Prepping to Build a Homestead: 8 Forms of Capital

in homesteading •  7 years ago  (edited)

Two months until the big move!!!

As I was browsing around my feed a couple days ago, I came across a post that intrigued me. It was a post by @goldendawne, who is curating a weekly page dedicated to Prepping. I am not a dooms day prepper but I like to keep an open mind for many possibilities and I like reading about preparedness. When I commented on the post, I mentioned that I am just a couple months away from moving my family to an off the grid location to build a homestead, she was curious to see how we have been preparing for it.

This prompted me too really think about it and actually make a post out of my answers. Thank you for the motivation @Goldendawne!

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The bulk of our preparation for the move has been in growing and harvesting our Intelectual Capital. I am obsessed with learning all I can about creating a life of self reliance.

We live in a 500sqft apartment (roughly 46.5m2 for those of you not familiar with the imperial system) on the 4th floor, of an apartment building, without an elevator. We have no yard, though we've had access to a local community garden for a couple of years now. The garden has tought us a lot of things but we aren't there all the time and having a lack of accessible green spaces in this concrete jungle, makes it difficult to grow our experiential capital. We do as much as we can while raising our child... making kambucha, bread and tinctures are a just few examples of the experience we have been able to build. The expansion in this domain, I feel is very limited here.

I am however, a builder by trade, and I've taken workshops in cobb, strawbale and natural building. That should count towards experiential capital as well as intellectual, lets not forget the years of traveling and playing in nature... We're not your typical city dwellers!

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I talked about two different forms of capital. This is a new concept for me, though it is something I have practiced without knowing it. Below is an image that explains briefly, 8 forms of capital. I just wanted to show you this diagram as a side note because I found it very useful for visualizing a successful homestead.

8Cap_v2.pngAppleSeed Permaculture

Obviously each one of the capitals shown here can be interpreted as you see fit for your life.


I've told you about Intellectual and Experiential Capitals, let's take a look at the rest of them:

  • Spiritual Capital:

I try to meditate sometimes, which isn't very much, but it helps keep me focused and in the moment when I need it. I have great faith in humanity, and have always believed there are more good people on earth than bad ones (the bad ones stand out because of the shock factor). Some of the principles I live by... No stealing and no hurting.

  • Cultural Capital:

I love art, music and history. I think life is about having fun, sometimes people get too serious. Does it matter if the world is going to change? Please enjoy yourselves as much as you prepare for a good future. Passing on your culture and the respect of those around you will reflect on future generations.

  • Social Capital:

This is something that should always be nurtured and tended to, as people change we cannot expect all our relations and friends to walk the same path all our lives. We have started to weave a beautiful network of homesteaders, preppers and entrepreneurs in our area and many friends from the big city have made the move already while others are dreaming about it. We won't be alone!

  • Living Capital:

Well, for now we have the land. As we engage with the woodlands we are learning what is edible, what has resale value and what areas can be designated for potential high value agriculture. Once we are settled a little, we will start with raising chickens, but eventually, we would like fish and small game.

  • Material Capital:

We have the obvious firewood, and available lumber material, but this parcel is also full of clay and rocks which could be used for building structures. We intend to hold a workshop in June or July to build a "Natural Materials" outdoor kitchen with a live roof.

Lookout for the workshop to be announced soon on @SenorCoconut and on @s-h-e-p, the new platform that connects steemians in the world of travelers and homesteaders.

  • Financial Capital

  • We saved as we could, but with life events, our funds have become very low at the moment. It will be a challenge, but I do plan on going to work from time to time to keep my shackles on which for now provide us with very good health insurance, and cash of course! We are also planning to bring in income through the homestead, under different forms, real estate rentals and events*

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I don't know if I quite get the full sense of how big of a project this really is. As we approach the time when we do move onto our piece of property, the reality is setting in. June 1st is the date that we give up our apartment in New York City to move to the forest. This is a raw piece of land, there is absolutely nothing in regards to utilities. We do have a couple RVs on the property and we built a shed and a playground for the little one.

Water is our first issue. So the first thing will be doing is building rainwater catchment systems utilizing the roof of the shed, digging small retaining ponds where we can, installing a cistern and pumping water from our river front. This water will be used for everything but drinking until we figure out exactly how to filter it properly. We are satisfied filling up a few 5-gallon jugs just for drinking every time we go in town. And for our first winter, we plan on getting ourselves a big enough trailer that would be suitable to have a wood-burning stove. We're thinking of a park model RV type of dwelling.

Having been a traveler I have seen many of different trucks and even a small travel trailer with wood-burning stoves, I know it is possible. I'm sure it may seem uncommon and dangerous to many of you, but I assure you it works very well. We just have to be aware and ready.

Until next time, and thank you for giving me the motivation to document our progress!!!

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Hey Coconut!

You beat me to posting about the Forms of Capital, HEHE. I was thinking about it two days ago.

Another quality post from you, and enjoyable to read. Good to know what you are up to.

I have been reading this book
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For a while and it talks about the various forms of Capital.

I consider this book to be a Financial Prepper's Guide. Sounds like you are already ahead of the curve here.

Heehee thanks you @binaryflat. Please write a post about it, I'm not in the race...lol! I'd love to read more about it.

Thanks for the book suggestion, I'll look into it.

Oh no... not another book I have to get... my financial capital is not doing so well as it is.. aaah.. seriously though thanks!

Thank you for this post! It really gives me a look at what you want to accomplish and why.

Cobb building? Now that is an art of construction.

I agree for the first winter to have a self-contained RV style for living would be appropriate too.

Thank you so much! Yea I really love cobb buildings. Though for the north east climate, it's not really adequate, it has great thermal mass but it's not suposed to be the best for insulation... I guess it could be fine to live in but not for a weekend home, it would take too long to get warm inside in the winter!

We will however have a couple little cottages and toilet rooms made of cobb and wattle and daube.

Thanks again for giving me the idea of writing this post. I learned a lot about our plan!

I think sometimes planning it out and actually putting it all in black and white can help you see and envision more. Glad I could help!

Yes it really helped! I've written down our plan before but never with so much thought. Thanks

Congrats on the upcoming move, it must be exciting. A lot of hard work, but the pay of is huge :)

Haha thanks @jackdub. I keep telling people at work I'm moving to the stick to work harder than I've been with them!

Exciting but a little scary too.... it's a new chapter in our lives!

I love this article. I never thought about having capital that way, so I went through the checklist and thought, yeah, awesome, I can definately say we have all those kinds of capital and have definately used them in my life, and on our small acreage. I'd love to think we had the skills if it came to the crunch. YOu know, i feel lucky my parents have passed these on to me too - resourcefulness, spirituality, intellect - I feel truly blessed. I would definatley advise more of the meditation. Dad's using that capital now in hospital getting chemo - it's really helping him through - he acknowledged how grateful he was that he 'banked' that over the years - you never know what's around the corner.

These different forms of capital have given me a new outlook on life, I will look deeper into it for sure.

I'm happy meditation is helping your dad, and that you've been passed on a lot of good skills. I will take your advise and meditate more often. I have wanted to. I have access to a sweatlodge run by by an elder every week near the property, I've gone once and that felt like it's own kind of group meditation/ therapy. I like it a lot.

Thanks for you comment @riverflows!

❤ You know that the more you meditate amd focus on breath, the more it becomes your brains default response in stressful situations? Its neuroscience too.

The sweatlodge sounds awesome! We have always wanted to make an outdoor woodfired sauna. They have them in Bali and i love them!

I did not knowbit was a neuroscience thing! I know that in general the more you do something the more it becomes secon nature.

I would love to see a photo of the Balinese woodfire sauna!

You seem to be further ahead in your planning than most I have encountered. I hope to make a workshop or two you put on.

I live in an 18' camper and built a woodstove out of a medical autoclave I scavenged. It works great and I have used it for two winters now.

Just make sure to put heat shields around it where it is close to walls and on the ceiling above it. The ceiling is the most important, as they are low and campers/trailers/RVs paneling is very flammable.

I hope everything works out as planned for you, my friend.

Oh I'd like to see that autoclave tunred into a wood stove, it must be very efficient!

Thank you for the tips on not burning down the rv. And thanks, I didn't thonk we had much of a plan until I started writing out the post. It made me think about a lot you know.

Now puting that plan into action is a differnet story, but we'll make it happen somehow... in the end it always works out!

You can also hand drive wells for your crops bear in mind you can only pull water up with a typical hand pump 23 feet at max.
Also when you build your forever house put a twelve volt panel in too. Like an RV has. You can run high efficiency led lighting off 12v and recharge batteries with solar pannels. Other than Led lighting not many appliances run well on 12v.

Thanksbthese are good ideas. I thought I would build a hybrid type home, wired for both voltages.

I think we can find an efficient pump that runs on gas or solar?

Congrats on getting ready to make your homestead come true. I have a small piece of heaven on a 10 acre homestead and I could not imagine anything that would get me back to living in the concrete jungle. It is a nice commute to work and back every day but totally worth it.

Oh that is so great to hear. A small piece of heaven on a 10 acre homestead!!! Awesome. Following you... I have to check it out.

Thank you, the dream is long one coming!

I spent my early life (60 years ago, yikes!) on the kind of homestead you're probably wanting to create. If you really are preserving ALL of these kinds of capital, you just might be happy there. Spiritual capital is a lot easier to acquire when you are in the quiet of the country. You have to tune into the universe if your cellphone is out of range and there's no cable. What this does for you is you get out of your own way. When you're making a livelihood directly off the land, there's a lot you have to just wait for. You might need a similarly in-tune neighbor just to show up at the right moment. I've had that happen many times. Or maybe it's like the weather systems listen to you. I had a neighbor who absolutely every year managed to plant his crops (we lived in a part of the world where there's too much rain to irrigate and not enough to rely on) just before a downpour. You get that ability to staying spiritually in tune.

Fortunately, I have many friends who practice various forms of connectivity with the universe... so it's around me, now it's just a matter of jumping into it for me!

Thank you for your wisdom, happiness is my main goal!

Wow 60 years ago, you must have so many stories to yell, I would love to sit and listen one day! The music must have been something amazing in those days!

Thanks for your comment, following you now.

What a journey you are embarking on, @senorcocounut! It sounds super adventurous. I love how you've broken down capital as more than just money. It's such a nice visualisation, not only to have a great homestead but also for any venture. Gets me thinking about the different kinds of capital I pack. I have a long way to go and lots of capital to build!

Thank you so much. I just found out about these different capitals myself, and it really made me think about disecting my own life to see what we do have. Very interesting stuff.

I am happy it makes you think about it too

Are you still going to be able to get on steemit after you move?

Lol, if I have the time, yes for sure. We're moving off grid, but we choose to be a couple levels down from the hard core 100% off the grid mountain people. We still have our phones with data!

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