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Infographic: How big a backyard would you need to live off the land?
Graphic illustrates how much backyard square footage would be needed to feed a family of 4 a well-rounded diet of meat, dairy, eggs, wheat, fruits and veggies for a year. Not surprisingly, it's a lot.
Tue, Aug 30 2011 at 10:00 AM
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Last week I shared with you "Cool House, Fat Wallet: How to Run the A/C Full-Blast Without Paying For It," a fantastic — and somewhat sobering — infographic from the folks over at group solar purchasing company, One Block off the Grid. In that post, I mentioned a previous infographic from 1BOG that details how much land would be required for a typical family of four to become completely self-sufficient (read: happily well-fed) for an entire year.
Here's a look at that infographic, titled "How Big a Backyard Do you Need to Live Off of the Land." As you can see below, you'd need a heck of a lot of backyard space — about 89,050 square feet (or about 2 acres) — if your clan plans on eating fruits, grains, and veggies, dairy (via goats) meat (via pigs), eggs, and wheat-based foods (the number drops to about 1.5 acres if you cut wheat out of the equation and opt to purchase flour from a local grocery store). The infographic also shows that to live off the grid, power-wise, the typical American home consuming 11,040 kWh of electricity per year would require 375-square-feet of rooftop space to install 25 solar panels that receive a full seven hours of sunlight per day.
Interesting stuff. My question to those of you out there producing a significant amount of edibles in your own backyards: How much space do you require to feed your family (or just yourself) in a self-sufficient manner without the benefit of living on a full-blown farm? What things, due to space constraints, are outsourced? What things do you find yourself never buying at a grocery store? Two acres is a whole lot of land — backyard farming is often so romanticized that one often forgets the amount of raw space required to keep it up beyond "hobby" status — so I'm curious as to how you make it work ... tell me all about it in the comments section.
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I saw three different ways of drying food that are various degrees of labor and investment requiring. I dry my own stuff out in the open on a tray, but then I live in an area where the humidity is low and the sun is hot. It takes a day to dry a pan full of sliced okra or sliced chilis. It isn't time consuming at all.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&NR=1&v=z35qloTGtvg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aofrh-bjCvQ
When you add in vertical gardening techniques, and add integrated systems (chickens in the orchard, ect) it is more than possible to feed a family of four on 3/4 acre - I know because I've done it.
Can you tell us more about your technique? How did you get started? Did you buy any foods from other sources?
how big of a bank account would it take to pay the bills on a backyard big enough? that's the question...big corporations legislated homesteaders out of the american landscape years ago (with exceptions of course) but that's just the ways she goes in this corporacracy-
you have tilapia? where do you get your hatchlings? i'm trying to grow tilapia also...
hello. it is important as Jooliree has pointed out that there are supplemental costs (not including veterinarian) for feeding all stock. including the labor, only the assured quality will be the benefit. having to depend upon larger farms for stock feed, why not depend upon them for products as well? 2 acres is just for a hobby.
Agree. On two acres, it would make much more sense to focus on fruits and vegetables solely, and obtain meat from other sources. It's enough space to provide a substantial supplement, but it isn't enough to be realistically self-sufficient.
I read an article in the Mother Earth News about a family of four in California that grew all their own veggies and fruits on a half-acre yard. He did it by using fruit trees as shade trees, and training his plants to grow up on trellises, fences, whatever he could.
The problem is, Mother Earth News is a complete crock when it comes to factual reporting. Their claims are ridiculously overstated and undersourced, whether they're promoting or chastising a topic.
They also did one with just one acre. Also there are folks like myself where it is just a 2 person household. Anyhoo still a good reality check for folks who are in the planning phase. I've seen some mighty creative use of space.