An Off-grid Community of Houseboats Have Taken Over an Island
Written by: Arron J. Staff writer @ Hyggehous.com
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You'll want to watch this video that takes you to an off-grid community of tiny home houseboats and boathouses that has taken over an island.
This houseboat community proves that living off the grid isn't only reserved for land dwellers. With over 100 tiny home houseboats and boathouses, Latsch Island is one of the most unique off-grid communities in America. Residents on the island live a self-governed life of freedom and mobility as they dictate their laws and travel freely on the Mississippi River. Shop Tiny Homes Around half of the tiny homes here have the option to be hooked up to the power grid, but many chose to live completely disconnected. Recently, with new money entering the off-grid lifestyle, the island is transforming.
Boathouses on Latsch Island have always been seen as an alternative lifestyle, a way to live more affordably.
But it takes a unique and determined mindset to make it work. While some boathouses are expensive and modern, others are made of mostly found building materials. Those building materials are often untreated and decay faster, which makes repairs an almost constant chore. Latsch Island is an island located on the Mississippi river and is part of the city of Winona, Minnesota. Latsch Island is best known for its off-the-grid counterculture houseboat community, which occupies the eastern coastline of the island. During periods of flooding or high water levels, the island sometimes becomes two islands, with the eastern section referred to as Wolf Spider Island.
The view from the Highway 43 bridge that crosses from Winona into Wisconsin is pristine with muddy blue-brown channels and green islands decorating the Mississippi River as it flows past Winona’s historic downtown.
On Latsch Island, situated on the Minnesota side of the river border, there are several fixtures along the beach just next to the bridge. There is an exit ramp that denotes a marina and city park but doesn’t reference the unique boathouse float house community floating just below to include a collection of ramshackle shanties and custom-built buildings that float, pontoon-style, in the water, just minutes from the city of 27,000 people
Residents of the boathouse community carry their supplies (including water) to their tiny homes by boat in the summertime and along an ice road in the winter months.
Cell phones and solar panels have impacted life on the island, but electricity is still reserved for just the essentials, first and foremost the basic lighting, which is powered by solar installations, generators, and battery packs. Propane powers some of the resident's refrigerators and stoves. The island has an eccentric and varied community with a mix of artists, professionals, and drifters. Many on the island are travelers, working jobs like the Renaissance Fair and returning to the boathouse between work seasons. Others work in Winona and live on the island year-round. Roughly 10 percent, or 10 to 20 tiny homes, are occupied year-round. For the boathouses of Latsch Island, where life on the river can mean floods, ice, or low water each year, change is the only constant.