
For many years, I’ve wanted to get myself into a situation in which I could can tomatoes. If your situation permits the growing and canning of tomatoes, you’re all set. It’s a yardstick against which you can measure your lifestyle.
But it took so long! Even after I bought the land, it was seven more years. The steps, roughly, are:
1. Buy your land
2. Build your house
3. Build a garden fence (maybe some areas could do without a fence)
4. Rehabilitate and prepare your garden soil, organically
5. Deal with the irrigation problem
6. Grow enough tomatoes to produce at least one peck of surplus tomatoes that ripen together
If you fumble a step, you lose a year. For example, last year I did not have irrigation. Hot, dry weather torched the garden. This year, the irrigation system made a huge difference. And in the early years of the Acorn Abbey project, my hands were too full to get around to things like preparing the garden soil or building the garden fence.
Why do we work so hard for tomatoes? I think it’s not just because they’re so good eat. I think it’s because tomatoes are sacred.



