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The Exciting Adventure Of Homestead Living

By Virginia Stewart


In American history, people can often come across pioneers who started out by putting stakes on land in the public domain. The term is used for land that has not been titled by public or private owners or government. Only basic state sovereignty applies, even if the state in question has not inspected the land nor has uses or plans for it.

Therefore the land is virtually free for any person to farm and build a home on. In essence, this is homesteading, which typically starts out on the subsistence level while the family or persons doing it are hoping for better in later years. Alaska homestead no longer benefits from the great homestead acts that legalized the process for generations of Americans.

Homesteading was once recognized as a way to make it for beginners, but the young today no longer consider it a viable option so that the practice has been discontinued for quite a number of years. The Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 officially ended free government land grants to homesteaders. But it is not applicable on places considered public domain.

So trying out the practice in Alaska is still very much viable, depending on passion as well as patience and determination to see the project through. But mostly only a few people really go for this kind of experience. Most areas of Alaska are vast tracts of snowbound wilderness, much of it in the public domain.

It will be a grand adventure for those with the rare kind of mindset for the youth of today. There are so many other things to do for them, and the age of homesteading renaissance has already died down after the counterculture, the years when many of the young wanted to live simply and as close to the earth like the ancestors did.

There are still those who believe that the magic of the experience is worth it. Plus, there are so many areas available for living on still, on public domain and without restrictions from government. Anyone can virtually point in any direction and find something that might fit his or her idea of a place to plant stakes on.

It can sound too simple for words, but the reality is not. For one, the climate there is very hard to deal with, and only the few adventures, old natives and those who know of no other life can have a sort of comfortable life on it. The applicable philosophy is that of the fittest surviving on for the place in question.

With people who are bent on taking on a living deep in Alaska, there are some basic must haves. These are the essentials for the simplest human activities like building, cooking, cutting and simple agriculture. Kerosene lamps provide light, while electricity is virtually unheard of in most places.

The best things to have for the adventure is imagination and creativity, as with all challenging endeavors. With these, the right persons will be able to create viable alternative lifestyles. It is not an easy thing to do, but with a bit of luck, it is one of the most spiritually and mentally rewarding accomplishments any healthy and normal young person can have.




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