retreat! retreat!

Feb 27, 2013 10:40


I awakened this morning with the not-unfamiliar conviction that the only smart thing to do would be return to Alaska’s North Road and homestead in preparation for coming social and climate collapse.

I assume this is perfectly normal.



In the modern world with modern technology, with enough time and patience (and money, but time and patience would trump *huge* amounts of money), I think even I could create a satisfyingly self-sufficient homestead. I mean, there are a thousand-million things I’d have to learn, like what crops you can grow besides potatoes on the North Road, but potatoes are a very good staple food. There’s a guy out in Bethel who is doing buried-greenhouse growing, and is starting to be able to deliver fresh veg to the villages on the Alaskan west coast; that’s clearly something you’d want to pursue.

Heritage grains, insofar as they can be grown there. If the greenhouses were successful, non-local fruits and vegetables would be great. Berries grow well in the short summers there, though: blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries and currants are all local berries and could very easily be cultivated as well as picked in the wild.

The salmon runs may be badly depleted these days, but a dipnet, some patience, and a smokehouse will go a long way toward getting you through the winter. Add a moose or caribou or two and you’re in pretty good shape. Obviously a few cattle and pigs would be really ideal. Cultivating beehives would be *smart*. I wouldn’t know anything about how to get other kinds of sugar in a post-collapse society, so yeah, beehives.

Immediately available energy resources: Solar panels, obviously. One does not wish to waste 20 hours of daily summertime sunlight. Runoff water storage. Timber-this is one of the reasons I’d want to return to Alaska. (Also because the population there is very low, even now.) Clear the land, dry the timber, perhaps build with it, definitely use it as fuel. Use modern building techniques and insulate the house to perfection; run a deep heat sink to use solar power from the ground as well as what falls out of the sky. And if you’re homesteading, if you *can*, you’re gonna find a chunk of land with a river or stream running through it, so you can harness that for energy needs as well.

You’d want to lay T1 or some other kind of broadband, for as long as the internet remained viable, but what you’d really want is a thousand thousand books about farming, first aid, subsistence, etc.

Nearly everything would of course be vastly easier with modern equipment and the fuel to run it on, but this is why one would want to do it *in advance*, you know.

The question of post-collapse security comes up, because hey, paranoia. One way to protect is is to build deep, so there’s less visible on the surface as a target. Not flaunting one’s wealth, also, but the truth is you can still have a very private life in Alaska if you choose to, so while you might want to stock up on massive fencing materials for if things got really bad, probably you’d be okay for quite a while. Society’s probably not going to collapse overnight; you’d have time to prepare for unfriendly neighbors.

Yes. Yes, I have been reading too much doomsaying climate change stuff recently. Why do you ask? On the other hand, this is the kind of thing I think about anyway. Don’t you?

(x-posted from The Essential Kit)

climate change

Previous post Next post
Up