Good job . I'm 6 years offgrid now . My cabin is on a slab 20x36,12x20 is the veranda. Well ,septic,solar,lpgas,woodstove. 4ft deepfreezer. I built a solar- power shed ,it has solar panels on top ,batteries and contols inside, genorater, wood shed ,tool shed,south side is salvaged picture windows for green house, starting plants and winter garden . Generator for well pump,pressure tank . I will change the pump out oneday to run off my solar . Someone gave me bad advise on that . I built the cabin myself , I'm very proud of it . Modern kitchen and bathroom, flush toilet . The veranda could be made into a room,but i don't need it . Nice for summer . Wish i could share a picture of it ,guess I'll have to do a youtube vidio one day .
This Spring I bought 16 acres of land in Northern New Mexico in the foothills of the Manzano Mountains, then I bought an old ( late1950's) small 14x40 (560 sq feet) "junk" mobile home from a mobile home park that the last tenant had trashed for $500 and then threw my buddy who has a 1 ton truck a tank full of diesel and a case of beer to move it for me. Then I gutted it back the studs pulled all the tin siding off squaring all curved ends u, put it on a 4 foot concrete pier foundation and used the tin to build a new pitched roof and I painted the roof with truck bed liner. I framed in the new windows, I used the 12"x18" Playhouse/Shed Windows because they are built just like a regular house window just smaller and in a tiny house/cabin you need wall space not windows, Then bought one of those cheapo chainsaw milling sets from Amazon to mill my own siding out of Engelman pine on because that's what was available on the land and then I stained it with Navajo Red stain. I haven done anything with the inside yet but the plan is to to build a little bit bigger bedroom, and a smaller bathroom and kitchen, It's just me and my gf now, her daughter just went off to college in august and my 3 kids are grown and out of the house. Were going to live completely off grid also but our solar is going to be bigger, were not going to have a range/oven, we have one of those 9 function countertop ovens and since the step-daughter has left we haven't used the oven at all, between the air fryer/oven, microwave, crock pot and electric skillet we don't need it plus that saves space, were just going to build a couple live edge open shelves to store them with, there was already a well on the property that the people we bought the land from had just dug 3 years ago in order to move there permanantly but when Covid hit there's jobs and 401k's went bye bye. the inside is going to be spray foam insulation with drywall to save money, we bought all used cabinets, sinks, toilet and bathtub. The Cabinets we bought from a garage sale from a couple who had remodeled their kitchen, $50 for an 6 foot bottom and 5 uppers, so we have an extra one to put in the bathroom to used as a medicine cabinet/storage in the bathroom, the sinks, toilet and tub we bought from the local Habitat for Humanity ReStore and were just going to repaint everything to make them look better. I found and old pie safe/china hutch that I'm going to put simple legs on to get it up to counter height for a kitchen island/ eating bar. and the top we're going to use as a in the wall mounted entertainment center for our t.v. and some knick knacks and book shelf. After the house is done I'm going to mill some more wood and used the left over tin I have to build a chicken coop, I'm going to use rain collection system to water the chickens and the garden we are going to plant.
What a wonderful special place especially with all your personal craftsmanship! Very nice! Wishing you many years of enjoyment there. It shows we really don’t need the “MacMansions”. Just enough is content enough. I am in my 40th year in my cabin. You keep making little changes and modifications as you see fit and your life evolves. Great job!
It really is a blessing and a labor of love. I have felt compelled to get this up and running so that no matter what happens in the techno world, we have a long term place to live.
I want to be a Hermit so bad !!! I can't figure out where to build off grid with no permits ??? Watched hundreds of videos no one ever responds when I ask :-(
Nice place ..... I have a 20’ x 24’ cabin on an old farm. It’s not quite finished but it keeps me warm and dry when hunting. I do have electricity but no running water. I repurposed lumber and metal off an old barn on the property that was falling down....
Nice setup! Your cabin has the same floorplan as our full-time house. Our house (in Maine) is 16' X 24'. My only regret is our roof doesn't have as steep of a pitch as yours. Our loft is only 44" at the peak. I love your "yard". It would make a nice private airstrip. :)
Yeah, we lease the front yard to a local farmer. Your low roof is probably better on heating, although our loft in the winter can get smoking hot with the wood stove.
Thanks for the tour from the uk 🇬🇧 I could feel every nail being driven, screw being turned and wood being cut in that place. Building your own place is like having a fitted suit where you are the tailor. Epic!
Great set up. I noticed though you have mold in the shower may need some ventilation in there as mold can get out of hand and may cause illness. ( retired RN.. sorry can't help myself when I see preventative measures that can be used.) Cheers.😁
What is the wattage of your well pump? How deep is it? What kind of inverter are you using? I have 300ft deep well and 1HP pump and want to design a solar/battery powered backup system. My research tells me that my well pump's steady state current is 9A at 240V and the in-rush could be as high as 50Amp, so it may require 12Kw at start up.
The depth of the well is irrelevant. The head of water is what matters. A.c. well pump will require large inverter, more batteries and more solar panels. I have a solar well which is not ideal for heavy after dark or cloudy day water use, but is adequate.
No web page, but we do rent it on occasion through Airbnb when we are not there. Pictures. www.airbnb.com/rooms/653507419483643664?preview_for_ml=true&source_impression_id=p3_1666278165_Zb6kyU7FjSue2U88
I live off grid in an 8 by 20 tiny house love the setup the only thing I would do differently in which I did was food with my main concern with my tiny house and you have a tiny refrigerator I would and I understand your own solar but I would probably use a chest freezer and then have separate ways to turn around and freeze bottles of water and use them as your Refrigeration and the freezer would use probably less electricity is that little fridge you have and you get double the use for one electrical item cuz you can use the freezer the freeze up bottles of water that you can then use as Refrigeration and it will give you way more food storage
The fridge has a freezer in it and we do freeze bottles for extra cooling. Going to upgrade to a low wattage 7.2 refrigerator freezer that actually uses half the electric as this mini fridge.
I worked for a company that built highways, about 4 yrs. they sent Me, and another guy out to set out markers using GPS on farm land look about like this it was so peaceful there wasn't long heavy equipment started rolling in dozers, trachoes, dump trucks ect. hated to see it and so did the people living there but they had no choice they were forced to sell though they were paid well. now there is a 4-lane highway running right through it.
Depends on your latitude, but for central U.S., 30 degrees/ winter, 55 degrees spring and fall, and 80 degrees in summer will get you more than close enough.
Let me give you an idea so you have one less thing to worry about powering as much through solar. Look.inti Geo-thermal... which is laying either 100 ft straight PVC pipe in to the ground with screens on both ends of pipe one end sticking out if the ground with some sort of housing over outside pipe (or get make the outside end curl towards the ground still yet with fan) with a computer fan powered by solar power or lay straight 100 ft 4.5 ft underground with a series of bends in a smaller square hole. I'd say start with a 3-4 inch diameter pipe and reduce it down to a smaller diameter pipe going into the cabin. With outside pipe as same as described earlier, doing something to keep rain out of pipe, both ends with screens. I think you have to have a two pipe system though. One to let cool air in from the ground and one to let warm air out. But the pc fan is just forcing air into pipe. And doing this vs an actual A/C UNOT Wlwould be much cheaper than a window unit. It's what I plan to do with my cabin...
Great set-up when you want to get away from it all. Adjustable solar frame is a neat concept. Have you used a metal detector around the old homestead yet, might find some valuables?
I like the solar panel set up with the three different adjustments for the time of year. How did you determine the different angles? You just worked it out by observation or was there a formula you used?
No, it's a second home. We spend about 40 days a year there. The area is great hunting and salt water fishing. There are also lots of historical sites. If you're a city person then it wouldn't be for them.
@@lbrown6859 it is brackish. We have white perch, stripped bass, red fish, cat fish and now even the snakeheads have showed up, and blue crabs later in the summer.
@@offgridwithalexanderthegre5157 wow. Those blue crab are some fine eatn'!! I like most any kind of fish if I am being honest, but I tell you what there's something kinda special about mullet when they are fresh, hard to beat. And they really like that brackish water, here in Florida anyway. Y'all have a beautiful place btw!
hey buddy just asking what size cabin is at I mean it looks good and everything I'm just trying to figure out what size it is it looks like the perfect size let me know please thank you
This is so awesome! I think the one major downside for me would be the lack of air conditioning. I could even survive the sweating all day, it's just that I can NOT sleep when it's hot. I don't know where you are located, but how is it in the summer?
I added a Midea window unit, which can run wide open all day but would need a generator at night. I just turn it off and use fans after dark and if I leave the windows closed it won't warm up much past 70 even on the hottest days.
I put one in, myself, about 6 month ago. No more dumping the compost toilet, which I did for 5 years. Doing the septic myself, cost me about 2700 in materials and I do have a backhoe which made it possible.
The well is solar with 24 volt battery back up, and is self contained. It's not on my main solar system and runs on d.c. power. Check out my water vid.th-cam.com/video/4lTG579r2aQ/w-d-xo.htmlsi=XD7V-L354GUXke9j
I built the original cabin with 12 volt solar for about 15k. The well was 4k and the complete solar well pump kit was $1400. So, a little over 20k. Today I would expect the basic build to be well over 30K. Keep in mind, that I did all of the work and repurposed a bunch of materials.
@@brandonhaynes6087 since this vid, I put my own septic in. Used a 1000 gallon plastic tank and 2 60' trenches and put an exterior mounted plumbing vent in. Total material cost for that system was about 2600. Tank, transfer, perf pipe, clean out, risers, stone and rosin paper, fittings. Probably saved better than 5k doing it myself. I do own a backhoe so that made it possible.
@@offgridwithalexanderthegre5157 how often do you have to pump the system out? Is all water going to that tank, or do you have a grey water system as well? My county is saying a composting toilet isnt legal
@@brandonhaynes6087 2 people 5 years, 4 people 2 1/2 years. No gray water system. Because of my outdoor shower and no washing machine tank may go 7 years.
Thanks for the tour. That was nice layout. I like your use of space. The easy adjustment solar panel rack was great! ❤
Thanks so much! 😊
your woodstove set up is beautiful! Thanks for the tour!
Thanks. The hearth is made with 200 year old bricks and the mantle brackets are window weights.
Good job .
I'm 6 years offgrid now .
My cabin is on a slab
20x36,12x20 is the veranda.
Well ,septic,solar,lpgas,woodstove. 4ft deepfreezer.
I built a solar- power shed ,it has solar panels on top ,batteries and contols inside, genorater,
wood shed ,tool shed,south side is salvaged picture windows for
green house, starting plants and winter garden .
Generator for well pump,pressure tank . I will change the pump out oneday to run off my solar .
Someone gave me bad advise on that . I built the cabin myself , I'm very proud of it .
Modern kitchen and bathroom, flush toilet . The veranda could be made into a room,but i don't need it . Nice for summer . Wish i could share a picture of it ,guess I'll have to do a youtube vidio one day .
Sounds nice.
This Spring I bought 16 acres of land in Northern New Mexico in the foothills of the Manzano Mountains, then I bought an old ( late1950's) small 14x40 (560 sq feet) "junk" mobile home from a mobile home park that the last tenant had trashed for $500 and then threw my buddy who has a 1 ton truck a tank full of diesel and a case of beer to move it for me. Then I gutted it back the studs pulled all the tin siding off squaring all curved ends u, put it on a 4 foot concrete pier foundation and used the tin to build a new pitched roof and I painted the roof with truck bed liner. I framed in the new windows, I used the 12"x18" Playhouse/Shed Windows because they are built just like a regular house window just smaller and in a tiny house/cabin you need wall space not windows, Then bought one of those cheapo chainsaw milling sets from Amazon to mill my own siding out of Engelman pine on because that's what was available on the land and then I stained it with Navajo Red stain. I haven done anything with the inside yet but the plan is to to build a little bit bigger bedroom, and a smaller bathroom and kitchen, It's just me and my gf now, her daughter just went off to college in august and my 3 kids are grown and out of the house. Were going to live completely off grid also but our solar is going to be bigger, were not going to have a range/oven, we have one of those 9 function countertop ovens and since the step-daughter has left we haven't used the oven at all, between the air fryer/oven, microwave, crock pot and electric skillet we don't need it plus that saves space, were just going to build a couple live edge open shelves to store them with, there was already a well on the property that the people we bought the land from had just dug 3 years ago in order to move there permanantly but when Covid hit there's jobs and 401k's went bye bye. the inside is going to be spray foam insulation with drywall to save money, we bought all used cabinets, sinks, toilet and bathtub. The Cabinets we bought from a garage sale from a couple who had remodeled their kitchen, $50 for an 6 foot bottom and 5 uppers, so we have an extra one to put in the bathroom to used as a medicine cabinet/storage in the bathroom, the sinks, toilet and tub we bought from the local Habitat for Humanity ReStore and were just going to repaint everything to make them look better. I found and old pie safe/china hutch that I'm going to put simple legs on to get it up to counter height for a kitchen island/ eating bar. and the top we're going to use as a in the wall mounted entertainment center for our t.v. and some knick knacks and book shelf. After the house is done I'm going to mill some more wood and used the left over tin I have to build a chicken coop, I'm going to use rain collection system to water the chickens and the garden we are going to plant.
Good deal.
I to live in the Manzano mountains
@@tbarela032003 Well hey neighbor
Very nice set up. Being a mile of the road is awesome! If things get crazy you will always have a comfortable getaway!
Yep 👍
Nice Job! Much like the cabin I built. Love an off grid cabin! Enjoy!!🌲👍👍
Me also. Thanks.
40 days a year is not enough.....lol.....a garden and go full time, living the dream. Nice!
Great video
Straight and to the point
I appreciate not sharing too many details like everyone else on TH-cam
What a wonderful special place especially with all your personal craftsmanship! Very nice! Wishing you many years of enjoyment there. It shows we really don’t need the “MacMansions”. Just enough is content enough. I am in my 40th year in my cabin. You keep making little changes and modifications as you see fit and your life evolves. Great job!
Thanks
Amen to that! I moved into my cabin in 2002. One of the best things I ever did.
This is just a whole new level of cool! Imagine the load off knowing you have this for peace of mind, and not having to deal with people!
It really is a blessing and a labor of love. I have felt compelled to get this up and running so that no matter what happens in the techno world, we have a long term place to live.
Looks good guys! I like that you used recycled and rustic materials. Saves money and gives it character.
Thats a great size for an off grid cabin. Nice layout too.
Gorgeous! Your craftsmanship is excellent sir!
Cool set up, nice property. Also nice last name ,Have it myself. LOL. Nice video.
Thank you for showing off that little slice of heaven. I think this should be what we all aspire to accomplish.
Pretty darn sweet set-up I’d say! Great job. 👍
Nice property and setup!
Mighty fine little set up👍👍
Very nice work. Beautiful property!
Wow, beautiful place. What more to need, it's all there.
Just wonderful! Thank you for sharing.
Great place you’ve created, thanks for posting 👍
Nice place if I had that property I wouldn't want to go anywhere I would become a hermit
I want to be a Hermit so bad !!! I can't figure out where to build off grid with no permits ??? Watched hundreds of videos no one ever responds when I ask :-(
You have got an awesome cabin I love what you did with the place I like all the trees around and just switch peaceful great job
Absolutely love this cabin. Wood work is Soo beautiful!! You do beautiful work.
You have a beautiful cabin and you put in a lot of thought and hard work in. Greetings from the UK.
Nice place ..... I have a 20’ x 24’ cabin on an old farm. It’s not quite finished but it keeps me warm and dry when hunting. I do have electricity but no running water. I repurposed lumber and metal off an old barn on the property that was falling down....
Nice
Nice setup! Your cabin has the same floorplan as our full-time house. Our house (in Maine) is 16' X 24'. My only regret is our roof doesn't have as steep of a pitch as yours. Our loft is only 44" at the peak.
I love your "yard". It would make a nice private airstrip. :)
Yeah, we lease the front yard to a local farmer. Your low roof is probably better on heating, although our loft in the winter can get smoking hot with the wood stove.
You got a really nice place I like it
Great setup - really like the adjustable solar panel.
Thanks
So cozy and well thought lay out. Thanks for sharing.
It’s absolutely beautiful.
I like it. Nice job.
Looks Beautiful
Very nice place you got there..
Congratulations! What a fine job.
Thanks for the tour from the uk 🇬🇧
I could feel every nail being driven, screw being turned and wood being cut in that place. Building your own place is like having a fitted suit where you are the tailor. Epic!
Thanks
That’s true craftsmanship
That's a beautiful cabin!
Absolutely wonderful!
Great job I love it would totally live there, thanks for the tour from NZ full of character and history 🥰 💪👍
Thanks
Great cabin!!
Very smart setup, good job!
Great set up. I noticed though you have mold in the shower may need some ventilation in there as mold can get out of hand and may cause illness. ( retired RN.. sorry can't help myself when I see preventative measures that can be used.) Cheers.😁
The green is simply algae that just needs a shot of bleach water. Hadn't been there in several weeks before I shot the vid.
All I can say is WOW, a dream cabin!
Nice Setup. What's the dimensions of the enclosed part of the cabin?
16x24
Nice build, very rustic, and practical
great cabin pard *LIKED* and *SUBSCRIBED* --LT
Love it. You did a great job.
Great cabin.
Nice set up. Look up earth tube as a cheap way to cool a house.
Yeah, my ground water is at 4' and humidity is high so in my case it would be a mold and mildew disaster.
Very nice!!
What is the wattage of your well pump? How deep is it? What kind of inverter are you using? I have 300ft deep well and 1HP pump and want to design a solar/battery powered backup system. My research tells me that my well pump's steady state current is 9A at 240V and the in-rush could be as high as 50Amp, so it may require 12Kw at start up.
Better off with a slow start d.c. pump
th-cam.com/video/4lTG579r2aQ/w-d-xo.htmlsi=XD7V-L354GUXke9j
The depth of the well is irrelevant. The head of water is what matters. A.c. well pump will require large inverter, more batteries and more solar panels. I have a solar well which is not ideal for heavy after dark or cloudy day water use, but is adequate.
Use the rainwater collection for a garden.
Beautiful place..... great job 👍🏻
Beautiful home thank you for sharing
Love it ❤️👍😎
Nice job 👍
Fantastic, just acquired 5 acres in White Mts in NH , planning similar set up. do you have a web page with photos?
No web page, but we do rent it on occasion through Airbnb when we are not there. Pictures. www.airbnb.com/rooms/653507419483643664?preview_for_ml=true&source_impression_id=p3_1666278165_Zb6kyU7FjSue2U88
Awesome! Great job👍
Great Job Brother just subbed Thanks !
I live off grid in an 8 by 20 tiny house love the setup the only thing I would do differently in which I did was food with my main concern with my tiny house and you have a tiny refrigerator I would and I understand your own solar but I would probably use a chest freezer and then have separate ways to turn around and freeze bottles of water and use them as your Refrigeration and the freezer would use probably less electricity is that little fridge you have and you get double the use for one electrical item cuz you can use the freezer the freeze up bottles of water that you can then use as Refrigeration and it will give you way more food storage
check our channel
The fridge has a freezer in it and we do freeze bottles for extra cooling. Going to upgrade to a low wattage 7.2 refrigerator freezer that actually uses half the electric as this mini fridge.
Amazing setup!!
I worked for a company that built highways, about 4 yrs. they sent Me, and another guy out to set out markers using GPS on farm land look about like this it was so peaceful there wasn't long heavy equipment started rolling in dozers, trachoes, dump trucks ect. hated to see it and so did the people living there but they had no choice they were forced to sell though they were paid well. now there is a 4-lane highway running right through it.
sad.
I envy you my friend !
I'm so jealous.
That is a really cool cabin
I think the different tones of wood. Nice job
Awesome looks great!
AWESOME!!!
Who said living off grid came with no modern conveniencea. great job.
Nice setup.
I'm hoping to do something similar but on a smaller scale if i manage to buy a woodland in the UK.
Thanks
what are the 3 hole angles you used to adjust the solar setup?
Depends on your latitude, but for central U.S., 30 degrees/ winter, 55 degrees spring and fall, and 80 degrees in summer will get you more than close enough.
Nice cabin sir
Let me give you an idea so you have one less thing to worry about powering as much through solar. Look.inti Geo-thermal... which is laying either 100 ft straight PVC pipe in to the ground with screens on both ends of pipe one end sticking out if the ground with some sort of housing over outside pipe (or get make the outside end curl towards the ground still yet with fan) with a computer fan powered by solar power or lay straight 100 ft 4.5 ft underground with a series of bends in a smaller square hole. I'd say start with a 3-4 inch diameter pipe and reduce it down to a smaller diameter pipe going into the cabin. With outside pipe as same as described earlier, doing something to keep rain out of pipe, both ends with screens. I think you have to have a two pipe system though. One to let cool air in from the ground and one to let warm air out. But the pc fan is just forcing air into pipe. And doing this vs an actual A/C UNOT Wlwould be much cheaper than a window unit. It's what I plan to do with my cabin...
Great set-up when you want to get away from it all. Adjustable solar frame is a neat concept. Have you used a metal detector around the old homestead yet, might find some valuables?
I have used a metal detector. Still trying to find the dump. It may be in the creek.
Very awesome build, what's the width and length?
Great cabin , what are the dimensions of this build ? Thanks.. currently planning a build in northern British Columbia
Thanks
It's 16' x 24' with a 9' x 16' loft. Deck is 14' x 16'.
I like the solar panel set up with the three different adjustments for the time of year. How did you determine the different angles? You just worked it out by observation or was there a formula you used?
Very nice. I love how you repurposed wood from the old house. Are you out there 24/7? What is there to do?
No, it's a second home. We spend about 40 days a year there. The area is great hunting and salt water fishing. There are also lots of historical sites. If you're a city person then it wouldn't be for them.
@@offgridwithalexanderthegre5157 I myself am definitely not a city person. And I love your place. Peaceful.
@@offgridwithalexanderthegre5157 so do you have mullet that come up near your house...? Is that brackish water there where you have the dock?
@@lbrown6859 it is brackish. We have white perch, stripped bass, red fish, cat fish and now even the snakeheads have showed up, and blue crabs later in the summer.
@@offgridwithalexanderthegre5157 wow. Those blue crab are some fine eatn'!! I like most any kind of fish if I am being honest, but I tell you what there's something kinda special about mullet when they are fresh, hard to beat. And they really like that brackish water, here in Florida anyway. Y'all have a beautiful place btw!
Very cool!
Nice cabin
Hi great Cabin! What part of the USA are You in? Looks like the deep south.
Virginia
awesome. Thanks for sharing!
hey buddy just asking what size cabin is at I mean it looks good and everything I'm just trying to figure out what size it is it looks like the perfect size let me know please thank you
This is so awesome! I think the one major downside for me would be the lack of air conditioning. I could even survive the sweating all day, it's just that I can NOT sleep when it's hot. I don't know where you are located, but how is it in the summer?
I added a Midea window unit, which can run wide open all day but would need a generator at night. I just turn it off and use fans after dark and if I leave the windows closed it won't warm up much past 70 even on the hottest days.
I’m about to go live in my land and build my tiny house and live off the grid.
Good luck!!
Very cool
nice set up
you running a septic system?
I put one in, myself, about 6 month ago. No more dumping the compost toilet, which I did for 5 years. Doing the septic myself, cost me about 2700 in materials and I do have a backhoe which made it possible.
Nice place
Do you have a 12 volt pump for your well now? Or is it 120v connected to your invertor/
The well is solar with 24 volt battery back up, and is self contained. It's not on my main solar system and runs on d.c. power. Check out my water vid.th-cam.com/video/4lTG579r2aQ/w-d-xo.htmlsi=XD7V-L354GUXke9j
BRILLIANT! 🎯
Muy acogedora me gusta mucho 👍🏼 buen trabajo
Make biochar out of wood put it on garden check out rock stove Mass theater couches
What state? And does your county allow this as full time housing or restrict it to a 3 season camp?
Virginia. It's a four season residence. If your state or county has those kind of restrictions, then you're in the wrong state for liberty.
Awesome content. What would be a rough estimate on the total cost of the cabin, solar, and well?
I built the original cabin with 12 volt solar for about 15k. The well was 4k and the complete solar well pump kit was $1400. So, a little over 20k. Today I would expect the basic build to be well over 30K. Keep in mind, that I did all of the work and repurposed a bunch of materials.
@@offgridwithalexanderthegre5157 thanks for the response. Do you have a septic system?
@@brandonhaynes6087 since this vid, I put my own septic in. Used a 1000 gallon plastic tank and 2 60' trenches and put an exterior mounted plumbing vent in. Total material cost for that system was about 2600. Tank, transfer, perf pipe, clean out, risers, stone and rosin
paper, fittings. Probably saved better than 5k doing it myself. I do own a backhoe so that made it possible.
@@offgridwithalexanderthegre5157 how often do you have to pump the system out? Is all water going to that tank, or do you have a grey water system as well? My county is saying a composting toilet isnt legal
@@brandonhaynes6087 2 people 5 years, 4 people 2 1/2 years. No gray water system. Because of my outdoor shower and no washing machine tank may go 7 years.
Enjoyed the video. Looks like SC or GA.
check our channel
Virginia
Very nice.
😍love it