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Invisiblepassifloracaerulea
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Registered: 11/13/10
Posts: 10,485
Re: Living off the Grid [Re: XUL]
    #25467219 - 09/17/18 01:23 PM (5 years, 4 months ago)

Not then. But now I have seen bigfoot a few times and am scared to death of the off trail old growth. I still go out to my old spots and pick mushrooms, but I don't fish anymore or camp there. I was so happy when I finally learned to pull those cutthroat trout out of the water. There is nothing like frying up a trout that you caught a few minutes earlier when you're starving and have been living off of salmonberry stalk and blackberry stalk soup with oyster mushrooms for the previous month. I tried to stay out of the public as much as possible and would only move for food, weed, mushroom sales, or winter. I was running because of a marijuana manufacture charge that I picked up in '94.


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Invisiblepassifloracaerulea
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Registered: 11/13/10
Posts: 10,485
Re: Living off the Grid [Re: passifloracaerulea]
    #25467228 - 09/17/18 01:26 PM (5 years, 4 months ago)

I owned an off grid berry farm about ten years later with my ex until we divorced. It was hell keeping the system functioning optimally. I was a slave to the system. I couldn't leave the farm for more than a day.


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InvisibleMoonFarmer
peasant
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Registered: 08/22/16
Posts: 2,293
Loc: Flag
Re: Living off the Grid [Re: passifloracaerulea]
    #25468142 - 09/17/18 07:51 PM (5 years, 4 months ago)

If you wrote a book I'd read it brother.


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:hypnotoad:


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Invisiblepassifloracaerulea
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Registered: 11/13/10
Posts: 10,485
Re: Living off the Grid [Re: MoonFarmer]
    #25468189 - 09/17/18 08:03 PM (5 years, 4 months ago)

It's so hard for me to organize papers. I doubt I'm up for that. It's my biggest problem. A movie with me cast by Mathew Mconehay(or sean penn!) would be pretty cool though.


Edited by passifloracaerulea (09/17/18 08:04 PM)


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InvisibleDustyBottoms
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Registered: 11/07/14
Posts: 3,071
Loc: TheUnderbelly
Re: Living off the Grid [Re: passifloracaerulea]
    #25488865 - 09/25/18 06:48 PM (5 years, 4 months ago)

I couldn't live out in the bush but I could definitely settle down in one of these. 

https://inhabitat.com/7-charming-off-grid-homes-for-a-rent-free-life/

Slow rolling through the AT or PCT would be a pretty cool way to live off the grid for awhile too.


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OfflineBlastfrompast
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Registered: 06/16/18
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Last seen: 4 years, 9 months
Re: Living off the Grid [Re: DustyBottoms] * 1
    #25506947 - 10/02/18 05:37 PM (5 years, 3 months ago)

If u are really wanting to move off grid and be self sufficient after ur land purchase .the next thing should be to either build or buy a sawmill . They supply u with so many valuable resources from job, money, home, etc... it is the most useful thing i have ever built . I even save the sawdust. I traded enough lumber for  solar panels .next was chickens, goats, and pigs which i also traded for lumber .they provide so many duties from food to land clearing  to just plain ol entertainment.  i havent bought any groceries(minus ketchup and mustard )in the last 7 years .Where i live in the Appalachians(far east tn)u dont really need a garden cause there so many edibles growing everywhere  just take a walk and a basket.


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OfflineBuster_Brown
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Registered: 09/17/11
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Re: Living off the Grid [Re: Blastfrompast]
    #25507146 - 10/02/18 06:37 PM (5 years, 3 months ago)

How do you move a log? and how do you lift it when it arrives at your mill?


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OfflineBlastfrompast
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Re: Living off the Grid [Re: Buster_Brown]
    #25507188 - 10/02/18 06:50 PM (5 years, 3 months ago)

With cant hooks and come alongs when i first started now i have a tractor with pallet forks its alor easier but the manual way worked. Also most of the timber i cut comes from my land we have close to 376 acre. Also u wouldnt believe how many logs u can get for free just for removing them


Edited by Blastfrompast (10/02/18 06:54 PM)


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Invisiblepassifloracaerulea
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Registered: 11/13/10
Posts: 10,485
Re: Living off the Grid [Re: Blastfrompast] * 1
    #25507995 - 10/03/18 12:43 AM (5 years, 3 months ago)

I had a small woodmizer sawmill and still do. I have a small 27 horse john deer that I use to lift the log onto the mill with chokers. You can also use a tool called a sweed which is a big swinging hook hanging from a handle with enough room fro 4 people to grab the end of the log and maneuver it to the mill or end of your truck bed heavy end first. Then you do the same with the small end and lift onto mill or slide into truck pile. I used to pirate logs almost every single night when I lived off grid surrounded by always clearcut BLM We also had this outdoor wood burning furnace that pumped low voltage pumped hot water to the greenhouses, chinchilla barn, our hot water heater, and house furnace. It was the best heat source ever and could heat up our house in a few minutes with the blower and heat exchange copper coils in back. very simple design. Weyerhauser left old growth stump rounds that they cut from the base of every tree after felling it, so they were perfect for a sledge hammer and wedges. There was always unlimited firewood. Once we had a place we were actually allowed in during the day called maple mountain. It was a mountain made of maple, alder, and hemlock trees. I attached as many chokers as possible to pull out usable sawmill timber, and cut away for firewood rounds. One morning the entire place had been burnt to a pile of ash by the company. There were at least 40 of us using that source. They gave no warning that it was going to be burnt. Back to piracy after that...


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OfflineBuster_Brown
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Registered: 09/17/11
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Re: Living off the Grid [Re: passifloracaerulea]
    #25508335 - 10/03/18 07:10 AM (5 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

passifloracaerulea said:
I had a small woodmizer sawmill and still do. I have a small 27 horse john deer that I use to lift the log onto the mill with chokers. You can also use a tool called a sweed which is a big swinging hook hanging from a handle with enough room fro 4 people to grab the end of the log and maneuver it to the mill or end of your truck bed heavy end first. Then you do the same with the small end and lift onto mill or slide into truck pile. I used to pirate logs almost every single night when I lived off grid surrounded by always clearcut BLM We also had this outdoor wood burning furnace that pumped low voltage pumped hot water to the greenhouses, chinchilla barn, our hot water heater, and house furnace. It was the best heat source ever and could heat up our house in a few minutes with the blower and heat exchange copper coils in back. very simple design. Weyerhauser left old growth stump rounds that they cut from the base of every tree after felling it, so they were perfect for a sledge hammer and wedges. There was always unlimited firewood. Once we had a place we were actually allowed in during the day called maple mountain. It was a mountain made of maple, alder, and hemlock trees. I attached as many chokers as possible to pull out usable sawmill timber, and cut away for firewood rounds. One morning the entire place had been burnt to a pile of ash by the company. There were at least 40 of us using that source. They gave no warning that it was going to be burnt. Back to piracy after that...




I about wore myself out sledging and wedging old growth rounds last autumn that the mill was glad to be rid of. Then this spring I split a 17' Hemlock log and drug it across the face of a ravine, almost losing myself. I've got old hemlock and cherry on the face of this ravine and about the only way I figure I'll get it out of there is to fell it into the creek then winch it back up to the paved road. I cant figure if the cherry is worth more by the 16" round log or if I'd be better making it into firewood.


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Invisiblepassifloracaerulea
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Registered: 11/13/10
Posts: 10,485
Re: Living off the Grid [Re: Buster_Brown]
    #25508827 - 10/03/18 10:47 AM (5 years, 3 months ago)

Or set up a spar.


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InvisibleAcuriousmycologist
"Asking for a friend"
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Registered: 07/07/18
Posts: 751
Re: Living off the Grid [Re: passifloracaerulea]
    #25509259 - 10/03/18 01:05 PM (5 years, 3 months ago)

No, it's the dream tho.


--------------------
We're all mentally ill. We're all delusional. We're all junkies. It's just a matter of degree
(the Venerable Robina Curtin)

Anything I say here is a fiction, for role play or research only. Full of bollocks I am. I wouldn't believe me.


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OfflineBuster_Brown
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Re: Living off the Grid [Re: passifloracaerulea]
    #25509433 - 10/03/18 02:11 PM (5 years, 3 months ago)

I don't know why I said Hemlock when I meant Locust.

Quote:

passifloracaerulea said:
Or set up a spar.






Yeah uh huh.


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OfflineBlastfrompast
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Re: Living off the Grid [Re: passifloracaerulea]
    #25510165 - 10/03/18 07:13 PM (5 years, 3 months ago)

So this boiler u had was it just one of the premade outdoor wood stove boilers or was it something u built  cause ive really bn thanking about investing in one of these cause propane is eating me out of house and home . We do have quite a large home 3600 sqft on one level but our monthly propane payment is 298 a month every month it is the only bill we have but damn that over3000 a year just to heat November through march  gotta figure so.ething out any ideas on best way to heat


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Invisiblepassifloracaerulea
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Registered: 11/13/10
Posts: 10,485
Re: Living off the Grid [Re: Blastfrompast]
    #25510638 - 10/03/18 10:26 PM (5 years, 3 months ago)

It was the smaller central boiler brand and unit at the time which was in 2005 when we got it. It could be made if you were a really good welder and had all the parts that cost essentially what the entire unit is... It was fucking sweet though, in how much exchange heat it really put off. You'd think the exchange to your normal hot water heater would be minimal, but our water was too hot without adding some cool water to it. The one heater we used for the whole house took a few minutes to heat up the entire house, even during freezing weather after being gone for days. I built the whole 30'x40' greenhouse with lumber i made with my sawmill pirated from the clearcuts by moonlight. That greenhouse was tropical. It was like walking into and breathing a rainforest. I had around a dozen different passiflora species, benches of giant salvias, and around 200 of around a dozen trichocereus species I grew from seed and were 7 years old. I built the greenhouse the last summer I was married, then had to give it up the next year. I've built some awesome shit and had just about everything taken from me over the years, even a rainbow obsidian claim that was worth millions to the chinese, and the assholes who stole it actually made those millions. I'm not exaggerating. Life will eat you.


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InvisibleWesker
I'm a teapot

Registered: 09/07/15
Posts: 225
Re: Living off the Grid [Re: passifloracaerulea]
    #25512793 - 10/04/18 07:19 PM (5 years, 3 months ago)

why the fuck did this go on this thread

YO internet u be trippin


Edited by Wesker (10/06/18 11:09 AM)


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