I don't know your location and how cold it gets, but some folk bury an old non-working freezer to store their produce in. I suppose they cover the door with straw bales or something else to provide some insulation.
I've also read of barrels being placed in the ground on an angle with access through a cover. Sure wouldn't be as rodent secure as a freezer.
The one on our homestead was simply earthen walls (heavy clay once below topsoil) with steps and a slant door at one end. Of course a roof over it that was wide enough to keep water away from the walls. The roof was rafters fastened with ridge pole, decking over them, builders felt and then soil covering it for insulation. Bottom line---expense would be for steps, door, and roof. It was in western Kansas where there was no shallow ground water to contend with and low rainfall didn't rust or rot everything within a short while.
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Today's Featured Article - Show Coverage: Central Illinois Strawberry Festival - by Cindy Ladage and Janna Seiz. Every year the coming of summer is highlighted by different events for different people. For some, it is heralded with the end of school, tilling the garden, or completion of the planting season. To us, connoisseurs of find food, antique tractors, farm toys, crafts, and downright fun, the annual Strawberry Festival means summer is here. Every year, in Carlinville, Illinois, the Macoupin County Historical Society and the Macoupin Agricultural Antique Association team up to fill th
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