Homesteading & the Lost Arts

Homesteading & the Lost Arts

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Please take care of yourself and your neighbors. Would like to see this page become a feasting place to find cool stuff to incorporate into our daily life.

This resource is a place in which we can utilize time tested information to better meet our basic needs. “Homesteading & The Lost Arts” topics are key to building self and community reliance. A place where anyone with homesteading "age tested" skills can willingly share with all. Mentor those of us that want and need to learn the "lost arts" of yesterday in order to live a more fulfilling and hea

Woman on Fire Menopause Anthem 05/17/2026

For all the gals… turn it 🆙 😘💨💨💨

Woman on Fire Menopause Anthem Discover Fireball's top songs & albums, curated artist radio stations & more. Listen to Fireball on Pandora today!

04/28/2026

amazing find

A single piece of woven brown wool, fringed with hand-twisted plaits, found in 1867 in a peat bog at Tankerness on Orkney. The fibres are thin and uneven; the weaver was working without a true loom, possibly on a vertical warp-weighted frame. Radiocarbon dating places its making between 250 and 615 AD.

The Orkney Hood is one of the only complete Iron Age garments to survive from Britain. The cloth was originally woven as a rectangle, then folded and stitched into a hooded shawl. It was repaired several times in its working life, the wool worn at the front and shoulders. It now sits in the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh, the textile still soft enough to lift.

Cottage and Company 04/24/2026

This amazingly simple setup would be smart to have in all small communities.

Cottage and Company 25K likes, 1.5K comments. "70-Year-Old Homesteader Bakes French Bread Like It's 1850"

Photos from Grimfrost's post 04/23/2026

Here’s a lost art! Look at this boat! Beautiful!!!!

04/23/2026

Fabulous! I’d recommend using H**P fiber for various projects such as this.

Why Gardeners Are Wrong About Clay Soil 04/05/2026

This is an awesome resource! Check it out.

Why Gardeners Are Wrong About Clay Soil Clay soil is NOT the enemy — but most gardeners are making it worse without knowing it. In this video, Sonny from Sunnyside Soil breaks down the science of c...

02/19/2026

Good to eat too!!!

SHE ISN’T A W**D. SHE IS A NITROGEN ALARM.

That patch of stinging nettles emerging in the corner of your paddock or garden isn't a random invasion. It is a precise biological read-out of your soil chemistry, flagging up exactly where the land is overloaded.

The Myth: We view the Common Nettle (Urtica dioica) as an aggressive "thug" that ruins soil and crowds out delicate plants. We fight it with glyphosate and strimmers, assuming it is the enemy of a healthy ecosystem.
The Reality: Nettles don't cause bad soil; they are a symptom of it. In ecology, Urtica dioica is classified as a Nitrophilous (nitrogen-loving) and Phosphatophilous (phosphate-loving) species. It cannot thrive in poor, balanced, or undisturbed soils. When you see a dense, vigorous stand of nettles, the plant is telling you that the ground beneath it is saturated with phosphates—often from historical manure piles, over-fertilisation, sewage runoff, or decomposing organic waste.

The Scientific Reality: The Rhizome Network
The visible plant is just the tip of the iceberg.

The Underground Map: Beneath the surface, the nettle relies on a vast network of creeping yellow Rhizomes . These specialized stems allow the plant to colonise nutrient-rich patches laterally, stabilizing loose, disturbed soil (ruderal habitats).

The Phosphate Lock: Nettles are exceptionally efficient at absorbing heavy metals and excess minerals. They sequester these nutrients in their tissues. By growing rapidly in early spring, they act as a "nutrient sink," preventing nitrates from leaching into watercourses during heavy rain.

The Sting: The famous trichomes (stinging hairs) are actually hollow silica needles acting as hypodermic syringes. They inject a cocktail of histamine, acetylcholine, and serotonin. This expensive defence mechanism evolved because the plant is so nutrient-dense that, without protection, it would be grazed to extinction by herbivores.

Seasonal Context: The February Flush
Why is this relevant right now?

The First Flush: While the old stems from last year are brittle and dead, look at the base of the clump. You will see the first deep green or purple-tinged shoots of the new season emerging .

The Overwintering Nursery: This early growth is critical. The Small Tortoiseshell (Aglais urticae) and Peacock (Aglais io) butterflies are currently hibernating as adults in sheds and hollow trees. When they wake up in the first warm weeks of March, they will need these specific young nettles on which to lay their eggs. The caterpillars are monophagous—they feed only on nettles. No nettles means no Peacocks.

Why This Matters Ecologically
By waging war on nettles, we are often shooting the messenger.
If you spray them, the nitrogen remains in the soil, often encouraging rank grasses or docks to take their place.
Furthermore, nettles support over 40 species of insect in the UK, including some of our most declining butterflies. A "nettle-free" countryside is a sterile countryside.

Your Action

Read the Land: Instead of just cutting them, ask why they are there. Is that corner an old compost heap? Is there runoff from a stable? The nettles are mapping the pollution for you.

Eat the Problem: The young February tips (the top 4–6 leaves) are at their culinary peak. They are packed with iron, calcium, and vitamins A and C. Pick them (with gloves), steam them like spinach, or make soup. Cooking destroys the sting instantly.

The "Sacrificial" Patch: If you must clear them, leave a patch in the sunniest spot for the butterflies. Nettles in the shade are ignored by egg-laying females; they need full sun to warm the developing larvae.

The Verdict
She isn't invading for fun. She is cleaning up a mess.
The nettle is an alarm bell ringing in green.
Don't silence the alarm; fix the soil.

Scientific references & evidence
Davis, B. N. K. (1991). Insects on Nettles. (The seminal comprehensive review of the biodiversity supported by Urtica dioica).

Olsen, C. (1921). The Ecology of Urtica dioica. (Establishing the link between nitrate/phosphate concentrations and nettle vigour).

Taylor, K. (2009). Biological Flora of the British Isles: Urtica dioica L.. Journal of Ecology. (Detailed physiology of rhizomes and nutrient uptake).

Butterfly Conservation. Gardening for Butterflies. (Highlighting the necessity of sun-exposed nettles for Vanessid species).

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