island

Red and white C19th lighthouse on island in Maine
Land

Maine Lighthouse for sale

If you want to truly be alone in style, check out this private island and historic lighthouse for sale in Maine.

Blue Hill Bay Lighthouse is located on Green Island off the coast of Brooklin, Maine, and offers 360-degree oceanfront views and white sand beaches.

The white clapboard lightkeeper’s cottage was built in 1856 and has four bedrooms, solar electricity, a wood stove, and a full kitchen with a refrigerator and gas range, according to the listing from Acadia Realty. “Imagine sitting on the porch of the keepers house, watching schooners come within yards of your porch,” the listing states. “Sitting on this outer island is like having your own private window to the world with amazing views in all directions.”

The picturesque scenery includes Isle Au Haut and the mountains of Acadia, as well as plenty of barking seals, which love to hang out around the island. “When you’re on the island, it feels a lot bigger than an acre,” said Steve Shelton, the listing broker.

In fact, the size of the island changes from day to day. At high tide, the island is about an acre; but at low tide, white sand beaches emerge and the land surface expands to 5 acres, according to Shelton. You can even walk to the mainland during low tide. “From the porch, you can wave to people when they come through on their boats,” he said. “It’s awesome.”

Shelton said the property is slated to be featured on an upcoming episode of the TV show “Unplugged Nation.” The current owners used a rainwater collection system, but the possibility of drilling a well is there, Shelton said. “It’s really cool,” he said. “It’s off the grid.”

Shelton said that compared with other lighthouse properties he’s seen, this one is in good shape and priced relatively low. It’s been in the same family for years and was originally put on the market for $850,000. The asking price has since been lowered to $650,000, he said.

Indeed, the asking price is less expensive than Graves Light in Boston Harbor (which sold for $933,888 at a government auction in 2013).

Just think about this: For the same amount of money, you could get a 569-square-foot condo in Mission Hill . . . or you could own your own island and lighthouse. Which would you choose?…

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The Road to Self-Reliance

American families have been going off-grid for more than forty years, but for most it’s a gradual process, involving a lot of learning by trial and error. In a recent article published in Reason, J.D Tuccille wrote about how his experience going “semi-off-grid” in 2008 led him to reconsider his attachment to the mains, and begin a journey towards self-reliance that is still ongoing today.

Dipping into off-grid waters

In 2008 a power failure lasted a week at J.D’s former home in remote Arizona. While he had his own well, it was controlled by a pump that required electricity, and the surface of the water was too low to dip some out by hand. Then there was the issue of modern plumbing without electricity, and the requirements of coffee pots to consider. However, outages were common – so J.D had come prepared. He and his wife Wendy Wendy had stored water, cut firewood, and fueled up the camping stove and lanterns. They remained hydrated, warm and fed through that and every other experience with the electric grid’s unreliability.
“All in all, it was a bit Little House on the Prairie for our tastes, though with a better wine selection – but ultimately more of an inconvenience than a disaster,” he wrote. “But tolerance for inconvenience can decline with the years.”

When they moved to a new house in the foothills, Wendy had a strict requirement – a climate-controlled environment in the house at all times. This required some research into the best off-grid power systems to use for the climate, so J.D had to get serious.
“This being Arizona, where everything bakes for much of the year under the fireball in the sky, my first thought was solar,” J.D writes. “But I quickly discovered that all of those panels adorning people’s roofs were nothing more than expensive shingles during a power outage. Most solar installations are designed to feed the grid, not keep you independent of it. I priced adding batteries to the mix to gain some autonomy, but they more than doubled the cost. And batteries couldn’t handle the power demands of an air conditioner anyway. So we settled, if that’s the right word, for a 22 kW standby generator, which can handle the well pump and keep the air conditioning running.”

He said they were “especially pleased” with the decision when the European Union completed a coordinated cyber-attack simulation and found it leading to a “very dark scenario,” including crashed power grids.
J.D also beefed up the water storage capabilities at the house with rain barrels hooked to the gutters, which are conveniently located near the garden where he now grows tomatoes, olive and fig trees.

“Wendy and I have stumbled down our path incrementally over the years out of a combination of necessity and curiosity,” he writes. “We also keep tweaking our set-up. In addition …

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Land

Off-Grid island for sale

Sunset at Sandbanks
Sunset view from Long Island

Its enough to make you long for an economic collapse. Long Island in Poole Harbour, Dorset, has gone on the market The uninhabited private island would be the perfect off-grid retreat, — it has no homes and there is no planning permission to build one, but normal people will not be able to afford to live there with offers of over …

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