Happy New Year!
Since my very first post on September 7, 2013, Vermont DeadLine has received 224,212 "hits" as of today. In the right hand column under "DeadLine's Athenaeum" is a list of topics which contain the buzz word for the 228 posts (to date) that I have written. Also, check out the rotating world on the same side. It is fascinating to see that people from all over the world have visited this site! Thank you for your support, and I hope you continue to drop by in the coming year.
image credit: motherearthnews |
For less than $7,500.00, Lowe's can sell you this tiny house. |
For a measly $3K, you can also buy this at Lowes. |
These tiny houses are often mobile, so you can hook your vehicle to it and travel any where you wish! As an alternative to a gas-guzzling RV, you will make a statement rolling into any town. I like to think of the tiny houses as kind of a gypsy caravan!
image credit: trib.com |
"Homesteading is a lifestyle of self-sufficiency. It is characterized by subsistence agriculture, home preservation of foodstuffs, and it may or may not also involve the small scale production of textiles, clothing, and craft work for household use or sale. Pursued in different ways around the world—and in different historical eras—homesteading is generally differentiated from rural village or commune living by isolation (either socially or physically) of the homestead. Use of the term in the United States dates back to the Homestead Act (1862) and before."
If you chose to be stationary for any length of time, there are important decisions that must be made. If your goal is to become independent of your reliance of public utilities (such as water, sewer, natural gas and/or electricity), then you must consider the many options and consequences of living off the grid. You would be responsible for complete self sufficiency, and a complete life-style change.
Here is a list of questions and answers that I have compiled, if you are considering moving to off the grid living. I have provided many links to the answers from the most reliable sources I could find (and relying very heavily on offthegridnews.com):
How will you heat your home? One of the most common ways the off-gridders choose, is to burn wood. One must be responsible for cutting, stacking and hauling their own wood. Here is something I didn't know, from tinyhousedesign.com:
"Burning wood is actually a carbon neutral way of heating a home. When a tree grows it absorbs carbon. When we burn it it releases that same carbon. If we use a highly efficient wood stove in a small living space we can actually get through the winters with little environmental impact and effort. The problem with burning wood for heating a large home is that it would take acres of trees to make it sustainable. Heating a small home requires less energy input which in turn reduces the cost, impact, and effort needed to stay warm in winter."
If you are truly off the grid, you must locate and haul your own water into your home if you have not figured out a way to have it pumped indoors.
image credit: offthegridnews.com |
How and where do you go to the bathroom?
Will you have an outhouse or an indoor toilet? There are interesting options such as utilizing composting toilets.
And.... how will you properly dispose of the waste?
offthegrid.net explains how to construct a small sewer system here.
Do you want to generate your own electricity?
offthegridnews.com offers 4 options here.
Do you want to become self-sufficient in the sense that you would raise your own livestock - to sell and for your own consumption - or both? I know that people frequently purchase chickens because they are a multi-purpose beast.
They are raised to maturity, produce eggs to eat and/or sell, and then slaughtered for food. There is no cost to reproducing them, so you can maintain a rather economic plan.
Image credit: Activist Post |
I have neighbors who have young children and raise chickens and ducks right in their back yard, here in the "city". The parents encourage this, as the children all participate in their keeping. They all are rewarded with an education, as it teaches them about self sufficiency.
Fortunately, there is a ton of information available online, here are a few helpful links:
Livestock
Chickens for meat and eggs
Livestock
Raising animals for milk
Chickens
Image credit: theprairiehomestead |
How and where will you store your goods? More great links:
Survival gardening
Growing vegetables indoors
Preserving vegetables
Winter vegetables
image credit: homesteadfocus.com |
Before the days of modern refrigeration, a root cellar was necessary to keep vegetables such as carrots, turnips, beets, parsnips, potatoes, and other root vegetables fresh throughout winter months. The Farmer's Almanac has a great "how to" which you can read here.
image credit: offthegridnews.com |
Of course there are safety concerns when using either candles or kerosene, so placement of these items should be scrutinized. Off The Grid News.com has a great article for making your own survival candles here.
image credit: Giphy |
If you decide that you leaving the working world behind, but own land, how will you pay your taxes?
Your survival concerns the root of all evil, as everyone still needs some money to stay alive.
Farm stands - selling vegetables, canned fruit and vegetables, jams and jellies, home-made candles.
image credit: pinterest |
offgridworld.com lists some ways in which you could make money and still maintain your off the grid status. And here is another link providing earning potential from offthegridnews.com.
Helpful and Informative Links:
http://www.motherearthnews.com/
http://www.offthegridnews.com/
http://www.tinyhousedesign.com/how-to-move-yourself-off-the-grid/
http://rurallivingtoday.com/sustainable-living/want-grid-living-can/
http://www.motherearthnews.com/homesteading-and-livestock/going-going-gone-off-grid-zbcz1409
https://homesteading.com/homesteading-skills-every-homesteader-should-know/
http://www.theeasyhomestead.com/what-is-homesteading/
http://www.theprairiehomestead.com/homesteading
Cool stuff!
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