Washington State: Where I WOULD and WOULDN'T Live

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  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024
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Комментарии • 177

  • @hendricksonhomestead
    @hendricksonhomestead 3 месяца назад +38

    I have to admit, I’m nervous to watch this one because I already live in Washington and I don’t need any confirmation that I’m in the wrong spot. Especially with a 2.25% interest rate.

    • @cerickson5256
      @cerickson5256 3 месяца назад +11

      Yeah, me too. I love it where I live, except for politics, liberaly progressive crazies, and very high taxes and cost of living. Otherwise, it's amazing and I can't bear to leave.

    • @ajsfa
      @ajsfa 3 месяца назад +5

      I had a 3% rate in Olympia and jumped ship in 2021. It was worth it.

    • @BRANDYHAMILTONS
      @BRANDYHAMILTONS 3 месяца назад +4

      Yeah, I live in Spokane but I want to live in the woods eventually as it's beautiful... my uncle is going to sell me an acre up north near Colville in the woods and I used to go to school in kettle falls so I know how exquisite it is up there 😊

    • @arsnotorious
      @arsnotorious 3 месяца назад

      We are not accepting immigrants into Canada...😊

    • @ohgawd
      @ohgawd 2 месяца назад

      ​@@cerickson5256what are those taxes for?

  • @bradcavanagh3092
    @bradcavanagh3092 3 месяца назад +29

    Stone's law: The level of freedom is inversely proportional to the volume of concrete.

  • @christroutner
    @christroutner 3 месяца назад +15

    Keep in mind that the Forks area is a rain forest. It's going to be very, very wet, but lush. Everything will mold and get covered in moss. Building covered storage will be key to living in this area.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 3 месяца назад

      And lots of deep porches. Western Clallam and Jefferson County need to break away from the more Leftist east end of their current counties.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 3 месяца назад

      @@smokeyangelav
      Your comment posted under a different video than you intended.

    • @smokeyangelav
      @smokeyangelav 3 месяца назад +1

      @@b_uppy it's the correct video, it just posted in the wrong area.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 3 месяца назад

      @@smokeyangelav
      I usually have a problem when "casting" to the TV. I try to comment, but the comment posts under the current video instead of the one I started the comment under...

    • @smokeyangelav
      @smokeyangelav 3 месяца назад

      @@b_uppy ah, no. it was the correct video. I don’t know why it replied under this comment though. I have moved it.

  • @ry3713
    @ry3713 3 месяца назад +14

    What a banger idea for a mini series.

  • @quackersplatfarm
    @quackersplatfarm 3 месяца назад +12

    I have a homestead in western WA, south of Olympic mtns. The wokeness in WA state is nuts but my area is red and lots of homesteaders. The summers are dry, months with no rain so you must irrigate.

  • @d0nn13m0n0
    @d0nn13m0n0 3 месяца назад +7

    I live in north Idaho. When you were talking about Spokane I was thinking “say it”. You zoomed into north Idaho and said it without saying it. This’ll be a great series if you keep it up.

  • @scottoldham7459
    @scottoldham7459 3 месяца назад +8

    Did you talk with any Washingtonians? Kinda missed the southern coast, very rural and mild. You ain’t from around here.

  • @StevenGreenough
    @StevenGreenough 3 месяца назад +9

    I guess I'm one of those "salt of the earth" dudes from Colville. Been on land here since 1973 and agree with your assessment of this area. Spent lots of time in southern BC on mini breaks (the great lockdown kinda spoiled the travel experience a bit!) Keep up the good work.

  • @4444Rosemary
    @4444Rosemary 3 месяца назад +9

    I escaped from Western Washington last year, I feel like I barely got out alive. But of course there are good things about Washington State, I am glad Curtis is taking a rational look at it. Me I'd say run don't walk, but that's not fair to the state as a whole.

    • @strictlyconservative8777
      @strictlyconservative8777 3 месяца назад

      Yes, it's more than fair, it's objective and factual!

    • @gaidhliglass
      @gaidhliglass 3 месяца назад +1

      😂 We're also escapees and are so glad we left. Felt overtaxed and couldn't stand the political direction. Welcome to the real world fellow escapee.

    • @brycehess6708
      @brycehess6708 3 месяца назад

      ​@@gaidhliglass did you move somewhere with a income-tax or no?

  • @matthewaamot2961
    @matthewaamot2961 3 месяца назад +5

    I'm in Whatcom, grew up with lots of conservative farm families but its changing fast. Main obstacle is affordability. Brother lives just south of Colville, but even he's seen big changes there in just 6 years or so. While I like many aspects of the "wet" (west) side better, I think if we were to stay in Washington that NE portion is the last best hope. That will only last for so long, though.

    • @Combatarmsnet
      @Combatarmsnet 2 месяца назад

      I’m in Custer in Whatcom, where are you at?

  • @accidentalhomestead5522
    @accidentalhomestead5522 3 месяца назад +5

    I live in eastern Wa./next to the Snake River. It is dry, 8-12 inches of rain per year. However, that does equal a lot of sunshine. On our 10 acre patch i put in a large lined pond and have stocked it with fish. It will double as a water reserve, but mostly it’s there for a secure 2nd source and the fish. One other benefit to being dry is a low low parasite load for grazing animals- we’ve just started with our hair sheep journey. Another note: property values where i am have gone nuts along with property taxes. We bought our place- 10 acres, large shop, small double wide for 200k in 2016. It’s tripled in price- and i dont want it to or to pay any more in taxes. My neighbor built a nice 3000 ft home- the county is hitting him for almost 9k a year- I’m just under 4k-we have what they call a scenic view of the river.

  • @jperiksen
    @jperiksen 3 месяца назад +4

    The problem is a lot of the rural you can not put a homestead. Watersheds do not allow building even a shed or a barn, or even putting in a gravel road. Also, you can't have animals or farm vegetables as they sometimes disallow fertilizers, herbicides (even organic), etc... US & many states have wildlife protection areas.

  • @dwighthires3163
    @dwighthires3163 3 месяца назад +4

    I love your observations about Washington. I was born here and have lived here for 70 years. I have been a diehard loyalist to this state. However, I am embarrassed about current happenings. State government has now passed zoning, building, watershed laws statewide because when they left it up to regional entities, they did not follow their far-left coast agenda. Now you cannot capture any rainwater, have even a temporary outhouse, use propane, or any form of alternative construction in anything you build on your homestead statewide. Statewide zoning has become a mess and the fees can easily exceed $30,000 for permits.

    • @bunsguns8222
      @bunsguns8222 2 месяца назад

      I thought capture of rainwater was settled years ago in favor of the citizens?

    • @dwighthires3163
      @dwighthires3163 2 месяца назад +2

      @@bunsguns8222 You are right in most of the states, but not so in Washington State. Go figure. I doubt there is anyone who wants to enforce this unique prohibition except anyone in the planning and building permit departments. This means you cannot use it officially to meet any code requirement.

  • @marvindelack4483
    @marvindelack4483 3 месяца назад +5

    We bought 6 acre place in loomis Washington. We are west of republic . Home steading is awesome here. Zone 6b

  • @RC-qb1dz
    @RC-qb1dz 3 месяца назад +3

    Im up in the Okanogan valley and water can be hit or miss. Where I'm at, wells are deep and low producing, but it's on a ton of granite and surface water takes a long time to seep really deep, so the water table can be favorably high.

  • @BGG15
    @BGG15 3 месяца назад +3

    Eastern WA is beautiful, I can't wait to get back one day.

  • @clifb.3521
    @clifb.3521 3 месяца назад +4

    Thank you for visiting Washington.

  • @Klaus__Schwab
    @Klaus__Schwab 3 месяца назад +2

    This is so awesome to watch, and you're my favorite youtuber. I'm watching this with my girlfriend and I'm grinning ear to ear because two 1/2 years ago I woke up and lived in Seatle so knew I had to leave, and I bought 40 acres up in Wauconda just North of Republic which was right in the middle green circle. Made me feel great about my decision. Thanks man, you rock.

  • @knesa20911001018849
    @knesa20911001018849 3 месяца назад +2

    I think you need to allow a wider range of acceptable down near the blue mountains. It is dryer, yes but I think you will find it isn’t any worse than the towns you pointed out up north. Warmer down south and better winters which I think makes up for a slightly lower rainfall

  • @PNW_Homesteader
    @PNW_Homesteader 3 месяца назад +2

    Curt! I live in Forks. No commy government here!

  • @groworforage342
    @groworforage342 3 месяца назад +3

    there are some serious outlaw/sovereign counties in washington state if you want a local gov on your side. though amenities (including government) are next to none. some of the arid areas are deceiving or perhaps I'm just used to living on the dryside.

  • @Floating.Swords
    @Floating.Swords 3 месяца назад +3

    Much of the focus in this episode is centered in areas that are in Idaho, which is a completely different state. Not that you didn't know that. I just felt compelled to point that out so that in the event you decide to turn this into a series in which more states are covered, you can try to hone in more on the areas that exist within the borders of that specific state. As always, your insight and commentary is greatly appreciated.

    • @tenthousanddays2103
      @tenthousanddays2103 3 месяца назад +1

      Did you mean to say "almost none of the focus in this episode is centered in areas that are in Idaho" ?

    • @Floating.Swords
      @Floating.Swords 3 месяца назад

      @@tenthousanddays2103 No. I meant to say much of the focus. But if you don't think that phrasing accurately describes the overview given in this video, then how about "an unnecessarily inordinate amount of time" was spent on areas in Idaho, which is obviously NOT in Washington, derp!.

  • @shawnkalin9337
    @shawnkalin9337 3 месяца назад +3

    In SHTF scenario, Bremerton sub base is a top west coast target. Just sayin...
    Maybe south east...

  • @SarahKirkconnell
    @SarahKirkconnell 3 месяца назад +3

    I'd also add about the Olympic Pennisula you only have ONE highway so in the even of a major earthquake this is an issue. Hwy 101 is a rural 2 lane road back there. It rains a LOT from Port Angeles on. You must be prepared for long winters that are always wet. But the tradeoff is being left alone out there. Tons of bears and elk if you hunt. However, much of the interior is federally owned "public" lands. If you wanted to homestead, it is going to be in a valley. It's a lot to think about, but the payoff of natural beauty can be worth the isolation. And rain.

  • @seaday123
    @seaday123 3 месяца назад +2

    May I suggest you add one other factor. Namely, influence of an area on the entire state. In the case of Seattle, it has a massive influence on what happens state level. So even if you are in one of the green areas noted, effects like transferring homestead to next generation is massively influenced by policies that are strongly determined out of Seattle. Eastern WA has this grievance regularly and it is a fair point to factor in.

  • @davidwelty9763
    @davidwelty9763 3 месяца назад +3

    I would consider state politics as well, especially as it pertains to property rights and government intrusion.

    • @offgridcurtisstone
      @offgridcurtisstone  3 месяца назад +3

      We do, but at the same time, when you're away from the cities, they don't matter as much.

  • @BGG15
    @BGG15 3 месяца назад +1

    Your dry region includes the very good ancient Palouse grasslands. it's not great for growing vegs ect, but it is amazing grazing land.

  • @rivitman
    @rivitman 3 месяца назад +1

    I've lived in Washington for most of my 64 years. Your west side circles are pretty accurate. And yes, reduce your radius around the east side locations some, Yakima much smaller i think. I'm on the east side now, and it's like a different planet altogether from the entirely screwed up west side where I spent most of my years. A lot of desert here in central Washington. But if you have a water source, the growing season is long. Were I a homesteader, Farther north I think, but there can be some pretty heavy winter up there. As to farms and chemicals, I'm just not seeing any negative affects here, no cancer clusters or anything like that.

    • @michellecelesteNW
      @michellecelesteNW 3 месяца назад +2

      Two branches of my family died from cancer and complications on the far east side of the state. Something to think about.

  • @lionsdenblades3247
    @lionsdenblades3247 3 месяца назад +2

    Thanks for this. I have a few acres in Puyallup, Wa. Just east of Tacoma. I love this town but I know it’s nowhere near ideal. We have been eyeballing Coleville and Sandpoint ID and north. Glad to know my intuition has some wisdom.

    • @tomGibertson
      @tomGibertson 3 месяца назад +1

      I'm in Puyallup- "the farm" here. First spring!

    • @lionsdenblades3247
      @lionsdenblades3247 3 месяца назад

      @@tomGibertson cool. Which farm? I’m down near Sterino farm

  • @086sully
    @086sully 3 месяца назад +2

    Kettle falls! Great area. Our natural foods store closed today unfortunately....

  • @charleneayers3608
    @charleneayers3608 3 месяца назад +4

    Yes, everyone please avoid those dry regions. Please …go away.

  • @ryandixon1102
    @ryandixon1102 3 месяца назад +4

    From South Tacoma, lived in Florida for 12 years until January, now I’m
    Back in Olympia. Definitely avoid the cities. Tacoma-Seattle area is all garbage

  • @zenjamin6262
    @zenjamin6262 3 месяца назад +4

    Such valuable info this would of been gold when I was buying

    • @my_channel_44
      @my_channel_44 3 месяца назад

      Research counties with no building codes and an aging pop with properties that have unpaid taxes. Don't be cattle who waits for it to List.

  • @lvk3622
    @lvk3622 3 месяца назад +6

    Hi Curtis; thank you for the overview. Perhaps you could do a second video on WA State Islands. I would be very interested in your thoughts. thank you so much for you sharing your insight.

    • @toddburgess6792
      @toddburgess6792 3 месяца назад +4

      The Islands are always a bad bet if you rely on the ferry system. They're trying to woke-it-up with electric ferries.

    • @lvk3622
      @lvk3622 3 месяца назад +3

      @@toddburgess6792 Perhaps in a SHTF situation, limited access to the island(s) would keep others from easily getting to you. A little isolation may not be a bad thing. Anyhow, some of the islands do have bridges...nonetheless, if you are self-sufficient and homesteading why leave in the first place? Some of the islands are sparsely populated, have conservate people on rurally zoned lands and are in Counties that are not necessarily in line with the political ideologies held by the State. Additionally, some have constitutionally loyal local Sheriffs who do their jobs properly. I think lumping all the islands, which boast limited populations, amazing natural resources, tons of local farms/markets and homesteaders into the same category as Seattle is not accurate imo. Was just hoping for another video by Curtis in the future that focused primarily on the islands....it seems the islands got overlooked in this one.

    • @GaserBeam-hi4ez
      @GaserBeam-hi4ez 3 месяца назад +1

      I loved living on Whidbey. It’s so crazy liberal though. The weather! The weather! Ugh makes me so sad. Cures migraines that weather.

    • @offgridcurtisstone
      @offgridcurtisstone  3 месяца назад +1

      For now, we've got 50 states and all Canadian provinces to do.

    • @SarahKirkconnell
      @SarahKirkconnell 3 месяца назад +2

      @@GaserBeam-hi4ez I grew up on North Whidbey, moved off for 15 years, then came back. We homestead on the south end now.

  • @geonote1789
    @geonote1789 3 месяца назад +2

    Excellent video Curtis. Would love to see a video on how you use Google Earth.👍

  • @carymartz8762
    @carymartz8762 3 месяца назад +4

    Move to Forks only if you have webbed toes.

  • @nyceimsuijuris6965
    @nyceimsuijuris6965 3 месяца назад +1

    HeyCurtis. . . great content regarding choosing a permanent homestead. .
    . although i just released a video which evidences one can no longer acquire land under any government. . . all estates have been absconded including yours. .. . paper though. . . this is an important distinction

  • @tomjensen618
    @tomjensen618 3 месяца назад +1

    I live within one of those red circles. He is right. Don't move here, I like the green fields ,the clean air and water and the great evolved folks with room in their souls. Don't you come trampling in fucking it up!

  • @Wood-For-Power1
    @Wood-For-Power1 3 месяца назад +2

    Hello. I am SW Washington bred, born and 71 years lived. While I do agree with your concrete-jungle and red circles assessment one commenters account of the county you choose to live in MATTERS. Wakiakam, Pacific, Lewis and even edges of Cowlitz counties are fine and "co-operate" the least with State level mandates. The still true industrial Ports of Longview; Kalama and Woodland fund these counties so less hammering of the farmers and property owners. Oregon Columbia River flip side counties from here can be a viable option too.
    Of course those moving from the dense Urban areas of California still demanding cake will only find very short term relief. Avoid lakeside properties. Avoid the pricing run ups on spectacular view property. Live in the in-betweens and car day trip to these areas.
    So far as Olympia/State mandates live family level small; with only the fewest like mined neighbors and then just do what you want out of sight out of mind.
    If you can totally throw out the enslaving concepts of My-Precious-Resell-Value; granite versus formica countertops then you can live-Free wedging-in the westside in-betweens areas.
    Coming from California; Portland/Seattle Urban . . .just leave that all behind. Grow the true PNW-wetside webs between your toes. Let the moss fill-in grow on your backside. Do burn wood for heat. Sweat that out to become a true local. Big Hydro-electric is a cheap convience - do not let it become a dependence. That propane is for the engines and cooking stove. Satellite systems work most everywhere now. Let is become your best friend. With an OFF switch. Insist on stadium sports live experiences; professional live theater; live concerts and they still own you and your soul.
    Steve unruh

    • @brycehess6708
      @brycehess6708 3 месяца назад

      Totally agree...im in north Clark county and there are no rules up here at all...when I tell the vancouver/ Portland flatlanders where I live they look at me like I'm a hermit in the mountains lol

  • @6x6Tortuga
    @6x6Tortuga 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for this...

  • @brendajs8053
    @brendajs8053 3 месяца назад +3

    Steading near an active volcano or on the coast near the fault line isn’t something to be concerned about when factoring things?

    • @smokeyangelav
      @smokeyangelav 3 месяца назад

      I’m guessing he didn’t know they were volcanoes.

    • @brycehess6708
      @brycehess6708 3 месяца назад +1

      Where you gonna go where a volcano isn't a threat?...Yellowstone would take out all of north america lol

    • @smokeyangelav
      @smokeyangelav 3 месяца назад +1

      @@brycehess6708 Not everywhere would be in a lava flow area. That I would avoid. There should be maps somewhere. I was in the Mt St Helen eruption. It got dark during the day because the ash was so thick. It was raining down like snow. Eastern Washington actually got heavy ash. It affected farmland for decades. Everything was so dusty and extra dust in our homes for years. Every time you stepped it would float. Central Washington was protected because of the rain shadow and didn’t get as much.
      I know that Washington has a reputation of always raining but that’s not the case. It has every planting zone in the US. Eastern Washington doesn’t get that much rain and is mostly desert. I wouldn’t want to live “downwind” of Hanford either.
      Washington has areas that require irrigation rights as well. Also areas called green zones. Some places shared wells and even power poles which can cause some conflicts with neighbors. Television and phone service is unavailable in some areas unless you get something like Starlink. It also has larger prey like Mountain Lions, Bobcats, and Bears. There are porcupine, Skunks, rattlesnakes, black widows, scorpions in the East. Most places in the US have coyotes but Washington has quite a lot. Near my grandmother’s house in Eastern Washington, they ran around in packs often which is fairly rare. My aunt got chased by a pack while riding her horse. You could hear them at night. Where I grew up in the mountains, we had a very short growing season so crops that require longer times were difficult. We would have frosts every so often in the summer. Cool season crops did amazing though. The soil in the mountain area is very rich. We might add some cow manure but that’s it. Pretty easy to dig but it wouldn’t take long to hit water. My grandfather was a cattle farmer but as he got older, he had to lease to other farmers because the taxes were high. My dad continues to lease to this day to pay the taxes. If he were ever unable to lease, he’d have to sell quickly I’m sure. It’s unfortunately hard to hold on to family land. My grandfather lost a lot of acreage to the military because they wanted to expand their bombing range. They took it to court but lost. It was the second time they had done it and they also took some of his brother’s land. They compensated him but not for what it was worth. My dad has to put up with hearing the explosions. 🫤 The county put in a quarry behind his house also. At least they leased that from my grandfather (and now my uncle) but still.
      I do love Washington though, specifically because you can be i. rolling plains, a desert, a forest, and an Ocean beach all in one day. In most areas, you have true four seasons. The people zip around in a rush and have good work ethic. They don’t really chat people up like you might see in some places. Their mind is always on the next thing. My son was a year old once when I was there. In Oklahoma, I had random strangers coming up to see him all of the time. One lady wanted to kiss his feet. In Washington, my son seemed like an inconvenience to them if he even made a sound. No one talked to him. Just something I Noticed. Oh you want to call people and arrange a time to meet. Most don’t want you to just show up. If you break down on the side of the road, people will just ignore you. Unless it’s a trucker and then they will stop. Truckers are the best there. Drs appointments often require travel to other cities. The small towns have small hospitals and in emergencies may life flight you to Portland or Seattle.

    • @brycehess6708
      @brycehess6708 3 месяца назад

      I live 20 miles south of Mt st Helen's and my whole family lived through the eruption in vancouver...wasn't a huge deal...a few bridges and ash was cleaned up....all the forests and wildlife are thriving all around the mountain...as far as lava goes that would be the least of your worries if Yellowstone blew

    • @brycehess6708
      @brycehess6708 3 месяца назад

      @@smokeyangelav every critter you just mentioned I actively hunt in washington..you sound terrified of the woods ? Lol

  • @freedom8921-s6o
    @freedom8921-s6o 2 месяца назад +1

    Waiting for you to do Alabama. The Northern part is a lot like Middle TN. The southern part is very different. Differences from TN is less people, property taxes, building codes. Land is cheaper and their are very few leftist. The biggest down side is very few people homesteading. Strange in a place if a seed drops out of your pocket, it will grow twice as big as other states with a lot of inputs?

  • @Celticwarrior2.0
    @Celticwarrior2.0 Месяц назад

    I live in kettle falls right next to colville and yeah you nailed that one on the head. You couldn't pick a better spot for shtf now as far as the Spokane area as you are pointing out I'm not too sure about those because I lived in Spokane for 20 years there's tens of thousands of people in those mountains around Spokane you'd want to get way away from those areas and that's just my two cents worth everybody has different opinions anyways God bless have a great day

  • @JC-ly8pz
    @JC-ly8pz 3 месяца назад +2

    no where on the wast side of the mountains. The mountains create two different states it seems.

    • @brycehess6708
      @brycehess6708 3 месяца назад

      Not even close....yacolt,woodland,amboy,
      Cougar,castle rock.....by square mile its far more conservative

  • @TheBushcraftontario
    @TheBushcraftontario 3 месяца назад +1

    So if I have mud roads, that must mean I've have lots freedom!

  • @michaelg4569
    @michaelg4569 2 месяца назад +1

    Thoughts on rural Maine?

  • @CadmeanLotus
    @CadmeanLotus 3 месяца назад +1

    It would be interesting to see a video like this for Australia.

  • @greenmarcosu
    @greenmarcosu 3 месяца назад +1

    I am most interested in Michigan and New Hampshire. Are you basing some of your reasoning on Joel Skousen's book Strategic Relocation?

    • @offgridcurtisstone
      @offgridcurtisstone  3 месяца назад

      Some what. Mostly on my experience listing properties and consulting in the states.

  • @scottfree8726
    @scottfree8726 3 месяца назад

    Curtis you should include population size info and different types of land in your talks, like recreation, unorganized, rocky, sandy, ext.

  • @michaell1665
    @michaell1665 2 месяца назад

    Love your channel, but wouldn't move to Washington state if they gave me the land... okay, I'll take free land!

  • @balfiman
    @balfiman 3 месяца назад

    Great series concept... When you started with WA, I figured you'd work your way from west to east, but I see your next video didn't follow that trend... Hoping you cover California soon!

  • @labellavita2248
    @labellavita2248 3 месяца назад

    Thanks, Curtis.

  • @solangeamos7172
    @solangeamos7172 3 месяца назад

    Hi Curtis! I'm local to your area and wondering if you are hiring this year? I'd love to be apart of the community. Cheers!

  • @michellecelesteNW
    @michellecelesteNW 3 месяца назад

    Broad strokes I think you're right on this but I know a few choice gems and worry spots in particular that aren't mentioned. Please do Oregon next. I've lived in both these states and debate often which is better/worse.

    • @brycehess6708
      @brycehess6708 3 месяца назад

      Oregon has better gun freedom(barely) and far better big game IMO...but as far as living I like wash

    • @michellecelesteNW
      @michellecelesteNW 3 месяца назад +1

      @@brycehess6708 the restrictions on food and water are growing in oregon - to a frightening degree. Gun or not, no one survives without food and water.

    • @brycehess6708
      @brycehess6708 3 месяца назад

      @@michellecelesteNW catch water and grow your food 👍

    • @michellecelesteNW
      @michellecelesteNW 3 месяца назад

      @@brycehess6708 of course but that's illegal in Oregon. That's what's becoming so scary. It's tyranny.

  • @ToCatchACreep
    @ToCatchACreep 3 месяца назад +2

    Please do a video like this for England.

    • @offgridcurtisstone
      @offgridcurtisstone  3 месяца назад +2

      Is it even possible to buy land there any more?

    • @jed-nw8gf
      @jed-nw8gf 3 месяца назад

      King Chuck the Turd (Sausage Fingers) and Queen Camilla own all the land there; where it rains 90% of the time - life like living in a tuppawear box.

  • @user-jv9qz2bu1r
    @user-jv9qz2bu1r 3 месяца назад +2

    anyone else from Port Townsend?

    • @GaserBeam-hi4ez
      @GaserBeam-hi4ez 3 месяца назад +3

      Not from there but lived just opposite of it. It’s very liberal. Gorgeous weather. Expensive. I’d say not safe even in the best of times l. WA has a lot of problems. But damn is it beautiful.

    • @user-jv9qz2bu1r
      @user-jv9qz2bu1r 3 месяца назад

      @@GaserBeam-hi4ez I moved to PT from teh SF Bay Area in 2000. I had to leave the congested Bay Area and someone had mentioned PT to me. With the hills and the water it felt like home. The dark winter nights is another matter. Half of the town is from California. Weather is mild here it never gets hot. It is a Marxist paradise to some, that is for sure.

    • @GaserBeam-hi4ez
      @GaserBeam-hi4ez 3 месяца назад

      @@user-jv9qz2bu1r I didn’t even notice the winters, it’s so mild and I don’t mind early nights. Summer the sun staying out is a bit much, but gorgeous.
      The drugs and homelessness and attitude is crazy, but as a Californian you’ve seen worse, so PT probably is comparatively nice and safe.

    • @user-jv9qz2bu1r
      @user-jv9qz2bu1r 3 месяца назад

      @@GaserBeam-hi4ez The wealthier PT residents live here from Easter to Fall. Some go to Baja. Crime, homelessness ae not PT issues. I have left valuables In my patio or unlocked cars. Try this in Seattle.

    • @SarahKirkconnell
      @SarahKirkconnell 3 месяца назад +1

      Across the water. We often walk on the ferry to go hiking and exploring in PT.

  • @brycehess6708
    @brycehess6708 3 месяца назад

    I live in north clark county and its like the wild west here lol..everybody shoots all the time and there is obly 1 sherrif for the whole area...were also up hill from everything in vancouver/Portland...gravel driveways andb I aved roads 👌

  • @DanlowMusic
    @DanlowMusic 3 месяца назад

    The politics of this state, especially the Seattle-Olympia have hurt the entire state. We really need to divide the state into 2 down the cascades. With the eastern WA side getting those rural towns just on the westside of the mountains.

  • @aaronrich9340
    @aaronrich9340 3 месяца назад +1

    Love eastern wa

  • @jilladams9326
    @jilladams9326 3 месяца назад +1

    I'm in Yakima, it's ok

  • @fredwilson3525
    @fredwilson3525 3 месяца назад +1

    Easy to change meters to feet in Google Earth.

  • @user-oe6iu5wx9s
    @user-oe6iu5wx9s 3 месяца назад +2

    Nova Scotia!

  • @username-1818
    @username-1818 2 месяца назад

    Oregon

  • @warriorranchnorthwest4766
    @warriorranchnorthwest4766 3 месяца назад

    Pend Oreille county is great place to homestead!

  • @legaleagleandpaws8198
    @legaleagleandpaws8198 3 месяца назад

    Let me know when you get to New Hampshire. God Bless

  • @Nocare89
    @Nocare89 3 месяца назад +1

    Yeah I-5 would definitely be a disaster area to be

  • @mtanner5965
    @mtanner5965 3 месяца назад

    Could you map out what states you will cover and when? I am way over in Virginia.

  • @VictoryStarr
    @VictoryStarr 3 месяца назад +1

    You crossed over into Idaho while talking about Washington. Is Idaho next?

    • @SirSpence99
      @SirSpence99 3 месяца назад

      Hope not unless he gives a disclaimer of "If you move here, you have to help politically, the leftists are aggressively trying to take over."

    • @driverkpk
      @driverkpk 3 месяца назад +1

      Yes courdelene, sandpoint etc are turning into hipster future nightmares!

  • @darrenmanser2847
    @darrenmanser2847 3 месяца назад

    Expand the lens people (I was going to say 'fish eye or die' but... Oops! 😂

  • @shawnkalin9337
    @shawnkalin9337 3 месяца назад

    And another note about SHTF scenarios is that the military and police will enforce travel restrictions. Just like they tested in the Plandemic.

  • @brusombear3823
    @brusombear3823 3 месяца назад

    wow google earth pro is sick

  • @DisasterRecipe
    @DisasterRecipe 3 месяца назад

    How do you feel about the Walla Walla region?

    • @charleneayers3608
      @charleneayers3608 3 месяца назад

      Pricey and woke since the wineries moved in.

  • @mariaaytes8394
    @mariaaytes8394 2 месяца назад

    Indiana?

  • @rayc.1396
    @rayc.1396 3 месяца назад

    You said "drove threw" that is what you did, no exploration, just drive a highway threw the area.

  • @BuddhistZenDave
    @BuddhistZenDave 3 месяца назад

    Now do Massachusetts.

  • @Commonmomhomeschooler
    @Commonmomhomeschooler 3 месяца назад +1

    Wa born and raised. Lewis county especially the east end is fabulous. But the state as a whole is garbage and ruined sadly

  • @my_channel_44
    @my_channel_44 3 месяца назад +3

    This is cool. But I wouldn't try to acquire any property on the washington area. Very anti-natal.

    • @andymeyer9876
      @andymeyer9876 3 месяца назад +3

      Yup. Born and raised here. Just got an acre of land paid off. The plan was to stay here forever, unfortunately the government just keeps getting stupider. With mail in voting, I don't think there's much hope.

    • @my_channel_44
      @my_channel_44 3 месяца назад +5

      @@andymeyer9876 I don't regard voting either way of fixing anything. That area is way beyond voting as a means to change anything.

    • @andymeyer9876
      @andymeyer9876 3 месяца назад

      @@my_channel_44 yeah true, do to rigged voting.

    • @kinvert
      @kinvert 3 месяца назад +2

      @@andymeyer9876 Washington isn't alone in this unfortunately.

    • @brycehess6708
      @brycehess6708 3 месяца назад

      So the anti natal people will be out bred....shouldn't effect your decisions

  • @jimmy4518
    @jimmy4518 3 месяца назад

    Michigan next

  • @Brzypoint
    @Brzypoint 3 месяца назад +2

    Curtis this is such a great idea! Would it be too much of a hassle to link each state video in the show notes for ease of reference as you complete this series? Thanks!

  • @pacifickaihomesllc3605
    @pacifickaihomesllc3605 3 месяца назад

    AVOID THIS STATE.