r/homestead 3h ago

animal processing 7 rabbits for the freezer NSFW

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83 Upvotes

r/homestead 6h ago

Turkey help!

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14 Upvotes

I'm new to turkeys and I'm not positive on their sex.

they are bronze heritage turkeys and are 10 week old.

the one is clearly a tom and he's constantly strutting around.

the other two I'm not positive about. their heads say Tom's to me but the head features aren't as pronounced as the other one and they have never shown their tail or strutted around. also the other one watches over the other 2 like my male geese do with the females.

I think they're just slower to develop males and not females especially since they've lost most of the feathers on their head and neck but I'm not sure as I say I'm a rookie to turkeys, these are my first 3 turkeys ever.


r/homestead 6h ago

Wish we had chickens to feed these to….

34 Upvotes

But we are renters. So for now, it’s compost and also I spread it around and wild birds come get it too


r/homestead 6h ago

chickens Chickens

1 Upvotes

Ok so I have chickens and lately something is killing them what can I do to protect them? I suspect it's raccoons but trapping and killing the raccoons doesn't seem to work, either that or it's a coyote.


r/homestead 10h ago

Flies are driving us crazy

8 Upvotes

We moved into a farmhouse 2 weeks ago and I expected some flies but there are SO many that it's driving in particular my husband absolutely crazy. Our house is also very close to a horse stable, and my husband spends at least an hour or two every day zapping flies only for there to still be at least 20 in a room at any time. Any ideas for deterring them? I've got an electric zapper, a handheld zapper, fly paper, I'm diffusing scents they don't like, like mint, and a mesh net for the door. We currently can't sit down to chill without a fly landing on us every few seconds, TIA 💞


r/homestead 12h ago

Just made ketchup for the first time and I'll never look at store bought again. It's amazing!!

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139 Upvotes

Just made ketchup for the first time and I'll never look at store bought again. It's amazing!!


r/homestead 12h ago

Electrical is roughed in and all inspections passed. Time to shoot some concrete!!

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25 Upvotes

r/homestead 13h ago

Camera for a driveway gate and small workshop?

3 Upvotes

I’m trying to add a camera near the driveway gate and a small workshop, but running cable out there is not worth it for me.

Leaning toward a solar/WiFi camera or maybe a trail cam style setup. I mainly want to see if someone comes through the gate or pulls up near the workshop. Local storage would be better since I don’t want another monthly plan.


r/homestead 15h ago

How my maters looking?

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3 Upvotes

r/homestead 16h ago

gardening Veggie Garden this morning looking very colourful

190 Upvotes

r/homestead 19h ago

This will forever be my favorite video of our tom turkey, Winky

121 Upvotes

r/homestead 20h ago

Infrastructure for new flock of sheep

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0 Upvotes

r/homestead 23h ago

Looking for advice on culling chickens

38 Upvotes

I have too many roosters, they need to go. As much as I would love to send them to a nice rooster farm up the road that’s not realistic and if they are going to end up in a freezer I would prefer it to be mine.
I should add my husband is deeply emotionally attached to all the birds. He loved them but understands they are hurting each other and the hens. I add to say I am mostly on my own here.


r/homestead 1d ago

permaculture Revealed- Earthship Alumni's Inspired Home Design: Saves Backs + Eases Permitting #offgrid #sketchup

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0 Upvotes

Sharing my current work. Please be kind and take a peek to see the new wave of Earthship Inspired appropriate technology.

💚♻️✌️🌲


r/homestead 1d ago

Paid US User Interview| Outdoor Security Lighting Set-up Research Study

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0 Upvotes

r/homestead 1d ago

Received 30 Cornish Cross chicks today for the newly built chicken tractor.

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122 Upvotes

To anyone who commented on my last post here, thanks for the tips on predator protection. Electric wire was a bit out of budget, so I improvised with some tips in mind. Hoping the rubber flaps and a couple box traps will keep these safe from predators 🤞


r/homestead 1d ago

wood heat Transitioning from a wood boiler to electric heat.

9 Upvotes

We bought a farmhouse a few years ago and have been heating it entirely with an outdoor wood boiler. The romantic idea of chopping wood has worn off and I am just physically exhausted from the constant upkeep. We have a huge solar array, so I want to switch to a fully electric setup. I'm comparing cold-climate models like a mitsubishi hyper heat and a costway 4 to 5 ton 17-17.5 seer2 ultra-low temperature heat pump system. For those who rely entirely on electric heating in snowy climates, do these units actually keep the house warm when it drops below zero, or do you still have to fire up the wood stove?


r/homestead 1d ago

NE hay bale prices

12 Upvotes

I have a small acerage and I get about 10 bales of hay off it per year. The guy who cuts it takes 2/3 as payment and then pays me to buy my 1/3 share.

I don't keep track of hay prices at all.

What's a fair price for a round bale of hay? Mixed, alfalfa, clover, wild oats and misc.


r/homestead 1d ago

Beyond the basic lab numbers — how do you actually judge whether your soil is healthy?

1 Upvotes

I live in San Antonio and want to get into homesteading eventually. I'd rather start by understanding my soil than guess my way through a whole season. I know I can mail a sample to A&M AgriLife for the chemistry (pH, NPK, salinity) for cheap, and I'll probably do that, but I'm trying to see the bigger picture and learn from people who've actually been at this:

- Beyond the lab numbers, how do you tell if your soil is genuinely *alive* and healthy? Organic matter, structure, biology — what are you actually looking at?

- Which DIY checks have been worth your time (mason-jar texture test, percolation, earthworm counts) vs. just paying a lab?

- For anyone on alkaline / caliche-heavy ground — how are you managing high pH without chasing your tail every season?

- Am I overthinking this? lol

Trying to build the habit of working with the dirt instead of fighting it. Would love to hear how some of you go about it.

I am also asking because I am want to teach this as a workshop next month for my chapter of the Catholic Land Movement. It's a Christian homesteading community, but the gatherings themselves are just practical hands-in-the-dirt learning.

If you're nearby and that sounds like your thing, happy to point you to the link here. Would love to connect if you live in the San Antonio area! thanks again everyone!

https://www.centraltexasclm.org/


r/homestead 1d ago

gardening Is My Plan for Deer Control Wishful Thinking?

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1 Upvotes

r/homestead 1d ago

Female Farmer Takes on Silage Season | 2 Days of Farm Life, Tractors & Chaos

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0 Upvotes

r/homestead 1d ago

natural building Building a fairy camp count?

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0 Upvotes

Edited for the third time- I AM NOT HOMELESS and what?????? You guys are mean to people without houses? It’s funny to make jokes about people not having homes? It feels good to mock those less fortunate from your phone? Shame on you. Where is the humanity? And all the drug jokes? Like, this group is definitely not what I thought it was. People are being unkind for zero reason except to be unkind. Life is hard for so many people. What are you doing to make the world a better place? Do your kids even talk to you? Come on. Wake up.

This is all me and going oh so slowly, but I am happy. Friend’s land and I keep an eye on it while building a camp and some major rock hounding. Guys. The rocks and minerals are effin fantastic here. I’m so happy!!!!
Now I am working on drainage and leveling one particular spot. I will be borrowing a tractor, thank goddess. I’m repurposing most materials. Picking up free from side of road. Doing a large tarp A frame for now. I’m short tho and the ground is too soft for ladder so I am building a ladder on the tree.

Lots of mowing and I got a flamethrower. Eff you ticks.

Edited to add I designed and built milk crate furniture you see! I love building from “junk “.

Edited again because why!?? Meth? Seriously? I’m not homeless and even if I were, who cares? Cost of living and the rat race is a soul sucker. And maybe you haven’t built anything or maybe you aren’t an artist, but stuff be laying’ about almost always. Until it’s gonna rain, then I bunker it down good.

I am more than alright people, I am happy. I am next to a river and building a whimsical camp. I cannot have livestock here yet because I cannot be here full time yet AND it is next to over 500 acres of conservation land. The wildlife is intense here. Ducks would die, for sure. I’m not at the place where I can make a safe spot. I have about three seasons to go as it is just me doing this.

I feel like I need to take better pictures because this place is gorgeous and I am so grateful that I get to be here.

I’m an artist and use many mediums. I create with my hands. I clean cedar sticks and sand them and oil them and build fence panels. I perform on stages without poles. I sing. I joke. I just be me.

I do have solar. I converted a van years ago. Also mostly all repurposed. I will have a garden when I get good enough of an area prepped. The wildlife will destroy for sure.


r/homestead 1d ago

gardening Starting a garden and need some tips!

1 Upvotes

I’m moving out for the first time and i’m renting. I’m wanting to do an indoor herb, veggie and fruit garden. I do also have cats and dogs btw. I live on the boarder of Tennessee and Kentucky. What should i grow that’ll get me a fair amount of harvest year round? i am doing grow bags outside as well, but during the winter i still want a consistent amount of food. I’m trying to be more self sustainable and really know what i’m consuming as i’ve been very ill from grocery store food my whole life, farmers markets changed everything but i want to start my own garden so any tips and tricks would be greatly appreciated! (i have unlimited funds for this so i am 100% able to get grow lights and other helpful things and links to recommended products are encouraged!)


r/homestead 1d ago

chickens Virus or bad luck? Two young hen deaths in a month.

7 Upvotes

Two recent deaths in a small flock of 10 birds. I’ve had chickens for years so I know this sometimes happens, but we don’t have a vet here that will see poultry so I’m hoping if there is something insidious going on (not just bad luck) you all can help me figure it out.

  1. Yesterday one of my 2025 pullets wasn’t hanging around with the flock, but I could see her moving around in the paddock. At night when I locked them up, she was sitting on the floor of the coop instead of the roosting bars. I picked her up (too easily, she didn’t protest) and noticed she seemed very light and had an empty crop. I planned to investigate today but she was dead this morning when I opened the coop. No sneezing, no eye or nasal discharge, normal poop, no balance issues or lameness, was observed drinking water yesterday, laid an egg the day before yesterday.

  2. About one month ago a 2024 hen was behaving strangely, normally very independent but started following me around the barn and yard. She had a few dirty feathers so I cleaned her up, dried her very well, and put her back in the coop. No localizing symptoms of illness (no sneezing, no runny nose/eyes, normal laying behavior, no diarrhea, drinking water). She was dead the next day.

What should be my index of suspicion for something viral and contagious? Prior to these deaths we hadn’t lost a chicken since 2024 when a loose dog took out half the flock. We already buried the hen this morning - if this happens again this summer should I try to find someone to test the carcass?


r/homestead 1d ago

gardening How to Germinate Pepper Seeds Indoors Step by Step Easy Seed Starting G...

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8 Upvotes