Homesteading and living simply

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third will be divided into sections for kids rooms.
Are you married with children? I thought you said you were single with no kids?

You’ll also have to plan to take a wife’s wants and needs into consideration. It’s probably better to find a likeminded wife first before you embark on all this.
 
It’s probably better to find a likeminded wife first before you embark on all this.
Yeah, if you’re not married now but would like to be at some point, this is probably a bad idea. You’re not going to meet a ton of single young women living in an isolated cabin in the boonies.
 
I lived for many years in a school bus buried in the ground. The windows to the south were left uncovered, as was the door for entry. I had solar panels also and a spring with the best water I have ever tasted. Wood was the preferred method of heating which I cut myself. I just loved living like that but when I met my wife she was not going to move into the bus so I bought her a house. Oh, what a man will do for the one he loves!
 
I don’t necessarily think people that live in the country are more spiritually successful I think it’s more personal but yet serves you in a much more bigger way than what is just personal.

“. . . If working people can be encouraged to look forward to obtaining a share in the land, the consequence will be that the gulf between vast wealth and sheer poverty will be bridged over, and the respective classes will be brought nearer to one another. A further consequence will result in the greater abundance of the fruits of the earth. Men always work harder and more readily when they work on that which belongs to them, nay, they learn to love the very soil that yields in response to the labor of their hands, not only food to eat, but an abundance of good things for themselves and those that are dear to them. That such a spirit of willing labor would add to the produce of the earth and to the wealth of the community is self- evident. And a third advantage would spring from this: men would cling to the country in which they were born; for no one would exchange his country for a foreign land if his own afforded him the means of living a decent and happy life . . .”

Leo XIII, “Rerum Novarum,” May 15, 1891.
 
I only discern marriage with traditional women that wish to reclaim their heritage by taking on the lifestyle of their forebears.
 
You do you, but know you’re severely limiting your pool of potential spouses. I don’t know where you think you’re going to meet single women when you’re living in a shipping container in the woods.
 
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I’m going to find my maiden before I leave. I have already met two women this year that want a life like mine actually dated one of them. I am hopeful that I will find another.
 
Hey man, whatever works for ya. Not trying to discourage you, just saying you’re in a pretty niche market here dating wise.

Also, “maiden”? 😏
 

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My wife still did not want to deal with the cold way up in Northern Vermont. Pa was as far north as she wanted to go. Well anyway, all that is in the past. We are now in Florida living in an RV (she is more than happy with that) after selling our house. I still have the property in Vermont and believe it or not the buried school bus since 1982 is still in good shape and livable.
 
I’ll gladly take that property off your hands or negotiate a price! Or if you let me use it to turn it into a food forest I’ll give you a rent pay.
 
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I like the idea of living simply, but not sure I’d be for the shipping containers myself. I’m inclined towards log cabin style, but then again, I live in a cold climate.
 
I wouldn’t be using a 19th century encyclical by Pope Leo XIII. He was addressing an entirely different issue than what we have in today’s world.

Jim
 
Thankfully God has gifted us an abundance of wood in the north. Anyways, how big do you think a log cabin should be? When does it become to big or to small? This is hard to figure out when trying to use least as possible while satisfying your needs at the same time.
 
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You indicate that you eventually plan to have a wife and children. What is reasonable square footage for what a couple who may eventually have children of both genders? I currently live in 950 square foot, 2 bedroom house. The basement could be finished to include a 3rd bedroom. It would be tight for more than 2 children. You could probably extend to 4 children if in twin bunk beds and having an even 2 boys/2 girls situation.
 
so a 950 square foot two bedroom house, I was thinking of buying an entire shipping container and after making it livable I divide it up in sections for the kids individual spaces, then purchase two more for my room plus kitchen.
 
How far would you like to be from a decent size town? Would you homeschool your kids? Are you worried they wouldn’t have much opportunity to socialize with peers or get involved in activities? What if someone needed emergency medical care? If you’re way out in the boonies, what market would you be serving as far as boarding horses?

I’m just curious, not trying to poke holes
 
I lived on 100 acres in Northern Vermont, 5 miles west of a small town and then 1 mile in the back down a dirt road I had complete privacy, especially in the back 40 acres. I could get to a medium sized town, big enough with a decent hospital within 20-25 minutes if medical attention was needed and also shop for supplies there. It wasn’t the big city, but a person looking for a more sedate lifestyle would like it.
 
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