Posts Tagged ‘log cabin home’
Off the Grid: Never Paid an Electric Company Bill – Not Ever!
A wind power and a solar power love story.
These are my friends, Mart and Cappy. They built this lovely log cabin home by hand on top of a mountain in Upstate New York about ten years ago. They have never been hooked up to the power grid, not ever, and have never paid an electric company power bill.

Mart and Cappy
Was it easy to do? Well relatively so. Has it saved them a ton of money? Well not sure exactly, but might be near the break even point. Those are some of the types of questions that I asked late this past summer the day I visited and took these photos.
In Cappy & Mart’s case this came about through necessity due to the site location where they decided to build their log home. They purchased this gorgeous piece of land with a nice hardwood firewood hillside attached and where it is located on a remote hilltop, I call it a mountain; there were no neighbors and only a dirt road access off the nearest secondary road about a mile away.

Log Home
The price quote that they received from the power company was staggering to bring power poles the mile to their home site, so Cappy being a clever guy, and a local contractor, decided to do it himself. How hard could it be? You put up a wind turbine, no lack of wind where they are, hook up, turn on, and forget the bills, right?
Well not exactly. They had no plan; they had no power survey, no charts and graphs or schematics. No problem, buy a small turbine and let’s get goin’. We do not have progress photos as the project developed, but what you see here is the latest iteration of their power plant that does the job. This homemade system did expand over time but they do have a plan now to streamline it and put up one nice wind turbine that would look much better.

Wind turbines
They are indeed off the grid, and the contraption in their yard looks strange to visitors but they have come to love it. They started with one small 450 watt turbine and later added two more of the same size. They also added one small bank of photovoltaic solar panels to help keep the batteries charged up on the windless days. They do have plans on increasing both the solar and wind energy system and perhaps in a year or two we will be able to give you an update.
So how is the life style with your own power plant? It is as cozy as can be and they want for nothing. They have plenty of electrical lighting, a refrigerator, television, and all the usual household appliances that anyone would have. They cook with propane and heat with wood. They have learned to conserve on days that the wind is low and they catch up with projects on the days that are quite breezy.

Inverter and Batteries
They do have a small gasoline powered generator for backup when Mother Nature does not provide enough free energy, but they never have gone without for any length of time. Though they still have no neighbors yet, another hearty soul has purchased a building lot about a quarter mile away and will be building a home there also.

Generator
The photo of the wood fired boiler is how they heat both their home in winter and their domestic hot water year around. The boiler is located outside and away from the house and the hot water runs through underground pipes to heating coils in the concrete floor of the full sized basement, and another set of coils are inside the domestic hot water heating tank.

Wood Boiler
Cappy and Mart are both full fledged volunteer firefighters and do a lot for the nearby community that they live in. Their property, though remote, is within the bounds of a town that has a college community and many very wealthy homeowners that surround a nearby lake. The village people influence the town board and they have passed some ridiculous zoning laws restricting wind power systems, so Cappy’s wind plant expansion plans have been put on hold.
Turns out that he has decided on one turbine that would cost a few thousand dollars to replace the three small ones that do the job now, but the zoning code would require them to get a licensed state engineer to approve it and that cost would be more than the cost of the new turbine. They are still looking at ways to make everyone happy and to get the new system installed.
All in all they are very happy living up in their little remote paradise, a small vegetable garden shown in the photo supplies nice fresh veggies in season and the largess is canned. Note the cornfield behind is farm corn for cattle feed.
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Green Energy
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If you do decide to never pay an electric company bill again and build your own wind or solar energy system with Earth4Energy, please do let us know how it works out for you. Our readers would love to hear your story.
One other thing that I should mention is that even though you might live where there is commercial power available, your own home could be off the grid and still feed extra or surplus power back to the power company grid and you would get paid by them instead of you having to fork over your hard earned cash for the utility bill.
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