Everything You Need to Know
Lives in the Dirt
Seed-saving tutorials filmed in root cellars. Fermentation guides from third-generation homesteaders. A community where someone in Vermont teaches someone in East Texas how to read frost lines.
Knowledge disappears
when it isn't passed down.
There are people in this country who know how to read a sky before rain, how to cure a ham without refrigeration, how to start a fire with wood that's still green, how to coax tomatoes from clay soil in a drought year. Most of them are getting older. Most of them don't have anyone to teach.
And somewhere else, someone just bought five acres and doesn't know where to start. They've watched every YouTube video and read every forum thread and still feel like they're missing the part that only comes from standing in a field with someone who's done it for forty years.
Homestead exists to close that gap. Not with algorithms or automated courses, but with the oldest technology we have: people teaching people. A community where the knowledge that lives in hands and soil and memory gets written down, filmed, and passed to whoever needs it next.
This is that place. Pull up a chair.
What lives in the archive
Four pillars of practical knowledge, contributed and vetted by members who've put it to use.

Save Seeds Like Your Grandparents Did
Over 120 heirloom varieties with complete saving, drying, and storage guides. Filmed in actual root cellars, not studios.
The Living Kitchen
Kimchi, kefir, sourdough, kvass, and forty-seven types of pickles. Written by people who learned from their grandmothers.

Grow for Where You Are
Frost dates, soil types, water tables, and planting calendars specific to your region. Not your USDA zone — your actual land.

From First Chickens to Full Herds
Raising heritage breeds, pasture rotation, basic veterinary skills, and the honest math of whether animals make sense for your land.
No account needed to browse. Join to contribute.
Who's already here
"I'd been canning for 35 years, thought I knew everything. Then a 24-year-old in Oregon showed me a cold-pack method for green beans that cut my processing time in half. That's what this place is."

"We moved from Brooklyn to 7 acres in the Hudson Valley with zero idea what we were doing. The frost-line thread alone saved our first garden. Someone from Vermont walked us through it line by line."

"My grandfather kept a journal. Every planting decision, every harvest weight, every failure. I posted a photo of three pages and within a week had 40 people helping me decode his shorthand."

who you'll find here
Join the Homestead
Tell us a little about where you are and what you're growing. We'll make sure the right people find you first.
