Off-Grid Living Ideas for Homesteading in Oregon

After decades of living on solar power, this author offers off-grid guidance on understanding voltage and reducing usage.

article image
by Marygold McNutt
The author lives in a 2,000-square-foot solar-powered octagonal home made with post-and-beam logs and straw bale infill walls and insulation.

Decades of problem-solving and experimenting have given this author valuable tips for homesteading in Oregon; here, he shares his best off-grid living ideas.

I must be setting a record for longevity and determination. I’m now celebrating my 40th year of living off-grid in western Oregon.

I didn’t grow up this way. While I’m related to generations of homesteaders, I grew up in the New Jersey suburbs less than 10 miles from New York City. My father, a professional journalist, built our large cinder block and stucco home while working full-time in the city.

Growing up mixing concrete and building things imbued me with a sense of can-do and a problem-solving mindset. I’m an ethereal rather than a practical person; I have a successful business as an astrological consultant, serving clients nationally and beyond. But I live off-grid on solar power in a house I co-built over many years that, circa 2000, also had the first residential permit for straw bale in our county near Eugene, Oregon. The 2,000-square-foot two-story octagon has post-and-beam logs from our land that frame straw bale infill walls and insulation. Almost all the dimensional wood was grown, sustainably harvested, and milled here, costing about 10% of commercial wood — at a much better quality — and also saving a 60-mile delivery. Our ceiling insulation is R-38 from recycled blue jeans, about as thick as pink fiberglass but much less toxic, especially to install overhead.

Living off-grid on solar is particularly extreme homesteading in Oregon near the coast, where we’re blessed with more than 100 inches of rain per year. It rains a lot in the darker months and hardly at all in summer. We’re in a narrow valley far up the watershed, with a creek running through the middle that we’re not allowed to pump water from or put a dam or spillway in, as it’s a major undammed salmon-spawning creek. There’s little wind, except when there’s a lot; wind generators aren’t an option, nor is hydropower.

  • Updated on Aug 22, 2023
  • Originally Published on Jun 27, 2023
Tagged with: Firsthand Reports, green home, Mark S. McNutt, off grid solar, off-grid, off-grid house, solar power
Online Store Logo
Need Help? Call 1-800-234-3368