A beginner's guide to self-sustainability in the suburbsGardens, goats and chickens in the suburbs? Absolutely!The easy-to-follow advice in this book will show you everything you need to know to enjoy an abundant, independent life on food and products grown in your own back yard. You may feel like you have superpowers the first time you prepare a meal using only ingredients you grew in your garden. And is there anything you can't do after you lather up with a bar of soap that you made in your own home? This book is full of recipes and tips that will help you discover the joy of self-sufficiency. Don't worry; suburban gardening doesn't mean you have to rip up your yard, or risk being ostracized by neighbors or your municipality or homeowners association.Inside you'll • Gardening instructions for any-size yard and any skill level • A complete overview of keeping chickens, mini-goats and bees in the suburbs • More than 40 food recipes featuring ingredients from your garden or animals • Canning techniques • Recipes for natural deodorant, toothpaste, lip balm and other beauty products • Step-by-step soapmaking instructions and soap recipes • Natural cleaning recipes for kitchens, bathrooms, surfaces and laundry • Gift basket ideas • Community-building ideas including babysitting co-ops, meal swaps, and barter systems • Advice on how to keep the peace with family, neighbors, and officials if your self-sufficient plans meet resistance
I write children's books, I'm more famous in my area for my pets! See my new book Little House in the Suburbs and videos uploaded below and the newspaper links here, here, here, here, and here.
This book is an overview of what could be possible to accomplish in the suburbs as far as self-sufficient living. It's not particularly detailed, like it tells you that you may need to supplement a beehive's winter nutrition but not how to figure out if they need it, and an overview of hive disease but not how to tell if your hive is not thriving.
It's a good starting place for ideas, but you'd need a whole other set of resources to actually do any of the things in this book. Or it could be interesting if you're a year into some of these projects and need a little insight from someone who has lived it. The authors are encouraging and tell of their own experiences, which was interesting.
Little House in the Suburbs: Backyard Farming and Home Skills for Self-Sufficient Living is basically a beginner's field guide for simple living when the place you live in happens to be suburbia, and not a farm. Included is a vast wealth of information on backyard gardening, keeping small livestock such as chickens and goats, directions for homemade items like soap and deodorant, and much, MUCH more.
I am so glad that I read this book. I want to try pretty much everything in it (Except for beekeeping. Bees are complicated.) I hope my future family is ok with chickens and goats!
this book is for the absolute beginner. seasoned pinterest users with interest on the subject can completely avoid it. as it is a collection of pinterest pins in a book. might come handy but lack of detailed information makes this book s bit dull. i'd much prefer a more personal book with their experiences than a collection of how-tos
GREAT resource for beginners! I wish I had this book last spring. My garden wouldn't have been nearly so pathetic! I was going to give up after 2 years of garden failure, but now I want to try again.
I'm totally digging this book. It is witty and has a ton of great recipes for all sorts of things. It is one of those library books that I'm going to have to run out an purchase.
Finally, a book about self-sufficiency that only focuses on suburbia! Great pictures, multiple points of view and opinions, and detailed personal experience makes this book a winner.
Excellent book discussing many different types of self sufficiency skills in a fun, modern way. Topics range from gardening & having a chicken coop to raising goats in a suburban area.
Suuuper fun read. I devoured it all in one fell swoop when I should have been sleeping (although that occasion is getting rarer and rarer these days, ptl), so I must admit to skipping some of the parts about mini goats and apiaries, fascinating though they were, because I have both a minuscule backyard and two housemates under the age of four.
But I am now excitedly planning some shade-resistant vegetable gardening on a lasagna-style garden on the narrow strip of yard I can claim to grow things AND making a compost bin made out of a garbage can AND actually considering making my own soap, which I had hitherto relegated to the realm of fantasies I would never live out. And mebbe buying a copy for my friend who absolutely yearns for a goat, good urbanite that she is.
Furthermore the authors' voices did not pall or become annoying, as I thought they might at the beginning, remaining entertaining and engaging all the way through.
I should probably lead with the fact that I'm not the intended audience for this book. While I did find the first few chapters about different ways to garden and keep animals (including bees!) interesting and generally informative, the second half is just a recipe/idea book I mostly skimmed. I didn't get why there were things about babysitting (???) and how to convince your partner to make changes to your life that match up with a sustainable lifestyle. This just isn't all that helpful unless you fall into a very specific category and live in a particular kind of suburb.
Easily the BEST gardening/home farm book I have ever read. Deanna and Daisy's personalities shine through: they are witty and relatable, humble and informative. Every page, chapter and topic simplifies things instead of complicates it with another conflicting voice. Throughout the book, calm reassurance that I'm either not messing this up (yet) and everyone will mess it up at some point gives me great confidence that I'm on the right road (instead of a doomed failure)! What a blessing this book has been! I've read an enjoyed every word so far!
I enjoyed the narrative of this book. We are far too reliant on big corporations for our everyday needs. This is a back to basic guide on how to reclaim self-reliance. The book also contains great recipes for making soap, shampoos and homemade vanilla (I’m making that tomorrow. I definitely recommend this book. Now I need some land so I can have a couple of chickens and dwarf goats.
I liked the chapters on planting and chickens, and I liked that it's authored by women who have relatively normal lives/families. I was disappointed in the recipe...there were so many included but very few I was interested in trying.
Loved this - full of useful information and I love how they have actually lived what they write so the tips and advice is based on real life. Very helpful for anyone living in a residential area that wants to grow food or keep animals
Great starting point for anyone who wants to be a little more self-sustaining. Gardening, beekeeping, goats, chickens, making your own cleaning supplies, and soap!
This is my 5th homesteading book I’ve read this year and this one was by far my favorite! I feel like I can actually try all the things introduced in this book
An extremely realistic approach to starting a backyard homestead. Both authors were very encouraging in their chapters of expertise, made things like composting seem very doable. So many good recipes for cleaning and hygiene products, I bought this book used on Amazon for future reference. Highly recommend!