The Coop

Homestead Living

Educational and inspirational conversations with the homesteaders who are at the forefront of the modern homesteading movement.

  1. 4월 24일

    Ep 19: Susan Poizner on Growing Fruit Trees with Confidence

    If you’ve ever dreamed of stepping outside and picking fresh, juicy fruit straight from your own trees (but felt intimidated by pruning, rootstocks, pollination, or where to even begin) this episode is for you. In Episode #19 of The Coop, Anna sits down with Susan Poizner, orchardist, author, educator, and founder of OrchardPeople.com, for a warm, practical conversation that takes the mystery out of growing fruit trees. Susan shares why most big-box store trees set beginners up for disappointment and explains how choosing the right variety and rootstock for your climate and space can eliminate up to 60% of future problems. She walks through the importance of bare-root trees, proper planting techniques, and why the first 3–5 years are critical for shaping a strong, productive tree. The conversation dives into cross-pollination (why some trees need a partner and others don’t), the difference between open-center and central-leader pruning, and how timing your pruning cuts makes a big difference in tree health and fruit quality. Susan also explains why grafted trees are the norm and how they allow us to grow exactly the fruit we want … without waiting 5–7 years to see what a seedling produces. Whether you have room for just one small dwarf tree on a patio or are dreaming of a backyard orchard, this episode gives you the knowledge and confidence to get started the right way. Susan’s passion is contagious, and her straightforward advice makes growing fruit trees feel exciting and totally doable … even for complete beginners. If you’re ready to move beyond “someday” and actually plant your first fruit tree this season, don’t miss this conversation.

    1시간 23분
  2. 2월 13일

    Ep 14: Lisa Steele on Gardening with Chickens … Symbiotic Systems That Actually Work

    Lisa Steele returned to her fifth-generation roots after Wall Street, launching Fresh Eggs Daily in 2009 to share natural, herb-based poultry care the old-timer way. Her book Gardening with Chickens showed that flocks and gardens can thrive together: chickens debug, fertilize, and till; gardens supply greens, bugs, and scraps.  Ten years on, the updated 10th anniversary edition (https://homesteadliving.com/gardening-with-chickens) adds refined systems, small-space hacks, and lessons from a decade more dirt-under-nails experience. The message is clear: build a symbiotic relationship that supports both your hens and your plants. Cut your feed bill, raise healthier birds, and grow better food (even on a small plot of land). Learn how herbs can support your flock, how to prevent your chickens from destroying your plants, and how to harness the power of your garden and your chickens to improve the health and outputs of both. If you want practical harmony between hens and plants, this is it. In this episode, Anna and Lisa cover: Lisa’s journey from Wall Street back to her rural rootsWhy she chooses natural herbs over chemicals for keeping her flock healthySafe plants vs. toxic ones for chickensHow chickens can help manage compost, weeds, and garden pests Timing free-range access to optimize your garden while protecting your main-season cropsChicken tractors, tunnels, and wing clipping: real-world pros and consDecorating the coop for joy (curtains, herbs, and aesthetics for form and function)Lessons learned from more than a decade of gardening with chickensA sneak peek into Lisa’s updated 10th anniversary edition of her book Gardening with Chickens

    1시간 9분
  3. 1월 29일

    Ep 13: Sally Fallon Morrell on The Timeless Wisdom of Real Food

    Thirty years ago, Sally Fallon Morell dared to challenge the low-fat gospel. Her book Nourishing Traditions wasn’t born from theory. It came from a mother’s quiet rebellion against the “virtuous” diet being sold to families. She discovered Dr. Weston A. Price’s photographs of indigenous peoples with broad jaws, straight teeth, and robust health, then watched modern guidelines push the opposite:  margarine in place of butter, skim milk instead of whole milk, and seed oils over saturated fats.  Sally pushed back against the “diet dictocrats,” and recommended an ancestral diet where red meat, raw milk, and healthy fats reign supreme. The message is disarmingly simple: nutrient-dense, traditional foods (properly prepared) built the healthiest humans for centuries.  Butter for vitamin A and contentment. Soaked grains to unlock minerals. Bone broth for glycine. Liver once or twice a week for the sacred nutrients that guide new life. Today the tide is turning. Butter sales climb. Raw milk finds new fans. The food pyramid has (rightfully) been flipped on its head. One family at a time, people are remembering what real food and health actually looks and feels like. If optimizing your family’s health and nutrition matters to you, you won’t want to miss this conversation. In this episode, Anna and Sally discussed: The story behind Nourishing Traditions and discovering Dr. Weston A. Price’s workWhy traditional, nutrient-dense foods beat modern “healthy” guidelinesThe dangers of industrial seed oils and the supremacy of butter & animal fatsImportance of vitamin A (from liver, butter, cod liver oil) for fertility & healthy babiesRaw milk’s superiority, finding sources, and why pasteurization creates problemsProper preparation of grains (soaking, fermenting) to unlock nutritionSacred foods: liver, shellfish, bone broth, fermented vegetablesBuilding health before pregnancy—and redemption even if you “missed the boat”Saturated fats vs. carbs for satisfaction, mood, and avoiding addictionThe quiet revolution: rising butter sales, raw milk popularity, wiser families survivingAnd yes, plenty more

    1시간 14분
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Educational and inspirational conversations with the homesteaders who are at the forefront of the modern homesteading movement.

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