No chemicals, no genetic modification, no overcrowded cages, and no international shipping. Homesteading food production made simple. Raising chickens and livestock sustainably. Just real food made by real people with a passion for quality and life.
Learn the tools and knowledge needed to develop a homesteading system that is sustainable, humane, profitable, and productive. Food Web: Concept offers specialized guides for urban, suburban, and rural areas for raising chickens, vegetables, and livestock successfully.
Food Web: Concept is designed to give the reader the basics needed to analyze their local situation, define realistic and sustainable goals, design and implement homesteading solutions, and adjust their approach as obstacles arise.
Introduction
Chapter 1: Inspirations
Chapter 2: Philosophy
Chapter 3: Structure
Chapter 4: Anchors
Chapter 5: Nodes
Chapter 6: Connections
Chapter 7: Example Webs
Moving Forward
References
We’ve already mentioned how complex and confusing the ideas behind Food Web can be. With so many overlapping cycles and animal needs, it’s hard to keep things straight. So the idea of these next few chapters is to break down the actual structure of Food Web and the terms we use to describe it. We’ll use the spider web as a rough analogy of the structure and components within an integrated homesteading system.
The overall web represents the network of species, all of which work together on various levels to improve some aspect of the whole. It should never be seen as something stationary. It is a living, breathing entity that evolves and develops according to changing situations or needs. Remember that the strength of a spider’s web comes from its flexibility and the ability to repair or remove damaged segments.
A simple Food Web
When you look at a web, there are three main components: anchors, nodes, and connections (strands). These are the principle terms we will be using.
Anchors are where the strands connect to the surrounding environment. They would probably be considered the start and end points of a web, where the flow of energy enters or leaves the farm. They are what hold the web in place within the world around it. With Food Web, they would be things that are imported from outside of the homesteading system (like some types of feed or medicine), as well as the things that are exported as products for sale (like produce and meat).
One of the main goals will be to make these anchors as stable as possible. Ideally, the imported items should be things that are cheap, in plentiful supply and locally available. A perfect example would be some form of waste stream from the community, such as tree clippings or old bread. As for the exports, knowing the community and their needs will go a long way to making the things you sell secure. Having a variety of products also helps. If one particular market should fail, there are still many others that keep the web securely in place, while you adjust or replace the unstable anchor.
The next term to clarify is nodes. They are the part of the web where strands cross each other. They form the internal components of the web, and are usually living beings. There are many different types of nodes. First, we have initiator nodes, which are the species that start off the food chains. These usually consume one of the anchor inputs. Others may be converters, changing feed or energy from one form to another. Then, we have consumer nodes, which tend to absorb energy rather than allow it to pass through. Most nodes, however, are multi-taskers, and perform many of these different jobs, sometimes simultaneously.
This example is based around a suburban house with a third of an acre (14,520 sf) of yard. We’ll be splitting the yard into ΒΌ acre (10,890 sf) of lawn and a 100 ft. x 90 ft. (900 sf) enclosed pen. A portion of the homesteading yard space is left over for human recreation. There are a couple of trees, both in the pen and the lawn area, which provide shade as well as carbon matter in the form of leaves.
A suburban Food Web producing numerous products from lawn waste
So, from this imaginary land, we get kitchen scraps from the house, about 3328 pounds of grass clippings per year from the lawn [29] and a considerable amount of fallen tree leaves. Depending on the species of trees, we may or may not have to collect a few weeds from our homesteading neighborhood. We will also need some additional grain, which could come from the waste of a local grocery store or bakery, or bought from a feed store.
This imaginary web will include rabbits, raising chickens, and earthworms.
Seeing as grass is the predominant anchor connecting this home to a food web, we’ll be starting our web with an herbivore, in this case, rabbits [30].
Characteristics:
Rabbits make a great animal for urban areas. They are quiet and produce almost no smell (especially if there is some carbon matter in the manure trays to absorb the urine), so neighbors will hardly even know they’re there.
Rabbits are social creatures that benefit from companionship. In a colony setup, there is often a hierarchy, whereby the alpha female will dominate the lesser ones. This can have a negative effect on the lower females, so it’s a good idea to keep no more than three females together. Males (bucks) should be kept apart, as a doe ovulates whenever stimulated, meaning that she can get pregnant at any time, including as soon as she gives birth.