Radical Simplicity: Living in under 150 sq ft on our Off Grid Homestead

in #homesteading7 years ago (edited)

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What is it like living in under 150 sq ft you might ask?

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Many of us have seen the tiny home ~ CRAZE ~ and some of you reading may even aspire to it, but what is it really like for people who do it?

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After Discovery Channel’s Homestead Rescue built an octagonal cedar log cabin on top of our already small existing footprint (that used to house a 15 ft yurt), our footprint shrunk from 175 sq ft to under 150 (didn’t do the math to figure out the exact footage of our 12 x 12 octagon, if you did feel free to leave it below!).

We had set up the yurt as a first way to get on the land, an easy, quick (and incredibly tiny) structure. Not planning on living in it for long, now we have an even smaller building to call home. This one does have a loft though, so props there!

First, I will say that we may be sort of cheating as we have a 200 sq ft storage building holding our off-season clothes, farm equipment and feed, beekeeping supplies, herbal medicines, freezer, and random other things. True Radical Simplicity and Tiny House Living may not afford any extra storage than what is available in the home.

So What’s It Like Living in Under 150 sq ft?

It’s definitely close quarters.

How close? Well if we both stretch our arms out we can touch from wall to wall.

Sometimes we literally bump into each other getting to and fro in the morning (which requires a compassionate attitude we don’t always muster as we’re getting ready). It requires patience, intentional space usage, and creativity in making small spaces work. For example, using space above the stove to cure our sweet potatoes, or using our gravity water tank as a table.

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It’s like a play house…

Where we get to design and build the interior and make finishing touches. By living with the bare minimum, we are better acquainted with our needs. The stakes are lower as we’re not making this our permanent home, so we’re having fun experimenting with building cabinets from reclaimed barn wood. We have put in large cabinet doors to cover stored food and to hide hanging clothes.

We have a 30 gallon tank for storing water that gravity feeds to a sink. We light the cabin using 12v batteries to power DC LEDs, recharging it at our solar shed every few days. We heat it with wood from our land’s gracious standing dead and thinnings.

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Everything is small, which can be frustrating in a kitchen if, like us, you like to live large. We make messes and experiment, and there isn’t really much room for that. In warmer months we almost exclusively cook outdoors, which allows us the space to process large amounts of produce easily.

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We’ve had fun finding creative ways to store bulky items like clothes by building a shelf above the door. We have a boudoir that uses floor to ceiling space to hold clothes, extra linens and our dirty clothes hamper. We’ve had to dramatically downsize the book collection, although being voracious readers, it seems books end up all over the place despite our best intentions!

We never had a tiny home dream…

But now that we’re living in one we’re grateful for the experience. We have a safe space to cozy up in during the colder months and a cedar sanctuary to recharge in. It is perpetually cozy, as the walls and ceiling are never far off, somewhat womb like. During the warmer months, we spend nearly all waking hours outdoors, so we have room to stretch out and be creative.

It will house us for a couple of years until we further establish our homestead and have the space, time, desire, drive and skills to build a more epic and spacious home. After that, the cabin will serve as a pleasant and secluded space to house guests and interns. Until then we are happily inhabiting a very small space and getting to know more acutely what we really need in a home.

Thanks for reading!! Please resteem and/or upvote if ya feel it :D

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What a beautiful little home! I've been living in a 113 sq ft Yurt for the last 6 months, and feel it's plenty of space. However, it's just one person in here, and I can see how it could start feeling cramped if there was someone else sharing the space.

Thank you! Yes we love it and loved the yurt living, yet it is a tight space. Love to meet another tiny home dwelling wizard :)

I love it! I really love your house. If I didn't have two teenagers and a 10 year old...and nine dogs inside...man, that'd be so cool. Thanks for showing us around! I think you know my friend, @kimmimoore ? She sent me a link to one of your posts the other day. Turned out I was already following you! Haha!

Haha three children and 9 dogs whew that would be tight!! Lol!! You’re welcome, I’m glad you liked the tour. Yes! I know @kimmimoore, saw her on New Years :D!! Love the homesteading community here and happy to be connected <3

We spent a year in a VW Van, 80 sqft... My husband, me, and our labrador... We learned that we're not really interested in a tiny house. Been there, done that, I guess we could say. But we learned so much from it too. We learned how to be more compassionate with each other, how to clean up quick, and how to live with less (I'll admit I still had too much clothing!)
I love to hear how people's experiences go with this process. We're hoping to build 1000sqft when the property we're looking for shows it's face! Loved the Homestead Rescue Episode, I really think they made you guys look like you had a lot more going on then a lot of the other homesteads.

Haha I hear ya on the Been there, Done that, Don’t need it lol!! I admit I also could let go of some clothes! Especially in winter everything being so bulky makes for tight living. Thanks for your words about HR- we were pleasantly surprised with how it turned out too :)

No way, that's not cheating...it's just extra space! It's a very cool story, I like that you call it a Cedar Sanctuary. Those potatoes look delicious and that boudoir, you guys built that?

Hey I was wondering if you could give us again the name of that episode from that Discovery Channel’s Homestead Rescue, is it under Mountain Jewel?

Thanks for another very inspiring post!!!!

Hahah! thanks for your vote of support @senorcoconut! Those sweet potatoes are continually delicious for us! It was our first time curing and it went well. Yes we built the boudoir- with reclaimed wood from our friend’s barn and the cedar paneling you see- maybe we should do a post about that??

Haha the episode is called Ozark mountain misery ! You can find it here

Thank you, I just found it on the actual channel's web site and borrowed a friend's cable network password. I'll watch it sometime today. After playing in the snow storm. The snow gets really dirty in New York City so we have to take advantage of it early!

Awesome, curious to hear your thoughts! Oh have fun in thee SNOW! :)

Just finished watching it... wow, it was a crazy adventure!!!

The mold was really starting to get you. and salvaged pieces from the Yurt?How did all that cedar just show up? I know it came from a neighbor but how did he know to bring it to you?

And everyone coming to help in the crunch, so great. I picked up on some tricks like the transferring of lines from one log to the next for cutting out the notch... I would like to see more details on the fish smoker, that was really cool too.

What a beautiful job you guys did on the log cabin! I don't know you guys but I feel proud for some reason! It was amazing!!!

I actually didn't know until I joined steemit about The Ozarks... so many homesteaders in the region and than the show tells about it too. Have a happy New Year, now the home is built and the irrigation system in place you will grow fast!

Haha glad you enjoyed it! It was a wild ride for sure and turned out beautifully in the end.

The wood was actually mostly already cut and prepared as a co called Sticks & Stones built most of the House ;) tv drama stuff they made it look differently! We did use the floor of the yurt for the building, which was a beautiful reclaimed poplar. We’ve got more pics of the fish smoker- perhaps we'll make s post :)

Beautiful in deed! I work in the film industry and many friends who do reality, told me about it being scripted to some extent with big accents on the drama side of it all...apparently drama sells (as we see on all news channels for example).

I would really like to see that post on the smoker and I'm sure others who follow you will too. You're doing really good.

I really enjoyed getting to “see” what your house is like! I’ve always wondered what it’s really like inside, and how it feels to dwell there.

Awesome ~~ thanks!! glad you liked the tour! One of these days we’ll make a video tour :)

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This is a wonderful article about the reality of life in a "Tiny House". Thank you for sharing, and I look forward to hearing more about your homesteading adventure!

Great to see some details of your house. It looks very cozy. I lived in a tent for awhile so this seems like a palace in comparison. Thinking of building a tiny house this year. I'm planning on spending most of my time outdoors so just need a cozy room to sleep in. I'm sure this house brought you guys closer, if you'll pardon the pun. Seems like a lovely life on your homestead. Thanks for sharing!

Thank you.

Haha, I totally hear you on the tent living. We both spent most of our 20s tent living (separately and then together), so it’s a definite step up. And just to have a cozy protected space where things don’t get wet haha. Good luck on your tiny house build! Thoughts on material choices? And where you’ll do it?

Thanks. I'm mostly considering wattle and daub and building it on our land in the hills of Kodai. You'll see our progress as and when we start.

looking forward to it :)

Amazing and beautiful house, thank you for homesteading motivation! On my way to build an Earthship.. one day. :) Thanks for sharing, resteemed, have a nice day n' #keepsteemin

Thanks!! Have you seen the Taos earth ships? We lived there for a while in an earthship- it felt so good to be in! I saw your other comment about paying for it through steemit- good luck! We are making this into a more full time thing too, to help support the homestead. Yehaw!

Yeah definitely looks like a brighter future :) Nice one, must have been amazing! Aye, nice good luck with that :) will follow you, nice to meet you!