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  • About
    • About Harold Thornbro
    • About Redemption Permaculture
    • Media
  • Blog
    • Articles
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    • Book Reviews
    • Homestead Recipes
    • Homestead Devotions
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  • Get Started Canning Course Quick View
    • Get Started Canning Course Quick View
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    • Get Started Canning Course

    • The “Get Started Canning!” Course Includes: Introduction To Canning with Rachel Jamison How To Make and Water Bath Can Jams and Jellies How To Water Bath Can Tomatoes How To Pressure Can Garden Produce How To Pressure Can Meat How To Make Delicious Fermented Dill Pickles
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  • Homestead Trees: Learn To Plant, Nurture, and Reap The Benefits Quick View
    • Homestead Trees: Learn To Plant, Nurture, and Reap The Benefits Quick View
    • Course
    • Homestead Trees: Learn To Plant, Nurture, and Reap The Benefits

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Me

Welcome To Redemption Permaculture At The Small Town Homestead

My name is Harold Thornbro, and I’m a permaculture practitioner and homesteader dedicated to teaching sustainable living, organic gardening, and permaculture principles, helping others create productive and regenerative home landscapes. If you’re looking for me, you’ll usually find me in the garden. 


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A Year On The Homestead:

Weekly Insights Tips And Projects
  • This Week On The Homestead – Week 10March 8, 2026

    As you start seedlings indoors, consider experimenting with heirloom varieties. Not only are these plants often hardier and more flavorful, but saving their seeds also helps preserve genetic diversity in your garden.


Support the work of Redemption Permaculture at the Small Town Homestead and the Modern Homesteading Podcast



Latest Comments

  1. Harold Thornbro on Why Do Beets Taste Like Dirt? Is It Normal?

    LOL! Poetry

  2. Jim Knapp on Why Do Beets Taste Like Dirt? Is It Normal?

    I have often said that beets taste like the dirt floor in the basement of a Stephen King novel. Picture…

  3. Harold Thornbro on When You’re Forced to Slow Down

    Thank You for the encouragement! Glad you're enjoying them.

  4. Richard Duhl on Improving Soil Health in the Winter Time

    very good information, make a lot of sense

  5. Joy on When You’re Forced to Slow Down

    Enjoying your homestead devotions. Thank you!


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Homestead Devotional

  • Faithful in the Busy Season

    “Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men.”
    — Colossians 3:23 (ESV)


    Spring has a way of waking up the homestead. After the slower rhythm of winter, the days suddenly fill with activity. Garden beds need prepared. Seeds must be planted at the right time. Fences repaired. Animals checked. Tools sharpened. Everywhere you look, there’s another task waiting.

    The excitement of the season brings energy, but it also brings responsibility. Spring doesn’t wait for us to feel ready. The work simply arrives, and it’s up to us to step into it.

    As I move from one chore to the next, I’m reminded of the words in Colossians 3:23:
    “Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men.”

    The daily work of a homestead may seem ordinary—turning soil, hauling feed, fixing a gate, planting a row of seeds—but Scripture reminds us that no work done with the right heart is ordinary to God.

    Each task becomes an opportunity to serve Him.

    The garden rows we plant, the animals we care for, the repairs we make—these aren’t just chores. They are acts of stewardship. They are reminders that God has placed us in a place where our labor can reflect His goodness and provision.

    Spring’s busyness teaches a quiet lesson: faithfulness in small tasks matters.

    Just like a harvest begins with tiny seeds placed carefully into the soil, a life of faith is built through small acts of obedience done day after day.


    Homestead Reflection

    As the work of spring begins, I want to ask myself:

    • Am I approaching my work with gratitude or with frustration?
    • Do I see the daily tasks as burdens or as opportunities to honor God?
    • How can I turn ordinary chores into acts of worship?

    Because when work is done with the right heart, even the simplest task can glorify God.


    Prayer

    Lord, thank You for the work You place before me. Help me to approach every task with a willing heart and a spirit of gratitude. Whether I am planting, repairing, feeding, or harvesting, remind me that my work is ultimately done for You. Teach me to be faithful in the small things, trusting that You bring the growth in Your perfect time. Amen.


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