Today, we’re going to talk about three (3) types of off the grid living: these are three realistic options, and basically these are three different levels of off the grid living.
The first level is roughing it completely, I mean, that’s where you build just a basic shack with no running water; you don’t hook up to electricity and you are more or less camping with a shack. The next level would be sort of a hybrid off the grid level where you’re half-in-half where you’re connected to the grid, maybe just for power, but you have a well, your own septic tank; you’re largely off grid, you’re still using the supermarket let’s say but you’re trying to move towards off the grid. This is where many of off the grid-ers are, they’re trying to develop a more self-sustaining lifestyle, but they’re holding on to electricity in some of the grid for the transition period. And then three, there’s sort of the modern off the grid lifestyle: That’s where you fully go off the grid, you’re self-supported, but it’s very modern; you’ve got solar for electricity or you’ve got wind for electricity, you’ve got both, you’ve got battery backups.
Solar is getting less and less expensive every year and financing is very low on solar, so, it makes it makes a lot of sense to invest in solar and it will make more and more sense as the years progress because solar seems to be the way we’re going and seems to be the least expensive of the renewable energy sources, especially as the panels go down.
You don’t have to be really reliant on the wind. Of course, there are some areas where a windmill might be better than a solar panel, but not many in the United States.
So, this is just a brief introduction to the three levels of off the grid living. Most people just think, oh, you know, most people don’t know about off the grid living thing: there’s just one type of off the grid living; there are various phases of it.
There are definitely some disadvantages too to the different types of off the grid and living like, if you’re really roughing it, you can see the disadvantages: you’re going to miss all of your appliances, your electricity, like you’re more or less camping.
And there are some advantages to that too; a lot of people want to dump the real world, they want to go completely, completely roughing it off the grid, and they want to live that way for life but most off the grid-ers want the third choice. They want to be completely off the grid, but with all the modern amenities; they want the solar, they wanna have electricity, they’ve got running water from the well, they’ve got a toilet that goes down to the septic system, so it’s much like living on the grid.
Most of those really nice off the grid homes have all the same amenities as an on the grid home, the people living in them tend to be more pioneering definitely like on the grid people and they tend to raise livestock, and plant gardens, et cetera, and try to move more and more towards the off the grid living and being totally self-sufficient.
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