Wednesday, January 31, 2024

January 31 - The Campfire Trail - Where Did The Volcano Come From?

January 31, 2024

Day 852 of the Adventure

I woke up this morning to a bleary-eyed sight of our mountain out the back window. I thought to myself in a half awake fog, "Where did the Volcano come from?" It only took a moment to get the cobwebs out enough to realize it was only our mountain with the addition of a convenient cloud. It's hard for me to pass up an unusual photo opportunity. So, grabbing my camera and making yet another barefoot run out onto the back deck, I captured this. I suppose it's barely noteworthy beyond the telling of it. Still, a curious sight at the backwoods cabin. When the trees get leafed out, the mountain will disappear from view once again until late next October. 

Is our mountain even a "mountain"? According to the U.S. Geological Survey, there is no official difference between hills and mountains. The United Kingdom and the United States used to define hills as summits less than 1,000 feet. Geologists and the Oxford English Dictionary report that a mountain is at least 2,000 feet (or 610 meters) above sea level, while the government of the UK Government defines a mountain as having an elevation above 600 meters (1,969 ft). Our mountain checks in at 1,355 feet in elevation, so I guess we officially have a "Hill", even though it's referred to as a mountain. So, it may be a hill, but it's our hill and we'll call it a mountain if we want to. The summit is actually about 3/4 of a mile from here so it's technically not ours. It belongs to the many property owners that live on it's footprint. Behind our cabin, the canyon, waterfall and land beyond that, make up the SW base of the mountain, so I guess we are part owners of it. We're not even in the top 20 of highest peaks in Missouri. In fact, we are only fifth highest in our county. We're behind such places as Brushy Knob, Pilot Knob, Grape Rough Ridge and Indian Ridge. We are higher than other peaks like Sow Coon Mountain, Wolf Ridge, Hooten Hill, Black Oak Ridge and Naked Joe Bald to name a few. How's that for a list of mountain peaks........ We are in Missouri, so there's that!

It's all more information than I'm sure anyone would have wanted this morning. The coffee has not had it's desired effect yet so, you get the benefit of my "Mountain Rambling".

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “Thousands of tired, nerve-shaken, over-civilized people are beginning to find out that going to the mountains is going home; that wildness is a necessity” ― John Muir

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost in the Woods (Colombia/Costa Rica blend)

Resources

Make sure to visit our website regularly to see new products and resources.

YouTube Channel: The Campfire Trail
YouTube Channel: Life of Treasures

Please Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following Video links to start your own adventure with us on our YouTube Channel:  

Creating a "Roadmap" Back to the Land


Our 30 Day "Back to the Land" Playlist



Creating Sustainable Income


Creating Sustainable Income (video series playlist) We just started this today (January 26) and will upload one video per week on Wednesdays. Make sure you are subscribed to "The Campfire Trail" YouTube channel and have the "Notification Bell" set to "ALL" to receive notifications of new video publications. 


Monday, January 29, 2024

January 30 - The Campfire Trail - Affording The Backwoods Life

January 30, 2024

Day 851 of the Adventure

I'm writing on this specific subject today as a preparation for a new video series we have starting tomorrow. It's something that not everyone will have an interest in. It's also something that many will have a great interest in. The subject is a "staple" for us and part of the reason we began our video channel in the first place. It is Income Creation and Sustainability as you begin to develop your dream of homesteading, off-grid living or backwoods, cabin in the woods life. 

It may seem to be a very basic subject. If it were about simply earning a paycheck there would be no need for the series at all. The entire subject would reduce down to "Get a job and earn a paycheck". This however is different. What I'm going to shining a spotlight on is the different mindset it takes to develop sources of income that do not require a steady job. In addition, I'll explain how it's possible to combine multiple sources of that kind of income. By doing so, it's possible to generate a broad enough base of income that the reduction or loss of one, doesn't have that much of an impact on your life. Does that sound like a fantasy? It doesn't have to.

Our journey of passive and multiple sources of income began a little more than 20 years ago. Did I understand it when we started? No, not really at all. It was only after several years did I begin to appreciate the fact that the primary skill needed was that of unlearning the traditional paradigm of income generation and begin embracing something entirely new. Shelley insisted that I write a book on what we had learned. Early in 2023, that book was published. Entitled "Wealth Creation", it was a compilation of principles and understanding we had learned. My realization of all of this lead me to the conclusion that it's how wealth is created. Thus the title. For us, it happened over a period of time and a number of businesses. At one point it included rental property, rental boats, fuel sales, vacation cabin rentals, brick and mortar retail business, online retail, campsite rental, affiliate product marketing, intellectual property and more. And really, all of it starting from scratch and when we were mostly broke. How do you juggle all of that effectively? Well, there's things to learn on that as well. 

I encourage you to get subscribed to the video channel (Link Here) (Also, click the notifications to ALL) or if you don't want to wait for the videos to publish, it's all coming from the pages in the book anyway, so you could get it that way. The video segments will be published on Wednesdays until they're done. I hesitate calling any of it a "secret". I will stand by the fact that it's mostly knowledge that's either misunderstood or not known at all. 

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “You can’t change and be somebody else in the future unless you start becoming a little better at being that future person today.⁣⁣” ― Richie Norton

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost on the Trail (Guatemala)


Resources

Make sure to visit our website regularly to see new products and resources.

YouTube Channel: The Campfire Trail
YouTube Channel: Life of Treasures

Please Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following Video links to start your own adventure with us on our YouTube Channel:  

Creating a "Roadmap" Back to the Land


Our 30 Day "Back to the Land" Playlist



Creating Sustainable Income


Creating Sustainable Income (video series playlist) We just started this today (January 26) and will upload one video per week on Wednesdays. Make sure you are subscribed to "The Campfire Trail" YouTube channel and have the "Notification Bell" set to "ALL" to receive notifications of new video publications. 

January 29 - The Campfire Trail - Our New Lincoln Log Connection

January 29, 2024

Day 850 of the Adventure

Our Cabin at Camp Run-Amuck was visited by and declared "Approved" by the Playskool Lincoln Log poster-child over this past weekend. Yes, we had this young man (and his lovely wife) at our cabin for lunch and a waterfall tour. Of course the boy is an adult now and we were surprised to learn that our new friend, and now part of our inner circle tribe, had such a respectable log cabin background. 

Upon their arrival, Brad was quick to point out that our cabin even had a green roof to match the log sets. He explained to his wife Michelle that his dream was to build a real Lincoln Log cabin for the two of them using the same color combinations of the play sets. The reality of that dream may be close at hand for them. As it turns out, we learned last week they would be in the area looking for land to purchase and build their very own adult sized Lincoln Log Cabin. 

Brads wife Michelle has been a long time friend of the family and is no stranger to the "Treasured Times Cruising" family. Treasured Times is one of the boats our daughter and her husband Mike own and she Captains down in the Florida Keys. We visit as often as we can. (One of my favorite trips HERE). Brad and Michelle cruise with them as well whenever they can 

You may be wondering about the randomness of this posting. As you may know, Mike and Adreane helped us with our cabin about two years ago as we were trying to get is closed in and livable before we became "homeless vagrants" (yes, there's a story there) Here's a video of that adventure. That trip sparked yet another adventure. That of Mike and Adreane recently purchasing a "Backwoods Bug-Out" property not too far from us this past fall. Upon hearing that, Brad and Michelle, looking for a remote woodsy place of their own for a couple of years, got the inspiration to expand their search to the SW Missouri Ozarks. So, the tribe seems to be assembling itself here in the beautiful Ozark Mountains. We'll see how it all develops but I found it fascinating that Brad had been the "face" of the Lincoln Log playsets years ago. I'm tellin' ya........ Once you get the cabin life in your system, it never leaves!

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “The woods carry sounds in their slow rhythms, sounds that only a heart can hear.”
― Kira Jane Buxton

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost in the Woods (Colombia/Costa Rica blend)


Resources

Make sure to visit our website regularly to see new products and resources.

YouTube Channel: The Campfire Trail
YouTube Channel: Life of Treasures

Please Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following Video links to start your own adventure with us on our YouTube Channel:  

Creating a "Roadmap" Back to the Land


Our 30 Day "Back to the Land" Playlist




Creating Sustainable Income (video series playlist) We just started this today (January 26) and will upload one video per week on Wednesdays. Make sure you are subscribed to "The Campfire Trail" YouTube channel and have the "Notification Bell" set to "ALL" to receive notifications of new video publications. 

Sunday, January 28, 2024

January 28 - The Campfire Trail - Choosing Vulnerability

January 28, 2024

Day 849 of the Adventure

5 Things Americans Are Prepping For
I try my best to stay non-political in my opinions and stick to the self-sufficiency message pretty intently. Occasionally though it gets the best of me. Today is one of those days, and yes, while political, it has roots in the "preparedness" message. (See the "5 things Americans are prepping for" here) I never thought I would see the day when a state felt compelled to challenge the federal government on something the federal government is supposed to be doing but are not. Then to make things even more bizarre, the federal government sues the state for doing their job for them and mandates that they stop and let things return to "nobody doing the job". Yes, I'm speaking of Texas attempting to secure the border and the feds telling them to stop it!

To be completely clear. I have always and will always support legal immigration. As a matter of fact, I had the honor and privilege to write letters of recommendation for a friend applying for citizenship in the past. The work and effort he went through to become a proud American is essentially being usurped by any and all of those who simply cross and assume they will be afforded the same treatment as those who entered correctly. This does not even address the more serious point of the vulnerability of Americans at the complete disregard of the government to even attempt to distinguish between those who are innocently trying to just get into the country vs those who arrive meaning harm with their intent. Speaking of drug trafficking, human trafficking and terrorism among the motives. 

There is nothing in me that understands the position the government is taking as it seems not only willing but actually complicit and encouraging of an environment of securing the border against threats. They cannot secure it from the threats without securing it from everything and everyone else as well. Is that so bad? Is that so wrong? I personally think not. 

I believe we have entered a new reality of vulnerability. One that will force us to add new levels of preparedness to our arsenal of skills. It's the skills of understanding that our nation is choosing vulnerability and we, as it's citizens, are left to "cash the checks", so to speak, of their decisions and actions. 

Stay vigilant, be kind, watch out for each other, your neighbors and..........

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty, and it does seem to me that notwithstanding all these social agencies and activities there is not that vigilance which should be exercised in the preservation of our rights.” ― Ida B. Wells-Barnett

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost in the Fog (Guatemala Decaf)

Resources

Make sure to visit our website regularly to see new products and resources.

YouTube Channel: The Campfire Trail
YouTube Channel: Life of Treasures

Please Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following Video links to start your own adventure with us on our YouTube Channel:  

Creating a "Roadmap" Back to the Land


Our 30 Day "Back to the Land" Playlist




Creating Sustainable Income (video series playlist) We just started this today (January 26) and will upload one video per week on Wednesdays. Make sure you are subscribed to "The Campfire Trail" YouTube channel and have the "Notification Bell" set to "ALL" to receive notifications of new video publications. 

Saturday, January 27, 2024

January 27 - The Campfire Trail - Things You Hear While Building A Treehouse

January 27, 2024

Day 848 of the Adventure

Many of you already know that one of our "Income Sources" is that of cabin and campsite rentals. Among the cabins are a handful of treehouse cabins. Much of the construction is done for the time being. (See what some of the construction looks like HERE) (See the completed treehouse HERE) As we spend some time deciding whether to build more or call the dozen or so we have complete, good enough. Over the years, as we've built them, a comical theme has emerged. It's the things we most often hear around the construction sites. Not by guests or curious spectators mind you. No, these are the things we, as the builders, often say. Much of this is heard almost on a daily basis.

DARN TREES! - The most common statement heard on a treehouse construction site. It occurs when the cabin, the worker and the trees are all attempting to occupy the same space at the same time. Since the cabin and the trees really don't care, it's the worker that is responsible for this statement.

Did something just move? - This is not an obviously "Special" statement, because everything moves........all the time! What distinguishes it from the normal "Did something just move?" is when something moves that is not expected to move! Say...... scaffolding for example. No, wait....That always moves. LADDERS! No, those always move too. You know what? Everything moves all the time!

Don't Look Too Close!
Scaffolding - Something.....actually anything ...... that randomly resembles actual scaffolding. Attachment points can be walls, posts, trees, heavy equipment, ladders, and any other Permanent, semi-permanent or temporary object. Attachment devices can include nails, screws, cargo straps, zip ties, ropes or heavy equipment when used with a combination of previously listed attachment devices. (See photo!)

Who's going up on the roof? - A statement made by any worker who does not want to go up on the roof!

Flipping the coin - A mystical process to determine who is going up on the roof. When there is a coin flip, Martin always wins. Which is also part of the reason coin flips have been outlawed!

WHOSE IDEA WAS THIS ANYWAY? - We have not been able to answer this question!

Get a rope - So far, this statement has been used exclusively to anyone needing a tie off rope and harness for working on the roof. Although it is being contemplated as a suitable phrase for use as we begin to figure out "Whose idea was this anyway!"

That is SO COOL! - The phrase heard as each stage of construction is being completed! It signals that it is now okay to move on to the next phase.

I think I'm too old for this - A statement made by everyone except John and applies to every aspect of treehouse construction except coffee and donut break. The frequency of this statement is in direct proportion to the height that one happens to be working.

HEY, I'M IN HERE! - A sound that emanates out from the inside of the cabin as nails are being shot through the cabin walls missing the studs.

These are just a few of the commonly heard phrases and statements heard around the treehouse construction sites.

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “No, no! The adventures first, explanations take such a dreadful time.”
― Lewis Carroll

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Highlander Grogg (Butterscotch/Rum flavors)


Resources

Make sure to visit our website regularly to see new products and resources.

YouTube Channel: The Campfire Trail
YouTube Channel: Life of Treasures

Please Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following Video links to start your own adventure with us on our YouTube Channel:  

Creating a "Roadmap" Back to the Land


Our 30 Day "Back to the Land" Playlist




Creating Sustainable Income (video series playlist) We just started this today (January 26) and will upload one video per week on Wednesdays. Make sure you are subscribed to "The Campfire Trail" YouTube channel and have the "Notification Bell" set to "ALL" to receive notifications of new video publications. 

January 26 - The Campfire Trail - New Video Series Starts

January 26, 2024

Day 847 of the Adventure

Creating Sustainable Income (a video series)
I was on the road early this morning delivering the work truck to the tire shop and the chainsaws to the saw shop. Along the way, I took advantage of the drive time to get the next video series for The Campfire Trail channel started. It's a subject that surfaces on a daily basis somewhere across the homesteading and off-grid groups. It's also something we've gotten pretty good at over the past 20 years. How to go about creating sustainable income. It sounds simple but there's actually a large gap between the concept and the reality of it in most people's minds. Most of it has to do with the mindset needed to move into that direction vs the actual work which we are mostly accustomed to thinking of when it comes to earning income. Those are the things we'll be covering and challenging our viewers with during this series. 

If the idea of multiple sources of sustainable income has any appeal to you, tighten your seatbelts and hang on. The world of earning income as you know it may be about to shatter. 

Here's the Introduction to it. 


Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “Every now and then a man's mind is stretched by a new idea or sensation, and never shrinks back to its former dimensions.”  ― Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost on the Lake (Colombia/Sumatra blend)

Resources

Make sure to visit our website regularly to see new products and resources.

YouTube Channel: The Campfire Trail
YouTube Channel: Life of Treasures

Please Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following Video links to start your own adventure with us on our YouTube Channel:  

Creating a "Roadmap" Back to the Land


Our 30 Day "Back to the Land" Playlist




Creating Sustainable Income (video series playlist) We just started this today (January 26) and will upload one video per week on Wednesdays. Make sure you are subscribed to "The Campfire Trail" YouTube channel and have the "Notification Bell" set to "ALL" to receive notifications of new video publications. 



Thursday, January 25, 2024

January 25 - The Campfire Trail - Things I'm Better At Now

January 25, 2024

Day 846 of the Adventure

A recent close encounter with mud
Almost everything I do any more feels more difficult than it did say, twenty years ago. Building out a Cabin in the Woods where nothing but raw land had existed prior is testament to this truth. For the most part I've been able to embrace the growing older nonsense. To be clear, it's better than the alternative by far. As we began this journey into the backwoods, I think I was approaching it from a 40 something's perspective rather than a 60 something's perspective. That 20 year gap in judgement hasn't presented us with impossibilities. We've accomplished everything we've set out to do. It's just taken a good fifty percent more time, more effort and more patience. Not to mention more close encounters with the dirt, water, mud, rocks and viny obstacles in the woods. Once a viny thing is encountered and the "falling forward motion", that ensues has begun, the encounters with the rocks, mud, water and dirt is inevitable. 

There was a time when I could muscle through woodland obstacles quite efficiently. Any more, they are a nuisance at best, a cause to practice up on colorful language on occasion and a trip to the cabin for the first aid kit at worst. We always hope the first aid kit is enough when necessary. So far, band-aids, duct tape, antibiotic lotion along with some soap and water has been adequate for our mishaps.

Upon reflection, I was having a hard time trying to come up with anything positive about growing older. Anything that I could point to and say, "Yes, I am much better at 'That" than I was at age 40". One thing came to mind almost immediately. I can now sit down in a chair and fall asleep much better than I could at 40. I am now trying to figure out how that can translate into a useful skillset. Still working on that one. I guess there may be one other thing I'm better at now. It's the skill of finding a simpler way of doing things. For example, I've been able to figure out how to turn most projects around here into something that can be done with the aid of a tractor. Moving dirt, rocks and firewood is a no-brainer. Taking a box of canning jars to the shipping container requires the use of the tractor bucket as well. I've even considered tilling the garden area exclusively with the post hole auger in the tractor. So yes, anything that needs done, is better done with the assistance of a tractor. I'm better at that now. 

I have now identified two things that I know I'm better at now than at 40. Now, I'm stuck. I'm sure there's at least a third thing I can come up with if I give it some more thought. The trouble is, I'm sitting here in my chair looking at the fire in the woodstove and I feel a nap coming on. 

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “The older I grow, the more I distrust the familiar doctrine that age brings wisdom.”
― H.L. Mencken


Make sure to visit our website regularly to see new products and resources.

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost up the Creek (Sumatra)


Please Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following Video links to start your own adventure with us on our YouTube Channel:  

Creating a "Roadmap" Back to the Land


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Wednesday, January 24, 2024

January 24 - The Campfire Trail - Minus the Picture You Don't Want to See!

January 24, 2024

Day 845 of the Adventure

Cedar sprig with fog induced droplets. Nice!
The chill of a cool 40 degree rain is typically never that welcome with me. Unless, of course, it arrives in late January. In January, any sort of rain that is not preceded with the word "freezing" is welcome. We awoke to a mild fog and comparatively mild temperatures. After coming out of the below zero event last week, it felt, dare I say, "Balmy"? I snapped a few pictures of it from the back deck, then decided on a bolder move. Wearing nothing more than shorts and tennis shoes, I wandered off into the woods for some close-ups. I thought about getting a selfie to prove I actually braved the cold and drizzle in a lot of bare skin. But after seeing what that looked like, decided to spare the readers from the........... Yeah, Whatever. It did not look good! I have the ability to improve a lot of things but my general physical contribution to the natural scenery is not one of them. 

Nevertheless, it was an exhilarating experience....... for the first ten minutes. After that, I was ready to get back to the woodstove and the hot cup of coffee waiting there for me. I don't necessarily recommend wandering around it the woods like this, but from time to time, and in the appropriate environment, you should give it a try. 

It actually gave me a better "wake up" boost than the coffee did this morning.  

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “Until you step into the unknown, you don’t know what you’re made of.”
― Roy T. Bennett


Make sure to visit our website regularly to see new products and resources.

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost in the Woods (Colombia/Costa Rica blend)


Please Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following Video links to start your own adventure with us on our YouTube Channel:  

Creating a "Roadmap" Back to the Land


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Tuesday, January 23, 2024

January 23 - The Campfire Trail - Snow and Ice Gone, Waterfalls Now

January 23, 2024

Day 844 of the Adventure

Last night before going to bed I stepped out onto the back deck for one more chunk of firewood. I'd been hearing rain all day and never gave it any thought. This time in the quiet, I could hear a familiar sound down the hill. A Waterfall. 

Our waterfall is about 100 feet behind our cabin down the hill. Plenty close enough to hear it quite well. It's on a stream that does not flow in dry weather but can become a small raging torrent with a good rain. Yesterday's rain was not that intense but it was steady all night and then all day. The picture to the right is not the waterfall. It's simply a small little trickle of water on the hillside. Since the temperature was still around 34 degrees this morning so I didn't spend a lot of time down there. If you'd like to watch the larger waterfall in action, here's a video link to it. 


Just another interesting day in the backwoods! (Make sure to Subscribe to our newsletter in the upper right hand corner of this page)

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “I like this place and could willingly waste my time in it.”
― William Shakespeare


Make sure to visit our website regularly to see new products and resources.

Base Camp Coffee of the Day:  Lost up the Creek (Sumatra)


Please Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following Video links to start your own adventure with us on our YouTube Channel:  

Creating a "Roadmap" Back to the Land


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Monday, January 22, 2024

January 22 - The Campfire Trail - Ice-Apocalypse - Thoughts on Preparedness

January 22, 2024

Day 843 of the Adventure

Mini icicles on the firewood box
Thoughts on Preparedness.....

We've made it through the night and the ice the weathermen were predicting for us. It rained most of the night but not enough. It was cold last night but not enough (I guess anyway) There is a glistening to the trees around here but it's pretty light. The outside temperature is 33 degrees here and according to science, that should be enough to halt any further ice accumulation. Regular ice storms are one of the realities of life in the Ozarks. Sometimes we can go several years without any. Other times we can manage to squeeze in several in a winter. The devastating ones don't happen too frequently. Maybe every five to six years. I remember one that we lived through back in the late 90's. It had pole mounted transformers lighting up the sky all night with bright blue electrical flashes and explosions all around town. If you stepped outside, the dead quiet was only interrupted by the constant snapping and crashing of tree limbs breaking and falling. In fact, it wasn't just the limbs, entire trees were breaking and crashing to the ground. Even the big mature oaks were not strong enough to withstand the weight of the ice. We lost power very early the first night and it was out for five days. We were partially prepared for it but not completely. I learned that a 1,400 watt generator was not enough to power anything other than a few lights, a TV and DVD player. We had installed an auxiliary LP wall mounted heater in our basement living area that kept the indoor temps in the upper 50's and low 60's. An LP fireplace on the main upstairs level kept the living room almost warm enough to sleep if you brought plenty of blankets with you. We had dragged our bed mattress from the bedroom in the far end of the house where temperatures hovered around 40 to the living room where the fireplace was located. We had some big candles lit in the bathrooms for light. The water heater was out so we ran out of hot water the first day. The food from the refrigerator went in coolers out on the back deck where the temperature hovered around freezing the whole time. We didn't lose any food due to it thawing out. And we waited........

That storm changed my perspective on preparedness. We spent five days without power. We had enough heat to keep things from freezing but not enough to ever get comfortable. After a couple days, the storm had passed, but the effects remained. Sometime in the middle of the night after the fifth day, I heard rustling and voices outside. It was linemen from the power company following power lines to see if there were any that needed repaired before re-activating the electricity. A limb had pulled our service off the side of the house, but it had not broken it or dragged it to the ground. I dressed and went out to meet them. They believed the damage on our section of power feeds were in good enough shape to turn back on and it should only be a few minutes. I thanked them and they wandered off back into the darkness. A half hour later, everything flickered back on and we began to return to normal. It took a couple hours to warm the house back up which was the most welcome part of the experience. 

We lost power here at the cabin due to snow storms twice last winter. Neither time was more than for a few hours. The difference is we didn't lose heat. We didn't lose the electrical power on the solar powered battery system circuits that supply power to about 70 percent of the cabin. Our stove is a non-electronic LP stove so the ability to cook was intact. We even retained our internet (not that internet matters that much) but it kept us in touch with the rest of the world and let us monitor the storms as they moved through the area. As we lay in bed around 3am knowing we've lost our electrical connection to the rest of the world, I smiled to myself. We had conquered at least a part of "grid independence".  And it felt good! Everything we have on the property is buried underground so the possibility of losing anything due to tree limbs is reduced to potential damage to vehicles, equipment or buildings. So far so good there. 

I realize that preparedness goes far beyond power outages, but you have to start somewhere, right? As we continue our "Cabin in the Woods" life, I find a continual new enthusiasm for the backwoods experience. A life of self-reliance and independence from the outside forces we have largely come to rely on for our basic necessities. I'm good with that!

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “Over the years, Americans in particular have been all too willing to squander their hard-earned independence and freedom for the illusion of feeling safe under someone else's authority. The concept of self-sufficiency has been undermined in value over a scant few generations. The vast majority of the population seems to look down their noses upon self-reliance as some quaint dusty relic, entertained only by the hyper-paranoid or those hopelessly incapable of fitting into mainstream society.” ― Cody Lundin


Make sure to visit our website regularly to see new products and resources.

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost in the Dark (Colombia Dark French Roast)


Please Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following Video links to start your own adventure with us on our YouTube Channel:  

Creating a "Roadmap" Back to the Land


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Saturday, January 20, 2024

January 21 - The Campfire Trail - A Lifestyle Or A State Of Mind

January 21, 2024

Day 842 of the Adventure

When considering a homestead, off-grid, back to the land or cabin in the woods life, the whole experience is certainly a lifestyle. Perhaps more than that, it's a State of Mind. Let me explain. The act of making your move into this lifestyle, whatever your personal preference of it looks like, creates an active life and lifestyle for you. Prior to that, and along the way, the state of mind that fuels your passion for it, exists to some degree. Whether it's a passing "romantic" fantasy or an intense and deeply held desire to escape what society has come to define as "normal", the State of Mind for that life does exist. 

In the "just dreaming about it" phase, the lifestyle is largely experienced in ones mind. We can almost visualize what life will look like in a rural or backwoods setting. The home, the view, the barn, the ponds, the chickens in the yard, woodsmoke curling up from the chimney. We can nearly smell the campfire, the pot of soup simmering on the stove, the scent of leaves in the crisp autumn air and the aroma of fresh coffee as the sun is rising on another day. All of these things create that state of mind that draws us forward towards the decision to commit to the lifestyle. I believe even after the commitment to the land and the life has been made, the state of mind must continue. The contentment of the life can potentially be over-run by the work, effort and energy needed to live that life. Obviously, the degree of commitment will vary and to many, the strenuous life will be more or less than it will for others. No matter how the actual lifestyle develops, your "state of mind" regarding the life will largely dictate the quality of experience you can expect to have. I've known people who let the work and effort drag them down to exhaustion and then become depressed and hopeless over all of it. While others have figured out how to keep the freshness of the experience alive in their minds. They can become physically tired but never seem to tire from their appetite for the lifestyle. 

We are closing in on our third year here at "Camp Run-Amuck". I believe we've been able to keep the dream alive, fresh and vibrant the whole time. Even during the difficult time of trying to live in the cabin while we were building it at the same time. There have been many periods of exhaustion and frustration. All the while, I have still been able to sit in a camp chair with a cup of coffee by a campfire and see through the chaos of the project to the peaceful and serenity of our backwoods environment. 

Is it a lifestyle or a mindset? If you've made the transition to the "Lifestyle", I would hope that it is both. If you haven't made the jump to the physical lifestyle yet, it may indeed be just mindset. Still, you have opportunity in front of you to begin that process today. No matter where you are or what your circumstances, you can find places and ways to begin creating a roadmap for yourself in the direction of your dream. I strongly encourage you to commit to viewing our video series "Back to the Land" today. It was created to help you to define what your specific journey would look like. Sure, there are examples of things we've done in it related to our journey, but those are just examples. You must create the vision or picture of what that dream looks like for you. Hopefully the series will prompt you into generating those thoughts and actions for your own journey. It's a 30 day (30 segment) set of directions, questions and challenges to help you begin thinking of how you would build your personal roadmap to the lifestyle. (Links Below)

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “The greatest thing in this world is not so much where we stand as in what direction we are moving.” ― Johann wolfgang von Goethe


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Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost on the Trail (Guatemala)

  

January 20 - The Campfire Trail - I Choose Snickerdoodle

January 20, 2024

Day 841 of the Adventure

There's still a bit of snow on the ground here in southwest Missouri from our recent sub-zero trip into the deep freeze. I don't think it will leave today but it will soon. Our tractor sits idly by waiting for us to return it to service for something other than the occasional delivery of a loader bucket of firewood from the woodshed to the cabin. It's a slow ride from Christmas to the middle of February, but we're getting there.

I think we've reached a turning point in the winter here. Today is the last day that a 20 something shows up in the long-range forecast as a high and a teen shows up as a low. In fact, there's only a couple more 30 somethings in the forecast as highs before they disappear as well. Obviously, it's weather and all of it can, and likely will change on a moments notice if a cold front pops up again. My experience living in the Ozarks does tell me though, that February is the month that daffodils begin to peeking up through the leaves and we'll see enough warm days where a short sleeve shirt will be appropriate attire. All something to look forward to as winter plods its way along towards spring and the woodpile diminishes in size. 

Shelley spent some time yesterday making a roasted squash soup filling the cabin with a rustic aroma of squash, onion and garlic. Of course, there's more to it than that, but I noticed she was also recording a video of it so you'll have a chance to see all of that for yourselves soon. It slow simmered all night for today's lunch. I guess winter is a time for that sort of thing. We were also invited to join some friends in a quick road-trip to the Mennonite store across the border into Arkansas yesterday afternoon. Run by a pair of Mennonite sisters, it's an opportunity to get fresh eggs, fresh home-made breads, fresh cinnamon rolls, bulk rolled oats, cheeses and other things of that sort. My purchase was large enough to earn me a "Free freshly baked cookie". I asked what variety was available and one of the sisters rattled off a quick, "Chocolate Chip, Lemon Iced, Peanut Butter, Oatmeal, Snickerdoodle..........." upon hearing that, Shelley quickly made my choice for me. I would choose Snickerdoodle. I may have indeed chosen the Snickerdoodle anyway, but choosing among good options is always easier when a wife is standing nearby to assist. I guess when it was all said and done, I had actually chosen a "half" of a Snickerdoodle. You figure that out!

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “You know how sometimes you tell yourself that you have a choice, but really you don't have a choice? Just because there are alternatives doesn't mean they apply to you.”  ― Rick Yancey


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Base Camp Coffee of the Day: B-52 (Kahlua, Irish Cream, Amaretto flavors)


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