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You stopped trusting the system.

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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

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Prepare For Emergencies with our Chicken First Aid Kit

Prepare For Your New Chicks with our Favorite Essentials

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greenhouse

Why We Grow Inside the Greenhouse as Much as We Can

April 17, 20264 min read

Why We Grow Inside the Greenhouse as Much as We Can

When people visit the homestead and see how much we use our greenhouse, the question is always the same: "Why don't you just grow outside? You have so much space."

Honestly, it's a valid question. There's something undeniably romantic about rows of vegetables stretching out under an open sky. And we do grow outside. But over the years, the greenhouse has become the heart of how we grow — and there are real, honest reasons for that.

Some of them are practical. Some of them are a little harder to talk about. But they're all worth sharing.

1. Nothing is truly organic under an aerosol sky

We work hard to grow clean food. We choose our seeds carefully, build our soil naturally, and skip every synthetic input we can. But here's the thing nobody in the organic gardening world wants to talk about: what falls from the sky is outside our control.

Whether you've looked into geoengineering, cloud seeding, or atmospheric modification programs — or whether you're simply paying attention to what's happening overhead — the reality is the same. Open-air growing means your plants, your soil, and your water are exposed to whatever is in the air and rain above you.

We can't certify what falls from the sky as organic. Nobody can.

The greenhouse doesn't solve everything. But it gives us a layer of protection that open-air growing simply can't.

For us, that matters. It's not about fear — it's about doing what we can, with what we have, to grow the cleanest food possible for our family.

2. Season extension changes everything

Here in our climate, the growing season outside is short. Blink and you've missed it. The greenhouse changes that completely.

We start seeds weeks — sometimes months — earlier than we could outside. We carry crops well into fall and even through winter with cold-hardy varieties. We're harvesting greens in December when the ground outside is frozen solid.

That kind of extension isn't just about convenience. For a homestead trying to feed a family year-round, it's the difference between dependence and resilience. Between buying lettuce at the store in February and cutting it fresh from your own bed.

The greenhouse gives us growing seasons that our outdoor space never could — and that changes the whole rhythm of how we eat.

3. Protection from animals — the underrated reason

Let me tell you: the wildlife around here does not care about your hard work.

Deer, rabbits, groundhogs, birds — they are persistent, creative, and utterly shameless. We've lost entire beds overnight to animals that somehow found a way through or over whatever barrier we thought was sufficient.

Inside the greenhouse? That problem disappears. No deer netting, no chicken wire perimeter, no waking up to find your brassicas stripped to the stem. The plants are protected, and we can actually relax about what we'll find in the morning.

It sounds simple, but after enough seasons of losing crops to wildlife, "the animals can't get in" becomes a very compelling reason on its own.

TLDR: The bigger picture

Reason 01

Cleaner growing environment

A layer of protection from whatever is in the open air — rain, aerosols, atmospheric fallout — that open-air growing can't provide.

Reason 02

A longer, more productive season

Earlier starts, later harvests, and year-round growing that makes real food independence possible.

Reason 03

Reliable protection from wildlife

No deer, no rabbits, no groundhogs. Just your plants, growing the way you intended.

We still grow outside. We always will. There's beauty and value in it that the greenhouse can't replace. But when it comes to where we put our most important crops — the ones we're counting on to feed our family — the greenhouse wins every time.

We can't control everything.

We can't control the weather, the air, or what falls from the sky.

But we can be intentional about the environment we grow in.

And for us, that intention lives inside the greenhouse.

If you've been on the fence about building or investing in a greenhouse, I hope this gives you a clearer picture of why we rely on ours the way we do. It's one of the best decisions we've made on this homestead — and we'd make it again without hesitation.


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