Posted on 02/21/2006 10:24:44 AM PST by SmithL
Arcata, Humboldt County -- Just past noon on a hazy, raw Sunday a few weeks ago, Linda Parkinson did what few homeowners in this storm-battered region could: She turned on the television.
While most Humboldt County residents were reeling from power outages left by devastating rains, Parkinson had electricity to spare. She cooked a feast for a dozen people, took hot showers and threw video-game parties for her 15-year-old son's classmates.
For 24 years, Parkinson, 49, has lived completely off the electric grid, drawing energy exclusively from solar, propane and other renewable on-site power sources.
She isn't alone. Some 180,000 American homeowners live off-grid, according to Richard Perez, publisher of Home Power magazine. Approximately a quarter live in California, and each year the national number grows 33 percent, according to the publisher's database of known off-gridders and estimates of those unreported.
"California is the hotbed of off-grid systems," he said.
Parkinson maintains that the movement is no longer a hippie fad; it's increasingly mainstream and propelled by Americans' desire to eliminate electric bills, keep homes juiced during blackouts, minimize U.S. dependence on fossil fuel and, for activists, send a gesture of defiance to the power companies.
"It's about self-sufficiency," she said, relaxing on the couch in her secluded home. "Living off the grid doesn't mean being disconnected. If anything, I've had an advantage. The power goes out a lot around here," and she still manages to crank household appliances.
In the wireless era, Parkinson said, technology both frees us up and plugs us in, and the off-grid choice is not a retreat from technology but an application of it.
(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...
I lived off the grid for ten years. I like the grid. I can still produce my own power in emergencies, but the grid requires no labor or maintenance expense on my part.
Is your furnace in your house or, as I've seen on the internet, in an outdoor furnace house? How is the heat circulated through your home?
I used my gas fireplace once and just about used up my kids' college fund in the process.
So how about some variation on the kachelofen?
http://www.ceramicstoday.com/articles/kachelofen.htm
That's what I was thinking---it would be nice to be on the grid but only have to use it when I wanted to.
More OT
What part of the country you in?
How well does the corn work out?
Apart from that though it's great. and if we have any left over, it's going to fatten up the deer that live in the woods behind our house, which we will then get back in protein next bow season.
Everything goes into the pot.
We had a gas fireplace which we swore we would never use so we got a fireplace insert. Our first floor is basically one large room so it's perfect for heating it, and the bedrooms are right above it so at night it's plenty warm.
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