The Self-Sufficient Backyard: Start Small, Build a Life That Feeds You

The Self-Sufficient Backyard: Start Small, Build a Life That Feeds You 🌿🏡

You don’t need acres of land to live more sustainably. A “self-sufficient backyard” is really just a collection of small systems that work together—saving water, growing food, reducing waste, and storing what you harvest.

Here are the core building blocks (pick ONE to start this month):

1) Water management

Collect rainwater from roofs into barrels/tanks

Use drip irrigation + mulch to cut watering in half

Add a small pond or swale to slow runoff and recharge soil

2) Composting (your free fertilizer factory)

Turn kitchen scraps + yard waste into rich soil

Simple rule: 2 parts “brown” (dry leaves/cardboard) + 1 part “green” (food scraps/grass)

3) Food preservation

Can, dehydrate, ferment, or freeze to stop harvest waste

Even beginners can start with: freezing herbs or dehydrating tomatoes

4) Medicinal + pollinator garden

Grow herbs for teas/salves and to bring beneficial insects

Easy starters: mint (in a pot), calendula, lavender, thyme

5) Root cellar style storage

You don’t need a real cellar—cool dark storage works

Use crates in a garage/basement for potatoes, onions, squash (kept separate)

6) Vertical gardening

Trellises and towers = more food in less space

Great for cucumbers, beans, peas, squash, tomatoes

7) Season extending

Cold frames, mini tunnels, and row cover let you grow weeks longer

Perfect for greens: lettuce, spinach, arugula, kale

8) Off-grid power (optional)

Solar can run small tools, lights, or irrigation timers/pumps

Best advice: don’t try to do everything at once. Build one system, let it become routine, then add the next.

âś… If you could start with only ONE this week, which would it be: compost, rainwater, or season-extending?