LogoSteading
Vol. III · Late Summer 2025For the First-Generation Homesteader


◆ The Digital Homestead Journal

Steading.


Teaching suburban families to raise backyard chickens, ferment their own sauerkraut, and turn a quarter-acre lot into a functioning micro-farm.

For the millennial couple with a raised bed and a dream. For the apartment dweller saving for their first acre. For the burnt-out remote worker who watched one too many sourdough reels and decided to change everything.

"It smells like dirt and woodsmoke and something baking. That's enough for now."

— From a recent caption

5 questions · Personalized First Season Plan

Wooden cutting board holding split heirloom tomato, jar of raw honey catching window light, pruning shears on folded burlap

Still life from the potting bench — heirloom tomato, raw honey, late summer light



Backyard ChickensLacto-FermentationHeirloom SeedsRaw HoneySourdough StarterCold FramesCompostingRoot CellarsSauerkrautSeed SavingWater Bath CanningCoop BuildsBackyard ChickensLacto-FermentationHeirloom SeedsRaw HoneySourdough StarterCold FramesCompostingRoot CellarsSauerkrautSeed SavingWater Bath CanningCoop Builds

◆ Editorial Departments

The Curriculum

Glass mason jars filled with lacto-fermented vegetables — sauerkraut, pickled carrots, kimchi — on a wooden shelf in golden afternoon light
Preserve
01 / 04

The Fermentation & Canning Department

Preserve.

A head of cabbage, two teaspoons of salt, and ten days on the counter. That's sauerkraut. Not a recipe — a practice. The kind that connects you to every farmhouse kitchen that came before yours, where nothing was wasted and the pantry was the measure of a good season.

"The jar on the counter is doing something alive. That still gets me every time."

From the Sauerkraut Series, Week 2

Covered in this department

Lacto-Fermentation BasicsWater Bath CanningSourdough StarterDehydrating & DryingFermented Hot Sauce
Hands cupping rich dark garden soil with small seedlings emerging, morning light filtering through leaves in a raised garden bed
Cultivate
02 / 04

The Soil & Seed Department

Cultivate.

Healthy soil is not something you buy. It's something you build — one season of compost, one cover crop, one handful of earthworms at a time. The garden that fed your grandmother fed her because she understood this. We're just remembering.

"Kneel down and smell it. If it smells like rain and something living, you're on the right track."

From the Soil Building Series, Part 1

Covered in this department

Raised Bed ConstructionHeirloom Seed SavingCover CroppingComposting SystemsCompanion Planting
Rustic wooden chicken coop with a small flock of hens in a lush backyard garden, golden hour light casting long shadows across the grass
Shelter
03 / 04

The Build & Structure Department

Shelter.

There is something deeply satisfying about a structure you built yourself. The A-frame chicken coop that took two weekends and cost $160 in reclaimed lumber. The cold frame that extends your growing season by six weeks on either end. The root cellar that holds forty pounds of potatoes through a hard winter.

"You don't need perfect tools or perfect skills. You need a plan and a Saturday morning."

From the Coop Build Series, Week 1

Covered in this department

A-Frame Coop BuildCold Frame ConstructionRoot Cellar BasicsRainwater CollectionRaised Bed Frames
Rustic farmhouse kitchen table with a bowl of freshly harvested vegetables, sourdough bread, and a jar of homemade jam in warm morning light
Nourish
04 / 04

The From-Scratch Recipe Department

Nourish.

The recipe was written at the kitchen table on a Tuesday evening, after a day in the garden. The tomatoes came from the raised bed. The herbs from the window box. The eggs from the two hens that have names. This is what it means to cook from the homestead — not perfection, just connection.

"Dinner tastes different when you grew part of it. I can't explain it any other way."

From the First Harvest Dinner post

Covered in this department

Sourdough BreadFermented Hot SauceGarden-to-Table DinnersPreserves & JamsEgg-Based Recipes
Swipe to explore →
Worn almanac open on a farmhouse potting bench, pressed wildflower between pages, handwritten margin notes visible in soft morning light

"Like pulling a worn almanac off a farmhouse shelf on a quiet Sunday morning — the spine cracked, the margins full of handwritten notes."

◆ The Steading Philosophy

This is for the people who are still figuring it out. Which is all of us.

Steading is not a perfection account. The photos are golden-hour beautiful because that's when the light is right and the day's work is done — but the fingernails are still dirty and the compost bin smells exactly like it should.

Every carousel is a lesson. Every story is a real moment. The curriculum covers backyard chickens, fermentation, soil building, seed saving, coop construction, and from-scratch cooking — taught the way a neighbor would teach you: across a fence, with a cup of coffee, no jargon required.

4d

Departments

Preserve · Cultivate · Shelter · Nourish

3s

Seasons

Of weekly content, without missing a week

1r

Rule

Teach what you actually know

This account is for

🏡

Millennial couples with a raised bed and a dream

🏙️

Apartment dwellers saving for their first acre

💻

Burnt-out remote workers who watched one too many sourdough reels

◆ The Homestead Finder

Find Your Homestead
Starting Point.

Five questions. No wrong answers. Walk away with a personalized First Season Plan that meets you exactly where you are — whether that's a balcony herb garden or a half-acre with chickens already on order.

First question

"What does your morning look like right now?"

5 questions · Personalized result · No email required to start

◆ The Community

Real people. Real dirt.

No before-and-after transformations. Just honest accounts of what changes when you start growing your own.

Preserve + Cultivate

"We started with a single raised bed and the fermentation series. Eighteen months later we have six beds, four hens named after rivers, and a pantry with 40 jars of pickled everything. Steading gave us the curriculum. We just did the work."

Now: 6 raised beds, 4 laying hens, 40+ jars of preserved food

Maren and Joel Tischler, a couple standing in their garden with raised beds behind them

Maren & Joel Tischler

Portland, OR · Quarter-acre lot, 2 raised beds, 3 hens

Preserve

"I have zero outdoor space. I live in a second-floor apartment. But the Preserve series changed everything — I have a sourdough starter that's eight months old, a continuous batch of kombucha, and a fermentation shelf that takes up exactly one corner of my kitchen."

Now: Active sourdough, 3 ferments running, land fund growing

Destiny Okafor, a woman smiling in her kitchen with jars of fermented foods on a shelf behind her

Destiny Okafor

Austin, TX · Apartment balcony, dreaming of land

Shelter + Nourish

"We were burnt-out tech workers who bought land without knowing what we were doing. The Shelter series walked us through building our first coop — two weekends, $140 in lumber, and three hens that produce more eggs than two people can eat."

Now: 3 hens, 1 coop built by hand, 21 dozen eggs this spring

Callum and Priya Whitmore, a couple standing next to their hand-built chicken coop

Callum & Priya Whitmore

Asheville, NC · Half-acre, full commitment

Steading· HOMESTEAD FINDER
☀️Question 1 of 5

What does your morning look like right now?

Be honest — no judgment here.