I'm Canadian so please excuse my ignorance. In Canada it's obvious that we're one of the most cucked countries right now so we expect next stages in this plandemic, forced experimental injections, cutting off access to work, food etc to come first, likely once Trudope rigs an October election and wins a majority government. Most of us don't have weapons so civil war option is out of the cards.
Is there a place or places in the U.S. with weather that allows for growing your own crops year-round? With access to clean water? I'm thinking making a bolt for the U.S. should sh*t go down to be my best chance to dodge and survive all this crap.
Stay strong Patriots.
The only places in the US that don't have a freeze once a year is south of LA, Ca. South of Corpus Christi, tx and south of Tampa, fla. That's from memory and likely needs further confirmation. Myself I'd pick a midrange state and plan on a greenhouse that works in that climate. You can grow a lot of food using vertical hydroponic techniques along with canning to store, which should be in a root cellar or something similar. Most of the places that don't freeze are either too expensive or you wouldn't want to live there. You don't have to grow food 12 months a year to feed your family and with a proper greenhouse you can likely have 10 months of growing season for many veggies. Spend time figuring out the above issues and pick a place to live where you will enjoy the other aspects of life besides growing food.
Thanks, I'm talking about having to live on the land on the downlow, not being able to likely work in the U.S. (not legally anyway) and certainly not being able to rent or buy any form of housing.
Arkansas, Missouri, Miss, GA, has areas with cheap land, plenty of water and a good climate for growing. You'll have to be out in the boondocks to find it cheap, and you'll spend some time making it habitable, but you can make yourself a good homestead if you are willing to work hard.
In fact now that I'm thinking about it, there are some Amish communities spread throughout that area. If it were me, I'd tuck myself in as close as possible to one of them and make friends. You aren't going to be accepted as Amish but if you start trading stuff with them and offering help at critical times, they'll likely become an ally. You can learn a lot from them if you take the time and they are good neighbors, not likely to cause you problems as they mainly keep to themselves.
Here's the sad facts: illegals in the US currently have more rights and protections than those legally present whether they be citizens or visitors.
Oh I know that very well and that's my reasoning. It's the same here in Chinada!
You can live off the land in tx... plenty of game and good ranching/farming... but you have to be tough as nails and imo, you need at least 50 acres minimum, depending upon area, to have enough cattle to have a bull to have yearly beef production. Goat ranching is easier, imo, but you have to have a specific type of fence to keep them in.
Not sure about growing crops but a Gravity filter and Steripen will let you drink water from pretty much any lake, stream or river... mine were delivered yesterday
Excellent tip, thanks!
Florida for sure. Most of our southern states have a climate that allows a winter garden. But it is specific plants like turnips, beets, kale, collard greens. Don’t know what else. Look for the USDA growing zones and you can see the growing seasons of each state.
Thanks, appreciate it.
South Texas has crops growing year round.
Lovely, and a great, free, patriot state.
Yes, why goats?
Certainly I have no use for sheep. Especially of the Canadian walking, talking, zombie type.
Also goat milk is less lactose intolerance.......Its easier on the human guts
Niki Jabbour, a Canadian living in Nova Scotia wrote a book called The Year-Round Vegetable Garden you should look into.
I only use a few of her techniques and grow vegetables roughly ten months out of a year.
Freezing and canning easily covers the other two months.
During Obama's second administration he contacted Florida's governor to place available land in the development track over to the agriculture track. An order.
Florida was needed and going to have to grow more food for the rest of the country due to climate patterns changing having to do with longer cold weather, like in the 1700's, when new englanders had to migrate.
So there is that. Climate cooling...
We’ve been looking at land for a second home or bug out Mississippi has some nice land for cheap. Near Biloxi which is coastal drive inland and it becomes wooded, beautiful and about $1,000 an acre
Find somewhere in a hidden valley, far away from any civilization or other farms. I'm sorry to tell you but they are going to poison any farmland that they don't/can't control. They will fly over your land and spray it with herbicide. Why do you think Gates and the Chinese have been buying so much farmland?
But first, start saving seeds, organic, heirloom seeds are best. Avoid F1 or GMO seeds, but anything is better than nothing. Even keep seeds from vegetables you buy at the supermarket. Get wheat, barley, rice, maize seeds too. Keep your potatoes and grow them spring and fall. Keep your seeds in your refrigerator. They will last 7 years at least. Learn how to save seeds. There are plenty of books you can download. Seeds will not be available when you need them.
Hard to poison your crops if you have a greenhouse though right? Great tips though. Yes I've seen the videos of farmers being coexerted into burning their crops for cash.
Cool.
Even as far north as North Carolina, you can grow some things year round, especially if you build even the simplest greenhouse. I've had tomatoes until the middle of December. There were a couple of light frosts before that, but I covered the tomato plants with pine straw and plastic to insulate them and keep the frost from falling onto the leaves.
You can plant greens (for salads and cooking), root crops, and peas in August and September in my growing zone. September is also the time to plant garlic.
I just checked some local stores, and seeds are very scarce. I couldn't find any fruit trees at all, even though the time to plant them is coming up.
All of the above relates to lower altitudes. If you move to the hills or mountains, you will need a heated greenhouse for sure to get anything in the dead of winter. What you should do is preserve your harvest from the spring, summer, and fall. Then you'll have stored food to eat during the winter.
Here in the low desert there's always something, but it will not be at all like the north. Unless you like living on nopalitos and citrus, you would be better off to accept some frost and build a greenhouse. Water and exposure are more important.
Fresh water is life. Any where that you can find a steady supply of fresh clean water is what you want. Foothills of any mountain range generally has great water supply. All along the Appalachian mountain range or Rockies. The further south you go, the milder the winters, therefore the longer the growing season
Canadian here too. Been thinking the same. Maybe we can go together. Bad thing though is that you have to have the shot to cross the boarder.
Nah man, not if you cross on the down low. Supposedly there is plenty of unprotected border crossing land especially in the Prairie provinces, may involve a lot of hiking from a last known southern road but if push came to shove I'd go for it.
Doubt American border patrol is much on the lookout for Canadians trying to cross illegally.
they fly scout drones 24/7 along the border. so maybe not a real person would see. But they would likely see you come across.
It's a lot of border to cover and I doubt they're going to bother with one Canadian coming across. It's a risk I might have to take.
As long as you can somehow provide the proper conditions, you can grow anything,anywhere.
Winter time doesnt stop the marijuana growers,does it? Nope.
For 250,000 Euros you can buy a "golden passport" to live on the Mediterranean Greek island of Crete where there's almost never frost, most people speak English and many own goats!
Below ground growing with a hothouse roof can be done year round. 9m Crually looking into how to set up a year round in Idaho. I'll be piping in hot spring water to heat the greenhouse into he winter. Vertical growing areas etc.
Although it's infested with WAY too many Democrats, west Tennessee has arable land, mild winters, and many off-the-grid kind of places still left. The southern part of middle Tennessee might also be viable. East Tennessee, where I live, has semi-mild winters but frequent zero-degree weather in winter such that only a good greenhouse would work for growing things
I don't have a backyard, fren. :(
Will you be giving up your canadian citizenship then?
You mean Chinada citizenship?
I'll be living there on the down lo. Trust me, I lived abroad until 2020 in 5 other countries and our government, hell our customs agents upon return for short visits and permanently didn't know shit.