I’m looking for a wide variety of topics. Feel free to call me crazy :)! But I would love any/all info regarding the following:
- Self-sufficient farming and gardening techniques
- Solar power installation and maintenance
- Water collection and filtration methods
- Off-grid food preservation options (canning, fermenting, dehydration)
- Constructing and maintaining off-grid shelters (tiny homes, yurts, earthships)
- Sustainable waste management practices
- Home remedies and natural medicine for common ailments
- Wild foraging and hunting skills
- Basic wilderness survival skills (fire building, shelter construction, navigation)
- Off-grid communication methods (shortwave radios, Morse code)
- DIY appliances and tools for off-grid living
- Sustainable living practices (permaculture, composting, recycling)
- Essential off-grid kitchen equipment and cooking techniques
- Emergency preparedness and disaster management
- Financial planning and budgeting for off-grid living.
Please feel free to include any topics along those lines. I’m sure if you’ve read to this point you get where I’m going.
Maybe there is somewhere, but I have yet to find it. This advice is geared towards relying on the economy minimally instead of going fully self sufficient. Our economy encourages hyper-specialization so having one person skilled at many things is discouraged.
Notes: This assumes you personally do all the required labor and are in the US. The Land is probably the biggest challenge due to the regulations imposed by US powers. You definitely can’t do this legally in a city limits and probably will run into resistance when doing it in the countryside. Farmland is valued at median of $5000 an acre and if you are able to convince someone to sell you a tenth of a acre at that rate you get $500 dollars. You will have to bypass an formal survey and probably consult a lawyer to to draft and file the paperwork with the government.
Living in this way is formally illegal unless you adhere to corrupt regulations designed to limit housing supply. A. Zoning regulations, B. Buildings code. C. Public health regulations requiring a sewer system be installed by a list of approved contracters(grift). A and B can be avoided in some counties in the US. C Largely cannot be avoided but there the amish have successfully argued against some of these regulations on religous grounds. In my view A B and C are all unconstitutional and immoral restrictions imposed by our corrupt government and deserve to be ignored if you are prepared to face the possible consequences of it. I suspect many areas effectively turn a blind eye to C.
Not a lawyer. this post is not legal advice.
Feel free to ask any follow up questions.