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I have some personal news to share. We're moving! As some of you already know, we have been working on a formerly abandoned homestead site, completely off-grid, with a small log cabin in the woods, for years now, trying to make it livable again. We are finally at the point where we can make this happen in the coming months. We are tentatively planning this for the summer.

For the first time in my life, really, I will no longer be an active chemist. The push and pull of going back into the office, where I am not needed, has reached a boiling point for me. I am resigning from the company I helped start and build and moving onto the next thing in my life as a forest farmer, dad and homeschool parent. Wish me luck. I've done one thing for the last 30+ years and now I'm going cold turkey away from it, to something pretty much the opposite.

I think I will be posting some about our successes and failures with the new adventure. Don't expect any pictures of us or anything. I have never found a picture of myself on the internet and there's not one of either of my boys. We're pretty private people, but, hopefully there'll be lots of nature photos along our trails and pictures of our soon-to-be plant based foods.

This year I am hoping to get some good information from the brilliant minds of Mastodon about a lot of things, including:

gardening. We have an ~800 sq ft, completely empty greenhouse. It has a large built in fan on one end, but no power. We have some solar panels on a hillside near it that are decades old, but still functional, that we are planning on repurposing to power the greenhouse along with the EcoFlow solar generators that we previously used to power the cabin before getting our permanent power up and running. Depending on how power hungry the motor is, we may need to add onto that. We'll see! I honestly don't know how many hours a day we'll need use the fans, for instance.

It's a blank slate, though. Zone 7b under the latest USDA map. Concrete floor. Otherwise completely empty. We have lots of thoughts about how best to use it, both to feed the family and have some left over. In the short term we would like to can and jar excess food, but we have plans to donate to the local community in the long term.

We have a year-round running spring at an appropriate elevation above it, but it would be quite the chore to collect and get that water to the greenhouse. We also have a year-round creek below it that we could conceivably pump water up from. We also have two boys who may end up running a lot of water around manually in the short term.

- I want our equipment to talk to our HomeKit in the end. While I don't *intend* to expand our HomeAssistant usage dramatically beyond that, I know that's how these things start and next thing you know you have 100 devices. It would be pretty cool to have greenhouse monitoring equipment as well.

Do I start a setup with something simple like the HomeAssistant Yellow if I don't want to spend a ton of time on this part of the plan?

It *might* be possible to get this to communicate to our new Rheem heat pump hot water heater, too, but that's the extent of our current HomeAssistant thoughts.

- We have some endangered native plants, as well as some cash crops growing both natively and intentionally planted in the forest as some test plots. Think ramps, ginseng, etc. but we are forest farming noobs.

We also have some test mushrooms going in log plugs that we intend to expand as we learn what works and what doesn't.

and - The state we are moving to has pretty decent LIDAR data of our property. I've played around with it quite a bit and made some fun maps. I was even able to find some hidden old logging roads that haven't been used in 100 years. I don't even know what I don't know in this area, but I'm planning to keep playing with it for data for the forest farming, running water from springs, etc.

I'm sure I'll add to this in a thread as we go and more things come up. It's all, honestly, terrifying and exhilarating at the same time at the moment, particularly for our boys who will be leaving the only home they've ever known this summer.

Also, wish me luck on my first ever public toot, I believe. I block and mute a lot of people anyway, so at least I know where those buttons are up front :)

@undefined @compost I'm a big fan of your knowledge that you've shared here on Mastodon and I'm wondering if you, or anyone else, could answer a question about vermiculture for us.

Both of our kids, in preparation for our move to the homestead, have chosen some "homestead skills" that they'd like to learn. My older boy really wants to do vermiculture, and I can tell there's a lot of different ways to get started, right down to just a bin.

What I'm wondering is if something like this, that we could theoretically keep either in or by our greenhouse, would be a good way for him to get started?

unclejimswormfarm.com/product/

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@BE i wish you all the best. Much trial and error stuff coming your way! And so much to learn and knowledge to gain through all the inevitable frustration. 👍🏼

@BE Wishing you a good move, what an awesome thing to do. Looking forward to the posts and veggie pictures.

@BE I have a few kWh of ecoflow systems, including the portable 400 W panel which is, I guess, technically portable. I like the systems. It is just for backup power at time point, but has been pretty solid other than the second battery on the Delta 2 being a bit flakey.

@BE Best of luck to you! Looking forward to hearing about your new adventures!

@BE What an exciting step to take for you and your family. Best wishes for it all.

@BE Homeassistant Green is plenty, that's what I use to interact with my Victron, run some automations, etc. It's plenty fast enough and uses less than 2W of power.

"I'm here for you" (as much as you'll take me / us)...! 

@BE I really like it! Well done!
And "I'm here for you" (as much as you'll take me / us.)

Quick other things:

█ Greenhouse YES (always been one of my great answer to linking all part of life to better human activity / investment)

█ Not sure about HomeAssistant stuff. You are the monitor here! Tech is a bit of a drag to setup and monitor itself and distraction for doing the work. So waste of your time possible here AND nothing works well nowadays lol... so you'll be kicking air soon enough and back to basics.

█ I wanted to say mainly I've been living basic / low-cost / low-footprint / ingeniously somewhat for years... so if you have silly low-level questions please ask (I'll have you on follow+notification and it will come up instantly!). Stuff lying around you don't know what to do with etc...

(...and working on everything best we can with what anyone brings to the table!)

Pic = qoto.org/@freeschool/108634476

Audio Podcast = qoto.org/@freeschool/111901758

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Especially If improving ourself and the communication is important to you...

Great post.
Towards Peace! ☮️

@BE How exciting! I'm looking forward to following your progress!

@BE Oh my! What an exciting adventure for you and your family! I want to hear all about it? Following!

@BE
Yes, it's an interesting and exhilarating journey you're taking.

I speak (partly) from experience. Having spend over 20 years simplifying my life and getting more self- resilient.

Some unasked-for advice 😉 :

* don't try to take on everything at once, it gives you 'farm-fever'!!

* Try to keep things low-tech.
For example: It's all very nice to have your Victron equipment talking to the rest of the world, but with some bad luck your batteries won't switch on because of a network error.

* In short, as I promote in my book, try to increase your independence of the technosphere as much as possible. Keep things simple and field repairable (by yourself!) wherever possible!

Good Luck!

@crash_course @BE I grew up on a farm, and I concur. Best thing to do is keep it simple. Think it all through. Have low tech redundancy for all your tools. You'll do fine. :)

@BE @compost The red wrigglers like a temperature range of 40 to 80 Fahrenheit. Can your location keep them happy? #compostodon, #compost, #Vermiculture.

@BE that's fantastic news! May this move bring you closer to the life you want :D

@BE congratulations. I can’t wait to hear how you progress. What lucky kids you have. Enjoy!

@BE What a great adventure! I can't wait for updates. All the best!

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