he passes in our children.
MrMan is a truth talking, get the job done kind of guy. At the same time he's a total goof ball that can always make me laugh. Laid back most the time he's not quick to start a fight; A good ol' country boy, born and raised on the back roads of Georgia.

Buga.
 My son, oh god how I love my son. He'll be a year old in December and he such a wonderful little Boy. He's already walking, climbing and getting into stuff. He's so inquisitive about everything, he absorbs so much information from the sights around him. Not a very social guy, he's apprehensive at first; But once he warms up to you he'll want to cuddle and babble and show you his toys.
 We cloth diaper, baby wear, bed share, and breastfeed. Some would say we practice attached parenting, I say I do what comes naturally for our family. We plan on him learning similar to the Montessori and Waldorf ways of education, a freedom to learn at his own pace what he wants to learn. Though he is young he already loves playing in the dirt, and getting messy. Buga loves experimenting with textures and sounds, they are his favorite things to do thus far in life. He loves animals and enjoys petting them with squeals of joy, sometimes he gets to rough but we're working on it.
 Buga loves to eat! Anything you put in front of him he'll gobble down. His favorite is pickles, but he'll eat any type of meat, veggie, or fruit he sees momma eating.





Why?
 So I guess now it's why. Why do I want to take my family down this curvy dirt road? Because I think we can do it! I think we can work hard and be happy. I think being able to spend every day with each other working can leave a heavy positive impact on all our lives. I think it will be a great thing to learn, grabbing from each farm we visit little piece of information. Pasting all that information together in the long run. Even if we don't start our own farm, we could.
 I want to work with my hands and mind. I know the job will be boring at times, and hard and thoughtless, or puzzling and complex. I'm ready for it. I CRAVE it. Being sore and tired from working all day coupled with being happy and content nestled in the family bed will be the perfect fix to my brain never shutting down.
 I think this will be a great way to tech my son. He'll have life long knowledge of how food gets from farm to plate; heck we all will! It will also cement the strong family ties I want. It will be a way for him to grow and learn and experience life the way it should be, not from a book, but actual life. he will: get dirty, play with animals, run around, fall down, get back up again.
 It will further my knowledge of food, good food, and how to eat good food. Right now we live on a process foods diet and that doesn't seem healthy. I'd love to eat better but I don't know how. I figure by immersing myself in the organic lifestyle it will be sink or swim, and I'll learn some really good recipes fast.
 And the social diversity that we'll be able to see. Even if we stay only in the US, there are 100's of farms to visit all across the country. Even if the traveling bit is only a perk and not the point its a great perk.
 There's probably so much more that I can't think of right now, but that's the gist of it. I'd love to get my family out to learn and do. No more standing by the wayside of suburban life. Wwoofing here we come.




WWOOF!


Wwoofing: What, how to start.

 A start to an adventure; where do I begin?
What is Wwoofing? Well http://www.wwoof.org/ says:

"WWOOF is a world wide network of organisations. We link volunteers with organic farmers, and help people share more sustainable ways of living."Although, I've seen it as Willing Workers On Organic Farms as well. What ever it is called it is a exchange of labor for food and lodging.

 Now the food will be (mostly)organic. Sometimes the host will cook, sometimes you'll cook. The lodging can be a house with running water, or it can be nothing but a campsite to pitch a tent. The labor can be a variety of things. It can range from easy to back breaking labor.

 What you do is go to http://www.wwoof.org/ and pick the country you want to go to that has wwoof. For a small fee, it was 30$ for the USA, you will be privileged to a directory of farms. You'll also get a profile. From what I've read you want to make your profile like a honest dating profile. Talk about yourself, the whys behind you wwoofing, what you did before wwoofing, what you look to gain, what you enjoy. The host is going to use this after you email them to get a feel for you.

 Then you figure out where you want to go in your selected region and find farms in that area. Pick out the farms you like and send them some emails.

 Currently I have yet to send out any emails to farm so I don't know much further in this process. I plan on sending out emails and making calls in late December as I want to be on the road in early march. I've seen it suggested that you get in touch with the house 2-3 months before you want to arrive. I'll let you know how it goes once I get there!