What I write about
Six categories. 80 topics. The cron pulls from this list every two days, never repeating until the well runs dry.
livestock
- Starting your first goat herd without losing your shirt
- Picking the right chicken breed for your climate and freezer
- What I learned the night I lost six birds to one raccoon
- Trimming goat hooves the boring, correct way
- Building a chicken coop you do not regret in year three
- Raising heritage turkeys without the drama
- Getting honest about meat rabbits on a small property
- Why a dachshund is a better farm dog than people think
- Ducks vs chickens for egg-only homesteaders
- Coturnix quail — the meat bird that fits in a closet
- A milking routine that does not eat your morning
- Spotting a sick chicken before the rest catch it
- Running goat breeding season without a calendar app
- How we prep for butcher day so it doesn't turn ugly
- Layered predator prevention that actually holds up
- Cutting goat feed cost without cutting goat health
- Hatching eggs at home — what the books skip
- The vet kit you actually reach for at 11pm
garden
- Planning a homestead garden by zone, not by Pinterest
- No-till in year one vs no-till in year three
- Reading a soil test without panicking
- Cover crops that actually fit a small backyard
- Building one hugelkultur bed before committing the whole yard
- Perennial food the lazy homesteader can plant once
- Backyard fruit trees in year one — patience and pruning
- Integrated pest management in plain English
- Seed-starting that doesn't need a basement greenhouse
- Stretching your growing season without a high tunnel
- Watering a garden without burning the well dry
- A compost system that fits a real life, not a magazine cover
- Seed saving the boring, reliable way
- Mulch experiments — what worked, what did not
preservation
- Getting over canning fear in one Saturday
- Pressure canning meat without ruining your nerves
- Water-bath canning jam that gels every time
- Fermenting vegetables on the kitchen counter — no weird gear
- Cold-smoking and hot-smoking pork on a backyard smoker
- A dehydrator schedule that pays for the dehydrator
- A freezer strategy for real-world power outages
- A root cellar bin without digging a root cellar
- Vacuum sealing without losing your mind to bag costs
- A jerky marinade you will actually make again
- Sauerkraut by feel, not by recipe
- A canning-tomato day that does not end in tears
off-grid
- Sizing a backyard solar setup without overspending
- Rainwater harvesting that actually feeds your animals
- Well basics every homesteader should know cold
- Generator care that means it starts in January
- Propane vs wood heat for the homesteader who does both
- Off-grid lighting that does not feel like camping
- Backyard radio comms — GMRS, ham, and the truth
- A battery bank you can grow into
- A drinking-water filter rotation that lasts a year
- Grid-down night one — the first 90 minutes
skills
- Cold-process soap that is not a YouTube clone
- Pouring candles that burn clean and look like adults made them
- Mozzarella in 30 minutes from your own milk
- Butter in a Mason jar, the slow, weird, satisfying way
- Knife sharpening that is not a religion
- Sewing repairs every homesteader should be able to do
- Basic stick welding for fence and gate repair
- Chainsaw safety the way I wish someone had taught me
- A sourdough starter that survives a busy week
- Tanning a hide for the first time without a workshop
- Basic carpentry that holds up to a working homestead
- Fire-starting in wet weather without internet hacks
- Five knots a homesteader uses every week
- Whittling and basic carving for the porch evenings
resilience
- Everyday carry for someone who actually works the land
- A 72-hour bag that fits real life, not a tactical magazine
- Building neighborhood mutual aid before you need it
- A homesteader's financial buffer in plain numbers
- OPSEC for homesteaders without going full prepper-paranoid
- Bringing kids into prepping without scaring them
- Building a debt-free homestead one season at a time
- Storm prep with 72 hours notice and a busy week
- Building a skill stack faster than gear stack
- Barter and trade in a small homesteading community
- A first-aid kit a homesteader will actually open
- Mental resilience for the slow, hard seasons