The Homestead Life: Is It a Realistic Lifestyle?

in #blog5 years ago


There is a growing interest in the homestead life. We are finding more stories and coverage in mainstream news along with magazines and other publications lately.


Our website provides a great channel for communication. We've had some interesting discussions recently where we've been asked to share more about why we homestead. One of the questions we were asked: "Is the homestead life a realistic lifestyle"?


There is a perception of what homesteading is really like, and I think this comes from seeing television shows set in Alaska. I think we can all agree that not every homestead is like this. There is an element of that ruggedness for us, but this is by choice. Some homesteaders live luxuriously and others live a really intense, extreme remote off grid life. Most homesteads fall somewhere in-between this.

When we first moved to this homestead we jumped into all kinds of things - immediately! We had spent so much time reading, researching and developing skills for homesteading that we wanted to hit the ground running. So we did.

Our time spent preparing was really important because we were able to develop skills before we moved to the homestead such as gardening and preserving food, but it established some pre-conceived notion's in our minds about what a homestead was supposed to look like.

Less than a month into spring and we had pigs, chickens, quail, meat birds and a huge garden. We were putting up fencing, building outbuildings are moving full steam ahead. It was intense.

Then came the hard lessons. Not everything that we tried stuck. Some things we just hated doing. Some things we were terrible at doing. Some things broke our hearts. Then there were things that sparked something inside of us, things we were really good at doing and loved to do.

It turned out that raising animals isn't something we are passionate about. We actually feel pretty terrible about it most of the time. We still keep hens for eggs but we've stopped raising quail and pigs. This might change but right now we've evolved into a homestead that grows a lot of organic food, focuses heavily on perennial edibles, foraging and wild crafting.

Eventually we've found our own groove and a lifestyle that nourishes us. We've grown a lot, learned a heck of a lot of new skills and wake up pretty exited to see what each new day will bring. We have no regrets. Sure, we wasted some time and even money on a few projects that didn't pan out but we learned from these mistakes. Even the hard lessons taught us something valuable about this life and ourselves.

We also discovered that our old careers have a place in our new world. We built this website, a way to share our knowledge and inspire and support others. We've also been providing personal mentor-ship and lessons.. Another thing we focus on is building community and connections. All of these things are becoming an important part of our homestead vision.

When it comes to homesteading, there is 'no one size fits all' category. No book or documentary has all the answers, but you need to start somewhere.
What we've learned is that when it comes to homesteading, it's the wild west. There really are no hard rules and there isn't a user manual to follow. A homestead is a highly personal thing There are numerous factors that determine what your homestead will look like. Your skills & interests, financial situation, land type, resources, community just to name a few.

Inevitably, there will be some trial and error. There will be some hard lessons, and many beautiful ones as well. One thing we have not heard from a single homesteader is the word regret.

The hardest part is stepping off that beaten track and getting started.

Ps. We are starting a campaign called 'the homestead life". If you would like to have your homestead story featured please get in touch and we'll talk. We'd love to hear from people across the continents, not just Canada!


Posted with love from my blog walkerland.ca with SteemPress : https://www.walkerland.ca/the-homestead-life-is-it-a-realistic-lifestyle/

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This is a good question to ask. I've been thinking about it a lot lately out of both necessity and also out of curiosity. The answer I've come to is that homesteading is more realistic/sustainable with strong community ties.

This was such a great read! I'm really glad we are spending a bit more time in our rental because we are spending it planning, learning skills, and saving a bit more money. I'm glad to hear you guys did something similar, lots of pre-planning and learning things you can do anywhere. I think that's also a valuable lesson, because it's teaching us and those around us that you don't need a huge chunk of land or even much space in a home to really embrace a homesteading life and mentality.
For instance, we don't have room in our backyard to do thermophilic composting (and I'm pretty sure our landlord wouldn't dig it... He's still asking us to fertilize his grass with chemicals which we simply won't do), so we are finding a happy medium and doing a worm composting farm indoors. We will use our worm tea to fertilize the grass for our landlord, and hopefully as a side effect, prove to yet another Chem user that natural fertilization does work. 😂
The point being, we don't own our land yet but we can still do so many things!

Thanks for the really nice article. Love reading this kind of perspective stuff!

Xx ToL

Thanks for the nice feedback @thetreeoflife, I appreciate it!

How do you find composting the worms indoors? I have a tiered worm bin (3-tiers I think) but I have been nervous to set it up inside. Our garage would be too cold in the winter and the actual compost bin is just so far from the house that I find it a chore to go out to every day.

It is true! The whole idea of self reliance, empowerment, learning new skill is something that everyone can invest themselves in - if they want to.

We are picking up our worms Thursday so I can't give you my experience for a bit haha however, we did set up our bins and I already have lots of food ready for them. Our plan is indoors, as we don't have the outdoor space to thermophilic compost. The setup we have is a diy 2 bucket setup, and the biggest output we expect is worm tea/compost tea which is a nice dilutable liquid fertilizer. We are stoked to set it up!
Maybe I'll post about it as we introduce our worms!

please do. I really find vermi-composting interesting and would like to set it up on a larger scale because we are all organic here and it's a challenge finding amendments that we trust. I've not been able top find worms for my bin. It will have to wait for spring I think. I suppose winter isn't really a big for fishing around here.

That was a beautiful read. Living homesteading life has been my dream eversince and this post serves an inspiration to look gorward to that dream. Thanks for this beautiful share. X

Thanks @sherryneil! Working towards a dream is good for the soul. xx

I often wonder what the world would be like if everyone took up a homestead life

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it would certainly be interesting but I suppose these days it would be very hard to do that. Not enough land to go around. That said, the actions of each individual, how they shop, being more mindful about wasting, and growing a little food wherever they are, could really change the world. Something does have to change and I love that idea of there being homesteads everywhere rather than all of these malls and pavement blocks.

Many solutions but I don't think developers are going to give up covering good agricultural land with houses for a while yet

I find that crazy because there are so many homes and office buildings sitting vacant. Continuing to pillage for profit is reprehensible.

There's so many that there's really no reason for homelessness. It's more profitable in some cases to claim the tax breaks on empty buildings than it is to go something good with them

We've been doing this such as we are for 10 years, but have been building the homestead for 35 years. So yes, it is realistic, but it is also constantly evolving, as you pointed out.

Very true, people change, circumstances change but the homestead can adapt and thrive through it all.

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