Saturday, September 5, 2015

dwelling wise 1 of 3


DWELLING WISE 1 of 3

I imagine some you don’t read the comments section, perhaps scared off long ago during the reign of the Bison Survival Blog wherein I foolishly did not approve comments but allowed them unfettered publication ( this bit me in the ass later when Blogger started requesting that I remove objectionable content which turned into such a reoccurring time sink I had to delete the entire blog rather than go back through two thousand posts and delete comments ).  ’Tis a shame.  Recently we were talking about how my Bison Pit Of Doom was constructed, as a prospective new Nevada resident wishes to sample the lay of the land hereabouts.  He had some good ideas on construction, a much better plan than the one I ended up adopting through a combination of ignorance, lack of skill and a strict building budget ( hint: far better to sink four corner posts than just throw the box down the hole as I did ).  But it did get me thinking on the way we build and think about building.  Our cultural habits on dwellings.  We have been building castles when we should have been erecting tents.  We have ignored all the lessons from history and adopted all the social status dwellings from the rich while poor and delivered ourselves to the dungeon door of the bankers ( and even helped out our own subjugation by embracing their zoning ideas under greed of potential profit rather than fight against them tooth and nail ).

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From that hearty band of brothers the Celts who settled the southeastern frontier, there arose the habit of eradicating troublesome natives, squatting upon the land and erecting crude shelters and crude farms.  This was from long standing habit, as the English aristocracy were in the habit of playing fast and loose with their native land, and while they toiled from hardscrabble soil and raised a meager livestock collection, they also knew better than to sink their roots too far into the ground and make themselves a target rich environment.  Impermanence was the watchword.  Building from local materials, which was free if not easy, then moving on when the soil was exhausted, was both a way of staying out from under the thumb of the lowland dwelling slave owning local lords ( such as the over-hyped Washington and perhaps even Jefferson although I try my best to not hate him too much since he was the least worst of the batch ) but also a strategy to escape future prosecution for the crime of being free and poor.  This accounts for a lot of the South being denuded prior to the War Of Northern Tyranny and the need to move west even when the land out there proved too dry ( although given the slavery issue that accompanied the move, I have my doubts soil degradation wasn’t as responsible as simply population growth ).  The soil in the South isn’t as bad as that in the Amazon and regeneration isn’t as cut and dried.  Reconditioning has a favorable climate absent the economic pressure to over farm.  But regardless of the underlying causes, building free and farming soil unwanted by the centralized farms was a sound strategy for the underclass.  

More next article

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26 comments:

  1. thanks for history lesson.
    my ancestors were some of those scots who settled in applachia. poor as church mice.

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    Replies
    1. Check out Jim Webb's "Born Fighting"

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    2. thanks, gonna buy two. one for me, one for another hillbilly!

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    3. Of course ,first check your library, THEN order through my Amazon ad at the top so I get commission.

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  2. Being poor has always been suspect to government types. Lord help you if you are discovered to be both poor and happy.

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    1. I think as long as you are properly fed and sheltered you have all you need to make yourself happy. Most try not to take it however.

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  3. “hint: far better to sink four corner posts than just throw the box down the hole as I did”

    Your method would probably work fine James, providing that you had a solid floor frame, and set it down on some peers. I'm no Frank Lloyd Wright, but in addition to the corner peers, there's probably some rule of thumb on placing them every so many feet per span. Even had you just placed it on a solid bed of well drained gravel, that would have probably sufficed.

    I'm sort of halfway leaning back towards the Earth bag method, but ultimately, it will probably be the easiest and cheapest method that I end up going with.

    Interestingly, today's article follows after my having watched some youtube videos earlier on the tiny houses (The portable deals built on trailers). I do see your point, and it's a good consideration, for what happens if the zoning Nazi's ban all RV living in Elko county? You must leave behind all of your hard work. But your problems are much bigger than this, because now, where will you go?

    Trailers are probably the best for the potential situation in which you describe in today's article. They really do suck in cold weather though, unless you happen to have the latest and greatest space age insulated models (And I'm guessing most followers of a frugal survival blog do not) or can afford lots of propane throughout the winter. And the tiny houses are not really all that cheap from what I gather.

    I guess Earth bag construction, while labour intensive, is very low cost, so it does have that going for it.

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    1. While illegal, pellet stove heating of RV's is much better cost wise than propane. Also, the latest and greatest insulated trailer, while far better than most older clunky models, still only buys you an extra ten or twenty degrees warmth. My last trailer was one of those. Glad I had it but still not appropriate for my first five winters until Gore Warming heated things up. Old but cheap trailer, with an attached enclosed insulated porch for both solar gain and legal pellet stove, with that porch covering a four foot deep underground bedroom for the worst weather might be another cheap way to go to get you started. After that, build a post-oil house.

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    2. But the pellet stoves are somewhat costly right? What about the pellets? Also, are they not somewhat Dependant on forced air for efficiency (AC)?

      I see your point though with regards to even modern trailers. You can only insulate thin walls so much. Most owners of these modern trailers simply bite the bullet and pay the cost for comfort.

      I was thinking an old, and very cheap trailer, since it's only going to be a temporary dwelling, and a hard wall between me and all predators, 2 and 4 footed, as opposed to a tent. The plan is to arrive there by early summer 2016. Immediately start the excavation, and by winter, have the earth sheltered dwelling done just in time (I hope?)

      My thoughts on the trailer are as follows: It must be big enough to have a holding tank. If I am harassed by the county, I then have the trailer to show as my source of grey or black water containment. Something small that can easily be hauled to a dump station once a month is ideal. Keep the dump receipt to show to the county worker. This should satisfy I hope?

      Otherwise James, I had another idea for a cheap and simple temporary shelter. Some time back, before the layoff, a plywood shipping container came into work. A thought had occurred to me that it would be very easy to modify a large shipping box such as this, or better yet, make one custom to your own specs. The only major modifications would be an added door, window, and a slight grade on the roof to prevent leakage. It could be small enough to place in the back of a truck, or it could be hauled to the site in pieces, and constructed upon arrival (Think the “Our Gang” clubhouse if you will). Paint it good, and you have a shelter that will last a few years as you set up your homestead.

      I like the shipping container idea a lot, but prefer the cover of the trailer better due to the waste disposal option.

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    3. I was thinking of a homemade pellet stove rather than store bought. All your ideas make sense to me-sounds solid all away around.

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    4. On a related note, I found this Thetford 40505 SmartTote Tank at Amazon. It's a small portable waste tank that connects to the main tank of your RV, so that you do not have to drive your RV down to the dump site every time that you wish to dump your tanks. This one is 12 gallons, and many of the reviews mentioned that you would probably not want one any bigger, since water weighs 8 pounds a gallon, making this one 100lbs when full.

      http://www.amazon.com/Thetford-40505-SmartTote-Wheel-Gallon/dp/B000P66C7Y/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1441583901&sr=8-1&keywords=thetford+40505+smarttote+tank

      On a different note, I just finished this months newsletter. I hope it's working out for you?

      I like it, and find it to be a nice filler in between articles, since it usually takes me a few days of reading it in bits and pieces.

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    5. The newsletter is working out very well. I can write the blog articles in three or four days so writing the newsletter articles give me a way to fill the rest of the week writing. I can be lazy, only write one blog some days, sometimes two. Skip a day if I'm feeling ill or exhausted, no need to try fiction or a booklet if I'm not feeling energized by the subject matter. Financially, I'm still not sure yet, but that is always at the bottom of my motivation list.

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  4. Speaking of housing as shelter rather than speculative/leveraged status-signaling icon, single-family housing in NYC & WA-DC/VA areas are down 2% year-over-year (45% of sales are 2% or more below year-ago price. SALES, not appraisals/debt numbers). This not periphery of Empire effect here, this is the CORE of the empire. This may be the blue-skies pre-tsunami tidal suck-out doom-predictors have spoken of.

    Staying free and not needing a lot of money means that you will not stay multi-generationally poor for long. McMansion guarantees poverty now and poverty later, with a stationary high-value target for the taxers and slave-makers.

    pdxr13

    pdxr13

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    1. Rome's wealth channel is faltering. Interesting indeed.

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  5. As far as I'm concerned, getting away from the asshole neighbors is the most important and expensive part. Everything is easy after that. 9 years ago I though 800' was far enough but I was wrong. I think the number of assholes in this country is expanding exponentially. All of the money you spend in proper insulation will be recouped after your first real cold winter and after that it is free.

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    1. People have always been assholes. What we have now is a universal degrading of community and a complete collapse of cultural norms, giving free reign to assholiness.

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  6. Greetings, ye of the exemplary strands. Of late I have been thinking of digging out my old copy of the book "A Pattern Language." I got in back in the Whole Earth Catalog days and it has proven a satisfying resource over the years.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Pattern_Language

    http://www.amazon.com/Pattern-Language-Buildings-Construction-Environmental/dp/0195019199

    Sorry, I don't have your affiliate info added to above URL, please feel free to correct. If possible try to borrow from the library, only part of the content will be of interest to you. There are other books in the series but I've not read them. Weird, I actually look back on my trailer days fondly. Now I'm in a standard issue ranch style suburban domicile where the Universal Law of Storage has taken hold - stuff grows to fill available space.

    Ran Tool

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    1. For The Universal Law Of Prepper Storage, double that amount

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  7. RV toilet when parked on-site gets marked "DO NOT USE", in favor of the compost bucket. Black water tanks are awful, and won't convince any kind of County Inspector. The biggest and most insurmountable problem of RV toilets is their enormous water consumption. Who has cheap water when off-grid? The best thing to do is insist that you don't live here, just visiting my friend's property. Set up a not-your-name LLC or not-for-profit research company to own the land.

    There are RV's, both motorhomes and trailers, with "arctic package", featuring much-much more effective insulation (double-pane windows!), bigger/more furnaces, bigger/more battery/propane tanks. As you would expect, Canadian units are good and not cheap.

    The problem with vintage trailers is that the standard wooden wall strut is only 1.5 inches thick (one-half of a 2x4), maximizing lightness, not heat retention. If you were to do a full-rebuild of a trailer using 2x4's as top and bottom sills, and offset staggered studs of 1.5x1.5's on the walls with insulation woven continuously between them, and made the windows small (venting, not light), it would be cozy with a minimum-size propane heater. If you have more money than time, thin-shell fiberglass models like Casita or Airstream can be continuously insulated (making the inside volume smaller).

    pdxr13

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    1. My problem when moving was lack of money OR skill. If that is your case, best to buy the cheapest trailer, bite the bullet for one years winter on propane ( if you have a job, you don't need the up-front money ) as you dig your pit. A very ugly but practical way of adding insulation is to staple think eggcrate type squishy foam to the interior walls. For windows, cover at night, or all the time north side, with tinfoil covered bubble wrap, then wool blanket.

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    2. Just spent labor day weekend on the land in the RV Camper. It got down to the upper to mid 30s on the coldest nights (outside). with a couple thick blankets and thermals we were able to weather the cold with only a little complaints. We spent the time on the land while renting a neighbors bob-cat excavator do dig out an "earth sheltered" garage/shop to park the camper in. It is an easy thing to do since our soil is pretty much pure clay that, even when wet, does not 'slump' or change the angle or 'repose'. So we are going to throw up some walls and a roof, and put on big sliding doors so we can pull the camper through. If we insulate the roof, doors, and exposed walls we should be able to keep it above freezing in the winter in the camper. Then we will spring for the propane tank and a electric free thermostat controlled propane heater to keep it even warmer so we can park our diesel vehicles in it and get them started again.
      .

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    3. Aren't you in a god-aweful spot? Dakota? Above freezing there, just earth sheltered, is quite an accomplishment.

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    4. I bought a 18.5' Timberline trailer from 1973 made in Sandy Oregon from a mud-pit on a hopp farm near Salem Oregon. It was $850 and had some rot. I didn't know about the rot. I knew that the heater and the refer worked, and that was good enough.

      I started by cleaning the inside surfaces really well. It was filthy even though it has never been lived in full-time. There was factory-original bad quality construction that had survived 30 years. Hinges without all of the needed screws.Drawers falling apart. Windows leaking between panels and frames, leaking between glass and frames. Roof corners and skylights all leaking. This is why the blue tarp is your friend, at least until spring when you can take apart and re-seal. The interior furniture is always crap, and uncomfortable. Better off to rip out the crap and hang hammock hooks. 1973 "factory" technology is easily DIY for tin-can trailers. No more skill than is found in "fix your Own Home" books is needed.

      I was really lucky in that I got 6 months of parking in front of the house before getting tagged. My neighbor had a space at the rear of his full-length driveway that I could park in and also plug in for power tools with a 50' cord. I finished up there, then tested my luck for a few more months in front of the house before getting a green tow-tag. Then it went into the back yard through the alley. PITA with come-along to get it placed nose-in with door placed out into the yard. Partial concealment with a couple of yard trees. Nice storage in addition to 620 square foot 109-year old house. Extra fridge space!

      pdxr13

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    5. Are taxes that bad you didn't want to just build a shed? Or do you enjoy construction projects ( itself sufficient justification )?

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    6. There was the possibility of employment in places without "housing", even rental sheds, so a cheap trailer with 2 axles (pulling stability, less-expensive tires than single-axle same weight) in the 17-23" range that I could tow with the car was a thing to have. It seemed to check a number of boxes in a number of scenarios, and still might.
      Having a travel trailer parked 20+ feet from your house, stocked with minimal basics (no need to immediately buy towels and toothbrushes, or dinner. Propane full, battery charged.) is like your own Red Cross shelter without the need to leave your uninhabitable premises to looters or kind neighbors (who are the same people).
      Tree fell on the house, kitchen fire, SWAT invasion tear-gassing, are all more likely in the next year than TEOTWAWKI. Guest quarters/illegal rental without need to pay taxes or heat 3rd bedroom is also a thing.

      Our little house has assessed value of very little, but because there would be no "development fees", a re-model resulting in a 4500 square foot 3-level basement-less "house" could be profitable for the development vultures. The 4000 square feet of dirt is nearing quarter-million, annual tax at almost $2000, structure-replacement with POS modernity minimums (modern minimum size/code lowest-quality everything, and who wants to live in a piss-fir/chipboard toxic-Chicom sheetrock box?) will be at least $110K. That would be the end for us: rebuilt/re-assessed, taxes would be over $4500/yr. That would be time to sell, move to cheap-land with pdx visiting privileges. For $50K, we could have end-of-gravel-road 20 acres with power at the road in a place with 1.2 humans per sq mile, and a new-used trailer on a well-drained pad.

      But, junk shopping pdx is better than anywhere.

      pdxr13

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    7. OK, :) I've used trailers so long as houses I forgot their uses to home owners. Good points.

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