196 comments on Energy Prices, Inflation, and Personal Savings
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GAIA Host Collective
I responded to Lou below.
Look, you are a mouth to feed. You do not produce anything unless I missed it in some post. I appreciate your intellect but that only uses joules.
Here are a series of reasonable queations, my answer to all of them is "yes." What are your answers?
1. I can provide for my energy needs.
Comment: I cannot provide mineral engine oil but I can limit my engine hours to preserve it and run my engines on wood gas.
2. I can provide my food.
Comment: Yes, I can. Boring but sustaining.
3. I can provide my power.
Comment: Yup, beside my PV system, I can run either my 8kW gas generator or my 23kW diesel generator on wood gas.
4. I can provide my household and irrigatation water.
Comment: Again, yes.
5. I can preserve the food I grow.
Comment: Barb had a post on this a few Drumbeats ago that I idn't have time to respond to. The answer is yes. We can steam can,waterbath can, dehydrate, vacuum pack and vacuum pack and freeze (remember I will have power even if the grid goes down).
I don' wat to run this into the ground but shipping coffee thru NO isn't an answer.
Todd
I grew up gardening and have a fairly good knowledge of orchard farming in different climates.
I have good ties to Iceland and Landsvirkjun (their national power company), so I can "bug out" there in extremis. The alternative, in extremis, would be my grandfather's farms in the Bluegrass area of Kentucky, But I will stay here in New Orleans as long as a monetary system stays functioning.
Rainwater cisterns are quite doable & easy.
Here's the crux as I see the urban versus rural debate and it comes down to complexity. And, maybe I should have approached your intial post from this perspective and left out all the ancillary stuff.
Most, but not all, rural lives are probably an order of magnitude less complex then urban lives/living, that is, they do not depend upon complexity (I am not saying that technology is unimportant.).
A simple example: It snows in the higher elevations here - even though we are only 20 miles from the Pacific Ocean. No one "takes care" of snow on the private roads, which encompasses most of the area because it is the boondocks. We have been snowed in for a couple of weeks and others we know of were snowed in for up to 6 weeks this past year. That's life.
Now, how would an urban are deal with this situation? How would those urban areas deal with being totally cut off from civilization for these lengthts of time? Especially, if it was the norm?
My point is that Tainter and, probably, Odum would say that urban complexity is doomed to fail.
Todd
My impression is that most rural living is much more energy intense (especially for transportation) and comparable or slightly less economic value added.
In a non-collapse environment, that will work strongly against rural living and make access to social services (for instance medical) much more difficult.
The rural life of today is not that of 1900. It has (appearances to me) evolved into a very energy intense lifestyle, with "driving everywhere". The "once a month" trip to town lifestyle is long gone. And drugs have migrated as well :-(
BTW, There is a particular type of weed that grows well on disturbed ground in New Orleans that makes good (if spicy) greens.
But if the collapse went to completion and urban living became completely untenable, then the rural areas are the only alternative. Not that rural areas would be good, just not as bad as collapsed cities in the midst of a terrible die-off.
If one is not in prime health and physical condition, you need a support network.
There will be plenty urban/rural squabbles if TSHTF. Conflict predictable, outcome unknowable
- the most long guns
- the best training (i.e. veterans)
- the best aim
Here's looking at you, babe . . . .However, my experience has been that I had less freedom to build a sustainable existence in the city than I do on my rural property. Things like zoning restrictions, small lot sizes and community standards organizations made it difficult to impossible to do many of the things I wanted to do to move towards a less energy lifestyle. The cost of living alone made it necessary to work full-time (ie. 5 days of commuting) to make ends meet in the city. This is no longer the case now that I'm in a rural setting.
I've tried to live sustainably in the city and in the boondocks. For me, it's easier in the boondocks.