7:29 am - Monday - January 6th - TWW - 29° F, humidity 43%, wind 8 mph out of the southeast......very cloudy this morning with a forecast high today of 55° F. On this date in 2013 I posted this video of me backing our 36' long Newell, and our 26' American Trailer out of my sister's property in Michigan.....we've been in some tight places over the years, but this was the winner.....
....it took 4 sets of eyes to get us out of that spot! We've been asked often over the years how we maneuver in tight places. The video was made, and produced by my sister, Jill, whose home we were visiting at the time. We had been on the road about 3 months at this point.
The view this morning....
Charles and Phyllis left for their drive back to Phoenix around 10 am, and shortly thereafter TLE and I began the long process of reinstalling our wind turbine on the trailer, but this time with 'guy wires' to hold it in place properly. It took us around 4.5 hours beginning to end to reattach the wind turbine to the mast, then raise the entire assembly into position, then cut the guy wires into the appropriate lengths, drive two stakes into the ground for two of the anchors, and finally attach the guys wires to the anchors. The third anchor is attached to the right rear of the trailer for now.....
.....anyway, here is the finished product. I wish I had taken more pictures of the process, but when I get focused on getting something done I get pretty single minded. Now, all we need is some steady wind to see if it is going to work as it should.
After TLE went back indoors (it was a chilly, blustery day) I spent time zip tying a lot of the wiring, and then putting everything away. The next big 'install' for us will be the two LifePo, 300 amp hour, 12 volt house batteries we bought some time ago to replace our two 8d, flooded cell house batteries, and that should happen Tuesday, or Wednesday. Once that is done our major projects here at TWW will be complete, and it will then just be a matter of fine tunning everything. After that we'll be working almost exclusively on TWW projects.
As I write we are well into our 3rd month here at TWW, and continue to adapt to living off the grid at elevation during the winter. We're doing considerably better at this point than I thought we would at the beginning. There were just so many unknowns when we arrived, but we did the proper preparation during the year before we arrived, and have been able to improve on our portable electrical grid slowly, but surely. We're down to less than 2 hours of run time on the Predator 5000 per day, and hope to reduce that further now that we've got the wind turbine ready to produce additional power when the sun is absent. Our dream of relying almost entirely on sun, and wind for our power generation is becoming a reality, and it has cost less than I expected.
Thanks for stopping by!