>Where is it best to buy land?
Delta County and Montezuma County in Colorado, Brewster County, Marfa County, and Terlingua in Texas, and Miller County Missouri all have zero building codes so they are really the only places that you can properly homestead.
>What materials will you use to make your home?
Wood or wattle and daub if you are in the forest, but adobe or stone if you are in the desert.
>What will you grow on your homestead?
That would be the challenge in most of these places. Not a lot grows in the desert. Prickly pears? Maybe you could get some kind of grant/subsidy for growing guayule.
>>372835>>372836Speaking of desert you have to factor how you're going to get and or keep enough water just in case.
Another bonus for sandy asscracks of nowheresvill is there's nothing. You could try terraforming a field, that's a lot of time and money. However you could also use the whole lot of nothing as a business advantage.
It'll be hot and should be fucking dry.
Not great for plants as is, but you could have a few greenhouses.
>>372837Another benefit of the desert is land is cheap. Like $1000 an acre or less.
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/Private-Rd-Terlingua-TX-79852/2066374840_zpid/ I know in the case of Terlingua there are no aquafers so you would have to rely on rain water alone. Something else you could do in Terlingua though is run a campground or bed and breakfast because it is right next to a state park and a national park. Parks are always out of campsites in Texas. Even Big Bend.
Man, these libtards killed FrensChan. This site seems to be the "Final Frontier" of the Freeweb and Anonymous camaraderie. Shit SUX mane.
FeelsBadMan
>>372840Go to the fishing thread and help us bring new anons to the site.