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Homesteading Couple Hasn’t Bought Groceries in a Year of Self-Sufficient Living

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Published on 14 Jul 2021 / In How-to & Style

Chris and Stef jumped into self-sufficiency last year when they decided not to buy groceries for an entire year, including staples like salt, sugar, coffee, and flour! Instead, they've been growing, catching, raising, and harvesting 100% of their food supply on a small 1/2 acre homestead. They're only a few weeks away from completing their year-long homestead challenge and they attribute their success to hard work and to the fact that they live in the Southern Gulf Islands where they have a great growing climate and access to the ocean.

Be sure to follow their@Lovin offtheLand homesteading adventures – they're going to continue producing most of their own food even after the challenge is done, and may even announce a brand new challenge later this year!
https://www.youtube.com/c/lovinofftheland
https://www.instagram.com/lovinofftheland/
https://www.facebook.com/Lovinofftheland

The couple's four main sources of food have been:
CATCH - they catch fish, prawns, and other seafood from the ocean
GROW - they grow loads of vegetables, fruit, herbs, and spices on their land
HARVEST - they forage for things like mushrooms, berries, nuts, and seaweed
RAISE - they raise laying hens, chickens, and turkeys for eggs and meat

Eating only what they produce has drastically reduced the amount of money that Chris and Stef spend on groceries (they still buy hygiene products and other items that are not food and beverages) but a lot of the savings went directly towards building infrastructures like fencing and the chicken coop.

Another advantage of living off the land and sea like this is that they have noticed a huge reduction in the amount of household waste they're throwing out. Food from the garden doesn't come in a package!

It was inspiring to meet these two and see all the work they've put into learning and working towards their goal of becoming more self-sufficient with their food production. They taught us a ton and we're looking forward to following along with them. Be sure to check out their YouTube channel which is called Lovin Off The Land:
https://www.youtube.com/c/lovinofftheland

Thanks for watching!

Mat & Danielle

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Blog: www.exploringalternatives.ca
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/exploringalternativesblog
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/exploringalternatives/

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COMMENTS
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We want our channel and our comments section to be an inclusive space where everyone feels welcome to watch and contribute. For this reason, comments that are inappropriate or hateful will be reported and/or deleted.

Please discuss and debate with respect, and report inappropriate or hateful comments directly to YouTube.

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CREDITS
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Music & Song Credits:
All music in this video was composed, performed, and recorded by Mat of Exploring Alternatives.

Editing Credits:
Mat and Danielle of Exploring Alternatives

Filming Credits:
Mat of Exploring Alternatives

Additional Photos from the start of the challenge provided by:
Chris and Stef from Lovin Off The Land

#homestead #selfsufficient #livingofftheland

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KEEPER
KEEPER 3 years ago  

beats eating bugs.

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Dadadamdam
Dadadamdam 3 years ago

I haven't watched the video, but IMO, animal grazing is better than agriculture. My thinking is that you can just capture an herbivorous animal like goat, cows or even nastier animals like pigs and you don't need to do much to make them grow. Just let them out in the fields and let them graze (don't make them overgraze) and just bring them back. Not so with agriculture. You have to probably devote more time for agriculture. But I don't know about these things so I'm only speculating and might be wrong too.

   1    0
KEEPER
KEEPER 3 years ago

@Dadadamdam: yeah but you got to protect them though, there are a lot of predator's who kill and eat chicken. i mean your partially correct though.

   2    0
Dadadamdam
Dadadamdam 3 years ago

@KEEPER: doenst the same thing (getting eaten) apply to plants too.

   2    0
KEEPER
KEEPER 3 years ago

@Dadadamdam: yep. free range is great because there is plenty of food for the chickens, but they still must be protected as much as possible due to other animals interfering, unless you don't mind losing your valuable food source that just keeps on giving. i used to have chickens when i was a kid, we only had 3 of them, and they used to lay eggs that were not fertilized eggs but they would lay them anyway, we didn't have a coop for them, but our back yard was pretty open where they could roam and we never fed them, they always ate the bugs in the grass, unfortunately we didn't have a place prepared for them to lay the eggs so we had to search for them within the yard. it was like Easter all the time lol.

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Dadadamdam
Dadadamdam 3 years ago

@KEEPER: not just chickens, though. I was also thinking about growing animals like goat, pigs, cow, bull and snakes too. Who knows, even ostriches too. I want to consume ostrich egg one day.

   1    0
KEEPER
KEEPER 3 years ago

@Dadadamdam: gonna have to have a much bigger yard for that.

   0    0
sithsith
sithsith 3 years ago

I know I might be bitching, but where are the kids of this self sustaining couple?

   1    0
KEEPER
KEEPER 3 years ago

I guess they don't have kids.

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