
Our Homestead
Oh my, how far she’s come! When we first bought this home back in the summer of 2013, she was a blank slate. A couple of mature trees, a few useless mismatched shrubs in odd locations, a front and back yard full of crabgrass “lawn”, and side yards with bare dirt.
We were essentially blank slates ourselves too. I have an education in sustainability and environmental studies, and we’d casually puttered with a couple small raised garden beds in rental homes in the past, but aside from that – we had little to no knowledge or experience with building, landscaping, or homesteading! I don’t think either of us even knew what that concept was when we started this journey. Nor did we intentionally set out to do it.
Yet with minds full of ideas, (home)bodies that don’t like to sit still, and a passion for being outside, we consequently have poured most of our free time, energy, love, and very modest disposable income in to transforming all of our outdoor spaces, little by little, from lifeless “yards” into flourishing and purposeful edible and medicinal gardens…
…an urban food forest, I like to call it.
Before we knew it, our home had become a homestead – a living thing that feeds not only our bodies, but our minds and souls too. Here, we grow and preserve about 85% of the produce we consume, raise chickens (as dear friends who happen to also provide eggs!), and pursue sustainable living practices like rain water capture and several methods of composting. We share our indoor space with 33 house plants and 3 kitties – Quincy, Dalai, and Bodhi Moon.
We dream, sweat, collaborate, compromise, relax, laugh, and love here. Most times, there is no where we’d rather be. In essence, we have created our own paradise, and it’s a paradise for local wildlife too! In 2018, our property became an official Monarch Waystation as well as a Certified Wildlife Habitat. You can find a full video of the property to follow.
Located just about halfway between San Francisco and Los Angeles, we reside in a small beach town in San Luis Obispo County on the Central Coast of California. Known as “SLO Cal”, not SoCal. There is big difference between here and there! This area is fairly rural, with a handful of modest-sized towns surrounded by vineyards, beaches, farmland, and open rolling hills.
We are right on the border of USDA gardening zone 9b and 10a. But unlike most similarly-numbered zones, it is very temperate and doesn’t get hot here often. This area is considered a Mediterranean climate, though being only one mile inland from the ocean, our summers are quite foggy. We actually struggle (or don’t even attempt!) to grow certain heat-loving crops like corn, melons, or fat heirloom tomatoes. Frost and freezing is also very rare here. I know, I know… we are spoiled rotten. Though an ideal climate sure does help, it is not necessary to have a thriving garden!
The gardens aren’t the only thing that makes our homestead special. Our town isn’t quite “urban”, and we definitely are not in suburbia, but we are surrounded by neighbors. However, our property is tucked back away from the street, located behind another property and only accessed by a long private driveway – leading to our little secret garden. A decent yard was a MUST when we were house shopping. You can image how absolutely giddy and blessed we felt when we came across this property that virtually had two private yards, the front yard doubling like a second backyard. With a very tight budget in an extremely competitive market, this was a shining diamond in the rough for us! I knew where I wanted the chicken coop right away, and the rest transpired and evolved with time.

Fun side story: When I was a little girl, I spent a week running around my neighborhood, uprooting (errhm… stealing) bulb flowers and small plants from other yards, re-planting them within a grove of bushes in our front yard ~ my first secret garden. Yes, I got in trouble.
Before you go getting too heart-eyed, overwhelmed, or green with envy (please, don’t!) over photos of our garden, remember to keep scrolling and take a peek at the collection of before and after photos at the very bottom of this page also! These are some of my favorite things to share on Instagram; they help people to see how – with a little time, energy, and love – a perfectly average, even boring space can be completely transformed into something magical. Also keep in mind that this did NOT happen overnight! We have tackled one or two large projects per year, over the last five years. Anything is possible when you put your mind to it! If you haven’t yet started creating your dream garden, you may enjoy this read ~ “How to Start a Garden: 101”
If you desire to, you can do this too! I believe in you.
Homestead Specs:
Our property itself is a modest .2 acres – approximately 9,000 square feet – but that number also includes our long driveway. The house itself is fairly small, at just under 1300 square feet, and that’s perfectly okay for us. Less house means more outdoor space! We had never really measured and taken inventory of our individual yard spaces, so we just popped outside to do so! Here is the verdict:
The front yard garden is 2,430 square feet. A couple hundred square feet of planting space was just added here in the fall of 2018, when we removed a portion of the driveway, and a whole mountain of useless pest-infested ice plant, expanding the yard into its place. In terms of edibles, the current residents of the front yard include: two avocado trees, a fuyu persimmon tree, two pineapple guavas, a strawberry and lemon guava, a dwarf weeping mulberry tree, four fig trees, a loquat tree, three passionfruit vines, two blueberry bushes, and various rotating veggie crops amongst the five raised beds and handful of wine barrels used for planting. That doesn’t include the plethora of other perennials, herbs, and annuals – some for medicinal purposes, some for the pollinators, a few simply there for the pretty. A 140-gallon rain barrel is hooked up on the front porch to collect a small portion of our captured rain water, with the monarch enclosure nearby.


The L-shaped backyard garden is 1,780 sq feet. Here resides the patio garden: our concrete patio that is now surrounded by five raised beds, fully enclosed with trellises attached to the yard-side of the beds designed to keep the otherwise free-ranging chickens excluded from this space. The archway leading to the rest of the back yard is covered with evergreen passionfruit vines, creating even more of a verdant courtyard vibe. On the patio, we use dozens of containers to grow everything from cacti to pineapple guava to cannabis and a dwarf Fuji espalier apple tree.


Heading out through the passionfruit arch, you find yourself in the “chicken yard”. Basically, the spoiled-you-know-what chickens get free range of the backyard all day, while instead we strategically fence off and protect certain areas of it, like the stone raised pollinator island. We call it “Stoney Island”.
In this backyard area, we were fortunate enough to have several mature fruit trees in place when we moved in: a Meyer lemon, an Anna apple, a mandarin orange, and a pomelo – like a white grapefruit. We have also added a fig, lime, kumquat, finger lime, and second meyer lemon tree to this space.


Right: Peeking through some stunner sunflowers to the chicken coop and coop garden beyond.
Turning left from the pollinator island into the next section of the L-shape backyard, you’ll find what we call the “coop garden” area – four large raised beds near our chicken coop. As you can see, it is also strategically fenced to prevent access from the winged monsters, err… I mean sweet dear beloved chickens. This garden space is along a south-facing wall – maximizing sun exposure along with radiant heat – an ideal orientation for gardening if you live in the Northern Hemisphere like we do.


Beyond the chicken coop to the left is a long, narrow, 550 square foot side yard. This once all-dirt barren space now houses so many productive and important things: the chicken run, a 6×8’ greenhouse in which we start all of our garden seedlings in, a milkweed nursery to support our monarch butterfly fostering passion, a large compost bin that can be used passively or turned into an active hot pile, a massive passionfruit vine that doubles as a privacy screen, and two large 530-gallon slimline rain capture tanks, bringing our total rainwater capacity to 1200 gallons!

On the opposite side of the house, there is another smaller side yard where a few homestead essentials are stored – a couple modest storage sheds, a homemade potting bench, and the small-but-mighty worm bin.
So, as you can probably gather, we try to make good use of every single inch! Every space, no matter how small, holds unlimited potential ~ you just need to look past what is already there and think outside the box.
One day we hope to have a larger property and even more space to grow and play – I want goats, and bees! And a yurt for you all to come visit! A place to hold workshops! – but for now, we are more than fulfilled… and plenty busy!
Welcome to our home!
Quick overview video tour via Instagram
Full video tour via YouTube
Before and After Photos
*I will work on writing posts about the details of all of these projects, including the steps we took, materials used, and lessons learned!
The Evolution of the Front Yard Garden


Then in the fall of 2015, we corrected our mistake, shown in the bottom half of the photo. We pulled out the beds (yes, the soil too), removed all the grass and roots from that half of the yard, put down commercial duty weed block landscape fabric below, then put down the beds and gravel.


Bottom: Spring of 2018, with the new pollinator paradise in full bloom.




Bottom half: Fall 2018. Note the new corner addition, terracing, and fence we built! Instead of weedy pest-laden ice plant, the corner now houses 5 fruit trees and dozens of perennials.

Bottom: December 2018. A whole new world, full of life.
The Evolution of the Backyard Garden

Bottom: The patio garden in fall of 2018. The chickens free range the back yard on the other side of the raised beds.

Bottom half: Just after we finished enclosing the patio in early 2015. With raised garden beds, trellises and gates added to not only to create more space to grow food, but also exclude the chickens from this area. The patio garden is born!

Bottom half: February 2018, when we completed the new stone pollinator island. We left this area grass for a long time, for the chickens sake. And then they ate it all. So…

Bottom half: Summer 2018, a few months after the “pollinator island” was built, and starting to fill in nicely! The fencing keeps the chickens out.

Bottom: Summer 2018 ~ the summer of kale trees.

Bottom: Summer 2018. The passionfruit arch is a focal point, and also excellent privacy feature from the neighbor behind us!

Bottom: Winter 2018. I can tell it’s winter because Zoey is molting, hard.
66 Comments
Denise
Love your posts, you are such a blessing of information.
Eileen
This is great! All of the before-and-afters give me hope! I’m approaching the 2-year anniversary of purchasing my house and it’s SUCH a work in progress – especially living in Minnesota when I only have a few months for yard projects. Thanks for sharing, Deanna!
DeannaCat
Eileen – Yes, there IS hope! Just keep chipping away at it when you can. Thanks for stopping in and saying hi!
Deborah Burns
So beautifully and productively created!
It is so good to have before and afters, not only for your sense of accomplishment (transformation is a lot of hard work!) but good to show others how to see potential!
Thank you for producing your new blog (it’s a lot of work too!) and it will grow just like your garden has and still does. Your heart and soul give it life! 🙂
Thank you!
~Deborah
DeannaCat
What sweet things to say Miss Deborah! Thank you, so much. Yes I love showing people what is possible through those before-and-afters. Our yard didn’t come this way, or just magically turn into this! But hard work pays off. Thanks for the kind words!
Rachel Chalhoub Bathija
Such magic!!! My dad and I are just in awe of all your hard work. Looking forward to having our own homestead one day. 🙂
Jen
You’ve been a favourite follow on Instagram for a while now and I’m so stoked you started a blog! I’m 2 years into a small town (suburban-ish?) homestead/re-wilding project and you’re a constant source of inspiration and also a bit of garden envy – I’m in zone 4B (Quebec) and my garden is currently under 3 feet of snow and ice! Your content is good medicine. Thanks so much for sharing!
DeannaCat
Ooof! Stay warm up there! I know, I feel like a bit of jerk, with our climate sometimes… Enjoy your homestead journey!
Teresa Green
Just wow! What a beautiful job you have both done. There are so many types of plants. I wish I could have a walking plant tour through your garden. I get excited and want to hurry the process of my garden. But I keep remembering to take it one step at a time. Thanks for putting your gardening life out there for us to dream!
DeannaCat
Yes! One step at a time. I am not sure if you saw it, but I mentioned in the How to Start a Garden 101 post that not only is it not feasible to do everything immediately and overnight, but it kind of takes the fun out of it! I really enjoy doing it in stages, because it gives me more and more new projects to look forward to and plan with time. Enjoy the process!
Tracy Douthit
Just amazing! Thank you for sharing, inspiring, and your authenticity! Thank you for teaching and letting us watch the growth and transformation process.. and learn from you at the same time! Just a breath of fresh air! Thank you!
Tina
Here from Instagram! Lovveeed reading this. Thanks for all the great, consistent content – it’s truly inspiring.
DeannaCat
Hi Tina! Thanks for coming on over to check it out! Positive feedback like yours is what keeps me motivated to keep sharing, so thank YOU!
Lauren
I LOVE all of the work you’ve done in your home. We are in the process of doing the same to the house we recently bought. I can only hope it turns out as wonderfully!
I saw in a previous Instagram post that you use your aloe to fertilize many of your plants. Is aloe also good for citrus trees? We have a new lemon tree we are trying to settle in.
Many thanks!!
-Lauren
Lilia Beltran
Deanna– you have a blog! Catching these before and afters of your homestead takes me back to when they were works in progress. You truly are THE inspiration in my own garden ventures. Your tips and info are reliable, effective, and 100% real. Thank you for sharing the wealth–so excited you’ve come such a long way!
DeannaCat
Hey Lilia ~ Thank you for the sweet words, and for being here along for the ride for so long! Best of luck (and lush) in your 2019 garden!