FL2AK: The Plan

This will be the Cliff Notes version of our Plan. and act as a Table of Contents for each segment of our Adventure. As it evolves, I will update links here.

  1. June 2020 Leave Jensen Beach
  2. Drive 5000 miles
  3. Rent/squat/cohabitate in Wasilla with our Friends, MammaK and Turtle. They offered, and we appreciate it! We will stay there for about a year, as we get our lives re established, and adjust to the new, well, everything.
  4. Liz will continue her current job, telecommuting. She (mostly) enjoys the work (but it IS work), and many of her coworkers have become close friends of ours. Continuing her employment means we keep in daily contact with dear friends, a bonus. Add in she is GOOD at what she does and takes great pride in her work, and that gives her a sense of satisfaction. I’d keep my job if I cou…no, just kidding…no way. 🙂
  5. I will start cutting firewood. I would like to have our firewood ready before I do anything else. And LOTS of it. Liz gets cold here in July. I expect her to learn to love a wood stove. I will find a paying job doing something, I’m somewhat handy, I’m told.
  6. As we acclimate, we plan on looking for some land.
    Land Search Criteria:
    * No less than 2 acres, but 5 or so would be better. Close to, if not touching state land.
    * Some form of water running thru or bordering it.
    * A four season road.
    * Within 30 minutes of Three Bears (a grocery store) in Wasilla. This is close enough to our landing address without giving too much up. (OpSec vs Blogging….always a tough choice) and keeps us close to our friends.
    * North and/or West of Wasilla
    * Not lowlands, or at least not all of it.
    * Less than $20,000, unless it offers some SERIOUS amenities we cant find ever again.
  7. Plant a garden
  8. Hunt. Small game for the first year, as we won’t be “residents” for quite a while…like 18 or so months if I understand it correctly, due to our June arrival. Non resident licenses are pricey…and in all honesty, I won’t have a damned clue about anything other than shooting squirrels, rabbit, and grouse – all things I’ve done many many times. Moose, bear, caribou…there is quite a list..wolves, wolverines, bobcat, coyote…buffalo, muskox…we could be here a while…sheep, can’t forget them (for the Tundra Talk guys)
    …you get my point. a LOT to learn about Alaskan big game hunting..pretty sure that is part of the reason for the time it takes to be considered a resident.
  9. Fish. Oddly enough, Salmon are far from my first thought when I start getting excited about Alaska fishing. Halibut, burbot(!), and pike are what tickle my fancy first.
  10. Forage. Yeah, walk around in the woods and pick up food. Free, natural, healthy, unprocessed food. Sounds horrible….in fact if I heard “free, natural, healthy, unprocessed”, I would think “KALE! RUN!”

Fiddleheads are among the dozen or so wild edible plants found in Alaska. There over a dozen wild berry varieties. And you can find over a dozen edible wild mushroom varieties (worth eating). I am well versed in finding and preparing many of the the Alaskan foragables, and we will easily incorporate them into our diet. I also look forward to learning about those unfamiliar to me, and then adding them to our diet too.

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Simply put, there is a LOT to do, to learn, and, dammit…, to enjoy! We are leaving Florida – the whole damned state is a tourist trap in one way or another. Florida is a FUN place to live…

….but, we believe, so is Alaska. Only bigger. And different. And new.

And we want to enjoy it.

Hope you continue following us
Gonna be an interesting adventure…

Peace,
db

Countdown Journal: -357

World SitRep:
It’s June 9th, 2020. Covid is still adversely affecting us, with about half of the locals still wearing masks, and half of those still look at us without masks as though we were criminals. Lovely.

Labors of My Fruits:
Mangoes are coming in nicely in our old, majestic tree. Haden is the variety, I believe….but mine are larger than the typical Hadens….either way, they are one of the select few items I REALLY want to bring with us. I plan on dehydrating quite a bit of it, as well as canning some. We all love mango salsa, and I’m fairly certain I will no longer be growing them after the move. A Florida item that I will truly miss…so I’m bringing what I am able to harvest…

Pre-squirrel, unripe mangoes

…except the squirrels are taste-testing as many of the unripe fruits as they can manage. Just a bite, enough to realize its isn’t tasty yet…and also just enough to start the fruit to rot, wasting it.

So ole’ db breaks out his Gamo Big Cat and thin the herd, and save the mangoes for my family’s consumption. Nothing is wasted, I was raised in West Virginia – we eat squirrel. My family may or may not realize what they have eaten…but I ate it too, so there is that…

Long Haul:
Still looking for an enclosed trailer. A family friend has one that will work, but it is smaller than we’d like, and while the price is very good, I have to apss on it, even though I could probably flip it for a profit…its a gift AND a curse.

While we could swing it if we HAD to, a new trailer isn’t in the budget, and honestly, would only be an inconvienance for the most part, as we have no place to park it. With the wife and I, along with 2 daughters, we have 4 cars. Add in two boyfriends, one that lives with us, there are 6 cars in our yard on a very frequent basis – so, no room. Yet!

It would be nice to have the trailer now so we could start packing some of the things we won’t be needing til we move – Lots of tools, some outdoor toys for camping and such, and the stockpile of empty feed sacks I’m collecting…feed sacks?

Plan? No Plan!:
So…our plan…I suppose I should post on that. Not just for future entertainment value (“WTF were we THINKING?”), but to somehow legitimize it. Naming something gives it power…
Update: Here is The Plan.

In the Bag:
Why collect feed sacks? Short version: To eliminate having a mortgage payment. We plan on building a small circular home from earthbags – feedsacks filled with dirt, tamped firmly into place, then plastered.

Now you KNOW we are crazy, right? Not just moving ourselves from Florida to Alaska, but moving there to live in a hobbit home made from DIRT?

I suppose I should add in that it will likely be a “dry cabin” – no running water. Yup. We are currently mulling over the unspoken question, “Outhouse or bucket?”

We will have electricity though…of a sort. And firewood for heat. Considering a rocket mass heater, yet another one of my crazy ideas.

But yeah, a house made of dirt. And no running water. Still want to come visit? 🙂

Hope you continue following us
Gonna be an intersting adventure…

Peace,
db