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Good-bye City Life!

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Good-bye City Life!

You know, this whole “I’m going to be a homesteader” thing started with a completely random thought, don’t you? I was perfectly content writing about preparedness and natural alternatives when a thought struck me, “I should be homesteading.” No amount of planning, prepping or reading from other homesteaders prepared me for what I was walking into.

First, some background information: I am a born and bred city girl. I lived in a sprawling suburb of Houston, Texas up until about 6 months ago when my family and I gave up the cush city life and relocated to a ranch on the other side of the United States. Sure I knew I was going to make mistakes (and lots of them). After all, I had zero experience being a homesteader. In fact, the only real experience I had with homesteading was opening up a bag of composted manure. So, I welcomed the mistakes because at least I would be doing what I felt I needed to do with my life.

Before taking on this grand adventure, I would daydream in my suburbanite home about surrounding myself with livestock, being knee deep in yard work, cleaning out barns, shoveling fresh manure (yes, I daydreamed about manure) and looking out to the horizon to see more than the house across the street.

In all honesty, I was not happy in the suburbs. I felt lost and in reality was quickly losing myself. I desperately needed my breath to be taken away by something . So, after careful planning, we found the perfect little town to set up our humble homestead and plunged in head first. This is where I fell flat on my face and landed into a lovely heaping pile of trouble.

1. Romanticizing homesteading will only get you so far

In all honesty, I was forewarned not to romanticize homesteading – and that’s exactly what I ended up doing. It is true that romanticizing something will help propel you into action; but there is nothing romantic about the rank stench of mass chicken manure. And nothing prepares you for seeing one of your livestock dead from a predator attack. I don’t want to deflate anyone’s homesteading dreams, but there is no rest for the weary on a homestead. There is a lot of work, ahem, sweat equity involved in running a homestead.

  • Hauling or chopping your own wood
  • Turning compost heaps
  • Hauling/burning trash
  • Tending to the garden
  • Mowing down overgrown pastures
  • Fixing/building fences
  • Chasing livestock in cold and sometimes, rainy weather
  • Shoveling that blessed manure I was daydreaming about

But… there’s the good too:

  • Stars!
  • Watching chickens busily searching for bugs
  • Your children running through a green pasture
  • Feeling proud to have produced your own food sources
  • Saving money by learning how to do things on your own
  • Did I mention the stars?

I think I’m still romanticizing it a little, but it really alters your entire perspective on life. Amidst the busyness of homesteading, the craziness of life seems to slow down or simplify somehow. No longer are you worried about the mundane – your purpose just becomes clear.

2. Start Small

One of my wonderful readers warned me to go into homesteading slowly. It’s so easy to have all of these plans and get carried away by them; and pretty soon, you are in way over your head. There will be times when you find yourself doing the work alone because either other members of your family are too busy, or are not as “on board” with homestead duties as you are. Regardless, my advice to anyone wanting to start up a homestead is to start small and make a list:

  • Start a small garden and build upon it.
  •  Build a livestock area (if you do not already have a barn) that is able to protect your livestock from predators. A three sided barn can easily be erected for this purpose.
  • Buy a small quantity of livestock and make sure they are thriving before you buy more.
  • Practice living off of the livestock, using their products as well as their bi-products.

3. Be responsible

Remember, the goal for anyone who wants to be self-reliant is to not be enslaved to debt. So, if your heart is set on getting your hands dirty on a homestead, start planning for it by setting money aside. On top of paying house payments, utility bills, random school fees (if you have children), you will be paying for purchasing tools, livestock feed, medicine and other livestock paraphernalia, building materials, seeds, soil amendments, deer deterrents, etc. All of this costs money, and if you do not have it, you will have to put your plans on hold until you do.

While we’re on the subject, make sure you are well prepared to care for livestock and again, start small. We started our homestead with chickens. In all of my reading and research, I read that chickens, rabbits and perhaps goats were the best livestock to start with. Of course, in the same reading, I read that you can allow your chickens into your garden to eat bugs. Well, just so you know, they didn’t eat just the bugs, they ate the garden too! Those chickens ate through my entire crop of fall plantlings I had started. So, there is no winter garden. We quickly realized that if the chickens were going to free range, they needed to be in a controlled environment. Plans were made for the chickens to be in a chicken run.

As a former city girl, I also did not take into account how our chickens would be preyed upon by foxes, hawks and coyotes. The foxes and coyotes attack from the ground, the hawks from the air. Make no mistake, we were at war and you are going to need more than just a pellet gun to keep your chickens around. I can honestly tell you I was very naive with this one; but, it’s real folks. If you are going to have livestock, you have to be able to protect them.

4. Beware of the grazers: They come, they eat, they leave.

I cannot begin to tell you how annoyed I am at deer. Those doe-eyed creatures will eat you out of house and home. We hadn’t yet installed deer fencing around the garden, and by the time we did, they ate my entire summer garden. Then they started on the large blackberry bush we have on our property and didn’t stop until they had satiated their never-ending appetites. I was able to get some of the blackberries put away, but it wasn’t nearly as much as I had anticipated.

Wild turkeys were another force to reckon with. We have grapes that grow on the ranch and after the turkeys came through, we were left with none.

5. Stop procrastinating.

I am so guilty of this one! I always wait to the last minute and then kick myself for procrastinating. You cannot do this on a homestead. Things must be done in a timely fashion. For example, rather than buying firewood in the summer when the price was cheap and the demand was low, we waited until winter was upon us. By the time we were ready for making an order, the price of firewood had doubled due to the demand.
We also kept putting off building the chicken run due to time constraints and one by one our chickens were picked off by predators. I’m still kicking myself for this one. By the time the run was built, we were left with a little over 10 chickens (from our original 30).

6. Go for broke!

I mean this figuratively, of course. If homesteading is your dream – then do it! You get out of this venture as much as you put in. So, if you put your heart and soul into it, it will be very rewarding. That said, go into it realistically because a lot goes into the upkeep and care of a thriving homestead. You need to be prepared to make lots and lots of mistakes. For an exurbanite like myself, this lifestyle shift was like night and day and we made quite a few mistakes in our first 6 months – so be ready!

Here are some ways that you can prepare for homestead life. Start by making lists.

  • what supplies you will need
  • what skills you should learn, if relocation is involved
  • check into www.city-data.com to look into potential moving areas
  • if you have children, look into the local schools (www.greatschools.org is a good resource to use)
  • make sure you can find a job in the area or that you can perform your job if you are self-employed (internet access, ease of shipping, by-laws and regulations)

To conclude, I can honestly tell you that making the choice to homestead is the best thing I ever did; it’s also the hardest thing I have done so far. Do not be fooled into thinking someone without proper preparation can successfully do this. You will make mistakes – guaranteed. Be sure that you are in a position to rebound from those errors, both financially and mentally. The reward to all this hard work and culture shock has been an increase in self-sufficiency, well-being and confidence. The glow of satisfaction of putting a meal on the table that comes completely from our own land is simply unmatched (something I am still longing for).

I will end this with one more piece of advice. For those of you interested in homesteading, read every homesteading/livestock related book you can get your hands on and read it. The more you understand, the better off you will be when you are applying the knowledge. Further, nothing beats real life experience, so if you know someone who is homesteading or has worked on a homestead, pick their brain and learn from them. Online resources such as www.a-homesteading-neophyte.blogspot.com/ is a wonderful resource to give you a realistic perspective of what homesteading is like.

Our plans for our small homestead is to add a barn by the Spring and add some goats and sheep to our little menagerie. I’ll keep you filled in on our progress. Until then, keep prepping and keep dreaming!

 

http://www.prepperdome.com/good-bye-city-life/

Source : readynutrition.com

Other Useful Resources :

Drought USA  (Discover The Amazing Device That Turns Air Into Water)

Survive The End Days (Biggest Cover Up Of Our President)

Survival MD (Best Post SHTF Medical Survival Guide Ever)

Bullet Proof Home (A Prepper’s Guide in Safeguarding a Home )

Sold Out After Crisis (Best 37 Items To Hoard For A Long Term Crisis)

Family Self Defense (Best Self Defense Strategies For You And Your Family)

Backyard Innovator (All Year Round Source Of Fresh Meat,Vegetables And Clean Drinking Water)

Blackout USA (EMP survival and preparedness)
Conquering the coming collapse (Financial advice and preparedness )
Liberty Generator (Easy DIY to build your own off-grid energy source)
Backyard Liberty (Easy and cheap DIY Aquaponic system to grow your organic and living food bank)

 

 

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    Total 3 comments
    • rockinr

      Everything stated in this article is true.Three things.
      !.Buying your land means looking for a comfortable climate.If you are going to move,move south.Why put up with cold winters and higher costs of living when the south costs less.Also buy the land only if it comes with your own water supply year round.When looking for my farm land,that was my number one priority.Water.
      2.Hiring help and gaining experience. In rural areas there are people who know the crops and how and when to grow them.It is okay to hire them and work for you to get the crops planted.You may use them in the future or you may not but they will help you from making a lot of mistakes.Also,there are farm coops that are there to help with information on growing crops and raising animals.They love to pass on what they know works.
      3.Since we need money to live,you have to consider this a business venture.In other words.NO LOANS! Do not borrow money to start your homestead.I sold everything I had.Put the money in the bank and started looking for land.When you find it ,you can drive a bargain because you have the cash.Also look for DIY projects online of things you want to accomplish on your homestead.Again,good solid information from people that have done it.
      You have much to learn.To go into it with low funds is a high risk.Find a job or maybe you have a pension that could support your expenses. Bueno suerte.

    • NM156

      Get the hell outta the big city areas huh??? Yeah you’re right….. The sword is coming and I’m tiring of the bs on this site as well as the liberal losers that are about to be exposed… I get it from every direction here just like the rest of us southerners get made fun of like a bunch of stupid hicks. WE”LL SEE WHO”S STUPID WHEN YOU CITY FOLK HAVE NOTHING TO EAT… You’ll come out to our rural areas begggin for food and clean water and nothing is what you’ll get….( Well you’ll get something alright, but lead is the most likely the last thing you get.) Hicks are truck drivers, water and waste water operators, farmers and the like. We take out and haul your trash, We fix your electricity, we cut your grass, we put up with your abusive self righteous attitudes every friggin day and I HAVE HAD ENOUGH, Wanna see a real life Tasmanian devil in action????? Look no further I AM THAT. I got called an internet bully today….. REALLY REALLY???? I get EFFED with every time I post a comment, even when I say” good post 4 *’s”. Mayhem says she gives me a reason to live,that SHE gives my life meaning. Crow pile does nothing but ridicule and humiliate, (Even though she has backed off a little lately)Craig eeerrrr scanno darkly tried to get me in trouble with my own company that flopped because technology became to expensive for me to compete with a privileged football player( SamGodfrey Google Samco leak detection if you think I’m Lying and I gave him LCMUD for him as a friend and he charged the district 7000 bucks and wouldn’t even throw me bone in return when he had excess business ), and EQ calls me 1/5 biotch and thinks since he trained with Chuck Norris that somehow I”m supposed to fear him((HAHHAHHAHHA Bring it old man) And sheeprider 1 constantly tries his dam@%$est to ban me. And Sean accused me of being RH negative when all I was said wasn’t even related and was trying to talk about JFK jr’s real killer. Hey losers…have you ever had the living chit beat outta you by your father????? have you ever been sexually abused???? Have you ever been humiliated in front of your classmates and then beaten by the principal because he knew your father wouldn’t take up for you?????? Well I hope not…… My point is this(especially to the glc)….. stop screwing with me. IAM THE GUY that just might show up……and I’ll tear you up from the floor up… TRY ME. LEAVE AN ADDRESS OR phone # like I did….. Walter knows I aint kiddin around… At least he has some sense. You come to my door and knock, I’ll treat you like a man….. Any questions??? yall have my # and ADDRESS use it only if you’re real. I’m sorry the people that likeme had to hear ( read this) :twisted: for my friends……..Take up for me

    • NM156

      Who in their right mind would take your advice sheepboy??????? NO FREAKING BODY. HA. Everyone on this site thinks you are a spoiled rotten privileged little brat. Put that in your pipe and smoke it. You can pay me a visit anytime you like. :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen:

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