NO ELECTRICITY!
Check out my article in the August issue of American
Survival Guide, now available. My article is titled “No Electricity, No
problem.” I provide suggestions for a
manual counterpart for all (or most) of our electric devices. Having
non-electrical devices can improve the quality of our life, and makes us better
prepared for emergencies.
Here are a few teasers from the article.
Today, most of us in the United States – rural or urban –
could not imagine life without electricity.
And what a wonderful invention electricity was – tapping nature’s forces
and putting them to work for us in myriad ways. Of course, there is a cost to pay – the money you pay for the
electric bill and the fuels that power the system. And there is also another less obvious “cost” that we have all
been paying as our dependence on electrical power constantly increase. We pay in the loss of really understanding
what it means anymore to actually perform a task that would have been routinely
done with manual tools a century ago.
Most people have barely a clue that nearly every task done
with electricity has a manual counterpart.
Yes, often this means more physical exertion. Yes, often this means that
the task takes longer. Still, when everything was done by hand, there was an
individual quality to good produced that is virtually unknown today.
Being self-reliant is a good thing on many levels, and many
pursue such skills with manual tools for its intrinsic deeper value that
it imparts to the user, forcing him or
her to slow down and attempt to find meaning in even the mundane.
Because we are so dependent on electricity for everything
today, we are also vulnerable. If there
was a widespread grid-down event, or even a localized blackout, many of the
functions of daily life that we today take for granted would cease. People
might panic, and many would feel helpless.
I strongly suggest you read Ted Koppel’s book “Lights Out”
for a look at what might happen to our society if the power was suddenly gone,
perhaps as the result of a terrorist act.
(Koppel also provides many solutions).
In your personal life, there are several ways you can build
self-reliance into your life.
One way is to re-think your usage of electricity. There are basically 3 methods in which you
improve the way in which you use electricity:
- Buy the most energy-efficient appliances you can find.
- Use your electrical appliances far more efficiently.
- Forego some electrical devices altogether. Let’s focus now on number 3.
HOME
Lighting: Lighting
is really essential. If there’s no
electricity, there are the old standbys: candles, battery-operated flashlights,
lanterns, slush lamps. There are also
light tubes, which are sold at most building supply stores. They bring light
into the home through the ceiling during the day so no electric lights are
needed. Don’t forget battery or solar
devices for light, as a backup, or for use in the cabin.
Air Conditioning: In
some environments, the AC really drives up the electric bill. However, using ancient building technology,
homes could (and should) be built today that require very little power for cooling
(or heating). If all walls were
insulated, including the ceiling, the need for any cooling could be drastically
reduced. Ancient desert homes, and old
Spanish missions in California, had thick walls and they remained cool in the
summer. Additionally, a roof painted white reflects the heat of the sun, and
the house inside is typically 10 to 15 degrees cooler because of this. Houses
with large overhangs also help to keep the inside cool in summer.
Heating: Again, a
heavily-insulated home requires far less heating to keep warm in winter. (I’ve
documented a lot of this in my “Self-Sufficient Home” book). A small wood stove may be all that is needed
to keep a well-insulated home warm.
There are other passive methods that could (and should) be
used so that less power is needed to keep a house cool or warm, such as
aligning the house, and windows, to take advantage of sunlight and prevailing
wind currents.
LOTS MORE IN THE ARTICLE…. American Survival Guide is
available at news-stands, or you can subscribe
at Engaged Media, 800-764-6278, or subscriptions@engagedmedia.com.
Back issues available from www.engagedmediamags.com.
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