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Hen in natural molting phase with pin feathers emerging — feather loss vs molting shown clearly in a healthy backyard chicken coop.

Feather Loss vs Molting: Identify Normal Seasonal Molts from Mites, Pecking, and Rooster Damage

One chilly October morning in 2025, I opened the coop door and found half my hens looking like they’d been through a pillow fight. Feathers everywhere, bare patches on necks and backs, a few birds with raw pink skin showing. The new flock owner next door had already called in a panic about “mites” and […]

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Trash-can mini root cellar and in-ground storage bed in winter — root cellars and in-ground storage keeping vegetables fresh and crisp without electricity.

Root Cellars and In-Ground Storage: Trash-Can Mini Cellars, Old Coal Shoots, and Leaving Roots in the Bed

In early 2025, a Zone 5 homesteader I know opened her root cellar in January expecting fresh carrots — instead she found a mushy, frozen mess. The electric fridge was packed, and the outdoor temperatures had dipped below -15°F for weeks. She lost nearly 70% of her winter roots to freeze damage and dehydration. That

Root Cellars and In-Ground Storage: Trash-Can Mini Cellars, Old Coal Shoots, and Leaving Roots in the Bed Read More »

Vibrant pea and bean vines climbing a cattle-panel trellis — trellises for peas and beans delivering maximum yield, clean pods, and easy harvesting in a lush garden.

Trellises for Peas and Beans: Best Supports, Spacing Tips & Successive Crop Strategies

Last summer I watched a neighbor in my Zone 7 community garden battle a 10-foot row of bush peas that had collapsed under their own weight, pods rotting on damp soil, harvest barely reaching 18 pounds. Same space, same soil — the following year I planted climbing varieties on a simple cattle-panel arch and A-frame

Trellises for Peas and Beans: Best Supports, Spacing Tips & Successive Crop Strategies Read More »

Black rubber tubs staying unfrozen in winter with warm refills and ground heat — no-electricity winter water hacks keeping livestock hydrated in deep cold.

No-Electricity Winter Water Hacks: Black Rubber Tubs, Warm Refills, Ground Heat, and Swapping Waterers on the Coldest Days

Last January in Wyoming, temperatures dropped to -28°F with windchill. Most neighbors woke up to frozen waterers — birds stressed, eggs frozen, some losses. My flock? Drinking normally from black rubber tubs that stayed liquid overnight. No heaters, no electricity, no panic. Total winter water cost? Zero dollars beyond a $45 tub investment two years

No-Electricity Winter Water Hacks: Black Rubber Tubs, Warm Refills, Ground Heat, and Swapping Waterers on the Coldest Days Read More »

Neatly stacked affordable firewood from mill offcuts and dead standing trees — ready for winter heat with a chainsaw on the chopping block.

Affordable Firewood: Mill Offcuts, Dead Standing Trees & Chainsaw Budget Tips

In late 2024, a family in rural Montana faced their first full winter in a new homestead. Their wood stove was great, but buying seasoned firewood at $450 per cord was eating their budget. They were looking at $1,800–$2,200 for the season. After one phone call to a local sawmill and a careful harvest of

Affordable Firewood: Mill Offcuts, Dead Standing Trees & Chainsaw Budget Tips Read More »

Thriving rows of garlic and onions in a tough climate garden — growing garlic and onions with heat-tolerant varieties and perfect day-length matching for massive, healthy bulbs.

Bigger and Better Onion Harvests: Starting from Seed, Picking Short-, Intermediate-, or Long-Day Types, and Curing Bulbs

In spring 2024, I watched a fellow gardener in Zone 9b Texas pull up his onion crop: pencil-thin bulbs, half bolted, total yield barely 45 lb from 200 ft². He used store-bought sets and the wrong day-length type. The next season he started from seed, matched short-day varieties to his latitude, and followed a proper

Bigger and Better Onion Harvests: Starting from Seed, Picking Short-, Intermediate-, or Long-Day Types, and Curing Bulbs Read More »

Thriving garlic and onion rows in a tough climate garden — growing garlic and onions with heat-tolerant varieties and perfect day-length matching for jumbo bulbs.

Growing Garlic and Onions in Tough Climates: Heat-Tolerant Varieties & Day-Length Hacks

Last October, Maria in Zone 10a Central Florida planted her usual long-day garlic — again. By March: scrawny leaves, premature bolting, tiny bulbs the size of marbles. Total harvest: zero usable heads. She switched to short-day Creole garlic and heat-tolerant onions. Result in 2025? 150 lb of perfect bulbs from the same 10×20 bed —

Growing Garlic and Onions in Tough Climates: Heat-Tolerant Varieties & Day-Length Hacks Read More »

Mixed-age chicken flock thriving on all-flock feed with free-choice calcium — feeding mixed-age chicken flocks made simple and healthy.

Feeding Mixed-Age Chicken Flocks: All-Flock Feed, Calcium Tips & Chick Transitions

Last spring, Mike in Georgia stared at his coop with frustration: 15 laying hens, 10 pullets, and 20 new chicks — three different feeds, constant sorting, chicks sneaking layer crumble (too much calcium), and hens ignoring expensive layer pellets. Feed bills hit $85/month. He switched to one all-flock system with free-choice calcium. Result? $55/month feed

Feeding Mixed-Age Chicken Flocks: All-Flock Feed, Calcium Tips & Chick Transitions Read More »

Gentle Jersey family milk cow being milked by hand on a sunny homestead — fresh daily milk for the whole family with love and simplicity.

Family Milk Cow: Best Small Breeds & Daily Milk Needs for Your Homestead

In January 2025, the Thompson family of five in central Texas stared at their grocery receipt: $420 for store-bought milk, cheese, and yogurt — every month. They’d dreamed of a family milk cow for years but worried about space, cost, and “too much milk.” They finally brought home a single Dexter cow named Daisy. Fast-forward

Family Milk Cow: Best Small Breeds & Daily Milk Needs for Your Homestead Read More »

Perfect spacing of 3 cucumber plants on a cattle-panel trellis — how many cucumbers per trellis for maximum clean yield and easy harvest.

How Many Cucumbers per Trellis: Exact Spacing & Pot Size for Maximum Yield

Last June, Sarah in Dallas stared at her 10×10 raised bed that produced just 40 lb of cucumbers — vines tangled everywhere, half the fruit rotten on the ground, powdery mildew wiping out the lower leaves by July. She tore it all out and rebuilt with a simple cattle-panel trellis. Same varieties, same soil. Result

How Many Cucumbers per Trellis: Exact Spacing & Pot Size for Maximum Yield Read More »

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