I usually don't start off with the "negatives" of a video but will make an exception for this one.
If you ever feel compelled to post a video to social media, don't make your 15 year-old granddaughter the star. Don't include businesses with their phone-number on the buildings in the background. Don't take footage of unique memorials* that nerds can track down to exact GPS location.
Another thing about this channel is my perception that the grandmother (76 years-old) is profoundly unhealthy. Maybe readers who specialize in geriatric patients can tell me I am wrong, but she looks like she suffers from water-retention issues (congestive heart failure/kidney failure/high blood pressure/obesity) and might have a couple more years left on her clock...maybe.
Finally, the dog. The girl seems to be a recent addition to the farm. Perhaps she was in a city getting bombed or was closer to the front. She brought her dog with her, probably for emotional support. An elderly, morbidly-obese
![]() |
| The farm equipment works around the islands with the trees. |
In this video the young woman and the grandmother collect walnuts and chestnuts from local trees. Presumably, a third person is running the camera, perhaps the young woman's mother.
In Michigan, this would be happening about October 1.
What I like about this video is that in the US we take great pains to NOT plant "messy" trees like fruit trees and nut trees. They are seen as a liability in terms of labor required to clean-up and the potential for litigation due to slips-and-falls and the potential for attracting stinging insects. That is the attitude of a wealthy country.
In a poor country, every item in the farm-yard is expected to contribute to the family economy.
As an aside, "economy", "ecology" and "ecosystem" share the same Greek root-word, "Oikos" (οἶκος) which means "home". The term "Home economics" is redundant.
Depending on the species, trees can be sources of:
- Food
- Protein (nuts)
- Fats (nuts)
- Carbohydrates (fruit trees, sap/syrup)
- Edible leaves (mulberry, linden)
- Bee forage (linden, fruit trees)
- Material for smoking/preserving foods (twigs, bark, husks from nuts)
- Shelter from the wind
- Shelter from sun
- Shelter from wintertime, nighttime low temperatures
- Fencing/hedging/thorny barriers
- Privacy
- Cordage (bast from linden, mulberry, withes from willow)
- Construction materials, low-value (poles, stakes)
- Construction materials, high-value (timber, lumber)
- Construction materials, very high value (tools/weapons)
- Emergency forage for domestic animals
- Fix nitrogen
- Deep roots can mine water that is deeply underground
- Fuel
- Property markers
- Attract game (if you want a crop of nuts you WILL be harvesting squirrels...lots and lots of squirrels)
- Medicinal
- Tar, gum, turpentine/spirits (birch, spruce, pine and other softwoods)
This list kind of list is never complete. I listed the uses in roughly in the order of the "value" to a near-subsistence Oikos. Obviously, the order will vary depending on local circumstances.
If I compare the typical species found in a suburban, Michigan yard against the list of potential benefits:
- Honey Locust (Pollen for bees. Shade. A few sticks for fires. Might fix nitrogen)
- Blue Spruce (Fire hazard. Short life. Gum, windbreak)
- Chanticleer Flowering Pear (attracts bees in spring and birds in the winter. Sticks to burn).
- Prairiefire Crabapple (same as Chanticleer)
Nuts
What is most intriguing about this video is that they collect the nuts to sell in town. That is, the nuts are a cash crop.
Later in the video, the young woman cracks walnuts for a dessert. If you look closely you will see that she is cracking the "seconds", that is, the nuts with the stained shells. They sold the bright "#1s" and kept the "#2" for personal use. That makes sense since the buyer was probably paying four times as much per kilo for the #1s.
The young woman is very practical. She uses the money from selling the nuts to purchase a pair of winter boots and to buy a pole and line for fishing.
Transportation
The family relies very heavily on a repurposed roto-tiller as a source of traction. That seems silly to me as a guy who thinks it is trivial to move 80 pounds of cargo in a wheelbarrow. Key point, I am a guy and the two characters in this video are not.
This is not a very efficient or stable means of transportation but it is a case of working with what you have. I suspect that the "tractor" is newly purchased, perhaps with funds from the Youtube channel.
The motor on the unit is identified as a "Bizon 170F". The internet seems to think that is a 211cc, 7hp gasoline engine manufactured in China.
*I originally thought this was from the Ukraine but now think it is from Russia or Belarus. There is a very short sequence where a bust of Lenin is visible in a small, roadside park and there is a War Memorial park with static displays of a T-34 and a MiG-21.
Random fact: At one time, if you had $200k USD and the proper permissions you could purchase your very own, private MiG-21
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)


.png)



