77 Comments
Oct 9, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

We have lost the pioneer spirit in the US. We have become a nanny state and the desire to achieve is disappearing! Sad commentary! The Malone's are bucking the trend!

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Looking forward to the next installment!

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Oct 9, 2023·edited Oct 10, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

I had read part one late last Thursday and had many thoughts. Fixing homes, developing properties, or fixing up our personal property is my life and business. Honestly, I have never tackled anything that was so overgrown as the pictures from part one, but have come across many rotted buildings. In any case, I have come to believe that the hardest jobs we face and accomplish in life are the most personally rewarding. In general nothing good, at least for me, comes easy. My wife and I had bought a run down house on a lake in NH. After a long hard day of work I would almost get an endorphin high thinking about what was accomplished from the day. Reading your post I think you had the same sorts of feelings. There is and should be pride in owning something especially when you put your hard labor in it. It’s a big piece of the American dream. I believe it creates a strong bound between two people. I’m sure you both had many calluses, cuts, bruises, and poison Ivy breakouts but wouldn’t trade them for anything. Well I ranted enough. Congratulations on all your accomplishments!! Hope to see more finished photos in part 3. J.Goodrich

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founding
Oct 9, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

Wow. We are facing so many of the things you have effortlessly handled. Well, just like Baryshnikov, you make it look effortless. Just today I was looking up how to install a gate into an already existing wire fence under tension. That post pounder thing is genius. I want one.

And don't guinea fowl make a lot of noise? Is it a problem? We, too, have about 30 acres but having them near the house could be a problem if they interfere with phone calls.

And are those border collies? Is this a breed that is somewhat able to fend for itself? We have mostly deer here, but also coyotes and a bobcat. And a large snapping turtle. At least the coyotes seem nocturnal.

I really wanted horses but unfortunately, the place is infested with black walnut trees.

I didn't even know homesteading was a thing until I recently discovered a TV show called Homestead Rescue. My husband (an engineer) is working on a water wheel for hydroelectric and has already got everything up on solar. We have a couple of creeks and a separate spring so he has more hope in water than solar. Just one year ago, we were leaving everything behind in OR, fleeing covid and ideological insanity. And now we find ourselves in a place that pretty much lets you do what you want. It's hard to keep grounded and your articles about your farm are so interesting and helpful.

It's so uplifting. Thank you.

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Oct 9, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

We had guinneas growing up. They roosted high up in the trees. I'm surprised a fox could get one, as they fly quite well, unlike chickens. I love their sounds, and they would also act as alarms and early warning system of anything nefarious nearby.

When I was a teenager, there was a back and forth "T.P." wars going on where we did each other's houses (trees in the front yard) with toilet paper. The next morning riding the bus to school, we'd all see whose house got hit the night before, hilarious. Well, our house didn't get hit, because the guineas "alarmed" and scared the heck out of those attempting to t.p. their trees. Too funny!

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Oct 9, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

What a life. Reminds me of some of my early days and even into my 70's. Well, maybe 80's as I did tear down a 20 x 16 building and built a small storage shed in its place last year.

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Oct 9, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

I have truly enjoyed your homestead essay. For two reasons I guess. First, it reveals something unique about your and Jill’s nature and I think it is good. Second, it fits with my own ag background. We have developed a more large scale cattle operation with a twist toward regenerative practices. We have not been able to do it debt free.

On the humerus side, with your focus on the buildings and the special horse breed, we rednecks would consider you a gentleman farmer. Seriously, you and Jill seem like such decent, humble folks. In my experience that is somewhat uncommon for people with your smarts.

May God bless you in all you undertake.

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Oct 9, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

Thanks for sharing Dr. Malone …your wife must have a great sense of humor , allowing the picture of her under the covers , with the dogs !! You guys are hilarious 🤣

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Oct 9, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

Loving your stories and photos, Dr. Malone!

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Oct 9, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

Here is the thing about LIFE. Everyone makes mistakes. It is part of the process. Accept this, learn the lessons and move on. Some people like to hang on, make others wrong and cause pain for everyone, but ultimately themselves. It takes an aware person with little stake in being right to let go and "let God". Thanks for the encouragement, it goes beyond the farm and into my soul.

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Blessings to you both. Nothing shares the unifying nature of humanity better than a sharing like this.

When we choose to faithfully build the promise of life awaits. A lesson for us all at any age.

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Oct 9, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

I have no bold, eloquent, or revelatory statements to make. I am simply enjoying your being candid and humble enough to share both the ups AND downs of your experience. And learning a bit as well, having never owned, managed, or worked on any farm, nor tried homesteading. Carry on!

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Oct 9, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

Waiting with anticipation for this beautiful story to continue. Thank you. God Bless🙏🏻

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Oct 10, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

I love this series, great motivation for the winter ahead of me where I have (finally) some time to catch up on much deferred maintenance and hopefully some expansion. The one thing I am missing is someone to care for the place when we are gone, so am very chained at the moment, which has its own niceties, but lowers movement.

I have had (🤞) good luck with predators for the chickens, outside of a rattlesnake that zapped my rooster's leg. It is the layout, about a quarter acre fenced in with many trees. It is hard for a fox or weasel or racoon to get in during the day and the hawks are deterred by the trees and the territorial ravens who extort me by swooping the outside layers' eggs.

The henhouse is well built, a bear could get in but nothing smaller, maybe a clever lion, which is around because of the scat and lack of deer and rabbits this summer. The fires from 2020 burned the forests out real bad and there is less space for the deer to take cover, the forest is open.

Congratulations on all the great work! I miss the lushness of the mid-Atlantic, and that cold dew on barefeet.

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Your lifestyle is both envious and admirable. At 76 I'm afraid too much for me. I am convinced the coined "birdbrain" came from having Guinea fowl, but they are such pure examples of life and they can be a real hoot. A fond memory is that of my parents neighbor's Guinea fowl chasing cars with chrome bumpers and aggressively pecking away at that competitor.

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Oct 9, 2023Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS

Like your other readers, I love these stories! The auger for the fence posts is beyond cool. A blessing that your neighbor had one; otherwise it probably would have been very expensive to rent. I appreciated the part about cataracts. I have one but not serious enough to have surgery yet. I didn't know about the triple vision lenses. I assume that works well for reading, computer, and distance as those are my needs. Hugely expensive but maybe worth it to get rid of glasses completely. Thank you for taking the time to write; your lives are very interesting to those of us who have always lived in a city.

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