Personal Question #1: How Much Time Do You Have?

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Personal Question #1: How Much Time Do You Have?

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How much space do you need to feed yourself off your land?

That question comes up over and over and over again on homesteading forums, in farming discussions, and amongst preppers.

The answers usually range from “heck, no” to “sure, I could like, do it tomorrow, man.”

Throw both of those answers out. The first guy is a defeatist—and the second guy is almost certainly exaggerating.

Once you accept that it is, indeed, possible to feed yourself off a piece of land, the second question is—how much land?

That’s where things get really tricky. You have to ask yourself a few questions first. Let’s handle those one at a time before digging deeper.

Are you thinking you’re gonna grow all your calories in between your job delivering pizza and your many other responsibilities?

If you’re tight on time, you might want to just work more hours and snag the rejected pineapple/salami/onion/iguana/anchovy experiments the cook likes to make between orders. It takes some serious hours to plan, plant, slaughter, harvest, feed, water, etc.

Growing your calories isn’t easy. They don’t fall into your hands. We’re not living in the Garden of Eden anymore. We gotta work like crazy, no matter what people tell you about amazing irrigation systems, earth boxes, or their friend who grows buckets of tomatoes in just minutes a day.

Finding ways to save some work is really important, but you are still going to have to work.

Can your back handle it? Will you actually do it?

Some people grow gardens, yet mostly live on soda, chips, etc. Their food-growing is a hobby—it’s not a major part of their diet. You’ll recognize these folks because they’re the ones giving away lots of produce rather than canning it. They’re the ones who complain about the “mess” created by their apple tree out front. They’re the ones who love to grow a few jalapeños and a tomato plant on the patio. They’re also usually overweight.

Having a garden is a good start, but unless you’re willing to eat in season—plus dry, can, and make your produce a big part of your day-to-day calories—you won’t live off it. Drop the soda and drink your own cider from that “messy” tree and you’re on the right path.

Assuming that you have time, a desire to work, and the desire to actually eat what you grow, now you need to figure out what it will take to grow it. The first question—as I mentioned above—is almost always “how much space does it take?”

If you’re growing in an arid region, you’re going to need a lot more space.

I once grew two patches of corn without irrigation.

One patch was spaced at 18 inches between rows, the other was spaced at 36 inches.

They both lived, but the tighter spacing produced less corn!

Many people have this idea that gardening in wide rows is something home gardeners adopted from factory farming. The thought is: “Hey, that’s the extra space machinery needs for access and harvesting.” However, that’s not actually true.

Yes, tractors need some space—but the reason old-school gardens had that huge spacing was because the plants needed all the water they could get. Generous root spacing lowered competition between plants and ensured they’d survive in a time without easy access to water. Imagine watering a cornfield with buckets from a creek and it makes sense. My experiment was a test of the ground’s water-holding capacity. Your land will vary.

If you’re in a rainforest, you can plant really tightly.

If you’re in Arizona, you’re going to need a lot more space between plants.

In much of the tropics, feeding yourself is really easy. There are no seasons to speak of, other than dry times and rainy times. You’ve got a massive diversity of food crops to pull from—and many of them produce year-round or at multiple times.

Ever wonder why bananas are always available at around the same price in the store? They’re basically non-seasonal. Sweet potatoes are a perennial in the tropics—plant them once, then dig now and again when you feel like it. Fruits, nuts, and pretty much everything else grows really fast down there. When you’re a plant and you’re not freezing half the year, putting on a whole set of new leaves and fighting to get all your reproduction done in a few warm months of growing time, and being knocked back by frosts and losing your leaves again, you can get plenty of food-making done.

On the other extreme, if you’re in someplace like Alaska, you’re going to have to deal with a short season of getting things done in the garden and packing away as much as possible while the sun shines. (There’s a reason the Inuit lived on seals, fish, whales, and other game, rather than on veggies.)

If you’ve got rich, deep, loamy topsoil, you’re going to be able to grow with ease. If you’re hacking into yellow, nutrient-depleted clay, life will be tough.

It’s going to take a lot more land if the land is poor. In the case of really bad land, you might want to concentrate on livestock like goats—which can take weeds and brush and turn them into human food—rather than on growing lots of crops. Think nomadic herdsman, not farmer.

You’ll be healthier than a heavy carb-eater, too.

If you’ve answered the questions above, you’ve made a good start toward figuring out the space you need. Theoretically, no matter what the climate, if you were willing to make radical changes in your diet, you could probably live on an average suburban lot. How so?

Mealworms and spirulina!

However, most of us don’t want to do that. We’d rather eat meat, eggs, veggies, and fruit.

Let’s be serious—this takes space. With a big 1-acre garden, 2 acres for goats, and another 2 acres for your orchards, food forest, chickens, ducks, ponds, etc., you could live pretty well in a good climate on good dirt. In the tropics, you could probably do it on an acre or 2. In rough, dry land, you might be talking 20 or even 100 acres. It’s all a matter of how creative you are and what you grow/raise.

I’m constantly amazed by the diversity some permaculturists are able to pack into tiny spaces. Sometimes being limited in a good thing!

We tend to think, “Dang, I need a lot of space.…” Then we get a bunch of space … and fail to utilize it well. I encourage people who are just starting out to pick a little space, make it as amazing and productive as possible, then expand. Scattershot approaches can work on big areas—but you may be surprised by how much you can do in just a little space.

Each area (except perhaps the Sahara—unless you’re Geoff Lawton!) is able to support something.

If your garden-savvy neighbors are doing great growing dry beans but poorly at cabbage, you might want to get your food more from legumes.

Now let’s take a look at a few homestead staples you should try. All of the crops I’m going to discuss have different yields and space requirements—but through constant experimentation, you will figure out what works best.

Grains are the first thing most of us think about when we think about feeding ourselves. Yet that’s one of the last places we should turn (with the notable exception of corn, which I’ll cover below) for calories in small-scale homesteading. The labor and space required is somewhat ridiculous. Yeah, it can be doneand I’ve done it on a small scalebut by the time you get enough seeds together, the loaf of bread you’ll make was totally and utterly not worth the effort.

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“Does It Make Sense to Grow Grains on Your Homestead?”

Are you ready to hook up a plow, sow, buy a scythe, cut, bundle wheat into sheaves and pray it doesn’t rain, rub the husks off and chuck grain into the air on a breezy day to get rid of the chaff, then grind the stuff?

This is why the Irish loved the potato.

Roots are your friends.

Where I am, I grow malanga, cassava, potatoes, boniato, icicle radishes, garlic, African yams, sweet potatoes, turnips, beets, and carrots.

Up North, I grew a huge bed of Jerusalem artichokes, plus beets, potatoes, leeks, green onions, radishes, onions, and horseradish (which you probably couldn’t live on without severe pain).

Many roots will stay in the ground beyond the short harvests of other crops. Try leaving tomatoes on the vine—no dice. Forget to pick green beans? The plant gives up. Roots are usually much more forgiving and should play a key role in keeping you fed.

We may think of pumpkins and squash as nice decorations in fall, but for Indians—and the pioneers that followed them—squash meant survival.

Many of the old winter squash varieties are large and can store for 6 months or longer. If you’ve got the climate and the space for these powerhouses, growing storable squash should be a priority. Likewise, beans are a good source of storable protein. Nab old-school shell beans and try a variety on your land. Though their yield isn’t as good as some survival plants, beans will repair your land by adding nitrogen. Crop them between other species and count the beans as an extra bonus. A particularly good plant to mix with beans and squash is the old stand-by: corn. Sweet corn isn’t what you want for survival—you want old varieties like Hickory King, Bloody Butcher, or Hopi Blue. Think scrappy, tough, and uncorrupted by genetic modification.

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“Three Sisters Gardens: Grow More Food With Less Work”

Unlike other grains, corn is easy to harvest.

Intercrop it with squash and beans in the “Three Sisters” method and you’ll get much more use of your space—plus confuse pests. Here’s a Three Sisters garden I planted a couple of years ago:

Say you’re sick of potatoes (for an amusing story on that, check this out).

That’s when you’re going to want an animal to turn those tiresome veggies into something sustaining.

Enter the chicken.

Eggs are simply one of the best things you can eat. They’re rich in vitamins and minerals plus protein and fat, and they’ll fill you up better than vegetables alone.

The problem with raising chickens is that you’re going to need to feed them as well as yourself. Unless you have a good stretch of free-range pasture/woods and a nice patch of food just for them, you’re going to have to buy feed—and yet again, you’re not self-sufficient.

There has to be a balance between bird population and feed. For a family of four, I’d shoot for a dozen laying hens and one rooster to protect them and provide you with the next generation of birds. Chickens don’t need much space, so I’d add them directly after my gardens get established.

Do you have wild areas beyond the edges of your cultivated space? Identify useful species and encourage them. I found wild plums, black cherries, wild grapes, and other edibles after moving to my property. Though these are low-yield plants, they’re also sources of food I don’t have to work for. Add to them the wide variety of uncultivated edible greens that pop up during various seasons, and you’ve got something to nibble on most of the year.

The short answer: Only you can figure that out on your land and in your climate and with your own abilities and time.

Start by heavily utilizing what you have and concentrating on high-yield crops like roots. Then move on to squash, beans, and corn; then add chickens and learn to forage for wild edibles.

Beyond that, don’t forget good producers like cabbage, kale, and green beans.

If you have a little more space, pack in a food forest and get long-term tree crops rolling, including health-packed berries and nuts. I did a lot of this on one acre in North Florida—and now I’m working on a similar system on a mere half-acre in the tropics.

Though I’m a big fan of reaching the destination of completely feeding my family, the journey itself has been highly enlightening thus far. Every day we inch closer to the goal—and if you work hard, you will, too.

David The Good is a Grow Network Change Maker, a gardening expert, and the author of five books you can find on Amazon: Compost Everything: The Good Guide to Extreme Composting, Grow or Die: The Good Guide to Survival Gardening, Totally Crazy Easy Florida Gardening, Create Your Own Florida Food Forest, and Push the Zone: The Good Guide to Growing Tropical Plants Beyond the Tropics. Find fresh gardening inspiration at his website TheSurvivalGardener.com and be sure to follow his popular YouTube channel.

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This post was written by David The Good

Yeah, but how much land does it take!? (Ha! Just kidding.) Good read. As always. It makes my heart happy that you included the Eat Wild section.

This is such a great question as in the early 70’s the book Live on an acre or something like that came out and was very popular. We have an acre in Hawaii and always wanted to accomplish this task. We don’t have enough room for a cow but chickens and so much food! Here it is a daily thing to harvest, so I think you could get away with less space, but I see so many people opting for Macdonalds instead of fresh, crisp kale and tomatoes. But if everyone grew at least 1 food item we could all be healthy and have free food! I LOVE free food. Last night we had fresh kappa cabbage I just picked, and the brightest orange sweet potatoes from our gardens coupled with meat loaf from our farmer friends. Almost totally free delicious dinner. Why anyone wouldn’t want to grow food is beyond me!

We have an acre. it’s just right! We just had fresh green kappa cabbage last night with the orangest sweet potatoes of our own growing and meat loaf from our farmer friends. It was practically free ( small cost for the meat) but the rest was free, fresh, tasty! I just don’t know why anyone would not want to grow their own food

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Personal Question #1: How Much Time Do You Have?

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Personal Question #1: How Much Time Do You Have?

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