Today I'm talking with Christeen at Rustic Haven Homestead.
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00:00 You're listening to A Tiny Homestead, the podcast comprised entirely of conversations with homesteaders, cottage food producers, and crafters. I'm your host, Mary Lewis.
00:12 Today I'm talking with Christine at Rustic Haven Homestead in Washington State. Good morning, Christine. How are you? Good morning. How are you? I'm doing great. I'm good. I'm good. I'm good. oh What is the weather like there?
00:30 Right now it's eight o'clock in the morning, so we're just getting our day started and it's super foggy and trying to rain.
00:40 That sounds about right for Washington state. Yes. Well, in Minnesota, it is bright and sunshiny. We got a little bit of snow overnight on top of the snow we got over the weekend. So it's very shiny outside because the snow is reflecting the sunlight. It's beautiful out. I love that. I can't wait for it to snow, but we still have a few more weeks of rain. Yeah, when.
01:05 I don't know anything about Washington state's climate except that you guys get a lot of rain. So does it get cold, cold there? It does. um Depending on where you live in Washington, that'll depend on how much snow you get. I have kind of been all over. So up in Skagit County by like Mount Baker, you get a ton of snow. And down here by Olympia so far, we don't get a lot of snow, but there's a lot of ice.
01:36 Okay. Yeah. I don't love it when there's ice. My husband drives all over the place for his job and the days when it's freezing rain, I'm just like, please be careful. Right. I don't mind driving in the snow and stuff like that just because I'm used to it from living up in Skagit County, which I didn't really grow up in. For the most part, I was born and raised in North Carolina where they put ice like
02:05 um, ice salt down instead of sand. Here they do sand. And so it's a little bit different on that front. But I've noticed that in certain areas of Washington, the roads aren't kept as well as others. So up in Skagit County, they worked really hard to make sure everything was maintained. Down here, it's like they're very short staffed.
02:32 And so the roads don't get cleared and when they do get cleared, it's clean cleared. So it's very scary. And if you don't grow up in an environment where you're actually driving in the snow and the ice, you become a danger to others. Yes. And that happens every fall here in Minnesota. That first snowstorm, there are more people who end up in the ditch than really should end up in the ditch. Yeah. And so...
03:02 I work in the medical field. have for almost 20 years and so I'm just like, just stay home. It's okay. Just stay home. If you can, don't be on the roads. Yes. Yep. Okay. is more important than your life. Oh, absolutely. You're, you're absolutely a hundred percent right. And other people's lives too, while we're talking about it. So tell me a little bit about yourself and your version of your homestead. Okay. So.
03:32 My name is Christine and I have grown up with my grandparents canning and baking everything and doing everything from scratch. My mama, she lived to be almost 100 and had a full-time garden, worked in the medical field. She worked in the hospital until she was in her 80s. And so she taught me a lot about canning.
03:59 vegetables and how to grow a garden and all of that aspect. And then whenever I was probably 30, I started getting into sourdough and learning all of that process, which has been quite fascinating actually. um But I met my spouse and we have started our own little homestead. We have all kinds of animals and
04:30 honestly all kinds of kids. uh Blended family of seven, so we have five kids between the two of us and they love to ride our goats like their horses. And it's fun to watch them get chased by chickens sometimes, but we have kind of just moved everything into a very simple life and hopefully in the next couple of years we can start homeschooling as well.
04:59 Ve
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