
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.



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.

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.


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Most people hear the word "geoengineering" and immediately write it off. It sounds futuristic. Conspiracy-coded. Unreal. Our government would never do something so evil, right?
But what if the real story isn't about the future?
What if it's about the past?
Because here's something most people don't know: humans have been trying to influence the weather for well over a century. Not in theory. Not in secret. In the public patent record.
And once you see the timeline, you can't unsee it.
In 1891 — the same decade people were still traveling by horse and buggy — an inventor filed a patent with the United States Patent and Trademark Office titled "Method of Producing Rain-Fall."
That was 1891. (!!!)
By 1913 there was a patent called "Rain-Maker." By 1919, inventors were patenting processes for causing precipitation by manipulating aqueous particles in the atmosphere. By 1927, there were patents for producing smoke clouds from moving aircraft.
This wasn't fringe science. This was documented, filed, and publicly recorded experimentation.
Early era · 1890s–1940s
Rainmaking, fog, and smoke. Early patents focused on producing rain, dispersing fog, and generating smoke screens. By 1915, there were even patents for protecting against poisonous gas in warfare. The atmosphere was already being seen as something that could be manipulated.
Mid-century · 1950s–1970s
Cloud seeding goes mainstream. This is where the volume explodes. Patents for cloud seeding, fog dispersal, weather modification, and atmospheric particle control multiply rapidly. Cold War interest in environmental control accelerates the research. By 1962, there were patents for "artificially influencing the weather." By 1971, for "weather modification method."
Modern era · 1980s–present
Scale and sophistication. Patents shift toward satellite-based concepts, aerosol technologies, ionosphere manipulation, and climate intervention. In 1987, a now-famous patent — often called the HAARP patent — described a method for "altering a region in the earth's atmosphere, ionosphere, and/or magnetosphere." In 1991, there was a patent for "stratospheric Welsbach seeding for reduction of global warming." By 2023, there are systems for programmable climate control panels and electromagnetic weather modification.
In total, the compiled patent record runs from 1891 all the way to 2023. Hundreds of patents. Publicly filed. Publicly searchable.
This isn't theory. It's documented experimentation — across six generations.
There's an important distinction worth making here, and I want to be honest about it:
There's a difference between documented weather modification — like cloud seeding, which is openly used today to increase rainfall in drought-stricken areas — and large-scale, coordinated climate control that's harder to verify or track.
I'm not here to tell you which claims are true and which aren't. That's not the point of this post.
The point is this: when we spend over 130 years trying to influence the atmosphere, the question shifts. It's no longer "Is this possible?"
The question becomes: how far has it gone?
And that's a question worth sitting with — regardless of where you land politically, scientifically, or spiritually.
For those of us growing food, raising animals, and trying to live closer to natural systems, this history feels personal in a way it might not for everyone.
We pay attention to weather differently. We notice patterns. We watch the sky, track the seasons, and feel it in the garden when something is off.
I'm not saying that awareness makes you paranoid. I think it makes you awake.
And honestly? This is one of the reasons so many people are coming back to:
Growing their own food
Building resilience into their homes and land
Paying attention to their local environment
Asking questions instead of outsourcing answers
Not out of fear. Out of awareness.
Most people are still arguing about whether weather modification is real.
Without ever looking at the timeline.
Over a century of patents.
Decades of experimentation.
And a question that still doesn't have a clean answer:
What are we actually capable of now?
I don't have all the answers. I don't think anyone does. But I'd rather ask the question out loud — from the homestead, with my hands in the soil — than pretend the history doesn't exist.
Do your own research. Look up the patent record. Form your own opinion.
That's all I'm asking.

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