Showing posts with label Homestead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homestead. Show all posts

Monday, April 7

Spotlight on Resources to Make Life Easier for the Busy Homeschooling Parent

Can we be honest for a moment?  Homeschooling is a HARD JOB.  It’s a huge responsibility.  There’s the part that everyone sees, and then there’s all the other stuff underneath the surface, which takes a lot of mental energy.

Homeschooling has the potential to place an enormous toll on a your mental mental health.  You might become excessively tired, cranky, or sad, or have difficulty concentrating, or have lethargy that leaves you not even wanting to teach at all.  (aka, burnout)

Taking care of yourself, both physically and mentally, is so important to being an effective teacher and enjoying happy homeschooling days.  You know these, but it never hurts to be reminded, especially if you find yourself needing to re-center.
  • Acknowledge that this is a busy season of life
  • Create a routine to reduce stress
  • But be flexible with your routine, when needed
  • Ask friends and family for help
  • Get plenty of sleep
  • Eat healthy foods
  • Exercise both your mind and body
  • Take a moment all to yourself
  • Remember to have fun

Brush up on all your skills at A Self-Sufficient Life!

Two of our favorite homemaking bundles to pick up are the No Sweat! Cooking Bundle and the Herbal Education Bundle.  The first utilizes batch cooking to ensure that your family has healthy and hearty meals, while cutting down on the prep and cooking time required by you on your busiest days.  The second can be completed family-style as a homeschool unit study or simply used to learn more about using herbs in your everyday life.


This three-book bundle includes:

Freezer Cooking Through the Year – This book includes : the whats and whys behind freezer cooking how-to tips and tricks pantry freezing guidelines, printable planning sheets more than thirty kid-friendly recipes!

Freezer Cooking Through Another Year – Join us for another twelve months of seasonally-appropriate freezer cooking recipes, along with planning tips and helps! This is for anyone who wants to get a leg up on getting healthy meals on the family table, without much fuss, and includes planning sheets and extra hints.

A Slow-Cooked Year – This book includes : the whats and whys behind crockpot cooking, how-to tips and tricks, safe crockpot guidelines, printable planning sheets, and more than thirty seasonally-appropriate, kid-friendly recipes!

DOWNLOAD THE BUNDLE


 

This two-book bundle includes:

  • Teaching Kids About Herbs – Each month, your child will learn about a new herb and how to use it. Herbs are placed in seasonal positions throughout the book, but it does not have to be completed in order.  Includes basic information about seasonally-appropriate herbs, project ideas, and recipes. (28 pages of lesson plans)
  • Simple Kitchen Fixes – Learning to use herbs effectively, for both cooking and remedy, is a lost art. This resource was designed to introduce the beginner to basic herbs and their uses. (31 pages)


Pick up the Whole Foods Cooking Guide FREE on our Subscriber Freebies page!  Not yet a subscriber?  Sign up here!




Tuesday, May 2

Farming Books for Elementary (Interest-Led Learning)

One of our sons is more the hands-on, outdoors type of kid.  He works hard and has great work ethic, but doesn't really plan to continue schooling beyond graduation.  He's not a fan of reading, but enjoys reading about working with animals and the land.  If you've got a kid like this....this list is for you!

**It should be noted that these farm-themed books are for elementary-aged children.  There is a separate book list for middle & high schoolers here.**

Farm & Homestead Books for Elementary School

Lower Elementary


--> Download & Print the Farm Book List <--


Upper Elementary

Caddie Woodlawn
Diary of an Early American Boy
Heidi


Arts & Crafts: Seed Art

Using pumpkin seeds, corn, peas, wheat berries, or any other hard seed, create your own nature art!  You'll need seeds, glue, construction paper, paint, and a little creativity.  (Parents should supervise younger children as small seeds can be a choking hazard.)


Build Your Own Homestead Little Learner’s Homestead Science

This elementary curriculum is an interactive homeschool curriculum that will introduce your child to small scale farming. This one of a kind homestead curriculum is designed for pre-school through to 3rd or 4th grade depending on your child and whether this will be used as a full curriculum or supplemental to another curriculum.  

Build Your Own Homestead is designed to give your child a better understanding of where their food comes from. This allows them to take ownership in providing food for the family whether that’s understanding what they are choosing at the grocery store, helping you tend to the garden, or gathering eggs from your chickens.  Homesteading is a science on multiple different levels. Agriculture, animal science, food science, experimentation, and social science are used everyday on the homestead.
*Homestead NOT required*


For more on homesteading, check out the Homesteading Course at SchoolhouseTeachers!

This homeschool homesteading course is designed for anyone who has a desire to live more independently and prepare much of what is needed each day using their own hands. In this elective course, the student can learn how to work for what they want by making it themselves, instead of participating in an “on demand” society. Homeschool students of all ages learn patience, along with the skills needed to make their own cleaners for the home, sunscreen, homemade ketchup and dry mixes, as well as how to choose animals and prepare for emergencies, and much more. Learning the patience and usefulness of “doing it yourself” can be immensely helpful not only in the sense of living a healthier life, but also for the budget!

Tuesday, December 27

Word of the Year 2023 - Self-Sufficient


Each year, we choose a Word of the Year...something to focus on energies on for the upcoming year.  It's akin to the New Year Resolution, but less of an actual task than a change in mindset.  For 2023, we selected Self-Sufficiency.  While this is something we've been working on for a while, we've decided it's time to put just a little more energy into this goal...

Previous words of the year include:

You can visit each of these to pick up resources and ideas for incorporating those principles and goals into your home.


Homestead Skills

Good planning is essential to a successful vegetable garden. Vegetables have specific requirements, and you must choose your site carefully to ensure a bountiful harvest. Get to Planning Your Productive Home Garden, and follow the basics.  

Want to take it a step further, or spruce up your front yard?  In Raised Beds & Pallet Planters, you'll get step-by-step instructions for unique planters!

Canning, freezing, and drying -- do you know which is best for each food?  Learn to put up your harvest (or bulk buys) in Home Preservation Basics.

At one time, most children learned Basic Outdoor Skills, but now we have to seek opportunities for teaching them.  Don't let another year go by without incorporating these simple tasks into your homeschool.

Whether you have a hobby-homestead, are a frugal momma, or just spent a lot of time with the 'Greatest Generation,' re-purposing is a simple fact of life.  Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without!  These Repurposing Ideas for the Homestead will help you to save money, do a little recycling, and even bring a personal flair to your home!

Immunity is affected by daily habits, lifestyle choices, and exposure to toxins.  Your immune system doesn't just help prevent you from catching colds, but also prevents against things like cancer.  Maintaining a healthy immune system should be top priority all year long, not just during cold and flu season...learn more in Immune Boosting Herbs.

Animals, outbuildings, pipes...all of these things need tending to and don't just wait for better weather.  But be smart about it and follow these tips from Winter Safety on the Homestead.  All I can say is, on cold winter days, I'm so glad we don't homestead closer to the Arctic!


Unit Studies (not just for kids!)

In the Farming & Ranching for Teens curriculum, we've pulled together books, videos, and hands-on projects covering both animal husbandry and agriculture.  We start out by covering the difference between farming and ranching and how the work of these folks affects you everyday, such as in the grocery store.

The My Side of the Mountain novel study features Sam, runs away to the wilderness to escape his family.  He is tested and discovers strength and self-confidence.  Today, the Boy Scouts teach survival skills in their Wilderness Survival badge.

Herb studies combine both science and life skills.  In The Secret Garden novel study, students learn to start and maintain an herb garden, as well as the uses for each plant.

In the Willa and the Wood novel studyyou and your students will learn about foraging for plants and basic herb uses.

Download and print the Farming Book List to incorporate agricultural wisdom into your homeschool.  This list includes both fiction and non-fiction books.

Recently, there has been a rise in the popularity of survival-based books for children.  Our boys were definitely drawn to these more rough and tumble types of books, but they're not just for boys.  Here are some of the Best Kids' Books About Survival.


Eat In Tonight

It may take some adjustments in your shopping and cooking habits, but eating real food (and not nuking it in the microwave) is so much healthier for you!  Your body will appreciate the difference, and after a little bit your mood will improve as you begin to feel more energized.

We use the crockpot to throw together dinners quickly at night.  A bit of prep work, toss it in the pot in the morning, and it's ready to go in the evening!  We also do freezer cooking, so that healthy homemade meals are possible when time is short.  It takes a day of prep (or sometimes, a few hours here and there spread over several days), but is so very worth it.  Does that mean we never eat out or grab something fast?  Nope.  Everything in moderation....
  
A Slow-Cooked Year
This book includes : the whats and whys behind crockpot cooking, how-to tips and tricks, safe crockpot guidelines, printable planning sheets, and more than thirty seasonally-appropriate, kid-friendly recipes!
Another Year of Freezer Cooking
For anyone who wants to get a leg up on getting healthy meals on the family table, without much fuss...this book includes : the whats and whys behind freezer cooking how-to tips and tricks pantry freezing guidelines, printable planning sheets more than thirty seasonally-appropriate, kid-friendly recipes!


Courses & Resources

I cannot say enough about the Homestead Education curriculum!  Introduction to Homestead Science covers the art and science of homesteading in a full year science curriculum. There is daily reading and vocabulary, additional research projects, hands on projects both short and long term, and applied mathematics. Being an introductory course, there are some topics that are covered more in depth than others.  

Peek through the photos here and you'll see that it is multi-modal and incorporates all the subjects!! My son is using it this year, but mom is learning alongside him as well. There's always something new to learn in the homestead life. There's a curriculum for Little Learners as well (preschool / elementary). Use code RANGE10 to save an extra 10%!



One of our favorite courses at SchoolhouseTeachers is the Homesteading course! If you’ve ever wanted to ditch the chemicals in your household cleaners, can what you grow or purchase at a farmer’s market, make your own gifts and candles, or learn how to do things the natural way, you need to see the Homesteading class.

This ongoing course shares tips and detailed instructions that can enable you and your family to live more simply and naturally. Printables and some how-to videos are included with these weekly lessons...and it's all included with the 350+ other courses offered at SchoolhouseTeachers.com.




Pick up the Homemaking & Homesteading Bundle in our Cottage Shoppe!  

The bundle includes twenty-four tutorials with background information for anyone who is interested in homemaking and homesteading. Topics are broken down into:
  • In the Kitchen – Fall & Winter
  • In the Kitchen – Spring & Summer
  • Around the Homestead – Inside
  • Around the Homestead – Outside


The Permaculture Student includes:

  • Private Community Facebook Group for Students
  • Unlimited Access to the Video Library
  • Includes eBook versions of The Permaculture Student 1 textbook & workbook
  • Hands-On Projects with Step-by-Step Directions & Video
  • Open & self-paced course. Start anytime, take your time & enjoy the design!
  • What you will learn:
    • Permaculture Design - homes, landscapes, society, businesses & more
    • Pattern Literacy
    • Reading the Landscape
    • Seed-to-Table Cooking
    • Earthworks
    • Seed Saving
    • Composting, Compost Tea, & Extract!
    • Food Preservation & Storage


DIY - Do It Yourself

Instead of getting desperate and spraying on commercial bug sprays, consider a better alternative... a Homemade Bug Repellant that smells wonderful, is effective, and takes only minutes to whip up!

For the price of one bottle of elderberry syrup at the store, you could make ten to fifteen times that amount at home! Homemade Elderberry Syrup is super easy, and anyone can make it.

Organic pecan butter is one of my favorite treats. It's also $18 per teeny-tiny jar.  I love to eat well, but I'm also cheap, so here is our recipe for Homemade Pecan Butter.

Making Homemade Mustard is simple and easy.  When making your own mustard, you can tailor it to your family's tastes, making it milder or spicier, and add herbs and spices to mix it up.

Another cost-cutting DIY is Homemade Fire Cider & Kombucha!  Get all the benefits for a fraction of the price.

Working out in the heat of summer can take its toll on your body!  Learn how to make Homemade Electrolyte Drinks, and skip the chemicals. (As an aside, I've also had friends and family use the replenishment drink as part of colonoscopy prep, with good results.)


What's your family's word of the year?  We want to know!

Make this year YOUR year! This reusable calendar features monthly at-a-glance pages and weekly pages with space for notes and planning. Each week also has a habit tracker grid to help keep the momentum going with your new habits! Just print and reuse each year for your planner.

Monday, October 17

Homestead Education for Upper Grades

Are you following us over at Instagram? If so, you'll know that we had a chance to check out the new Homestead Science curriculum from Homemade Revelation before it dropped (I know, we were so lucky!!), and I cannot say enough good things about it. Here's what we had to say the first week...

🌿🍁Ok, but for real...I am LOVING this new curriculum from @homestead_education !!!

Peek through the photos and you'll see that it is multi-modal and incorporates all the subjects!! My son is using it this year, but mom is learning alongside him as well. There's always something new to learn in the #homesteadlife...

Now that we've really had a chance to utilize it, I want to break it down and let you see inside so that you can decide if this is a good fit for your family. Similar to many curricula, the course has daily reading and vocabulary, additional research projects, hands on projects both short and long term, and applied mathematics. Being an introductory course, there are some topics that are covered more in depth than others. The author says there will be future curriculums covering additional topics more in depth, but you could easily use only this course and reap a great deal of knowledge!

Middle / High School Learners

Created for upper grades learners, Introduction to Homestead Science contains 18 interactive units that teach agriculture science, life skills, applied mathematics, and character lessons.  Each of those units includes eight lessons, spanning two weeks, for a total of thirty-six weeks.  Each lesson has accompanying workbook activities and projects.  The curriculum also includes tests, quizzes, and six homestead projects (no acreage required).

Units include:
  • Building & Land
  • Tractors & Small Engines
  • Poultry
  • Companion & Predator Animals
  • Dairy & Fiber Animals
  • Meat Animals
  • Compost & Soil
  • Insects, Bees, & Bugs
  • Gardens
  • Orchards & Vineyards
  • Grains & Forage Crops
  • Food Preservation
  • Home Cooking
  • Off-Grid Life
  • Hunting, Fishing, & Trapping
  • Foraging & Herbs
  • First-Aid
  • Homestead Accounting
Homestead Science is available in both digital and print versions. Both versions come with an answer key for busy parents to utilize, too!

Homestead science focuses on real life skills that can be used in practical applications. This also includes some trial and error along with insightful questions on how to improve the projects.
Some projects include:
- Electric fence to keep slugs out of raised beds
- Hot compost
- Drip irrigation
- Calculating feed rations and costs
- Herbal salves
- Capturing sourdough
- Planning home cooked meals
- Water purification
- Wilderness navigation
- Homestead accounting
- Real life research projects
- Opportunity for advancement in quality of character
- and many more!


Peek inside the Homestead Science curriculum!


This is just one of the pages from the table of contents, showing how in depth this course really goes!  The textbook component uses a combination of visual aids and well-researched text for instruction, and the student pages provide a place to check that knowledge.



After each lesson, there is a vocabulary check to ensure students understand what is being discussed.  I prefer to have my students do the vocabulary section of the journal BEFORE reading the lesson so they will be primed to pay attention to certain words and will already have a basic understanding of the meaning.  Each lesson also has 'life skills' aspects, such as this piece on assessing and responding to emergencies.


Within the course are several hands-on projects...some in the kitchen, some in the garden, and some around the homestead.  This gives students a chance to apply what they are learning in a real-world scenario!  Don't have a large parcel of acreage?  No worries.  These projects don't require a lot of space, and there are suggestions for things to do if you are in an apartment or otherwise unable to utilize any land at all.  The cooking projects are both practical and tasty, and (if you're like me) you'll enjoy turning the kitchen over to your teens for a bit...


The student journal also has space for applying information in a real-world scenario, such as running and agricultural business.  Students are asked to do more research, create theoretical (or real, if you have the space and inclination) entrepreneurships, and figure out how to make them work.  These 'life applications' are something I love most about this course!

Elementary Learners

Little Learner's Homestead Science is an excellent curriculum for elementary aged students. It's an interactive homeschool curriculum that will introduce your child to small scale farming.  While it tends to be light on the reading, it has lots of activities, visuals, and gives a full understanding of all the parts of a homestead, including where food comes from, which allows them to take ownership in providing food for the family whether that’s understanding what they are choosing at the grocery store, helping you tend to the garden, or gathering eggs from your chickens.

Little Learners is available in both digital and print versions.  There is also an accompanying 2 foot x 3 foot wall poster to help your student visualize what is being learned.

For families who just want to dip their toe into the homesteading world, or like the idea of using farm materials to teach, The Homestead Alphabet associates farming facts with the alphabet using coloring pages and a variety of homestead activities. This is a great preschool through 2nd grade curriculum.  It can be used independently, without any other pieces, but it should be noted that if you are planning on using the Little Learner's Build Your Own Homestead, the Homestead Alphabet is already part of it so there is no need to get both.  

The Homestead Alphabet is available in both digital and print versions.

Finally, for families who just want some read-alouds or short readers, there is the the reader box set.

This boxset of Homestead Education Stories contains wholesome children’s books about homesteading and teaches positive character traits.  The set has nine homestead story books at a discount price and includes the audiobooks, too!

The stories are clean, represent traditional families, and are secular. If you opt for the full curriculum, Little Learner’s Homestead Science, you get copies of these stories in that.
  • Wade’s Treehouse
  • Quailetta’s Giant Egg
  • County Fair
  • Thomas the Tomato
  • My Favorite Squash Plant
  • Weekend at Grammy’s
  • Famous Whole Wheat Flour
  • Daddy’s Tractor
  • Grandpa’s Fishing Knife

Freebies

If you just need a little piece here and there, snag one of the free printables available on the site.  These may seem like little things, but having this information on hand makes a busy homesteader's life a lot easier!  

  

Homeschool Helpers

Whether you're tackling the Little Learners or the full Homestead Science, these Homestead Student Planner Pages will help you keep track of lessons as well as teach older students record keeping and problem solving.  These planner pages and journals are your documentation that while you got the kids away from a desk and into more hands on learning, they were still meeting state requirements.  Included are suggestions for how to use the planner.

Test your knowledge of food, farming, & traditional skills for all ages with the family game on sustainability!  Are you ready for a fun and educational game trivia game that you can take anywhere?  With over 300 questions, including bonus kid’s questions, Homestead Trivia is perfect for:
  • Game Night
  • Road Trips
  • Educational Reinforcement
  • Ice Breakers




Interested in learning more about Homesteading?  You're going to LOVE our Word of the Year for 2023!!  😉