Adventurers and their teams battle Mother Nature to build unique homes in remote areas. From Montana to the North Pole, from yurts to log cabins to Earthships, will they build in time to bea... Read allAdventurers and their teams battle Mother Nature to build unique homes in remote areas. From Montana to the North Pole, from yurts to log cabins to Earthships, will they build in time to beat their deadlines?Adventurers and their teams battle Mother Nature to build unique homes in remote areas. From Montana to the North Pole, from yurts to log cabins to Earthships, will they build in time to beat their deadlines?
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So I watched one or two episodes. The first was about Northern America in the glaciers... Respectable. The second was in an area of great Bushland.... Hollywood drama to the max. The cut scenes made out like there was some fantastic hardships. And perhaps there were, but the exaggerated drama lost me when the people filmed made it obviously appear worse for the camera than it likely was.....
Not true to the experience that was portrayed from what was filmed. Over drama for the sake of film.
Not true to the experience that was portrayed from what was filmed. Over drama for the sake of film.
Week after week this show illustrates the problems in building off the grid. Anyone interested in doing this must watch this show. Even if you're not planning to do it, it's still worth watching to educate yourself.
Part of the enjoyment of this shows is not only what you can do, but what you shouldn't do. The #1 problem is under-estimating the time to build. #2 is failing to account for the weather, which is a major part of any construction. #4 is materials and #4 is personnel. Watching people struggle through this is very interesting.
I also like the locations which are usually beautiful, though I don't understand why you can't build off the grid in more hospitable places.
Part of the enjoyment of this shows is not only what you can do, but what you shouldn't do. The #1 problem is under-estimating the time to build. #2 is failing to account for the weather, which is a major part of any construction. #4 is materials and #4 is personnel. Watching people struggle through this is very interesting.
I also like the locations which are usually beautiful, though I don't understand why you can't build off the grid in more hospitable places.
A couple of things I would like addressed. 1) the safety issue brought up here before 2) slow the dram and 3) and most important I want more information on the "off grid" part. If they living there full time, is it a vacation home? What about septic? Plumbing? Or bathroom issues in general none of that is every discussed and is a major point of living off the grid. What we can't talk about composting toilets? I would like more details on the solar systems, how many watts? What kind of batteries? Where is their battery storage? I would also like to see follow up. What's it like to live off the grid? What changes did they have to make, what didn't work? What did they have to add/take away/fix.
The first couple seasons were entertaining. Then the show started to repeat the same formula. Most folks built when the weather was bad. Endless shots of ....golly it's snowing we're behind. Getting six minutes of building, a cut to the next segment with a recap of what we just saw was annoying.. The building off the grid wasn't necessarily green. Lots of styrofoam and plastic included. By season three I just watched the intro to find out where the home was going then headed to the end to see what was built. Really liked some of the buildings. But too much similarity in the furnishings and interiors. Six different owners claimed their log end walls were unique. I get the complaints about construction safety. I was annoyed by families with kids that didn't think they needed hand rails on the stairs or outside areas. Might also add if you have a toddler and a wood stove you need to prevent them from burns. My biggest complaint is about the use of horticultural plants in the builds that claim to be natural. In season two old crunchy hippie guy claimed everything came from the land. Chrysanthemums are not natives. I made it through all 13 seasons by skipping forward except for Cappy. He was okay.
Firstly people...enough crying about the lack of safety. They are not employees of an organization. They are not being forced to work unsafely...They make their own choices. Just like you may smoke, drink, eat fast food, skydive, etc. I've done union electrical work and sometimes shake my head at the idiocy of people, but who cares? Should the show insist they wear safety gear and follow OSHA requirements? Come on. If it was a How-to program, then I'd say yes - they should set an example. But this is just people doing it for themselves.
They usually DO usually mention the use of composting toilets when they don't build septic systems. They also mention rain-water capture systems if they don't drill a well. Obviously they touch on solar power and sources of heat (propane, geo-thermal, etc.). They even mention budget.
MY GRIPE is not mentioning how much the land cost (you often are introduced to people with common, middle class jobs buying 25, 50 acres or more. I'd imagine in the middle of nowhere you're not paying top dollar, but the cost would be interesting and informative to know. My REAL GRIPE is not discussing how the still-working people do their jobs when you're 50, 100 miles or more from the nearest town. Those miles are not highway miles, either - you're not getting anywhere quick. I've seen many mention they're builders by trade. How and where are you building when you're so far from anything? I've seen a nurse and a salesperson. Same question? Are these getaway homes or is it their primary residence, as you're led to believe. Because each subject always mentions something to the effect of "we decided to live off-grid" or "wake up and have coffee looking at the mountains". Um...when do you leave for work? Tell us the real-life logistics.... Do you go to Costco once a month and stock up on supplies? Very interesting show to me, but I really want some details on how they can do this if not retired.
They usually DO usually mention the use of composting toilets when they don't build septic systems. They also mention rain-water capture systems if they don't drill a well. Obviously they touch on solar power and sources of heat (propane, geo-thermal, etc.). They even mention budget.
MY GRIPE is not mentioning how much the land cost (you often are introduced to people with common, middle class jobs buying 25, 50 acres or more. I'd imagine in the middle of nowhere you're not paying top dollar, but the cost would be interesting and informative to know. My REAL GRIPE is not discussing how the still-working people do their jobs when you're 50, 100 miles or more from the nearest town. Those miles are not highway miles, either - you're not getting anywhere quick. I've seen many mention they're builders by trade. How and where are you building when you're so far from anything? I've seen a nurse and a salesperson. Same question? Are these getaway homes or is it their primary residence, as you're led to believe. Because each subject always mentions something to the effect of "we decided to live off-grid" or "wake up and have coffee looking at the mountains". Um...when do you leave for work? Tell us the real-life logistics.... Do you go to Costco once a month and stock up on supplies? Very interesting show to me, but I really want some details on how they can do this if not retired.
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