Welcome to Annie's Homestead

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

Stay Updated

And join the inner circle

Be one of the firsts to know anything new and stay up to date with all the happenings on the homestead!

(I won't spam you ever - PROMISE!)

READ THE BLOG

laundry stripping clothes in sink with borax

Laundry Stripping with Borax: Why Your Clothes Are Still Gross (Even After You Wash Them)

July 13, 20253 min read

Laundry Stripping with Borax: Why Your Clothes Are Still Gross (Even After You Wash Them)

You’ve probably seen it on TikTok—someone dunks their towels into a tub of hot water, adds a swirl of powders, stirs it like a witch’s brew, and then bam—murky brown water. Gross? A little. Satisfying? Absolutely. But laundry stripping is more than just viral content. It’s an old-school deep-cleaning method that works.

I’ll walk you through why laundry stripping works, how to do it safely, and why Borax—the humble mineral you never hear about anymore—is the hero ingredient the cleaning industry doesn’t want to talk about.

What Is Laundry Stripping (and Why Should You Care)?

Laundry stripping is a deep cleaning method that removes built-up residue from fabric softeners, hard water minerals, synthetic fragrances, detergent, body oils, and other gunk we can't see. Even freshly laundered towels and sheets might still be holding onto gunk you can’t see (or smell—yet). This method gets deep into the fibers and lifts all that buildup out.

What makes it work? A powerful trio: sodium borate (Borax), sodium carbonate (washing soda), and a good ol’ powdered laundry detergent. Mix that with hot water and soak your “clean” fabrics for a few hours. The result? Shockingly gross water and refreshed laundry.

What’s the Deal With Borax? Why Don’t We Hear About It Anymore?

Borax isn’t new. It’s been used for over a century in cleaning and preserving. It’s a naturally occurring mineral (sodium borate) that softens water, neutralizes odors, and breaks down grime. It’s non-toxic when used correctly and doesn’t rely on synthetic fragrances to smell clean—it actually helps things be clean.

So why don’t you hear about it anymore?

Because Borax can’t be bottled into a neon-colored cleaning spray with a fancy label. It’s not profitable for big brands pushing overpriced, artificial “solutions” with ingredients you can’t pronounce. Borax is simple, effective, affordable… and that doesn’t exactly fit the marketing model of modern household brands.

When Should You Laundry Strip?

Here’s when to consider laundry stripping:

  • Your towels feel stiff, even fresh from the dryer.

  • Your “clean” sheets still smell a little… funky.

  • You’ve bought clothes from a thrift store and want to strip out any unknown chemicals or scents.

  • You live in a hard water area (like 85% of the U.S.)

  • You use fabric softeners or dryer sheets.

  • You just want your laundry to actually be clean.

How to Strip Laundry: Ingredients + Instructions

What You Need:

  • ¼ cup Borax (sodium borate)

  • ¼ cup Washing Soda (sodium carbonate)

  • ½ cup Powdered Laundry Detergent (skip bleach-based ones)

  • A tub or large container

  • Hot water

Steps:

  1. Start with clean laundry (washed but not necessarily dried).

  2. Fill your bathtub or container with hot water—enough to cover the laundry you’re stripping.

  3. Add Borax, washing soda, and powdered detergent. Stir to dissolve.

  4. Add your laundry and submerge it fully. Swish it around.

  5. Let it soak for 4–5 hours. Stir occasionally to release buildup.

  6. Remove and wring out the items.

  7. Rinse in the washing machine with NO added detergent.

  8. Dry as usual (no dryer sheets).

Tip: Separate lights and darks, and don’t overload the tub.

What Fabrics Can You Strip?

Stick to thicker, more absorbent fabrics like:

  • Towels

  • Sheets

  • Robes

  • Washcloths

  • Duvet covers

  • Cloth diapers

  • Workout clothes

Final Thoughts

Laundry stripping isn’t about fear-mongering over hidden toxins. It’s about reclaiming control over your home care routine, using time-tested, effective ingredients—not $10-per-spray marketing gimmicks.

If you’ve ever looked at your towels and thought, “Why do these still smell weird?” — it’s probably time to strip ‘em.

And hey, next time someone tells you Borax is “old-fashioned,” just remind them: so are cast iron skillets and real butter—some things don’t need reinventing.

laundry stripping clean laundrynontoxic laundry
Back to Blog

It's time to take the first step towards your homesteading journey.

Don't let uncertainty hold you back any longer.

Our chicken course offers a comprehensive roadmap to self-sufficiency, guiding you step-by-step through the process of creating your own thriving flock, from hatch to harvest.

Enroll in our course today and take the first step towards a brighter, more empowered future!

Annie's Homestead is not affiliated by Facebook™ in any way. Facebook™ is a registered trademark of Facebook™ Inc

Branding and Website by RoyalT Studio