Living off the Grid: How one couple took the alternative route to home power By Harley L. Sachs What would you do if the power company demanded $37,000 to set up a one-mile line to your house in the woods? Not only that, but the specifications required cutting a 20-foot wide swath so that overhanging branches wouldn’t hit the wires, creating an ugly gap in the woods. That was the problem faced by Sandy and Jerry Mitchell when they bought a 4,200-square-foot home at Cedar Bay, five miles from Calumet, Michigan in the UP. Their three-story house is complete with a sauna and hot tub. For the Mitchells, living “off the grid” provided the best alternative to the power company’s plan. Their electric power solution was multifold: solar panels, a windmill, and a diesel generator to charge up a bank of 12 hefty 6-volt batteries when the sun doesn’t shine or the wind doesn’t blow. On a full charge, the batteries can keep their home running for 20 hours.
BACK-UP PLAN If the wind is blowing and the sun shining, there’s no need for the Mitchells to start their generator. But when the batteries are running low their equipment sends a signal to automatically start the generator, which can charge the system in four hours and runs on an economical one quart of fuel an hour. A Xantrax conversion center is used to convert their 6-volt battery current to 120 and 240 volts, with the latter voltage used to power the pump in their well. The windmill, made by Southwest, sits on top of two 20-foot sections of steel well casing and is about 60 feet high to clear the tree tops. At first the Mitchells had a 12-bladed windmill, but one dark and stormy night, as the saying goes, a 70 mph wind howled so strongly that the gyrating windmill lost three of its blades and popped two of the four guy wires out of the ground. Jerry rushed out into the storm in a panic and tied the wires to trees. A permanent fix came later when he bored holes in the solid rock, set in anchors of rebar, and reattached the guys. Now the original setup has been replaced with a 3-bladed propeller that can be tilted to provide less wind resistance when those storms return. Their power cost is about $2.60 a day. Compare that to your electric bill.
WOOD HEAT For heat the Mitchells burn wood in an outdoor furnace, using 12 to 14 cords of wood a year, costing between $80 and $95 a cord. The couple expect to halve their heating bill with the installation of a Hardrock masonry oven. Like the historic porcelain ovens of Europe, the masonry oven warms up the rock which then radiates an even heat for hours. The heat is distributed by a hot water system laid in the floor using a grid of flexible Pextubing. An advantage of the outdoor central boiler is it can be fed with logs, not small sections of firewood. Another is that the chimney is separate from the house, reducing the danger of chimney fires. Of course, being off the grid the Mitchells are also not on a county road, so they must plow a 1,500-foot driveway using their truck with its 360 horsepower engine. It’s an economical way to live, once the equipment is installed. Jerry paid for the 40-square-foot solar panel, which is mounted on their deck, with some 1919 commemorative gold coins. Sandy and Jerry Mitchell own two Carmelita’s Mexican restaurants, one in Calumet and the other close to Michigan Technological University in Houghton. The Mitchells spent many years in Santa Fe, New Mexico, but also lived for a time in Alaska. They also publish a local newspaper, The Pilgrim. Look for it at www.thePilgrim.com. If in Houghton or Calumet be sure to stop in at Carmelita’s.
Visit the web site www.hu.mtu.edu/~hlsachs where you can listen to two stories, read a third, read reviews, and find links to the publishers of my books.