praise the lord we have running water here in Geelong Victoria Australia, never saw snow until I was 27 as for ice that's something the barman puts in your drink love your vid and your happy personality.
I just started working for a Fairbanks company remotely today and heard about dry cabins for the first time. Thank for providing such an informative video. The rabbits are adorable.
What a charming, fun teacher- very engaging, interesting and informative- yes, the “lower 48 “ could learn quite a blot from exploring this lifestyle. Thanks for being so good to your animals and sharing your fascinating way of life. a great video- very well done.👍 As a lifelong Texan, you’ve got my respect. ( it’s almost Halloween, but warm -in the 80s here - seeing snow is a big event that might happen once every other year-lol.)🤠
I hope you can buy more 5 gal jugs soon. The price sure is right. I don't have water, bc of broken pipes. No money to fix right now. I live in the eastern USA.
@@bigsprucerabbitry6238 What I think is so cool is that you have water trucks to get water from very cheap. There's nothing like that here. I do get my water from my kind neighbor that I've known most of my life. Great video. MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL
@@judya.shroads8245 Merry Christmas to you too! Water trucks are awesome if you have a big tank 900 gal or more tank. We don't so never use the service - I find a 5-10 gallons of water is all we normally go through in a week so getting a big tank would just be a waste.
Thanks for the video. We have a dry cabin in Minnesota, mainly because it would cost too much to install a septic disposal system. We get water for washing from the lake in front of the cabin. In the winter we have to auger through as much as 3 feet of ice to get down to water. We get drinking water from a spring a few miles away. We use gallon jugs to carry our spring water because bringing it back involves loading it into and out of the boat. 1 gallon jugs are just easier to lift out of the boat and our water trips don't involve a long walk except in the winter when we drag a sled. We got rid of the outhouse a few years ago and were able to use an electric incinerating toilet after the cabin got connected to the electric grid.
Thanks for sharing. That is awesome! I actually prefer outhouse and composting systems to the incinerations toilet system. Too much electric and who doesn't love have a frozen posterior in the middle of winter ;-D.
Good video my home is basically a dry home I used to use a company bring water to my home. I was paying $540 a year just for service charges and only drawing $11 a year in water. So I went to bulk water and I use only two litres a day .Now I spend about 50 bucks a year. And I've learned do use water more wisely thanks again for the video.
Im in the lower 48 and live in a dry cabin :) only difference between what youre doing and me is i have a private well. Waternis pumped up to a cistern, then hauled in by hand every day. We are a family of 6 and go through about 15 gallons a day
That is awesome :D! I believe you on that water use. We have a catchment system in the summer when the garden are in and we can use our laundry machine and sun shower (really should make a video about those one of these days) and the water use goes up to a few hundred gallons per month of roof water, but this time of year my husband, I and all the bunnies and chickens go through about 10-15 gallons a month. Thanks for stopping by!
We are currently living in a "dry" house due to our pipes being frozen and unreachable. I have to complain! Not enough water to wash my hair and flushing toilets? Well, we get snow from outside, melt it and pour it into the toilets. This is not fun!! I don't know how everyone does it. I feel yucky and my hair -- more than awful. Thanks for listening. Blessings to everyone!!
I am sorry to hear that. If you are in Fairbanks, there are showers at the University and many gyms around town. Good luck, spring is a few monthes off so hopefully things will start to look up for you.
Glad I could help. If you have other questions, feel free to ask. Alaska has the best and the worst people in the world and can a hard place to move if you don't have family or other connections to shield you from the jerks that find their way to the end of the road. Good luck with your move :D
I was raised in Eastern Oregon without running water or electricity because we were poor. My husband and I bought bare land in north central Idaho fall 2019 and hauled all of our water that first year. Fortunately, we had friends that let us shower and do laundry. We haven't got our house built yet, but we do have water into the 5th wheel (that's Heaven), but no septic yet, so trips to the outhouse are still necessary. We also have a cabin in Eastern Oregon that has a water setup much like the one in your cabin. Lived at Galena, AK for a year in the 70's and we had to haul our drinking water there.
Thanks for sharing. If it works it works. I didn't live in a dry cabin until college, but grew up somewhere warmer with a rather iffy septic system so the transition wasn't too bad.
@@bigsprucerabbitry6238 It cracks me up that when I was growing up emptying the "slop" jar was done after we had used it during the night rather than venture to the outhouse in the dark...
That is a great idea. We get lots of rain so roof water is also a great alternterative for laundry. As it turns out my work place has a laundromat so most of the time just use that.
The purchased water for drinking and cooking only. Everything else (including animal water) is melted snow, a "brick" of ice from the lake, or lake water.
Does anybody have any idea why a rabbit's neck head is tilted and crooked and behind one of the ears looks like it has got like a little slice but I believe that maybe one of my neighbors did something because they got mad of me complaining to the police about their cats killing my chickens
I thought this I thougthird world countries only goes to show the everyplace could use in chair day I'm thankful for when I've got. I'm had hard times as well prayer😇
@@bonnieburton9985 Dry cabins on permafrost actually make a lot of sense. It might not look unadvanced, but the alterative is a constant battle with frozen pipes and a cost of living 4-5 times as high.
I don't know why you would use water you pay for to give your animals, with all the snow you can use snow for washing dishes, showering, cleaning and etc.
We don't have a water tank at the house so no water deliveries. Carrying a 5 gallon jug in the car is easy and costs 10 cents to fill. Water wagon is next to where we work so it is easier than melting snow so it is purely laziness. You bring up a good point and we do melt snow if we forgot the jug.
praise the lord we have running water here in Geelong Victoria Australia, never saw snow until I was 27 as for ice that's something the barman puts in your drink love your vid and your happy personality.
Thanks. Up here frozen pipes and the constant hassle they create make dry cabin living just plain easier. It was snowing the day I was born :-D
I just started working for a Fairbanks company remotely today and heard about dry cabins for the first time. Thank for providing such an informative video. The rabbits are adorable.
What a charming, fun teacher- very engaging, interesting and informative- yes, the “lower 48 “ could learn quite a blot from exploring this lifestyle. Thanks for being so good to your animals and sharing your fascinating way of life. a great video- very well done.👍 As a lifelong Texan, you’ve got my respect. ( it’s almost Halloween, but warm -in the 80s here - seeing snow is a big event that might happen once every other year-lol.)🤠
Cute informative video! Waters cheaper there than here for 5 gallons drinking water!
I hope you can buy more 5 gal jugs soon. The price sure is right.
I don't have water, bc of broken pipes. No money to fix right now. I live in the eastern USA.
Good luck to you - broken pipes are terrible! We have plenty of jugs, but defiantly like the 5 gallon ones more than the 7 :D
@@bigsprucerabbitry6238 What I think is so cool is that you have water trucks to get water from very cheap.
There's nothing like that here. I do get my water from my kind neighbor that I've known most of my life.
Great video.
MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL
@@judya.shroads8245 Merry Christmas to you too! Water trucks are awesome if you have a big tank 900 gal or more tank. We don't so never use the service - I find a 5-10 gallons of water is all we normally go through in a week so getting a big tank would just be a waste.
Cool Water station and we used to melt water when we were at the cabin. Also cool video.
Thanks for the video. We have a dry cabin in Minnesota, mainly because it would cost too much to install a septic disposal system. We get water for washing from the lake in front of the cabin. In the winter we have to auger through as much as 3 feet of ice to get down to water. We get drinking water from a spring a few miles away. We use gallon jugs to carry our spring water because bringing it back involves loading it into and out of the boat. 1 gallon jugs are just easier to lift out of the boat and our water trips don't involve a long walk except in the winter when we drag a sled. We got rid of the outhouse a few years ago and were able to use an electric incinerating toilet after the cabin got connected to the electric grid.
Thanks for sharing. That is awesome! I actually prefer outhouse and composting systems to the incinerations toilet system. Too much electric and who doesn't love have a frozen posterior in the middle of winter ;-D.
Good video my home is basically a dry home I used to use a company bring water to my home. I was paying $540 a year just for service charges and only drawing $11 a year in water. So I went to bulk water and I use only two litres a day .Now I spend about 50 bucks a year. And I've learned do use water more wisely thanks again for the video.
Thanks for dropping by! You learn how to conserve water when you need to carry it for sure!
Im in the lower 48 and live in a dry cabin :) only difference between what youre doing and me is i have a private well. Waternis pumped up to a cistern, then hauled in by hand every day. We are a family of 6 and go through about 15 gallons a day
That is awesome :D! I believe you on that water use. We have a catchment system in the summer when the garden are in and we can use our laundry machine and sun shower (really should make a video about those one of these days) and the water use goes up to a few hundred gallons per month of roof water, but this time of year my husband, I and all the bunnies and chickens go through about 10-15 gallons a month. Thanks for stopping by!
We are currently living in a "dry" house due to our pipes being frozen and unreachable. I have to complain! Not enough water to wash my hair and flushing toilets? Well, we get snow from outside, melt it and pour it into the toilets. This is not fun!! I don't know how everyone does it. I feel yucky and my hair -- more than awful. Thanks for listening. Blessings to everyone!!
I am sorry to hear that. If you are in Fairbanks, there are showers at the University and many gyms around town. Good luck, spring is a few monthes off so hopefully things will start to look up for you.
Love your energy. Thanks for sharing how to manage water in a dry cabin. I'm housesitting for my friend in Fairbanks and your video was very helpful!
Thanks! Glad I could help and hope you are enjoying yourself while in Fairbanks :D
Thanks for sharing, very interesting
I just moved to alaska and trying to get situated and boy has your videos helped me see what life might be like and how to handle some thing lol...
Glad I could help. If you have other questions, feel free to ask. Alaska has the best and the worst people in the world and can a hard place to move if you don't have family or other connections to shield you from the jerks that find their way to the end of the road. Good luck with your move :D
@@bigsprucerabbitry6238 Thank you, been looking for a place, I have never lived in a dry cabin but here it seems like a real possibility lol
I was raised in Eastern Oregon without running water or electricity because we were poor. My husband and I bought bare land in north central Idaho fall 2019 and hauled all of our water that first year. Fortunately, we had friends that let us shower and do laundry. We haven't got our house built yet, but we do have water into the 5th wheel (that's Heaven), but no septic yet, so trips to the outhouse are still necessary. We also have a cabin in Eastern Oregon that has a water setup much like the one in your cabin. Lived at Galena, AK for a year in the 70's and we had to haul our drinking water there.
Thanks for sharing. If it works it works. I didn't live in a dry cabin until college, but grew up somewhere warmer with a rather iffy septic system so the transition wasn't too bad.
@@bigsprucerabbitry6238 It cracks me up that when I was growing up emptying the "slop" jar was done after we had used it during the night rather than venture to the outhouse in the dark...
It sounds like bathing would be the toughest adjustment to make.
Laundry is actually the hardest part.
You have to deal with a lot different situations than we do but maybe I can adapt a few of your ideas to my situation.
Great to hear :-D. Good luck!
You haven’t posted any new videos for at least two years. I hope everything’s fine with you and your family.
Boil the water in the slop bucket and reuse it to wash yourself or your laundry.
That is a great idea. We get lots of rain so roof water is also a great alternterative for laundry. As it turns out my work place has a laundromat so most of the time just use that.
The purchased water for drinking and cooking only. Everything else (including animal water) is melted snow, a "brick" of ice from the lake, or lake water.
That is a good way of doing it. Thanks for sharing.
Where you been
Does anybody have any idea why a rabbit's neck head is tilted and crooked and behind one of the ears looks like it has got like a little slice but I believe that maybe one of my neighbors did something because they got mad of me complaining to the police about their cats killing my chickens
I thought this I thougthird world countries only goes to show the everyplace could use in chair day I'm thankful for when I've got. I'm had hard times as well prayer😇
You would think 2020 everything would be advance
@@bonnieburton9985 Dry cabins on permafrost actually make a lot of sense. It might not look unadvanced, but the alterative is a constant battle with frozen pipes and a cost of living 4-5 times as high.
@@bonnieburton9985 I think you may be surprised how many even in the lower 48 that live this way !
I don't know why you would use water you pay for to give your animals, with all the snow you can use snow for washing dishes, showering, cleaning and etc.
We don't have a water tank at the house so no water deliveries. Carrying a 5 gallon jug in the car is easy and costs 10 cents to fill. Water wagon is next to where we work so it is easier than melting snow so it is purely laziness. You bring up a good point and we do melt snow if we forgot the jug.
I raise English Spots.
They are good bunnies, although ours are mostly mutts.