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| Texas Pioneer Farms |
With more than a decade of volunteering at a living history museum, I can honestly say I have no regrets about homeschooling my children and giving them what I often call a "Little House on the Prairie" upbringing.
Those experiences inspired both my book Mom's Pioneer Living Handbook and many of the articles I write today. Having grown up in the Ozarks and spent time living off-grid on family property in rural Missouri, I already had an appreciation for simple living. However, spending years immersed in a living history environment gave me a deeper understanding of how our ancestors lived, worked, and overcame challenges.
What Life Was Really Like Before Modern Conveniences
It's one thing to read about pioneer life in a book. It's another thing entirely to spend long summer days dressed in period clothing while demonstrating 1800s skills in the Texas heat.
When temperatures climbed above 100 degrees, visitors would often ask:
"Aren't you hot wearing that dress?"
The answer surprised many people.
Most of our clothing was made from cotton, which actually stays remarkably comfortable in hot weather. Long sleeves and long skirts also protected us from the sun and insects. After spending enough time outdoors, I quickly learned why our ancestors dressed the way they did.
You also learn very quickly why old homes were designed with dog runs and breezeways. Those architectural features weren't decorative. They were practical solutions that encouraged airflow through the house before air conditioning existed.
Cooking Before Electricity Was Hard Work
One of the biggest lessons I learned involved food preparation.
Cooking on a wood stove wasn't as simple as turning a dial and waiting a few minutes. Meals often required planning hours in advance.
Many families cooked during the cooler morning or evening hours because the stove itself could quickly heat the entire kitchen. After the meal was finished, water still had to be heated for washing dishes.
At our museum, we had access to a hand-pump well, which gave us a glimpse into the daily effort required just to obtain water. Even then, I often found myself wondering about the families who had to carry every bucket from a spring, creek, or nearby water source.
Modern conveniences have made us forget how much labor was once required simply to prepare a meal and clean up afterward.
Why Traditional Skills Mattered
The more time I spent living history, the more respect I gained for our ancestors.
Running a household required a tremendous amount of work. Cooking, cleaning, laundry, gardening, preserving food, caring for livestock, raising children, mending clothing, and homeschooling often filled every hour of the day.
These responsibilities weren't hobbies. They were essential skills necessary for survival.
Our ancestors developed a level of self-reliance that many of us have lost in today's convenience-driven world.
What Our Ancestors Can Teach Us About Preparedness
One of the most interesting realizations I've had is that our ancestors were not "preppers."
They simply lived in a way that required preparation.
Food was stored because winter was coming.
Seeds were saved because another planting season would arrive.
Firewood was gathered because cold weather was inevitable.
Extra supplies weren't purchased out of fear. They were stored because experience taught people what they would need in the months ahead.
That mindset is something worth remembering today.
Learning to Live With Less
Over the years, I've become increasingly grateful for modern conveniences.
Air conditioning.
Running water.
Refrigeration.
Washing machines.
Vehicles.
Grocery stores.
These are luxuries that previous generations could only dream about.
Yet I have also learned that becoming completely dependent upon these conveniences can leave us vulnerable when disruptions occur.
Power outages, severe weather, supply chain problems, and other unexpected events remind us how quickly daily life can change.
Having backup sources of light, water, cooking methods, and food storage isn't fear-based thinking. It's practical planning.
Why These Skills Still Matter Today
During my travels, I've visited places where people still live in ways that resemble life in the 1800s by modern American standards. Some families continue to live in tents, raise livestock, cook over fires, and travel seasonally with their animals.
These experiences reinforced something I have come to believe strongly:
Resilience comes from skills as much as supplies.
Knowing how to adapt, improvise, repair, preserve food, and make do with what you have can be just as valuable as anything stored on a shelf.
The Inspiration Behind the Miles Away Series
Many of these lessons influenced my recent Miles Away series, a grid-down family survival story built around realistic scenarios and practical challenges.
Rather than focusing on fantasy survival situations, I wanted readers to think about everyday questions:
- How would we cook without electricity?
- How would we get water?
- How would we preserve food?
- How would we handle sanitation?
- How dependent are we on modern conveniences?
In many ways, a prolonged grid-down event would force us to rediscover skills that previous generations considered ordinary.
Final Thoughts
I believe it's important to remember how our ancestors lived—not because we want to return to the past, but because their experiences still have something to teach us.
Preparedness isn't simply about storing supplies.
It's about developing resilience, learning practical skills, and understanding how people survived long before modern conveniences existed.
The more I learn about pioneer living, the more I appreciate both the comforts we enjoy today and the wisdom our ancestors left behind.
Perhaps the greatest lesson of all is this: self-reliance isn't about fear. It's about peace of mind.
This article may contain affiliate links to my books. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. I may also earn royalties from books I have written.
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