I'm planning to live off-grid on my 40 acres in Alaska this fall. The adventure requires some intense logistics to get myself there. I must plan very carefully to most efficiently use my funds.
A little about my property. It's 40 acres on a hill at the top of a remote recreational subdivision, bordered on one side by a decent sized creek, the other sides shared with state land and one neighbor. It's a dream property, forested with alder, birch, willow, and spruce. It has a few springs on it, from what I could see. Wildlife includes black bear, grizzly, moose, grouse, rabbits, various ermine. Berry patches are scattered about. The view, once I clear some of the trees is going to be fantastic.
If all goes well, I'll be living on it in September. Other opportunities might present themselves, especially as some corporate games are being played to potentially eliminate my position at Pybus. Props to the anti-collective nausea of The Orange Confusion. (This shit's not supposed to make sense to anyone--just building a network of trace-able alt-personality modifiers for artificial intelligence servers to collect).
My adventure last year was somewhat disastrous. Amazing, but I faced a lot of problems. The first was landing too far from where I intended to land. This caused a huge delay in lugging gear through the boggy forests. I didn't get to my property till 6 days into the month long trip, and that was after abandoning a lot of gear.
My buddies were both injured, limiting their ability to help. One actually had to fly out because of how bad his legs were twisted in the rough terrain. It was truly rough.
My chainsaw was smashed by a heavy birch only 5 trees in. I cut wrong, let the chainsaw linger in the final cut too long, and the trunk's break pinched the bar and whipped it out of my hands, twisting it till it fell beneath the tree. It bent the bar at a 90 degree angle and crushed some plastic components of the saw. Brand new $800 saw wrecked. Luckily my buddy found an abandoned hut with some extra parts that we could get it rolling again. Rusted and messy, but I managed to fix it all up a couple days after the wreck.
While I single handedly worked on building a shelter, one buddy went out and delivered necessary gear for me to build.
I hardly made any decent structure, other than a cache to store the gear I had managed to bring to the property. There is still 500 pounds out there that I sadly cannot reach. It is probably being ripped apart by bears as we speak.
Tuesday, April 2, 2019
Monday, April 1, 2019
Winter Care-Taker in Alaska: A Tale of Warning
I was winter caretaker most recently at a lodge on Admiralty Island. Mixed feelings. On one hand, I love the Alaskan winter. On the other hand, it was hard to manage several different buildings with resources spread too thin. Having hurt my knee early on with no financial support left, bank-account-wise or insurance-wise, the adventure barely paid off my year stay. Financially, the payoff was getting the hunting and fishing benefits. But there were a lot of down-sides, most of them having to do with the facilities. I played it close to the chest, as I always do, and I almost didn't come out the other end.
Pybus Property Problems
First off, the lodge was not built for the winter. Heating was horrible. A 35 gallon propane tank would hardly last a few days with the outside temperature under 30 degrees. I tested it one time only, by letting a tank burn without any fire in the wood stove. It lasted less than 60 hours. This was with the majority of the lodge space tarped off to save heat, in addition to a lean-to positioned close to the wood stove for warmth. For the majority of the winter, I had a fire going most of the time, but had no time to cut wood in the summer, so it was all wet. When the crew left in December, I had a total of 6 propane tanks, which, if we do the math would equate to only 18 days. But I needed it to last around 100 days.
Additionally, the pipes underneath the lodge burst some time in late December which caused the water from the tank to drain significantly. I had to shut off all the water to preserve some for Spring, and I lived dry for the next three months.
No toilet, no sink, no shower. For three months.
I think I showered about 6 times throughout the winter. I could have certainly showered more, but it was often difficult with the cold. I had no one that would look or smell me anyway.
The propane heater in the laundry room was also a bust. It kept kicking out, and the machines were never winterized. One really cold night it kicked out and everything froze. I used a diesel heater to make the room into a hot sauna to melt the water, but I don't think it worked. Every machine has to be replaced with a $100 part that will undoubtedly fall over to me. Understandable, but regrettable and depressing. That's why I'm moving off-grid honestly. Get a grasp on things I control.
Charging the lodge's biggest boat, the Gemini, was also a huge pain. It wasn't something I had anticipated maintaining. I had to use 150 feet of extension cords to get there, and it would only stay charged for a day. Trying to bilge boat compartments with these power issues was a pain.
Last Stretch: Month of March
March is the month I left the main lodge, and returned to crew's quarters. The wood stove was too filled with creosote to keep it going nicely, and I couldn't find a stove-pipe cleaning kit. In crew's quarters I ran minimal heat by kerosene. I ran it only during the day, shutting off power at night. The battery system would only last a couple hours max. I ran no heat in the main lodge for the rest of the time.
The snow melted in the last couple weeks of March, when I was most injured, and that's when all the trash showed up from underneath the snow. I didn't have time before the snow fell, and didn't have the strength after it melted, and will most certainly be held accountable for something I had no control.
I went to town to fix up my injury, leaving the lodge in an incomplete state, and surely breeding resentment, which I have felt ever since the company got acquired by someone else in 2018.
The Take-Away
Over all, I would not recommend winter care taking at such a large, unequipped facility. If I were to do it again, I would be sure to document every little thing. I'd document all communications and take pictures of every part of the facility throughout the winter. I'd also get a written contract, signed by both me and my employer, stating the terms of the winter agreement. If anything comes up, it is in writing. With various bad experiences in the past, I don't particularly trust employers to have the well-being of employees in mind. Having had that trust breached multiple times, I don't think I will EVER fully trust an employer. This is nothing personal, but purely a necessary step a skeptic must take to ensure his survival.
Next winter, my time will be spent on the smallest possible house with the smallest possible gear to get the hell away from everyone and have responsibility of my own things.
Pybus Property Problems
First off, the lodge was not built for the winter. Heating was horrible. A 35 gallon propane tank would hardly last a few days with the outside temperature under 30 degrees. I tested it one time only, by letting a tank burn without any fire in the wood stove. It lasted less than 60 hours. This was with the majority of the lodge space tarped off to save heat, in addition to a lean-to positioned close to the wood stove for warmth. For the majority of the winter, I had a fire going most of the time, but had no time to cut wood in the summer, so it was all wet. When the crew left in December, I had a total of 6 propane tanks, which, if we do the math would equate to only 18 days. But I needed it to last around 100 days.
Additionally, the pipes underneath the lodge burst some time in late December which caused the water from the tank to drain significantly. I had to shut off all the water to preserve some for Spring, and I lived dry for the next three months.
No toilet, no sink, no shower. For three months.
I think I showered about 6 times throughout the winter. I could have certainly showered more, but it was often difficult with the cold. I had no one that would look or smell me anyway.
The propane heater in the laundry room was also a bust. It kept kicking out, and the machines were never winterized. One really cold night it kicked out and everything froze. I used a diesel heater to make the room into a hot sauna to melt the water, but I don't think it worked. Every machine has to be replaced with a $100 part that will undoubtedly fall over to me. Understandable, but regrettable and depressing. That's why I'm moving off-grid honestly. Get a grasp on things I control.
Charging the lodge's biggest boat, the Gemini, was also a huge pain. It wasn't something I had anticipated maintaining. I had to use 150 feet of extension cords to get there, and it would only stay charged for a day. Trying to bilge boat compartments with these power issues was a pain.
Last Stretch: Month of March
March is the month I left the main lodge, and returned to crew's quarters. The wood stove was too filled with creosote to keep it going nicely, and I couldn't find a stove-pipe cleaning kit. In crew's quarters I ran minimal heat by kerosene. I ran it only during the day, shutting off power at night. The battery system would only last a couple hours max. I ran no heat in the main lodge for the rest of the time.
The snow melted in the last couple weeks of March, when I was most injured, and that's when all the trash showed up from underneath the snow. I didn't have time before the snow fell, and didn't have the strength after it melted, and will most certainly be held accountable for something I had no control.
I went to town to fix up my injury, leaving the lodge in an incomplete state, and surely breeding resentment, which I have felt ever since the company got acquired by someone else in 2018.
The Take-Away
Over all, I would not recommend winter care taking at such a large, unequipped facility. If I were to do it again, I would be sure to document every little thing. I'd document all communications and take pictures of every part of the facility throughout the winter. I'd also get a written contract, signed by both me and my employer, stating the terms of the winter agreement. If anything comes up, it is in writing. With various bad experiences in the past, I don't particularly trust employers to have the well-being of employees in mind. Having had that trust breached multiple times, I don't think I will EVER fully trust an employer. This is nothing personal, but purely a necessary step a skeptic must take to ensure his survival.
Next winter, my time will be spent on the smallest possible house with the smallest possible gear to get the hell away from everyone and have responsibility of my own things.
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