WE HOMESTEADED WITHOUT CAPITAL
Ruralist shares secrets to establishing a homestead on low finances, including personal account.
by JIM HILBERER
RELATED CONTENT
You can make fresh, homemade butter in just a few easy steps with this easy butter recipe....
Give your log (or any other) Home a House Log! July/August 1981 You house-log cover that's both att...
Ever wonder what the world would look like without people? It turns out there’s a lot we can learn ...
If you like folk music and traditional hand crafts such as soap making, Mountain View, Ark., is the...
yes, virginia, there is free lunch? it's called the solar greenhouse! November/December 1975 by Jam...
MOTHER NO. 22 featured, among other things, an
article by Lee Winchester titled, "Homesteading Capital is
Where You Find It". Jan and Jim Hilberer, however with
practically no money at all had already successfully left
the Big City behind them long before they read Lee's
thoughts! Here's a report Jim sent us in March of
1974.
I would like to point out that homesteading can be done
with little money, lots of hard work, and much pleasure. My
wife, Jan, and I left Rochester, New York in the spring of
1972 with $250 and our VW. Less than a year later, we were
settling into a cabin of our own on 51/2 acres of Virginia
land.
We left the city with the idea of locating inexpensive land
in West Virginia. After looking that state over and
shelling out a sizable portion of our small bankroll on VW
repairs, though, we gravitated to the northern border of
Virginia where jobs were more plentiful. Our plans at that
time were to camp out for the summer, work, and save every
penny we could toward our homestead. We weren't exactly
sure right then that we'd be able to make the idea work the
way we wanted because, although I've camped since I was a
child, Jan had never—until then—camped out in
her life.
We pulled into an attractive little campground with a
brand-new 9 X 9 tent, a Coleman stove, some lanterns, and
$70.00 left in our pockets. We liked what we saw. The
grounds had a 15-acre lake, showers, toilets, washer, and
dryer . . . not a bad home for the summer. So we chatted
with the owners and they agreed to let us stay for the
whole season for the lump sum of $100 . . . half down and
the other half due the following month.
That left us with only $20.00 to live on, so we immediately
set up camp and went looking for work. I took a job that
paid $100 a week—not much, but a good
start—that same day and Jan, a teacher, found
employment as an art instructor shortly afterwards.
Page: 1 |
2 |
3 |
Next >>