Learn to Homestead with SKIP

This new program helps older folks find an heir to their property, while providing valuable skills and resources to a new generation of young homesteaders.

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by Mike Haasl
To earn badges, participants can complete a wide variety of skills, such as building a picnic table.

Learn to homestead with SKIP (Skills to Inherit Property) by accomplishing new skills, and maybe even inheriting a property of your own.

I’d like you to meet a fictional young woman named Pepper. She’s 18 years old and reads Mother Earth News cover to cover. She wants to make the world a better, healthier place. She dreams of having a garden, five ducks, and a cozy cabin in the country, and to accomplish it all herself. She just has a few problems to overcome.

Homesteads cost money, and the price of land just keeps increasing. Pepper will have to work a long time to be able to afford her own place. She sees a couple of routes to earn money for her future property, but they aren’t great. She could get a job she’s passionate about, but positions in her areas of interest probably wouldn’t pay much. Or, she could get a higher-paying job, but she may be miserable the whole time. Both of those options might include a hefty college price tag. Regardless of the route, it’ll probably take 10 to 20 years before she can scratch up a down payment for a homestead — and 30 more years to pay it off. So, if everything goes well, Pepper will be about 60 years old when she finally has her little slice of heaven paid off and can think about retirement.

Pepper also faces the hurdle of becoming a capable homesteader. Running even a simple acreage requires a lot of skills. She didn’t grow up on a farm, and nobody taught her how to garden. She can read books and watch videos of people doing these activities, but that’s a far cry from getting her own hands dirty. If she magically had a place today, she’d have to build skills by “drinking from a fire hose.” It sure would be nice to have some experience with chickens before the chicks arrive.

I’d also like you to meet a fictional older man named Otis. Otis has a 200-acre property with two houses, an orchard, a big garden, a tractor, and all the homesteading gear you can imagine. He had to give up the animals a few years ago because he couldn’t keep up with them. His kids have moved away and have no interest in living there. He wishes a grandchild or another young relative would take an interest in his lifestyle, but he doesn’t know any young people who’d be a good fit. If he wills his land to his children, they’ll just sell it to the highest bidder. After his death, Otis foresees his lovingly tended garden, orchards, and the old house he grew up in being leveled. His new house might even be bulldozed to make room to subdivide the acreage. All his decades of work will be erased. These prospects sadden Otis, but what can he do?

  • Updated on May 23, 2023
  • Originally Published on May 1, 2023
Tagged with: beginning homesteading, Homesteading, Mike Haasl, Permies, SKIP
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