If we could buy 1000 acres or more, who would join us?

Just bumping this up to see where everyone is at on this nowadays. I still want to do something but a legal issue with a family member has strained finances for now. Hubby still not really on board. Anyone else?
 
Wow, I've never even considered eating a moose before, I wonder what that's like.. (after a quick google I find out that Moose is actually a deer, and so its meat is called venison and is similar)

Wild turkey sounds fantastic.

I've had both, and both are good eating. Wild turkey is remarkably similar in taste to domestic turkey, but it looks different.
 
I wouldnt mind living in NC...my ancestors settled some areas there and its pretty country. Not sure about job situations. Unfortunately I am not able to retire yet.

I would suggest South Carolina. The income tax rate in North Carolina is one of the highest in the country. Property taxes suck in my area near Charlotte, as we now pay a little over $4,000. per year. The only thing included in our property taxes is garbage pick up.
 
I would suggest South Carolina. The income tax rate in North Carolina is one of the highest in the country. Property taxes suck in my area near Charlotte, as we now pay a little over $4,000. per year. The only thing included in our property taxes is garbage pick up.

Really? Wow I didn't know that but I do remembers housing being high last time I was there. If my dad hadn't sold his property he inherited I would have about 15 acres in the western part of the state.
 
Wow, I've never even considered eating a moose before, I wonder what that's like.. (after a quick google I find out that Moose is actually a deer, and so its meat is called venison and is similar)

Wild turkey sounds fantastic.

My uncle bagged a moose on a small island in Canada...

Excellent meat.

Tax tag and title to get it back to the states with airline fees, puddle jumper fees, trail guide, lodging... etc...

$125/lb

:D
 
I'd rather be dead than live in a compound

If it hasn't been said yet ...

"If it has a fence, then it's a 'compound'. If it has a basement, then it's a 'bunker'".

Perhaps something like the police/media pitbull ID chart is required.
 
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Deb is probably my favorite member here. Hope all is well.

I love the idea of a community of like-minded individuals. I have ~20 acres in south-central Pennsylvania. On the fringe of the Marcellus and Utica. Acreage nearby that can be had. We're already surrounded by Simple Folk (Amish), who know how to live off the grid. Really it's ideal territory for liberty minded people. Wouldn't take much to take over the local and county governments, and at times the state government can be amenable to our way of thinking.

Plus, I've been thinking for a while now that Appalachia - especially with the discovery of the oil and natural gas reserves - is an excellent candidate for a break-away state, practically within the US, but ideally without.

Any interest in a movement?
 
Any attempt like this is doomed. The economy has been perverted so much only those with access to the money printing press can prosper(corporations). Disconnecting from the money machine means substandard existence and slow death. In other words, you no longer can make it on your own.

 
Any attempt like this is doomed. The economy has been perverted so much only those with access to the money printing press can prosper(corporations). Disconnecting from the money machine means substandard existence and slow death. In other words, you no longer can make it on your own.



We're all going to die. The money machine can't stop that.
 
Putin offers free land for citizens & foreigners in Russia’s Far East

https://www.rt.com/business/341892-far-east-land-infrastructure/

5 May, 2016

President Vladimir Putin has ordered free land handouts in Russia’s Far East to be provided with minimal infrastructure. On Monday, he signed a law offering land plots of 1 hectare (2.5 acres) to Russians and naturalized citizens for free.
“We should work with regional authorities, so that land plots are allocated in areas with at least minimal infrastructure,” Putin said on Wednesday while meeting with Russia's Far East Development Minister Alexander Galushka.

According to the minister, the infrastructure could be provided to a group of 20 land owners. He said that since the ministry has announced the idea of land development, people have started applying.

They suggest cooperation of about 200-300 people, said Galushka, adding that then the provision of infrastructure becomes possible, even if it’s not a highly-developed one.

The Minister also said that the Cabinet is preparing a bill on lowering electricity prices in the Far East to the average cost in Russia.

The idea of a so-called ‘Russian Homestead Act’ was first proposed in early 2015 by the presidential envoy to the Far East Federal District, Yury Trutnev, who suggested offering large plots of land for free to anyone willing to resettle to the Russian Far East to start a farm or business. The program is one of the initiatives aimed at boosting the economy in the region.

Anyone is entitled to apply for up to a hectare of land in the Kamchatka, Primorye, Khabarovsk, Amur, Magadan and Sakhalin regions, the republic of Sakha, or the Jewish and Chukotka autonomous districts.

The land can be used for any lawful purpose but can only be rented, sold, or given away after an initial five-year period.

Foreigners are also allowed to use the land, and the registration of full property rights is only possible after the naturalization of potential owners.
 
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Those Russian areas.. none of them are over 43 degrees right now.. dead of summer.. BRRRR
 
Those Russian areas.. none of them are over 43 degrees right now.. dead of summer.. BRRRR

I have hunted up there when I was younger when it was so cold you could hear the bark explode off the trees.
 
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