Polyface
Homestead Tsunami: Good for Country, Critters, and Kids
Homestead Tsunami: Good for Country, Critters, and Kids
Couldn't load pickup availability
From his 66-year farm, food, and family experience, Joel Salatin explains why thousands of Americans are selling their urban homes, cashing out retirement funds, and heading to the country. The exodus is both a goodbye to one life and an embrace of another.
When society breaks down, people head away from the city. For food security, health, and satisfaction, homesteads offer a haven of hope and help when much seems hopeless and helpless.
While fear motivates people to change, only faith sustains. This book offers multiple reasons for modern homestead living. Some are:
- Secure, stable, safe food.
- Healthy, happy children.
- Superior immune function.
- Community and connections.
- Meaningful work.
- Creation stewardship immersion.
In his 16th book, Salatin offers the homestead why to those contemplating the jump, those trying to dissuade their friends from jumping, and those who regret having jumped. Despite its sweat and disappointments, homesteading offers incalculable benefits that feed the soul, soil, and spirit.
Homestead Tsunami digs deep into the ethos of today's best pension plan: living and learning proximate to people who know how to build things, repair, things and grow things. A better life awaits.
Author: Joel Salatin
Publisher: Polyface
Published: 01/16/2024
Pages: 320
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.15lbs
Size: 8.98h x 5.98w x 1.02d
ISBN: 9781733686631
About the Author
Joel Salatin and his family own Polyface Farm in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. The farm grows pastured livestock and forestry products, marketing directly to thousands of families. Featured in countless print media, documentaries, and YouTube videos, the farm represents the best in commercial-scale environmental agriculture.
He speaks internationally to food and farming conferences, has authored 16 books, and is editor of The Stockman Grass Farmer, the world's premier trade publication for pasture-based livestock farming. Some 15,000 visitors a year come to the farm for tours, food, education, and entertainment. He writes columns for Plain Values magazine, homestead journals, and Manward, an e-magazine.