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You stopped trusting the system.

Now let's build your way out of it

Learn how to grow real food, real birds, for real independence.

Does this sound familiar?

  • You've been reading labels and not likeing what you see.
    You don't fully trust the grocery store, the supply chain, or what the label actually means. You're not paranoid. You're paying attention. And you're ready to do something about it.

  • You want to know where your food actually comes from.
    You want to know the bird, the feed, the ground it walked on. You want the full chain — and you want to own it.

  • You’re done waiting for the system to fix itself.
    Whether you have five acres or a back patio, you're ready to start building something that doesn't depend on anyone else. One seed. One egg. One jar at a time.

If any of that sounds like you — you're exactly who this is for.

Most homesteading content online is either a Pinterest fantasy or a 47-step overwhelm spiral. Neither helps you actually do anything.

This isn't that.

Annie's Homestead is no-gatekeep, straight-to-the-point resources for people who are done outsourcing their food supply to a system they don't trust. We go into the detail. We share what actually works. And we don't pretend it's simpler than it is — because you're smart enough to handle the real version.

That's where Annie's Homestead comes in.

Start exactly where you are.

You don't need land, livestock, or a barn. You need a direction and someone who's actually done it. Whether you have a backyard or a window ledge, the first step is the same: start something you can eat.

Know what's in your food — because you put it there.

From egg selection to hatch day. From mealworms to free-range. From seed to harvest. Annie covers the full chain because the full chain is the whole point.

Build skills that make you less dependent.

Fermentation. Incubation. Coop automation. Food preservation. Every skill you learn is one less thing you need from a system you don't trust. That's not a hobby. That's a strategy.

Free: Automate Your Coop

Want to streamline your chores?

Less time on chores.

More time on everything else.

The exact automations Annie uses on her off-grid Idaho homestead — automatic doors, refillable waterers, everything that runs the coop so she doesn't have to babysit it.

Free. Because we don't gatekeep here.

Hey There,

I'm Annie

I'm here to help you leave the system with ease

I live off-grid in the Idaho mountains with a flock of birds I hatched myself, an indoor grow room, and a greenhouse — because I'd rather know exactly what's going into my food than trust a label that doesn't have to tell me everything.

I built Annie's Homestead for the person who's started asking questions they can't unask. The person who reads ingredients now. The person who looked at the Palantir-USDA contract and thought — okay, it's time to build my own supply chain.

No sugar-coating. No gatekeeping. Just the real process, the real numbers, and honest answers about what it actually takes.

You found this page for a reason. Stick around.

Top Resources

Streamline your chore list with our chicken coop automation list

Prepare For Emergencies with our Chicken First Aid Kit

Prepare For Your New Chicks with our Favorite Essentials

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Free Range vs Chicken Run: What’s Better for Your Flock?

April 24, 20265 min read

Do You Let Your Chickens Free Range or Keep Them in a Run?

This is one of the first real decisions people face after getting chickens. But hopefully you already have this figured out before getting birds.

Because once your birds are out of the brooder and into the real world, you’re no longer just raising chickens. You’re now going to be managing a system.

And that system usually lands somewhere between two options:

Free range… or a run.

What you’re really deciding is how much freedom your birds have, how much control you keep, and how much risk you’re willing to carry.

What “Free Range” Actually Means

Free ranging is exactly what it sounds like.

You open the door, and your birds have access to move beyond a confined space. They scratch, forage, wander, and spread out across whatever land you give them.

For a lot of people, this is the picture they had in mind before they ever bought chickens.

And there’s a reason for that.

Chickens that can roam tend to behave differently. They move more. They forage more. They interact with their environment instead of just existing inside of it. Their diet often expands to include bugs, greens, and whatever they can find on the ground, which can influence egg quality and yolk color in noticeable ways.

It feels closer to what people think raising animals should look like.

But free ranging isn’t just a lifestyle choice.

It’s a tradeoff.

The Part of Free Ranging People Learn the Hard Way

The freedom that makes free ranging appealing is the same thing that makes it unpredictable.

Once birds are no longer contained, you lose a level of control.

They don’t stay where you want them.
They don’t avoid the areas you care about.
And they definitely don’t understand the concept of “off limits.”

Gardens get scratched up. Landscaping gets torn through. And sooner or later, predators notice.

That’s the part that shifts people’s perspective quickly.

Because losing a bird changes the conversation.

Free ranging can absolutely work. But it works best when it’s intentional, not passive. It’s not just opening the coop door and hoping for the best. It’s understanding your land, your predator pressure, and your own willingness to monitor what’s happening.

What It Means to Keep Chickens in a Run

A run is the opposite end of the spectrum.

It’s a defined, enclosed outdoor space connected to your coop. Your birds still get sunlight, fresh air, and room to move, but within boundaries that you control.

That control is the reason so many people choose it. It gives us much more peace of mind and a strong layer of safety.

When chickens are in a run, you know where they are. You know where they’re going. You know what they’re getting into.

It reduces the risk of predators.
It protects your garden.
It creates a predictable daily routine.

And for a lot of backyard setups, that predictability matters.

Where Runs Fall Short

Containment solves one set of problems, but it creates another.

Chickens are built to move, scratch, and forage. When they’re kept in the same confined space day after day, the ground changes. It gets compacted. It gets worn down. It can turn into mud or dust depending on your climate.

You start relying more heavily on feed instead of letting them supplement naturally. You take on more responsibility for enrichment, cleanliness, and overall flock health.

None of that makes a run a bad option.

It just means it’s not a “set it and forget it” solution either.

Like free ranging, it works best when it’s managed with intention.

The System I Use (And Why I Don’t Pick Just One)

I don’t fully free range my birds, and I don’t keep them locked in a run all the time either.

I use both.

My chickens have a run. That’s their base. That’s where they’re safe, contained, and easy to manage.

But when I want them to have more space, I open that run and let them out into a larger area that I’ve set up using electric netting.

That netting creates an exterior perimeter around them so they’re not wandering the entire property, and I’m not chasing chickens around or dealing with constant losses from predators. But they still get to move, forage, and behave like chickens outside of a confined pen, which is really important to us.

It gives me flexibility and peace of mind, for the most part.

I can control when they’re out.
I can control where they go.
And I can adjust based on what’s happening on the property. The fence is easy to turn off and move when the birds have eaten all the green in their current area. And in the winter, the fence comes down and the birds stay in the run and the coop all winter long. The electric fencing doesn't work great when it's covered in 4+ feet of snow.

This balance is what makes our system work.

Free Range vs Run: What Actually Matters

Most people ask which option is better.

That’s not the most useful question.

Because both systems work, and both systems fail, depending on how they’re managed.

Free ranging works when you understand the risks and build around them.

Runs work when you maintain them and don’t treat them like a permanent holding space without upkeep.

And hybrid systems work when you’re willing to stay involved.

What matters most isn’t the label you put on your setup.

It’s whether your system:

  • Keeps your birds safe

  • Fits your daily routine

  • Works with your land and your goals

So Which One Should You Choose?

If you want maximum freedom for your birds and you’re comfortable with some unpredictability, free ranging may make sense.

If you want structure, safety, and control, a run is a solid option.

If you want both, you don’t have to choose.

You can build a system that gives your birds access to more space without giving up control entirely. It's up to you. I'm just here giving you my experience.

I will always encourage you to start simple and pay attention to what’s happening. Then, just adjust as needed.

That’s how most strong homestead systems are built anyway.

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