Townhouse Homestead?

our home

We rent a two bedroom townhouse here in Spokane, it is our little home, but could it ever be a homestead? Maybe not, but I am rather determined to get it as close to that as possible.

From Wikipedia: “Currently the term homesteading applies to anyone who is a part of the back-to-the-land movement and who chooses to live a sustainable, self-sufficient lifestyle.

I know I could only dream of growing enough food to feed my family on my little 17×8 shaded patio (the soil part of it is only 6×7 feet and it is mainly hard clay.) But I also know there there are things I can do that will move me as close to the homesteading dream as possible. I know we will not live here forever. Currently my goal is to own 5 acres 10 years from now, but between now and then, I want to live my life in a way that keeps me as close to the Earth as possible. And cheaply! I truly believe that we can live a green live without using tons of green!

I have a lot of doubt of course, I have a lot of personal negativity that has to be dealt with while I move along this path. I admit I am a total city girl. I was raised in very big cities, Spokane is the smallest place I have ever lived with half a million people. My parents did have houses and we always had gardens but I really do not know the first thing about farming. How do you irrigate a garden large enough to feed a family? How do you retrofit a house with solar panels? How do you set up a chicken coop? Do chickens attack you when you gather their eggs? Heck, I’ve never even changed a diaper you know? Most city girls know even that, and here I am wanting to use cloth diapers on my baby.

Still I am trying very hard to stay positive so that the daunting feelings of “not knowing” fail to discourage me. Most of my dreams are healthily sprinkled with idealism and well as being long term. They will require their large share of dedication and back breaking work. I do know with all certainly that I can learn and that I am driven to learn. I know I am intelligent and creative and I can achieve this if I really want it.

But back to the townhouse homestead, I figure if I start small I can grow from there and see how far it takes me. We have done all the usual “green” stuff already with changing to compact fluorescent light bulbs, recycling, buying used whenever, buying local whenever I can. I try to plan meals around what is in season (which is also cheaper.) I try to make as much stuff from scratch as I can. This morning I am going to be making chicken stock. I know some people don’t go this far even, but I find a huge personal reward is knowing that I have made something that is as close to the Earth as possible with my current means.

Still, I feel I could do more, my goals are small for this year, they have to stay in our budget (we have no debt and I want to keep it that way) and they must work around all the learning which comes with having your first baby. These are the things I can to do this year, (I plan on documenting all them, maybe they will eventually help someone with dreams similar to mine):

1. Vermicomposting: In the next month, I will be setting up an indoor worm bin, I have everything I need for it except a pound of red wigglers (worms) which I am waiting to here back about from a couple sources. Vermicomposting is basically using worms to quicken the composting process. It is an efficient way to get ride of my organic kitchen waste with no smell and I can use the worm castings (poo) to enrich the soil for my plants.

2. Herb Garden: I want to grow all the herbs I currently buy prepackaged in the store. I plan on growing them in containers (so that I can bring them in come winter time.) I am going to start with the ones I purchase most frequently; basil, cilantro, rosemary, mint, oregano, thyme. I eventually want to pick up more but I think these are the best ones for me to start with. I will probably buy starter plants as I do not have the room the start things from seed.

3. Vegetable Garden: This year I will probably only grow tomatoes and perhaps strawberries, again from starter plants and in containers. Personal rant on GM foods aside, I would like heirloom if possible. I am choosing to do these in containers as my patio soil it is very poor and needs lots of work to make it better. (I may plant Purple Prairie Clover in the soil as it grows well in poor soil and fixes nitrogen in the soil.) If these do well on my patio then next year I may expand to more types of vegetables.

My biggest current delema with tomatoes in determinate and indeterminate, basically ones that grow to a fixed size a stop or ones that vine and keep growing. Determinate seems best for container gardening, however all their fruit ripens at once, where as indeterminate ones have bare fruit all season long.

4. Baby: Our biggest change this year will be the baby, as any new parents wants, I hope to do everything right but mistakes as also part of the learning process. I want to breastfeed, use cloth diapers, make my own baby food (when that stage comes.) I want the baby to grow up knowing how important taking care of the Earth is and be surrounded by it’s beauty.

Maybe that is the main reason I am making this whole green push, I have been gradually doing it over time, but I feel I need to set a good example for Michael and my child. I know that starts with me being dedicated to the things I love. Whatever direction these goals end up going, I am sure they will all lead to a very interesting year though!

8 Comments

  1. jett
    Posted Saturday, January 26, 2008 at 11:22 am | Permalink

    You have some great goals and your year, no matter what, is going to
    be pretty amazing. I just wish I had half your discipline.

  2. Reisaf
    Posted Saturday, January 26, 2008 at 3:47 pm | Permalink

    You should see if you can get those mountable window planter things, the ones that hang outside might not be much but could get you a little more room for growing some things where they definatly won’t get steped on.

  3. Posted Saturday, January 26, 2008 at 3:59 pm | Permalink

    I’d have to find out if my landlady would let me attach a window box to the siding… for some reason I don’t think she would but now I got some food for thought!

    I do have a big inside windowsills though, so I can keep some plants there. I have to leave room on the upstairs ones though, the cats would knock the plants down if I didn’t… ^_^

  4. Posted Saturday, January 26, 2008 at 7:26 pm | Permalink

    I bet you’ll do just fine.

  5. Posted Sunday, January 27, 2008 at 12:29 pm | Permalink

    It is good to have goals, even big ones that seem impossible. You have some smaller, achievable ones too. I used cloth diapers and they worked well, and I made my own baby food too. Both saved a lot of money. I find growing fruit and vegetables is time consuming when I am working, so I try to support local farmers instead. I do grow tomatoes, lettuce and herbs though for seasonal meals.

  6. Posted Sunday, January 27, 2008 at 9:48 pm | Permalink

    Well done! Great to have some goals – and to go for them. Good luck – and buy youself a small pot of herbs – which will keep you in fresh edible leaves for months!

  7. Posted Monday, January 28, 2008 at 9:39 am | Permalink

    I wanted to use cloth diapers. I regret to say that I did not end up doing this. The breastfeeding, yes, one year per child. I grow my own herbs. I dehydrate and dry at the end of summer. I don’t bring mine in during the winter, as they are planted in the ground. Solar panels? No idea. We kept chickens for a while and I LOVED it. No, the hens don’t attack you when you go out to gather the eggs, but the rooster will. Unless you plan on letting your hens set (get their eggs fertilized to hatch chicks), you won’t need a rooster. For our purposes, about 5 hens would be plenty to keep us in eggs. Unfortunately, we had 17. Chris built a chicken coop and fenced it in I didn’t like keeping the chickens in the pen. There weren’t enough bugs and grass for them to eat. They would have been much happier if they could have roamed free during the day and then hopped onto their roosts at night. We tried this, and they ended up roosting on our porch rails, ignoring their chicken coop and crapping all over everything. Also, because this is the country, there are many stray dogs. The dogs ended up eating our chickens. And Chris had to battle a 6 foot chicken snake to get it off of Juliet (a hen). That was not fun.

    If I had it to do over again (and I may), I would have 5 hens, no roosters and take all my grass clippings and leaves from yard work and put them in the henyard, along with the chicken food. And I would understand that chicken snakes are par for the course, and not freak out and assume they will bite me and kill me.:-)

  8. Lykaios
    Posted Tuesday, May 6, 2008 at 7:05 pm | Permalink

    Hey!

    I think your goals are great– if you have any questions abotu growing plants or livestock including chickens (and in the future perhaps bigger like cows) don’t hesitate to ask, as I was raised in a small farming village with experience in all of these things :) My family raised laying hens and meat hens and turkeys, my mother worked on a dairy farm for several years and we had a large garden for a few years. I definately think your goals are attainable. Try not to worry too much (I know easier said) and just plow on ahead. It seems you are being quite realistic towards the whole thing, so that’s definately a good start.