Icu4dzs
Super Self-Sufficient
- Joined
- May 7, 2010
- Messages
- 1,388
- Reaction score
- 59
- Points
- 208
Is it me or does the entire subject selection of a majority of the otherwise reasonable periodicals any good SS'er would read (MEN, Backwoods Home, etc) somehow concentrate all their energy in areas that are way south of REGION 3/4?
I see lots of great ideas but as soon as I think about how "I can do that", I realize that it would freeze so solid up here that it isn't worth the trouble. We heat our homes about 6 months of the year (often longer) because the PERMAFROST usually comes in early NOV or OCT and stays until APR or MAY. Yes, it HAS snowed here in JULY...go figure.
Everyone who is working with solar panels; making them or mounting them appears to live south of the 45th parallel. My 16 panels are covered with snow all the time...(If I clean them off it snows again...)
At least my wind turbine turns most of the day, almost every day...
I notice that most of the solar energy articles are all written by folks who live south. What gives with that? Doesn't anyone in the periodical business know that there are lots of us who live a bit north of the 45th and have very little in common with the folks who have 280 day growing seasons like they do in P'cola, FL.?
I sure would like to hear a good deal more from fellow SS'ers who are living in the sub-zero, short day areas of our nation to have some idea as to what life is like for them. I know what it's like in the south. Seems that everyone in the periodical magazine business knows all about the folks south of the 45th but no one seems to have much to say about NORTH of the 45th.
I do notice that Bubblingbrooks lives in AK and they have a growing season not unlike what we have in SDAK. I would imagine northern Idaho, Montana and Wyoming might have some things in common with SD.
How about it folks? Why don't we cold weather kids get together and discuss SS as it is above the 45th?
I see lots of great ideas but as soon as I think about how "I can do that", I realize that it would freeze so solid up here that it isn't worth the trouble. We heat our homes about 6 months of the year (often longer) because the PERMAFROST usually comes in early NOV or OCT and stays until APR or MAY. Yes, it HAS snowed here in JULY...go figure.
Everyone who is working with solar panels; making them or mounting them appears to live south of the 45th parallel. My 16 panels are covered with snow all the time...(If I clean them off it snows again...)

I notice that most of the solar energy articles are all written by folks who live south. What gives with that? Doesn't anyone in the periodical business know that there are lots of us who live a bit north of the 45th and have very little in common with the folks who have 280 day growing seasons like they do in P'cola, FL.?
I sure would like to hear a good deal more from fellow SS'ers who are living in the sub-zero, short day areas of our nation to have some idea as to what life is like for them. I know what it's like in the south. Seems that everyone in the periodical magazine business knows all about the folks south of the 45th but no one seems to have much to say about NORTH of the 45th.
I do notice that Bubblingbrooks lives in AK and they have a growing season not unlike what we have in SDAK. I would imagine northern Idaho, Montana and Wyoming might have some things in common with SD.
How about it folks? Why don't we cold weather kids get together and discuss SS as it is above the 45th?