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ramonaj
True Blue Farmgirl

118 Posts

rhonda
gibsons british columbia
Canada
118 Posts

Posted - Apr 06 2013 :  11:48:56 AM  Show Profile
This is an old topic so I may be way behind. I'm reading The Seed Underground by Janisse Ray. Very good book about the need to save our seeds.

happiness to all sentient beings
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coaloha
True Blue Farmgirl

502 Posts

Pam

USA
502 Posts

Posted - Apr 13 2013 :  7:50:44 PM  Show Profile  Send coaloha an AOL message
Nicole,

You inspired me with your "Little House" reading. I was at Goodwill tonight and picked up a nearly complete set of the Little House books. Those books take me strait back to my childhood and are probably responsible for my nesting instinct. All that putting food up for the winter and making do with things...

Warmly,
Pam

Pam
Farmgirl #1075
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Cindy Lou
True Blue Farmgirl

2325 Posts

Susan
Lonsdale MN
USA
2325 Posts

Posted - Apr 13 2013 :  8:23:53 PM  Show Profile
A local food co-op's newsletter suggested 3 books I hadn't heard of but they sound interesting. The titles alone would be good reading.

The Wisdom of the Radish: And Other Lessons Learned On a Small Farm by Lynda Hopkins

The Feast Nearby: How I lost My Job, Buried a Marriage and Found My Way By Keeping Chickens, Foraging, Preserving, Bartering and Eating Locally (All On $40 a Week) by Robin Mather

Barnheart: The Incredible Longing for a Farm of One's Own by Jenna Woginrich (a couple of posters here mentioned this one)

I'm going to check if any of them are at our local library or available for interlibrary loan.

Susan


"Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?"
Mary Oliver

Edited by - Cindy Lou on Apr 13 2013 8:27:12 PM
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ProgressiveHomemaker
True Blue Farmgirl

218 Posts

Rachell
Mars Hill NC
USA
218 Posts

Posted - Apr 14 2013 :  07:01:53 AM  Show Profile  Send ProgressiveHomemaker an AOL message
You guys are the best! I love the suggestions coming in. I have been collecting a list of books of my own and I promise to type them all up soon and share them here. These are all ones I have not yet read, but maybe one of the titles will speak to you.

Have a lovely day!

http://progressivehomemaker.wordpress.com/ Homemaking is not just for conservatives anymore!

So progressive, I'm old-fashioned!

Life's short. Make today count.
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MaggieMB
True Blue Farmgirl

217 Posts

Mary
western Pa
217 Posts

Posted - Apr 14 2013 :  6:36:04 PM  Show Profile
Brittany, I just finished 50 Acres and a Poodle, and really enjoyed it! And, it takes place, kind of, in my area. I also liked the book that you mentioned, Garden Spells. Thanks for the recommendations!
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patchworkpeace
True Blue Farmgirl

478 Posts

Judy
Jackson Michigan
USA
478 Posts

Posted - Apr 17 2013 :  08:07:55 AM  Show Profile
Some good recommendations. Another you might like is Letters from a Woman Homesteader by Elinore Pruitt Stewart. Also, Half-broke Horse by Jeanette Walls tells the life of her grandmother who was active, spunky lady! Happy reading to you!!

Success is measured not by the position one reaches but by the obstacles one has to overcome to reach it. Booker T. Washington

My blog, The Review-anista Reads http://friendsfunfabric.blogspot.com/
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TexasJo
True Blue Farmgirl

161 Posts

Jody
Berthoud CO
USA
161 Posts

Posted - Apr 17 2013 :  6:07:14 PM  Show Profile
Brittany & Mary, I liked Garden Spells also and will have to give the School of Essential Ingredients a shot. Sounds interesting.
Thanks, Rachel, for getting this started, a lot of good suggestions on here! Sorry I don't know any farmgirl books to contribute. :/ But there sure are a bunch on here that sound good!!

Jo


We can do it!
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coaloha
True Blue Farmgirl

502 Posts

Pam

USA
502 Posts

Posted - Apr 18 2013 :  9:50:31 PM  Show Profile  Send coaloha an AOL message
Judy, I had forgotten about Letters from a Woman Homesteader. It is one of my all-time favorite books; it felt like I was sitting with a dear friend as I read. A book that I enjoyed was Enslaved by Ducks, written by a back-yard urban farmer. Things didn't go as planned for the author, but it was in the detours and failures that I enjoyed the book the most...I could relate to some of them.

Pam
Farmgirl #1075
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patchworkpeace
True Blue Farmgirl

478 Posts

Judy
Jackson Michigan
USA
478 Posts

Posted - Apr 19 2013 :  08:14:27 AM  Show Profile
quote:
Originally posted by coaloha

Judy, I had forgotten about Letters from a Woman Homesteader. It is one of my all-time favorite books; it felt like I was sitting with a dear friend as I read. A book that I enjoyed was Enslaved by Ducks, written by a back-yard urban farmer. Things didn't go as planned for the author, but it was in the detours and failures that I enjoyed the book the most...I could relate to some of them.

Pam
Farmgirl #1075



I'm glad to hear that someone else enjoyed it so much. You are right about her becoming like a friend as you read.

Success is measured not by the position one reaches but by the obstacles one has to overcome to reach it. Booker T. Washington

My blog, The Review-anista Reads http://friendsfunfabric.blogspot.com/
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coaloha
True Blue Farmgirl

502 Posts

Pam

USA
502 Posts

Posted - Apr 22 2013 :  9:57:22 PM  Show Profile  Send coaloha an AOL message
I have to tell you all something funny. I had recommended Enslaved by Ducks...well, the ducks have found me! We have a pool in our back yard, which is very common in Phoenix. A pair of mallard males have discovered our pool and I often see them swimming around in it in the early morning hours! Of course this is a problem, but I am so enchanted by the ducks that I pretend that I don't see them (thank goodness for the pool guy who cleans every week!) Today I was out gardening, and the ducks flew over our house twice; I think that they wanted to take a swim in our pool but were reluctant to land when I was outside. They weren't the only ones upset by my presence...a little tiny verdin was trying to build his nest over the area where I was working and he scolded me all morning. And then there was the hummingbird...she hovered in front of me at close range, as if to say "It's time to fill the hummingbird feeder". I didn't get the feeling that the wild birds were very happy with me thins morning.

Pam
Farmgirl #1075
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patchworkpeace
True Blue Farmgirl

478 Posts

Judy
Jackson Michigan
USA
478 Posts

Posted - Apr 30 2013 :  06:18:11 AM  Show Profile
Pam, your backyard sounds lovely!

Success is measured not by the position one reaches but by the obstacles one has to overcome to reach it. Booker T. Washington

My blog, The Review-anista Reads http://friendsfunfabric.blogspot.com/
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DandeeRose
True Blue Farmgirl

1509 Posts

Alicia
Charlestown, IN
1509 Posts

Posted - Jun 16 2013 :  8:16:19 PM  Show Profile  Send DandeeRose a Yahoo! Message
So many yummy sounding books!!!!! We finished the Little House series recently. I read aloud to my family. We are now reading Laura's journal, On the Way Home. And I am reading Anne of Green Gables.

Many Blessings- Alicia #5232
http://dandeelionrose.blogspot.com/

Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass; it's about learning to dance in the rain."
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ProgressiveHomemaker
True Blue Farmgirl

218 Posts

Rachell
Mars Hill NC
USA
218 Posts

Posted - Aug 23 2013 :  11:40:27 AM  Show Profile  Send ProgressiveHomemaker an AOL message
I am just finishing up Last Child in the Woods by Richard Louv. I HIGHLY recommend it for farmgirls with kiddos in their lives!

http://progressivehomemaker.wordpress.com/ Homemaking is not just for conservatives anymore!

So progressive, I'm old-fashioned!

Life's short. Make today count.
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oldbittyhen
True Blue Farmgirl

1511 Posts

tina
quartz hill ca
USA
1511 Posts

Posted - Aug 23 2013 :  3:38:08 PM  Show Profile
Rachell, I have given a copy of "Last Child in the Woods", to my Daughter inlaws, and my daughter, plus a few young mom's I know, and they have all loved the book, its a very good one...

"Knowlege is knowing that a tomato is a fruit, Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad"
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Lavender Rose
True Blue Farmgirl

1979 Posts

Brenda
Jackson MI
USA
1979 Posts

Posted - Aug 23 2013 :  6:23:17 PM  Show Profile
If any of you can find "A Lantern in Her Hand" by Bessie Streeter Aldrich, it is worth reading. I read it years ago and it is sitting on my bookshelf. I think I should read it again.

Brenda

Each day we add to our legacy--good or bad.
Our Daily Bread
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ProgressiveHomemaker
True Blue Farmgirl

218 Posts

Rachell
Mars Hill NC
USA
218 Posts

Posted - Aug 24 2013 :  07:03:46 AM  Show Profile  Send ProgressiveHomemaker an AOL message
What is that one about, Brenda?

http://progressivehomemaker.wordpress.com/ Homemaking is not just for conservatives anymore!

So progressive, I'm old-fashioned!

Life's short. Make today count.
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Betty J.
True Blue Farmgirl

1403 Posts

Betty
Pasco WA
USA
1403 Posts

Posted - Aug 24 2013 :  07:18:51 AM  Show Profile
How many farmgirls read their "books" on the Kindle? I can't seem to get my mind around that, holding a piece of technology to read. It may work some day soon, but at the moment I like the comfort of holding a book in my hand.

The last book I am reading is called The Longest Road, Overland in Search of America from Key West to the Arctic Ocean by Philip Caputo. It is a very interesting book, not quite a love story but a people-oriented book. I am also reading The Walk series by Richard Paul Evans. Whenever he has a book come out, I purchase it because it is always a good read.

Betty in Pasco
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TexasJo
True Blue Farmgirl

161 Posts

Jody
Berthoud CO
USA
161 Posts

Posted - Aug 24 2013 :  9:29:03 PM  Show Profile
Betty, I know what you mean. I adore books. I love to hold them, turn the pages and even the smell of them is somehow relaxing. Even with all that I do own a Nook..kind of a Kindle. And I read it every night. I have read many wonderful books on my nook and I love it.I still read regular books too, but because I always read at bedtime the light bothers my DH. The color Nook is lit so I can read easily without keeping him awake. Its a wondefful solution for both of us. And I also like magazines but now I don't have all the paper to recycle. I feel a lot better about that also.

We can do it!
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