Tag: summer homestead

  • An Ideal Summer Day of Simple Homestead Living With Family

    An Ideal Summer Day of Simple Homestead Living With Family

    Daily writing prompt
    Describe your most ideal day from beginning to end.

    Simplicity isn’t about doing less — it’s about noticing more. My ideal day on our little homestead is built around that truth. It’s a day where time stretches wide, full of laughter, sunshine, and slow, simple living.


    Morning Calm and Connection

    The day begins the way I love best — with toddler kisses, a sleepy hug from my six-year-old, and my husband beside me. Before the world fully wakes, we take a quiet moment to breathe together. There are no alarms, no emails, no errands pulling us away. The only plan is to move through the day at a gentle rhythm, enjoying each other’s company and the sweetness of home.


    Breakfast and the Beauty of Routine

    Breakfast is a family affair. My husband gathers eggs while I grind coffee beans and brew a fresh pot. The kids take their favorite jobs — cracking eggs (usually with some shell), preparing pancake batter, and frying bacon. We cook with the windows open, sunlight pouring in and the sound of birds joining our morning conversation.

    The meal is simple and colorful: fresh eggs, pancakes, and bacon from last year’s pigs. It takes longer, but it’s richer in every way because we do it together.


    Hands in the Dirt, Hearts at Ease

    After breakfast, my husband heads out to refill the animals’ water tanks and check the garden fences. Meanwhile, the kids and I harvest what’s ready — sun-warmed tomatoes, crisp cucumbers, and snap peas that rarely make it to the kitchen. We feed the chickens, pick up toys outside, and pause often to feel the warmth of the day settling in.

    The work hums softly in the background; it’s grounding, steady, and quietly joyful — the soundtrack of homestead life.


    Raising Kids on a Homestead

    By late morning, the chores shift to play. We might pack up for an outing — a trip to the library or a shady walk by the Horicon Marsh — or stay close to home and make our own adventure. My husband and son might build something simple, like a birdhouse or garden trellis, while my daughter and I mix water, flower petals, and herbs in the “mud kitchen.”

    These are the moments where raising kids on a homestead feels magical — learning through exploration, imagination, and plenty of sunshine.


    Building Homestead Community

    Around noon, our neighbor stops by with a bag of fresh Amish bakery treats. He stays for a half hour just to chat at the kitchen table while the kids dart in and out. We sip lemonade and trade stories about gardens, weather, and local goings-on.

    These spontaneous visits are at the heart of homestead community — the easy, come-as-you-are friendships that summer invites. When he heads out, we make a quick lunch of garden sandwiches and homemade pickles, laughing over whose plate is the messiest.


    The Rhythm of Slow Living

    The afternoon drifts by in that perfect blend of rest and play. My toddler naps, the older one curls up with a book or joins my husband hoeing the garden, and I steal a few quiet minutes with a book on the bench outside our door. Later, we cool off in the sprinkler, make homemade popsicles, or pick raspberries from the patch.

    The hours stretch unhurried — each one filled with that golden kind of peace slow living on a homestead offers.


    Simple Suppers and Summer Evenings

    As evening settles, supper becomes another shared project. My husband fires up the grill while I toss a big garden salad and slice the first broccoli of the season. The kids set the picnic table beneath the maple tree. We eat outside, barefoot and happy, surrounded by the hum of summer — crickets chirping, bees buzzing, and the sky fading into soft pink.

    After dinner, we linger. Sometimes it’s s’mores over the firepit, other nights it’s catching fireflies or telling stories under the stars.


    The Gift of Enough

    When the kids are asleep, my husband and I share a quiet moment on the park bench — two cold beers, warm night air, and a shared silence that says, “This is exactly where we’re meant to be.”

    These days remind me that simplicity isn’t a destination; it’s a daily choice — a rhythm we return to when life feels too loud. Most of us don’t get many days like this, but even small pieces of them are enough to steady the heart.

    This is my ideal summer day: no deadlines, no projects, no rush. Just the four of us growing food, raising kids, building community, and living a simple homestead life that teaches us how beautiful “enough” really is.

    Feature Photo by Michelle Tresemer on Unsplash


    💬 Tell me about your ideal summer day! What does simple living look like in your home or community? Share your thoughts or your favorite summer traditions in the comments — I love hearing how other families find joy in the everyday.

    💚 If this post resonates with you, please like and share this post to spread the message of simple, grounded living.

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    Next Read: Saturday Morning Family Breakfast: A Recipe for Togetherness