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There's a benefit to going slow (and this ties back to @normonics point re "A Pattern Language"): going slow forces you to ( accidentally ! ) gather data before you complete your plans. Data about the land, your schedule and preferences, livestock...https://twitter.com/RizomaSchool/status/1345014246887862272 …
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3/ Give a guy a $1M budget to hire labor etc, and he'll get his "ideal" homestead built in the first year. ...problem is, he'll _then_ realize that his ideals were wrong in several regards.
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4/ Going slow allows for the creation of Hayekian local knowledge. Big budgets and fast speeds let you see [ and act ] like a Stalinist state with no feedback loops.
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7/ interesting parallel ! https://twitter.com/justinowings/status/1345036856635908098 …
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Can you put in a good word with liberty farm for me? I’ve had a follow request pending for probably a year!
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Wife, please approve his follow request! I vouch for him.
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Learned a lot in 9 years on my NH homestead but still accomplished a fraction of what I hoped I would. For years warned friends that understanding theory is not enough. I know--I have all the right books on my shelf also--but access to knowledge isn't the same as actual skills.
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When we left farming, we felt like the late 1800s Boston homesteader whose land we had occupied: blizzard, flood, drought, and grasshoppers, all in one year. He sold out to my 5th great grampa. We didn't lack skillz, but shitty things do cluster.
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