Survival Chic Says - Be Sure to Prep... but do it with Style

5 Hacks for Off Grid Housing that Work

Shade is everything


We have been off grid on an old California ranch for a few years now.    The ranch itself is an original cattle ranch and has always been off grid.  

Here are 5 tips we have found that work to make your off grid living easier...


1. Set up your home to optimize inside and outside living based on the season.

It is clear that the original builders of our ranch figured out how to have a nice shade area (that catches the breezes in the summer) on the cool north side of the house and windows in the winter that catch the sun and heat on the Southwest side.....   But they were also clever enough to be sure that those south west windows could be shaded the summer and that  upstairs doors/and windows could funnel the hot air out and pull in the cooler evening air.  

So orientation of your building is everything.     We are working on a new little caretakers unit.  It is similar to this but  built with 3 prefab little kit sheds. It has a shade awing for summer and  the upper windows open to let the heat escape.  We did it with 6 inch walls so it can be super insulated and planted shade trees that cool things in the summer and drop their leaves in the winter.   The shell on a slab was less than 13K.  for 12X 30.  We backed it up to a pump house that already had water hookups and solar so we just had to plumb them through the wall and run a line to our septic.

Depending on your zoning you can hook 
several little pre made sheds together

2,  Figure out the whole Heating and Cooling thing and be done with it.   

We have a big wood stove in the old main house and small propane heaters in some of the smaller rooms.  We super insulated everything and used reflectix in the attic rafters.  For summer we run a small window airconditioner on the cool side of the house in ONE room that we can retreat to and made our TV room.   This is 600 watts and it runs off of solar panels.  We have a battery bank that  provides the power that is needed when the condenser kicks on and off.   We just let it run all day on low  while the sun is out... and the insulation does the rest.

We also have an old working cuppola on our house... we were skeptical of it when we first saw it because it needed repair.  But after a couple of hot summers we get it.   We have now rigged a little solar fan in it and when we open the cuppola windows in the evenging  the house VENTS.  The first year we didn't even have the fan and it worked great.  The trick is to NOT open the upper most window until the evening outside temp is 76... then it works like a funnel bringing in the cooler temps and venting out the hot temps.


3.  Build a BIG shade room for living and gardening.    

Gardens need a little break from the hot sun where we are... and we find a good shade house does the trick as well as providing a pleasant place to work.  Our house has a large old pergola on one side made from old timber and limbs.

Our old architecture makes the bones for the
 outdoor garden room


this isn't our Garden Room...
 but we have adobe walls and a perfect place for
 an outdoor fireplce so this is what we are aiming for

Remember everything always feels bigger if you have a high roof and air flow is better.    Bigger is always better and that lets us train flowering vines and grapes up the polls and  and allows beams that support  shade cloth.

Again.. we are in a hot climate so we use a lot of green bushes and flowering trees to keep us cool and to be green and pretty.  We are on a solar well so we have lots of water and everything is on auto timers.  We have just enough pressure and gravity flow to water a small lawn and the pastures that we can see from the porches... makes everything 'feel' cooler when it is green.


4.  Put your RV to work for 'facilities'.
We had friends who built a small pole barn and then used greenhouse double wall pastic for the roof (because the connecting strips that connect the panels screw into the beams and hold everything in place pre engineered and it had a great roof cap).  They started out parking their rv next to it.. but then eventually ended up with something similar to this with little sheds, and their RV at one end essentially the kitchen and bathroom.     They have the problem of it always being TWO warm so solar fans have been the trick.


Pole Barn types of structures make great starting points

Another version
5.  If you are building... Go tall and build outdoor rooms inside of courtyards
Courtyards and entrances are the easiest and cheapest things to build... And when you step through one you have an immediate feeling of suprise and something wonderful.  You can make them with pallets and waddle if you are really cheap.. or stretch chicken wire over them and learn how to make a stucco wall.. we have a  couple of beautiful old stucco walls that are stucco on old cinder blocks that we salvaged.  You can stick chicken wire on anything.. and stucco/cement with polymers will stick in any shape.  We made molds for 'edges from plastic coke bottles and just worked with it till it formed up... then add stucco paint.   Anyone can stucco  over ANYTHING using  the stuff right out of the can... this is our go to material over scrap/salvage wood.

Courtyards are easy.. and gates even easier



Salvage upcycling is a great place to start

The other EASY trick?  Go tall.  Everything always works if it is a little taller than expected.. a doorway, windows, a roof or a wall.  

This is a multi million dollar home.  But a pole barn 
with salvage windows and faux painted floor
 can get the look

Have fun, Survival Chic



The Smart (inexpensive) Way to Have a BUG out Location


We have been living the prepared life for a long time.  When we got the 'bug' to be prepared decades ago we decided to make it a part of our daily life.    We just collected things as we went, lived our normal life and kept  'things'  in a safe place.   I am not even sure the term 'bug out' location had even been coined yet.  You now read about 'prepper fatigue' people who are 'ready' and waiting... and ... waiting... and waiting....  We were never in that mind frame.

The family had an old farm so we started our effort there back in the day.  Just making a beautiful life and working out of the area but coming back on weekends.    As those who follow my blog know we have now left that farm for family OPSEC reasons and have settled on a much larger ranch.

So what did we learn... or better said...

How do you really plan to bug out affordably?

When we started we were lucky to have a family place to go to.    We started with collecting nonperishable food, we updated the family farm orchards and water systems and built a few small additions to the existing infrastructure like greenhouse extensions.    Still it cost money.      As we worked on the place we noticed other family members had a slightly better idea.      They...

1.  Purchased an RV (and usually nothing fancy but with working systems)
2.  Filled it with 25 year buckets
3.  Parked it at the family farm
4.  Had a plan on how to get there IF they need to.

Some younger family members really figured it out.  Bought really small utility trailers and got it all done for very little money.


Now that we are on a much larger ranch  a few of those family members and a few people that are new to our group opted to come along with us and have 'prepped' by parking a fully stocked RV.

After looking at every version of idea out there I actually think this is one of the best ways to go.  Start in your garage.  Then find an inexpensive trailer or utility trailer.  Pack it and find a remote place you can park it safely and inexpensively.   FIGURE OUT HOW YOU CAN GET TO IT (walking, little motorized bikes etc) and make sure there are like minded people there.    Then just live your life.    The reality is you are NOT going to want to hook up a trailer and try to travel if the SHTF.  So have peace of mind instead.

At our ranch we have gone ahead and improved a little area with a water line and shortly a waste dump connection into a septic.    We have room for about 10 rigs and that is about the right size for our group.    Of course I am all about style so here is what I dream.. (these are not my photos.. just some I found around online but you get my point).

You can always live stylish in my world




You can build something affordable
 on a cheap trailer, fill it and park it at your location



You Can make a Bug out in Sections.  Two of these
 with a little trellis porch between?
You can do it in phases

Insulated Utility trailers are sturdy and cheap


Happy prepping... Survival Chic