⚡️Are You Ready to Live Without Electricity? |💰We Save THOUSANDS Living Off the Grid

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  • Опубликовано: 22 май 2024
  • Increasing natural disasters. Rising electricity costs. 78% of Americans living paycheck to paycheck. It’s time to prepare and practice living without electricity. Whether for a short period of time or long-term, we can all expect to be without electricity at some point.
    No matter how reliant we seem to be on electricity, the reality is, for most of us, electricity is a WANT and not a NEED.
    Learn to thrive without electricity and have the freedom to choose and the power of self-reliance 💪
    Support my channel: ko-fi.com/raisingwildflowers
    Off-grid supplies (affiliate links)
    Solar Power Station Battery: amzn.to/43vb90Z
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    Solar Camping Light amzn.to/3IP4k0O
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    Clever Fox Budget Planner Pro amzn.to/3K1VIW1
    MINT MOBILE: See if Mint could help save you money! mint-mobile.58dp.net/do4DnM
    Business Email: katieraisingwildflowers@gmail.com

Комментарии • 294

  • @ashleybosvik3031
    @ashleybosvik3031 Месяц назад +22

    I was wondering where you bought your power station from

    • @raisingwildflowers
      @raisingwildflowers  Месяц назад +7

      Amazon! Here are the links to the battery pack and solar panel I use 😊
      Solar Power Station Battery: amzn.to/43vb90Z
      Portable Solar Panels amzn.to/3PvQrIK

    • @ashleybosvik3031
      @ashleybosvik3031 Месяц назад

      ​@@raisingwildflowershow much would you say the power station weighs

    • @raisingwildflowers
      @raisingwildflowers  Месяц назад +3

      @@ashleybosvik3031 It’s pretty heavy. At least 30 lbs. I would compare it to a car battery.

    • @kenyonbissett3512
      @kenyonbissett3512 Месяц назад

      @@ashleybosvik3031there is a 42% of coupon as of May 24. Beware, the coupon will attach to the lowest priced item so buy the battery by itself.

    • @amberbrooks82
      @amberbrooks82 11 дней назад

      I'm sorry for my ignorance on this, but I was wondering if that comes with the panels or bought separately?

  • @sandrabryan9106
    @sandrabryan9106 Месяц назад +127

    We had an off grid cottage growing up. It had propane lights, oven/stove, a woodstove. We had an old insulated icebox fridge and would pick up a large block of ice for it...worked great. We would save the melted ice water for dishes, boiled. We also had large rain barrels, the lake and 2 ten gallon jugs of fresh water from home. We also had a BBQ and back up propane camp stove, coleman lanterns & mantles & flashlights. Portable radio for music. It had an outhouse. We always had a properly stored stash of non perishables.. WE raised a flag & vice versa when we arrived to let our Aunt/Uncle & cousins, across the lake, know we had arrived. WE read, swam, canoed, fished, played cards, did puzzles, foraged fruit/berries and hiked and had campfires for entertainment. Best memories ever.

    • @janvan4424
      @janvan4424 Месяц назад +4

      This sounds so wonderful! 🥰

    • @kristiecox7350
      @kristiecox7350 Месяц назад +2

      This sounds like heaven! ❤

    • @jessicaordonez3026
      @jessicaordonez3026 Месяц назад +3

      What a wonderful and sustainable life ❤❤❤I am officially jealous of you

    • @user-uh9we3hk4j
      @user-uh9we3hk4j 25 дней назад

      Well it's not my most desirable way to live.

    • @sandrabryan9106
      @sandrabryan9106 25 дней назад

      @@user-uh9we3hk4j In your opinion!

  • @Soundofwindonsand
    @Soundofwindonsand Месяц назад +44

    I learned that if I start getting bored at night, I just expand the garden another 10 feet, Im too tired, & pass out at dark

  • @birgitelisabeth9661
    @birgitelisabeth9661 13 дней назад +64

    The biggest problem is property taxes. You can save all you want but if you can't pay the property taxes you lose you home and your land. Property taxes are the most unfair and discriminating taxes of all.

    • @tealkerberus748
      @tealkerberus748 10 дней назад +16

      This part. Income taxes and expenditure taxes are both arranged around the payer's ability to pay. Less income = less income tax. Less income also = less expenditure. It's fair.
      But property taxes? You can inherit a gorgeous house in a good area and never have the sort of income people assume when they see where you live, but the property taxes are there to drive out the poor, the widowed, the disabled, and anyone else who isn't rich enough to earn the approval of a rich neighbourhood. It's actively cruel to the individual, and it contributes to the stratification of society whereby the rich only ever interact with other rich people and completely lose touch with what life is like for anyone who can't afford to live in their neighbourhood.

    • @nicholaslogan5185
      @nicholaslogan5185 10 дней назад +6

      ​@@tealkerberus748ya know I never thought of that. As a disabled person who can no longer afford the house I had before my disability..... Yeah I kinda feel this one. 🙏 ✌️

    • @Off-gridPA
      @Off-gridPA 9 дней назад +4

      ​​​@@tealkerberus748PA trys to help with property tax. Low income there is help. Maybe why called a Commonwealth State. PA does strange things how does things to other states. Still your point is valid Property tax. Fix up your home you get penalized in tax. People have things to say about low income people living off the system but government people get paid how much living off same system?

    • @fredrickriffel5845
      @fredrickriffel5845 6 дней назад +9

      The government owns your house not your. You are renting from the government.

    • @user-et4lj6ev2r
      @user-et4lj6ev2r 5 дней назад +1

      How do you get to your house? A street or road, do you have a sewer system, police department to protect you & your property? Etc, etc,etc, how do you think all that is paid?

  • @GenealogistBuchanan
    @GenealogistBuchanan 16 дней назад +15

    Fascinating, I was a teenager when rural electrification came in the 1950s, Until then, we depended on kerosene lamps in the bedrooms and Coleman lamps in the kitchen and living room. A battery powered radio provided news and entertainment, but we also had a wind-up gramophone and books and games, And often neighbors would drop in for a visit, Our water was provided by a dug well and pumped and carried by hand. Cooking and heating was fueled by burning wood. We had an ice chest one year, but harvesting and storing ice was an effort. Instead, milk was usually stored in an extra bucket kept down another well. Laundry was boiled in a wash boiler on the stove and then scrubbed on a scrub board, until Dad bought a wringer washer powered by a little gasoline engine (Johnson Iron Horse 1/4 horsepower). When I was 12, my parents moved to a place that had electricity and running water, and other modern conveniences of the day.

  • @Shobyw
    @Shobyw Месяц назад +32

    I feel one day every American might have to live this way! Say NO to wars!

    • @saintamerican6105
      @saintamerican6105 Месяц назад +3

      Yup ONE DAY but only God knows when it will be.. the Amish been preparing for decades!

    • @domingue4god
      @domingue4god 19 дней назад +5

      Say no to Biden!!!

    • @denisewilson8367
      @denisewilson8367 13 дней назад +5

      ​@@domingue4god and Trump I don't like either one.

  • @glendabyford8074
    @glendabyford8074 Месяц назад +28

    I wash all our laundry with a wash board and manual wringer.. it cleans our clothes amazingly.. now it does take a little time but it’s so calming…

  • @jimhoward6584
    @jimhoward6584 Месяц назад +40

    A suggestion from someone who has lived off grid about half the time the past 25 years. Over time expand your size of power station/solar array and get a small 110 volt fridge. It is well worth the cost and effort. Do NOT buy a propane fridge-----way too expensive. I currently run a 5 cu. ft. 2 door fridge freezer and use about 500 watts/day having 2000 watts of storage/battery with a 875 watt solar array of used dirt cheap residential solar panels.

    • @JasonBarnett-YTisantiWest
      @JasonBarnett-YTisantiWest Месяц назад +2

      You can usually buy a propane fridge for next to nothing when it comes out of a trailer that is about to be decommissioned. Usually, you can buy the trailer for 100 bucks and got the interior for the appliances.

    • @bonnroberts1722
      @bonnroberts1722 Месяц назад

      Not in Portugal...

    • @jimmybrad156
      @jimmybrad156 Месяц назад

      i think u meant watt hours in the first two.

    • @denisewilson8367
      @denisewilson8367 13 дней назад

      I love my propane fridge. But if you have such a huge solar system I guess you can waste the power.

    • @specmp341
      @specmp341 12 дней назад +1

      Add a small fan to a propane fridge system for the coils and propane usage is more minimal

  • @jamieperson7623
    @jamieperson7623 Месяц назад +34

    You are so positive and empowering. You don't get this capable without going through much struggle. You are a strong warrior mom. Love that you share all your knowledge so freely I really enjoy your "do it yourself as economically as possible videos" Love and light to you and the fam.

  • @TheSilmarillian
    @TheSilmarillian 11 дней назад +16

    Been living off grid solar and wind , 2000gal rain water tank for the last ten years , works for me.

    • @telasims233
      @telasims233 2 часа назад

      My thing is, property taxes keeps us SLAVES to pay pay pay? I was so happy when I paid off my lil fixer upper house, because it's mine.. OH WAIT!! the property taxes keep going up, so did I EVER own anything?? The second I miss a payment, they can take the home I busted my ass for, taxes go up with Inflation.. we ALL NEED these skills, because our retirement checks can't run inflation... I got A LOT out of this video ❤

  • @Michelle_Emm
    @Michelle_Emm Месяц назад +13

    You need electricity to make ice, if the grid is down then no ice=no refrigeration.
    Our camp fridge runs off a single solar panel that we bought for $60 second hand and a deep cycle battery we bought from Aldi.
    We have a 6.5kw solar panel array on our house which produces double the amount of power that we use. We sell the excess power back to grid which keeps us constantly in credit. We will eventually add storage batteries and disconnect from the grid.
    You've done so much work on your land in such a short time! Truly inspiring!

  • @2strive405
    @2strive405 Месяц назад +21

    Yes, I want to see a water video!

  • @annagia153
    @annagia153 Месяц назад +25

    I ditched my Keurig coffee maker switched to instant and I like it just the same and so much cheaper.
    Changing to Mint mobile was the best thing I’ve done the savings on phone service is great!
    You are so prepared to live off grid very impressive.
    Living in the moment at its finest!!

    • @markritacco270
      @markritacco270 Месяц назад +4

      I personally do not drink coffee or tea but use hot water for other food-related items. I use a "kettle" (like much that the UK uses) and it takes less than two minutes to heat up the water and the unit is usually less than $20.

    • @Frannieville
      @Frannieville Месяц назад +1

      My keurig caught on fire. I’m done with coffee makers.

    • @markritacco270
      @markritacco270 Месяц назад

      @@Frannieville Yikes! As horrible as it was, it is really good you caught it before further damage.

  • @Soundofwindonsand
    @Soundofwindonsand Месяц назад +11

    I spent 5 years in the Cascade mountains washing all socks, underwear,& T-shirts in a 5 gal bucket plunger wash bucket,
    Hard part was wringing out and drying Inside a 3 season camping trailer, in Winter
    Thats the season your Not supposed to stay in a 3 season
    trailer...

    • @denisewilson8367
      @denisewilson8367 13 дней назад

      I live in my summer version all year round, for the past 10 plus years.

  • @markritacco270
    @markritacco270 Месяц назад +30

    I have collected 5-gallon jugs (10 so far) that are used at dispensers (like at an office). I fill them up at certain Walmart’s for $0.40 gal (purified) or local kiosks for $0.20 gal (natural spring). I use a 2-gallon jug with a spigot on the side (BPA free) in the refrigerator to have cold water. I only drink water, no alcohol, soda/pop, or anything else.

    • @kenyonbissett3512
      @kenyonbissett3512 Месяц назад +3

      Wow! $0.20 to fill a 5 gallon jug is only $1, amazing! We had no water for about a week while our well pump was being repaired. I learned to use very little water to shower, cook and clean. To shower I needed just one gallon split into 2 containers, but then without hot water I didn’t want to linger.

    • @denisewilson8367
      @denisewilson8367 13 дней назад

      I wish I had everyone else's prices. It's $1.89 for a 2 1/2 gallon jugs at my local grocery stores.

    • @specmp341
      @specmp341 12 дней назад +2

      I fill a 270 gallon IBC water tank for $2

    • @kenyonbissett3512
      @kenyonbissett3512 12 дней назад

      @@specmp341 who sells water that cheap?

    • @specmp341
      @specmp341 11 дней назад +1

      @kenyonbissett3512 I get mine from a bulk tower water supplier, or a car wash that has clean bulk water supply fill up stations

  • @readyornot316
    @readyornot316 26 дней назад +8

    Try a solar cooker for additional savings on propane, well worth the investment. We use propane for hot water, cooking, baking and heat. It adds up.
    For laundry, $40 buys you an industrial mop bucket. Use a clean plunger 🪠 for washing and the mop wringer gets most of the water out.

  • @ravenbrown7053
    @ravenbrown7053 Месяц назад +19

    I have been moving towards an offgrid lifestyle for a couple of years now- currently my electric bill is under 30$ a month year round- the only thing that i havent transitioned off grid are my refrigerator and a couple of lights- i solar lamps to use if needed and i could switch to nonperishables from my pantry if needed- i cook and bake exclusively on my woodstove 9-10 months a year and use a small charcoal grill or my outdoor fire pit atsummer

    • @kenyonbissett3512
      @kenyonbissett3512 Месяц назад

      Many solar generators can power a simple refrigerator for 24+ hrs. Many will recharge with no problem for 5yrs. In Europe many people will recharge at night when rates are low in winter and in summer use the solar option. The unit RW recommends is on sale for $411/5yr=$82. Or $0.22 a day. Even after the full recharge period of 5 yrs, it does a partial charge so the cost per day could be substantially less than $0.22 a day.

    • @retirementbootcampoff-grid237
      @retirementbootcampoff-grid237 19 дней назад

      This is yet ANOTHER reason EVERYONE should have a non-perishable food pantry. Canned goods have expiration dates now, so label them in big numbers and use first-in first-out FIFO. Build up your supply a little at a time I keep four big boxes, about sixty cans including canned meats. Tuna, ham, hash (potato-beef), and canned chicken all relatively cheap items they are cheaper than fresh meat anyway!

  • @dp3797
    @dp3797 Месяц назад +18

    I think you guys are smart for starting this venture when you’re young, because I will tell you when you get to be in your mid to late 50s. It’s a lot harder to do that kind of stuff. So congratulations. I hope over the years your Homestead grows, and you get more comfortable, and enjoy the off grid life.

    • @kenyonbissett3512
      @kenyonbissett3512 Месяц назад +2

      I think too, that when you start earlier as you age you learn to adjust your way of life. You have the base knowledge and can invest and adjust more comfortably to new systems. It’s an advantage to generational living.

    • @bonnroberts1722
      @bonnroberts1722 Месяц назад +2

      I've lived off grid in Portugal for 13 years, started in my 40's on a narrowboat in the UK, moved here in my 50's, 66 now and just updating our solar rig with lithium. We have had a 12/24v boat fridge for 12 years but with the lithium batteries we can get a proper one and run the washing machine...
      Life is good :)

    • @brucegeary6705
      @brucegeary6705 10 дней назад +3

      I'm just turning 70 this year. Started one of these ventures last year. Young, older makes no difference. Need the right frame of mind.

    • @dp3797
      @dp3797 10 дней назад +2

      @@brucegeary6705 of course frame of mind is important, but when your bodies beat up, it is much harder to Homestead than when you’re younger.

  • @robertmccorkle9627
    @robertmccorkle9627 Месяц назад +16

    There is a big difference between living with no air conditionering in Virginia versus Mississippi were I live. Our house only has five windows in the whole house. We would be miserable without electric.

    • @raisingwildflowers
      @raisingwildflowers  Месяц назад +7

      Totally agree! Our house in FL needed electricity for a/c. But we did keep the thermostat at 80-85 🫠🤣 It’s definitely more challenging to stay cool without electricity than to stay warm. There are lots and lots of non-electric heating options.

    • @annjames1837
      @annjames1837 Месяц назад +1

      Well, with Biden's new coal industries regulations, you WILL be paying much more on your electric bill. This is by design

    • @Memorial_Memory
      @Memorial_Memory 10 дней назад +1

      @@raisingwildflowers look into passive house design, earth ships, partially underground homes, and more. The earths stable temperature mixed with facing your windows a certain way to the rising Sun will keep you cool.

  • @chaoticallysay2625
    @chaoticallysay2625 Месяц назад +13

    They are ripped us off with electricity and gas here in the states.

    • @12313846
      @12313846 6 дней назад +1

      You should come to Europe.... Gas and electricity are 3 times the price...... Thanks for the sanctions on Russia..... Now we have to buy gas from the US...... That's 3 times the price.

  • @andreaskokandich6454
    @andreaskokandich6454 Месяц назад +6

    I’m interested in how the water works for you. My family laughs because I bought wall sconces and candles. But with all the storms, they are getting used a lot. Especially having a child that doesn’t like the dark

  • @Grime_time
    @Grime_time День назад +1

    I’ve been slowing buying things for off grid living. Sadly my parents (who have more money saved) aren’t on board but I’m still doing it for us. A wood burning oven will be my next big purchase. I’m excited for off grid living 🙌

  • @ZXX984
    @ZXX984 Месяц назад +26

    For two partially disabled adults in our 60’s, this would be too much for us to live this way. You are young and physically can do it. Go for it.😊

    • @nolagirlhomestead
      @nolagirlhomestead Месяц назад +8

      I'm 66 and retired. Hope you are able to continue to afford the comforts you need...

    • @lisescheiman5092
      @lisescheiman5092 Месяц назад +2

      Get a solar array now.

    • @nolagirlhomestead
      @nolagirlhomestead Месяц назад +8

      @@lisescheiman5092 TU! My point exactly. Don't let age or disability stop you from gathering preps NOW!

    • @nexxterra
      @nexxterra Месяц назад +5

      @@nolagirlhomestead It is always "disability" that stops you from doing things, just often, it is not the disability you think it is that is the cause.

    • @briannorth3419
      @briannorth3419 Месяц назад +4

      Listening to David Dubyne on his channel adapt 2030. He was talking about how infrastructure ( metals ) will be stripped because of the metal content price. He was showing that copper and tin are at all time highs in price.
      He was giving an example of a California town recently that stopped repairing the street lights and put up stop signs because of theft of copper wires in the street lights.
      David said what happens when copper, tin say go another 5x in price or 10x in price that all infrastructure is a risk of being stolen. Your lights and ac are at huge risk of never coming back on in that scenario.

  • @stellagrey1465
    @stellagrey1465 Месяц назад +8

    I was off grid in NM for 3 years. We did alot of things wrong. Now we're back on the grid in Alabama (where we're from). Definitely know how to deal with rough times from that experience. We used rechargeable fans, solar, alao had a few lights that ran off solar on their own, hauled water daily, went into town to do laundry, heated water on the stove top for washing dishes. We also occasionally went into town to take showers at the gym. Its all doable but hard at times. It was a pain going into yown to shower. We were building an outhouse for a shower shell at home but didnt finish it before we moved back.

  • @kizziah7777
    @kizziah7777 14 дней назад +4

    And battery operated touch lights are awesome

  • @Shannbyvank-zq6sw
    @Shannbyvank-zq6sw 11 дней назад +4

    Been off the grid 2 years in November. Can't say it's been easy but I still have all the usual microwave,espresso,deep freezer etc. In the summer solar power makes it cheap and easy. Winter means running a generator to charge our solar power stations

  • @lindaorozco4595
    @lindaorozco4595 Месяц назад +4

    You are so right on! I have been doing all I can to prepare for outages. We have them every summer.

  • @sonialofton5526
    @sonialofton5526 Месяц назад +5

    Yes, I would love to see a water video! Thank you for sharing your journey! 😊

  • @rebacarmack8335
    @rebacarmack8335 Месяц назад +5

    Y’all rock! Not everyone is cut out for this but y’all make it work.

  • @MrBoxofplastic
    @MrBoxofplastic 26 дней назад +6

    Ice is ridiculously expensive now. $6 for 20 pounds.

  • @WhatDadIsUpTo
    @WhatDadIsUpTo 17 дней назад +3

    5:49 Lighting
    Did you know that the trigger voltage for a 25 foot LED ripe light is 3 volts?
    That's 2 AA batteries in series. I cut in plastic junction boxes into existing walls, installed a wall switch & cover and have about 2 year's worth of light in every room. The little battery holder fits inside the junction box alongside the light switch.
    The switches look like any other wall switch.

  • @WhatDadIsUpTo
    @WhatDadIsUpTo 17 дней назад +3

    10:20 Laundry
    I've been mostly off grid about 12 years and through LOTS of trial & error, I broke down and bought a nice clothes washer and fire up my whole-house Honda emergency generator to run it a couple days a week. Soooo much easier than the gerzillion other ways I tried. I line dry.

  • @Rebecca-zx5yl
    @Rebecca-zx5yl Месяц назад +3

    Awesome! I live in Alaska and a lot of people here live off grid. It is my family’s plan over the next couple years

  • @ThePeacemaker848
    @ThePeacemaker848 14 дней назад +3

    Honestly the biggest struggle without power is food refrigeration and freezing. Freezing meat is so easy whereas all the other techniques are very time consuming.
    Next I would say a simple flashlight is multiple times better than a candle or lantern - especially for emergencies.
    And of course telephone- especially for emergencies.
    After that, the rest of electricity is only slightly more convenient. Other than emergencies, the old style pioneer living works just fine.
    A $1000ish dollar solar/wind setup gets you enough power for Fridge/freezer, lights, charging stuff, etc... And lasts a good 8+ years. So that's 96 months at $1000 = $10.50 per month. Then you might need new battery which is pricey and roll the dice for repairs on the fridge.
    Propane is great and efficient for heat, but there is always lots of wood too.

  • @WhatDadIsUpTo
    @WhatDadIsUpTo 17 дней назад +2

    7:45 Heat
    I built a propane-fired rocket mass heater in my bedrooms. The exhaust runs through a narrow 3" x 3" labyrinth tube inside a poured-concrete bench. Once hot (having run 2 hours), that bench stays hot about 12 hours.

  • @LL-wu8zt
    @LL-wu8zt Месяц назад +4

    You are wiser beyond your years. I could learn a lot from you.

  • @jameslee-dp6cb
    @jameslee-dp6cb 26 дней назад +2

    You can put septic tanks under ground to circulate water through and use a DC pump to circulate it with. Use a small DC motor to pump the water through a heater core and use a small fan to transfer air across the core to cool the air in your house. The more tanks you have, the cooler the water will be. Rain water can be routed into the septic tanks to cool the reservoir during the summer.

  • @sherrryann
    @sherrryann Месяц назад +3

    -thank you for reminding me to go check & pay on the electric bill! we pay 1/2 on 1 paycheck & other 1/2 on the next check.

  • @dlight2669
    @dlight2669 27 дней назад +3

    I bought a solar shower bag at yard sale. I have dabbled with solar cooking a few times. Solar is so underrated and under utilized. I also use solar lighting inside at night. Next I want to get solar panels and power station. Never know what will happen in the future. Heat w Mr Buddy in winter but no fan in summer is rough at night.

    • @suzannebinsley5940
      @suzannebinsley5940 9 дней назад

      Another solar option is solar skylights. When the sun shines on the solar panel, the light runs. It's energy independent and nice for daytime lighting for an extremely dark space.

  • @laurenwalkup4340
    @laurenwalkup4340 Месяц назад +1

    Yes, I would be interested in a water sourcing video. I also would love to follow your garden throughout the summer for status updates on pest control and harvesting.

  • @lissaestes7017
    @lissaestes7017 21 день назад +3

    Living off grid is illegal where i live. I just try to use as little power as possible, and I have always had alternate resources and skills available.

    • @angelinasouren
      @angelinasouren 7 дней назад

      Where is that? I too see many great things on RUclips that aren't possible where I am right now.

  • @lmagas-om9dp
    @lmagas-om9dp Месяц назад +5

    Last time I used the laundromat here in Canada, it cost me $8 per load just to wash!

    • @raisingwildflowers
      @raisingwildflowers  Месяц назад

      We have laundromats like that here too! But you can also find some super cheap ones if you get lucky 🤞

    • @ashleybosvik3031
      @ashleybosvik3031 Месяц назад +1

      I have a hand manual washer that tosses the clothes back and forth and rings them out. It was about 90.00 dollars.

    • @kenyonbissett3512
      @kenyonbissett3512 Месяц назад

      Ouch,😣!

    • @denisewilson8367
      @denisewilson8367 13 дней назад

      $8 to $10 per wash load in Michigan. $1 to start the dryer. And it eats quarters!

  • @WhatDadIsUpTo
    @WhatDadIsUpTo 17 дней назад +7

    8:53 Hot Water
    I made a small rocket stove that sits next to a plastic 50-gallon barrel and uses thermosiphoning to heat it up. I have windmills that keep me supplied in comptessed air, so if I want a hot shower, I charge the drum with a blast of compressed air and can shower for half an hour or until the barrel has only about an inch of water left. The rocket stove burns wood sticks &/or pellets and it takes about 30 minutes to heat 55 gallons to around 115°F.

  • @joannekohn3869
    @joannekohn3869 Месяц назад +4

    Would love to see a water video. Thanks 🤗

  • @johnsturtevant9351
    @johnsturtevant9351 Месяц назад +1

    Water - Gutters - Rain Barrels - Transfer pump (batt operated) - IBC Tote (food grade) - then take that water - for counter top filter, etc... There are many systems that can be put in place to collect and filter and use water safely.

  • @WhatDadIsUpTo
    @WhatDadIsUpTo 17 дней назад +2

    13:22 Water
    Water is Sooo easy. I installed gutters on all my roof eves (6) and let it flow through a first-flush thingy I designed and built, then store it in IBC totes and my swimming pool. I store 2,000 gallons and use it for drinking, cooking, bathing, washing, watering the animals . . . Really everything except the toilet. I don't have a flush toilet. I use a composting loo.

    • @tealkerberus748
      @tealkerberus748 10 дней назад

      A lot of builders in the US put bitumen and other poisonous materials on house roofs. That needs to be banned. A good clean metal roof is ideal, and there are various types of roof tiles that will also provide clean roof run-off if the homeowner prefers them visually. It's one thing to have to filter out toxins the rain has picked up by falling through polluted air, but it's another to have your actual catchment surface polluting the water too.

    • @WhatDadIsUpTo
      @WhatDadIsUpTo 10 дней назад +1

      @tealkerberus748
      Corrrectomundo!
      My roof is galvalum steel. I use a leaf guard and a first-flush method that pools collected water in a 2-gallon food-grade plastic bucket. There is a screaned center tube shorter than the bucket's rim, extending through bucket bottom. Debris swirls around as things fill up, but can't climb up the tube sides nor get through the screen. I collect in 275-gallon IBC totes, which further act as a settling pond and draw water by siphon, from the center of the tote. I further filter through both a carbon filter and a ceramic filter before consuming any. Been doing it that way going on 13 years and it hasn't killed me yet!

  • @joyceslusser3148
    @joyceslusser3148 13 часов назад

    I have the camper shower setup which drops into a bucket of your fave temp water and uses a USB rechargeable battery. Works well enough for my long hair. I can shower with 5 or so gallons easily.
    Maybe not the easiest but I also have the aluminum tubs and a wash board for laundry and hang stuff out to dry.
    It works well enough. Maybe you could find a municipal water source and fill a tank? Water is the hardest for me too.

  • @jessicathompson236
    @jessicathompson236 4 дня назад

    We've actually had alot of practice. Its not that bad. It just takes a bit more effort getting the water and cooking/cleaning. It really does take alot more time.

  • @leonadubois249
    @leonadubois249 4 дня назад +1

    I live off grid with my 3 great grandchildren. We do have solar but rarely use it... mostly in winter for lights and to recharge tools...I love this life... no bills every month is fantastic! We have wood heat cook with a wood cook stove though I do have a small propane camp stove and a wood heater which heats the whole cabin really well in our -40c winters...I use ice from town in a non working mini freezer to keep things cool in summer..I use the porch that I have shelves in for colder months...no running water is the toughest but we capture rain water haul drinking water and use a swamp and dug out to water the gardens...the kids bath in a large Rubbermaid container or we use a shower I hooked up using a pump garden sprayer..I use a laundromat or my grandson's washing machine in town and I hang them to dry..

  • @francrouch6547
    @francrouch6547 Месяц назад +2

    How do you have water supplied to your hot water heater. Thanks for being real with everything.

  • @robynclarke5274
    @robynclarke5274 26 дней назад +1

    You can also buy in camping shops solar water bags.

  • @Cheryl-wm1xd
    @Cheryl-wm1xd Месяц назад +2

    Hi - I was wondering all throughout the video how you're getting water? Please, I would love to see a water video. Thank you, I'm really enjoying your off grid journey.

  • @kenyonbissett3512
    @kenyonbissett3512 Месяц назад

    Since 2021 the price of electricity has more than doubled in my area. They did introduce 2 tier, where if you use electricity from 10pm to 5am it is half price. This can make using a solar generator cost effective as well as a back up system.
    The power station she recommends costs $709, there is a 42% off coupon as of today, May 24. The final cost with Prime is $411 + tax if your state has it.

  • @joni1
    @joni1 Месяц назад +3

    Although we have electricity it goes out often because of the number of storms. We have a Jackery and solar panels and a Honda generator. It really makes a difference even though expensive.

    • @chaoticallysay2625
      @chaoticallysay2625 Месяц назад

      Be glad you thought ahead because you still bought them on sale compare to today's prices (the solar things). I want to go off the grid too but with a gas/electric stove and the fridge I cannot completely go off the grid.

    • @chaoticallysay2625
      @chaoticallysay2625 Месяц назад

      And I'm planning on buying a washer/dryer too cuz I do live in a rental.

  • @denisewilson8367
    @denisewilson8367 13 дней назад

    You are doing great! I've lived this life for 10 years plus. The best years of my life as an adult. I grew up on a multigenerational homestead. We had a 3 seater outhouse, and a windmill driven pump in the barn for water and wood cook stove and heating stove. Gardens and fruit trees, a hardwood "forest" and a pine tree grove, and all kinds of wild berries and other edibles. Best childhood any kid could have.
    We grew our own meat and at first dairy, later we bought from a friends grandparents. Hunting & fishing was lots of fun competition between siblings. And later with my own kids and now they do it with their own kids and some with their grandkids too.

  • @LillyAllenGoats-uk3pp
    @LillyAllenGoats-uk3pp 7 часов назад

    We have been off grid for 1.5 years and we love it, but we bought a DIY solar package from Signature solar in Texas, so we do have electricity.... Its crazy blasting the air conditioner during the summer and know we have no bill anymore!!!
    I think you'd be happy with the air conditioners if you get solar and batteries at least 😀 it's a few thousand up front but less than a new car (if you go the diy route)

  • @marinagarvin8795
    @marinagarvin8795 Месяц назад +1

    Next collect rain watter🌧build storage for it ,is the best for garden ,and shower to...In Europe we had out door shower, with a 30 gallon plastic jug above the shower....in some hot days we didn't need to heat the water,some days jast add 1/2 bucket of hot water...and ready to go😊.

  • @robintaylor1084
    @robintaylor1084 Месяц назад

    In my journey to self sustainability I decided to ditch the coffee maker. I now use a pour over and I just heat up water and pour it over the coffee. Love my Mr. Buddy. Has saved me on many occasions. I have seen the shower 5 gallon bucket that has a couple spray nozzles foe dishes or showering. I have several solar generators that will run all my stuff including my 18 cf fridge.
    What about rain catchment? Is it illegal in VA?

  • @tommysimmons5266
    @tommysimmons5266 5 дней назад

    Yellow mop bucket will drain the water out of clothes when using a 5 gallon bucket for washing clothes.

  • @Pinkfrogz
    @Pinkfrogz 15 дней назад

    Still loving your channel. Thank you for sharing all the smart things you do.

  • @AskIveSolar
    @AskIveSolar Месяц назад +2

    I thought you meant completely without electricity, but I got it, you mean grid power.
    *Update* oh you do mean without electricity. Solar is so affordable that it's a no brainer for me. Battery storage is even getting cheaper too.

  • @SandwichKing-lj4ej
    @SandwichKing-lj4ej 4 дня назад

    Hard to believe most of human history was lived without electricity or modern technology.

  • @saintamerican6105
    @saintamerican6105 Месяц назад

    Dang my life is a piece of cake compared to your off grid living style, well done! God bless

  • @imaxinebrown694
    @imaxinebrown694 9 дней назад

    Thanks for sharing

  • @Shobyw
    @Shobyw Месяц назад

    I love your lifestyle as sometime back I used to be a farmer!

  • @andgabby2510
    @andgabby2510 Месяц назад +2

    I love your channel! ❤️ you keep it so real and informative

  • @A-Morale-Booster
    @A-Morale-Booster 6 дней назад

    O wow, great ideas. thank you !

  • @user-ni3me9dg3g
    @user-ni3me9dg3g 13 дней назад

    Nice down to earth video. A good balance between functionality and convenience.

  • @treepop1550
    @treepop1550 Месяц назад

    Good information !! Thanks !!

  • @chaoticallysay2625
    @chaoticallysay2625 Месяц назад +1

    I do like your portable shower idea thats me with one bathroom. So yeah it saves being smelly.

  • @billb945
    @billb945 Месяц назад +1

    Living paycheck to paycheck doesn't mean almost broke. Some people know hot to budget every penny and save quite a bit and live paycheck to paycheck. Supposedly 78% live "paycheck to paycheck" but only 40% claim they couldn't come up with the money for a $1,000 emergency without using their crrdit card or borrowing. That means the balance 38% is managing their paycheck to paycheck income very well. One could assume the other 22% is managing their finances to the penny as well.

  • @dainiusl7931
    @dainiusl7931 День назад

    Thank you so much for sharing this information.
    God bless you!❤

  • @GettingToHeaven
    @GettingToHeaven 7 дней назад

    Very informative. Thanks!

  • @sktchmnky
    @sktchmnky 5 дней назад

    For coffee get yourself a camping percolator. Great Great great investment. No electricity needed and you get fresh coffee daily.

  • @jadonovan8065
    @jadonovan8065 10 дней назад

    We've been using french press theses last few years, so that isn't too bad.

  • @davidvincent5702
    @davidvincent5702 Месяц назад

    I'm doing the same.every one should do it time to time. Keep you in check with live.YA

  • @BuckJones1909
    @BuckJones1909 18 дней назад +1

    Very informative with very useful ideas! Please do a video on water!

  • @Eileen49654
    @Eileen49654 7 дней назад

    I've lived completely off grid for a short time. I would rather take on a second job if I couldn't afford utilities on one job
    Finding wood, or paying for it, along with chopping, splitting, stacking, and constantly feeding a fire takes as much time as a part time job
    Sweltering in the summer with no air, going 3 days without a shower, no internet, cable, DVD player is h e l l. Constantly cooking on a grill, pooping in a outhouse, peeing in a bucket, not being able to easily wash clothes, or my hands was a nightmare
    I love walking to my thermostat and turning up the air or heat. Soaking in a warm bath and getting squeaky clean, cooking in a crokpot, warming food in a microwave, sitting on a sanitary toilet etc..,is heaven
    Romanticize it all you want but living off grid is horrible

  • @davet7663
    @davet7663 11 дней назад

    Great video young lady. Best of luck to you and your family. Pretty country 😎

  • @tealkerberus748
    @tealkerberus748 10 дней назад

    Buying ice = buying electricity. Buying refrigerated or frozen groceries = buying electricity. If you're lucky, the supplier you're buying from has a back-up power supply - usually a fueled generator and enough stored fuel to run it for at least a week. Otherwise, if the power goes out, your supply of ice and chilled or frozen food is out too. You're not off grid: you just think you are.
    If you're buying fuel, and if your fuel supplier depends on electricity, then that's out too. Liquid fuel stored in underground tanks is temperature stable and that's great, but if you need an electric pump to get it out of the tank then when the electricity is unavailable, so is the fuel.

  • @user-nw4kk1hx6c
    @user-nw4kk1hx6c 21 день назад

    Thank you for this video

  • @Utah_Mike
    @Utah_Mike Месяц назад +2

    $70 for propane heat for 6 months? Mr heater buddy uses 1 # propane every 6 hours on low.

    • @raisingwildflowers
      @raisingwildflowers  Месяц назад +1

      A trick I learned from the guy who filled up our tanks: Don’t turn your propane all the way on. I just BARELY open the valve on the tank. It will save you so much propane. Same if you have any connected to cooking devices.

  • @ClairenParkerontheRoad
    @ClairenParkerontheRoad Месяц назад +1

    I have that fan it's the best.

  • @sheila9573
    @sheila9573 10 дней назад

    Slowly...ever so slowly working my way there. Got special needs kiddos and can't send them into shock...concern is keeping cool during extreme heat...quite tricky. But...fellow coffee lover...I have the thermos you push the top down from Ace hardware $30...propane stove it with a camp percolator...OH YAH!!! 24 hour hot coffee awaiting me in the a.m. 😊

  • @summerjoy247
    @summerjoy247 Месяц назад

    Nice! We have welll water and a propane tank but our bill is way more than yours, around $250! I need to learn more about how it all works. Hubby really wants solar panels but they are expensive. I’ll show him these portable solar options. Thanks!

    • @denisewilson8367
      @denisewilson8367 13 дней назад

      Solar panels are cheap $1 per watt or less. What is expensive is the batteries. Lead acid is cheaper than Lithium ion but they don't last as long and you can only use 50% of the lead acids power or you ruin the batteries. Lead acid batteries do ok if they get cold. But the lithium ion will not work if they get cold. Lead acid batteries off gas but the lithium ion don't so they can be stored inside. Those rechargeable generators have a short life if you have to recharge them everyday. Less life than any batteries. Compare recharging cycles before buying.

  • @AlmostaGreenAcre-zs5eu
    @AlmostaGreenAcre-zs5eu 12 дней назад

    Lots of great suggestions to help others become more independent. Small changes at a time end up being big changes in the long run.

  • @DIYcreatewithme
    @DIYcreatewithme Месяц назад +1

    I'm getting there, slowly. It's expensive

  • @telasims233
    @telasims233 Час назад

    Very useful information, especially with inflation ❤

  • @WayneMacLean-lj8lb
    @WayneMacLean-lj8lb 4 дня назад

    I grew up in Massachusetts. Built my first home in 1981 a hour from work. But the land back then a hour out in the country was much cheaper then being close to businesses and companies that paid better. My house was beautiful very comfortable and allot bigger then I needed being alone. Had every modern convenance a home could have best stove tile everything and all wood no paint. I had 12 acres and all kinds of animals. Horses and turkeys and a pig and chickens but all pets I enjoyed. But in 1998 things changed the town got more crowded. People less friendly. More traffic. I was no longer happy. I decided to pack up and move. I ended up buying 60 acres on a mountain in Montana no power. But had a small cabin on it where the person used to go to for two weeks of the year from Chicago. I bought the property but having had all the comforts of my home and growing up with running water and power. I thought ok need to buy some solar panels and everything needed to have full power for things. And a wind generator. But it got late in year had bought a log splitter and chainsaw to cut wood for heat. Had a wood stove I connected. Figured in the spring will put the solar up and wind generator. But in the spring took long hikes in the National forest that connected to my property. Drove around to different places seeing things I never would in Massachusetts. And then I was cutting the wood but not using the log splitter . Made a game out of chopping the wood instead. Candles oil lamps flashlight and outhouse. And as time went on I got so used to living with no power of modern convenance I just sold the solar and deep cycle batteries. Only bill I get is my property tax once a year in my P.O box in town a hour away. No people no sounds of police cars driving on a street no nothing but a Elk calling out or a pack of coyotes or a owl that has landed on my roof at night saying something . Or the deer that just lay down on the side of my cabin like lawn ornaments who are so use to me that when I come outside they just lay there like oh it's him no big deal I am not moving. Some times the things you think you cannot live without. You find out you really did not need them as much as you thought.

  • @commonsense7167
    @commonsense7167 9 дней назад

    What is the humidity in your area ? Your AC keeps humidity down and without the AC , I would be concerned with mold growing in the house . Just a thought

  • @AlsanPine
    @AlsanPine 10 дней назад

    you can get solar super cheap. get collectors retired from large solar farms. they rotate their collectors after 10yrs or so. i got 16 of them delivered for $1600. each is a 275w panel and everyone of them is still producing higher than rated. i use wrecked tesla batteries with midnight controller.

  • @Shobyw
    @Shobyw Месяц назад +3

    What’s your monthly budget these days?

  • @ashessdust3236
    @ashessdust3236 11 дней назад +1

    I don't know but if electricity gose off they may stop filling propane tanks. I am looking for wood burning alternatives.

    • @raisingwildflowers
      @raisingwildflowers  11 дней назад

      Definitely agree. We will be putting a wood burning stove in the home we build. It’s a little too risky in our camper right now.

  • @juliamarple3785
    @juliamarple3785 Месяц назад +6

    Getting prepared isn't something you have drop big $$ on all at once. Little bit by little bit, better than the year before. You can't ever be prepared for every situation, cuz each one is different.

  • @thewindmillgarden
    @thewindmillgarden 12 дней назад

    Good video. Thanks. 👍

  • @emilrhodes2761
    @emilrhodes2761 Месяц назад +2

    Good video. With , basically, 4 adults and one baby and various pets how do you guys only do laundry twice a month? With that many people how do you handle shower needs etc.? Do your adult daughters still live with you ?

  • @rebecca55371
    @rebecca55371 26 дней назад

    You had me until instant coffee.😉
    French press all the way baby!
    Thanks for the video.

  • @WhatDadIsUpTo
    @WhatDadIsUpTo 17 дней назад +2

    12:15 Entertainment
    I have chickens.

  • @danielking2944
    @danielking2944 26 дней назад

    If you’re cooking with propane and buying ice ,off-grid solar will pay for itself quickly. You can start small and scale up paying cash.
    It’s very informative living simple as you describe so you see what you really need. I have been down that road and enjoy the liberation that simple living brings. Thanks for sharing your experience. I hope others will benefit from it.

  • @davidvandenberg6616
    @davidvandenberg6616 6 дней назад

    Use the battery on your rv with a solar panel to charge it.