Wednesday 26 October 2011

Cottage Industries for making money Off Grid

Cottage Industries

Going off the grid has been on my mind for awhile now. However, one of the roadblocks to going off the grid is the problem of making enough cash/money to pay your taxes, purchase items that you can't get off the grid or just having some cash for a rainy day. Now, since I am a woman, this problem is all the more acute, there is only so much I can do. So after much thought, sleepless nights, prayer and meditation I have come up with a pretty workable list. At least it's workable in my mind and that's all that matters to me. So without further delay here is a workable list of jobs, methods and ideas for bringing in the cash while living large “Off the Grid”.
Intertwined: The Art of Handspun Yarn, Modern Patterns, and Creative Spinning (Handspun Revolution)Intertwined: The Art of Handspun Yarn, Modern Patterns, and Creative Spinning (Handspun Revolution)
Amazon Price: $8.24
List Price: $19.99
Cottage Industry: A Portrait of Irish ArtisansCottage Industry: A Portrait of Irish Artisans
Amazon Price: $33.76
List Price: $45.00
Raising Chickens For DummiesRaising Chickens For Dummies
Amazon Price: $10.45
List Price: $19.99

1. Spinning homemade yarn and knitted goods: This is my newest adventure! Recently, I decided to take up knitting. When I made the trek to the nearest yarn shop I was very disappointed. The yarn they had was just your ordinary, ugly, skinny, bland yarn. I had visions in my head of wild, full, vibrant, crazy yarn. I knew I had seen it somewhere but it definitely was NOT in this yarn store. When I asked the clerk about it she didn't seem to know what I was talking about. So I picked up some half-ways decent yarn (because that was all I could find) and started looking online for the yarn of my dreams. Well I found it! It was homemade, homespun yarn that I had seen and it was AWESOME! I had found a new hobby and with a little luck maybe even a new job! Not only is homespun yarn more beautiful than the ugly stuff you get in the stores but it is so much fun to make and really quite addictive. Immediately I started thinking about how I could purchase my own goats and sheep to supply my new endeavor!
2. Selling Organic Fruits, Nuts and Vegetables: This is a given if you are living off the grid. When I had my boarding house in Portland, Oregon I had two apple trees. One I never had to do anything to and it provided the most wonderful, the most perfect apples I've ever had. The other was so awful that had I not moved I would have cut down that tree. So, the lesson here is plant things that grow easily in your area. That way you wont have to do anything to your trees but collect the fruit and prune them every once in awhile. Of course there is a bit more work to growing vegetables but the lesson still applies: plant things that grow in your area. It will cut down on the amount of work and you can get by with little or no pesticides. Eat from your farm, can some things and sell the rest.

3. Freelance Writing: Well, anyone who has had any experience at all with freelance writing knows that they will never get rich doing this. However, having said that, you don't need to make a lot of money when you are living off the grid...so what you do make stretches further than if you were living somewhere else with real bills. So, freelance writing can contribute to your income and with a little effort might mean the difference between making a tax payment or going into foreclosure. Besides all that, it's fun!
4. Raising and Selling Animals: Look, you have all that land so you might as well make good use of it! Breeding animals can also be a wonderful experience. I have a friend who bred seeing eye dogs for the blind, she did this for many years and found it very fulfilling. There are all kinds of animals that you can breed and sell, farm animals, seeing-eye dogs, police dogs, if you like certain breeds you can breed them or you can even venture out into birds. If you already have farm animals you might as well breed them and sell the off-spring. And while were on that topic you might as well milk the cows or sheep and sell the cheese too! Now, I can hear some of you saying that you don't have the space to raise and sell animals, well have you ever thought about raising rabbits? Rabbits can be raised even inside a building, they are quiet and the breed..well like rabbits! Also, let's not forget about fish, if you have a decent sized pond you can raise catfish, tilapia or trout. There are so many possibilities here that I couldn't possibly address them all.

5. Selling Eggs: Depending on how many chickens you have selling eggs can be an industry all it's own, especially if they are free range organic eggs. Most chickens lay one egg a day, at around $3.00 a dozen, it's possible to make a some extra cash just selling eggs, if you don't want to go full hog (or chicken) then you can just sell eggs to your neighbors to make a little here and there.
6. Daycare: This may or may not work depending on how far out you are. However, if you already have children of your own why not add a few more and make some extra money. Children love farms and two or three more at minimum wage could bring in an easy thousand a month or more.
7. Making and selling solar ovens and dehydrators: Solar ovens and dehydrators are pretty easy to make...it's not like building a house or something! I included this because even I could make a solar oven or dehydrator and they are such neat contraptions. They can be as artistically designed as you like, easy to build and practical since they use no electricity and provide a useful service. Advertise in the local paper and see who gives you a call.

8. Selling Heirloom Seeds and Plants: With all the GMO frankenfoods out there this industry is making quite a splash. Anyone who knows anything about all the crap in the grocery store wants to start growing there own food. Since you already have the seeds and plants why not harvest extra and sell them from your farm? It's very easy to do and costs little to nothing since you already have the plants.
9. Selling Fertilizer: I read once that some guy started selling chicken manure and made over $500,000 a year doing so. If he can do it we can do it! You have the animals, all you have to do is advertise, maybe you or I won't make $500,000 a year but really do you need that much?
10. Starting an “Off-Grid” School: This is something I've been knocking around in my brain for sometime now. The old ways of spinning, cooking on a wood-stove, chopping wood, building cob houses, making maple syrup from ...MAPLE TREES, has been lost. We go to the store and we buy what we need, never thinking about where it comes from or what's in it. I think a school like this that teaches people how to survive off the grid and independently would really make it. Of course, we this idea you would have to have a good sized area and facilities to house your students and teachers. But, I think it would work and it has the potential to bring in quite a bit of money.
11. B&B: I read somewhere that ENTP's (Meyer's Briggs personality tests), of which I am, create their own world and then charge people rent. Well if that doesn't describe me I don't know what does. For over 10 years I ran a boarding house in Portland, Oregon. It was a lot of fun and it paid my mortgage. I would think that there would be a lot of people who might be interested in spending the weekend at your “Off-Grid” farm. I know I would! So why not build a home that is large enough for guests and put out the shingle! It's quite a wonderful experience to meet people from all over the world and the money would be more than enough for your needs.

12. Make Candles or Soap: This is something you can do off the grid and most of the ingredients you can get on your land. You could also sell these items over the internet or you could even have a little “gift shop” along with the B&B.
13. Upholstering or Refinishing Furniture: I personally know of one person who does this for a living out of his home (and you know who you are!). This is one field that you would have to live close to a city in order to drum up enough business.
14. Or...All of the above! :) Finally, I don't think that is is completely unfeasible to do or at least to try all of the above mentioned ways to make money. Some areas might be more to your liking than others but hey you'll never know until you try them and just think of all the fun you'll have giving it a whirl!
As a people we must start thinking for ourselves, we must stop depending on government to house us, give us jobs, provide food, energy and water. As Americans we have a heritage of independence but I'm afraid we have lost our way and have become dependent upon the state. I read a story awhile back in the book “The Creature from Jekyll Island”. It goes something like this: There was a farmer who noticed a lot of ducks on his farm and hungered for a duck dinner. But, every time he tried to catch one of the ducks they flew away. Finally he got smart and started leaving bits of food around. The ducks started eating the free food and therefore started becoming fat. The farmer started trailing the food to an area with a trap door and eventually the ducks became so tame that they just followed the food right into the trap. So the farmer was able to have a duck dinner anytime he wanted.
We have to learn from this lesson that cheap energy, free food or housing that is given by or supplemented by the state can be taken by the state. To really be free we have to strive, innovate, create, and just say NO to the trail of crumbs that leads to the trap. Living Off-Grid and independently is the way to avoid becoming someone's duck dinner!
 
 
Original post: Brie Hoffman

Wednesday 19 October 2011

Make your own cleaning products

Clean Green photo
I wrote the other day about a green cleaning service in New York. If you're interested in doing some green cleaning of your own, click through for a quick overview of how to make your own cleaners from natural, nontoxic ingredients. It's the most condensed how-to you're likely to find anywhere.
Thanks to WellHome for the great graphic:
HowtoCleanGreen.jpg
More on green cleaning:
How to Go Green: Cleaning

Friday 14 October 2011

Whole Trees -- Pruned For Stunning Architecture & Better Forest Management

Whole Trees -- Pruned For Stunning Architecture & Better Forest Management


wholetreearchitecture2.jpgPhotos: Whole Tree Architecture
Building with whole timber -- as opposed to milling it down into 'products' -- has lots of advantages, ranging from increased fire resistance (seems paradoxical but true), low embodied energy and carbon sequestration.


Wednesday 12 October 2011

Two Solar-wind Hybrids worth looking at.

Southwest windpower INC and Advanced technology and research corp:

hybrid wind solar photo
Image credit: ATR
One of the most common criticisms you hear from clean energy naysayers is that renewables suffer from too much variability. But from the world's first 24/7 solar power plant to large-scale energy storage, that problem is now being tackled from many angles. One of the simplest ways to lessen the problem, however, is to diversify the supply. And now a partnership between two renewable energy equipment suppliers is offering what it claims is the world's first fully integrated wind‐solar hybrid system of substantial capacity.
We've already seen one large-scale combined solar and wind power park, but now Southwest Windpower Inc. and Advanced Technology & Research Corp. have announced that they will be producing a combined hybrid solar/wind renewable energy system that will provide a more constant, more reliable supply of renewable energy for small-scale on site energy generation. This from their press release:
The initial wind‐solar offering, named Skystream Hybrid 6, uses a Skystream 3.7 wind generator, six solar panels and a GPS‐controlled tracking mechanism that rotates the panels to capture the best available sunlight. The tracking mechanism delivers up to 35% more energy than fixed panels on a rooftop. The solar panels and tracker are mounted on the wind turbine's tower, which minimizes the system's visual impact and reduces the costs compared with separate systems. State and local incentives for solar and wind systems can reduce the overall costs significantly in many locations.
No word on the ATR website on pricing, but the first units should be available later this month for the continental United States, and later world-wide through Southwest Windpower's distribution network.




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SEPCO Solar wind hybrid:

Solar Wind Hybrid Light
We completed a project with a company that integrates a solar power system with a wind turbine. Both are used to generate power to charge a battery that powers a light at night. This system can then charge the battery during the day using both technologies and throughout the night with the wind system.
Here’s a great video on how one community used solar and wind hybrid systems to make the Fish Creek park light up at night without having utility costs associated with standard electrical. The City of Grand Prairie uses solar and wind lighting systems to power the lights from dusk to dawn to keep the families, walkers, and joggers safe from unwanted company.
Solar Wind Hybrid Light
This also cost the city less as there is no reason for grid extensions. The lights run on the solar and wind power alone, allowing for quick installation and no wires having to go underground. The solar wind hybrid systems also allow for no power bills from the local utility company saving the city even more money.
Combining solar and wind power is a great solution when the amount of sun is not as high as in other areas because it would lower the amount of solar required to power the device. For more information on a solar wind hybrid system, contact us here at SEPCO.

Credit to Treehugger
Sepco

Thursday 6 October 2011

Mr Dale’s father-in-law, visiting friends and a few passers-by helped out and the result is stunning.

The couple camped out with their children Cosmo, seven, and Elsie, six, to  create the wooden-framed, turf-covered property using scavenged and second-hand materials.

They paid nothing for the land because the owner of the Welsh wood wanted someone to take care of the area.  

‘We didn’t think about Lord Of The Rings when we made it,’ said Ms Saville, 37.
The couple spent only £3,000 building the the house 
 
The couple spent only £3,000 building the the house (Pic: www.SimonDale.net)
‘We didn’t deliberately design it to look like that, but there’s something about using that wood that naturally brings out that Hobbity look.’

Freelance photographer Mr Dale, 33,  and his writer and gardener wife had been looking to move to the country to bring up their first child but were dismayed by the cost of mortgages.

‘We were about to rent a house and we met a lady in a car park who had built her own – and she was 62,’ said Ms Saville. ‘She said we should go for it.’
Simon Dale  
 
Simon Dale reckons it took 1,500 man-hours to complete the home which he carefully blended in to a Welsh hillside (Pic: www.SimonDale.net)
Mr Dale said: ‘Being your own have-a- go architect is a lot of fun and allows you to create and enjoy something which is part of yourself and the land rather than, at worst, a mass-produced box designed for maximum profit and convenience of the construction industry.’

The couple have recently moved into their third self-built home on their own smallholding in West Wales and devote most of their time to building projects.

Building instructions:
Click Here

Original posting: Metro.co.uk

Monday 3 October 2011

Permies.com an amazing resource

Permies.com

This site is an amazing resource for anyone looking into growing their own and preparing to go off grid. I highly reccommend looking at it.

Here are some of their forums :
Most folks are looking for the full collection of permaculture forums. Within that there is the permaculture forum and forums on green building, organic / sustainable practices, woodland care, homestead and more. Some of the topics include:

Note: the clickable links bring you to Permies.com
Enjoy and happy reading!

Friday 30 September 2011

Top 10 Most popular posts on earth bag building

Copied from  : Earth bag Building All credit goes to them.


Every year we publish the most popular blog posts for the last 12 months. We’ll do that again in November on our 4th anniversary. Our goal here is to look at the most popular blog posts since we’ve started – the Best of the Bestest. Think of them as hidden gems unless you’ve read all 756 blog posts. (And if you have read them all, then you can start reading the info on our mothership at EarthbagBuilding.com. It’s all free. Enjoy.)
1. Counties with Few or No Building Codes</a>
2.
Bullet Resistance of Compressed Earth
3. Low-cost Multipurpose Minibuilding Made With Earthbags (This is my earthbag dome that almost went viral last year and got republished on dozens of blogs… see photo above.) Click here to read the free step-by-step How to Build an Earthbag Dome Instructable at Instructables.com.
4. Creating Earthbag House Models
5. Earthquake-resistant Earthbag Houses
6. Earthbag Rootcellar
7. Cost of Earthbag Houses
8. $2,000 Earthbag House
9. Earthbag Survival Shelter
10. Using Earthbags as Ceiling Insulation

Tiny House Has Two Kitchens

They might not be for everyone, but tiny houses have a lot going for them. They use less materials, consume less energy and, crucially, they encourage inhabitants to live with less. From life inside a Solar cabin to an off-grid DIY cordwood home built for $2500, we've already learned many of the tricks of life in a smaller home. Here we visit Feral Farm once again to look at another mini-dwelling.
And this one even features two kitchens!


Thursday 8 September 2011

Pioneer Living a great basic guide to an initial setup

At the very beginning there are so many different ways that people go off grid. for some it means no utilities and the various methods of achieving that. For others its never touching another dollar in their life. They are happier living "off the grid" and being sustainable at the same time and in turn trading/bartering for everything. Then for others it could be going back to the simpler days we enjoyed in the past.

For these people the next section is quiet important. The pioneer living website covers the basics for someone who just wants to get away from most technologies. Have a read and let me know your thoughts.

Website:
Pioneer Living

Amazingly great site for information on windturbines

Not much to say just have a look and let me know your views

Great page with lots of links for interesting projects. 
Otherpower.com

The wind turbine page with a mountain of information.
Wind turbine page