11 Years Living Off-Grid in an Earthship Style House


Exploring Alternatives

Published on Mar 25, 2017

Hélène Dubé and her partner Alain Neveu from Es-Cargo (http://www.es-cargo.qc.ca/) have lived off-grid in Quebec, Canada for 11 years in a self-built earthship style home made of recycled tires filled with earth and large south-facing windows.

Their water is gravity fed from a spring-filled cistern placed up the hill from their home, their power comes from solar energy, and they use a composting outhouse toilet.

For refrigeration, they make their own ice during the winter by freezing water in recycled windshield washer jugs outside, and then they store them in a root cellar inside unplugged chest freezers insulated with sawdust.

They manage to keep their food cold with these homemade ice blocks from January to July, and then they get ice blocks from a neighbour. For hot water they use approximately 200 lbs of propane each year.

For heat they have a homemade rocket stove that is an efficient way to burn wood, and they also use it as a cooktop in the winter.

They would eventually like to be self sufficient in their food production and have gardens, hens, and they’ve begun to build an aquaponic system as well. But they do find that growing all of their own food, running workshops, and staying on top of all their other projects to be an incredible amount of work for just two people.

They’re hoping to attract more people to the property to form a small community of inspired and like-minded permaculture enthusiasts.

6 thoughts on “11 Years Living Off-Grid in an Earthship Style House

  1. I keep seeing compost pits made with pallets. I need to come up with 9 pallets. Three pallets per pit. First pit is ‘Incoming’ matter. Second pit is the ‘Working’. Third pit is the ‘Finished’. I don’t know if we can recommend books in comments but here’s a good one. I consider it one of the best books for off the grid, self sustaining methods. It has it all. From homesteading to leather making.

    “Back To Basics, How to Learn and Enjoy Traditional American Skills” by Readers Digest. ISBN 0-89577-086-5.

  2. She did admit that this effort takes a lot of people, not just to build but to sustain. I wonder how to make it less labor-intensive for those without the extra help.

    .

    1. Amen… I’m living proof.

      Don’t ever take on this effort…unless you have the guts to realize how badazz your grandparents were to survive.

      Just so you can complain about a botched order at Jack in the Box.

      Man…. we have no respect of where we came from.

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