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Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby Loki » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 18:19:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('thuja', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lore', '
')
For what it’s worth, the best security you can buy is to find yourself a small rural community that you can become a part of.


No it's not. And let me be blunt. The end of the world as you know it will not come when indonesian raiders try and plunder you potato patch. It won't come when mad max bsrbaians are hoarding gas and defending it with machetes. It won't come when the food trucks stop arriving and city folks canibalize each other.

No folks, the end of the world as you know it will be when you lose your job and income. That is much more liely to happen in a rural climate where jobs are scarce. Just google rural counties near you and examine how they are doing economically.

Man I thought this was one of the main lessons of 2008. Peak Oil is about long grinding poverty. Please don't prepare with sailboats. Prepare to live as cheaply as possible while holding on to employment, any employment that brings in some income.

Can this be done rurally? Sure..but think it through carefully. Going country aint some panacea.

Thuja, I agree that we should be preparing for poverty, not Mad Max mega-doom, and that this can be done in the city. We're on the same page there, I don't foresee a mass movement from city to country, nor do I think there necessarily should be.

That said, most cities aren't Portland---I lived there for 15 years, and as cities go, I think it's exceptional. I wonder how your thesis would work out in places like Houston or Atlanta, i.e., sprawled out, grossly overpopulated suburban hellholes.

The city vs. rural question really comes down to individual proclivity and location. I prefer country life, but if need be I'll move back to Portland. Funny thing is, when I got laid off from my job in Portland, I found work out here in the boondocks. And I'm able to live more cheaply here than I could in Portland.

I saved a quote I read on the Oil Drum last year that sums up my thoughts on the subject:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Burgundy', 'I') think people are deluding themselves about their future, they currently have the choice of which type of poverty they want to live (city ghetto or rural peasantry). They should really be making up their minds and choosing now, before their choices are made for them.


I've chosen rural peasantry, at least for now. Hopefully I won't have to fend off Indonesian pirates any time soon.... :lol:
A garden will make your rations go further.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby thuja » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 18:23:04

@Jessi:

I'm not sure what you mean by living off the land...100% sustainable without the need of the ammenities of civilization?

Cities have been around since the dawn of civilization 6000 years ago. Are you imagining living in a pre-civilized world, a stone age hunter gather existence?

If you envision an agrarian lifestyle, that goes hand in hand with cities. Rural and Urban have been symbiotic for the last 6000 years.

So yes you may not "need" the things from the city that I've described. But if you want to live in anything resembling post stone age man, then the dreaded city is an important part of it. Doesn't mean you have to live there. But it does mean that cities won't go the way of the dodo bird.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby Crusty » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 18:41:26

I think I sit in between Thuja and JessiRhea.

I think things will get harder and harder but 'grinding poverty' is a bit too doomer for me.

Thuja doesn't really typify the city environment, she lives close to a rural area, she grows a lot of her own food, has reduced her energy usage and knows her neighbours. I think as things get hard she will be a teacher in her community, showing her neighbours how to live a simpler lifestyle. This is a lot different to people living in the middle of a big city, with a consumerist lifestyle and believing the BAU will continue for ever. People have lived through hard times before (the great depression) and history tells us that they pulled together saving their hatred for the Government who let this happen. I see this happening in the Middle East now.

To JessiRhea may a suggest you use the last of the cheap oil to set yourself up. Get to know your neighbours. Get a Bobcat to clear some land for your Doomstead (20,000hrs manual labour for one barrel of oil) Here we use the beer economy, pay for the fuel and a slab of beer at the end of the day (which we all drink). Here if money's tight we buy a big caravan (the bigger the cheaper, and a fuel gets more expensive cheaper still I think) build a lean-to (carport) over the top with a gutter with big water tank and you have all your water (we call them 'Humpys'). Clear some land for you food/outdoor area with good drainage for flood and swales for drought. Composting toilet, shower/bath area with grey water for fruit trees. Mates have a small solar panel, and a battery and it does a chest fridge and a few lights. A pushmower and brushcutter doesn't use much fuel but are great while waiting for things to self mulch.

I know things are going to get harder and harder, and in some corners of the world great suffering, but I only have one vote which I use it wisely and compassionately (I think). Spending too much time thinking about it just paralyses me and solves nothing so I believe in prepping yourself and you local community!!

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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby GlynG » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 19:41:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lore', 'F')or what it’s worth, the best security you can buy is to find yourself a small rural community that you can become a part of.

I agree on this! Ideally one used to growing all/most of its own food and as self-sufficient from the outside world as possible. Traditional rural communities in many poorer ‘less-developed’ countries may well be far better places to live in the future than anywhere in the US or UK, assuming you can integrate into the culture and community.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('thuja', 'P')lease don't prepare with sailboats.

It’s actually a perfectly viable option – I know of a number of people who have/will prepare for PO by moving onto sailboats, including Dimitri Orlov for one (see here for details of the recent book on collapse Fleeing Vesuvius to which he’s contributed an article on ‘Sailing craft for a post-collapse world’), who I think it’s safe to say knows a fair bit about economic/societal collapse!

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('thuja', 'C')ities have been around since the dawn of civilization 6000 years ago...if you want to live in anything resembling post stone age man, then the dreaded city is an important part of it. Doesn't mean you have to live there. But it does mean that cities won't go the way of the dodo bird.


It’s not an either/or between having cities and the stone age – very many cultures and places past and present have got on very well (I would suggest a lot better than us) without having any settlements on the scale of a city. I don't think cities won’t disappear, but I think it's likely many could become incredibly bad places to live.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby Shaved Monkey » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 19:48:37

For me its about reducing spending
The less I want carrot the less treadmill I have to turn.
Developing my skills,(cooking and construction are important)
Growing as much of my own food as possible/practical
Reducing my wants,(while not feeling too deprived)
I have LCD wide screens TVs, FTA Sat dishes, Wii,Computers,Dish washer Washing Machines etc...even a coffee machine and a pasta maker.
Developing a network for friendship,trading and support
Giving back to the community, so it can survive too.
It has been like that even before I knew about peak oil, so nothing much has changed.
I grew up with fruit trees and a veggie garden in the backyard.
We bottled our own passata,dried,froze and bottled our excess, made sausages, had chickens and pigeons and bees all in the suburbs of a large city.
My dad still lives there and I planted him a few more trees before I left.
Every house I've owned I planted fruit trees in the backyard.
I have owned my place for 10 years and planted the fruit trees set-up a computerised watering system attached to 3 water tanks and a pump and rented the house out and worked somewhere else.
I quit a high paying job to move to the country
My income has been reduced by 90% on my previous job, so I have gone from upper-middle class to technically living below the poverty line, but my lifestyle has improved, greater than the 90% loss in income.
Less work= less petrol+wear and tear on car+ less lunches+less money spent on stress relief+less clothes= (quite a saving)
I have access to fresh organic food,have a comfortable shelter,have enough money to pay the bills, have a comfortable life,good friends and plenty of spare time.
I regularly cook on a hibachi using twigs, I find on the ground.
I like it because its free and it tastes better than cooking with gas or electricity.
By product is potash and bio-char so its win win on every level.
This year I have put in solar panels,ordered my solar hot-water,(should be in in about a month) and bought a chest freezer (turning off 2 fridges,I run 4 including a wine fridge as I only shop once every 3 months).This should reduce my power bills to nearly zero.

Next year its grey water system,aquaponics and wicking beds.
Following year may be wind turbine,batteries,another water tank and maybe a chest fridge.(use virtually no power)
I still have more fat I can trim, if necessary,this is important as circumstances change and you need to be prepared.
I am trying to constantly improve my efficiencies and reduce my out goings.
Any cent saved is an improvement in my lifestyle, if the SHTF, I am ready,if it doesn't, I have some more cash and will buy some more wine or go on a holiday.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby JessiRhea » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 20:58:25

Thuja: When I say "living off the land", I do mean being 100% sustainable without the amenities of civilization. It's been done before, it can still be done. But I have no illusions that everyone can do this. I didn't really make myself clear on that before. When I think about how I should prepare for when things get bad, I feel that I should prepare for the absolute worst situation. Therefor, yes, I believe it is wise to learn to be completely self sufficient. Now, not everyone can go run to a remote area and live off the land. There's just too many people. But those who do, I feel, will have the best chance. And yes, I fully realize that the rural and urban are symbiotic. What I mean to suggest here is that, when chaos strikes and the world is no where near getting its shit together, the best course of action may be to live very primitively until things settle down. In the aftermath, however, when societies are just beginning to rebuild, of course there's no need to be a caveman any longer and cities and communities are bound to crop up, and going back to a nice agrarian lifestyle would be ideal.

Crusty: I'd love to do just as you suggest. But another reason I'm learning to do what I'm doing is because I don't have two pennies to rub together. A Bobcat and some other setups would be great, but as it is I just gotta make do with what I can build with my own two hands. Good advice for someone who has the means, though.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby Skinner » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 21:20:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lore', 'A') sailboat “get out of dodge” escape is a totally ignorant tactical plan.


Boy, I don't know about that. Mike Ruppert seems to be putting just such a plan into motion, and he is an absolute god in the peak oil world.

Sail out to sea, come back a few months later after the starvation, zombies and nuclear fallout have done their work...presto...utopia for Doomers.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lore', '
')For what it’s worth, the best security you can buy is to find yourself a small rural community that you can become a part of.


A small rural community after a nearby nuke strike or fallout from the bombs or melting down nuke power plants is most likely an empty small rural community. Looks at what just a little tsunami did to nice small rural communities in Japan a few weeks back. And that isn't the impending peak oil Doom, just regular ol' natural disaster Doom.

You sure won't survive the nuke strike or fallout or zombies in a configuration like this!
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby thuja » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 21:53:28

@glyn:

Indeed some cities will indeed become awful places to live...as will some rural areas. That is the case already throughout the world. Again being in a rural enclave is no panacea. Here is a list of most likely reasons rural living could become a nightmare...

1 You lose your job and there are few to no other jobs available
2 Your county funding gets cut and you lose road maintenance, fire, police and school services.
3 Due to high unemployment remaining businesses fold up including the grocery store and the gas station in the main small town.
4 you know have to drive very far to get gas or provisions and are getting low on money to pay for your land/house.
5 Any side business like farming or raising animals costs a lot for capital investments and it's getting more and more expensive to sell what you produce at the far away town.

OK..I could easily describe a lot of bad scenarios for those living in a city envirronment but many here want to gloss over the economic problems of living rurally as we likely go through cascading and punishing recesions. it's important to see things clearly and not just embrace a pollyana statement such as living rurally is the best prep for a post peak world.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby Ibon » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 22:00:34

I have a 10km drive up a 4WD road to get to my homestead here in Panama. There is a spot on the way up off of a steep embankment that the locals use as an informal garbage dump. There is no trash collection here. Anyway, today coming up the road I came upon a group of guys who where hauling up the embankment all sorts of metal trash; old car battery, rusty old electric stove, old saw blades, etc. etc. They had hiked up 4 km from where they parked their 2WD pickup that couldn't make it up the road and where going to haul all this trash back down the road on foot. I asked them what they sold the scrap for. They told me 6 cents a pound. This was a about 8 guys with maybe 800 pounds of trash. They might earn $50-60 divided by 8 totaling maybe $8 per person for an extremely laborious effort. And recycling the trash of our modern civilization. That was a real scene on that jungle road. Kind of a post peak oil scene for sure. I couldn't just drive on and ended up letting them load the whole heap of scrap in the back of my pick up and they piled in afterwards. I took them back the 4km to their truck. They wanted to pay me something at least for the diesel I burned getting them back to their truck with their scrap iron but I told them I was happy to see them haul away the trash.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby Shaved Monkey » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 22:22:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('thuja', '@')glyn:
OK..I could easily describe a lot of bad scenarios for those living in a city envirronment but many here want to gloss over the economic problems of living rurally as we likely go through cascading and punishing recesions. it's important to see things clearly and not just embrace a pollyana statement such as living rurally is the best prep for a post peak world.

You need water,food and shelter
More land less people means those 3 should be easier to achieve rurally.
Security is the next thing
An isolated close community should make that possible too.

When its choice between Omega Man or Darling Buds of May I choose the Buds :)
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby Newfie » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 22:47:57

Out of curiosity...how many folks here live in a center city location, in a city of 1 million or more?
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby Skinner » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 22:58:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Newfie', 'O')ut of curiosity...how many folks here live in a center city location, in a city of 1 million or more?


Not me. But want to bet that many do? Doom as intellectual distraction online is probably much more common than posters who can actually make it through even a week without their regular paycheck.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby AusJake » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 23:08:22

I live 12 miles from my city's CBD which is a population of 4.5 million
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby thuja » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 23:10:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Shaved Monkey', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('thuja', '@')glyn:
OK..I could easily describe a lot of bad scenarios for those living in a city envirronment but many here want to gloss over the economic problems of living rurally as we likely go through cascading and punishing recesions. it's important to see things clearly and not just embrace a pollyana statement such as living rurally is the best prep for a post peak world.

You need water,food and shelter
More land less people means those 3 should be easier to achieve rurally.
Security is the next thing
An isolated close community should make that possible too.

When its choice between Omega Man or Darling Buds of May I choose the Buds :)


You need water, food and shelter...and a regular income to make sure you keep those things. That's harder to do in a rural setting. Take away social security checks, federal and state government grants to rural counties...and you will see a more realistic picture of the rural future. That is one of severe unemployment, foreclosurre and poverty. Wait that's already happening rurally.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby Shaved Monkey » Sat 02 Apr 2011, 23:45:10

I own the house,have 3 water tanks collecting water of my roof can access the water through gravity if power goes.
I can cook and build and fix things,I have a very good knowledge of permaculture, I have heaps of tools, I have a veggie garden,heaps of seeds, a worm farm and food forest and access to more through the community garden.
There are kangaroos in the paddock next door,hares down the road and fish in the sea (10 minutes walk) if I want meat.
I cook on my hibachi from twigs on the ground.
The main reason I need money is to pay the government their rates.(its my biggest yearly expense)
If the SHTF big time I wont need to pay the rates or the power bill or the registration or the insurance and there wont be shops so I wont need as much money as I do now or a job.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby mos6507 » Sun 03 Apr 2011, 00:12:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('thuja', '
')You need water, food and shelter...and a regular income to make sure you keep those things. That's harder to do in a rural setting. Take away social security checks, federal and state government grants to rural counties...and you will see a more realistic picture of the rural future. That is one of severe unemployment, foreclosurre and poverty. Wait that's already happening rurally.


The people who have it made are those who keep their jobs and maintain a bugout in the country. The trick is knowing when things are bad enough to actually bugout for good. I don't particularly like going this route because you can't be a stake-holder in the bugout area if you aren't a fulltime resident. People are going to see you as the opportunist that you are if you mosey into town only after TSHTF. But in the end, not many would walk away from established careers willingly.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby Skinner » Sun 03 Apr 2011, 08:49:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '
')The people who have it made are those who keep their jobs and maintain a bugout in the country. The trick is knowing when things are bad enough to actually bugout for good.


Ruppert says the time is now. But I don't seem to be able to find streams of cars on the road fleeing for the countryside just yet. Maybe he has jumped the gun?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '
')I don't particularly like going this route because you can't be a stake-holder in the bugout area if you aren't a fulltime resident. People are going to see you as the opportunist that you are if you mosey into town only after TSHTF. But in the end, not many would walk away from established careers willingly.


This works as a great scenario if you believe in "Doomer as hypocrite" but I think those who are already tilling the land outside of any possible fallout zone or nuke strike area are better off than the "we'll flee BAU and go camping when the time is right" gang.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby davep » Sun 03 Apr 2011, 09:13:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', 'T')he people who have it made are those who keep their jobs and maintain a bugout in the country. The trick is knowing when things are bad enough to actually bugout for good. I don't particularly like going this route because you can't be a stake-holder in the bugout area if you aren't a fulltime resident. People are going to see you as the opportunist that you are if you mosey into town only after TSHTF. But in the end, not many would walk away from established careers willingly.


Or you could do what I did. I bought my doomstead with the profit from my suburban house near London. When money got tight I ended up getting a long-term freelance job about 300 miles away and commuting home every weekend to visit my family.

It's not ideal as I don't like being away from my family, but I can pay for a lot of work on what was a delapidated rural farmhouse. If and when TSHTF I can just stay at the doomstead.
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby mos6507 » Sun 03 Apr 2011, 09:44:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Skinner', '
')This works as a great scenario if you believe in "Doomer as hypocrite"


Don't be so judgmental. There's a reason most doomers I've heard about doing the doomstead thing are retirement age or childless or trustifarians and either had a sizable nestegg in order to pull what is essentially a no-complications early-retirement, or never had much money or career to lose in the first place by bugging out.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Skinner', '
')...outside of any possible fallout zone or nuke strike area


So you're farming on Mars?
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Re: Is a Post Peak Oil Lifestyle do-able for Doomers?

Unread postby mos6507 » Sun 03 Apr 2011, 09:52:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('davep', '
')Or you could do what I did. I bought my doomstead with the profit from my suburban house near London.


I've wanted to do that for a few years now. The only catch is the suburban house belongs to my mom and dad and they want my daughter to grow up in this "good school system" rather than the boonies, and the threat of TEOTWAWKI isn't enough to make them budge. But with the money from this house I could have built a grade-A off-grid family compound with no mortgage and probably barely even have to work until TSHTF. That's an opportunity doomers can only dream of having, but unfortunately it has to pass through the family denial-filter. If nothing I (or now my sister) can say to convince them that's the thing to do, then nothing will convince them. So I've got to hope we have enough time left for my daughter to grow up and me to slowly build some chicken-sh*t house up north one straw-bale at a time.
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