Episode Details
Back to EpisodesEpisode 1070: How TO Deal With Homestead Burnout
Description
Today, we talk about homestead burnout, why many new homesteaders feel tempted (and do) give up after only a year or three, and what to do about it. We also cover our usual Monday segments.
Featured Event August 23: Wild Edible Walk with Kerry Brown of Strong Roots Resources – 8:30 AM before Curds and Connection at the Holler Homestead.
Sponsor 1 Strong Roots Resources – Permaculture consulting, education, and more.
Sponsor 2 AgoristTaxAdvice.com/LFTN – Helping entrepreneurs, homesteaders, and freedom-minded folks handle taxes the smart way.
Tales from the Prepper Pantry
- Setting up Basecamp for long-term storage
- Road food from the pantry
- Fall garden focus
- Pushing for more dried herbs
Frugality Tip From Margo: Before making a large purchase, check multiple sites. Margo scored a $100 gift card from Northern Tool by ordering online (over $1000 purchase), then picking up in-store. A little research can literally pay off.
Operation Independence Adding value can make all the difference — like offering a Wild Edible Walk add-on for the cheese class.
Main Topic of the Day: How to Fix Homestead Burnout
- Discussion with Tactical about my dead garden bed
- Why so many homesteads give up after 1–3 years
- Striving for perfection
- Using 1 person to do the work of 2, 3, or even 4
- Instagram homesteads vs. reality
- The same reasons we burn out on anything
- The homestead is always there — and you live there
- Striving for perfection
- Why people get into homesteading
- The homesteader's curse
- My 140 tomato story
- If you're not on a homestead yet, what you can do
- The homesteader's curse
- How to avoid homestead burnout
- Create a space where you can truly let go and reset
- Have other interests or hobbies
- Adjust expectations before you start
- Create goals that aren't fear-based
- Learn to spot burnout early:
- Constant fatigue
- Irritability or loss of excitement
- Letting maintenance slide
- Avoiding certain areas or projects
- More arguments or isolation
- Spending more time on screens than outside
- Self-check questions:
- When's the last time I felt genuinely excited about a homestead task?
- A
- When's the last time I felt genuinely excited about a homestead task?
- Constant fatigue
- Create a space where you can truly let go and reset