Hey there, I'm Annie!

I’m here to help you cut through the noise and actually figure out chickens, gardening, and homesteading—without the overwhelm, guesswork, or Pinterest perfection pressure.

Midwest girlie

I didn’t grow up on some Pinterest-perfect homestead. I grew up in South Dakota, where real food came from someone you knew and "slow living" wasn’t a trend — it was just life. These days, I live tucked into the Idaho mountains, raising birds, building off-grid systems, and figuring it out as I go. I'm not fancy. I'm just resourceful, stubborn, and not here to be told by the FDA what's "safe."

Green Thumb Guru

If I’m not out wrangling chickens or hauling buckets, I’m probably elbow-deep in the garden. I grow what I eat because I don’t want produce that’s been sprayed, picked before it's ripe, shipped, and stored for weeks. Give me dirt under my nails and heirloom seeds over sterile grocery store shelves any day.

Community Builder

I’m not interested in chasing followers — I’m here to build something real. Whether it’s helping you automate your coop, decode your chicken’s weird behavior, or learn why your towels feel crunchy (hint: it’s your detergent), I create tools and content that actually help. I believe in local connections over internet likes, and if I can help you grow your first garden or raise your first flock, that’s a win in my book.

Why Trust ME

Because I’m not here to sell you a fantasy — I’m living the real thing.

I didn’t grow up doing this. I learned the hard way: one frozen waterer, failed garden, and rogue chicken at a time. I built my homestead from scratch in the Idaho mountains, off-grid and off-script — with a grow room inside and almost 100% chemtrail-proof greenhouse outside (yes, really).

I don’t gatekeep. I share exactly what’s worked for me — from mealworms to meat birds, soil hacks to coop automations — because you deserve more than half-baked advice from someone who’s never actually hatched a chicken.

I’m not a guru, I’m just saying what everyone’s thinking: the system’s broken, and growing your own food is the most radical act of rebellion we’ve got left.

So if you want someone who gets it — someone who’s walked through the overwhelm and figured out how to make this lifestyle doable (and actually fun) — you’re in the right place.

Let’s grow something real.

Why choose my course

Because Googling every chicken question at midnight isn’t a strategy.


My "Hatch to Harvest" course is the guide I wish I had when I started — no fluff, no filler, just straight-up answers and hard-earned experience. It's for people who actually want to raise their own meat birds without the overwhelm, confusion, or sugar-coated nonsense.

Inside, you'll get step-by-step instructions for everything from setting up your brooder to harvesting clean, healthy meat — ethically, confidently, and with your sanity intact. Whether you're brand new or just tired of piecing together info from a bunch of random YouTube videos, this course will walk you through it all — start to finish.

You don’t need to be a full-blown farmer to raise your own food. You just need someone who’s done it, messed it up a few times, and figured out what actually works.

I made this for the everyday homesteader who’s ready to do things differently — because raising your own food shouldn’t be complicated. It should be common sense.

What problems can I solve

You’re here because you want real answers from someone who’s lived it — the good, the bad, and the broody.

If you’ve ever felt…

Overwhelmed by chick care and unsure if you're doing it "right"

Confused about coop setup, predator protection, or how to keep things clean

Frustrated with all the conflicting info about raising meat birds ethically

Grossed out by store-bought chicken and ready to take control of your food

Tired of wasting time searching through YouTube videos and Facebook groups

I’ve got you.

I’ll walk you through every part of raising chickens from hatch to harvest with clear, practical steps — no jargon, no guilt-tripping, no fluff. Just real help from someone who’s done it off-grid, on a budget, and without a team of farmhands.

This isn’t about being perfect. It’s about learning, doing, and feeding your family real food with real confidence.

Read The Blog

Power of Pollinators

The Power of Pollinators

June 06, 20244 min read

From busy bees to graceful butterflies, these winged marvels weave the very fabric of our existence, helping us to build a variety of fruits, vegetables, and blossoms in our gardens. In this blog, we're unraveling the intricate world of pollinators, understanding their significance, the hurdles they face, and how we can be their champions in our own little patches of paradise.

The Importance of Pollinators

Pollinators are essential for the survival of humans and the Earth's ecosystems. They help flowering plants reproduce, which are the source of most of our food, beverages, fibers, spices, and medicines. In fact, pollinators are responsible for one out of every three bites of food we eat, including fruits, vegetables, chocolate, coffee, nuts, and spices. Pollinators also help plants grow larger, more flavorful fruits and increase crop yields. In the United States, pollination of agricultural crops is valued at $10 billion annually.

These unsung heroes of our planet - bees, butterflies, birds, and bats are responsible for the reproduction of a staggering 75% of the world's flowering plants and 35% of our global food supply. Their tireless pollination not only sustains ecosystems but also fuels agricultural prosperity, contributing billions to the global economy annually.

Pollinators also play a key role in the food web, providing food for more than 80% of birds in the U.S., as well as reptiles, amphibians, and mammals. They also contribute to healthy soils and clean water by fostering robust plant communities.

Pollinators include a wide variety of creatures, such as bees, beetles, ants, wasps, butterflies, moths, hummingbirds, bats, and small mammals. However, pollinators are under threat from environmental pollution, contemporary forms of agriculture, and controlled forms of pollination.

Challenges Facing Pollinators

As native vegetation is replaced by roadways, manicured lawns, crops and non-native gardens, pollinators lose the food and nesting sites that are necessary for their survival. Many pollinator populations are threatened by habitat degradation and fragmentation. Pollution, pesticides, pests, pathogens, and changes in land use, and climate change have all been associated with shrinking and shifting pollinator populations, particularly insect pollinators.

Habitat that pollinators need in order to survive are shrinking, but you can help mitigate this problem but supporting pollinators in your area.

Supporting Pollinators in Your Garden

But fear not, just one visionary with a garden can make a world of a difference! It's time to embrace your role as a guardian of nature and create a safe haven for these extraordinary creatures.

Here are some surefire ways to lend them a helping hand:

1. Embrace Diversity: Choose a diverse mix of native flowers that bloom at different times throughout the year. Plants like milkweed and coneflowers attract butterflies, while lavender and sunflowers are favorites of bees. Hummingbirds love trumpet-shaped flowers like bee balm and honeysuckle. This variety ensures a continuous supply of nectar and pollen for pollinators.

2. Nesting Nooks: Craft cozy homes for nesting bees and butterflies using charming bee hotels, enchanting butterfly houses, or rustic brush piles, allowing them to raise their young in style. Your local garden center may already have some of these in stock so make sure to check there if you don't want to craft your own.

3. Bye-bye Pesticides: Many chemical pesticides are very toxic, and in addition to killing pests, they can harm you, your children, your pets and the environment. So next time, before reaching for that can of bug spray, try some of these safer alternatives. Opt for natural pest control methods to protect pollinators from pesticide exposure. Integrated pest management techniques and organic options can keep your garden healthy without harming beneficial insects.

4. Quench Their Thirst: Create inviting water stations with shallow dishes or bird baths adorned with pebbles, serving as refreshing oases for pollinators to quench their thirst and cool off during scorching days. Shop at thrift stores or yard sales for items to repurpose!

5. Spread Pollinator Love: Ignite a pollinator passion in your community by raising awareness about their importance and inspiring others to take action. Pollinator gardens are great to educational opportunities for homeschool events, tea parties and more! Find unique ways to inspire your community and lead by example.

Remember, we hold the key to safeguarding the life-giving services pollinators provide, for we are the guardians of this precious land. By cultivating some enchanting gardens full of pollinator delights and championing their protection, together, we can secure a flourishing tomorrow for generations to come.

So, let's extend a grand floral welcome, inviting our buzzing allies to partake in the creation of a magnificent garden paradise. The stage is set, the invitation is sent - let the pollination party begin!


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