Products & Apparel

Podcast & Blog

About Troy McClung

Troy desires to be the quintessential family man, although he ends up being Clark Griswold most of the time. He lives on a rural homestead farm in the foothills of the Appalachian mountains with his beautiful wife and two young boys. He loves everything outdoors and when he is not running his marketing company, he enjoys quiet family time at home on the farm.

Standing bacon now on the farm

Craiglist is the devil. Simply put. I find myself regularly skimming through the lists seeing if there are any deals that must be purchased. This usually doesn’t end well for my farm budget. One such case unfolded two weeks ago. While perusing the farm listings, I found a brand new post for 8 week old [...]

By |2016-11-30T19:14:49-05:00May 5th, 2013|Homesteading|1 Comment

Sawdust: Utilizing a by product from the woodshop

Many readers may think I am scraping the bottom of the barrel on content when I decide to write about saw dust. It is, after all, just dust, right? Sawdust has become extremely useful at Red Tool House Lumber Co & Farm and not in the most obvious of areas. The interesting thing about the [...]

By |2016-11-30T19:14:49-05:00April 22nd, 2013|Woodworking|2 Comments

Incubating Chicken Eggs: Part Three – The Hatching

The incubation period has come full cycle now and we have had a successful hatching. I will recap the details from where I left off in Part II. DISCLAIMER: Some images in this post may be disturbing to some as it illustrates the success and failure of animal reproduction and my attempt at learning as [...]

By |2016-11-30T19:14:50-05:00March 20th, 2013|Homesteading|0 Comments

Layers Coop Framed Up at our Farm

Several weeks ago, we poured concrete piers to start our layer coop project (previous post). Now that the weather is actually becoming more agreeable, we could continue on with our project. As mentioned in other posts, we are blessed to have several nice resources (sawmill and a plethora of trees) that have helped keep the [...]

By |2016-11-30T19:14:50-05:00March 9th, 2013|Homesteading|0 Comments
Go to Top