Today, I’m going to talk about Off The Grid Safety.
Well, living off the grid can provide a lot of personal freedom. Living off the grid living also causes one to take more responsibility over one’s safety. Alright, I’m going to give you some time tested crime prevention secrets and counter-measures to secure your off the grid dwelling whether you’re an off the grid-er, an RV, a prepper or Herman, a survivalist, or simply spending a few days off the beaten track wild camping.
So, one: Know your neighbours. I mean, this is your number one safety tip in the area there, become best friends with these people. You don’t have to become best friends but at least say hi once in a while, it’s your choice, right. You need to know who these people are.
Get a dog; that’s pretty obvious. Right?
Landscape within hospitable plants. This is a nice idea, you know, some of the thorny plants are quite beautiful and provide protection for your lot, like a rose bush. Right? Beautiful and excellent protection makes it harder for people. You can make a fence out of those bushes which makes it harder to people to enter into your lot.
Consider an alarm system, that’s fairly obvious. You might want to add a wireless motion sensor to that.
Keep your outdoor areas well lit; this is super important. Just it’s very expensive, it’s a great safety measure, just to have lights on all the doors and on all of the open outdoor areas well lit. That’s a lot of safety, right?
Don’t leave your keys out. Don’t try those magnetic boxes where you put your keys under your car, put your key under your mat; people watch you and they see where you put your keys and they will rip you off, right? And even if they don’t see where you put your keys, they just guess that people do that, and they check.
Add internal locks to critical storage areas. This includes emergency food storage, crawl spaces, etc.
Secure your mail; you don’t want to get a mail that you’re up for withdrawal and all, use a P.O box. It’s the safest way to secure your mail. You might only have a chance to get into town every couple of weeks and check your P.O box, but it’s still worth it. You don’t need daily mail if you’re living off the grid.
Secure your doors with multiple locking mechanisms, pretty obvious. Less obvious, reinforce the door frames because if anyone is trying to bust through that door, all the locks in the world aren’t gonna help it if the door is mounted to a frail frame. Get a tough frame, be aware people come through the door, add locks to your gates, obviously.
Secure the side lights or doors that have large windows, by that, I mean, if you got side lights, put like a metal grid over them so people can’t break out the lights and cause darkness. And if you have large windows that people could easily pass through and open the door, even crawl through, secure those with a gate, like a metal, you know, cast iron, set of bars or something similar. Maybe even something that you can remove when you don’t want as much safety but definitely secure those easy-to-get into windows and easy-to-break lights.
And, lastly, create a safe area where you can retreat, like, have a route out of your dwelling, so if an emergency occurs, let’s say, somebody’s trying to attack you or rob you; you can flee and you can flee more safely, because you’ve got it all planned out. You have a route, you have your emergency escape route at the back, and it shouldn’t necessarily be an easy route to follow because you live there, you know the uneven terrain, you know all the little turns and twists, so it should be sort of a tough path to follow. You know personally very well; you can run blindfolded basically for like twenty or thirty yards to get you away from the house if you’re being attacked.
You could even come up with a rough trail that, you know, personally very well, and it’s very difficult for somebody to follow you with any speed when they try for the first time at night, even with the flashlight, let’s say, that will add a lot of safety also and that’s often times overlooked when planning for safety.
Alright, that’s all we have about safety on off the grid living for today. We will be coming back, join us for more daily off the grid living motivational, technical presentations.
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