Washingtonians

Status
Not open for further replies.
Quote:
Great site to help you do just that...........
http://www.survivalistboards.com/

Yup.
That is the way to go.
But, fair warning...while Eastern Washington is gorgeous, and sparsly populated, it get relatively little rainfall...and finding a property with a year round creek on it (especially one that is strong enough to run a trubine) is more than likely not going to happen.
We just spent 3 years searching while living in NorCal with Grandma...and there was a few places that were nice, one was the Illinois Valley in Oregon, beautiful !
Creeks and rivers !
And the second is the North of the Ponderay area, above Sandpoint, and towards Elvira Idaho.
Another is the southern Idaho area...the wide portion, but hard to find a 20 or 40 acre peice, the farms there are huge.
The nicest place we found was here.
Land prices excellent, sparsely populated yet not without community and culture, a few hours to everywhere: Vancouver WA, Portland, Seattle.
And we have the lovely rain and cool salty fog...and well water is up high, most are within 30 feet.
That is our aquafir, not runoff.
We also have fantastic hunting and fishing.
And there is plenty of sun here to run a solar array.
We have an 18 panel system on our house in California...that is for sale, and I am positive the same set up would run fine here.
That said, you need to conserve during dark months, just like we had to do there in California.
That system was a grid-tie.
The biggest bummer I had living in Eastern WA was the lack of water.
Springs dry up...creeks dry up, it is dry there.
You would have to have a DEEP well, and that is expensive !
Beats living in Kansas though !!!
wink.png


Eastern Washington is wonderful, high desert country with awesome sage brush plains, monster ponderosa pines, huge mule deer...and great people.
 
Good news!!!
woot.gif


My husband says I don't have to re-home ALL of my chickens. He made me SO happy today.

The reason I need to downsize is because I lost two clients in one day. "I am a private contractor, for local farms."
So with the loss of the two clients, I would not be able to personally pay for the care of my flock. My husband has not spent one penny on my flock. As they are my birds. So this morning when I told him I was re-homing the birds, and why. He said to just lower my numbers to 5, and he will pay the feed bill!

I was able to rehome my EE'ger to R3ranch today. So I only have two more birds that I need to rehome.
 
Eastern Washington is wonderful, high desert country with awesome sage brush plains, monster ponderosa pines, huge mule deer...and great people.

Awwww...shucks....now you're just kissin' up.
lol.png
I think we are pretty fair crowd. Rare Feather Farm, whatcha' think? I would have to admit though, it beats tornados. We don't really have earthquakes either.​
 
Quote:
this house is AMAZING!! *sigh* now I must wander off and dream..
wink.png


edited to add: I could have my geese! lol!

Good grief ! It is a dream come true home !
But look at the price !
Holy Cow !
This place I have here, 5 acres, a brand new septic (required anywhere you go in Washington state) no house $50K.
I paid cash, got a BIG storage barn brought in...10 X 16 and made a cabin out of it...added on 8 x 8 kitchen, it is cozy, not good for more than 2 though.
Kids could use the loft...
It is a way to start out and work on the big house...
 
Quote:
lol.png
you could have fun with it though...just remember that kinky is using a feather, but perverted is using the whole roo....
lau.gif


Oh my gosh....you are so wrong....just wrong....
clap.gif
yuckyuck.gif


lau.gif





did you let Tyson see the stuffed roo yet ?
Just think what ppl think when they see a stuffed roo in your bedroom !
lau.gif

My Daughters had one of those rabbit fur 'cats' that is sleeping curled up and looks so life like and they put it in the middle of the street and watched people almost crash trying not to hit it, then grabbed it and ran home...ha ha ha, they were disiplined heavily.
 
Not kissing up at all ! You know I lived in Tonasket for several years, love the place.
Love the deep cold winters...I like the whole area, but no water.
Lucky if you have a pond that does not run dry.
How deep is your well and do you have alkyline water ?
Ours over there was super deep and dried up around June and we had to haul water and the well had really sulphery-alkyline water.
Taking a shower would steam up the whole house and smell to high heaven of stinky rotten eggs !
lol.png

Friend in Idaho has a well like that too...so it is all over I guess.
 
Quote:
Our well is 150 feet deep. We get about 15gpm. We're up high so we get LOTS of snow pack and there are lakes & several creeks around us. My in-laws who live across the pasture have a hang-dug well from the late 1800's that is still functional and they have lots of water, too. The water is hard (calcium) but not alkaline at all.
 
hard is alkyline, calcium is hard......but sounds like you have a great set up !
At least you do not have the horrendous stinky sulpher well !
gig.gif

My poor friends in Idaho spent so much money on having the well drilled, and there is no guarantee you will get perfect water...oh well.
We lived above the store (Rounds Lake) in Aneas Valley outside Tonasket, and we had a spring that burbled out of the ground way up where we were...way cool artesia kind of spring, but dried up after June...we considered having it fractured (dynamite to creat more cracks in the rock) but never did, we had to move and let it go cuz the mill closed and there was no work.
I really loved that place.
We built an awesome cabin and huge perfect chicken pens and coops.
All that went into brain storage, I accept it as learning experience for when I need the wisdom, like now, homesteding again.
I love it.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom