Usually I write mostly for myself. Two days ago recommend posting into the Clean Planet community. I decided to post at least once into it.
I currently live in a community in the rocky semi-desert on South Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain.
I describe our life in a nutshell in this post.
We live a free lifestyle. Freedom. Both financially and physically too. We live in caves and in tent. There is no rent, no bills. Except my monthly mobile bill, which is €20 EUR per month. This includes a monthly 100 GB mobile internet data and 2000 minutes mobile talk into any network, including foreign networks. Of course I can cancel this package anytime.
We collect the waste selectively. Glass, metal, trash.
We collect the paper around the heaters.
As I already wrote in the above mentioned post, currently we collect the firefood from a nearby place. From the other side of the barranco, close to the road. Only a few minutes of walk away from the community place.
We collect the no longer edible fruits and vegetables and the not usable parts in two buckets.
We put the puckets underground below this trapdoor.
Once the buckets are full, we walk away, and throw their contents into this wood container. This is the compost. The mountain in the background is the Montaña Roja.
The toilet is beside the compost.
We put the used toilet paper in the trash can. Once it is full, we burn the used toilet papers.
We cover the new toilet paper with a plastic bag to cover it from the rain. The toilet does not have a roof.
We fill up eight liter bottles with water.
In addition to drinkink the water, we use the water to cook, to wash the kitchen things, to take a shower, and to water trees and flowers.
We take a shower in this cave.
Literal shower. This little cave is like a real bathroom.
We have many shampoos.
The water from the little cave above goes into a bucket, and we use it to water the trees nearby, so it is not going into waste.
We put the food in the other cave. Into the same cave as the water bottles. The storage cave.
We have refrigerators too, but currently our solar energy system is not strong enough to make them work. A thousands of Euros of investment to make these refrigerators work.
We have 5V USB chargers.
And with an inverter, we have 230V too.
The two solar panels give 200 Watts (2x100 Watts) power. Mostly we use it to charge mobile phones, power banks and laptops. Currently it could make only a smaller refrigerator to work. And only in the sunlight. We would need an industrial inverter, more solar panels and batteries to make the existing refrigerators to work.
Currently this is not a primary priority. But of course the community is working together.
If you are interested, then I keep blogging about my life. Mostly I post into the Daily Blog community.
Have a nice day. All the best. Greetings and much love from Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain.