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List of Feasible First Year Homesteading Goals

 

If you’re new to homesteading, it can feel a little overwhelming at first.  Chances are, you have dreamt of living a homesteading lifestyle for a long time, but now that you’ve finally committed to it, you don’t know where to start!  In fact, you can actually start implementing homesteading techniques no matter where you live.  It’s important to set some small goals to keep you motivated as you begin this exciting journey.  Here are a few feasible homesteading goals for your first year:

First of all, your goals should always be measurable.  Don’t say something general like “save more”.  Instead, say “spend $100 less than the $500 I spent last month.”  You need to be able to see that you’re reaching (or exceeding) to maintain the momentum you need and to build your confidence!

Start an herb garden

Grow (and use!) at least 3 herbs

This starter kit makes this goal completely attainable.

Start a vegetable garden

Grow at least 3 different kinds of vegetables.  You can even start your own seeds for cheap, cheap, cheap using these suggestions.

No land or not the right season?  No problem!  Try this cheap indoor vegetable garden!

A good place to start is zucchini, tomatoes, and peppers.  These plants will give you buckets of yummy produce and they’re relatively easy to maintain.

A word of caution about zucchini…if you plant them too close together, the fruits may become hidden under the leaves.  You have to regularly check your garden or you’ll end up like us with zucchini the size of watermelons that have seeds the size of pumpkin seeds.  Seriously.  You’ve never seen zucchini this ridiculously big in your grocery store.  We grew sumo wrestler zucchini.  Don’t be like us.  They grow FAST so keep an eye out.

Start a stockpile

Not only is this a great homesteading goal, it’s incredibly important for money-saving as well.

If you stock up on things you can’t make or grow yourself when they’re cheap and store them properly, you only have to supplement with a few things each month.

For example, we can’t grow rice or lentils, so we stock up when there’s a great deal and store them in these food grade buckets.  A good first year goal is to maintain at least a month’s worth of food for the entire family.  Make sure you’re actually stockpiling things you’ll use and using what you stockpile or you’re defeating the whole purpose.

Get chickens

If you want to have animals on your homestead, chickens are a great place to start.  They’re easy to care for, they give you added benefits like cleaning fleas and ticks from your yard, and they can free range on your property and cut down the cost of chicken feed.

You can pick up a starter chicken coop incredibly cheap and search Facebook groups for hens.

Sell eggs

With chickens come eggs (hopefully) and once they start laying, you’ll be amazed at the number of eggs even a small flock can produce.  A lot of first time chicken owners think you need a rooster in your flock to get eggs from your hens.  This is simply not the case.

Side note:  Our rooster hated us and was mean to our hens.  One day, I’ll write a post about how I honestly thought he was a hen when I picked him up from a local farm, but that’s another story for another day.  It wasn’t until the stupid thing started crowing that we realized our hen was a cranky rooster.

If you have happy hens, you’ll have dozens and dozens of eggs.  If you are getting more than you can reasonably use, why not sell some?

People go crazy over the taste of fresh eggs over store bought, myself included, and will pay a premium for them.  With chicken feed costs around $15 for a 50 pound bag, it won’t take you many eggs before your chickens are actually paying for their own feed.

Start making your own:

Bread is a good place to start.  Pick up a bread machine at your local thrift store (or grab a brand new one here), some flour, yeast, and salt.  Before you know it, your house will smell heavenly and you’ll never want to go back to store-bought bread again.

Something we didn’t realize was that the paddle of our bread maker was going to get stuck in the bottom of our bread loaf.  Lots of people just pull it out or chisel it out.  In my experience though, bread maker bread is shaped like a brick and it makes it very awkward to use.

A better solution is to let your bread maker mix up the dough and rise it for you.  You can then take out the dough and transfer it to a greased bread pan and bake it in the oven.  You still get the convenience of not kneading and rising your dough, but you also get the attractive and more useful shape of a regular loaf.

If you have the ingredients to make bread, you have the ingredients to make lots of other things, like tortillas, naan bread, even crackers.  Look up simple recipes for things you use all the time and try to make your own.  You’ll feel so accomplished!

Consider purchases you make on a regular basis and set a goal of switching out store-bought for homemade.  Good examples might be jam, soaps, household cleaners, etc.

Repurpose all items possible

Did you use a baby food jar to store your safety pins instead of picking up a small container at the store?  Did you use an old t-shirt for rags instead of buying overpriced pieces of cloth you’re just going to ruin anyway?  Get creative and find solutions to things you’re tempted to pay for a solution to.

“Put Up” Your Harvest

If you successfully grow some veggies, you can start to learn to save some for later when your plants aren’t giving you fresh produce.  You can learn to can or even just freeze some, depending on the type of produce.

I always have chopped carrots, celery, and onions in my freezer, so those are great places to start.

This is an awesome way to save your food.

You can also can tomatoes or make your own pasta sauces and pizza sauces.  You can go ahead and take credit for this one twice! – putting up your harvest AND replacing a store-bought product with your own!

 

If you’re new to homesteading, set some goals and don’t stop until you reach them!  Make your own bread products, grow your own produce, and stockpile some of your favorite items for a rainy day.  You’ll be motivated and feeling accomplished before you know it!

Do you homestead with your family?  What advice would you give to newbie homesteaders?  Let me know in the comments!

Jean

Sunday 24th of March 2019

Free range chickens are not a good idea because there are also free range coyotes.

Lisa

Sunday 20th of January 2019

I gave each of my children “a bit of earth” (Secret Garden). They each had an area around the house they were in charge of. They picked out the plants and flowers they wanted, planned the space, planted them, then maintained it.

My mom only had us kids pulling weeds, & I wanted my kids to enjoy the gardening experience, so this way they did.

I also gave them a 4’ x 8’ garden box for vegetables/fruit gardening. I had them choose & become the experts on a certain aspect. One daughter was the expert at growing anything on vines. Another grew the herbs, another the potatoes. I grew the “salsa garden.” It boosted their confidence to be masters of their own piece of earth, & to be considered expert at something, which they eventually did.

Now they are married with kids of their own, and gardens of their own.

Homesteading First Year Goals List & Tips – The Homestead Survival

Tuesday 1st of January 2019

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Anna

Wednesday 19th of December 2018

This is so exciting to me! Amazing compilation of best creative ideas. Thank you for sharing your methods, best recipes and tips are not only useful for homesteading but also for life in general.

Diana

Saturday 1st of December 2018

I think the only thing I would add, would be to decide on a 5 year item to grow, and plant one. if you are big into ground fruits, start small and invest. a blueberry plant takes a few years to produce, strawberries , less. plant one tree a year if thats all you can manage of fruit or nuts, and learn about it. in 5 years, you will have added 5 new fruits or nuts to your larder. Look into perrenials that dont cost much in time or money . aspargus, rhubarb. Take one item you buy, and decide to make it this year- jam,chutney, pesto etc.look at your wish list of things to buy, and buy one a year-a juicer, a dryer, a dehydrator etc. lastly, plan for your harvest. 12 jars arent going to cover 4 bushels of tomatoes. Put the cost into you food budget where it belongs well before that point. Share. Add to your local food bank, soup kitchen, as well as friends and family.Feed you soul.

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