7 Hard-Earned Homestead Lessons for Proactive Small Business Owners
The Unexpected Business Wisdom You Pick Up When the Sheep Break the Fence
Freedom is calling. Can you hear it?
It’s that whisper inside when you scroll past yet another productivity hack and think, “There must be more than this.”
Maybe you’ve dreamed of moving to the countryside. Not just for the peace and quiet, but for something real. A slower life, where the work matters. A place where your health, your time, and your decisions feel yours again.
That was me too.
What I didn’t expect was that a piece of land, a handful of animals, and a whole lot of dirt would turn into the best business school I’ve ever attended.
No tuition. No Zoom calls. Just life, unfiltered. And the kind of feedback most entrepreneurs need.
Let me take you through 7 lessons I learned at what I call Homestead University.
And yes, they apply whether you live on a farm or run a business from a second-floor city apartment.
1. Perspective Matters More Than Time
Ever planted bamboo?
Probably not. But this type of grass (yes, bamboo is technically a grass) is a masterclass in patience. For the first three years, nothing happens above ground. It grows underground and builds a root system so strong that it can’t be toppled later.
There’s a lesson in that.
Modern culture tells us to launch quickly, scale even faster, and remain visible constantly. But even in the “build in public” scene, what you don’t see—the internal clarity, the real foundation—is what determines whether something lasts.
Bamboo isn’t lazy. It’s smart.
And if you're in a quiet phase, don’t mistake it for failure.
2. Sometimes You Have to Kill Your Baby
What’s the thing you love doing in your business?
We all have one. A favorite product, a cherished offer, an old-school printer we refuse to part with. Sometimes it's a team member, a service, or even a whole branch of our work that once lit us up. But now just drags us down.
On the homestead, it was my favorite dog. Ill, old, suffering, and beyond help.
In business, it was a project I loved but couldn’t afford to carry on anymore.
Letting go of things that no longer help you—especially those you love—can be tough. Yet, it's one of the most important choices you’ll make as a leader.
3. Patience Can Be Learned
“Everything can be learned,” my parents used to say.
Sure. But patience?
That one took a while. I didn’t really get it until a heart attack forced me to slow down. To listen to my body, and stop sprinting through life like there was a finish line I had to beat.
Nature taught me what my body had been whispering all along: Even fish rest in the winter. Even soil needs a season to restore. And even you—yes, even you—aren’t supposed to be “on” all the time.
Regenerative living, like regenerative business, is built on rhythm. Rest is not laziness—it’s strategy.
4. Garbage Is Often the Base for New Growth
Humans are great at throwing things away. But Nature? She recycles everything.
Nothing is wasted on the homestead. Fallen leaves, food scraps, and animal waste all go to the compost heap. And in time, that dark, ugly pile becomes life—rich, black soil full of nutrients.
We forget this in business.
Too often, we discard “old” ideas, people, or tools that still have value. Retired employees who still carry deep knowledge. Draft content that just needs reshaping. Failed products with hidden insights.
Observe Nature: Even the rot has a role.
5. Protection (Foresight) Is Cheaper Than Damage
Let me tell you about the greenhouse incident.
Trying to save a few bucks, I skipped reinforcing the foundation. It looked fine… until a big storm hit six months later and flattened it.
Cheap decisions cost the most.
Whether it’s ignoring backups, under-insuring key assets, or skipping onboarding to “save time." Cutting corners doesn’t make you smart. It just delays the damage.
In life, on land, and in business: build your foundation before the storm comes.
6. Weather and Markets Are Unpredictable
Back in 2008, I was running a business that served the construction industry. When the crash came, 80% of our clients went under within six months. Just like that.
We never saw it coming. But we could’ve been more resilient—if we’d diversified earlier, saved more aggressively, and paid attention to the patterns.
It’s the same with farming. You can’t predict the weather. You can only prepare: diversify your crops, protect your water, have a backup plan.
Because storms will come. What matters is whether you’re still standing after.
7. Death (of Your Best Apple Tree) Is Inevitable
One day, your best client will leave. One season, your best-selling product will lose relevance. One spring, your favorite apple tree just won’t wake up.
And sometimes? There’s no reason. No mistake. No warning.
Living close to Nature teaches you this: loss is part of the cycle. It’s not personal—it’s seasonal. You mourn, you adapt, and you plant again.
That’s not weakness. That’s wisdom.
Bonus Lesson: Not Every Investment Works Out (Ask the Ducks)
Picture this: I bought a big, powerful guard dog to protect our ducks. Pedigree, training, the whole package.
Instead of guarding them, he chased them around the yard at night—until they dropped dead of panic. It was heartbreaking. And expensive.
In business?
The same thing happens. You invest in a team member, a tool, a course—and it fails spectacularly.
Sometimes it’s not your fault. Sometimes it is.
Either way: learn fast, adjust faster, and don’t let the ducks die next time.
Final Thoughts: Homestead University Never Hands Out Diplomas
If you’ve ever wondered whether life on the land could teach you something deeper about life and business, I’ll confirm it right now: yes, it can.
But the real lesson isn’t how to grow carrots or fix a broken fence. It’s how to think long-term, decide with clarity, and align your life with natural intelligence—not modern dysfunction.
That’s why I created my 7-Point Regenerative Decision-Making Framework.
It’s what helps me navigate the storms, simplify complexity, and make decisions that actually hold up. In business, in life, and out here on the farm.
It’s coming soon.
If you want it, sign up for The Fearless YOU, and I’ll send it straight to you when it’s ready. No fluff. No farm fantasies. Just tools that work—even when the market crashes and your guard dog fails.
Thank you for reading.
To your freedom and health,
Daniel
It’s my dream to have my own homestead in the next 10 years 🌟🙌! Thanks for this amazing post !
I didn't know this about bamboo, but it's a fitting metaphor for individual preparation. Build a strong foundation of resilience and adaptability.