How to Make the Most of Harvest Time During the Food Crisis

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We talk a lot about food production here at the OP. We just recently started offering a collection of our articles on food growing, preservations, and storage. Between widespread crop failures, the bizarre string of fires at food processing facilities, and farm business-killing dictates in traditionally food-exporting countries like Canada and the Netherlands, the global food system does not look particularly robust right now.

I don’t know whether or not this is all coincidence, but it’s beside the point. Even the USDA is predicting large price increases for many foods through the rest of 2022 and into 2023. Stockpiles of food will only last so long; we need to know how to produce at least some on our own. Or have a direct, working relationship with people that do.

Based on my own experience, I can say that even nominal self-sufficiency is both harder and more rewarding than people predict.

And this really comes true at harvest time.

I started producing food when my children were very small in a 10 x 10 suburban backyard garden. Years later, I started a small pastured-poultry business when my marriage ended. My various projects have grown over the past fifteen years to a point where we now produce a good portion, probably about 30 to 40% of our calories, of our own food.

A lot of people daydream about more self-sufficient living, and as problems with the food system persist, increased self-sufficiency will become necessary for many people. We will have to have local support groups to survive long-term. (Assuming we’re not all rounded up first. . . but that’s a topic for another day!)

Developing a closer connection to your food sources is rewarding, but it’s work.

I’m not just talking about moving onto acreage. Even a little suburban garden can mean a lot of extra work at certain times of the year. Producing enough tomatoes to can a large number of tomatoes and sauce for the year is entirely possible for many people on small plots, but there is a wholly separate learning curve relating to processing and storage. Berry bushes and fruit trees can keep you really busy, too. Harvesting and processing can easily keep you up at night and kill a few weekends.

In fact, I had a friend a few years ago who had a suburban plot and grew everything to make her own pasta sauce for quick dinners throughout the year. I have another friend on another suburban lot who has green chile as her staple. Both of them get together with female relatives for “hell weekend” a few weekends every fall, where they put everything up. They joke about it, it’s fun, and they wind up with a year’s supply of meal staples. But these are big projects and not for the faint-hearted.

And, whenever you attempt to integrate yourself into biological systems, you open yourself to so, so many things that can go wrong.

Even the pros have bad years, through no fault of their own. All farmers have to deal with the risks of hailstorms, droughts, grasshoppers, and other various pests. Taking control of your food supply brings with it increased confidence and security but also the risk of catastrophic failures.

For example, despite really wonderful planning on my part for the garden this year, the heat, drought, and discontinuation of Nolo-Bait meant that not one of my basil, beet, rutabaga, or carrot seedlings survived. I can’t even get cover crops going right now. Grasshoppers are eating everything. I have never had such a bad year for late-summer gardening. I would take it more personally, but I am friends with professional vegetable growers in the area who have also had a terrible year. The wheat farmers who have grown up on the land? Getting absolutely nothing this year because of the drought. It’s just a bad year.

I used to get more upset about failures. These days, I just talk to gardening and farming friends to get perspective. I have a very Type-A, workaholic personality. Becoming involved in food production has forced me to accept that I can’t power through every problem.

At the end of my first summer raising chickens, I developed intestinal problems that lasted for five weeks. During the last two weeks of that, I also developed a respiratory infection. A few years later, I had gotten so run down that I developed Bell’s Palsy and couldn’t eat solid food for three weeks. My face has gotten back to normal, but I still have neurological problems bad enough that my hands often shake. I rely on my shotgun for self-defense; I can’t aim rifles or handguns accurately enough.

I don’t say any of this to discourage anyone, only to emphasize that shifting to a lifestyle of more connection with your food supply will be a big change for most of us. And change can be really, really hard. It often leads to better things. I’ll take my neurological problems along with my productive property and healthy children over my old life in a heartbeat. But it takes commitment.

Change is coming whether we like it or not.

And even if you’ve made great financial decisions and hedged all your bets, all the money in the world won’t matter if there’s nothing to buy. I know Daisy’s said it before, but it bears repeating: we need to become producers.

However, as steep as the learning curve can be, the payoff is worth it. As one of my favorite authors, John Seymour, says in his book The Self-Sufficient Life, “The crown of the year is harvest time, and if you cannot enjoy that, you are unlikely to enjoy anything.”

Despite my horrible year regarding root crops, I still have enough tomatoes. I’ve been sun-drying one batch after another on racks for weeks now. Once temperatures drop too much for sun-drying, I’ll start making sauce. We’ve got garlic and onions strung up in the kitchen already. The garden is full of celery which we’ll eat fresh until it’s time for frost. At that point, I’ll harvest and then dry them in the dehydrator to flavor soups through the winter. We’ve still got jalapenos, pumpkins, ground cherries, and sweet corn waiting to be harvested. We actually got a lot of grapes this year, too, which I ate fresh until I got an allergic reaction and had to stop. They were delicious, and I regret nothing!

harvest time

We’ve got cucumbers, some of which we’ve eaten fresh and some of which I’ve been lacto-fermenting. We’ve got peas in the freezer for winter, and hopefully, I’ll have enough sweet corn to put by some extra for the winter, as well. There’s nothing quite like pulling meat from your own animals out of the freezers, throwing in vegetables you’ve preserved yourself, and making a meal from your own property in the middle of January.

Well, that’s good for someone with a few acres out in the country, you may be thinking to yourself. What’s harvest time to someone in the middle of the city?

You can often get the best prices of the year at harvest time, and there are ways to add value to food.

Canning is a skill that takes some time and effort. When my kids were little and ate more PB&J, I used to wait for sales at the grocery stores and then buy tons of berries to can. I saved quite a bit of money only buying produce at its absolute cheapest, and I learned a valuable skill, too.

(Check out our free QUICKSTART Guide to home canning to learn how to start to incorporate this valuable skill into your harvest time.)

Now my kids are too old for jams and jellies. My elderly friend, who lives on a small city lot, asked me to help clean her crabapple trees, and while I couldn’t stand the thought of wasting heavenly-smelling fruit, I wasn’t sure what to do with 50+ pounds of crabapples.

harvest time

We’re making country wine this harvest time.

I did a practice run with a gallon of peach juice left over from canning, and so far, so good. I now have 50+ pounds of crabapples fermenting in a huge bin in my kitchen. My house smells delightful.

I don’t actually drink that much myself, and obviously, I don’t let my kids drink alcohol, but I have a lot of friends, and alcohol can be an excellent bartering item in a true SHTF situation. My philosophy has been that the more various skills I can pick up, the better I’ll be in the long run, and if someone gives me massive quantities of fruit, winemaking is a great way to turn lawn waste into something valuable.

If you have a small space and a small budget to work with, you’ll want to do some research before spending money on any kind of extra tools. I can say without a doubt that the money I’ve spent on canning supplies has been worth it, but I’ve had the luxury of being able to spread my purchases out over more than a decade.

If you are really interested in brewing but don’t want to drop a few hundred dollars right off the bat on beginners’ kits, I would strongly recommend reading some of Sandor Katz’s books, such as Wild Fermentation or The Art of Fermentation, to understand the principles behind fermentation. A lot of libraries carry Sandor Katz’s work, and if they don’t, you can always order through the inter-library loan system.

Full disclosure: I spent a lot of time in chemistry labs as an undergraduate and a lot of time in the kitchen as an adult. I don’t want to make winemaking sound easier than it is. But Sandor Katz does a great job of explaining how so many people, spanning so many cultures, made alcoholic beverages long before chemistry labs and science degrees.

As bad as this year has been in terms of crop yields, there is still some food being produced. Even in my drought-stricken area, I’ve had multiple people contact me this year to help clean fruit trees. Spending a little extra time learning how to harvest and preserve can really pay off in the long term.

Stay productive and you can produce.

And in case you’re wondering, all of my canning, drying, and fermenting is done on top of my actual job of homeschooling and keeping my kids involved in various sports and activities. I’m not really a TV person. The people that know me in my personal life know that I’m very high-energy. However, the truth is that people throughout most of history have not been able to do one job for eight hours a day and then go home, sit in front of a screen, and order whatever they need online. We’ve been living in a historical anomaly.

I strongly suspect that this historical anomaly is going to be over for most of us before too long. We’ll have to get used to being more industrious or going without. But I could be wrong.

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However, we shouldn’t waste our energy being depressed or angry about things falling apart.

Ask yourself what you can change. Can we change the politicians and corporate leaders pulling the strings? If we can’t, then we need to focus on what we can do, and for most of us, it boils down to simpler, more productive ways of living.

I would strongly encourage anyone feeling frustrated about lack of control in their lives to think about taking a small step toward food independence. It’s too late in the year to start a garden, but it’s the perfect time of year to think about learning how to process whatever food is available. For many of us, this is a really fun time of year. Pretty soon, the farmers’ markets in my area will start roasting chiles, which I can smell from my house. It’s very fun and rewarding, even in a year of slim pickings like this one.

If you already produce your own food, what’s harvest time like for you? Do you have any helpful hints to share with others? How do you put back food? Let’s discuss it in the comments.

About Marie Hawthorne

A lover of novels and cultivator of superb apple pie recipes, Marie spends her free time writing about the world around her.

Picture of Marie Hawthorne

Marie Hawthorne

A lover of novels and cultivator of superb apple pie recipes, Marie spends her free time writing about the world around her.

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  • It only takes fruit, sugar, wine or Champagne yeast that you can buy on Amazon and water to make wine. Expensive kits are not needed.

    • If you just plan to drink it letting it use its wild yeast is usually pretty good. Best apple coder I ever had was just a jug on my kitchen counter.

  • When I used to live in North Carolina, we would press huge amounts of crabapples and apples, put them in 5 gallon buckets with an air lock and they’d ferment into hard cider. No yeast or sugar needed. Once the cider is finished, you can use some to easily make apple cider vinegar. Easy process with crabs, no mother needed though if you have some natural ACV to start with you can use it. Very easy and useful skill to know, and for smaller amounts, no apple press is needed, just makes it all much easier.

  • Bell peppers and sweet potatoes were the only thing that thrived in my north Florida 200 sq. foot suburban garden.

    I’m “curing” the potatoes in my hot and humid garage for a week or so then to cool storage.

    Even if we had a bad year, we gained experience and produced more than most folks. Sometimes it’s hard for me to see this from a big picture point of view.

    This article makes me want to restart my canning.

  • I need help from the Book readers:
    There is a book of prepper fiction where the author left a list for his kids on page 80 of his book. (I think page 80 if i recall correctly) Like his check list for them what to do after. He included a copy of his work of fiction in their BOBs for college. I saw the author discuss it in a video about his book once.
    Does anyone know what book this was. I’ve been desperately trying to think of it.

    My apologies for the off topic question – but I don’t social media so this is my only contact with you all who could answer this challenging trivia.

  • I learned to make hard cider from the book, The Alaskan Bootleggers Bible.
    Need to get the new edition.

    On a food crisis related note, a CBS news report showed in 2019, 40 million people relied on food banks. As of 2021 that number rose by 13 million to 53 million.
    A report earlier this year showed 10% of users were first timers of food banks.
    I think next year, it is going to be worse.

    • Great book????????

      I bought 3 gallons of unsold goldenrod honey from a local producer here.

      Going to try a few batches of test mead after October.

      • Jim,
        from a local honey maker here i can buy “melter honey” for very cheap. It is the sort of ‘burnt’ honey leftover from the melting out the beeswax process I believe. Anyway it’s less than half the cost of regular honey. A 2 gal bucket is $40 in my neck of the woods in 2022. Useful for mead, or bread baking etc where the honey flavor isn’t noticed.
        It has a molasses look, and a slightly roasted (carbon) taste.. I can eat it on toast and it doesn’t bother me, but I like the health of raw honey too -but when it’s being baked into bread it isn’t raw anyway.
        Well I’m rambling – but if you know honey people you could ask if you can buy the melter honey at a lower price.
        Good luck.

    • Speaking of food banks, those of us who can should donate when we are able. I do payroll deduction to a local food pantry (people and pets) as well as a couple of other local charities. Local means stand alone charities that helps those in my area.
      I would also add to not be discouraged if you cannot grow much more than enough to eat in season. Regardless if you live in an area that isn’t experiencing drought/heat/too much rain. There may be a time you can grow/preserve more. Kind of like eating an elephant – one bite at a time.

  • I live in zone 8a/b southeast US. I had a winter garden last year of lettuce, chard, carrots, beets, radishes, garlic, leeks, and onion in raised beds. The biggest surprise was the dill growing all winter and into March. I had a problem with white flies until the nights started getting cool in late September. Then the rest of the season was bug free. Aside from the humidity/heat of summers here, winters are a gardening blessing. Keep that compost pile going y’all, we’re gonna need it.

  • I would argue that it is not too late to start a garden (in fact, it’s coming up to the best time). Look into no dig gardening, lasagna gardening or back to Eden gardening. They are low effort ways to build a healthy productive garden. Basically, you put a load of organic matter down to smother other plants and create a light, rich soil. It can have edges of wood etc or just be a raised mound.
    I made a new garden bed for my family last fall on a patch of lawn in my small yard. I dug over the ground because it was compact clay, and covered it in cardboard. Then all fall I threw my grass clippings and raked up leaves on it. I topped it with homemade compost in the spring and planted mostly brassicas but also some salad greens and peas. I mulched early summer around the young plants as well.
    This summer my area has had a bad drought, the grass is brown and even mature trees are dying. I have watered that bed about three times (though I probably didn’t need to at all) but we have been eating fresh veg and salads all summer. Very little weeding too.
    I recommend you start now, then as fall comes you could even go round your neighbourhood and recycle your neighbours leaves and grass trimmings into food for your family next year!

  • In addition to my small, outdoor raised beds, I grow lettuce, tomatoes, microgreens and herbs indoors for 12 months in my Aerogardens…no bugs, and delicious all year!

  • I’ve made crabapple jam and crabapple butter in the past. My father-in-law loves it, but it’s definitely something you will either love or hate depending on how you feel about tart flavors.

  • Hi. So far I’ve harvested 95# of potatoes from raised bed/ Ruth Stout gardening. Squirrels took out most of the corn. Squirrels have also been attacking my pumpkin patch and sunflowers. Radishes were a failure this season. Carrots still growing and my Buttercrunch leaf lettuce has spread and grows in the lane way and lawn. All plants are non GMO, fertilized with manure or partially composed organics. No chemical sprays used.

    This is more of a water saving tip: if you leave your lawn nice and long and only cut it after a good rainfall you won’t have to water it much. At around 7″ I cut it back to about 4″.

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