
Here are complete, easy-to-follow directions for 101 homemade items that will save you time and money. Projects include things for your home (such as a tool box, a basement closet, a fuel sled, a solar drier, and a window greenhouse), your garden (compost boxes, cold frames, soil sifters, fences, and tomato supports), and your farm (a moveable shed, a corral gate, a watering trough, a chicken feeder, and an incubator).
With easy-to-follow directions and a materials lists, this is a book of projects that any beginner can take on and successfully complete. Among the titular 101 are designs for lawn furniture, movable sheds, cold frames, garden shelves, and a compost bin. You will save time and money by “building your own.”
Here are complete, easy-to-follow directions for 101 homemade items that will save you time and money. Projects include things for your home (such as a tool box, a basement closet, a fuel sled, a solar drier, and a window greenhouse), your garden (compost boxes, cold frames, soil sifters, fences, and tomato supports), and your farm (a moveable shed, a corral gate, a watering trough, a chicken feeder, and an incubator).
2 Comments;
Love this little book The pictures in this book are just terrific- clear, well-drawn, and simple in that pre-digital, 70’s pen-and-ink style that makes me downright nostalgic. And there are a lot of things in the book that I didin’t know I needed until I saw them- how about a tool cleaner? Put sand in a large container, mix in used oil, and store your tools in the sand/oil mix. They come out not just cleaned, but already oiled, too. Also inside: multiple composters, a cold frame, a root cellar, feeders, brooders, bird houses, chairs, benches, fencing, gates- and you can probably build them most of them just by looking at the pictures. It’s like having a cool great-uncle teach you old farm tricks.
Fill in the blanks If you build things, this book is great. It’s not very detailed so you have to fill in the blanks, a beginning builder may need a little help. What a cool book for ideas on “farm life” type of items. Movable pig styes, horse sheds, chicken coops and even an incubator. My Aunt & Uncle owned this book when I was a teenager. My uncle built an incubator for me from the plans in this book. I gathered a dozen duck eggs from the haystack (after installing a dimmer switch to regulate the temperature from the light bulbs, because I couldn’t find a thermostat) I incubated a dozen duck eggs, diligently turning them twice a day, watching the thermometer, keeping the water pan full. Every egg hatched. What a triumph! It is 20 years later and I still pull that book off the shelf. It’s a keeper.