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Handy Farm Devices: And How to Make Them
Rolfe Cobleigh
The Lyons Press
, 1996 - 290 pages
average customer review:
based on 17 reviews
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highly recommended
Great!
This book is a "must have" because of all the great ideas.
Today you can just buy all the stuff but this would be very costly.
This little book s
how
s how to build everything you need by yourself.
I'm starting a very small
farm
for selfsuffiency and was desparate about the costs of all the needy things.
This book will spare me hundreds of $, it's really great.
Where we're heading?
My interest in this book comes from a growing concern about Peak Oil. When energy is no longer cheap or plentiful,
how will
we adapt? One way to approach this question is to look ahead and see how technologies such as solar and wind energy can help. Turns out, however, that the feasibility of these technologies is also dependent to a large degree upon plentiful, cheap oil. So, in addition to looking ahead, it's probably a good idea to look to the past. How did people of a few generations back manage such simple tasks as refrigeration (for example), without relying upon constant availability of electricity and fossil fuel?
This book is a good resource for those who want to investigate this question. It offers many examples of very practical implements, most of which can be built with simple tools, some basic skills, and hard work. "Hard work" may be the most operant item in that list, and throughout the book are sprinkled brief aphorisms encouraging one to embrace the work ethic: "the manly part is to do with might and main what you can (Emerson)"; "keep your shop and your shop will keep you"; "Taste the joy that springs from labor (Longfellow)".
Good illustrations; spare, to-the-point writing st
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Handy Guide For Handy Devices
This is great guide for people who want to build things, even if they aren't very good at it. There are some really clever ideas in this book, and loads of useful information. This is a reprinting from 1909, but just as useful as it was back then.
Historical and functional
This book is full of historical information about
devices
, buildings and just useful things. This guide would be useful in areas or
farms trying
to live without elecrical equipment and in cases of disasters to
make
do until some assistance with more modern means arrives. I enjoyed the writing and would recommend the book to those looking to do things more "natural".
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Fantastic book that can save you time and money
"Success comes to the man who so works that his efforts will bring the most and the best results-not to the man who simply works hard." Very elequently stated by the author from page three in the introduction of this gem of a little book.
Call me a survivalist, but I feel books such as these are going to become imperative in the future of america for both the suburbanite and country boy alike.
Handy
Farm
Devices
by Rolfe Cobleigh is a must own to anyone who owns or is even thinking about owning their own homestead. This book allows you to
make just
about anything you could possibly need around a private farm/homestead. Just to name a few things that are tucked away in the pages of this litte gem are
How
To: use a carpenters square, build stairs, temporary animal housing, a cellar, make your own dresser drawers, feeders for your animals, make a chicken coop from a barrel (and other chicken, pig, horse, and cattle housing designs as well), laying cement foundations, simple housing plans, how to build a concrete stone house for $400 dollars, build your own wheelbarrel, plus various orchard and planting ideas as well as other ideas that are so numerous I can't possibly mention
them
all.
The only thing this book will not do is give you a step by step guide on how to go about doing X,Y, and Z. It gives you pointers and a general push in the right direction, but it doesn't give you in depth direction. I only see this becoming problematic if you were to take on the task of building one of the houses described in this book. However, I don't see in depth directions being an issue for most of the devices mentioned. Even a modest amount of ingenuity should be sufficient in most cases. In the end this book delievers all that it reasonably can in less than 300 pages. A must have for those interested in homesteading, and those who believe that true self-sufficiency will become a necessary skill in the future of this country.
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