homesteadersofamerica

2021 Homesteaders of America Conference Lectures :: FREE ACCESS to Opening Sessions

We were absolutely BLOWN AWAY by the turn-out for the 2021 Homesteaders of America conference in Virginia this year! So much so that when nearly everyone who bought tickets all showed up on Friday morning, our volunteers couldn’t get attendees checked in fast enough before the first lectures of the morning began. This was unprecedented to say the least and we worked furiously to get the line moving. Thankfully, all of the kinks were worked out and we didn’t have a repeat on Saturday!

We are so sorry if you joined us this year but were unable to make it to your session!

We have made all of those lectures available for FREE so you can dive in and catch up with what you missed! No membership required!


Didn’t make it to the conference this year? Check out our full conference recap HERE.


2021 Homesteaders of America Conference Friday Morning Opening Sessions


Did you enjoy those lectures? Sign up to become a member of Homesteaders of America and you’ll get access to ALL of the videos from this year’s conference!* (AND past year’s as well!) That’s hundreds of hours of inspirational and educational homesteading content to help you on your journey to greater self-sufficiency.

*Access to content varies with membership level. VIP members get full access to conference lectures.


145+ Homestead Income Ideas for the Small Farm

145+ Homestead Income Ideas for the Small Farm

Looking for some income ideas for your small farm? Ready to grow your homestead into a self-sufficient business? Need a creative spark to help you figure out how to earn some side income and add infrastructure or livestock to your homestead? We have put together the ULTIMATE Homestead Income Ideas Guide! Learn ways to make a profit from your small farm while being a service to your community. 


Ready to dive in even deeper and set your farm business on a trajectory for success?

Join some of the homesteading community’s leading entrepreneurs for one-on-one learning about how to make your farm and homestead a monetary success during The Homestead Business Weekend Seminar, January 21 & 22! In fact, Joel Salatin will be speaking on this very topic! His talk is entitled “Earning Money on the Homestead: Unlimited Opportunities.”

There are only a few in-person spots left for this event to be held in Columbia, Tennessee but that doesn’t mean you have to miss out! Virtual tickets are unlimited and available for purchase today! Be sure to grab your pass today so you don’t miss out on the valuable wisdom & inspiration our speakers will be sharing to help you get your homestead business off to a great start!


Cautions Before Starting a Homestead Business

Don’t Lose Your Homestead Vision

While it’s easy to get excited about branching out on your farm & starting to earn income from your hard work on the land, it’s important to make sure that you keep your priorities in focus with a clear vision.

No matter what prompted you to start this lifestyle, whether health goals, financial goals, to have greater self-sufficiency, etc. you must be careful not to fall into the trap of shifting your focus and getting swallowed up in the business to the neglect of your homestead. Be vigilant and constantly evaluate if your farm’s needs are being met and scale your business accordingly.

Become a Cottage Economist

Cottage Economy is a small book written by William Cobbett in the early 19th century. In it the author said, “The man who, by his own and his family’s labour, can provide a sufficiency of food and raiment, and a comfortable dwelling-place, is not a poor man.”

He has also said, “It is not the greatness of a man’s means that makes him independent, so much as the smallness of his wants.”

Two mindsets can be gleaned from his work and are fundamental for the homesteader wanting to earn primary or supplemental income from their farm:

1.) Adjust your expectations. Most of us have grown up in a consumer economy and many of our needs are actually wants. Learn to discern the difference. Perhaps you’ll find you can just enjoy your life without the hustle of keeping up to folks who are charging it all anyway.

2.) The truth in the maxim “A penny saved is a penny earned.” We recommend starting a journal for one year of all the money you can save. Add savings from sales & coupons. Even better, add money saved when you refrained from making a purchase altogether (100% savings!) Challenge yourself to save as much as possible.

Use The Homestead Journal or Homestead Management Printables to track your homestead expenses (something you should get in the habit of doing anyway if you’ll be starting a business). Record your yields & calculate your price per pound on the various areas of homestead production. Find out the average cost per pound for a comparable product and add that to your savings.

For example, this year we raised 489 pounds of pastured poultry at a cost of $2.22 per pound. Pastured poultry from a local farmer is $4.90 per pound (for whole chickens). That’s a savings of $1,310.52. Why should these numbers not be considered in the cottage economy of the homestead? When these factors are considered, perhaps you’ll find that the cash income from a homestead business isn’t as valuable as being a prudent cottage economist.

With those caveats behind us, let’s jump into the exciting part and discover all of the ways you can start earning income on your homestead!

Homestead Income Ideas

145+ Homestead Income Ideas for the Small Farm

Ways to Make Money in the Garden

  • Sell Extra Garden Seeds
  • Grow & Sell Extra Seedlings
  • Start a Market Garden & Sell Vegetables 
  • Start a Medicinal or Culinary Herb Garden & Sell Plants
  • Grow an Extra Row of Garlic & Sell Seed
  • Grow Microgreens for Restaurants & Market
  • Start a Worm Farm
  • Sell Perennial Herbs & Flowers
  • Make & Sell Great Compost
  • Grow Mums for Fall Decorations
  • Grow Cut Flowers for Market
  • Grow Culinary Herbs & Spices for Market
  • Grow Cannabis/Hemp

Sources of Income from Livestock

  • Offer Breeding Services
  • Raise Extra Meat & Sell It
  • Start a Herdshare
  • Raise Bottle Babies & Sell Tame Livestock
  • Rent Out Your Goats for Land Management
  • Rent Out Your Pasture
  • Raise Heifers to Sell as Halter Trained Family Milk Cows
  • Raise Others Livestock to Butcher (Butcher your own meat, have your customers join you and help on butcher day. If “customers” butcher their livestock that were raised on your farm, certified processing facilities aren’t necessary. This allows you to offer custom cuts, specialty products, render fat, etc.)
Make Money Selling Rainbow Eggs

Earn Income from the Poultry Flock

  • Sell Surplus Rainbow Colored Chicken Eggs
  • Market Premium Duck Eggs
  • Sell Hatching Eggs
  • Hatch Chicks to Sell 
  • Sell Started Pullets, Ready to Lay
  • Raise Pheasant, Grouse, or Quail for Hunters
  • Raise Mealworms to Sell for Snacks
  • Raise Ducks for Restaurants
  • Raise Thanksgiving Turkeys

Make Money Raising Sheep

  • Raise Lambs for Market
  • Sell Wool for Fiber
  • Sell Pelts & Skins for Home Decor
  • Sell Parasite-Resistant Healthy Breeding Stock

Raise Rabbits & Make Money

Homestead Income Ideas

Beekeeping Income Ideas

  • Offer Hive Rental to Farms & Orchards
  • Sell Surplus Honey
  • Sell Your Extra Beeswax
  • Market Healthcare Products with Propolis
  • Offer Swarm Removal Services
  • Sell Beeswax Candles
  • Formulate Herbal Salves

Farm & Land Services Income Ideas

  • Shear Alapacas & Sheep
  • Offer Stud Services
  • Horse Boarding 
  • Pet Training
  • Horse Riding Lessons
  • Farm Sitting
  • Board Pets
  • Start a Petting Zoo
  • Rototill Gardens
  • Offer Stump Removal Services
  • Woodlot Clean Up
  • Snow Removal 
  • Leaf Removal
  • Tree Pruning & Trimming Services
  • Apple Cider Pressing
  • Start a Mobile Butchery
  • Deer Processing
  • Taxidermy
  • Engine Repair
  • Mill Grains for Your Community
  • Floral Arranging
  • Rent Out Equipment
  • Make & Sell Hay
  • Offer Tractor Services
  • Lease Hunting Rights
  • Rent Out Your Land RV & Campsite Parking
  • Run an Outdoor Yoga Studio
  • Build a Shooting Range
  • Offer Taxi Services (Especially in Amish Communities)
  • Rent Out Your Stock Trailer
Earn Money Building Services

Put Your Skills to Work: Offer Building Services

  • Offer Handyman Services
  • Build Fences
  • Build Raised Beds for Gardeners
  • Build Chicken Coops
  • Saw Mill
  • Reclaim Old Barns
  • Build Tiny Houses
  • Custom Furniture Making
  • Repurpose Antique Furniture (Furniture Flipping)

Earn Money from a Woodlot

  • Sell Extra Firewood
  • Sell Surplus Maple Syrup
  • Grow Nursery Trees
  • Grow & Sell Bamboo Products
  • Start a Tree Farm for Timber
  • Start a Christmas Tree Farm
  • Grow Ramps
  • Grow Mushrooms
  • Grow Ginseng

Agrotourism Income Ideas

  • Plant a Corn Maze
  • Start a U-Pick Orchard or Garden
  • Start a Bed & Breakfast
  • Create a Vacation Rental Property
  • Start a Pumpkin Patch
  • Offer Your Farm as a Wedding & Event Venue

Use Your Homestead Skills & Sell Crafts

  • Sell Your Handcrafted Creations on Etsy
  • Take Your Old Canning Jar & Make Home Decor
  • Sell Homemade Soap
  • Make & Sell Candles
  • Grow Gourds in Your Garden & Make Crafts
  • Woodworking, Woodturning, Woodcarving
  • Create Barnwood Home Decor
  • Make Feather Crafts
  • Grow Job’s Tears Grain & Make Jewelry
  • Naturally Dye Fiber
  • Sell Your Handmade Quilts
  • Weave Baskets
  • Make Handmade Pottery
  • Become a Leathersmith
  • Become a Blacksmith
Homestead Income Ideas

Cottage Foods

  • Sell Homemade Bread at Market
  • Sell Baked Goods
  • Sell Starter Cultures
  • Start a Micro Brewery
  • Sell Artisan Cheeses
  • Create Herbal Tea Blends
  • Sell Raw Pet Food
  • Sell Tallow & Lard

Online Income Ideas

  • Sell Your Photography 
  • Join Affiliate Marketing Programs
  • Social Media Manager
  • Graphic Designer
  • Write Books
  • Print on Demand Design (Such as T-shirts & Mugs)
  • Offer Consulting or Coaching Services
  • Virtual Assistant
  • Start a Website & Blog
  • Start a Podcast
  • Start a YouTube Channel

Home-Based Businesses

  • Permaculture Design Consultant
  • Teach Your Skills & Host Classes or Workshops
  • Rent Your Fields to Photographers
  • Fish Farming
  • Responsible Dog Breeding
  • Become an Herbalist
  • In-Home Child Care
  • Pet Groomer
  • Offer Music Lessons
  • Become a Homeschool Teacher or Tutor
  • Snail Farmer for Restaurants
  • Niche Product Supplier (This is common in the Amish community. Many families have a side business selling niche products to their community such as beekeeping supplies, gardening tools, furniture, etc.)
  • Product Distribution (Think Mary Kay, Avon, Essential Oils, Chalk Paint, etc.)
  • Resell Antiques from Estate Sales
  • Become a Doula

Do you have any homestead income ideas to add to this list? Share them below in the comments!

145+ Homestead Income Ideas: Ways to Earn Money on a Small Farm | Homesteaders of America
145+ Homestead Income Ideas: Ways to Earn Money on a Small Farm | Homesteaders of America

What to Plant in December: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

What to Grow in December: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

Learn what to plant in December with Homesteaders of America Vegetable Garden Growing Guides!

No matter where you are gardening in America, be sure to read some of the tips for other growing regions in this guide. Even though your garden may be still churning out produce, you will need to take advantage of the slower season to do some winter garden tasks like soil testing, amending, and next year’s garden planning.

What to Plant in December: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

How to Use the Growing Guides

In the Growing Guides, you will learn what to plant each month according to when your last frost date. 

The Growing Guides will be targeted for the continental United States, which also includes some of the warmer areas of our country such as southern extremes Texas and Florida. Their growing season is vastly different from folks living in the northernmost states.

Be sure to follow us on social media, read our newsletter, or check back on the blog for updates throughout the year! 

What to Plant in December: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

Last Frost Date in January

Your next round of summer crops is right around the corner but you can spend the next couple months enjoying traditional fall & winter produce from your garden. Here’s what to plant in December:

Indoors, Direct Seed, or Transplant

  • Lettuce
  • Greens
  • Pak Choi

Direct Seed

  • Beets
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard
  • Radishes
  • Cabbage (Transplant)
  • Broccoli (Transplant)
  • Kohlrabi (Transplant)
  • Peas

Last Frost Date in February

Want to know what to plant in December if your last frost was in February? The answer is, “Plenty!”

As some of your main crops begin to to die off, be sure to sow cover crop seeds to support your soil life, maintain topsoil, add fertility, and build organic matter. Winter rye is a good choice for overwintering. It can be tilled under in the spring or you can use a solarization tarp to kill it off. Other choices would be a combination of oats & peas or daikon radishes and turnips if you’d like to break up soil compaction. All of those will be killed off over the winter, leaving your garden ready to plant in the spring.

Start Indoors

  • Lettuce
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard
  • Arugula
  • Spinach

Direct Seed

  • Garlic
  • Radishes
  • Peas
  • Winter Rye
  • Oats & Peas
  • Radishes or Turnips
  • Buckwheat (Double check your last frost date… you’ll need about a 4-5 weeks before frost to get the most out of buckwheat)

Last Frost Date in March

If you’d like to keep your garden going you’ll need to be thinking about which solution you’ll need to extend your season. Remember that every layer of protection will effectively bump you one growing zone south. Some gardeners can keep their garden growing almost year-round. Check out Eliot Coleman’s book, The Winter Harvest Handbook, for the best information about how to achieve this.

Indoors

  • Lettuce
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard
  • Claytonia
  • Arugula
  • Spinach
  • Miners Lettuce

Direct Seed

  • Garlic
  • Cover Crops (winter rye may overwinter; radishes & turnips are good for breaking soil compaction)

Last Frost Date in April

Without frost protection, your gardening season is over. Try to get as much clean-up and prep work for the spring done now because you never know if a soggy spring will set you back next year.

This is a great time to take a soil sample and submit it for testing. That way you can be sure to have all of your amendments purchased and ready to spread in the spring before planting. Amending your soil ensures that your plants have all the nutrients they need to grow and produce well. And well-nourished plants mean nutrient dense produce for your family’s table. Grow Abundant is an excellent resource & tool to help you learn how to replenish your soils depleted nutrients.

If you didn’t sow cover crops in your garden you can still protect the soil from runoff (while suppressing weeds) with a mulch of leaves, grass clippings, organic straw or weed-free hay.

If your ground is still workable, you can get garlic seed in the ground. Be sure to cover it with a nice bed of mulch to protect it over the winter.

Now is a great time to learn how to grow windowsill microgreens. It’s quite simple! They grow quickly and in a few short weeks you’ll once again be munching on fresh, crispy, homegrown greens. Try pea shoots, sunflower sprouts, and radishes to start. You can also grow broccoli, kale, beets, and more!

Direct Seed

  • Garlic
  • Cover Crops (winter rye may overwinter; radishes & turnips are good for breaking soil compaction)

Last Frost Date in May & June

‘Tis the season for winter garden planning! By now a few seed catalogues have already started rolling in and you can focus your efforts solely on drawing up your garden plans and researching new crops. Be sure to check out our Seeding Rate Chart in the Homestead Management Printables so you’re sure to order enough seed. As seed prices continue to rise and the number of seeds in the packets dwindle, you’ll need to pay particular attention to what each seed company is offering per packet. It’s different for everyone and the Seeding Rate Chart will also give you an idea of what a conversion from grams to ounces to M looks like.

As the year draws to a close you’ll want to tally up your garden harvest yields from your Homestead Journal planner. These records will help you quantify your actual production and set goals & grow EVEN MORE NEXT YEAR!

Make sure you start your garden on time! Learn what to plant in December with Homesteaders of America Vegetable Garden Growing Guides!

Backyard Compost: From Start to Finish

Backyard Composting: From Start to Finish

You may already know that backyard compost is the most valuable addition to any garden. You may also know that compost changes soil structure in the very best ways, converting your average garden soil into one that’s friable and fertile.

Finished compost adds nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, making soil nutritionally rich. It acts as a pH buffer by bringing the pH to a neutral level (a middle ground between acidic and alkaline). Backyard compost also saves you time and money since it dramatically increases soil’s water-holding capability. Water run-off is reduced, diseases are suppressed, and a healthy wildlife environment is created all thanks to compost.

The best way to get compost into your garden is to make it yourself at home. Lucky for us, the transformation of organic matter into this rich nutrient source is uncomplicated and inexpensive, and it doesn’t even smell.

Carbon and Nitrogen Sources - Guide to Home Composting

Backyard Compost: From Start to Finish

The Pros and Cons of Compost Bins

One of the first things to address is whether to use a fully enclosed compost bin. Many people are surprised to learn that a specific “bin” isn’t necessary to the composting process, although it has its upsides.

  1. From an aesthetic point of view, compost that’s contained inside a bin looks nicer, especially if it’s in proximity to a neighbor’s house.
  2. It’s easier to keep the organic matter piled together when you have sides around your pile.
  3. Another good reason to use a contained compost bin is if you’re adding a lot of kitchen scraps to the pile since they can encourage unwanted visitors, such as raccoons or the neighbor’s dog.

If you’re interested in using an enclosed bin (complete with lid) as opposed to the open ground, several pre-constructed models are available at local garden supply and home improvement centers. If you happen to be even the slightest bit handy, it’s easy to create a semi-bin at home using wood pallets or even hardware cloth that’s been wrapped around four T-posts (note that neither of these options include a lid).

On the other hand, I have several “open” backyard compost piles that I’ve built directly onto the ground, which is as basic as it gets. I love my open piles because nothing gets in my way when I’m turning them over, and it’s the cheapest way to go (I’m nothing if not a cheap gardener).

Build Your Own Hot Compost Pile - Guide to Home Composting

Four Backyard Compost Needs

You just need four things to create rich backyard compost:

  1. Carbon organic material (browns)
  2. Nitrogen organic material (greens)
  3. Water
  4. Oxygen

Although there are many critters in compost piles (such as worms) that help break things down, the bacteria, fungi, and actinomycetes – the microbial decomposers –are the heavy lifters in a compost pile. All organic matter is composed of carbon and nitrogen; they just show up in different percentages. When organic matter is predominately carbon, we refer to it as “brown.” Those that are heavier in nitrogen are “greens.”

In terms of the carbon-to-nitrogen equation, 30:1 is considered the perfect ratio for composting. Therefore, if the “C” is higher than 30, the organic material is considered a carbon source. If it’s lower than 30, it’s considered a nitrogen source.

Let’s say you have a small pile of straw to add to your compost pile. Straw’s C:N (carbon-to=nitrogen) ratio is somewhere around 80:1. Therefore, carbon-heavy straw is clearly a “brown.” You’ll find that brown material is often actually brown in color, such as cardboard and dried leaves. Carbon materials are the food (energy) for this hard-working crew.

The decomposers will need nitrogen to grow and reproduce. Look for organic materials that are below 30 on the carbon side of the C:N ratio. For example, grass clippings are about 20:1. Don’t let what looks like a high carbon number fool you; it’s below 30, so this is a good nitrogen source. Animal manure (from herbivores only) is around 25:1, and kitchen scraps are about 15:1. All these are excellent nitrogen materials for your compost pile.

The idea is to have a generally even balance between the two types of materials to help the microbial critters fuel up and get a hot compost pile going.

Here’s the part where I tell you to completely ignore the math. Don’t get bogged down with the number equations. Just add equal amounts of carbon and nitrogen materials to your pile, and nature will take it from there.

How to Fix a Smelly Compost Pile - Guide to Home Composting

Water and Oxygen

The last two things necessary to create healthy, life-sustaining compost are water and oxygen. Most gardeners would like to get their hands on their compost as quickly as possible. For that to happen, you’ll want to have an almost equal balance of water and oxygen to create an aerobic or active compost pile.

The rule of thumb when it comes to watering a compost pile is to keep it just about as moist as a wrung-out sponge (around 40% moisture). If you can squeeze a drop of water out of a handful of organic matter pulled from the center of your pile, you’re good to go.

f you get a moisture level of 60% or higher, your pile may begin to smell because it’s becoming oxygen starved. The hardest-working bacteria in compost is the aerobic bacteria, and they’ll only hang around if you give them sufficient oxygen through aeration.

The best way to keep air in the organic matter is to turn all the material over at regular intervals. The simple task of lifting and turning the pile over introduces the right amount of oxygen.

DIY Wire Compost Bin - Guide to Home Composting

Finished Compost

Eventually, the organic matter decomposes to the point at which the microorganisms have almost completely finished their work. The resulting backyard compost (or humus) is dark and crumbly with a sweet, fresh-earth smell. The nutrients from the organic matter at this stage are easily accessible to plant roots.

If you’ve kept the pile balanced with carbon, nitrogen, moisture, and oxygen, it’s possible to have finished compost in as little as four weeks. On the other hand, if you decide to let nature do the heavy lifting, it might end up being six months to a year before it’s ready for the garden.

This article was originally published on Fix.com


Homestead Gardening

Get ready for a great growing season with these articles to help you grow more in your homestead garden!

How to Make Backyard Compost:: Homesteaders of America
How to Make Backyard Compost:: Homesteaders of America

What to Plant in November: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

What to Plant in November Vegetable Garden

Learn what to plant in November with Homesteaders of America Vegetable Garden Growing Guides!

Many folks throughout the country have closed down their garden for the growing season and are turning more to indoor activities now that the weather has grown cold. The rest is a welcome break from the garden toil of the past several months and a time to recharge the mind & body before another gardening year is upon us. Use this time to take soil tests, order amendments to replenish the garden’s nutrient levels, visit the library and expand your knowledge, plan a crop rotation, and take seed inventory. Before you know it those first seed catalogues will be in your mailbox and you can start discovering your new favorite crops & varieties and planning to make your next garden even more successful!

Meanwhile, in the southern parts of the United States, many fall gardens are in full-swing. Preparations are being made for frost with row cover and other season extension tools. Garlic is being planted, cover crops & mulch are being put down to protect the soil from run-off while supplying organic matter.

In the furthest reaches of the south, you may just be starting to plant the fall garden that, with an eye on the forecast, will take you all the way to spring with a supply of fresh vegetables.

What to Plant in November: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

How to Use the Growing Guides

In the Growing Guides, you will learn what to plant each month according to when your last frost date. 

The Growing Guides will be targeted for the continental United States, which also includes some of the warmer areas of our country such as southern extremes Texas and Florida. Their growing season is vastly different from folks living in the northernmost states.

Be sure to follow us on social media, read our newsletter, or check back on the blog for updates throughout the year! 

What to Plant in November- Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

Last Frost Date in January

Want to know what to plant in November if you last frost date is in January? The answer is, “Plenty!” Check out these crops you can be growing. You can start most of these either indoors or outdoors depending on your circumstances.

Indoors, Direct Seed, or Transplant

  • Cabbage
  • Broccoli
  • Greens
  • Lettuce
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard

Direct Seed

  • Radishes
  • Peas
  • Cucumbers
  • Beets
  • Turnips
  • Carrots
  • Beans

Last Frost Date in February

If you want your summer crops to keep churning out the produce, make sure you stay on top of the harvest. Your plants job is to make seed and if you skip harvesting for a week and the fruit over matures it will signal to the plant that its job is done and will begin to die.

Start Indoors

  • Lettuce
  • Greens
  • Pak Choi

Direct Seed

  • Beets
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard
  • Radishes
  • Cabbage (Transplant)
  • Broccoli (Transplant)
  • Kohlrabi (Transplant)
  • Peas

Last Frost Date in March

Want to know what to plant in November if your last frost was in March? The good news is you can still get your greens in the ground and get a harvest before Jack Frost starts nipping. Make plans for season extension and you’ll be able to make the harvest roll in for even longer!

As some of your main crops begin to to die off, be sure to sow cover crop seeds to support your soil life, maintain topsoil, add fertility, and build organic matter. Winter rye is a good choice for overwintering. It can be tilled under in the spring or you can use a solarization tarp to kill it off. Other choices would be a combination of oats & peas or daikon radishes and turnips if you’d like to break up soil compaction. All of those will be killed off over the winter, leaving your garden ready to plant in the spring.

Also, if you didn’t save garlic seed from your harvest this year, make sure you’ve got seed ordered!

Indoors

  • Lettuce
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard
  • Arugula
  • Spinach

Direct Seed

  • Radishes
  • Peas
  • Winter Rye
  • Oats & Peas
  • Radishes or Turnips
  • Buckwheat (Double check your last frost date… you’ll need about a 4-5 weeks before frost to get the most out of buckwheat)

Last Frost Date in April

If you’d like to keep your garden going you’ll need to be thinking about which solution you’ll need to extend your season. Remember that every layer of protection will effectively bump you one growing zone south. Some northern gardeners can keep their garden growing almost year-round. Check out Eliot Coleman’s book, The Winter Harvest Handbook, for the best information about how to achieve this.

Transplant

  • Lettuce
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard
  • Claytonia
  • Arugula
  • Spinach
  • Miners Lettuce

Direct Seed

  • Garlic
  • Cover Crops (winter rye may overwinter; radishes & turnips are good for breaking soil compaction)

Last Frost Date in May & June

Without frost protection, your gardening season is over. Try to get as much clean-up and prep work for the spring done now because you never know if a soggy spring will set you back next year.

This is a great time to take a soil sample and submit it for testing. That way you can be sure to have all of your amendments purchased and ready to spread in the spring before planting. Amending your soil ensures that your plants have all the nutrients they need to grow and produce well. And well-nourished plants mean nutrient dense produce for your family’s table. Grow Abundant is an excellent resource & tool to help you learn how to replenish your soils depleted nutrients.

If you didn’t sow cover crops in your garden you can still protect the soil from runoff (while suppressing weeds) with a mulch of leaves, grass clippings, organic straw or weed-free hay.

If your ground is still workable, you can get garlic seed in the ground. Be sure to cover it with a nice bed of mulch to protect it over the winter.

Now is a great time to learn how to grow windowsill microgreens. It’s quite simple! They grow quickly and in a few short weeks you’ll once again be munching on fresh, crispy, homegrown greens. Try pea shoots, sunflower sprouts, and radishes to start. You can also grow broccoli, kale, beets, and more!

Direct Seed

  • Garlic
  • Winter Rye Cover Crop

Make sure you start your garden on time! Learn what to plant in November with Homesteaders of America Vegetable Garden Growing Guides!

What to Plant in October: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

What to Plant in October Vegetable Garden

Learn what to plant in October with Homesteaders of America Vegetable Garden Growing Guides!

With October comes cooler temperatures and even the first frost in many areas of the United States of America. This means another gardening season is in the books. We can kick back and enjoy the literal fruits of our labor. If this is depressing and you know you’ll miss getting your hands dirty, never fear, the seed catalogues will start showing up in your mailbox in just a few short weeks. The dream of next year’s garden, with all of its hope and promise, is right around the corner.

Other parts of the country are focused on the fall garden and the changing menu that comes with eating seasonally based on what the harvest brings. While down south the summer gardens may still be churning out the produce and the deepest southern reaches are still busy planting traditional summer crops. (But lest you get jealous Last Frost in April & May folks, don’t worry, you’ve got something on them: you are in that small window of time where late season tomatoes & early fall lettuce crops converge and a homegrown BLT sandwich can realized.)

What to Plant in October: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

How to Use the Growing Guides

In the Growing Guides, you will learn what to plant each month according to when your last frost date. 

The Growing Guides will be targeted for the continental United States, which also includes some of the warmer areas of our country such as southern extremes Texas and Florida. Their growing season is vastly different from folks living in the northernmost states.

Be sure to follow us on social media, read our newsletter, or check back on the blog for updates throughout the year! 

What to Plant in October Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

Last Frost Date in January

Since your daytime temperatures will begin moderating in a few months, you can keep starting many types of seeds indoors that you will transplant into the garden later this fall.

Start Indoors

  • Brussels Sprouts
  • Onions
  • Celery
  • Slow Growing Herbs

Direct Seed

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Corn
  • Beans

Last Frost Date in February

If your last frost date is in February here is what to plant in October! Though your summer garden is still doing well, pop a few seeds in the soil so you can add the variety to your diet that the cooler season will bring. If you’re not ready to say good-bye to the goodness the summer garden has brought, it’s not too late to do another round of some vegetables such as summer squash, cucumber, and beans!

Start Indoors

  • Broccoli
  • Cabbage
  • Lettuce

Direct Seed

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Beans
  • Beets
  • Lettuce
  • Chard
  • Kale

Last Frost Date in March

If you want your summer crops to keep churning out the produce, make sure you stay on top of the harvest. Your plants job is to make seed and if you skip harvesting for a week and the fruit over matures it will signal to the plant that its job is done and will begin to die.

You can start planting your fall garden now, but there are even a few summer crops you might be able to get a small harvest from if you plant now. Some bean & summer squash varieties will be ready to harvest in just 40 days!

Indoors

  • Lettuce
  • Greens
  • Pak Choi

Direct Seed or Transplant

  • Beans
  • Summer Squash
  • Beets
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard
  • Radishes
  • Cabbage (Transplant)
  • Broccoli (Transplant)
  • Kohlrabi (Transplant)
  • Peas

Last Frost Date in April

Want to know what to plant in October if your last frost was in April? The good news is you can still get your greens in the ground and get a harvest before Jack Frost starts nipping. Make plans for season extension and you’ll be able to make the harvest roll in for even longer!

As some of your main crops begin to to die off, be sure to sow cover crop seeds to support your soil life, maintain topsoil, add fertility, and build organic matter. Winter rye is a good choice for overwintering. It can be tilled under in the spring or you can use a solarization tarp to kill it off. Other choices would be a combination of oats & peas or daikon radishes and turnips if you’d like to break up soil compaction. All of those will be killed off over the winter, leaving your garden ready to plant in the spring.

Also, if you didn’t save garlic seed from your harvest this year, make sure you’ve got seed ordered!

Start Indoors and/or Outdoors

  • Lettuce
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard
  • Arugula
  • Spinach
  • Radish (Outdoors only)
  • Peas (Outdoors only)

Cover Crops

  • Winter Rye
  • Oats & Peas
  • Radishes or Turnips
  • Buckwheat (Double check your last frost date… you’ll need about a 4-5 weeks before frost to get the most out of buckwheat)

Last Frost Date in May

If you’d like to keep your garden going you’ll need to be thinking about which solution you’ll need to extend your season. Remember that every layer of protection will effectively bump you one growing zone south. Some northern gardeners can keep their garden growing almost year-round. Check out Eliot Coleman’s book, The Winter Harvest Handbook, for the best information about how to achieve this.

Indoors

  • Lettuce
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard
  • Claytonia
  • Arugula
  • Spinach
  • Miners Lettuce

Direct Seed

  • Garlic
  • Cover Crops (winter rye may overwinter; radishes & turnips are good for breaking soil compaction)

Last Frost Date in June

Without frost protection, your gardening season is drawing to a close. Try to get as much clean-up and prep work for the spring done now because you never know if a soggy spring will set you back next year.

This is a great time to take a soil sample and submit it for testing. That way you can be sure to have all of your amendments purchased and ready to spread in the spring before planting. Amending your soil ensures that your plants have all the nutrients they need to grow and produce well. And well-nourished plants mean nutrient dense produce for your family’s table. Grow Abundant is an excellent resource & tool to help you learn how to replenish your soils depleted nutrients.

If you didn’t sow cover crops in your garden you can still protect the soil from runoff (while suppressing weeds) with a mulch of leaves, grass clippings, organic straw or weed-free hay.

Make sure you start your garden on time! Learn what to plant in October with Homesteaders of America Vegetable Garden Growing Guides!

What to Plant in September: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

What to Plant in September Vegetable Garden

Learn what to plant in September with Homesteaders of America Vegetable Garden Growing Guides!

The traditional gardening season is beginning to draw to a close for folks in the northern most reaches of America. Unless you have row cover, a hoophouse, or a greenhouse, frost will begin to threaten your garden in just a few short weeks. The good news is many season extension options are readily available and affordable so you can get another month or two of garden-fresh veggies for your family’s table before taking a break for the winter. Meanwhile in other parts of the country, the gardening season is still going strong! If you’re down south you can even start growing a second round of summer vegetables!

What to Plant in September: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

How to Use the Growing Guides

In the Growing Guides, you will learn what to plant each month according to when your last frost date. 

The Growing Guides will be targeted for the continental United States, which also includes some of the warmer areas of our country such as southern extremes Texas and Florida. Their growing season is vastly different from folks living in the northernmost states.

Be sure to follow us on social media, read our newsletter, or check back on the blog for updates throughout the year! 

What to Plant in September Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

Last Frost Date in January

Keep thinking about that fall garden while you’re bringing in the summer harvest. Now is a great time to start some of the crops that will appreciate cooler fall temperatures in a few months. If you are getting a late start, check out some summer vegetables you can still direct seed in the garden this month.

Start Indoors

  • Brussels Sprouts
  • Tomatoes
  • Peppers
  • Celery
  • Eggplant

Transplant

  • Tomatoes
  • Peppers
  • Eggplant

Direct Seed

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Beans
  • Melons
  • Corn

Last Frost Date in February

Since your daytime temperatures will begin moderating in a few months, you can keep starting many types of seeds indoors that you will transplant into the garden this fall.

Start Indoors

  • Brussels Sprouts
  • Onions
  • Celery
  • Slow Growing Herbs

Direct Seed

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Corn
  • Beans

Last Frost Date in March

If your last frost date is in March here is what to plant in September! Though your summer garden is still doing well, pop a few seeds in the soil so you can add the variety to your diet that the cooler season will bring. If you’re not ready to say good-bye to the goodness the summer garden has brought, it’s not too late to do another round of some vegetables such as summer squash, cucumber, and beans!

Start Indoors

  • Broccoli
  • Cabbage
  • Lettuce

Direct Seed

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Beans
  • Beets
  • Lettuce
  • Chard
  • Kale

Last Frost Date in April

If you want your summer crops to keep churning out the produce, make sure you stay on top of the harvest. Your plants job is to make seed and if you skip harvesting for a week and the fruit over matures it will signal to the plant that its job is done and will begin to die.

You can start planting your fall garden now, but there are even a few summer crops you might be able to get a small harvest from if you plant now. Some bean & summer squash varieties will be ready to harvest in just 40 days!

Indoors

  • Lettuce
  • Greens
  • Pak Choi

Direct Seed or Transplant

  • Beans
  • Summer Squash
  • Beets
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard
  • Radishes
  • Cabbage (Transplant)
  • Broccoli (Transplant)
  • Kohlrabi (Transplant)
  • Peas

Last Frost Date in May

Want to know what to plant in September if your last frost was in May? The good news is you can still get your greens in the ground and get a harvest before Jack Frost starts nipping. Make plans for season extension and you’ll be able to make the harvest roll in for even longer!

As some of your main crops begin to to die off, be sure to sow cover crop seeds to support your soil life, maintain topsoil, add fertility, and build organic matter. Winter rye is a good choice for overwintering. It can be tilled under in the spring or you can use a solarization tarp to kill it off. Other choices would be a combination of oats & peas or daikon radishes and turnips if you’d like to break up soil compaction. All of those will be killed off over the winter, leaving your garden ready to plant in the spring.

Also, if you didn’t save garlic seed from your harvest this year, make sure you’ve got seed ordered!

Start Indoors and/or Outdoors

  • Lettuce
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard
  • Arugula
  • Spinach
  • Radish (Outdoors only)
  • Peas (Outdoors only)

Cover Crops

  • Winter Rye
  • Oats & Peas
  • Radishes or Turnips
  • Buckwheat (Double check your last frost date… you’ll need about a 4-5 weeks before frost to get the most out of buckwheat)

Last Frost Date in June

If you’d like to keep your garden going you’ll need to be thinking about which solution you’ll need to extend your season. Remember that every layer of protection will effectively bump you one growing zone south. Some northern gardeners can keep their garden growing almost year-round. Check out Eliot Coleman’s book, The Winter Harvest Handbook, for the best information about how to achieve this.

Indoors

  • Lettuce
  • Kale
  • Swiss Chard
  • Claytonia
  • Arugula
  • Spinach
  • Miners Lettuce

Direct Seed

  • Garlic
  • Cover Crops (winter rye may overwinter; radishes & turnips are good for breaking soil compaction)

What to Plant in August: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

What to Plant in August: Vegetable Growing Guide

Learn what to plant in August with Homesteaders of America Vegetable Garden Growing Guides!

Many gardeners in the country begin to converge in their plans this month and turn their attention to the fall garden. Whether you’re in the deep south and planting another round of tomatoes or are in the northern reaches and tucking away lettuce seeds into pots, ready for transplant next month when the temperatures cool, the gardening season is still far from over!

What to Plant in August: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

How to Use the Growing Guides

In the Growing Guides, you will learn what to plant each month according to when your last frost date. 

The Growing Guides will be targeted for the continental United States, which also includes some of the warmer areas of our country such as southern extremes Texas and Florida. Their growing season is vastly different from folks living in the northernmost states.

Be sure to follow us on social media, read our newsletter, or check back on the blog for updates throughout the year! 

What to Plant in August

Last Frost Date in January

Your growing season is heading into it’s eighth month and still going strong! Keep thinking about that fall garden while you’re bringing in the summer harvest. Now is a great time to start some of the crops that will appreciate cooler fall temperatures. If you are getting a late start, check out some summer vegetables you can still direct seed in the garden this month.

Start Indoors

  • Broccoli
  • Cabbage
  • Brussels Sprouts
  • Tomatoes
  • Peppers
  • Celery
  • Eggplant

Direct Seed

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Corn
  • Carrots
  • Beets
  • Parsnips
  • Chard
  • Kale
  • Beans

Last Frost Date in February

Since your daytime temperatures will begin moderating in a few months, you can keep starting many types of seeds indoors that you will transplant into the garden this fall.

Start Indoors

  • Tomatoes
  • Peppers
  • Eggplant
  • Onions
  • Slow Growing Herbs

Direct Seed

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Corn
  • Melons
  • Beans

Last Frost Date in March

Believe it or not, it’s time to start thinking about your fall garden! Now is a great time to start some of the cool weather crops that will be ready to get transplanted in a couple months. Meanwhile, you may still have enough time to squeak out another succession of some crops. Be sure to check your seed packets for the days to germination to be sure.

Start Indoors

  • Brussels Sprouts
  • Onions
  • Celery
  • Some Herbs

Direct Seed

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Beans
  • Beets

Last Frost Date in April

Want to know what to plant in August if your last frost date was in April? There are a still some heat-loving plants you can start growing in your garden! You can also get your fall garden off to a good start by planting some brassica seeds! Next month you’ll be able to get even more plants growing that will nourish you and your family later this year when the temperatures begin to cool.

Direct Seed

  • Beans
  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Carrots
  • Beets

Indoors

  • Cabbage
  • Broccoli
  • Kohlrabi

Last Frost Date in May

Late start getting your garden in? It happens to the even the best gardeners. Don’t despair! There are still many plants you can still get into your garden before it’s too late. Just be sure to check the days to maturity. You may not have time for longer growing varieties before the first frost hits.

Direct Seed

  • Beans
  • Beets
  • Carrots
  • Cucumbers
  • Summer Squash

Indoors

  • Lettuce
  • Greens
  • Swiss Chard
  • Kale
  • Cold-Tolerant Herbs
  • Cabbage
  • Broccoli
  • Kohlrabi

Last Frost Date in June

What to get the most yield from your vegetable garden? Get another succession of cool season crops such as radishes or heat-tolerant lettuce going! If you have the space consider succession planting other quick crops such as beans and summer squash.

As you start bringing in the harvest have your cover crop seeds ready to scatter if you won’t be succession planting. Bare soil easily erodes, losing organic matter and nutrients. The roots of your cover crops will hold soil in place, increase the organic matter, nutrients, and soil life in your garden.

If you will be planting again in a couple months grow a quick cover crop that will appreciate the cooler spring weather. If the space will be left unplanted consider a cover crop that will stand up to your summer heat.

Direct Seed

  • Radishes
  • Lettuce
  • Summer Squash
  • Green Beans

Cover Crops

Quick Cover Crops for Cooler Seasons:

  • Oats
  • Peas
  • Rye
  • Buckwheat

What to Plant in July: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

What to Plant in July

Learn what to plant in July with Homesteaders of America Vegetable Garden Growing Guides!

It is HOT outside! As we are battling weeds & bugs in the garden and, hopefully, bringing in the harvest it’s hard to even think about fall. But, as hard as it may be to believe, it’s time to start thinking about your fall garden! Even if you won’t be planting one for another month or so, be sure to have your fall garden seeds on ordered now. Fall gardens look very different for everyone, depending on where you live in the country. In the south it looks more like a summer garden for most of us, while in the north it is very heavy on the greens.

What to Plant in July: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

How to Use the Growing Guides

In the Growing Guides, you will learn what to plant each month according to when your last frost date. 

The Growing Guides will be targeted for the continental United States, which also includes some of the warmer areas of our country such as southern extremes Texas and Florida. Their growing season is vastly different from folks living in the northernmost states.

Be sure to follow us on social media, read our newsletter, or check back on the blog for updates throughout the year! 

What to Plant in July

Last Frost Date in January

Since your daytime temperatures will begin moderating in about 3 months, you can keep starting many types of seeds indoors that you will transplant into the garden this fall.

Start Indoors

  • Tomatoes
  • Peppers
  • Eggplant
  • Onions
  • Slow Growing Herbs

Direct Seed

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Corn
  • Melons
  • Beans

Last Frost Date in February

Believe it or not, it’s time to start thinking about your fall garden! Though your fall garden is going to look a lot different than someone who is growing in a region where their last frost date is in April or May. Your fall garden is more like a second shot at a summer garden. Lucky you!

Start Indoors

  • Brussels Sprouts
  • Onions
  • Celery
  • Some Herbs

Direct Seed

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Corn
  • Melons
  • Beans

Last Frost Date in March

Things are heating up! There are a still some heat-loving plants you can start growing in your garden!

  • Beans
  • Corn
  • Okra
  • Tomatoes
  • Peppers
  • Eggplant
  • Summer Squash
  • Winter Squash

Last Frost Date in April

Late start getting your garden in? It happens to the even the best gardeners. Don’t despair! There are still many plants you can still get into your garden before it’s too late. Just be sure to check the days to maturity. You may not have time for longer growing varieties before your first frost hits.

Direct Seed

  • Beans
  • Beets
  • Carrots
  • Sweet Corn
  • Cucumbers
  • Summer Squash

Transplant

  • Tomatoes
  • Peppers
  • Eggplant

Last Frost Date in May

What to get the most yield from your vegetable garden? Get another succession of cool season crops such as radishes or heat-tolerant lettuce going! If you have the space consider succession planting other quick crops such as beans and summer squash.

As you start bringing in the harvest have your cover crop seeds ready to scatter if you won’t be succession planting. Bare soil easily erodes, losing organic matter and nutrients. The roots of your cover crops will hold soil in place, increase the organic matter, nutrients, and soil life in your garden.

If you will be planting again in a couple months grow a quick cover crop that will appreciate the cooler spring weather. If the space will be left unplanted consider a cover crop that will stand up to your summer heat.

Direct Seed

  • Radishes
  • Lettuce
  • Summer Squash
  • Green Beans

Cover Crops

Quick Cover Crops for Cooler Seasons:

  • Oats
  • Peas
  • Rye
  • Buckwheat

Last Frost Date in June

While most of your garden is in and the growing season is well underway, you can maximize your growing efforts through succession planting! Early crops or quick growing ones will be ready to go into the ground again so you can make good use of your garden space and harvest even more.

Direct Seed

  • Radishes
  • Lettuce
  • Greens
  • Green Beans
  • Carrots, depending on variety

Start Indoors

For succession planting next month plant these indoors:

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers

What to Plant in June: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

What to Plant in the Vegetable Garden in June

Learn what to plant in June with Homesteaders of America Vegetable Garden Growing Guides!

No matter where you live in America, summer is officially here this month! Even if it is still chilly at night there is something we can all be growing to take control of our own food source and provide our family’s with the freshest and most delicious produce the season has to offer!

What to Plant in June: Vegetable Garden Growing Guide

How to Use the Growing Guides

In the Growing Guides, you will learn what to plant each month according to when your last frost date. 

The Growing Guides will be targeted for the continental United States, which also includes some of the warmer areas of our country such as southern extremes Texas and Florida. Their growing season is vastly different from folks living in the northernmost states.

Be sure to follow us on social media, read our newsletter, or check back on the blog for updates throughout the year! 

What to Plant in June

Last Frost Date in January

Believe it or not, it’s time to start thinking about your fall garden! Though your fall garden is going to look a lot different than someone who is growing in a region where their last frost date is in April or May. Your fall garden is more like a second shot at a summer garden. Lucky you!

Start Indoors

  • Brussels Sprouts
  • Onions
  • Celery
  • Some Herbs

Direct Seed

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers
  • Corn
  • Melons
  • Beans

Last Frost Date in February

Things are heating up! There are a still some heat-loving plants you can start growing in your garden!

  • Beans
  • Corn
  • Okra
  • Tomatoes
  • Peppers
  • Eggplant
  • Summer Squash
  • Winter Squash

Last Frost Date in March

Late start getting your garden in? It happens to the even the best gardeners. Don’t despair! There are still many plants you can still get into your garden before it’s too late.

Direct Seed

  • Beans
  • Beets
  • Carrots
  • Corn
  • Cucumbers
  • Summer Squash
  • Winter Squash

Transplant

  • Tomatoes
  • Peppers
  • Eggplant

Last Frost Date in April

What to get the most yield from your vegetable garden? Get another succession of cool season crops such as radishes or heat-tolerant lettuce going! If you have the space consider succession planting other quick crops such as beans and summer squash.

As you start bringing in the harvest have your cover crop seeds ready to scatter if you won’t be succession planting. Bare soil easily erodes, losing organic matter and nutrients. The roots of your cover crops will hold soil in place, increase the organic matter, nutrients, and soil life in your garden.

If you will be planting again in a couple months grow a quick cover crop that will appreciate the cooler spring weather. If the space will be left unplanted consider a cover crop that will stand up to your summer heat.

Direct Seed

  • Radishes
  • Lettuce
  • Summer Squash
  • Green Beans

Cover Crops

Quick Cover Crops for Cooler Seasons:

  • Oats
  • Peas
  • Rye

Warm Weather Cover Crops:

  • Sunn Hemp (grows very tall- you can also use it to shade less heat tolerant plants)
  • Trefoil
  • Cowpeas
  • Buckwheat

Last Frost Date in May

While most of your garden is in and the growing season is well underway, you can maximize your growing efforts through succession planting! Early crops or quick growing ones will be ready to go into the ground again so you can make good use of your garden space and harvest even more.

Direct Seed

  • Radishes
  • Lettuce
  • Greens
  • Green Beans
  • Carrots, depending on variety

Start Indoors

For succession planting next month plant these indoors:

  • Summer Squash
  • Cucumbers

Last Frost Date in June

If your last frost date is this month, your garden may already be well on its way with plants that can tolerate more chilly weather. June is the time for you to plant all of your direct started seeds in the ground. Tender seedlings can be transplanted now as well!

Start Indoors

  • Unless you have some succession plantings of greens planned, there isn’t anything to be done indoors- it’s time to head outside!

Direct Seed

  • Beans
  • Beets
  • Carrots
  • Corn
  • Cucumbers
  • Kale
  • Squash
  • Melons
  • Sweet Potatoes
  • Warm Weather Herbs, such as Basil, Chamomile, Nasturtiums and more

Transplant

  • Brassicas, if not done already
  • Eggplant
  • Onions, if not done already
  • Peppers
  • Tomatoes
  • Herb Seedlings