My garden was rampaged by cows | Off-grid resilience mode on

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Two days ago, I dared to leave my homestead to spend the night at a friend's house. One night... Just one night I gave myself some time to stop working on this. I came back to find cows had entered the garden.

They stormed in leaving a trail of fallen plants, stomped sprouts, as well as lots and lots of shit.

The saddest part is that they ravaged most of the kale/brussel/cabbage flowers that were pretty much near the point of seeding. Those seeds were my biggest project as they would be adapted to this land and weather. I wanted to distribute them to other people, as well as allow them to find their place in this ecosystem.

See how the amount of flowers was greatly reduced? Al least some managed to stay on their feet.

Most of the radishes were pulled from the ground and left there. Cows have a very strange way of acting as they tear plants apart without even eating them. The flowers I mentioned before were also just cut off and left on the ground.

Baby lettuces just torn out, pure senseless destruction.

When I arrived to see this it was raining, to add dramatism to the scene you know. It was a devastating sight and the first thought was just to kill myself. That all my work was for nothing, that I was a fool for thinking it was possible to live in a different way, that everything was meant to be destroyed. But it doesn't help to take away one's life because... reincarnation. So I thought of just leaving and to stop worrying about stuff, "have nothing, lose nothing", was an appealing suggestion.

After the whole depressive moment I started fixing what could be fixed, and realized that much had survived the attack. Much had been lost, but much had survived. So it was the question to myself: "will you focus on the losses or on what remains?" And of course the better choice was to see all that still could be saved and cared for.

I picked up all the torn radishes, flowers, and leaves and brought them in. I selected the bigger radishes to save them for salad and all the small ones, along with flowers and leaves went to making ferments.

To make the ferments I just put them in jars with salt and water. Then I put some stones on the top to weight down the plant material so that it doesn't float on top of the water and start to rot.

The bigger stems of the plants went back into the soil as sometimes they can root again and breed new plants. The plants that already had seedpods I left hanging where they could receive sunlight and perhaps complete their process.

Despite how painful this episode was, I still believe in this. Perhaps not in the naive way it is pictured everywhere. I've no doubt there will be more challenges. It should be illustrated how much work this all means, not just the pretty peaceful images shown everywhere. Doing this is just as hard and demanding as any path in life. The good thing is that those bright peaceful days do exist from time to time, and they are worth all the struggle.

After all, resilience is a necessary feat to develop no matter which way you go. Challenges are for everyone and it will always be a matter of how you decide to confront them.

These are troubled times all over the planet, with many floods and other natural disasters. No doubt it our doing as we've upset the balance with our actions. I truly hope we can wake up before it's too late. Start improving our relationship with nature and each other.

Have a good day!



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20 comments
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Things happen. When I first bought the land, I didn't have a fence and the neighbor's sheep periodically wandered into my garden, and my livestock also sometimes makes me similar gifts.

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How long have you been at it? This is my second year but I still feel such a baby hahah

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(Edited)

😀 also 2 years. I bought the land itself 5 years ago and I have been living here permanently for only 2 years

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Well it seems we still got lots of fence work to do

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I had some horses get into my garden a few months back, they devoured all my greens and trampled over lots of other veg as well. They did leave me some horse shit, but it is too rich for my garden being so fresh. Yeah it´s all about learning really. It takes a few years I think, to really get your garden lush. xxxxx

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I want to be a child again and feel responsible for nothing 😭

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It is tragic that this happened to you. From experience you should be more cautious about leaving your crops alone or in the care of the cows. The best thing, is that you saved part of the crop.
Greetings @fenngen


Es trágico que te ocurrió eso. Por experiencia debes tener más prevención al dejar tu siembra sola o al cuidado de las vacas. Lo mejor, es que salvaste parte de la cosecha.
Saludos @fenngen

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The cows are my neighbor's and I've been building my fence steadily for the last months. I build only with materials I can get from the forest and use mainly old fashioned non-powered tools (except for the phone and a drill which are solar powered) because I love this planet and don't support the oil fueled culture we live in.

As you can imagine, this is a lot of work and time, so it's not because I think it's ok to leave the garden in care of cows, it's just there is much to do yet.

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The bear wire around the garden would keep anything away.

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Barbed? Or is there a "bear wire" I searched but didn't find anything.

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Que weno que le aprovechaste a lo que pasó!! Te mando un abracito 💖 yy fuerza para seguir mejorando esas cercas para tu que tu bosque siga creciendo 🙏🏼

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Those cows were bullies!!

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Yes, big nasty ones. Makes me want to go back to eating meat 😡

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