A woman has shared how she’s living her dream off-grid life after buying a plot of land and building a container to live in and hopes to open a fully functioning farm
While the cost of living has got everyone holding onto their pennies tighter than ever, one woman has gone to extreme lengths to make sure she keeps her costs low.
Robyn Swan decided to sell all her belongings to live in a container off-grid in rural Scotland. The 32-year-old had always dreamed of living off the land and began researching off-grid living seven years ago before making the life-changing decision in December last year and buying just under seven acres of land near Stirling for £185,000.
She’d been saving for a number of years, and to help pay for the land, Robyn, who owns a dog-walking business, sold all her belonging including her furniture, TV and her car.
She also re-mortgaged her home in Stirling which she now rents out out to cover her mortgage and bills. She said: “I discovered pretty early on that it’s near on impossible to buy a farm without a big bundle of cash.
“After I re-mortgaged my house, I then had the bundle of cash sitting there, making me a cash buyer. I sold basically everything else including my car, TV and furniture and currently rent out the house so I can live on the land without any bills.
“It just felt like the right decision at the right time in my life. Everything just fell into place.”
It meant she was able to fulfil her life-long dream after buying a piece of land, which had been on the market for six years.
She ultimately snatched it up as the only buyer dedicated to the off-grid life and said: “The land had been under offer a few times but people wouldn’t be prepared to live off-grid so the sales would all eventually fall through. Most people want a dishwasher or a tumble dryer but I never really worried about that.”
However, it took two months to build the container and Robyn had to sleep on a mattress on the floor during the process. “I slept on the floor the entire time it was being built. I had a campervan to stay in while the construction was happening but it ended up breaking down and being stuck in a garage for a month and a half.”
But in the end, she shared that she took the mattress out of the van and put it on the floor of the container. She used materials from the local builder’s merchants to build her abode, purchased a second-hand kitchen from Facebook marketplace for £5,000 and set up a bed.
Robyn said: “I was lucky to have loads of friends chipping in with items or a helping hand. It’s not quite finished yet but I have a bed and kitchen sorted.
“Well, I say that, but I don’t have a fridge yet so whatever I eat I have to buy that day.”
Her aim is to become fully self-sufficient and live off the land – but there’s still a long way to go.
She said: “I grow some of my own food including potatoes and certain fruits but I am not nearly where I want to be in terms of self-sufficiency. I also plan to set up a solar system for the living spaces but the process is quite expensive. I would love the site to be 60-70% self-sufficient but I am currently at 10-15%.”
However, she’s found that living without being connected to the mains has been easier than expected. She harvests rain water, bathes in a cast-iron tub she got for free from Facebook marketplace and re-uses her bath water for the plants.
She said: “I harvest rain water to use though I have to be careful about how much water we pour to boil for tea. I use a pink cast-iron tub for my baths which a local interior designer was giving away.
“To heat it, I have to light a fire underneath and sit on a plank of wood so I don’t burn out my bum. In terms of electricity, I have a power bank in the van which charges as I drive it. That’s where I usually charge my phone and laptop. I use a gas cooker to make food, which right now I still buy primarily from local shops.”
Over the last seven months, Robyn has set up a fence around the entire perimeter and built shelters for the animals living on the site. She has eight sheep, six pigs and over 20 chickens, which she has built shelters for, and her four dogs live in the container with her.
She now has hopes to turn her land into a fully functioning farm and has big plans for the future. “I want to start a market garden in the area the pigs are currently in now,” she revealed, and adding: “I will grow all the fruit and vegetables. I’m hoping to plant some fruit trees soon.
“I am also planning to start the self-build on the house as well, using the derelict barn already existing on the property. The planning permission has already been granted but I want to make some changes to make sure it’s properly insulated.”
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