Fielden

Fielden

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Real farmers. Real agriculture. Real enrichment for homeschool families. Now available. Homeschool Agriculture Enrichment. Agriculture. Creation. Wonder.

Built with farmers, beekeepers, and growers. Coming Spring 2026

05/26/2026

Homeschooling does not always have to start at a desk.

Sometimes it starts at a fence line.
A beehive.
A patch of soil.
A question your child asks that turns into a whole afternoon of learning.

Agriculture has a way of teaching more than facts. It teaches patience, observation, stewardship, and how deeply connected creation really is.

That is part of why Fielden was built this way. Learning that feels real often lasts longer.

05/14/2026

We’re heading to the Rocky Mountain Homeschool Conference in Denver, June 11–13, and we’d love to meet you there.

Stop by the Fielden booth to explore hands-on homeschool enrichment rooted in agriculture, creation, and real-world learning. We’ll have sample lessons, interactive elements for kids, giveaways, and a few conference-only surprises throughout the weekend.

And if you’re coming Thursday night… you may want to stop by early. 👀

04/28/2026

Wonder often begins when a child notices what others pass by.

Why bees move with such precision.

Why seasons shift slowly but never randomly.

Why living things depend on invisible systems to survive.

Sometimes good learning begins with simply teaching children to pay attention.

Photos from Fielden's post 04/23/2026

Some seasons of homeschool look practical from the outside.

Schedules. Flexibility. Life logistics.

But often the deeper reasons are quieter than that.

For many moms like me, the choice begins with a desire to shape not only what children know, but how they learn to discern, question, and stand when life becomes difficult.

That kind of formation rarely happens all at once. It happens in ordinary days.

- Laura Lockhart - Founder, Fielden

04/21/2026

Sometimes children ask larger questions when they are studying small things closely.

Why does this system work so consistently?

Why does design appear everywhere?

Why do living things depend on such careful order?

Good learning leaves room for those questions.

04/16/2026

Agricultural literacy gives children context modern life often hides.

You can learn more about the heart behind Fielden here: www.fieldenathome.com/our-roots

Photos from Fielden's post 04/14/2026

Children often recognize authenticity long before adults realize they do.

There is something different about hearing a concept explained by someone who has lived it.

That is one reason learning from real agricultural voices matters.

Agriculture carries lessons that reach far beyond production—patience, responsibility, dependence, timing, care, and the quiet order woven into creation itself.

When those lessons come from people who know that world firsthand, children often listen differently.

Photos from Fielden's post 04/09/2026

Some subjects shape character quietly while children think they are simply learning content.

If you want to see how this looks inside a full course, you can explore here: www.fieldenathome.com/hive-and-harvest

04/07/2026

Wonder often begins before formal instruction does.

Some of the best conversations start when children slow down enough to notice what has always been quietly working in front of them.

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Pueblo, CO