Backyard Farming on an Acre (More or Less) – Book Review
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Backyard Farming on an Acre (More or Less) by Angela England is a homesteading guide written with the enthusiasm of a beginner and the experience of several years of homesteading with limited space. It’s a great pep talk for those new to the idea of self-sufficiency who are wondering if they can raise more of their own food without moving to the country.

How Backyard Farming on an Acre (More or Less) is Organized
Backyard Farming on an Acre is divided into five parts:
- Living Large on a Small Scale
- Gardening on a Backyard Farm
- Animals for a Backyard Farm
- Enjoying the Bounty
- Crafting from the Backyard Farm
Each of these parts is divided into subsections.
Living Large on a Small Scale includes: the Backyard Farm Adventure; Finding Land; and Building on Land Your Already Own
Gardening on a Backyard Farm includes: What and How Much do You Want to Grow?; Tools and Skills for the Backyard Gardener; Gardening Smart from the Start; Get the Most from Your Garden; Vegetables for the Backyard Farm, Kitchen Herb Gardens; Fruits, Berries and More; Heirloom Plants and Saving Seeds
Animals for a Backyard Farm includes: Keeping Chickens on a Small Scale; Rabbits on a Backyard Farm; Sheep and Goats: Backyard Multi-taskers; and Beekeeping in the Backyard
Enjoying the Bounty includes: A Seasonal Guide to Managing Your Harvest; Canning and Freezing Produce and Meat; Dehydrating and Smoking; Root Cellars and Basements; and Preserving Garden Herbs
Crafting from the Backyard Farm includes: Making Butter, Yogurt and Cheese; Fibers: From Sheep to Sweater; Home Brewing Cider and Wine; Goat’s Milk Soap Making and Other Ways to Use Your Harvest
There are also appendices featuring Simple Plans for the Backyard Farm, Gardening Journal Pages and Resources.
Things I Like About Backyard Farming on an Acre (More or Less)
Angela features a taste of a *lot* of different topics, so there’s something in this book for nearly every interest level. She’s got some nice drawings in the beginning of the book to give the reader ideas about how much can be worked into a typical suburban back yard.

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With a supportive spouse, Angela tackles fence building, gardening, food preservation and many other tasks that can help you provide your family with fresh food no matter how small your space is. There are a few seasonal recipes to get your thinking about eating from your garden instead of from the grocery store.
She moves beyond the basic chickens discussed in many small scale homesteading books to an assortment of backyard animals. There’s a nice tutorial included from Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds on how to properly save tomato seeds. (They need fermenting to remove the outer seed covering.) She defines basic terms in many of the sections so that those unfamiliar with the topic will be better able to understand the discussion. I was glad to see that she included medicinal herbs as well as culinary herbs, as these are also left out of many garden planning books.
Things I Didn’t Like About Backyard Farming on an Acre (More or Less)
Even though the book contained a lot of information, there were many areas that could have used deeper explanations, recipes or at the very least relevant online links. For instance, there were multiple photos of how to make a lavender wand, and only one photo of how to butcher a chicken. Granted, most of us would find the wand far more pleasant, but if you need to butcher a chicken, you’d better have a different book or some other source of information.
I would have loved to see some color photos, and more photos in general, or more line drawings. In the tool section, for instance, a side by side shot of the different tools would have been a great addition to the descriptions. There were so many garden photos that simply didn’t capture how beautiful I know these plants should be with only a gray image. (Color photos significantly increase printing costs, so I understand the need for grayscale.)

I’m also pretty sure my old neighbors in the suburbs would have had kittens if I had tried to transform my yard as she suggests. Some of them had panic attacks just because we had a garden and an assortment of fruiting plants. Critters would have sent them off the deep end. Hopefully your neighbors will be more understanding.
A Homestead Doesn’t Have to Be Huge
No matter how much or how little land you have, this book will help inspire you to look at your space in new ways. You don’t have to do everything – you can pick and choose what fits for you and your family. I think Angela did a nice job creating a beautiful book to help inspire a new generation of homesteaders.
You may also enjoy other book reviews from our homestead library, such as:
- If You Only Get One Homesteading Book, This Should Be It
- The Independent Farmstead
- How to Make Money Homesteading

Originally posted in 2013, updated in 2017.

Making a garden space more efficient and workable.
Herb gardening!
I currently have a backyard garden and am teaching my 3 children where good healthy food comes from. I would love to learn how to harvest my own seeds, How to enhance my compost by keeping animals, how to can and store the foods I grow, and how to elimanate unwanted pests organically, rather than by using chemicals. I can’t wait to read the great things you have come up with to help my small garden space more fruitful and productive.
Grew up with my depression era mother teaching me how to organic garden. Finally have a nice sunny backyard (my former one was too shady) and have been gardening and composting the last 6 years. Am wondering if your book has a chapter on how to convince spouses to agree to backyard chickens. 😉
Actually I am very interested in chickens and beekeeping.
i want to grow a medicinal herb garden and would lov eto grow all of my veggies and fruit that I can.
I own a little over an acre. This is exactly the kind if book I’ve been looking for!
I want to learn about how to grow the largest amount food in a small area.
I would like to know how to fit everything I need on 1 acre!!
Thank you for this great review. The giveaway is a bonus 🙂 I appreciate that you also put some negative things about the book. Too many people only praise.
Just purchased 4 baby goats ~ would love to learn about making butter,cheese and soap
I would like to learn more about starting my garden plants from seed and then caring for them till planting.
I would love to learn good ways for northern/cold climate gardening that isn’t expensive.
I would like to learn more about raising chickens
I need to get better at composting! My soil is absolute crap and my plants don’t grow because there are no nutrients!
I would love to win this book you are offering as it would help up greatly on our 5.29 acres of land.
I really want some chickens!
I would like to learn more about how to garden with little space. I live in a city and have a small backyard that has a large tree in the middle. We’ve done a few gardens and it’s hard to get the type of produce I would like to grow in the amount of space we have. Thanks for your blog and all the wonderful advice!
I would like to learn how to care for and raise an organic beef cow and non gmo
Just got into gardening recently and I would love to add this book to my collection. Good luck all.
Very cool giveaway! 🙂