This is Us...We are Eliana's Garden. Sharing, living, learning all things forest and homestead.

in #introduceyourself7 years ago (edited)

This is us…Jeremy, Stesha, lil Man, & lil Lady (not our children’s real names of course). We are a semi-modern, semi-rustic, forest farming, homesteading and homeschooling family. We spent the past 8 years developing a 1.5 acre semi-urban homestead and sold it earlier this year to build and move to our forever home on 17.5 acres. We have pushed the ‘reset’ button on life in many ways and this blog will document the makings of our new homestead and creating the simple life we have always had a heart desire for.

We recently were blessed with the opportunity to begin a farm on over 200 acres of gorgeous forest and pastureland in southern VA. Through the faith and efforts of a generous couple we will share how all this unfolds and manifests to help the earth and our community. Beginning in Spring 2018 we will also be offering a variety of homesteading, survival, and forest farming courses through our local community college. We will share with you what we teach in hopes to inspire you towards a healthier and more sustainable lifestyle.

We will also be sharing our past story of love, faith, forgiveness, trials and triumphs. It has been a long hard road with many ups and downs to get to see Eliana's Garden begin to manifest from the seeds of our dreams.


Photo credit to JessaD Photography http://www.jessadphotography.com

We have been ‘farming’ and studying permaculture based concepts for roughly 10 years. Ever since we were both children we carried a passion for the natural world and were both fortunate enough to have been raised by parents who further instilled respect and love for God’s creation. We consider ourselves stewards of this beautiful land we have been entrusted with and strive to pass this sentiment to our children and community.

Jeremy and I (Stesha) both have backgrounds in agriculture with both having worked on farms, nurseries, sold our produce and goods at farmers markets and to restaurants, and taught agricultural topics over the years in a variety of settings. Jeremy has a degree in horticulture and I have one in agricultural education. When we bought this land we developed less of a desire to be in hot fields and more of a desire to be in the soft speckled light of the forest. We have started our venture into forest ‘farming’ and are looking forward to sharing with you as we learn and explore this fairly new recognized form of farming. This video (click on video link below) was taken of us in 2016 by the Appalachian Beginning Forest Farming Coalition in our first year working with them (2nd year forest farming)…. click on their link to go check them out. Great organization, amazing mission, wonderful community! We are also avid foragers and mushroom hunters. I recently obtained my 5 year permit to forage and sell wild mushrooms in the three states, very excited to share finds with you as they happen.

Jeremy currently still works outside of the home as a manager at a great local retail and landscaping nursery. I am a homemaker in all forms of the word with a current nearly 5 year old and a 3 year old. We homeschool our children (yes, even at this age!), cook all our meals from scratch (gluten free!), process our own meat, grow as much food as we can, forage, make as many of our household needs as possible, and tinker with more hobbies than we can hold. We live simply and love it. We are plant nerds and not afraid to admit it. We’re going to share this simple life with you if you care to come back.

As this blog develops you will find many how-to’s (hopefully with videos included in most) for the homestead, resources we find, recipes for wild game and foraging, and hopefully some inspiration that you CAN do this too.

This is us. We are Eliana’s Garden.

Thanks for joining us on this journey! More posts to come. Cheers and blessings to each of you reading!

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It sounds like you're going to fit right in with the homesteading crew, which is a powerful group on the platform.

Thanks @dber! I hope we can become an active part of this growing community here, learning and sharing with other passionate homesteaders. Excited to be here and get engaged. I followed you!

And I you! I am also very happy to help out and collaborate wherever possible.

I should say I tend to hesitate to talk explicitly about edibility in discussing mushrooms on public forums - which is a conservative approach I also apply to my own foraging.

I often describe my opinions, knowledge and willingness to eat finds as a fluid rubric. There are a fairly large number of edible mushrooms I feel nearly certain I could identify - but my willingness to eat them is connected to the degree to which I require the sustenance. In normal life wild mushrooms are, essentialy, nutritionally superfluous, and so I almost never eat my finds.

I'd be glad to collaborate whenever possible as well! Let me know if you have any ideas. :)

Agreed that in today's modern convenient society it is not necessary to seek out sustenance from the wild. However, that's not saying that it isn't beneficial for us or an excellent way to get dietary needs without having to empty your pockets. Chicken of the wood here, for example, is typically found in large amounts and packs a powerful protein punch of 14g per 100g of of edible matter...that's a lot of protein for something that is not animal! Lot's of mushrooms are great nutritionally and medicinally. I'll be exploring some research into all that in future posts. Thanks for the great comments @dber!

One issue I always have is not only the identity of a given species, but the concern about the mushroom picking up local environmental toxins - is this something that professional foragers consider, or is the goal just to avoid obviously contaminated areas?

That is most certainly an issue!! When foraging ANYTHING one should take into consideration the possibility of absorbed toxins. It is also an issue to make sure wherever one is foraging it is legally allowed. Good rule of thumb is to never forage in areas sprayed with any type of fungicide, pesticide, herbicide, etc. No dump sites, brown sites, sprayed lawns, under powerlines, etc. We forage predominantly in private pristine forests. When I go knocking on doors for permission to forward something I've seen while passing by one of the first questions I ask is if they 'treat' their property/lawn/trees with anything. IMO anyone with any common sense will use it when it comes to this...then again it is common for people to spray their gardens and eat it anyway. :/ Thanks for bringing up a good point! That's another great post idea!!

Agreed! Lots of good stuff for you to talk about - sorry to be so actively commenting these last few hours - i'm just sitting around at work waiting for something to happen, with little luck :)

Ha ha! No worries, kids have been down with a crud so I've been indoors today for the most part. I've enjoyed the interactions! Hopefully we'll continue to connect!

welcome to STEEMIT, look forward to more of your mushroom foraging and other stories! :)

Thanks @alexpmorris! Many posts to come!

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Hey @elianasgarden! Welcome to steemit! I KNOW you have a lot to contribute and will do well here. Love you guys!!

Thank you Trishy!!! We love you and appreciate you sweet support. Very glad to be here and looking forward to contributing. <3

I love you guys and I love that you're on steemit!

We love you too Jon! Thanks so much for recommending this to us. We are looking forward to the steemit journey! Muah!

I'm so following you guys! I believe there is a lot to be learned from you.

Thank you and that's kind of you! We have a lot to share and are passionate about educating (and learning!) Thanks for following! Can't wait to read more of your paleo recipes!

Hi, Elianasgarden, Let me welcome you to Steemit. Hope you gonna have fun with our community. Feel free to follow me @rightuppercorner Have a great time @rightuppercorner

Hi and thank you!! I've been eagerly awaiting my approval from steemit for DAAAYYYSSSS. We are glad to be here and looking forward to contributing information to the community. Cheers!

Welcome to steemit @elianasgarden,
Enjoy your stay here and goodluck

Hi and thank you!! Very glad to be here and looking forward to becoming a active member of this growing community!

Youre welcome, I followed you as well, looking forward to see and read beautiful content from you, by the way farming in 200 acres forest is cool but a very big tasks.

YES!!! A huge task! It is roughly 70% forest with the rest luscious pasture. We decided to embrace the opportunity primarily for the forest as we grow specialty forest products like ginseng, ramps, mushrooms, etc. Much of it will be left wild for foraging, species habitats, or hunting outside of the farming. The fields we are planning to pasture a rotation of heritage cattle and chickens. It's all still in the planning stages but will manifest more and more as we move into next year. (it is head spinning! lol) Here at the homestead we have so many plans being developed while others are still being planned. Exciting times ahead and chances are that we won't be able to do it all alone.

@elianasgarden, welcome to steemit. look forward to learning more about you, your family, and your homesteading life.

following

Thank you very much! We are glad to be here and eager to share information (and hopefully inspiration!) Please come back (or follow) for lots of fun stuff to come. :)

Welcome to Steemit from one of @jonknight's crazy writer friends.

I LOVE @jonknight ! Any friend of his is a friend of mine. :) Thanks so much for joining us.

Nice to meet you, @elianasgarden! Welcome to the Steemit Community, wish you good luck and a good start, ive send you a small tip and followed you, hope you have an amazing day! :)

Thank you! That was very kind of you for a newbie like us. I followed and wish you luck as well! Thanks for sharing information and steem. :)

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