Hi guys,
I know there is no need for justification, but I do feel a tad bit responsible here, since I invested in the people, community and a lot of builds.
The following (years?) I will be less active on Ratrodbikes, even more so than the past months. I will still be working on my hubs and bicycles now and then and post the pictures/details on this forum.
I will also be selling a lot of my bikes. I am 100% keeping "Pope Roger" my complete self-built bike though! I don't want to be bikeless
So what are we spending our time on?
I mentioned it here and there, offcourse family first, but we are pushing to start our Regenerative Agricultural Farm.
I can't help but share my enthusiasm here.
Probably more of a patch of land and start with vegetables, berries, fruit trees and depending on the patch we rent or buy, also Eggs or Poultry.
It is rather a challenge (on financial, time and political fronts) to start a farm in the Netherlands right now. But we are dreaming about/working on that for about 5 years. Starting with "Food Forests" that need 5 to 7 years to grow before you can harvest some products. Financially we could not take that time. Then we went to Norway to see if we could pursue a dairy farm that works with horses instead for tractors. Their way of working was awesome, but unfortunately we did not buy that farm.
Then we discovered regenerative agriculture.
The current engineering company I work at is great, but the motivation is slacking at this point.
Farming info (skip if not interested)
I will save you the climate change talk. Regenerative Agriculture is very interesting since it combines a lot of oldschool farmwork with new observations, insights and management tools.
If interested, I will below post a basic explanation and framework terms and links for this way of farming:
Cool tools you ratters might like!
This week I bought a second? hand seeder tool. A October 1919 "Planet Jr" seeder. Because the new plastic stuff isn't my jam.
We used a plastic/aluminum modern seeder which is too flimsy... and the plastic degrades and has issues with stress relaxation. The belt slips when its wet.
But checkout this 'built to last' American beast, I think you might like the appearance!
I just can't wrap my head around the state since it is 100+ years old. I will do some maintenance and repairs as period-correctly as possible.
Hickory or pine wood?
I will be building a harvesting/bicycle cart in the future. Ratrod that thing aswell.
Thanks for reading guys!
I know there is no need for justification, but I do feel a tad bit responsible here, since I invested in the people, community and a lot of builds.
The following (years?) I will be less active on Ratrodbikes, even more so than the past months. I will still be working on my hubs and bicycles now and then and post the pictures/details on this forum.
I will also be selling a lot of my bikes. I am 100% keeping "Pope Roger" my complete self-built bike though! I don't want to be bikeless
So what are we spending our time on?
I mentioned it here and there, offcourse family first, but we are pushing to start our Regenerative Agricultural Farm.
I can't help but share my enthusiasm here.
Probably more of a patch of land and start with vegetables, berries, fruit trees and depending on the patch we rent or buy, also Eggs or Poultry.
It is rather a challenge (on financial, time and political fronts) to start a farm in the Netherlands right now. But we are dreaming about/working on that for about 5 years. Starting with "Food Forests" that need 5 to 7 years to grow before you can harvest some products. Financially we could not take that time. Then we went to Norway to see if we could pursue a dairy farm that works with horses instead for tractors. Their way of working was awesome, but unfortunately we did not buy that farm.
Then we discovered regenerative agriculture.
The current engineering company I work at is great, but the motivation is slacking at this point.
Farming info (skip if not interested)
I will save you the climate change talk. Regenerative Agriculture is very interesting since it combines a lot of oldschool farmwork with new observations, insights and management tools.
If interested, I will below post a basic explanation and framework terms and links for this way of farming:
- Holistic Management (example) can be applied for more than farming only.
- Holistic Grazing:
- No dig market gardening info
- Agroforestry
- Food Forests (Martin Crawford)
Cool tools you ratters might like!
This week I bought a second? hand seeder tool. A October 1919 "Planet Jr" seeder. Because the new plastic stuff isn't my jam.
We used a plastic/aluminum modern seeder which is too flimsy... and the plastic degrades and has issues with stress relaxation. The belt slips when its wet.
But checkout this 'built to last' American beast, I think you might like the appearance!
I just can't wrap my head around the state since it is 100+ years old. I will do some maintenance and repairs as period-correctly as possible.
Hickory or pine wood?
I will be building a harvesting/bicycle cart in the future. Ratrod that thing aswell.
Thanks for reading guys!
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