@PugJesusM to HistoryPornEnglish • 2 days agoMonthly ration in Poland, early 1980simagemessage-square156arrow-up1512arrow-down15
arrow-up1507arrow-down1imageMonthly ration in Poland, early 1980s@PugJesusM to HistoryPornEnglish • 2 days agomessage-square156
minus-squareZementlinkfedilinkEnglish37•1 day agoThat is around 970 calories a day if you take 1/30th of each edible item on the Table. It’s not enough, but surprisingly almost half the needed amount.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish13•17 hours agoYou supplement it with potatoes, carrots, cabbage, cucumbers and other veggies. And some apples and seasonal fruit. Things sucked but people weren’t malnourished back then. Also not shown here: gasoline was also rationed, as were cars themselves.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish27•1 day agoIf Poland is anything like the US, families were expected to keep a garden where they grew many vegetables and fruits, and often kept chickens.
minus-square@CoCo_GoldsteinlinkEnglish5•19 hours agoAre you referring to ‘Victory Gardens’ in WWII? If so, that’s a bit of an apples to oranges comparison, since Poland had been at peace for over 35 years.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish12•17 hours agoI’m Estonian, not Polish, but I’ve helped my mom grow potatoes and stuff. Because of the peasant history, our people have always grown our own food. Only in the least few decades has it been getting less common.
That is around 970 calories a day if you take 1/30th of each edible item on the Table.
It’s not enough, but surprisingly almost half the needed amount.
You supplement it with potatoes, carrots, cabbage, cucumbers and other veggies. And some apples and seasonal fruit.
Things sucked but people weren’t malnourished back then.
Also not shown here: gasoline was also rationed, as were cars themselves.
If Poland is anything like the US, families were expected to keep a garden where they grew many vegetables and fruits, and often kept chickens.
Are you referring to ‘Victory Gardens’ in WWII?
If so, that’s a bit of an apples to oranges comparison, since Poland had been at peace for over 35 years.
I’m Estonian, not Polish, but I’ve helped my mom grow potatoes and stuff. Because of the peasant history, our people have always grown our own food. Only in the least few decades has it been getting less common.
Prior to WWII, during the depression.