GOOD TO KNOW NEWS TRENDS LINKS
Modern Homesteaders
March/April 2004
By Joyanna Laughlin
 |
Photo by Sandy MacKinnon
|
Guiding Ideals: “Thoreau and the early homesteaders felt that simple living was a way to get to the higher principles they believed in.”
—Greg Joly
RELATED CONTENT
Following the principles of permaculture, an artist creates a serene, self-sustaining oasis in the ...
By supporting your local economy, you’ll cut down on food exports and eat local and you’ll promote ...
Gregory Paul Johnson shares his experience living the simple life in a 140-square-foot home....
Duane Elgin, who introduced Americans to Voluntary Simplicity in the 1970s, believes conscious livi...
Until recently, few builders have put the words “green” and “low income” in the same sentence. Howe...
A twenty-first century couple follows in Thoreau’s footsteps.
STAKING THE CLAIM: In 1994, Greg Joly and Mary Diaz bought twenty acres of heavily wooded land in Vermont’s Green Mountains and began to fulfill their dream of homesteading.
BUILT BY HAND: The family’s 1,200-square-foot, two-story log home is a manual labor of love. Using fieldstone from their property, Joly laid the foundation in 1995. The next summer, he framed the house with logs he harvested on his land and hand-milled onsite. Friends and neighbors helped raise the frame.
OFF THE GRID: A pair of seventy-five-watt photovoltaic panels and three deep-cycle batteries run the lights, a radio, and a laptop computer. A generator-powered well provides running water, which is heated by firewood.
MODERN REALITIES: Henry David Thoreau’s writings and handcrafted cabin at Walden Woods inspired the American homesteading movement. To succeed now, however, Diaz teaches special education to provide the couple with an income and health insurance.
WORDS OF WISDOM: “Learn to work with the materials you have, think hard about what you can and can’t live without, buy the best tools you can afford, and learn how to take care of the outhouse,” says Joly.
NO MAN IS AN ISLAND: Living in the woods pretending the rest of the world doesn’t exist isn’t good for you or the world, Joly and Diaz say. Foster community wherever you live.