Saturday, April 4, 2026

Homesteading/Food Gardening Books on Sale!

It’s Eastertime at our Little Farm!
At the moment, if you celebrate Easter you may be munching on chocolate Easter eggs, or prepping for your celebratory brunch. 

But if you’re also food gardener or homesteady person, you’re probably planning to jump back to your spring activities as soon as you’ve polished off your last chocolate bunny!

With that in mind, whether you’re an experienced gardener or starting your first food garden, and/or you love hens, you might be looking for some fresh inspiration—so you’re in luck…

My homesteady ebooks Little Farm in the Henhouse and Little Farm Homegrown are currently on sale for $.99!


Little Farm in the Henhouse brings you the joys and challenges of keeping a backyard flock of laying hens--plus tips and techniques for maintaining healthy, happy chickens!




This engaging memoir follows a midlife couple’s hen adventures in the Foothills of the Cascade Mountains--with nature and wildlife in the mix! Little Farm in the Henhouse is available at all your favorite retailers…and will be on sale for $.99 all through April.


Also on sale for $.99, but only through April 7…




Little Farm Homegrown is a gardening book for anyone who’s dreamed of going back to the land for a simpler life… After two city-bred Boomers weather their first, tumultuous year on their rural backyard farm, they discover their homesteading journey has only begun. Like the first Little Farm in the Foothills memoir, Little Farm Homegrown is a warmhearted tale for gardeners, nature-lovers, and dreamers of all ages! 

In the meantime, if you celebrate Easter, or simply the wonders of springtime in general, I send you all my best wishes!



Monday, March 16, 2026

Irish Romantic, Happily-Ever-After Movie for St. Patrick’s Day!

Gentle Irish film
Do you love Ireland? Farms and country life? And a shy romantic hero? I have the perfect St. Patrick Day movie for you!

Scanning our library’s DVD shelves one rainy day—our satellite internet is too slow for streaming—I came across Wild Mountain Thyme.

From the opening scene, I was a goner.

I fell head over heels for bumbling, quirky Anthony Reilly, headstrong, outspoken Rosemary Muldoon, and this gentle story of unrequited love and family feuds, set in the lush countryside of County Mayo.

Wild Mountain Thyme was mostly filmed near Crossmolina, with real pubs and a couple of working farms among the locations, and misty, far-off Mount Nephin overlooking gloriously greener-than-green pastures.

The film was sweet and funny, clever and tender in all the best ways…and never have I ever, in just a few weeks, watched a film four times.

As the romantic leads, Emily Blunt and Jamie Dornan had great chemistry, two would-be lovers who were clearly meant for each other. 

Emily Blunt and Jamie Dornan

I seriously wanted the movie to go on forever! However, if you’re into the usual rom-com plot lines and sexually-charged banter, you wouldn’t call this a romance. In fact…

“This is the weirdest movie I’ve ever seen.” —Bestselling Texas Romance Author

Maybe this is one of those movies where you either love it or hate it. While I adored Wild Mountain Thyme, I admit it had a few…issues.

For a story about two farmers, there’s not a whole lot of farming going on. Rosemary is running the family place by herself, but she has loads of free time to gallop around the countryside on her wild white stallion.

Anthony also seems to have tons of leisure, in which to float his little traditional “coracle” boat down the local stream. The farms were extremely sanitized too…lots of cows but not a speck of manure. But that’s movies for you.

Wee Irish boat for lazily floating down a stream

As Rosemary channels a little Maureen O’Hara’s mid-century feistiness, her country-chic, mismatched skirts and cardigans also makes you think the movie takes place in the 70s or something, 

I also had to shake my head when Anthony’s suave, New York cousin (Jon Hamm) comes to visit. Flying in from New York into the small Ireland West airport in rural Mayo, he drives up to the farm in a hired Rolls Royce! Out in the sticks, where on earth would he have rented a Rolls, I ask you?

Yet I couldn’t help loving every moment. When Jon Hamm’s character (who wants to buy Anthony’s farm) tells a pretty young Irishwoman he’s a farmer, she retorts, “No, you’re not.”

“How can you tell?” says he.

She gives him a long look. “You don’t look tired enough and your hands don’t look like feet.” Zing!

When Anthony’s comes to Rosemary’s house, soaking wet from the epic rainstorm, he pulls a filthy handkerchief out of his pocket to wipe off his face.

Rosemary advances on him with a pair of oversized kitchen tongs and snatches away his hanky—then throws a clean towel at his head so hard he almost falls over. Maureen O’ Hara couldn’t have done it better.

I was even spellbound through the longest, talkiest movie climax you could ever imagine…but film critics really gave the film a hard time.

Critics felt the film was too Darby O’Gill-ish—that any minute you could expect a leprechaun to pop in. And here’s where the Irish flair for a vivid turn of phrase comes in.

One called it “a steaming heap of celluloid cabbage,” and another said it was “overt paddywhackery on display.”

The critics’ biggest beef, however, were the actors’ Irish accents. Apparently not even Jamie Dornan’s accent was good enough—and he’s from Northern Ireland!

“Irish Accent Code Red Crisis”—Journalist Eavan Murray

But I think the people who gave it a bad rap had missed the point. The film’s themes—so very Irish, of loneliness, of depression, and the love of the land—had been treated with such tenderness and real emotion. So I think it was really meant to be a fable…a tribute to days gone by. 

“It’s a beautiful, eccentric, strange poem of a film.” —Emily Blunt

Even if Wild Mountain Thyme was “gentle, sweet, twinkly nonsense,” I’m sure once you watch this Irish happily-ever-after fairy tale, you’ll never forget it. 

Three more unforgettable Irish movies you’re sure to love, if you don’t already…

The Secret of Roan Inish, Brooklyn, and with Maureen O’Hara at her finest, The Quiet Man

For more Irish entertainment and culture, visit “Irish Fun” at www.susancolleenbrowne.com !

Monday, February 9, 2026

What *is* Homesteading?

Sometimes, I just want to play in the woods
There’s something I’ve been puzzling out for quite some time: what exactly is homesteading? 

At one of my recent “Grow a Homestead-Style Food Garden” classes I teach at the local community college, a student asked me that very question. 

I think of myself as living a “homesteady” life, yet I had to admit I wasn’t quite sure what to tell her.

On the one hand, isn’t it the concept of “homesteading” kind of obvious? For example: it’s 1) growing your own food, 2) being big on DIY, 3) maybe living more simply. 

Self-reliance is a prime consideration. To me, however, homesteading is so much more…

But first, let’s consider what homesteading is *not*.

It’s not necessarily living on a large acreage out in the boonies. (We do live on 10 wooded acres out in the sticks.)

It doesn’t mean you’re off-grid. (We do have a solar array for our home, but it’s connected to the grid. When the power goes out, we’re out too. But we also have solar for our well pump, which is connected to 3 humongous batteries, and that means we’ve got plenty of water when the power does go out!)

It doesn’t mean you’ve installed a graywater system, or you collect rainwater, or you eat only what you can grow or raise. (We grow a *lot* of the fruits and veggies we eat, but far from all of them!)

A food gardener I admire greatly lives in a mid-sized Midwestern city, on about 1/2 acre, and raises lots of food for her family, and calls her life a homesteading journey. She writes eloquently:

“Homesteading is deeply tied to the seasons, and time begins to flow differently when you lean into the rhythm set by nature.” —Laura Lemon

I agree 100%! Homesteading, or as I prefer to say, “the homesteady life” is simply a mindset. A few things to ponder about this way of thinking.

~Living and raising food according to the seasons, going with the flow of nature.

~Caring for nature, being closer to the land

~Creating homes and food for pollinators and other “good garden friends” as my husband John would say.

The little toad house John created for one of our *friends*

~Aiming for crop productivity. A perfect, photogenic garden? Not so much!

~Using what you have on hand…why buy something when you can make do?

Here’s a real-life example.

We’ve got some neighbors about 3 miles down the main road, a lovely young family with about 2 1/2 acres on a former clearcut. When they moved in, the property was mostly covered with young firs, 3-10 feet tall.

They bulldozed down all those lovely young firs, and cleared all the underbrush and grass. Then they graded the entire acreage, and I do mean thoroughly: back and forth, back and forth, until the land was as bare as a moonscape. 

I wondered, were they going to plant a huge garden, or even put in a little farm with a pasture?

But no. They left the bare dirt, then planted about 100 little store-bought cedar saplings around the perimeter of the property. Despite lots of rain, about 90% of the saplings died within 2 or 3 months. My guess is that the soil was completely destroyed from all the grading.

Why, I wondered, didn’t they just leave a little circle of firs and brush around the borders of their property? The strip of native plants would have made a mini-habitat for birds and insects, privacy for their yard, plus a nice windbreak. 

They ended up replanting with a whole new set of cedar saplings. A whole lotta money spent for both sets, when they could have just used what they had on hand, and let nature do what she does best! 

Native red currant that popped up on our property provides oodles of food for bumblebees!

As you see from my pic above, I used what I had on hand for gardening gear…an old shirt of John’s! 

Anyway, back to cultivating a homesteading mindset…

Maybe all you have room for is a small container garden. But you can still raise food “homestead-style”! And even if it’s cold and snowy where you live, it’s not too soon to start thinking about it…I’ll chat more about this next time…

And you can get my free gardening guide, Little Farm in the Garden, plus find more about all my homesteady books at www.susancolleenbrowne.com !

Photo credits: John F. Browne