Monday Apr 13, 2026

Faithful Harvest MN

Today I'm talking with Abigail and Christian at Faithful Harvest MN

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00:00
You're listening to A Tiny Homestead, the podcast comprised entirely of conversations with homesteaders, cottage food producers, and crafters. I'm your host, Mary Lewis. At Green Bush Twins and Company, we believe in the power of creativity, imagination, and art to bring people together.  Our mission is to inspire connection across all ages, encouraging understanding, individuality,  and a true sense of belonging. We're building more than a brand. We're growing a mindful community rooted in kindness, intention, and shared purpose.

00:29
At our core, it's about real people sharing real stories, ideas, and products that make everyday life more meaningful.  If you believe in living with purpose and supporting brands that care,  you'll feel right at home with Green Bush Twins. That tiny homestead podcast is sponsored by Green Bush Twins and Company. Today I'm talking with Abigail and Christian at Faithful Harvest Minnesota in Dexter, Minnesota. Good afternoon, guys. How are you? Good. How are you doing? Good.

00:54
So I'm in LaSore, Minnesota and it's overcast here and it's like 57 degrees. Is that what it's doing where you are? Yeah, it's about that here. It's really windy today, but the sun is out. So we're happy about it. Yeah, the sun is not out here. It's kind of great.  Oh.

01:15
But that's okay, because at least it's warm and it's not snowing. Finally, yeah. You get all cooked up over the winter and then finally like the nice days, you just want to break out and do clean everything all at once.

01:33
Oh yes, my husband spent most of Easter day outside and he was either riding the tractor and watering chickens or he was in the greenhouse planting seeds. yeah,  perfect timing to start doing this stuff. It gets exciting when the weather finally starts getting nice and  itching to get outside and get all that stuff done.  Absolutely. So do you guys consider yourselves homesteaders or farmers?

02:01
Uh, we consider ourselves homesteaders,  um, just because  whenever I think of farm, I kind of think of the large scale industrial farming and  our homestead is  very small batch and homemade and we have it smaller right now.  yeah. Okay. So tell me a little bit about yourself and what you do as homesteaders. Yeah. So,  um,  I'm right now I'm an ER nurse,  um, and I'm

02:31
part time with that right now. And uh that's kind of a new transition for me personally. And  we've been doing the homestead for about four years now.  And uh recently over the last year, we've gotten much more into the business side of the homestead and just starting to share what we do on the homestead and our daily life and everything. So that's kind of where we're at right now and what we do.

03:01
I'm just spending a lot more time doing stuff for marketing and just getting ready for the planting season here. Yeah. When starting the homestead, I do have a drywall business.

03:21
other than doing the homestead.

03:26
so you both have outside income.

03:30
Yeah, yeah, we both have our jobs outside of this.  And then, you know, we're considering this a really fun job.  The homestead is the job you want to be doing. The other two jobs are the jobby jobs.  Yeah, exactly.  The goal is to maybe one day we both do this full time and that's kind of our long term dream one day. But for now, just paying the bills with that and then in our free time we...

03:59
do everything we can for the homestead just to be out there and just working together on it. sounds very familiar after talking with people over 500 episodes in the last two and a half years. You're not alone in that guys. That's how it's done. So did you always want to be homesteaders? Were you raised by people who grew things? How did it work? Yeah. on

04:27
My side, I did grow up on a small hobby farm is what we called it. And my parents just raised cows, pigs, and sometimes chickens just to feed the family and some friends.  And my mom always had a garden growing up. So it's kind of been in my blood. And when we finally got together and we've been, Christian and I have been together for five years and just got married last year. And in that five years we've

04:54
learned a lot about each other that we both would love to get back to our roots of making things homemade and growing our own things, growing our own produce and livestock and just being able to be self-sustaining more. And that was kind of our biggest goal. So I do have a background in farming, I guess, but I learned a lot more in the last five years of Christian than I ever had growing up. Yeah, I would I would agree with that in the last five years.

05:23
I've learned more than I ever have in my life. Growing up, I grew up on a small acreage and the extent of that was  what we would do was have a small garden and it was basics, tomatoes, peppers, onion. No, not onions,  just oh pretty basic garden plots, small garden plots. We didn't have any  livestock or anything like that, but

05:51
always grew up just being outside and either working  or just  playing mow the lawn, stuff like that. But yeah, it wasn't until Abby and I met and... uh

06:11
to start getting into this learning little by little. Yeah, it's a whole different ball game when it's just you guys and it's not family doing it.  Mm For sure. Yeah. There's a lot more that  I didn't realize that my parents know so much more that I never even learned that I find myself going back to them like, what did you do with this when we were younger and all this stuff and now when it's just us, it's fun learning the little things that maybe we didn't know in the past.

06:41
Yes. And honestly, I think one of the best things about getting into homesteading is the learning curve because it's not, it's not necessarily a steep learning curve. is a consistent learning curve. Yeah, that's a really good way to put it. Yeah, I agree. Everything we've done over the years has just come little by little. Reading here, watching, you know, watching this or then trial and error that and

07:12
At the beginning projects, it seemed a little daunting, but just getting into it, it's always been a steady, steady incline.  Yes.  And once you know it, you know it. You don't forget it. It's like riding a bike. It's true. I love that part because if I had to relearn everything every day, I would just throw in the towel. It would be too much. Groundhog Day is not an appealing concept to me.

07:41
Um, Abigail, I saw your video on your Facebook page of your soap, making your soap. Yeah. Yes. And you were saying that it makes your skin so much softer and that I can't remember the rest of it, but just you were kind of raving in the commentary about how much you love it. Is that cold process, Lysow? Yeah. So that is, I guess I'm...

08:10
not a connoisseur of making soap. And I, when I first learned how to make it, I actually learned it from a guy that makes it in Minneapolis and he had a YouTube video out there. I was, and I had always wanted to start making soap eventually. And so we just pulled the trigger and pulled up this YouTube video. Like let's just buy the exact ingredients. Let's do it. And yeah, it is a cold process soap. ever since then, we've been using that same exact recipe just because we, we love it so much and it

08:40
changed how our skin feels and everything. So yeah. Yeah. Well,  let me tell you, girly, I am, am 56 years old. We started making our own cold process Lysol a good 15 years ago, mostly because mostly because the store bought soap that I could get made my skin dry and it made me itchy. And I got a bar of cold process Lysol.

09:10
at the Renaissance Festival from,  I can't remember the name of the company, I don't think they're even out there anymore, but they had an oatmeal almond soap. And I fell in love with it and  I had the same reaction. I did not have itchy skin anymore. My skin was soft and it didn't smell like the soap at all.  And I said to my husband, said, can we please try making cold processed lye soap?

09:36
I cannot afford to spend five or six dollars a bar per soap and it will cost us like less than a dollar if we make it ourselves. So he took it upon himself to deal with the scary lie because I don't like dealing with it. And we still to this day make soap and we sell it in the farm stand that we have on our property and people really like it. They really like the coffee scented one and they really like the leather scented one.

10:04
Oh, that sounds really nice. I feel like I'd really like the coffee one too. It sounds waking up in the morning and taking a shower and just like that coffee smell. It's like, okay, I'm not gonna drink a cup of coffee now. It's fabulous. I actually love the lemon.

10:24
I can't remember the oil we used first. We use a straight lemon oil now and we have a lemon soap and that one's my favorite in the morning because it smells  so bright and sunshiny  and it wakes you up.  Oh, I love that. You might have to try a lemon one.  Sounds really nice.  Yeah, the unscented ones work just as good.  My wife makes like a forest one that I really enjoy. That's the one I use right now.

10:53
Yeah, it's like I ended up finding an Old Spice copycat mix and was able to kind of get that same smell. That's a lot of the people's favorites right now on the guys' side. Oh yeah, absolutely. The other thing that we did do, I don't know if we're going to keep doing, is we use the same oils to make candles. And so our candles mirror our soap scents.

11:22
And so at the farmer's market, people come up and smell the candles and then they look over and they see the soaps and they see the same names on the soaps and they're like, are you kidding? The soap smells like the candles. Yes. Yes, it does. That's awesome. I love that. It's really fun. Okay. So you guys have a garden now. You do a garden now.

11:48
Yeah, right now  we're getting ready. We're getting ready to start making more beds, but yeah, we have a raise. What we do is raise beds.  That's kind of what's kicked off everything. But. Yeah, we have a garden that we started indoors. I'm playing, sowing seeds and then we'll eventually be. Putting him outside to harden them off. Yeah, we ended up starting with raised beds when we started.

12:18
gardening about three years ago, just because we wanted to kind of keep it simple. We weren't sure if we wanted to do the tilling yet. We're just like, let's just start with five raised beds and see how it goes. And now we're up to 27 raised beds and planning to expand more this year. So we try to get enough produce to last ourselves for the year. That was kind of why we started gardening in the first place is we wanted to preserve and whatever we needed to do between canning, freezing, drying.

12:47
to save on the grocery bill every year. So being able to start that, and then it just kind of expanded into, okay, maybe we can start selling at markets. But yeah, our garden is one of our favorite times of year just to be able to see all the green out there and start getting the produce and eating what we  grow by seeds inside months and months ago. It's exciting. So is your kitchen table covered with seed trays right now?  Basement. Yeah, our basement is our...

13:16
We call it like the factory down there because we have tables of  seedlings growing down there. Racks, racks  and  LED lights. uh every morning  when our neighbors are driving by, they're like, your basement oh looks like a spaceship  down there.  Do you have the pink lights or just the white lights? White lights right now. And then eventually they're going to turn into pink lights when we start moving.

13:47
We start moving the tomatoes over to the other  table. Yeah, once the seedlings get bigger, we have to move them to a different table because they get  so tall when they're just in the basement. So we got more industrial lights on another side and those ones are pink and then it kind of looks like we're yeah. Yeah. Why? Like tabletops? Yeah. Doors and whatnot. Yeah.

14:11
Yeah, I made the mistake of getting the pink lights. I didn't realize I had ordered pink lights. I thought I had ordered white lights and those pink lights are really creepy in the middle of the night. They are. They were. What's going on over there? This is the first year in forever. And that's a that's a big overstatement, but whatever. This is the first year since we moved in here in August of 2020 that I do not have ceiling trays on my kitchen table right now.

14:40
because we started every single seed in our hard-sided greenhouse this year. Wow, that is awesome. So you have greenhouses outside right now? Yeah, we have a big, we have a, I always screw up the measurements. I thought it was 20 feet by 40 feet, but it's actually smaller than that, but not by much. So we have a hard-sided greenhouse, yes. That is cool. That's  another goal, but how...

15:10
How did you go about building that? I well, I applied for a grant, number one, and got it amazingly enough. I didn't think we had a chance in hell of getting it.  And then that paid for the supplies and my husband and my son and a neighbor helped us build it, helped us put it up.  Congratulations. That's awesome.

15:37
I feel like that's a big weight lifted  off your shoulders. You can just keep production going and be able to use that space all year round. Well, it gives us an extra couple months in the fall and it gives us a couple extra months in the spring. It is not great for growing anything past December and until March.

16:02
Okay. I suppose that makes sense here in Minnesota. I would need a heater if you had to want it to grow anything indoors and there's probably not enough sun either. Yeah, that's the thing. We would either have to use one of those, I don't know what they're called, they're a great big heating unit and they're heated with propane, I think. You hang them up. Or we'd have to use

16:29
electricity, which we don't want to do because it's too expensive,  or we would have to get solar panels and a generator. And all of those options aren't really worth it for just three months in the winter time. Yeah, that's true.  It would build a lot of costs up for,  and then I'm sure in the greenhouse, you can't grow much more than like greens and things that are more fragile that don't need a ton of sunlight.  So I suppose it might not be worth  the cost it would take to do that.

17:00
Yeah. And then the other thing is, that where would we sell them? Cause there aren't really a whole lot of winter markets.  Yeah, that's true too. So we decided that gaining that two  months in the fall and that two months in the spring  really was a good idea because getting our plants started in March and 1st of April means that we actually have stuff to sell at the first farmers market in June. Oh yeah. It's very smart. Yeah.

17:30
And we just wanted we just wanted a greenhouse. Darn it. That was part of the reason.

17:41
Yeah. One day we'll be building up to it. Hopefully. Well, you guys are young yet. Yes. Are you in your late 20s? Yeah, I'm 26. Yeah, 32.

17:59
You have lots of time to grow and stretch and decide what works for you for your homestead, which is amazing. Yeah, that is true. And you put it like that. I appreciate that. Yeah, it was just, at the feels of, you know, still trying to figure out what's the next step for us. And you will be until you leave the homestead for good. I swear to you, we bought our place five years ago, five and a half years ago. And, uh,

18:29
We're still not sure what we're doing and we're like fully fledged adult people. Our kids are grown. So it's always going to be what's next. It's always going to be what should we do? What do you want to do? Yeah.

18:45
I like that part that  we've felt  really creative since starting this, at least  just from all the ideas that have been coming up and the what ifs, like maybe we can do this and that and  how do we get there? that's, you  know, being creative is just what homesteading has allowed us to do.

19:09
And it's fun.  Yeah.

19:14
That's my favorite part. It's fun.

19:18
My wife and I were just talking the other day about that.  When you get home from a long day  of just being out there, whether it's  working on a project that you had no idea  how  to start it, ah being in the garden, hands  dirty, tired,  how satisfying it is when you get inside and the laughs you had throughout just working throughout the day, how goofy you can get.

19:48
We get really goofy out there. Yeah. Some of the some of the best memories we've made have been out outside working and being creative, as he said, and at the end of the day. And I still think back to last year, I still remember those memories out there working hard and until the moon comes out and we got blood lights out there just trying to keep working, trying to get plants in before it rains the next day. And yeah, I remember. Yeah, I remember we remember that time when we exactly we took out

20:18
the shop lights and I took out the drywall lights and we just started hooking everything up and planting in the middle of the night.  It looked like a basketball court out there. bet it did. You guys don't have kids, do you? Not yet, no.  it's going to be harder to do those kinds of things once you have babies. So enjoy the silliness now  because the silliness that comes with kids is a whole different animal.

20:46
Oh, I suppose. That's something to look forward to, Absolutely. So do you guys have any animals on the homestead yet? Do have chickens? Yeah, we do have chickens. have right now we have 19 hens that we get eggs from for ourselves and then to sell at markets. And then every year we do 75 broiler chickens to be able to we butcher them ourselves come when they're.

21:16
eight weeks old  and we have a whole family day of it, butcher the chickens. And then when we're done, we have our freezer full for the year. And then we're able to fill our parents' freezers and a couple friends. um So yeah, just have chickens, but no other livestock right now. um Potentially maybe work into getting pigs this year. that's in the plan this year. Nice.

21:44
If money was no object and time  wasn't a real object, and it is because you guys both have jobby jobs, what would you like to have for animals on the homestead?

21:55
Oh, that's a really good question. Yeah. I would like a whole zoo out there if I could. But Christian would probably stop me. I love all animals, but I think specifically for thinking for the homestead. Yeah. Yeah. I would like for as far as an exotic animal, I was like if money was no option, it gets a couple of peacocks out there for sure. That'd be the fun. That'd be the fun bird. But I would go.

22:25
I would go beef  and a lot of beef, lot of pigs, chickens, those basic ones, which I don't think  there was. Yeah, I think  we've always kind of, we've talked about goats in the past, but I think that we're kind of leaning more towards beef, pork and chicken just because those can have the most yield. And we kind of want animals that will.

22:53
give back to us in the long run. know,  we do we do love pets and everything, but I guess if money was no object, then we'd get all of the fun animals to like goats, and stuff. get like fish because we have like a little bit of a pond back there. You can start getting like you can start farming fish, trout, stuff like that. mean, just imagine getting into that. Yeah.  You start farming trout. I'm coming to see you and I'm bringing money.  Bring it over.

23:21
Come on, on.  It's sitting there.  You could just see at one point it was a pond and has water backed up.

23:39
Well, I've started asking that question now and then because the answers are always interesting. I asked them the other day and she said,  I think I would like kangaroos. And I was like, okay, that would be great.  Oh, would be a fine fence.  Yeah. My husband and I have been talking about getting into quail. And I mentioned this a couple of episodes ago and we haven't actually decided yet because

24:07
Money's a little tight with the way everything keeps going up in price. So we're waiting until we have at least an extra, literally extra, $200 before we do anything. Because we know we have to get an incubator. We know who we're getting the eggs from, and that's probably not going to cost us anything right now. But we still have to make the coop. We have to get the brooder. We have to get things to make this happen. So we're working on

24:37
putting $200 aside that is not allocated for anything for Quail. And that would be awesome. Yeah, it's amazing to when you think about you want to get an animal and then you start think like when it's a dream, it's like, oh yeah, we can do that. And then when you start thinking seriously about it, then you remember all the little things that will add up. that. But I think that's a really cool idea that you set aside. You're waiting to set aside that money.

25:04
to be able to do that. Cause then it's like, know that you are for sure. Like you have a really good plan going forward and everything. Oh, that's what it helps to us. I feel too, like it's always helped  like, well, not always, but I should say it started more  responsibility with money and really thinking about, right, what's, you know, let's sit down, let's write it out. Let's see, let's make a plan. I've always enjoyed that part of it too. Yeah, for sure.

25:32
Well, it's either feed the quail or feed us and we need to eat to be able to do the things to be able to feed the quail. So the quail comes  second. other thing that  I haven't said anything to my husband yet because I'm still chewing on it, but  I made the mistake of watching a video about pygmy goats the other day. The little tiny goats, they're only about two feet tall and the biggest they get.

25:57
The biggest they get is 70 pounds. And I was like, oh my God, I could have goats. We could handle those. Those are small. And then I was like, but they're probably going to cost $500 a piece and we have to have a fenced in area for them, which means you got to buy the wood to make the fence. And my brain just started spinning. And I was like, yeah, I'm going to keep this to myself until I figure it out.  Then I will be like, Hey, there's somebody that has two pigmy goats. We could have baby goats. And he'll be like,  um.

26:27
Lay out the full plan. What? Yeah. He's going to be like, we need a plan. I already got it. Yes, I am trying really hard to keep my bright ideas to myself right now because he has ADD or ADHD. And if I even so much as breathe the word goat with any kind of intention near him, he's going to be like, goats. And he'll do he'll do the he'll do the deep dive into how we can make it happen. I

26:55
don't want to do a deep dive. want to take it slow on this.  quail is much more doable. Pygmy goats  are  a pipe dream right this second, but I suspect there might be little goats here within two years. So we'll see. Oh, I love that. It's exciting.  Yes, and uh it's only him and I, and we like goat milk and pygmy goats are just as good for milk as regular goats.

27:24
but they produce less of it, which means we wouldn't be wasting any. Oh, there you go. That's a smart way of going about it.

27:33
Yes, and I could probably handle a small goat. I don't think I can handle a big 150 pound goat. That's not my idea of fun. So.  It is so much fun talking to homesteaders because you guys get it. I said, pig me goats and both of your voices just went up like, oh.  We'll have to come visit them when you can come to the trout farm, then we'll go visit the goats.

28:04
We'll trade visiting rights. It'll be great. Yeah, there you go. I remember my, was just thinking back to when my buddy had a Billy goat and that, uh, I see way bigger than pigmen goats, but this thing, this thing was named Bob and it was just a nuisance, man. It was, it would stand on cars. It would stand everywhere. I was, I don't know, that came to my head. thought those goats, man.

28:33
Goats are either a huge pain in the ass or they are a blessing. And if I get little tiny goats, maybe there'll be blessings. Maybe.  We'll see.  We will see how that plays out eventually.  But it's fun to think about and it's fun to do the research and I am a big lifelong learner. really like learning new things. So studying up on pygmy goats is no skin off my nose.  All right, guys, I try to keep these to half an hour. Where can people find you?

29:02
Yeah, so we're um on Facebook at Faithful Harvest MN and we're also on Instagram with this same uh username. And then  maybe in the future we're working on a website so you can keep an eye out for that. But yeah, I've been trying to post on social media a lot more so you can keep up with us on there and see some fun videos and content.  And that will be in the show notes so people can find you.

29:30
All right, as always, people can find me at tinyhomesteadpodcast.com.  This was really fun, you guys. And Christian, thank you for making the time too, because Abigail said you were going to join us, and I was like, yes.  Thank you. Yeah, thank you for reaching out to us. Really appreciate it. Yeah, thank you for giving us a platform to be able to share about homesteads and other people get to share different things going on with their tiny homestead. It's a good platform that you've created for everyone. Yeah,  it's so.

30:00
We've never done anything like this before. So  we're excited. We really were to be able to talk to you.  Good. And it's so fun for me.  You guys say thank you. All the people I've interviewed, you're all like, thank you so much. And you have no idea how this lights up my days too. So thank you.  All right. You guys have a great day.  Thank you.

 

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