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  #1  
Old 11/11/09, 01:03 AM
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Ohio
Posts: 97
How do you keep track?

We've been in our new little homestead for 3 weeks now

As we've been improving things and making plans for the future, I thought I should find out how others keep track of what, when, how much, etc. So there are records of what works, what doesn't, what grew here this year, all the week to week operations that would be important to know.

Do you use a computer program, is there a website that is organized with this kind of information? Or do you just use a journal (blog, paper, etc). Someone had posted a neat little journal for timelines for planting and I wondered if there was something already out there so I'm not trying to reinvent the wheel.

I'd love your input!

Rickki
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  #2  
Old 11/11/09, 04:25 AM
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Southern Indiana
Posts: 955
We have a calender with a 2 1/2 " square for each day. At the end of each day we write the important things that happened that day in the square. Life is too complicated, I like the simplicity of this system.

My Eight year old grandson spent a couple days with us last week, and the first night he asked "grandpa what are we going to do tomorrow?". I started off telling him about six or seven things we would do and said "shouldn't we be writing a list?". I replied, you should never put a job list in writing, if jobs are in writing you are more committed to do them. We might get up tomorrow and feel like doing something else and we might not feel like doing anything.

"O"
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  #3  
Old 11/11/09, 05:08 AM
dancingfatcat's Avatar  
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,035
English Oliver, I sure do like the way you think ............... the simple way of life, Bravo!

"I replied, you should never put a job list in writing, if jobs are in writing you are more committed to do them. We might get up tomorrow and feel like doing something else and we might not feel like doing anything."
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  #4  
Old 11/11/09, 05:23 AM
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Southern Indiana
Posts: 955
My computer doesn't have enough gigabytes to run a program that will compute all the curve balls that homesteading throws at you. Only your brain and common sense can do that.

"O"
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  #5  
Old 11/11/09, 06:06 AM
7thswan's Avatar  
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: michigan
Posts: 22,570
http://myfolia.com/ a site for keeping track of all your gardening, asking questions, much like this site.
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  #6  
Old 11/11/09, 07:17 AM
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: South Central WI
Posts: 834
I just used a standard spiral notebook, and would jot down notes journal style. Could cover any topics at once, and it is nice to go back over and read about years' past. I forgot half of the stuff we've done over time!
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  #7  
Old 11/11/09, 07:35 AM
Batt's Avatar
In Remembrance
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: SW Mo.
Posts: 1,625
Quote:
Originally Posted by Welshmom View Post
I just used a standard spiral notebook, and would jot down notes journal style. Could cover any topics at once, and it is nice to go back over and read about years' past. I forgot half of the stuff we've done over time!
And also to go back and read what you were so worried about and how you were going to fix/avoid it. Then to think that most of those things never became a problem.
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  #8  
Old 11/11/09, 07:42 AM
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 5,201
I have a home office, complete with 'bill paying and planning' desk, and a separate computer desk--and of course, files, reference books, etc, etc. But I use a large yellow pad for planning out the big picture job list, and use small ones for grocery lists and shopping trips. All the appointments, birthdays, and important dates and stuff go on a calendar(always the John Penrod Michigan engagement calendar) right in front of me. Once in awhile I set up an Excel spreadsheet to track something--like gas bills and electric bills. The large yellow pad gets added to, revised, rewritten, and it's always so much fun to cross off one of the jobs as they get done.

I bring my first morning cup of coffee in here six days a week to start off the day. I am on a "one chapter a day" Bible reading kick right now with a new version I'm trying to get familiar with, then the computer goes on and I check the weather radar and, of course, Homesteading Today. Then I can pay bills, make lists, check out the catalogs, and plan, plan, plan.

I've done this routine nearly all my life in some form or another, ever since my Dad got me a little tiny roll top desk when I was about eight years old......
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  #9  
Old 11/11/09, 07:45 AM
Micahn's Avatar  
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Ocklawaha, Florida
Posts: 390
We are moving to our new place tomorrow and I am not sure where to even start the work as so much to do and want done. Not sure if a program would help or not.
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  #10  
Old 11/11/09, 08:21 AM
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: East Tennessee
Posts: 217
Before we went totally non electric, I printed out a spreadsheet for food usage. Every time we cooked a meal, I marked what we used on the spreadsheet. This gave me an idea of what we ate for a year and how much. It was not an exact, but it gave me a good idea of how much I needed to put into the root cellar to get us through until garden time next year, as well as how much meat we need before deer season begins.

A journal is great as well. I have access to the internet at work. I have kept an online journal for over a year. It has been nice to go back and read through the struggles....and know that we can make it and will make it. If you don't have access to doing an online journal through a website, or a blog on a forum, or something like Livejournal, MySpace or something, then get yourself some notebook paper and a binder. Keeping a hand written journal is a wonderful thing. I cannot tell you how many time I have pulled mine out and read back through the struggles, the first weeks of going non electric, the laugher.....and even the tears we shared on this journey. Besides being a record for you, think about your grandkids and on down the line. My granddaughter loves to read through the pages of the journal and I just think some day, her grandchildren will be sitting somewhere some day reading those pages about their ancestors.
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  #11  
Old 11/11/09, 08:33 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: SW Michigan
Posts: 16,408
Uh...we're supposed to be keeping track?



You guys are amazing. My list looks like Oliver's.....
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  #12  
Old 11/11/09, 08:36 AM
Wait................what?
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Montana
Posts: 2,254
Quote:
Originally Posted by Callieslamb View Post
Uh...we're supposed to be keeping track?
Ditto!
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  #13  
Old 11/11/09, 10:03 AM
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: NC
Posts: 1,352
Another Ditto!

After a while, things on your homestead will become routine. You'll learn what the planting times are in your area. You'll learn how many rows of green beans to plant to can each year.

Journals, to look back, are good. With today's digital cameras, include pictures in your journals.

To-Do lists are important, especially in the beginning. Keep several lists going, and update them, as needed. Goats, heating/firewood, canning, pantry, garden, or whatever is applicable. Saves a lot of trips to town, as you review your lists to see if it's time to pick up x y and z.

Over the long run, IMHO, the best thing to do is to build a reference library. This can be a combination of books, magazines, file folders, and materials you've printed out from the Internet. Don't rely on the internet. Your computer can fail. The power can go out. Your favorite on-line web site can go down. They can update the site and delete things that are important to you. Had that to happen recently to one of my favorite reference sites. Now I regret not printing out everything they had in one section. (sigh)

By building your library, it's easy to pull out the applicable information when you need it. Don't really need a tracking system. Just grab the book/folder/notebook on gardening or canning or rabbits, or candles, etc.

Lee
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  #14  
Old 11/11/09, 10:19 AM
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 332
I keep to-do lists sorted by what kind of day they require. My rainy-day list, my sunny-day list, my drive-up-to-Tukwila list, etc.

Once something is done it goes in my journal on the computer. That way if I have a question years down the road I can search for a relevant word and pull up everything related.

I can't stress enough the importance of keeping backups, whether your records are electronic or on paper. I send my journal entries via email to two good friends, so if need be I can reconstruct them the hard way, as well as keeping an on-site electronic backup.

My parents did not have an off-site backup and lost all their records (and photographs, etc) in a house fire last year.
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  #15  
Old 11/11/09, 10:33 AM
Brenda Groth
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Michigan
Posts: 7,817
i am a big journaler..and I've found that the journals that i keep are good sources to go back to and glean knowledge from.

i keep a daily diary type journal of personal things as well as weather..etc.

i also keep several garden/yard/house journals..

one of my garden journals ..i take the magazine clippings or seed packets or tags of things i buy for the gardens and yard and put them into the journal and write down all the information for caring for, pruning, fertilizing, etc..that i can for that particular plant..write when i plant it, what it does..if it does well, if it dies..etc..

I also keep a garden map journal that has lots of information of what i have done and what i want to do, has sketches of where things are planted and when i divide or move a plant or put in a new plant, it goes on a sketch in that journal..if i have plans for future plantings, i write notes in that journal.

i also keep a spiral bound to do book, in the front it is sectioned off for things iniside, outside, yearly, monthly, etc..important, non important..prioritized..i cross off things that are finished.

when ever i think of something or see something that needs done i can't do right away i jot it down..(just like you would a shopping list)

i buy those spiral bound notebooks when they are 10c in the back to school sales..along with a few other things..like glue sticks and pens..

they make a great cheap way to keep track of things.

it is easier for me to pull them out and walk around with them, then to turn on the computer.

i have notes from back in 1971 when we bought the house
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  #16  
Old 11/11/09, 11:12 AM
byexample's Avatar
Seeking Sustainability
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Painted Desert, Arizona
Posts: 315
I think keeping a journal of some sort is very important... especially for gardening and breeding of livestock. The method must has to work for you... I don't think there's any one right or wrong method.

We use calendars and I have a computer based journaling program I use to keep track of livestock breeding.

We also take lots of photos and use iPhoto on the Mac to organize the photos. Because our digital camera date-codes all photos we have a running photo-journal of projects from around the homestead. I've been surprised to find how often I use my photo library to determine "when did we plant this?" or "where exactly is that water line running?" It's all right there and visually indexed... making it very easy to find specific info... or at least narrow in on a time frame.

One way or another... the more documentation the better.
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  #17  
Old 11/11/09, 12:12 PM
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Worcestershire, England
Posts: 474
I keep records of livestock feet trimming, breeding etc as well as the medical records and animal movement records we have to keep for the government (Don't you have to do that? -lucky things if not!)
I have several card index boxes which I find really useful for crops - seed types, date of planting, date of germination etc. If I ever lost those boxes......!

Last edited by Kaitlin; 11/11/09 at 12:13 PM. Reason: punctuation
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  #18  
Old 11/11/09, 12:48 PM
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Posts: 268
Projects

As far as projects go. we have a large ( from the top of the closet door to the bottom) on going list. Each week or so we pick something and work on it until it is done. DH gets to mark it off, it makes him feel so good. If we are short on money we pick a job that is just hard work. if we have money we go to the store get what we will need and get to. Vickie
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  #19  
Old 11/11/09, 01:21 PM
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Join Date: May 2002
Location: Kansas
Posts: 12,972
I have a calender for my garden and a separate sheet for additional information.

The calender will list super souix tomato planted: the additional sheet will say that super souix tomatos are indeterminate and from wintersown seeds. I can see at a glance what has been planted, but if I need more info I have that also.

I can put "Fertilized squash" on the calender, and if I need to know what I used it is on the paper. So, I can see at a glance which veggies have and have not been fertilized.

Etc.

Last edited by Terri; 11/11/09 at 01:29 PM.
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  #20  
Old 11/11/09, 01:39 PM
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Too many fat quarters...
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: SW Nebraska, NW Kansas
Posts: 8,537
Most ranchers I know (including mine) have a calf record book of some kind (the linked one is most popular) that they keep in their left breast-pocket.
In it goes not only calving info, pasture rotation and notes, herd health, address/phone info, and notes.
Starting around Christmas, every vet has some that they'll either give you, or sell you.

DH totes around the current one in his pocket, but the past few years' are always somewhere readily accessible like his glove box, or the drawer in the kitchen. He refers back often.

I would think there's probably something similar for farmers, but I don't know too many farmers so wouldn't know where to get one.
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Last edited by ErinP; 11/11/09 at 01:41 PM.
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