No, I don’t mean moving off the farm. For all the issues we’re having, I hope to live here for many more years!
No, I mean this blog.
This blog is a very photo heavy blog. Early on, we ran out of media storage with the free WP account, so we forked over the dollars to pay for an upgraded account, with our domain name, that gave us 13gigs of storage.
Which did tide us over for a while, but we are at 98.9% full right now.
Some things, I’ve been posting on Instagram and embedding here. Which doesn’t always works, and sometimes requires people to click through to Instagram to see the images, and I think you need to have an account to see anything there. There are some things, however, that I won’t post on The Re-Farmer Instagram account – like our stock up shopping photos. I also upload photos to Word Press using my phone only, because it automatically compresses the images into a smaller file. Something it does not seem to do when I upload using my computer. Even images I’ve resized significantly are larger files than ones I upload from my phone.
A while back, I started going through old posts to try and free up storage space. I got rid of a lot of “photos of the day” and “critter of the day” posts that basically had a photo and little else. With others where the photos were relevant to the post, I checked and, if the files were full size, I would remove the original image, resize it, and repost it.
It was enough to tide us over for a while longer but it is incredibly tedious and time heavy to do it, and I don’t even know if I managed to get all the posts I could. I’ve been making pretty much daily posts – sometimes several a day – for years, so there is a lot to go through. I have to first open a post and check the images separately. If it’s a full size image, I then have to find it in the media storage area. Which you’d think would be easy, since I could just copy and past the file name into the search field, but it turns out that WP changes the file names somehow, adding _ in spots within the file name, for example. So I would have to figure out how to find the image using parts of the file name, instead. Once I found an image that I wanted to keep, I would then resize it, upload the new file, input the new image file into the old post, then delete the original, large file. Or, if it was a photo only post, I would simply find and delete the old image file, and then the original post.
There’s only so much of that I can do, before there’s nothing left to change, and it’s not saving enough storage space to be worth it anymore. I hate making posts without at least some sort of image in it (like this one!). Most of my posts are about things we are doing that I want to share. The whole point of this blog is to document what we are doing here.
So I’ve been trying to figure out alternatives. The plan I have with WP right now isn’t available anymore, so if I upgrade, there’s no going back. Their plans go from 6gb of storage space to 50gb of storage space, and the plan I have now gives me 13gb.
Upgrading, however, is to a business plan I don’t want or need, just to get some extra storage space. There is an option to buy storage space as an add on, but it would need to be paid for annually (though the prices lists are monthly), and the cost for 50gb is more than twice as the cost of the next plan up, which comes with the same amount of storage space. They’re basically charging more than a dollar a gig (Canadian $), whether you’re buying an extra 50, 100, 150 or more gb.
Which is ridiculous.
Alternatives include starting another free WP account and using it just for storage space and embedding the images into posts here. Which becomes a logistical nightmare (I already have trouble keeping track of my personal accounts and this blog’s accounts). I had opened a Flickr account and use that to store images to embed here, but they limit by the number of files, not storage space, so that didn’t take long to fill up. I haven’t found another place to store files that can be embedded here that I like.
Another alternative is to move to another blogging platform. Since I use a gmail account for this blog’s email, I would have access to a Blogger account already. As far as I know, I haven’t seen any limit on how many images can be stores on a free account, but for all its problems, I like the editing functions on WP better than Blogger.
I tested out Medium, but that isn’t so much a platform for blogging as a space for far left extremist hive minds.
I considered doing YouTube videos, instead, but 1) it takes a lot more time to edit and upload a video and 2) there are only so many things I would want to take video of, and I’m not the sort that can just talk into a camera. I prefer writing. Plus, I also would avoid anything that shows our faces. There are reasons this blog remains anonymous.
I ended up getting a personal Substack account some time ago, mostly because I wanted to follow other Substacks. I haven’t tried writing anything there, but I noticed that you can transfer entire blogs over fairly easily to the platform.
So here’s the thing.
This blog now has just over 900 subscribers, including email subscribers, after 7 years of blogging. I really don’t make any effort to promote this blog. Again, our need to remain anonymous prevents us from trying to create the next, great viral blog. π WP does make it easy to follow other WP blogs – or at least it does, when it’s actually working.
I turned ads on in 2020 and only recently got enough ad revenue for an actual payout, and that amount doesn’t even cover the cost of the plan we’re on. Not that this blog can be used as an income generator (I cannot have an income, as it would negatively effect my husband’s disability payments), but it can be used to raise donations for the cats.
From what I’ve seen, Substack might be a good place to move to. For anyone already using it, can you tell me what the limits are for storage space on a free account? I can’t find any information for that at all. Of course, I’d have to pay to keep our domain name, but that shouldn’t be an issue.
Substack also has other options that seem to make it easier to collect donations for the kitties. Substack would take a cut, but since the account is otherwise free, that beats how much we’re paying per year for our WP plan. With WP, I’d have to upgrade plans to be able to use a donation widget, and we just can’t afford that. I have a Ko-fi account, but have never been able to get anything more than a donation button to work here, and I keep forgetting to post updates there.
If I do move to Substack, and you subscribe to this blog, would you follow us over?
For those using Substack now, how to you find it? How would you compare the two platforms?
Any and all feedback would be greatly appreciated!
The Re-Farmer

I have used Substack, but I just donβt have the time to maintain writing there and here on WordPress at the same time at the moment so I decided to stay here for now-mainly because I have been here a lot longer. If you go across to Substack, I would follow you as I really enjoy reading about your daily life.
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Thank you! I’m glad you are enjoying my rambling! π
That’s the thing, isn’t it? I wouldn’t be able to maintain this level of writing on two platforms, so it would have to be an all or nothing switch. If it weren’t for the storage issues (and with how I use this blog, posting photos is pretty essential), I wouldn’t be considering moving.
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Would we have to pay to follow you on substack? The only substacks Iβve ever seen are the ones you have to pay to subscribe to.
Iβve used blogger in the past and didnβt love it.
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No. Some people set up so that you have to subscribe to see the entire blog post or article, but most of the ones I follow either don’t, or do that only for select articles. I would not use that feature. Plus, it would be considered an income, which I cannot have. I could set up a donation button, I think. At least, I’ve seen one on other accounts, but I don’t know how that works.
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It depends how itβs set up-some people are paid only, others have a mix of paid and free posts and others are completely free. It all depends on the person writing the blog to be honest.
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Thanks. Do you use it for blogging at all?
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I gave blogging a go there for a while at the end of last year, but trying to run two blogs on the same subject and two different platforms was taking up more time than I have available. I did find that in some ways Substack is easier to use, but for things like resizing photos as you are writing, WordPress is easier and more functional. I also didnβt want to lose the, admittedly small, community I have here-I quite like it.
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Thanks for the feedback!
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before you move, consider Smugmug.com
I absolutely hated the storage policy/plans/space here on wordpress. it wasn’t until I got really photo heavy with my stuff that I realized its limitations. Smugmug not only stores your photos, but they can also do very short video. Additionally, a click on my embedded pictures in my WP site (they will have my name as author) will link to the full size picture – something WP doesn’t do.
good luck! Mike
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I’ve never heard of them! Thank you! I will check them out.
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sure thing – it was super helpful for me!
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I took a quick look. It seems to focus on selling photos, which I won’t be doing. How is it for straight blogging?
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yeah, people can put their photos on a “marketplace” there. but I use it to host my photos for WP. I just have all my albums set to private and create an embed link for the photos i put on my page. there is no blogging function for it – at least not that i know of.
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Ah, I understand. That would definitely solve my problem!
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I also would have suggested Google photos as they are free…but there is a massive trade-off to that in terms of privacy. and I’m not sure I would suggest it for anyone. but that may be another route you could take!
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I tried that early on, and the images wouldn’t embed! Instead, they got uploaded into my WP media storage and took up more space. I never could figure out what I was doing wrong, so I started using Instagram, instead.
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lol, Lord. leave it to Google to do some weird stuff like that!
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There are WP plugins that can compress the size of the media images en masse and save a huge amount of space.
I “pre-shrunk” my images before uploading them to WP and, after 11 years, I’m still under 1% “full”. A full sized image from a cell phone is around 3-4Mbyte in size. My “pre-shrunk” images are around 100kbyte, which is a 30-40 times reduction in size.
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Oh!! If I could do that with my current files, that would be a huge help! Thanks!
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Well, crud… they all require a plan upgrade.
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Check out the help topic “Optimize your images”. It doesn’t need any upgrades, although it does require (I think) doing the images 1 by 1. But doing a few at a time would slowly reduce the storage space.
Many of the images on my blog are 640 by “something around 480 pixels” and seem (to me, anyway) to look okay. The 640 by ??? images are around 80-100k
Do be aware that images can only be “down-scaled”, so it’s a one way process.
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Thanks!
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OMG!!! I can’t believe this!
I found this feature (it’s something that got upgraded relatively recently, so it wasn’t available when this first started to be a problem) and have been using it. After scaling images down, it tells me what the new, smaller, file size is.
Great. So how much storage I have available should have increased, right?
Nope. It *decreased*. I check on my phone, since it gives me the amount of storage space to the 10th of a percentage. I went from 98.9% to 99.1% last night. I went to bed, tried again this morning, scaling down more files and…
I’m now at 99.2%
I notice the editor gives me the option to restore to original. Which tells me that for every image I’ve been down scaling, I now those images stored in both the scaled down size, and the original size, but can only see the scaled down version. How utterly insane!
I found some image compressors that got good ratings and can do batch compressions. They need to be uploaded into WP to work – and I don’t have enough storage space to upload any of them.
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This, as you’ll doubtless recall, is something I’ve been struggling with for the longest. I’ve yet to find any decent options. Everything is just as bad (albeit usually in somewhat different ways) or worse.
Then, of course, there’s all the “loyal” followers here at WP who will quickly tell you when you bring up the idea that they don’t have time to follow other sites…
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I only have the free version of WP. I went through a while back and deleted all of my photo only blogs because of space issues. I do enjoy keeping up with your adventures and even though I’ve not heard of most of these other places I’m game to try,
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I’m in the process of slowly deleting our old photo of the day posts that are still up, and the related images, again. I’ve managed to get myself back down below 99% – barely – so far. I’ll just have to keep chipping away at it.
On the plus side WP improved their post and media sorting and search functions. I’ve been able to find and delete more photo posts and related images in half an hour than I’d been able to do in an hour or more, the last time I tried to do this!
I really don’t want to move to another platform. It’s such a hassle. To have to do that simply because I’m out of storage space for photos irritates me. Charging through the nose for storage is probably their biggest money maker. Storage is really cheap these days. It shouldn’t cost over Cdn$600 a year just for 50 gb!
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