I was in Mexico last July, about two hours south of Cancun. There was no city power, and the hotels ran totally off of solar power and wind power. There were no sewers, and the sewage was treated in these tanks that had plants in them. The sewage went in one end, and grey water came out the other. At no time did anything seem dirty or could you smell sewage. It was totally great and showed me how we could be less destructive. I am moving in that direction.
I am heading over that way now,but first I want to answer your question about the chickens.We get $10 each hen and usually $5 for the roosters. Blessings
7 comments:
I read most of it but I did not have time to really get into it. I want to get more in depth with the website later. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for the link. Headed over now.
What an awesome blog! Thanks for linking up. I've been reading her blog for about an hour now. WOW!!!
Wow! Really gives you something to think about. My first thought was am I ready to give up my phone?? No more blogs to read either, *smile*. Wow.
That's a cool blog kelle, thanks. I'm already food self sustained and can easily go without electric for everything right now, even water.
I was in Mexico last July, about two hours south of Cancun. There was no city power, and the hotels ran totally off of solar power and wind power. There were no sewers, and the sewage was treated in these tanks that had plants in them. The sewage went in one end, and grey water came out the other. At no time did anything seem dirty or could you smell sewage. It was totally great and showed me how we could be less destructive. I am moving in that direction.
I am heading over that way now,but first I want to answer your question about the chickens.We get $10 each hen and usually $5 for the roosters.
Blessings
Post a Comment