Off-Grid 101

Off-Grid 101

UK hideaway

Off-Grid Farmhouse in the Pennines offers exceptional value at $60 per night including vegetarian breakfast…

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Community

Vote for Rachel

High profile Channel 4 TV Grand Designs trade fair set to choose off-grid home as eco-house of the year…

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Mobile

I live in my car

Jassen Bowman lives in his car out of choice – here’s a unique glimpse into the thought process of a car-dweller…

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Off-Grid 101

Questions from a reader

One of the very nice ladies who reads my blog, asked me several very good questions, I thought I would copy the message here and answer them, I think they are the sorts of questions that other people might ask, they are certainly the kind of questions I would ask if I didn’t live like this and had the opportunity to ask…

Hi Wretha, this is Marty.

I enjoy reading your b-log but I don’t know where the guestbook is to sign it. You had asked if we would sign it so that you would know others are reading.

I wanted to ask you some questions about going off-grid.

1. How do you get water? We have a well and though there’s an electric pump on it I heard that we could get a solar well but the whole well has to be redone. I would also like to add a hand pump.

We do not have a well, it’s way too expensive for us to even consider right now, so I get my water from my neighbor, he has a well and is extremely generous to us, we do things for him as well. We have a 300 gallon container, it used to hold fruit punch concentrate so it is food/water safe. We also have a 55 gallon drum inside the cabin, next to the sink, we have a 12 volt pump attached to it and the water faucet, when I turn on the faucet the pump comes on and I have running water, it lasts me about a week, maybe a week and a half if I’m careful. I use that water (inside the cabin) for washing dishes, hands and such, not for drinking. I go to my neighbor’s house pretty much every day for drinking water, I carry it back in one gallon containers.

If we have to, we can get water from the community well, it’s free to the residence out here, we can get as much as we want, but we have to get it back to our property, that was the original plan to get water from there, but since our neighbor turned out to be such a great guy, we get it from him for now.

2. How do you keep cool in the heat? I think I could go without a lot of things but not being able to keep cool I just can’t. (also going through menopause!)

That’s easy, it does get hot here, but the humidity is low, it’s high desert on a mountain range, it is hot during the day, especially in the sun, but if you have any shade, it’s comfortable, there is almost always a breeze too. The nights are cool year round, even in the hottest part of summer, as soon as the sun goes down, you start looking for something to cover your arms with.

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Energy

Comfortonomy

Domestic fuel cells on sale now make off-grid comfort a genuinely plausible option. Hybrid systems incorporate solar, wind and fuel cell — all grouped around 12 volt batteries.…

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How We Went Off-Grid

Order Here How We Went Off-Grid

20 x 8 Ft. Outdoor Storage Shed, Desert Sand

Order Here 20 x 8 Ft. Outdoor Storage Shed, Desert Sand