11 Years Living Off-Grid in an Earthship Style House

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • Hélène Dubé and her partner Alain Neveu from Es-Cargo (www.es-cargo.qc...) have lived off-grid in Quebec, Canada for 11 years in a self-built earthship style home made of recycled tires filled with earth and large south-facing windows.
    Their water is gravity fed from a spring-filled cistern placed up the hill from their home, their power comes from solar energy, and they use a composting outhouse toilet.
    For refrigeration, they make their own ice during the winter by freezing water in recycled windshield washer jugs outside, and then they store them in a root cellar inside unplugged chest freezers insulated with sawdust. They manage to keep their food cold with these homemade ice blocks from January to July, and then they get ice blocks from a neighbour.
    For hot water they use approximately 200 lbs of propane each year.
    For heat they have a homemade rocket stove that is an efficient way to burn wood, and they also use it as a cooktop in the winter.
    They would eventually like to be self sufficient in their food production and have gardens, hens, and they've begun to build an aquaponic system as well. But they do find that growing all of their own food, running workshops, and staying on top of all their other projects to be an incredible amount of work for just two people.
    They're hoping to attract more people to the property to form a small community of inspired and like-minded permaculture enthusiasts.
    To learn more about Hélène and Alain's off-grid lifestyle and about any upcoming projects and workshops, you can check out their website and follow them on Facebook:
    Es-Cargo: www.es-cargo.qc...
    Facebook: / escargoqc
    Their posts are in French but they both speak French and English.
    Thanks for watching!
    Mat & Danielle
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    STAY IN TOUCH!
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    Blog: www.exploringalternatives.ca
    Facebook: /exploringalternativesblog
    Instagram: @exploringalternatives
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    COMMENTS
    -------------------------------------------------------------
    We want our channel and our comments section to be an inclusive space where everyone feels welcome to watch and to contribute. For this reason, comments that are inappropriate or hateful will be reported and/or deleted.
    Please discuss and debate with respect, and report inappropriate or hateful comments directly to RUclips.
    -------------------------------------------------------------
    VIDEO CREDITS
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    Music & Song Credits:
    All music in this video was composed, performed, and recorded by Mat of Exploring Alternatives.
    Editing Credits:
    Mat and Danielle of Exploring Alternatives
    Filming Credits:
    Mat of Exploring Alternatives

Комментарии • 2,2 тыс.

  • @jessicat.4429
    @jessicat.4429 4 года назад +961

    She is winning right now with this pandemic.

    • @khushwindersinghuniversali8317
      @khushwindersinghuniversali8317 4 года назад +55

      Yes, we dont need money,money has no value. We need resources,we need technical problem solver specalized in agriculture,energy,transportation. No politics,no money,no businessman,no banks. Jacque fresco puts ot together.

    • @fem5927
      @fem5927 4 года назад +30

      The money probably bought her the land to built on..

    • @rosegoldbb
      @rosegoldbb 4 года назад +1

      Super winning
      Hit it down pack

    • @wakawaka2611
      @wakawaka2611 4 года назад +4

      @@fem5927 bought who's land? 😂

    • @SoulKisses76
      @SoulKisses76 4 года назад +17

      Omg, it took me a minute to realize you meant 'winning'. Ha! I kept trying to figure out why she's whining. 😂 Sorry, long day. She is absolutely winning. I was surprised to know that they have internet. Pretty cool.

  • @b_3791
    @b_3791 4 года назад +566

    “i didn’t want to depend on anything i could not supply.” i feel that so hard.

    • @mercurialpierrot7073
      @mercurialpierrot7073 4 года назад +11

      @Who let the virus out? Woof woof woofhan ???

    • @soph5669
      @soph5669 4 года назад

      Hard enough to live off your own supplies? Lol

    • @KrisVictoria
      @KrisVictoria 4 года назад +1

      @Who let the virus out? Woof woof woofhan to be expected after hundreds of years of women being sold like property.

    • @samdom9122
      @samdom9122 4 года назад

      I read this exactly when she was saying it. Serendipity

  • @paulbroadwater2957
    @paulbroadwater2957 6 лет назад +1098

    I appriciate the honesty at the end about the amount of work involved living this way. Also, they admit they are not completely self-sufficient which a lot of stories like this advertise. Community and the ability to trade commodities is necessary, just like it has been for 1000's of years.

    • @knpstrr
      @knpstrr 6 лет назад +47

      100% self-sufficiency is virtually impossible. That being said, the journey to becoming more independent, even if you can never be completely independent, may be worthwhile for many.

    • @mizpappas
      @mizpappas 5 лет назад +21

      Yep. I was waiting for her to admit she needed a community. Humans really do need eachother 😃

    • @pentabuzz149
      @pentabuzz149 5 лет назад +48

      Just image a whole community living like this and trading vegetables and good. Would be fantastic. Helping each other out and living life as it should be

    • @Neenerella333
      @Neenerella333 4 года назад +6

      @@pentabuzz149 It sounds lovely to me as well, but works best on a small scale of 150 or less individuals, not the populations we have now. And the work needs to done constantly, there is no time for travel or rest or education. Plus, 8 billion people are hard to convince to live all the same way.

    • @YeshuaKingMessiah
      @YeshuaKingMessiah 4 года назад +5

      Dineen Serpa in a community you can trade time too, so you take care of my place for a week or so, I’ll take care of yours when you want to go away for a bit. Education is easily done online except for rare occupations needing hands on training. And you will be leaving daily for those so u have to figure out a way to do so anyway.
      If youre working crazy hard, with no rest, you need to figure out a way to rest also. Ppl have always had rest periods, either daily as a siesta in some cultures or weekly as a Sabbath, etc. Meditation and prayer are also great ways to relax and very doable. Hopefully you build a hot tub on your little plot of land!

  • @autumnbr0718
    @autumnbr0718 4 года назад +622

    If we all switched to a lifestyle like this.. pollution would drastically decrease.. overconsumption would drastically decrease..a lot of health related issues would decrease.. this is really the way God intended for us to live

    • @sarahdavies2923
      @sarahdavies2923 4 года назад +34

      i was with u all the way up until the god bit

    • @caitlyn5045
      @caitlyn5045 4 года назад +12

      Sarah Davies same. God has nothing to do with anything lol.

    • @autumnbr0718
      @autumnbr0718 4 года назад +22

      IDC what y'all say keep that same energy when dark times come

    • @caitlyn5045
      @caitlyn5045 4 года назад +24

      Autumn B Not everyone has to rely on faith to get them out of hard times. That’s an ignorant comment to make.

    • @meowingvideos3
      @meowingvideos3 4 года назад +54

      @@sarahdavies2923 let the woman have her opinion without being shamed for it

  • @Green4CloveR
    @Green4CloveR 4 года назад +174

    People think this is extreme but humanity has been living like this for thousands of years.

    • @LW-tb3cz
      @LW-tb3cz 4 года назад +2

      Had been living like that, most people now do not have the skills needed to live off grid.

    • @rockthecasbah6450
      @rockthecasbah6450 3 года назад +3

      We still do. Most people in Asia live like this, we always have a small plot of land in the backyard to rear chicken or goat and plant fruit trees and vegetables, whatever we can't finish we give to our neighbors or we sell them. We also harvest rain water to water our plants and livestock.

    • @thatsright2145
      @thatsright2145 2 года назад +2

      @@rockthecasbah6450 Its the same in the Caribbean I guess it okay for us third worlders

    • @15IgorS
      @15IgorS 2 года назад

      I would still buy a compressor fridge. Mine in my campervan runs on solar and takes 40watts, less than my laptop. And doesnt run all the time.
      But thats for me, everybody have to live how they want

    • @jameswright3972
      @jameswright3972 Год назад

      All you need architecture and landscape designing to make a place nice

  • @TomNook77
    @TomNook77 7 лет назад +579

    This lady is an inspiration. There are still beautiful people on the earth.

    • @roshninisha2149
      @roshninisha2149 5 лет назад +3

      TomNook77 those people are so rare but :(

  • @Rocky-or4rz
    @Rocky-or4rz 5 лет назад +1161

    Too bad most places in this country have made it illegal to live off grid. Thanks lobbyists and greedy politicians.

    • @SherioCheers
      @SherioCheers 5 лет назад +5

      We just don't want to pay for your Lysteria after drinking rainwater, when you can't cover the cost...

    • @WHSCheerleader1970
      @WHSCheerleader1970 5 лет назад +92

      @@SherioCheers Actually, municipal water is required to have fluoride. Fluoride is poison. Research it.

    • @gunny8unny93
      @gunny8unny93 5 лет назад +45

      @@WHSCheerleader1970 Fluoride is naturally in water.. it's naturally in MANY different things we consume.. we bump up fluoride content to prevent our teeth from rotting out of our face early in life.. It helps people avoid expensive dentist visits and infections.

    • @MaximC
      @MaximC 5 лет назад +23

      By lobbying you mean legalized corruption, right?

    • @cosworth166
      @cosworth166 5 лет назад +95

      @@gunny8unny93 drinking fluoride does nothing for your teeth the same drinking shampoo dosent make your hair shine, and they cannot absorb fluoride either, dont believe everything your told as a child, use your common sense.

  • @jimmybiggs9230
    @jimmybiggs9230 6 лет назад +1580

    Folks are tired of being forced to pay greedy power and water companies!!

    • @grzegorz16100
      @grzegorz16100 6 лет назад +38

      Than get your water from the river and bring it on your back 4miles home. LOL

    • @deicide6403
      @deicide6403 6 лет назад +53

      Gregory May
      or rain water collection system.

    • @CurbHopper111
      @CurbHopper111 6 лет назад +90

      @Christina Reynolds Without the greedy electric company we wouldn't have older folks dying every year here in Phoenix from the heat because they can't afford the $300+ electric bill to keep their small homes cool, since the price of electric is jacked up by more then 100% every summer because they know people are going to NEED to use more of it, since our lives depend on it. The existence of electric, having it in our homes, and being GREEDY when it comes to extorting us are completely different subjects. Jimmy was complaining about the greed and how much they charge, therefor turning more people towards going off grid. Not complaining about the existence of electric and water in hospitals and factories. I doubt most of those businesses struggle to pay the bills. Electric companies can still exist without killing lower income senior citizens every year.

    • @chriswindham3278
      @chriswindham3278 5 лет назад +31

      Christina Reynolds I been using solar power for 10 year I'm doing fine.I don't have pay anything .

    • @Cody_Ramer
      @Cody_Ramer 5 лет назад +10

      Holly Ball if you have a 300$ electric bill for ac than you need to seriously check the insulation as you have none.

  • @redn40
    @redn40 5 лет назад +760

    People on here romanticizing off grid living never grew up on a farm...Its nonstop hard work..

    • @AlmaVasquezjr
      @AlmaVasquezjr 4 года назад +101

      farming to provide for others
      is different than just providing for yourself.

    • @jaxxiet5851
      @jaxxiet5851 4 года назад +6

      Yeah this is a hard no for me for many reasons...

    • @daythinker1704
      @daythinker1704 4 года назад +3

      It can be but tech is getting so fantastic!

    • @daythinker1704
      @daythinker1704 4 года назад +9

      @@amberelise9831 write, create, read, husbandry, farm, paint, draw, research. Bunches of stuff.

    • @lisasmith9311
      @lisasmith9311 4 года назад +10

      redn40 I'm off grid it's not really hard the hardest thing I guess would be running the well it's simple but has to be done often

  • @rachelhudson4662
    @rachelhudson4662 7 лет назад +1013

    We all need to revaluate what we really need to live a comfortable life,

    • @zaboomafoo_0
      @zaboomafoo_0 5 лет назад +19

      not many have the time/resource to do so. we should educate on how to reevaluate instead, with proper planning with what a person has within their means- because these earth ships are quite the pretty penny to invest in. we should look into urban self-sufficiency and reducing the impact of the ever growing metropolis and fleeting suburbs. eventually i suspect we will be forced into living a more self-sustained lifestyle as fossil fuels and non-renewables become more scarce and expensive

    • @joshuamckay3309
      @joshuamckay3309 5 лет назад +7

      I think it's unfair to evaluate what people need to live based on your definition of need. In this video alone I saw her making ice. She doesn't need ice to live comfortably. I saw solar panels on her roof, a stereo in her kitchen, you don't NEED those things to live comfortably.
      It's okay to have things, even nice things. I think our goal should be trying to lessen our impact on our environment in the best ways we can. If self sustainment and off grid living is your jam then go for it. But we shouldn't judge others for what we consider to be necessity.

    • @caelum4762
      @caelum4762 5 лет назад +8

      @The Metalhead why taking it so personal?

    • @Makeitliquidfast
      @Makeitliquidfast 5 лет назад +1

      That's your problem, your not supposed to live a comfortable life, the glory is in the struggle.

    • @faithesther325
      @faithesther325 4 года назад

      Caelum μ right tho

  • @mluttrell8329
    @mluttrell8329 5 лет назад +380

    I love how she said “sharing to create abundance” what a beautiful concept.

    • @evelina2363
      @evelina2363 5 лет назад +6

      It’s actually the principle society has been built on right from the beginning...

    • @estebanb7166
      @estebanb7166 5 лет назад +2

      That's a stretch. Maybe on paper, most definately not in practice.

  • @afriendtoo6971
    @afriendtoo6971 7 лет назад +1331

    The naysayers are the ones getting up at 5am, rushing around to get ready for work, sitting in traffic for hours breathing exhaust fumes, tolerating a miserable boss for 8 hrs , rushing home to get caught up on chores or family....... then doing it all again the next day.

    • @Laffy1345
      @Laffy1345 6 лет назад +2

      You

    • @antiv
      @antiv 6 лет назад +113

      Christina Reynolds What an extremely simplistic and faulty analysis. Congratulations.

    • @ziontrumpet3343
      @ziontrumpet3343 6 лет назад +50

      If you are connected to the internet, such as this lady, you are not truly "off-grid".

    • @PS-os6sr
      @PS-os6sr 6 лет назад +52

      Christina Reynolds,
      What an ignorant comment...

    • @PS-os6sr
      @PS-os6sr 6 лет назад +22

      Zion Trumpet,
      Yes, and also you are not off grid unless you are dead...

  • @ninjanerdstudent6937
    @ninjanerdstudent6937 4 года назад +95

    Legend has it that this lady is so off-grid that she doesn’t even know of the existence of Corona virus.

    • @Juuls92
      @Juuls92 4 года назад +12

      Then she is truly more wealthy than all of us.

    • @priscillajimenez27
      @priscillajimenez27 4 года назад +2

      She prob uses her internet to stay informed of what's going on.

    • @r.a.6459
      @r.a.6459 4 года назад +1

      While her southern neighbours have the coronavirus raging so badly that their power went out, their internet went out.

    • @juliad.6372
      @juliad.6372 4 года назад

      Well good for her..

    • @cheberur
      @cheberur 3 года назад

      Loool

  • @arielm106
    @arielm106 4 года назад +2

    One day i'll have an earthship of my own. Thank you for sharing their story!

  • @heidi4517
    @heidi4517 5 лет назад +94

    I love it. That thing that makes me happiest in life is growing my garden, homemade meals, listening to the birds sing, and beautiful scenery!

  • @Not_all_as_it_seems
    @Not_all_as_it_seems 7 лет назад +478

    Very important point raised at end of vid. How homesteading is a community thing with food production. That is one area where no man can be an island.

    • @knpstrr
      @knpstrr 6 лет назад +11

      typically with clothes as well. Most people don't make their own clothes from scratch.

    • @cherriemckinstry131
      @cherriemckinstry131 5 лет назад +15

      @@knpstrr it's possible to get by as I've made clothes on a machine or buy second hand or modify clothes. Quilts out of old clothes are amazing and fun. Plus you can grow a lot of food with not much land. It just takes planning.

    • @knpstrr
      @knpstrr 5 лет назад +2

      @@SimonWoodburyForget I never said it was impossible.

    • @knpstrr
      @knpstrr 5 лет назад +5

      @@SimonWoodburyForget You want me to tell you why you replied to me?! I don't know why you cared about what I said and so much so decided to reply to me.

    • @morganhenry5845
      @morganhenry5845 5 лет назад +7

      And y’all wouldn’t work in a community of ppl off grid still fighting w a keyboard

  • @Infinitybein
    @Infinitybein 7 лет назад +3

    the ice lasting to mid-july...awesome!

  • @dnnsmtchll
    @dnnsmtchll 6 лет назад +1295

    125 years ago every body was ---off grid

    • @melodybarlow7815
      @melodybarlow7815 6 лет назад +25

      But almost nobody had many windows back then, much less huge windows like shown in this video.

    • @Mig-nr8hc
      @Mig-nr8hc 6 лет назад +33

      Dennis Mitchell I wish it was still like that. That’s when ppl helped ppl the best years of my life 😊

    • @cherriemckinstry131
      @cherriemckinstry131 5 лет назад +1

      @@Mig-nr8hc Garden of Hope project

    • @MelliaBoomBot
      @MelliaBoomBot 5 лет назад +49

      Im with you there, even in the 1970;s in Wales, UK..I had great grand-parents who more or less were self-sufficient without realising it. They had a stove in the kitchen that heated the house and that they cooked on/in. They kept one or two or three animals..pigs, geese...had an orchard for fruit..had a south facing garden and made MADE food, fruit bread, apple pies, scones, treacle toffee..so didn;t even use plastic and so were "environmental" with foodstuffs. If we went on a picnic (picnic? remember them!) we had egg sandwiches/cheese sandwiches/fruit and orange squash. In a word it's all bollox these days.

    • @willg4802
      @willg4802 5 лет назад +13

      You're 125 years old?!?!?!

  • @kmadarchives1549
    @kmadarchives1549 4 года назад +1

    Love the "green house" concept. Hope to get there myself one day.

  • @ExploringAlternatives
    @ExploringAlternatives  5 лет назад +7

    Thank you for watching this video! We've had a lot of comments about cement and swastikas in this video and just want to share our responses here:
    1) In response to her statement that cement is not durable:
    Durable is the French word for sustainable. She meant to say that cement is not a sustainable building material. She did not mean that it doesn't last a long time.
    2) The trivet on the stove is not a swastika.
    We've had several comments from people saying they think there is a swastika symbol on her cooktop. It is not a swastika.
    The item on her stove is a trivet to protect counters and other surfaces from hot pots and pans. At first glance, the item does bear some resemblance to a swastika, but if you look closer, it has several differences, including the fact that each arm has an extra bend in it, making it more of a swirl than two intersecting S's. The pattern is also pointing in a counter clockwise fashion, so even if it was a swastika (which it is not) it would be the Buddhist symbol and not the Nazi symbol.
    We think it's incredibly important to be vigilant against any kind of discrimination and we appreciate you reaching out to let us know about anything that you find offensive in our videos so that we are aware of it.
    Thanks so much for watching our videos :)

  • @goddessjnu6055
    @goddessjnu6055 7 лет назад +472

    why do people always have to put others down I think this is the most beautiful place ever it's creative the world needs more of this shut up if you don't have anything good to say

    • @tigerlilly3727
      @tigerlilly3727 7 лет назад +15

      Goddess Jnu we will voice our criticism whether you approve of it or not.

    • @metalheadmalta
      @metalheadmalta 6 лет назад +5

      This is discussion, not dissing... The concept is good. But it's just not good enough. PErhaps with our criticism they can improve on something they missed.

    • @patsyvennachio7985
      @patsyvennachio7985 5 лет назад +7

      So no one should make an honest comment. Thanks, everyone should ask you before commenting,

    • @phulsadoom
      @phulsadoom 5 лет назад +7

      Attempts at shaming sincere and valid critism only hurts those you are seeking approval from.

    • @willg4802
      @willg4802 5 лет назад +9

      Why do some people think that valid questions and criticism are "putting people down"? Do you believe EVERYTHING everyone tells you, or just the things that harmonize with your biases, biases such as ...modern appliances and conveniences baaaaaaad...no electricity goooood.

  • @alwaysuknown7770
    @alwaysuknown7770 5 лет назад +63

    “ it’s part of sharing and creating abundance”
    You lady, are in the exact alignment in which I’m working toward. Amazing job for you’re community and opportunities for others! 💕

  • @system2thinker659
    @system2thinker659 7 лет назад +410

    My great grandparents used a spring box as their refrigerator. Basically, they built a wooden box between the spring and their home (a modified cooler would probably work). The water would flow through this box on the way to the house and keep everything inside at a constant temperature (40-50 degrees). It was like a cooler with melted ice that kept everything inside cold and dry as long as they used mason jars and other airtight containers.

    • @Witchy-Wonderland
      @Witchy-Wonderland 5 лет назад +16

      That’s so cool! Thank you for sharing!! Where did they live?

    • @dustinhargrove2129
      @dustinhargrove2129 5 лет назад +2

      Those are awesome! Be careful with bacteria when you do it though!

    • @Neenerella333
      @Neenerella333 4 года назад +3

      Sounds like the old Phoenix Swamp Coolers, except they added moisture to the air. That was fine for our dry climate, until the dew point reached 50F during the summer monsoons and they struggled to cool the air. Made our skin and clothes so soft.

    • @caseylovesguitar
      @caseylovesguitar 4 года назад +11

      My grandma used to have to put things down the well, so a similar system. Butter and milk and whatnot was stored in a bucket down the well and brought up when needed.

    • @jimanderson7648
      @jimanderson7648 4 года назад +1

      @@caseylovesguitar years back there was also ice boxes or in the country there was ice houses

  • @MariaMaria-uf4lq
    @MariaMaria-uf4lq 5 лет назад +70

    I used to love Swiss family Robinson's. I had forgotten about them. What you are doing is beautiful and thank you for sharing!!

    • @sauravbasu8805
      @sauravbasu8805 5 лет назад +2

      Maria Maria And 'Robinson Crusoe' Read them in childhood , translated in Bengali, my mother tongue. Surely among my favourite books read.
      From the college library, read 'The Ra Expedition' and 'The Kon-Tiki Expedition' by Thor Hayerdahl. Fantastic read ! 'The Silent World' by Jaques Yves Costeau was another marvel. They were all non-fictions but transported my mind to a world far away...
      Add to those the second hand dust- covered old National Geographic magazines which I bought cheap by my pocket-money( obtained from tuitioning school-kids ) from the vendors from Kolkata ( previously Calcutta ) pavements. They were marvellous !

  • @spinderella3602
    @spinderella3602 5 лет назад +169

    I'm living off grid on 40 acres. For two years I've been in a 32 ft. Travel trailer but now I'm digging to build underground. The bulk of my building material will be rammed earth because I have an over abundance of sand and clay. It's also fun to see someone else who doesn't have a refrigerator. We are managing well without it. This is my 1st year gardening and we will soon have 1k d's ft. Indoor garden. I think I'm striving for a lifestyle similar to yours. I 💘 it. Thank you!

    • @melody01238
      @melody01238 5 лет назад +9

      How are you paying for your internet? Phone? Totally off the grid means no dependence on government regulated commerce.

    • @shaquoyag1484
      @shaquoyag1484 5 лет назад

      That’s is AWESOME ! Would love for you to share your journey with us here on RUclips

    • @Realatmx
      @Realatmx 5 лет назад

      Use of refrigerator in Asia or in dessert I can see some logic but people lives in cooler climate thinks it is necessary to survive.. So pity

    • @robincash4569
      @robincash4569 5 лет назад +2

      Need help?

    • @lammilami
      @lammilami 5 лет назад +11

      If you’re on the Internet aren’t you exactly on the grid?

  • @CreationsByWally
    @CreationsByWally 7 лет назад +48

    I've been dreaming of living off grid for years. So good to see others dream come true. Gives me even more hope.

  • @kariwick-InnerPeaceCoaching
    @kariwick-InnerPeaceCoaching 7 лет назад +199

    Knew I would LOVE this video when she first talked about the Disney movie "Swiss Family Robinson" . . . a lot of my desire to live simply and off-grid probably first started here as well!

    • @doveoo5
      @doveoo5 7 лет назад +11

      Have you ever read "My Side of the Mountain?"

    • @bradshaw106
      @bradshaw106 7 лет назад +8

      My side of the mountain was my favorite book as a child. I still own copies of both my side and far side

    • @RedSpiralHandTV
      @RedSpiralHandTV 7 лет назад +8

      One of my favorite books as a child....also "Island of the Blue Dolphins" which was similar but the main character was an indigenous girl.

    • @kariwick-InnerPeaceCoaching
      @kariwick-InnerPeaceCoaching 7 лет назад +1

      No, but thank you for the suggestion. I am going to check it out!

    • @chuckcassel5417
      @chuckcassel5417 7 лет назад +1

      RedSpiralHand hey,I read that book many years ago,girls weren't supposed to use weapons ,right?

  • @patrickmckowen2999
    @patrickmckowen2999 7 лет назад +35

    I would love a bit more solitude natural surroundings - but give me a lot more solar panels and batteries so I can still run my big screen ( but more efficient LED ) TV and refrigerator. Not to mention my laptop and wireless service to be able to talk to all these fine people.
    One of the reasons we went to mass farming was that people could not sustain themselves without the help of the community. You grow this, I grow that, lets barter! I think it important to supplement, I love my motherinlaws tomatoes and cucumbers come late summer - but we would die off if it were not for communal growth and interactions.
    Love the place - thanks for sharing.
    Cheers. Patrick

    • @MsLoverofTruth
      @MsLoverofTruth 7 лет назад +2

      Exactly. More solar panels and put in a wind mill for wind power that will also serve to pump water into your home. That should give enough power to run the things you need.

    • @learntocrochet1
      @learntocrochet1 7 лет назад +2

      I agree with you totally. You speak well of the originations of community. Perhaps a small community of off grid homes?

  • @pnoman316
    @pnoman316 6 лет назад

    Wow I really love what you’re doing! I’m a schoolteacher and for years I’ve been interested in living off the grid and living off the land and to be honest I never really had a clue as to how to accomplish that. And because I’m a schoolteacher I have summers off. With that said I’m very interested in coming to your workshop.

  • @sandrapicazo1058
    @sandrapicazo1058 7 лет назад +54

    Why don’t you use wood burning boiler for hot water you just put in couple of sticks and you have hot water all day we gutted out an old boiler for my mother in law and it works beautifully its 7 yrs old now and still works fine better then buying propane

    • @cherylpemberton1676
      @cherylpemberton1676 6 лет назад

      Sandra Picazo, GOOD FOR YOU, taking care of the elder; great idea too, more should follow your advice!!!!!!!!

    • @djnunya5153
      @djnunya5153 5 лет назад +7

      Use a coiled black hose on the roof. Solar powered hot water which is incredibly HOT.

  • @rachelhudson4662
    @rachelhudson4662 7 лет назад +266

    I see so many people dry clothes in the drier. If only more people would peg the laundry on the washing line, would make a huge difference to the health of the environment.

    • @GrzegorzDurda
      @GrzegorzDurda 7 лет назад +33

      and the clothes would last way longer.

    • @Nofretari
      @Nofretari 7 лет назад +11

      I try to dry most of my clothes on a clothes line.

    • @Clari26
      @Clari26 7 лет назад +8

      Because many people did that way for 1000s of years, and dreamed of something easier... Its not how big or small something is, since its relative... You can have a large home that consumes less energy then a small home, and vice versa...

    • @feltingme
      @feltingme 7 лет назад +10

      I tried that, but clothes are full of fine lint, and unfortunately that would not be acceptable in my son's school. Of course there are lint brushes, but then it would take so much time, that would be not practical.

    • @dreasmom2789
      @dreasmom2789 6 лет назад +33

      feltingme
      You shake the cloths before hanging. And what kind of school worries about lint?

  • @cicicovington1414
    @cicicovington1414 4 года назад +15

    Im a city girl however, as I get older, this is the lifestyle this vegan girl desires, preferably in a tropical climate, (I need mango & avocado trees Lol). There is a certain freedom that comes w being self-sustaining & living abundantly w/in a natural setting. Its just so challenging finding alpha men who find peace & happiness w/o modern conveniences. Did this family ever create the community they mentioned?

    • @Jenny-nz4mi
      @Jenny-nz4mi 4 года назад +7

      There's offgrid communities on FB. Even some offgrid dating groups. There are plenty of men there that are crying out for likeminded woman (including vegan men). Also, you can have some modcons. We have a 40kva solar system, harvest rain water etc. So you can have a fridge, tv, internet. Not being vegan, I'm not entirely sure of the limits that you would include animals (excluding pets) in your lifestyle. But if you rescue some battery hens they will live quite happily in your garden and reduce pests, and fertilize the soil, as will ducks. They will be past laying age and you'll be able to give them a happy life. So there's ways to work it. I ditched corporate life, sold my city house, and bought 100ac. We rely on wood for cooking and heating. It's doable. I have my fingers crossed that you can achieve it.

    • @cicicovington1414
      @cicicovington1414 4 года назад +2

      @@Jenny-nz4mi Wow! That was a wealth of information & thnx 4 sharing a bit about u, it was inspiring🙏 I'll check out these groups uve mentioned, thnx for gifting me a starting point😊

    • @stevewalsh5668
      @stevewalsh5668 3 года назад

      Go for it!

  • @yerasmus4025
    @yerasmus4025 4 года назад +26

    I love how positive her outlook on life is. Shows how you can create in your mind and have such creations manifest. Workshops "It' s part of sharing and creating abundance". She gets it! Off the grid living is not for lone rangers. She understands many spiritual principles it seems.

  • @bemo1119
    @bemo1119 5 лет назад

    What a dream come true!

  • @epayne
    @epayne 7 лет назад +2

    This is so inspiring

  • @mvandell
    @mvandell 7 лет назад +93

    I've been living off grid for the past 16 years, and highly recommend it!
    Fascination and awe of 'Nature' grows everyday.
    Peace folks!

    • @ziontrumpet3343
      @ziontrumpet3343 6 лет назад +9

      ...yet here you are online.

    • @_TheDudeAbides_
      @_TheDudeAbides_ 6 лет назад +25

      @@ziontrumpet3343 When they say off grid, they mean off the power and water grid. Not the internet.

    • @markgillies1834
      @markgillies1834 5 лет назад

      I'm jealous!Also,do you subscribe to the permaculture way of thinking of do you just let nature do it's thing?Peace,love and hapiness.

    • @melody01238
      @melody01238 5 лет назад +2

      How do you have internet and a phone? Off the grid implies no dependence on government regulated commerce.

    • @richardthenryvideos
      @richardthenryvideos 5 лет назад

      @@_TheDudeAbides_ true. Still seems weird and a bit hypocritical

  • @sanalettan5794
    @sanalettan5794 7 лет назад +479

    my dream retirement home

    • @ExploringAlternatives
      @ExploringAlternatives  7 лет назад +23

      Ours too! =)

    • @breckandy
      @breckandy 7 лет назад +2

      @Sanal
      If you heard them talking, the work is just beginning when you take on this lifestyle. No retiring here. Like 200 years ago, back-breaking toil dawn to dusk.
      Imagine all the pollution that goes into making tires.

    • @rowanp8740
      @rowanp8740 7 лет назад +21

      @breckandy
      Imagine all the pollution from tires that no one wants anymore.
      If it's already being manufactured, why not utilize the waste product?

    • @icecreamladydriver1606
      @icecreamladydriver1606 7 лет назад +20

      Peiople get all starry eyed and think how romantic this life would be. No way. It is hard work and most people who try it give it up within the first few years. But at least they try to persue their dreams.

    • @skenney8325
      @skenney8325 7 лет назад +5

      My dream retirement? The Four Seasons. Why pick and choose which conveniences to give up? Your car (when you run out of whatever, etc.) . . .

  • @skywatcher7272
    @skywatcher7272 5 лет назад +6

    This is how God intended us to live. :)

  • @cowjuice4689
    @cowjuice4689 4 года назад +10

    Strange how this pops up after I tried camping in my backyard and tried to live off the vegetables and hose water -.-

    • @T.C556
      @T.C556 4 года назад +2

      Your phone is spying on you. It's amazing how things get rrcomm9in line with what's going on in my life and conversations.

  • @shaquoyag1484
    @shaquoyag1484 5 лет назад +12

    Man I really want to do this. !!! So I can get away from this Crazy stimulation I’m in. Very inspiring

  • @maaskeimorgen
    @maaskeimorgen 7 лет назад +45

    I study engineering and these last few months I've learnt about exactly how to make the entire "grid" - supplying drinking water, taking care of waste water, handling trash, supplying heat and electricity, all of that. I've learnt how to do it for even small establishments, like 20-50 people. I think about that very much the same way as I think about being off grid. Off grid, on grid, it's all about the things we need apart from a dry, warm place to sleep and be. There's only two differences between a grid and being off grid, when I think about it as an engineering student:
    1) How much time and money there's available to ensure the supply/establish the grid: the more people, the bigger the parts can be: the drinking water tank, the thermal mass, the solar panels, the septic plantation, all of it.
    2) How experimental the solutions can be. If you're making a grid for many people, it has to be very secure. It absolutely has to work properly. This means the solutions have to be thoroughly tested, and sadly, this often means old and polluting too. If it's just a few people who are going off grid, it's ok if it doesn't function optimally the first few years, because it's meant to be experimental. Right?
    Now, I'm into engineering because tech amazes me, so I'm not into the whole off grid thing, because it mean two things: 1) that people avoid the tech, more or less, 2) that I don't get a chance to take care of it, lol. But all the attempts to be sustainable interest me a lot because if they work, I'd love to try to apply them to the big grid. It must feel weird for someone who wants to go off grid to hear that people who want to make the big grid also have interest in the off grid dream, haha.

    • @7489k
      @7489k 7 лет назад +2

      maaskeimorgen Great point! It's so nice to hear a tech lover who doesn't shut this idea right down 😊👍

    • @pentabuzz149
      @pentabuzz149 5 лет назад

      I mean what if you made a grid system in an area like in this video and had a community that lived sustainably?

    • @markgillies1834
      @markgillies1834 5 лет назад

      @@pentabuzz149 👍

  • @VanessaAdam
    @VanessaAdam 7 лет назад +35

    Awesome. I love earthship homes, they offer so much more than any other sustainable building can.

    • @ExploringAlternatives
      @ExploringAlternatives  7 лет назад +20

      They are pretty fantastic, we would love to build a mini one for ourselves one day. Thanks for watching :)

    • @marcbeebuzz1711
      @marcbeebuzz1711 7 лет назад

      how do you get wifi, cabled-in or straight off satellite?

    • @Kube_Dog
      @Kube_Dog 6 лет назад +1

      Hahahaha! That won't get a reply! It's doesn't fit the nature narrative. Excellent question, but you're not supposed to ask. It breaks the mood and the fantasy.

    • @chriswindham3278
      @chriswindham3278 5 лет назад

      Marc Beebuzz solar energy

    • @chriswindham3278
      @chriswindham3278 5 лет назад

      Kube Dog I answer you welfare hick. I use solar energy for internet if you go college study you understand this .A simple 12 volt solar power let me run laptop tv DVD player and radio.

  • @dawnfranklin7280
    @dawnfranklin7280 7 лет назад +117

    Taking a class with this wonderful women has been added to my bucket list today!!

    • @Kube_Dog
      @Kube_Dog 6 лет назад

      So, it's on your bucket list to make a long bucket list of thing's you'll never do? Mission accomplished.

    • @WrestlerMonkey123
      @WrestlerMonkey123 6 лет назад +4

      Once she said, "concrete isn't durable" her credibility was pretty much nothing

    • @marthabishop4635
      @marthabishop4635 6 лет назад

      dawn franklin I

    • @burgesskj
      @burgesskj 6 лет назад +3

      Matthew Wakamatsu, Certainly the vast number of surviving roman ruins would agree with your conclusion. However, I suspect she was translating in her head from the French, and intended to mean that it was not a _sustainable_ practice, referring to the heavy pollution related to concrete construction processes.

    • @AmedeeBoulette
      @AmedeeBoulette 6 лет назад +4

      Matthew Wakamatsu that’s because you don’t live in Québec; our crazy Siberian weather eats concrete for breakfast... so, there’s that...

  • @oliviaclark5479
    @oliviaclark5479 4 года назад +29

    the only thing i’m confused about is, who is the “we” she keeps referring to?

    • @soniav6119
      @soniav6119 4 года назад +6

      Her, the dog and the plants😂😂😂

    • @annakatarinalupis1044
      @annakatarinalupis1044 4 года назад +10

      Olivia Clark, it's written in the description bellow the video: Hélène Dubé and her partner Alain Neveu from Es-Cargo ;-)

    • @EWCIAGROBEL
      @EWCIAGROBEL 4 года назад +1

      Her partner

    • @soniav6119
      @soniav6119 4 года назад +1

      @@annakatarinalupis1044 haha, I seen that. I just thought it was funny...lmao!!!

  • @RvWendy
    @RvWendy 5 лет назад +15

    Such a special lady, I admire her and would like to live like that one day 😍

  • @earthelenagarrett6003
    @earthelenagarrett6003 5 лет назад +12

    I bet it’s peaceful, no drama

  • @darangemaster1
    @darangemaster1 7 лет назад +11

    that is an amazing house i would love to do that but little by little here in the USA many counties are banning this type of living and requiring you to be attached to the grid.

  • @tetsubo57
    @tetsubo57 7 лет назад +155

    An issue that some people have had with Earthships that use tires is off gassing. Even if sealed behind a stucco wall the tires can still off gas. I am a little confused about her comment concerning concrete. Concrete has been a stable and well understood building material since the time of the Romans.

    • @daniluchison
      @daniluchison 7 лет назад +13

      tetsubo57
      Concrete is not flexible while tires containing earth are. Why do u need it to be flexible?
      U have to understand the larger picture, our civikization is about to collapse... not because we want to or because it has to from a HUMAN POINT OF VIEW... the problem is that we are not alone on this planet and that which sustains us, the very planet that nurture us, has determined that is either us or the planet. Needless to say it has been decided we are too dangerous and will therefore be wiped out to start all over again. Only very few survivors are needed to restart... but for them to survive the reset, they must live in a flexible structure. I know, im crazy. The issue is if true or not... time will tell very soon.

    • @maxmason6779
      @maxmason6779 7 лет назад +23

      oh, and the billions of tires literally all over the globe aren't off-gassing? huh. okay. but there ARE certain criteria required for tires to off-gas; heat, sunlight or abrasion. none of these are a factor in an Earthship if properly constructed.

    • @Clari26
      @Clari26 7 лет назад +13

      Concrete has many benefits not sure what she is talking about...

    • @lauraisabella2513
      @lauraisabella2513 7 лет назад +23

      I know, right!? When she made the comment about concrete I just laughed ;D That lady doesn't really know anything about concrete. (PS: I'm an architect)

    • @VvDOPAMEANvV
      @VvDOPAMEANvV 7 лет назад +12

      Those tires are not off gassing. You didn't do your research. Go do 100 push ups and read a book.

  • @hintarasholtorzic9033
    @hintarasholtorzic9033 7 лет назад +33

    Interesting. I want to spend some of my life with people like this in places of similar nature.

    • @janicefreedom8665
      @janicefreedom8665 6 лет назад

      did you get anywhere with this? Did you start a FB page? I also want to do a community in BC, Canada. North Vancouver Island specifically. Anyone discovering this can contact me if interested. Soon I will make a FB page... just getting a few more ducks in a row first.

  • @TombstoneHeart
    @TombstoneHeart 5 лет назад +12

    The ice storage idea isn't such a dubious idea as it may appear at first glance to some people. Not many modern people are aware of the fact that in the 1800's and into the early 1900's, there was a thriving ice export market in North America and later, in Norway. North American ice was even exported down here to the Great Southern Land. I read of this years ago and, according to the person who wrote the piece I read, that even with a losses of up to 50% from ice melt during the voyages south, it was still a viable market. I think the most common form of insulation for the cargo holds was cork, but other material may have been used. Given that most of the ice exported was probably shipped by relatively slow sailing vessels, perhaps Helene and Alain and other interested people might consider a special made structure for ice storage that may make having an electric powered refrigerator obsolete for their needs.
    Here's a link to the history of ice exports: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_trade

  • @chrisniner8772
    @chrisniner8772 7 лет назад +11

    I am in my 20th year offgrid, I wish I had known what an earthship was when I built! I am running a fridge and separate freezer along with everything else.

    • @taraclarissa
      @taraclarissa 4 года назад +5

      How are you on the internet?

    • @stevewalsh5668
      @stevewalsh5668 3 года назад

      @@taraclarissa solar power and satellite obviously.

  • @McDuffin
    @McDuffin 7 лет назад +40

    Awesome job. They really should get those exposed tires covered up though.

    • @ladypilliwick8179
      @ladypilliwick8179 7 лет назад +3

      glass bottles work fine too

    • @GothicaBeauty
      @GothicaBeauty 7 лет назад +1

      Fuff Mcduffin why should she get the tyres covered up if she doesn't want to?

    • @TTGTanner
      @TTGTanner 7 лет назад +4

      i've heard exposed tires give off harmful chemicals

    • @GothicaBeauty
      @GothicaBeauty 7 лет назад +2

      Tanner G only when they're set on fire they do.

    • @ptanyuh
      @ptanyuh 7 лет назад +3

      Nope---the exposed tires absorb heat better.

  • @jnagtube
    @jnagtube 6 лет назад +50

    concrete is incredibly durable. the problem with mud and sand bricks is that they largely dependant on the climate. can't have a mud / sand brick house if it rains a lot.

    • @joaniedingess752
      @joaniedingess752 6 лет назад +5

      Maybe if one makes the roof to be widely overhanging, it might keep the walls from getting wet or even build wind break walls to protect from harsh winds too. Using straw in the mix would help it to have more conformity to solidness. Let some cut weeds dry out for instant straw. Heard of those hey bales used with a type of hardener that makes those work well, but again, maybe need a wider roof to protect.
      Maybe dig down into earth to build it, in a huge hole surrounded by rocks to keep it dry, have roof(maybe rounded and dome) above the ground with narrow window slits for light. That would eliminate some of the problem of wetness and wind, maybe keep home warmer too. I know several ppl who built their homes that way, not off the grid, but just to have more heat and less wind deterioration on their walls. But then they also liked more darkness in the interior. But they save a lot on their heating bill during winter and summer cooling system bills.

    • @freebornjohn6876
      @freebornjohn6876 5 лет назад +10

      Lots of houses in Devon England made of clay/ mud (cob). Rains quite a bit there, but large overhanging roofs protect the walls.

    • @2011Ohmygoodness
      @2011Ohmygoodness 5 лет назад +4

      @@freebornjohn6876 Yeah and they are hundreds of years old, still standing strong.

    • @Neenerella333
      @Neenerella333 4 года назад

      @@joaniedingess752 New Mexico has some old adobe homes with no roofing(flat roof) that uses that kind of clay/straw reinforcement. Also hundreds of years old, with regular maintenance, but it is a very dry climate with minimal snow

  • @ctrash
    @ctrash 5 лет назад +1

    I wish I was rich enough to live off the grid like I had no money and had the charisma to convince dozens of people to build my house for me.

  • @arthurfisher7198
    @arthurfisher7198 5 лет назад +18

    i had a laugh when she said concrete isnt durable

  • @chrisgeorgallis7746
    @chrisgeorgallis7746 6 лет назад +21

    We ALL need to learn to be Self sufficient
    I'm learning to grow my own veggies.

    • @Irena26H
      @Irena26H 4 года назад +1

      That's a great place to start. Next you can learn how to make your own butter, peanut butter, and other simple items. It's really simple to get started and it just builds on itself. 👍

  • @syau1636
    @syau1636 4 года назад +5

    It looks so familiar in 1970 in Hong Kong. I feel so warm when seeing this and recall my memory of that time.

  • @ElizabethOnTheInternet
    @ElizabethOnTheInternet 7 лет назад +103

    That so cool with the frozen water jugs! And what a beautiful house, thanks for sharing!!

    • @ExploringAlternatives
      @ExploringAlternatives  7 лет назад +5

      Thanks for checking out the video =)

    • @cherylcooper1885
      @cherylcooper1885 7 лет назад +3

      Is your solar system hooked up to run a frig? Make your own ice..

    • @charlieanaya5058
      @charlieanaya5058 7 лет назад +3

      They don't have a fridge, that's what the ice was about in the cellar. If I could, I would bring them $1000 worth of equipment or more and make my way up there and install it for them but I'm poor too...

    • @charlieanaya5058
      @charlieanaya5058 7 лет назад

      The house is built out of used tires, they don't have many panels and have to haul ice from the neighbor half the year. If they had the money they would upgrade to be comfortable and have cold food. With your logic, Why would they burn wood and propane then?

    • @arpadzigisfari5819
      @arpadzigisfari5819 7 лет назад +7

      My mother was born in 1921. Her family had an ice box when she was growing up rather than a refrigerator. A man used to come around the neighborhood selling ice for the ice boxes because that's what people had. As the woman said in the video, refrigerators have not been around that long, historically speaking. If you go into historic houses, they have a room in the basement for keeping food cool.

  • @fernandabrandao7846
    @fernandabrandao7846 4 года назад

    The only not selfsustained is the usage of propane which can easily be switched to use the electricity from the solar panels

  • @patymoonkaraoke
    @patymoonkaraoke 5 лет назад +7

    If all the leaders of the world were like you, we would know harmony overnight.

  • @durkhaneyali3929
    @durkhaneyali3929 4 года назад +3

    In northern Pakistan there are huge wooden boxes (the size of a chest freezer) built to collect the ice cold spring water temporarily. Water leaves the other end so the natural route of the spring is not disturbed and the boxes are filled with beverages to be sold on the road side. They look very cool and cost nothing to cool drinks all day.

  • @binthrdonthat
    @binthrdonthat 7 лет назад +6

    OMG, I felt the same about the movie Swiss Family Robinson. Beautiful lifestyle

  • @appraisingjaime8662
    @appraisingjaime8662 7 лет назад +8

    Love your guys channel. I'm doing Etsy full time so I can be a nomad

  • @MISSPHOTOGENICBABY
    @MISSPHOTOGENICBABY 5 лет назад +2

    All I can think about is spiders and bugs 😩, it’s beautiful though!

    • @zzbudzz
      @zzbudzz 5 лет назад +1

      I have a 20 x 20 glass porch ( florida room) we always get bugs, spiders, wasp on it ...then our cat brings snakes , lizards ,frogs, rabbits etc .to us because he thinks we are such bad hunters ..lol

    • @cheberur
      @cheberur 3 года назад

      @@zzbudzz LOL 🤣

  • @heidilight3636
    @heidilight3636 4 года назад

    What area are you in? You amaze me! I admire you!

  • @vashnanerada8757
    @vashnanerada8757 4 года назад +4

    Love it, I'm so jealous. I could easily live like you. You have done an amazing job. Very nice

  • @KeenanModica
    @KeenanModica 7 лет назад +5

    Good video! They should think of investing in a 12 volt icemaker (fairly inexpensive and efficient).

  • @erikahernandez1052
    @erikahernandez1052 7 лет назад +15

    some really nice people to help build this house

  • @rickydunn6519
    @rickydunn6519 5 лет назад +1

    I need more of a balance...very hardcore...bravo!!!

  • @vikkishaaa6310
    @vikkishaaa6310 5 лет назад +6

    I'm so impressed by your lives. I've only imagined living like this in my head.
    Away from the riffraf of society.

  • @Windkisssed
    @Windkisssed 7 лет назад +70

    At one point i had considered this route..... but then I realized there's way too much work for one person!!!!
    Great video!! Thanks

    • @GwenMotoGirl
      @GwenMotoGirl 7 лет назад +6

      Windkisssed me, too. Even too much for 2. I dream of earthbags. Also much labor.

    • @The1234567890brand
      @The1234567890brand 7 лет назад +27

      Did you catch her story? She found communities online and people came out to help. The communities are definitely out there with plenty of people able and willing to help, you just have to find them. Just a thought

    • @filipdivic1302
      @filipdivic1302 7 лет назад +7

      actually another permaculture principle is to create systems tht require very little work. look at some 'happen films' on youtube and check out Sepp Holzer. A mountain / sloped site is actually ideal for Permaculture! Its all about the knowledge, this decreases work time.

    • @schoolshow94
      @schoolshow94 7 лет назад +2

      Gwen I thought the same thing too

    • @peterlogan7734
      @peterlogan7734 7 лет назад

      Filip Divic f

  • @ja553
    @ja553 7 лет назад +77

    living on her own terms.

    • @Kube_Dog
      @Kube_Dog 6 лет назад +3

      And Canadian welfare and pity cash from friends and family. Oh, yeah... her own terms.

    • @WiscoDrinks
      @WiscoDrinks 6 лет назад

      Kube Dog she would be better off living in an RV

    • @chriswindham3278
      @chriswindham3278 5 лет назад +1

      Kube Dog um highest welfare is united States .highest welfare in united States are poor whites in redstates.Redstates don't pay into system they take more from system

    • @mrsbethanyelise
      @mrsbethanyelise 5 лет назад +2

      @@Kube_Dog she probably makes money from the workshops she talks about

    • @Kube_Dog
      @Kube_Dog 5 лет назад

      @@mrsbethanyelise No one is gonna pay her for that. Maybe someone will pay a little out of pity, but not really. It welfare or disability or something like that.

  • @user-qj7ou8ok6n
    @user-qj7ou8ok6n 5 лет назад +32

    Does “off grid” mean tax evasion? Because if so SIGN ME UP!

  • @suicidesincedaageof3
    @suicidesincedaageof3 5 лет назад +8

    Ok but, was that a swastika on her stove? 1:30

  • @rizzatouristy2574
    @rizzatouristy2574 5 лет назад +12

    I would like to live off grid .. inspiring . Thank you

  • @taserrr
    @taserrr 5 лет назад +4

    Some of these comments are just plain wrong.
    I like what they're doing and that's fine, but claiming it's efficient and everybody should live like this is just dead wrong.
    For instance, they use wood to heat up their house, which has around a 6% efficiency, whilst oil/gas generators produce heat at about 30 % efficiency. I believe eletric heaters are even more efficient.
    Also you have to realize all these materials they are using have to be produced in factories (solar panels, metal objects, you name it).
    On top of this most people have to go to a city to work in, imagine all the traffic on the road not to mention emission when everybody has to move from a house in nature towards a city and back everyday. When people claim this is a better way to live they don't understand what our current way of life provides for us. For instance, you wouldn't be able to complain or see this video without companies creating the internet/maintaining it. The more compact we live, the more efficient, the faster we evolve our technology, the less we have to work, the older we can get, the more luxury we can afford.
    I'm all up for how these people live, it looks peaceful and nice and you're living closer to nature. But saying we should all live like this will just devolve us back a few thousand years of civilization.

  • @MrGeorgeqs
    @MrGeorgeqs 5 лет назад +37

    4:23 😂 if you heard it give us a like

  • @grayghost1667
    @grayghost1667 7 лет назад +18

    I wish I could move out of town now and not look at another person again I would be fine with that. wi fi not needed. when I go to the stores and look around all I see are sheep.

    • @jemimakurian6071
      @jemimakurian6071 7 лет назад +3

      Gray Ghost ...so true...I have no idea I am going to live the next 40 years in this so called civilized society

    • @daisychain3007
      @daisychain3007 6 лет назад +1

      Jemima Kurian What is uncivilised in our society?
      Try living in some other parts of the world and you will see what uncivilised is.

    • @tobito2013
      @tobito2013 6 лет назад +1

      Edgy

    • @mimimaliar7057
      @mimimaliar7057 6 лет назад +1

      I would love to be your neighbor 10 miles away. I feel the same

    • @Shelilah41
      @Shelilah41 5 лет назад

      Gray Ghost so true we all just a number everyone is for themselves. I feel so bad for my grandchildren

  • @svetlanasemina2329
    @svetlanasemina2329 4 года назад +1

    A lot to learn from this experience! It is always a lot of work but it worth it!! 👍🌱
    Много можно изучить из опыта таких построек. Такие проекты всегда требуют много физических затрат, но оно того стоит!

  • @chriskozak4966
    @chriskozak4966 6 лет назад +7

    Amazing concept, incredible way to live. Thanks for sharing.👍🏽🙏🏽

  • @flamingpieherman9822
    @flamingpieherman9822 4 года назад +3

    So how do you pay your property taxes? How do you get gasoline or foods you dont groe?

  • @booksbeautynv9994
    @booksbeautynv9994 7 лет назад +19

    Please try mitticool refrigerator and other things from India. It works without electricity

    • @Neenerella333
      @Neenerella333 4 года назад

      I just looked it up. Seems interesting. I wonder if it works in high desert climate.

  • @bigal6667
    @bigal6667 7 лет назад +46

    I love your videos!!!

  • @SometimeAgo65
    @SometimeAgo65 4 года назад

    Cool...I just have one question, How do you keep snakes out? You probably don't worry about that though, lol. That would be my biggest concern I guess.

  • @KommyToob
    @KommyToob 5 лет назад +1

    Funny how for many years people strived to obtain modern conveniences.Only now more want to get back to basics.

  • @rachelkelley7125
    @rachelkelley7125 7 лет назад +5

    This is completely awesome!! I would love to be able to live like this!! We already live in our mobile home which sometimes is quite similar. We rely on very little outside influences and prefer it that way! We love our simple kind of lifestyle :)

    • @cherylpemberton1676
      @cherylpemberton1676 6 лет назад

      Rachel Kelley, Do you mean mobile home like a TRAILER, or MOTOR HOME?!!?

  • @RemiStardust
    @RemiStardust 7 лет назад +7

    "We don't even have a fridge" --- No thank you.

    • @sasuhinagalore
      @sasuhinagalore 4 года назад

      I dont have a fridge. It's not that scary.

  • @planettime9205
    @planettime9205 4 года назад +3

    wow wow wow, this is by far one of the most amazing videos I've seen on sustainability! I would absolutely love to visit one of their workshops one day when I visit Canada! I am sharing this everywhere, it is so cool!

  • @feyyfey
    @feyyfey 4 года назад +2

    Indigenous people have been living like this before Europeans came and imposed their destructive system

    • @beeorganic
      @beeorganic 4 года назад

      Wow, you mean indigenous people had solar panels, internet/computers, incandescent lighting, and built homes from used tires just like the woman in this video? Your precious "indigenous people" lived/live "that simply" just because they weren't/aren't intellectually evolved enough to create such complex, modern conveniences. They take ANY and ALL advancements they can get they hands on- voluntarily. Your comment... bravely typed on a "destructive" computer/electronic device using the "destructive" electricity they (Americans of European descent) invented. Your hypocrisy and ingratitude speaks volumes and spoken like a true inferior.

    • @feyyfey
      @feyyfey 4 года назад +1

      @@beeorganic 😂😂 look how bothered you are.. but where you really lost credibility and exposed yourself as a racist is: ."they weren't intellectually evolved enough"

  • @carmichaelmoritz8662
    @carmichaelmoritz8662 5 лет назад +1

    i still have the dream of finding someone that would like to basically live off grid . most people are to busy trying to get wealthy meanwhile all they are doing is struggling from paycheck to paycheck .

  • @rozchristopherson648
    @rozchristopherson648 4 года назад +4

    Love ❤️ your setup. But do the tires leach toxic chemicals into the soil over time ?

    • @DeflatedPumpkin
      @DeflatedPumpkin 4 года назад

      Also what happens to the stability of the house as those tyres start to perish?

    • @stevewalsh5668
      @stevewalsh5668 3 года назад +1

      No they do not.

    • @stevewalsh5668
      @stevewalsh5668 3 года назад

      @@DeflatedPumpkin those tires will take 300yrs to rot.

    • @rozchristopherson648
      @rozchristopherson648 3 года назад

      @@stevewalsh5668 That’s good to know.

  • @santosmarcuss13
    @santosmarcuss13 4 года назад +24

    4:24-4:26
    Headphones in. Volume up.

  • @ginnylorenz5265
    @ginnylorenz5265 7 лет назад +3

    Fascinating, wonderful, beautiful. Thank you for sharing!!! Love from San Diego, CA.

  • @janejames35
    @janejames35 4 года назад +1

    Many people in Russia and Ukraine live like this, their self-made homes look a lot better.

  • @1MSally1965
    @1MSally1965 4 года назад +1

    Would have liked to see the bedroom and rest of the house.

  • @jasonpetersharpe
    @jasonpetersharpe 5 лет назад +4

    This is really awesome! I LOVE 💕 it! -j

  • @sandymatza
    @sandymatza 5 лет назад +4

    I would love a home like that. Nomore putting up with neighbors.

  • @TsetsiStoyanova
    @TsetsiStoyanova 6 лет назад +6

    this has got to be a hard life!

    • @ElizabethMBoyd
      @ElizabethMBoyd 3 года назад

      Country life has chores but a better quality of life

    • @stevewalsh5668
      @stevewalsh5668 3 года назад

      Not hard at all. Very rewarding and stress free.

  • @heidilight3636
    @heidilight3636 4 года назад +2

    I want to find land with fresh running water ; a stream, hot stream, waterfall, natural pools, a crystal cave I can move into and have crystal quarts skylights and windows

    • @sidilicious11
      @sidilicious11 3 года назад

      I want a waterfall and hotsprings on my property too.

  • @rogerplessen5246
    @rogerplessen5246 7 лет назад +1

    If you are in rocky forest soil and want a garden make raised beds or use 1/2whiskey barrels which I did in the mountains at 6500 feet. Put branches chopped up roughly then oak leaves then charcoal then compost of needles floor soil and nitrogenous waste and chicken manure about a foot thick innoculated with earthworms. Mulch and let it cook right in the bed or terrace . Then some rock dust a little biochar some black soil and some worm castings and aged manure. a couple of inches thick. Make beds about 5 or 6 feet wide and plant patches of vegies in little cross rows. You can plant close..thin..and store in a root cellar, can or freeze dry. Good for 25 years or so! Plant and succession plant ..use. Every week of summer...irrigate from spring. YOU CAN GROW STUFF IN THE MOUNTAINS .