What is a CSA?

A CSA, by definition, is a Community Supported Agriculture. In a CSA, people buy “shares” in a local farm in advance of a growing season, and receive their return in produce. It’s like that CD you have had at the bank for 10 years, except you get a return out of a CSA. To answer the question “What is a CSA”, we will go over a few pro’s and con’s.

PRO:

They’re flexible. One of my favorite things about using a CSA is that they are flexible. All of the farmers operate differently, and many times personally. They can grow produce according to past purchases of shareholders, deliver produce if you’re sick, and put your kids to work when they’re driving you nuts. The point is, It’s really a relationship between you and your grower that dictates how and where you can get your produce.

CON:

There is no guarantee. If the tomatoes get blight, or your farmer produces 1,000 linear feet of beans and no lettuce or kale, you get what you get. Paying in to the CSA does not guarantee the type of return you get. Just like any investment, you’re in it for better or for worse.

PRO/CON:

Most likely, your share will consist of produce you may not normally use. Your farm has to grow a decent variety of produce to stay relevant. They may even have some things you’ve never heard of before. Until I met my wife, I thought kale was a form of seaweed, so I understand the plight. If you can manage a bit of positive thinking, this is a great way to broaden your cooking repertoire. Along with that, you’ll be adding a healthy variety of new vegetables into your diet that you would not have normally ventured into. It’s an adventure!

PRO:

You can learn how to farm. If you have been reading my blog at all, you know that I am starting at zero. Why do you think I’m interviewing CSA farmers and following homesteaders on Instagram? I’m a flippin cheater. One thing that Graham from Valhalla Farms told me was that you can always glean from other people and other styles of farming. Even just by going to the farm to get your produce or asking the farmer questions. If you are lucky enough to be within range of Graham and Bianca, you may learn more about farming than you even want to. These people are a wealth of knowledge at your fingertips.

PRO:

It’s fresh. Check out this article. It is not the only article ever published on the nutrients lost in food in time. The more freshly picked your food, the better. For instance, Bianca and Graham pick their produce the night before or the morning of pickup depending on the variety. Do you have any idea how long it takes from farm to store to table for produce at a place like Walmart or Meijer? Neither do they! I guarantee it wasn’t picked that morning!

These are just a few of the things that make up a CSA. In the simplest terms, at the beginning of a given year, you pay for a growing season and are given fresh, usually organic, healthy produce in return. Sounds like a good deal to me.

As always, start small, think big, and stay healthy!

What About Their Legs!?

This is a question I get so often that I decided to dedicate a post to it. “What happens to their little legs when you move the rabbit tractors around?” Well…not what I assumed would happen.

I wish that my entire life was on video so that you could see the ridiculous events that unfold around me. Just last week I feel off of my A-frame ladder onto my extension ladder from my roof swatting at a wasp…all the while being yelled at by my wife from the kitchen window because of my lack of safety. Just a quick snapshot of my life for you.

Back to topic. So there I was, trying to answer this question. I thought “I’ll lift the tractor up higher so that I can see the rabbits better and keeps their legs above the ground. Don’t. Just…stop it.

Have you ever seen a mouse squeeze through a tiny spot while you stood there in amazement and stupification? Me too, but with a rabbit. So now I’m holding up a rabbit tractor with one hand above my head while crouching on the ground and trying to grab an escaped bunny with the other. Lucky for me, Kristi was outside. She ran over to catch it and the little bugger moused back IN to the tractor.

Oy.

So to answer your question, don’t worry about their little bunny legs. Just drag the dang thing slowly and they will be fine. Whatever you don’t, don’t pick it up high enough for an escape. You will regret it.

Side note: don’t swat at wasps while leaning over a poorly balanced ladder.

As always, start small, think big, and stay healthy!

Roots for Days. How to Upgrade your Backyard Garden

“I love the smell of fresh tilled dirt in the morning. Smells like…sustainability.”
-Me, copying Apocalypse Now

We planted our carrots and beets in our backyard garden sometime in March and they are going crazy!

This is actually something that we learned this year on our homestead. We live in Michigan, and this year in March it was still getting into the high teens and low twenties at night with temperatures barely over 40 on average during the day. We have never planted anything before Memorial Day weekend to be honest with you. This is really the first backyard garden that I’ve started to get outside my norm and plant new things. I usually stick to the zucchini, tomato, peppers, and a few cukes if I’m feeling saucy. This is the first year I’ve played around with root vegetables, all in an attempt to be more sustainable every day.

As soon as the soil temperature picked up above freezing, they all shot up like crazy. So much that I’m actually worried that I messed up and it’s all too good to be true. For real, they look like I started them in a greenhouse.

How do i prep for a garden upgrade?

The point is, if you’re starting to venture outside of your normal tomato and green pepper plants and into a wider variety backyard garden, look into the seeds you’re planting. Heck, they usually have directions right on the packages. Figure out what you want in your garden for NEXT year and plan accordingly. Different plants need to be started/ planted in the garden at different times during different seasons and temperatures. They also require different soil moistures and sunlight. What we have been learning is to find someone who plants in our state and listen to some of their advice. If you’re in Michigan, my wife loves MIgardener. She even ordered the seeds for our backyard garden from them this year.

Where do i find a know-it-all?

Michigan is not the only state with a professional like MIgardener. The internet is chocked full of people much smarter than I am about this stuff who you could probably hit with a rock they are so close to you. YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook all have groups if you can’t find a singular entity with all of the knowledge. I’m actually part of a homesteading group on Facebook. I don’t glean much from the mindless posts, but if I ask a question, I can usually take a “majority rules” approach to the answers I get and figure the rest out on my own.

So here’s your takeaway:

  1. Plan your backyard garden a year ahead
  2. Read up on your seeds
  3. Read up on your climate
  4. Find a professional in your area
  5. Plant Your backyard garden!

As always, start small, think big, and be healthy!

Click here for more ideas on That Homestead!

6 Easy Ways to be More Sustainable

Homesteading is for everyone! As a brand new homesteader, I would like to pass on how easy it is to get started. When you look on Youtube or other blogs, it is easy to get overwhelmed. Some of these people are running full time farms while you barely know how to keep a cactus alive on your countertop. Don’t fret. I started the same way. In this blog, I want to show you 6 ways to start off a small homestead. The cool thing is, that some of these things can be done from an apartment! Who knew!? All you have to remember is not to think too big. goals are great, but you also have to be realistic. If you go out and get 6 pigs, a cow, a goat, chickens, rabbits, and 400 linear feet of beans, you might fail. Start small and expand accordingly.

  1. Aquaponics. Although I have not tried this yet, I plan on it this winter. If you don’t know what it is, start here. This is a great demo on a small scale aquaponics system. If I were you, I would steal his idea and run with it. I plan on building a small countertop version for my herbs. well, I should say, my wife’s herbs. Is there anything cooler than fresh herbs that are also helping to keep a fish alive? I don’t know, but probably not. This is one of those small scale sustainable practices that would be great if you had an apartment.
  2. Chickens. I have not started my chicken farm yet, but it is next on the list for this year. I have never head chickens, but I know people with less know-how than my left foot that haven’t killed their egg chickens yet. This makes me hopeful that the endeavor will not be too out of reach. If you go to Far North International, you can find some pretty small, fairly cheap chicken coupes to get started. I have seen people in very suburban areas raise chickens for eggs with small coupes like these. If you are a little more handy and would like to do it on a larger scale like I’m planning on, there are many other ways to get started. This guy is one of my favorite homesteaders, and that link is a good start for a detachable chicken tractor/ coupe. I’m going to satellite for a second to tell you that he is one of my favorite homesteading YouTubers. Only watch if you don’t mind someone being way smarter than you. He has so many great ideas and explains them all very well in his videos. There are a few cool things about raising egg chickens. Eating fresh eggs (of course), selling extra eggs, you can feed chickens your table scraps, you can compost chicken manure, chickens eat ticks and other bugs, and they are just funny as the day is long to watch.
  3. Rabbits. Obviously my favorite. This was the beginning of my homestead obsession. I don’t even remember what got me into it, but these guys have the lock down on information on getting started. It is not very in depth, but is a perfect overview on what obstacles you are up against and when they will happen. I would personally recommend that everyone start with meat rabbits on their homestead. They are so easy. All I do right now is go out every morning, fill up the water bottles, and put food in the feeders. That, of course is the bare minimum, but it’s all you HAVE to do. once your rabbitry is up and running it pretty much runs itself, other that any unforeseen hurdles. But if you are alive, hurdles will happen…so you might as well also have fresh healthy meat for your family. Obviously there will be more work involved the larger your rabbitry gets, or during harvest times.
  4. Garden. I have always found this one easy, but I have always had a garden growing up. Don’t get me wrong, there have been a few years where I have produced nothing from my garden due to disease and weather. Lucky for you, you obviously read blogs and peruse the internet for information, so when it comes to disease and weather issues, you’ll be ahead of it.
  5. Recycling. I live in Michigan, so this may be a little more state specific for the purposes that I am going after. I hate recycling at the road. I have one of the tiniest bins every created to hold an entire weeks worth of plastics, paper, cardboard, metal, etc. I have to PAY for the tiniest bin in the world. Why am I paying to recycle? I refuse. No pun intended. In Michigan, we have scrap yards galore. All of my metal is sorted, cleaned, and taken in. They pay ME for my garbage. Many places will take plastics for money as well. As for paper and cardboard, we compost a lot of it. Whatever we don’t compost, we burn. The only thing that gets thrown away is meat scraps, which can be fed to come animals if you have pigs or chickens. Bango jango, I will not ever pay anyone to recycle anything. Ever.
  6. Composting. Composting is a great way to be sustainable at your homestead. It and recycling really go hand in hand, as it is just another form of recycling. We put all of our green garbage in our compost pile. There are a lot of different ways to compost. You can get worm bins, compost bins, or just put it all in a big pile like I do. I will eventually get into worm composting, but for now My way is working just fine.

I hope that these 6 tips helped you gather a few ideas on getting started toward sustainability. After all, that is the key to homesteading. The beauty is that most of this can be done with little or no property. It is a great feeling to know that your home is running clean, and it is my pleasure to help you in your journey to sustainability. Don’t forget to subscribe so that you don’t miss new blog posts!

Paradigm Shift

There has been a paradigm shift in our mindsets around consumption over the years. People are relying less and less on GMO’s and more and more on local food. From backyard gardens to farmers markets, people have had enough of big government farming.

It is my goal here to instill a sense of pride in your neighbor with the annoying chickens. To have you smile instead of dry heave at the smell of the compost pile across the street. I want you to understand the hard work, dedication, and fear that goes with full time farming on a small scale. It’s not because I wholly disagree with industrialism. God made us to be ever striving to reach our potential. He made us in his image, and he is The Creator, after all. It’s because these small scale farmers and homesteaders feel a sense of pride in something pure. Pure food. Humane food. Healthy bodies. Helping the world to be a little more sustainable. These are all things that God had in mind when he made this place.

It’s very interesting to me how people’s mindsets can change so quickly and to such a degree. How few years ago was it when we grew up on family farms? Men were trained by their fathers and grandfathers. Women were trained by mothers and grandmothers. Family was more important than 401k, and our food was from dirt to table.

Fast forward to now and you wouldn’t know it was the same place. We slave at a job to pay for a car…which we need just so we can get to our job. We buy big houses and big televisions and our children are raised by IPads. Men are not men and women are not women. Our kids are surrounded by filth and hate at every turn, and rarely have any sort of a family structure to rely on.

I don’t know about you, but I get real depression if I think about it for too long. I find that I have to distract myself from the reality of the world so that I don’t lose all hope in it. “For all that is in the world-the desires of the flesh and the desires of the eyes and the pride of life-is not from the father but is from the world. And the world is passing away along with its desires, but whoever does the will of God abides forever.” 1 John 2:16-17 ESV. Our world, as a whole, is headed the way of worldly desires. It is up to us to act singularly against the grain of the flesh. We are light and truth to people living in a world of darkness and deceit.

The Face of Food

In this section of That Homestead, we will be featuring you! Are you a local CSA or homesteader? Do you sell eggs, chicken, produce, beef, or anything organic? I want to hear from you!

I want to feature only the most passionate of homesteaders here. This is a place for the elite. The ones who said “enough is enough” with leaving their families in the dust while they worked 70 hours a week. The ones who said “enough is enough” to ingredients in their food that they can’t even pronounce. The ones who’s friends told them they were nuts.

If this is you, contact me to set up an interview and we will show the world what it’s like to be sustainable.

Save Money Feeding Your Rabbits

My 1942 Farmall A. It makes mowing lawn fun.

I was mowing my lawn yesterday and had a bit of a light bulb moment. The rabbit I have in the pasture tractor hardly eats any pellets. I move him every day and he eats the grass down to nothing wherever he is….so why couldn’t I use the piles of cut grass in my yard? I took a handful out and the two rabbits I have in hanging cages went crazy for it.

Here at That Homestead, we’re always trying to find ways to spend less money. If i feed grass to my breeders, I will have about 7 months of free food per year. I free feed my rabbits, so that adds up fast depending on how many breeding rabbits you have at once.

Along with feeding fresh grass through the summer, I’ve been looking into drying the grass clippings like hay and feeding it through the winter. From what I can tell it has the same fiber that hay does. The nice thing about the pellets is that they still get all of the nutrients that they might lack from eating just dry grass.

4 Easy Steps to Starting Seeds in Eggshells

Baby Zucchini!

There are many ways to start your seeds before planting season, but here is one that we have found helpful. You can start your seeds in eggshells in 4 easy steps.

  1. Eat eggs (preferably from your own chickens)
  2. Save the eggshells and cartons
  3. Add soil and seed.
  4. Just add water!

It really is that easy. When we eat our eggs, we don’t wash them or anything. Just put the two halves inside each other, back into the hole in the egg carton that you pulled them from, back in the fridge with your uneaten eggs. We eat a lot of eggs around here, so we start saving shells 2-3 weeks before we want to plant (depending on how many seedlings we’re starting). The ones we don’t save go to the compost pile.

Sadly, I don’t have established compost yet, so we buy potting soil. It’s whatever. BUT we put a rabbit pellet in every eggshell with our seeds. Rabbit manure only needs to dry for a week or so and it can be put directly into soil.

We use our rabbit tractors to give our plants some sun in the early spring.

After that, water like you would any other seedling and bada bing, bada boom. You nailed it.

The one thing we are going to try next year (if the greenhouse isn’t built yet) is to buy some of those plastic lids that you would put on aluminum trays and cover the cartons like a mini greenhouse. Right now we carry them in and out everyday to get sunlight and it’s kind of a drag. The worst part is the one night your two year old has a melt down and you forget to bring them in is the one night you get frost and kill your poor little plants. That’s just no bueno.

If you have any other ways or ideas to start seeds I would love to hear them! Leave them in the comments!

Breeding Rabbits

Yes it’s a little odd. I know. But it’s a necessary step in producing more rabbits. Lucky for us, “breeding like rabbits” is all too true.

Step 1: Always take the female to the male. Females are more territorial, and males have less of an attention span. Sounds a little like real life for humans too. Anyway….if you take the male to the female, he will spend more time smelling around than bumping uglies. Always always always take the female to the male.

Step 2: Light a candle, put on some mood music, and watch it all unf…oh, never mind. It’s already done. It will not take much time out of your day to make sure that you get a successful breeding. When I bred mine, I watched the buck knock out two quick ones within a minute, watched for a couple of minutes, and then witnessed a third go-round. There are a lot of different ways to check for a successful breeding, but I like this hands off approach. Make sure they have three tries and you’re probably good to go.

Between 10-14 days you can palpate the females to check for pregnancy. I haven’t figured out how to do it yet, so watch all of the same YouTube videos I watched and see if you can. I waited the 29 days and woke up to exponentially more rabbits than I had the night before. Sometimes the suspense is half the fun.

The males can breed once a day successfully. I can attest since both of my does had kits and they were bred one day after the other. The only thing I noticed was that the male had a little harder time focusing on the task at hand. Maybe I’ll get him some Gatorade next time…

You can apparently re-breed the females 2-3 weeks after birth. I will keep you posted on how this plays out. I plan on breeding on week 2 to the exact day to see how it goes. I’ll be looking for ease of breeding, wellness of mama, and wellness/number of kits comparatively in the next litter.

If you have any other questions or comments please feel free!

How to Build a Rabbit Tractor (Video)

Sorry about the video quality. YouTube channel coming soon. I will have a more involved post on building these in the future with full dimensions. Hope this is helpful!

I was worried about the poultry mesh because it’s so flimsy. It has been just over a month and it is still holding out. I don’t really believe that it will work out, but it’s pennies compared to the price of the welded wire, so I will probably stick with it.

You can watch the video here!