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Off-Grid Living in New Mexico: What It’s Really Like Before You Buy Land

Everyone Loves the Idea of Off-Grid Living

Until they actually try it.

The internet has made off-grid life look simple: solar panels, gardens, sunsets, and coffee on the porch.

What you don’t see are the parts that actually decide whether you stay… or pack up and leave.

Before you buy land in the desert, before you sell your house, before you make the biggest lifestyle shift of your life — you should understand what off-grid living in New Mexico is really like.

We know because we’ve been living it for nearly six years at Plateau Hame de Colquhoun and Ka-Hoon Campground and Event Center.

No show.
No investors.
No retreat marketing.

Just life.

Why So Many People Move Off-Grid — And Why Many Quit

People don’t move off-grid because they hate society.

They move because they want:

  • Quiet
  • Independence
  • Fewer rules
  • Lower expenses
  • Space to breathe
  • Control over their environment

And those parts are real.

But what most people aren’t prepared for is this:

Off-grid living doesn’t remove problems.

It changes the type of problems you solve.

In town, problems are abstract:
Bills. Schedules. Traffic.

Off-grid, problems are physical:
Water. Power. Weather. Equipment.

And the desert is honest about it.

The Reality of Off-Grid Living in the New Mexico Desert

Water

There is no faucet connected to a municipal system.

Water must be:
hauled, stored, monitored, and rationed.

You learn quickly how much you actually use.

Long showers stop being normal.
They become decisions.

Power

Solar works — but not the way YouTube often shows.

Cloudy days happen.
Batteries drain.
Inverters fail.
Generators sometimes save your refrigerator.

You begin paying attention to the sun the way farmers pay attention to rain.

Weather

The New Mexico desert is beautiful — and demanding.

Windstorms can last days.
Dust gets into everything.
Summer heat requires planning.
Winter nights get colder than people expect.

You don’t fight nature anymore.

You adapt to it.

Repairs

Here’s something few off-grid videos talk about:

You become your own maintenance department.

Plumbing, electrical, structural fixes — you will attempt things you never imagined yourself doing.

Sometimes successfully.

Sometimes at sunset with a flashlight in your mouth wondering how you got here.

The Psychological Adjustment

This is actually the part that determines success more than skills.

Off-grid living changes your nervous system.

In town:
constant stimulation
noise
notifications
neighbors

In the desert:
silence

At first people love it.

Then something unexpected happens.

Your brain, used to constant input, starts inventing worries. The quiet forces you to sit with your own thoughts. Some people find peace.

Others discover they were using noise to cope.

This is why off-grid living isn’t just a housing change.

It’s an identity change.

Why You Should Not Buy Land First

The biggest mistake we see:

People romanticize off-grid life, purchase land immediately, then discover the lifestyle doesn’t fit them.

Land ownership makes leaving emotionally and financially harder.

That’s why we created a soft landing experience at Plateau Hame de Colquhoun.

You can experience off-grid living before committing to it.

Stay.
Observe.
Participate.
Learn.

You find out:
• if you enjoy the quiet
• if you can handle the work
• if desert life suits you

Because off-grid is amazing — for the right person.

And miserable for the wrong one.

Learn With Us — The Off-Grid Campfire Chat

Every morning at 11AM MST we host the Off-Grid Campfire Chat online.

We don’t teach theory.

We talk about:
mistakes
repairs
costs
unexpected problems
what nobody warns you about

No sugar coating.

You can watch online or visit in person:
http://www.plateauhamedecolquhoun.com

Is Off-Grid Living Worth It?

For us — yes.

Not because it’s easier.

Because it’s honest.

Your work matters immediately.
Your environment responds to what you do.
Your life feels connected to your actions again.

Off-grid living isn’t freedom from responsibility.

It’s responsibility you actually understand.

Final Thought

If you’re thinking about leaving conventional living, don’t rush.

Experience it first.

Ask questions.
Stay awhile.
Test yourself before investing everything.

Off-grid living isn’t a trend.

It’s a life.

And the desert will tell you quickly whether it’s yours.

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Security Camera Caught a Mysterious Desert Animal at Our Off-Grid Campground Last Night

A Quiet Visitor Passed Through the Campground Last Night

One of the things about living off-grid is you eventually realize…

We’re not the only ones who live here.

Last night our security cameras recorded a small nighttime visitor calmly wandering through the campground. No panic, no mess, no interest in anything we had — just a peaceful stroll across the property like it had somewhere important to be.

From the shape, ears, and long tail, it *looks* like it may be a fox — but we aren’t wildlife experts. If anyone familiar with desert animals recognizes the species, feel free to let us know what you think.

Whatever it was, the little traveler appeared healthy, relaxed, and completely at home in the desert.

Honestly… probably one of the most polite guests we’ve ever had.



Sharing Space With the Real Residents

People sometimes imagine desert living as empty.

It isn’t.

It’s just quieter — and the neighbors don’t knock.

We see tracks in the mornings, hear distant calls at night, and every once in a while the cameras show us who actually lives here full-time. Moments like this are a reminder that we didn’t create this place. We simply settled into it.

We don’t chase wildlife.
We don’t feed wildlife.
We don’t disturb wildlife.

We just observe and respect.

Out here, coexistence matters more than ownership.



The Desert and the Music

Experiences like this are part of why we created **Music in the Desert** in the first place.
The land, the stillness, the stars, and the unexpected moments all shape the atmosphere of what we do.

Sometimes the audience is people listening to the music.

Sometimes… it’s whoever quietly passes through under the night sky.

**Music in the Desert** is hosted by:
🎙 *Advocatus Diaboli*
🎶 *Melodious*

Learn more about the campground and events:
http://www.plateauhamedecolquhoun.com

Explore the music of Advocatus Diaboli:
http://www.advocatusdiaboliandthegrimleaferband.com

We’re grateful to share the desert with every respectful visitor — human or otherwise.



#DesertWildlife #OffGridLiving #fox  #campgroundlife  #KaHoonCampground