Green Acres Homestead
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2010
- Messages
- 1,174
- Tractor
- Kubota L4740 sold. As of Jan 2023 I have a new L2502.
A maple sap gathering and boil. It funny what you learn along the way.
I never understood how they dealt with the wind chill in Oklahoma!Here in Texas, most of us think of Montana as the extreme North, and where it's too cold to live. Then there is Canada, an entire Country even farther North. It's just amazing to me how you guys deal with winter up there!!!
One summer I had to go to Houston. It seemed like it was still 90 at midnight. I never understood how them Texans could handle the heat. I'll pass.I never understood how they dealt with the wind chill in Oklahoma!
I was going to say the same thing about you heat. Don’t get me wrong. There are days thatI never understood how they dealt with the wind chill in Oklahoma!
I was going to say the same thing about your heat. Don’t get me wrong. There are days that the climate is very painful and the older I get the more painful it becomes. I don’t mind cold and dry. -30 c I’m good but -5 and damp or even just at freezing and damp and raining is what I don’t like. Getting wet with the wind howling then flash freezing with a drop in temp even kills our deer and other animals. It’s brutal.Here in Texas, most of us think of Montana as the extreme North, and where it's too cold to live. Then there is Canada, an entire Country even farther North. It's just amazing to me how you guys deal with winter up there!!!
We can have some hot weather. But we have Air Conditioning and cold beer.One summer I had to go to Houston. It seemed like it was still 90 at midnight. I never understood how them Texans could handle the heat. I'll pass.
Warm coats last forever down here. I wear a winter coat about 10 times during most winters.I was going to say the same thing about you heat. Don’t get me wrong. There are days that
I was going to say the same thing about your heat. Don’t get me wrong. There are days that the climate is very painful and the older I get the more painful it becomes. I don’t mind cold and dry. -30 c I’m good but -5 and damp or even just at freezing and damp and raining is what I don’t like. Getting wet with the wind howling then flash freezing with a drop in temp even kills our deer and other animals. It’s brutal.
Man a year ago that was funny. Today the prices are high and there is no guarantee for any energy. Crazy.If you burn up all the wood on your land what will you do if elect and natural gas are unavailable?
Kidding just a little bit.
It is a real issue and a lot of people can’t change their circumstance.
We have been lucky to have options of reliable electrical power + wood burning stove at the main house but not a huge supply of our own wood.
Second place has plenty of wood but no WBFP or stove (at least not yet anyway) but has reliable electric power (so far) and very reliable natural gas.
But these places are 5 hours apart.
I know this is an older posting but I just started returning to this forum. Man I bet you are some glad you went with wood now. I know here in East Coast Canada the price of oil is about $2.20 a litre. About $10 a gallon. It will cost us about $6000 to heat our house this year if even if we can get it. I know there are places in Europe that they are now allow to turn their heat up past 68 degrees. Man we are living in a different world and it happened very quickly. Good luck and hope everything is working out for you with your wood heat.A few years ago I lost power for a week from a winter Ice Storm. At that time, my only way to heat my house was from electricity. Once Summer hit, I bought and installed a wood stove and started cutting and storing firewood. Now my house is only heated from firewood. I feel sorry for everyone that is relying on electricity or natural gas, or oil to heat their homes. If you can get it, what will it cost?
Thanks for the reference to the other interesting posts.Morning Ray,
Thanks for sharing the update on your project and road development. Land clearing takes time and there's another couple here on TBN doing a similar project in Calais Maine 26 acres building an off-grid cabin you might find an interesting read too. Moving and need to buy a new TLB next year.
Do you need to finish the road before you start your cabin build? Then what is your plan on the build - stick built etc? Do you have power access on the property too? I know that can get spendy to run poles!
On heating oil, it's running $6 USD/gal here now, we pre-bought at $4 this year so feel fortunate and supplement with wood and mini-splits and 7,2 KW solar. Electricity here has nearly doubled to .35$ a KWH from last year due to cost of fuel too.
I think you might be right. I am flip flopping back and forth. We had an Asian bark beatle kill most of the good trees on our property so I got to thinking maybe a cord wood style or rock and cordwood combo.Building foundation with rocks is a good plan but takes time and work to accomplish. Getting a footer likely at least 3' down with a crushed stone base is a minimum for frost in your area I would think.
Doing this with rocks and one person with your BH is not easy as you need to shim each one level as you build the foundation but is doable. Then chink and backfill with stone and cement to level. But as you dig up rocks you would be able to build over a few months - or stockpile the rocks at the site then place them.
Do you have enough larger trees 6" plus to build the cabin walls or have them milled square? Might be easier to use PT on top of stone then stick build your walls - for a 24x24 cabin would not take a lot of lumber.
Looks like an interesting project for sure!
Beautiful property and looking forward to following your project. Want to get up Cape Breton area way one day - closest I've been is Amherst NS.
Yep. a temp shelter is what I was thinking but more importantly I love your wood shed build. Sounds like you are a man after my own heart. Do you have more pics of your property?Great video - thank you - beautiful spot to for a cabin on the water. I guess the "utility/woodshed" is going where you cleaned up the trees and rocks?
Also its really pretty interesting watching you on the BH and FEL feels like i am running it as I do the same.
Anyway, winter is coming fast and if you can get the posts/frame up you can make a temp shelter/top with a tarp for the winter. Here's a pic of my 16x20 temp shelter for the oak and pine I milled for a screen porch next year.