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Is Your Farm Producing Fruit that Will Last?

Season 2 Episode 10 Published 6 hours ago
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Your garden can look amazing while your life quietly runs on empty, and that’s exactly why we wanted to hit pause and talk about “fruit that lasts.” 

I’m Noah Sanders, and this is a catch-up from our family, our farm, and the work God keeps pressing on my heart: stop chasing what looks impressive and rebuild life from the roots up. If you care about Christian homesteading, faith-based farming, and land stewardship that actually holds together over time, this one is a needed reset.

In this episode I share highlights from the Homestead Conference in Texas, including what I taught on thermal composting and why gardening in the Deep South feels like relearning everything. Pests, heat, red-clay soil, and year-round growth change the game for Alabama and the southeastern United States, and that’s part of why I’m working on a new book with my friend David the Good, focused on dependable Deep South survival gardening. 

I also give an update on the Well-Watered Garden Project, a simple 20 foot by 20 foot training garden built on Foundations for Farming principles, designed to help Christians grow food while practicing humility, unselfishness, and faithfulness.

Then we go deeper. John 15 doesn’t leave room for fake fruit: Jesus is the vine, we’re the branches, and real growth comes from abiding in Christ. We talk about pruning, limits, and why the smallest daily moments often reveal the truest state of our discipleship. If you feel stretched thin, this will help you rethink what obedience looks like right now.

Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who’s carrying too much, and leave a review so more homesteaders can find the show. What’s one commitment you need to prune this season?

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