Survivopedia
  • HOME
  • GENERAL PREP
    • All
    • Disaster Scenarios
    • EMP
    • Natural Disasters
    • Survival News
    • Survival Skills
    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    When Hope Feels Distant: Survival Lessons from Faithful Generations

    Packing a Family Vehicle for Long-Term Bug-Out Living

    Packing a Family Vehicle for Long-Term Bug-Out Living

    Raising Strong Kids in a Weak Culture

    Natural Anti-Inflammatories That Store for Years

    What If the Power Grid Goes Down Tomorrow?

    What If the Power Grid Goes Down Tomorrow?

    What the Ukraine War Taught Us About Civilian Survival

    What the Ukraine War Taught Us About Civilian Survival

    Bugging In vs. Bugging Out: What Historic Cultures Would Choose

    Why We Prep

    • SHTF SCENARIOS
      • Survival Skills
      • Disaster Scenarios
      • Natural Disasters
      • WATER
      • FINANCIAL
      • WAR & CONFLICTS
      • emp
    • EQUIPMENT
      • Bug-Out-Vehicle
      • Firearms
      • COMMUNICATION
    • ENERGY
      • ENERGY
      • Energy Sources
      • Electric Equipments
      • Consumption Control
  • WEAPONS
    • All
    • Cold Weapons
    • Firearms
    • Regulations
    Field Reloading

    Field Reloading

    Fully Automatic Firearms? No Thanks!

    Are Alternative Weapons Practical in a Post-Disaster World?

    How To Travel With A Firearm

    The Ultimate Survival Knife: How to Pick the Right One

    A Sharp Edge: Choosing the Best Survival Knife for Prepping and Self-Defense

    Is There a Place for “Fast Draw” in Survival?

    Indispensable Gear for your EDC Core Layer

    Best 17 silent weapons for when SHTF

    Best 17 silent weapons for when SHTF

    • Firearms
    • Cold Weapons
    • Defense
    • Privacy & Data Protection
    • Regulations
  • FOOD
    • All
    • Cooking
    • Farm Animals
    • Food Storage
    • Hunting
    • Plants & Gardening
    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    8 Medicinal Plants the Native Americans Used for Survival

    Catching and Preserving Fish in Survival Situations

    Herbal and Alternative Antibiotics

    Heirloom Vegetables and Seeds

    Heirloom Vegetables and Seeds

    How To Stash Water When You’re Bugging In

    How To Stash Water When You’re Bugging In

    9 Composting Mistakes – All that Stands Between You and Black Gold

    9 Composting Mistakes – All that Stands Between You and Black Gold

    This Is Why The Amish Will Not Go Hungry During A Crisis

    This Is Why The Amish Will Not Go Hungry During A Crisis

    Eating Snake Meat – The Dos and Don’ts

    • Food Storage
    • Cooking
    • Farm Animals
    • Hunting
    • Plants & Gardening
  • Store
  • Newsletter
  • HOME
  • GENERAL PREP
    • All
    • Disaster Scenarios
    • EMP
    • Natural Disasters
    • Survival News
    • Survival Skills
    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    When Hope Feels Distant: Survival Lessons from Faithful Generations

    Packing a Family Vehicle for Long-Term Bug-Out Living

    Packing a Family Vehicle for Long-Term Bug-Out Living

    Raising Strong Kids in a Weak Culture

    Natural Anti-Inflammatories That Store for Years

    What If the Power Grid Goes Down Tomorrow?

    What If the Power Grid Goes Down Tomorrow?

    What the Ukraine War Taught Us About Civilian Survival

    What the Ukraine War Taught Us About Civilian Survival

    Bugging In vs. Bugging Out: What Historic Cultures Would Choose

    Why We Prep

    • SHTF SCENARIOS
      • Survival Skills
      • Disaster Scenarios
      • Natural Disasters
      • WATER
      • FINANCIAL
      • WAR & CONFLICTS
      • emp
    • EQUIPMENT
      • Bug-Out-Vehicle
      • Firearms
      • COMMUNICATION
    • ENERGY
      • ENERGY
      • Energy Sources
      • Electric Equipments
      • Consumption Control
  • WEAPONS
    • All
    • Cold Weapons
    • Firearms
    • Regulations
    Field Reloading

    Field Reloading

    Fully Automatic Firearms? No Thanks!

    Are Alternative Weapons Practical in a Post-Disaster World?

    How To Travel With A Firearm

    The Ultimate Survival Knife: How to Pick the Right One

    A Sharp Edge: Choosing the Best Survival Knife for Prepping and Self-Defense

    Is There a Place for “Fast Draw” in Survival?

    Indispensable Gear for your EDC Core Layer

    Best 17 silent weapons for when SHTF

    Best 17 silent weapons for when SHTF

    • Firearms
    • Cold Weapons
    • Defense
    • Privacy & Data Protection
    • Regulations
  • FOOD
    • All
    • Cooking
    • Farm Animals
    • Food Storage
    • Hunting
    • Plants & Gardening
    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    8 Medicinal Plants the Native Americans Used for Survival

    Catching and Preserving Fish in Survival Situations

    Herbal and Alternative Antibiotics

    Heirloom Vegetables and Seeds

    Heirloom Vegetables and Seeds

    How To Stash Water When You’re Bugging In

    How To Stash Water When You’re Bugging In

    9 Composting Mistakes – All that Stands Between You and Black Gold

    9 Composting Mistakes – All that Stands Between You and Black Gold

    This Is Why The Amish Will Not Go Hungry During A Crisis

    This Is Why The Amish Will Not Go Hungry During A Crisis

    Eating Snake Meat – The Dos and Don’ts

    • Food Storage
    • Cooking
    • Farm Animals
    • Hunting
    • Plants & Gardening
  • Store
  • Newsletter
No Result
View All Result
Survivopedia
No Result
View All Result
Home HOME & SHELTER

Why A Hemp House Is The Best House A Prepper Can Have

Why on earth is CVP writing about building with hemp?

No, I’m not high and I haven’t lost my mind. I’m writing about hemp because it makes a lot of sense for survivalists to consider hemp as both a crop and a building material. You don’t build with hemp by itself but mixed into hempcrete.

Hempcrete = Hemp + Lime Binder + Water

  • Strong, Breathable, Lightweight
  • Flame, Water & Pest Resistant
  • Energy-efficient Insulation
  • Non-toxic
  • Hempcrete Provides Better Ballistic Cover Than Wood Framing

To build a hempcrete structure, you build a frame, (which like the skeleton), fill it with hempcrete (like the body) and then finish it with lime plaster (like the skin.) Hempcrete homes don’t need vapor barriers or gypsum and don’t use any plastics in the walls. This is important because scientists are discovering that plastics are harming the environment in ways that we never imagined, and this will likely one day result in a reduction in amount of plastics that we use. Hempcrete is not a structural material but is does support its own weight. It has an R value of 2.1 per inch. Hempcrete can also be preformed and dried into blocks or bricks. In this form, hempcrete can be integrated with other building materials.

Choice of building materials has a lot to do with which houses are reduced to rubble in disasters and which homes are still standing when the dust settles. As a building material, the resilience of concrete is unsurpassed. I have had the privilege of examining Roman archaeological sites in Europe and I marveled at the fact that some concrete and concrete and masonry structures were still standing 2000 years after they were built. In fact, at a Portuguese site called Conimbriga, archaeologists hooked up a pump to elaborate ancient fountains and found that they still worked! In historical sites in the desert southwest, I have seen ferrous metal objects in the ground for only 100 years rusted so thoroughly that their only trace was a rust-colored soil in outline of the object, so I know metal pipes break down very quickly once maintenance ends and they are subject to moisture and other natural forces. But the Romans made the pipes at Conimbriga from clay and they stood the test of time.

I was impressed by both Roman concrete and Roman passive solar building design. Romans law prohibited builders from blocking a neighbor’s sunlight and prescribed the length of eaves of houses by latitude so that walls were shaded from the hot summer sun and received full sunlight in winter to store heat in the thermal mass of concrete buildings. We like to think that we’re so cleaver nowadays but take a peek out the window and you’ll see that this simple passive solar design trick is overlooked by many modern architects. This got me thinking about what kind of home I’d like to build someday. One day, I’d like to build a home that that will last much longer than the 40-80 years that the average wood-framed home lasts. I’d also like to ensure that it will survive any natural disasters that befall it.

Early on, I settled on a using a combination of concrete and concrete masonry as building materials. In photos of disasters, the benefits of concrete as a survival building material are plain to see. You’ll see a whole block of wood framed homes scoured right off their concrete foundation pads by a hurricane or tornado and then you’ll see a concrete or concrete masonry structure standing virtually untouched.

Hempcrete can be used in conjunction with concrete and concrete masonry. It has advantages over standard concrete in some applications because is both a great insulator and lightweight. This means it can be used to add insulation to concrete home and can be used where concrete would be too heavy. As a survivalist, I also like the fact that buildings of both concrete and hempcrete are hard to burn down.

Hemp is a very multi-use crop and the USA is the only industrialized nation that doesn’t produce it. It’s survival-related uses are many:

  • Food – Hulled hemp seeds are called hemp hearts and are technically nuts. Hemp hearts are amazingly nutritious. Hemp oil is also used in cooking.
  • Fuel – Hemp also produces renewable energy in the form of hemp oil.
  • Building Material – Hemp can make hempcrete (a cement-like material with a high insulation value), hemp MDF, roofing tiles, lightweight cement and wallboard.
  • Cordage – Hemp fibers have long been used to produce rope and twine.
  • Cloth – Hemp fibers are also woven into hemp cloth which is used to produce clothing.
  • Oil – Hemp oil is used in cooking and to make varnish, lubricant, soap and skin care products.

Hemp roofing tiles are non-toxic so they could be used to tile a roof designed to catch rainwater without making it toxic. With a first-flush diverter and a non-toxic roof, rainwater could be captured and used to water the garden or treated for washing or even drinking.

So, why don’t we see more people building with hemp? Many people around the world do use Hemp as a building material, but unfortunately, US legislators lumped hemp together with marijuana even though hemp isn’t used to make drugs. While both plants are of the genus cannabis, hemp and marijuana are two very different crops with very different properties. Unfortunately, these high taxes currently increase the costs of hemp-based building materials in the USA, but if those taxes are lifted, hemp could quickly become an important crop in the US again. In protracted emergency, hemp would no doubt re-emerge as an important crop because it so versatile.

The federal government wasn’t always anti-hemp. In fact, George Washington grew hemp. Thomas Jefferson touted the growing of hemp over tobacco as a cash crop. In their day, hemp was such a valuable commodity that citizens could pay their taxes in hemp. Hopefully, legislators will rectify their error and the USA can join the rest of the world in producing this important crop again and survivalists can begin taking advantage of the unique properties of this versatile building material.

BPHcover1

Tags: consumption controlenergy sourceHEMPhemp houseshouse protectioninsulation
ShareTweet
Previous Post

3 Things To Consider Before Setting Up Your Bunker

Next Post

How You Actually Need To Store Your Guns

Cache Valley Prepper

Cache Valley Prepper

Cache Valley Prepper is the CEO of Survival Sensei, LLC, a freelance author, writer, survival instructor, consultant and the director of the Survival Brain Trust. A descendant of pioneers, Cache was raised in the tradition of self-reliance and grew up working archaeological digs in the desert Southwest, hiking the Swiss Alps and Scottish highlands and building the Boy Scout Program in Portugal. Cache was mentored in survival by a Delta Force Lt Col and a physician in the US Nuclear Program and in business by Stephen R. Covey. You can catch up with Cache teaching EMP survival at survival expos, teaching SERE to ex-pats and vagabonds in South America or getting in some dirt time with the primitive skills crowd in a wilderness near you. His Facebook page is here. Cache Valley Prepper is a pen name used to protect his identity. You can send Cache Valley Prepper a message at editor [at] survivopedia.com

Related Posts

GENERAL PREP

Raising Strong Kids in a Weak Culture

September 3, 2025
COMMUNICATION

Why We Prep

September 3, 2025
How To Stash Water When You’re Bugging In
Bug In Plan

How To Stash Water When You’re Bugging In

August 12, 2025
9 Composting Mistakes – All that Stands Between You and Black Gold
HOME & SHELTER

9 Composting Mistakes – All that Stands Between You and Black Gold

July 23, 2025
Disaster Scenarios

America’s Forgotten Fallout Shelters: What Remains, What’s At Risk, and How to Survive

August 8, 2025
GENERAL PREP

How to scout your living area and identify threats

December 18, 2024
Next Post
How You Actually Need To Store Your Guns

How You Actually Need To Store Your Guns

Comments 6

  1. Bill in Idaho says:
    6 years ago

    How Structurally Secure are Hemp-Crete Panels and Blocks ? I am Very curious and Very interested.

    Reply
    • Alex says:
      6 years ago

      The compressive strength of Hempcrete is low for structural components, somwhere up to 0.024 pounds per square inch (psi).

      Survivopedia team.

      Reply
  2. Brie Smith says:
    6 years ago

    Are there US builers using Hemp-Crete Panels and blocks? Where can these products be pirchased?

    Reply
    • Alex says:
      6 years ago

      In the US, there are currently over 50 homes made from hempcrete, the first being built in North Carolina in 2010. Hempitecture, a Washington-based company, has been retrofitting homes using the material. In Colorado, there is Left Hand Hemp, located in Denver, who builds hemp structures and helps teach others through seminars about hempcrete. We can expect to see a lot more buildings utilizing hempcrete in the coming years in the US, now that hemp has been legalized federally.

      Survivopedia team.

      Reply
    • kelly says:
      6 years ago

      There is only one company in Canada with a viable brick but it is not scalable to market just yet. Also, I know of no one making panels. I am toying with the idea of pre-fab but it’s a year out. Best method is spraying hempcrete into the walls. Contact me at 970-433-0414 if you’re interested in speaking more or planning a build this year. Cheers!

      Reply
  3. kelly thornton says:
    6 years ago

    Greetings! Thanks for the shout out about Left Hand Hemp! I am actually in Boulder but will soon be relocating to the midwest! No worries, we can build houses anywhere in the country or help you out on a workshop!

    Cheers!
    Kelly

    Reply

Leave a Reply to kelly thornton Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

September 23, 2025

Bugging In vs. Bugging Out: What Historic Cultures Would Choose

September 12, 2025
What the Ukraine War Taught Us About Civilian Survival

What the Ukraine War Taught Us About Civilian Survival

September 3, 2025

When Hope Feels Distant: Survival Lessons from Faithful Generations

September 5, 2025
Top 6 Survival Rifles And Why You Need One

Top 6 Survival Rifles And Why You Need One

428
Top 5 Bug Out Locations In The US

Top 5 Bug Out Locations In The US

257
Top 10 Vehicles For Your EMP Survival

Top 10 Vehicles For Your EMP Survival

162
10 Items You Need To Hoard

10 Items You Need To Hoard

148
Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

September 23, 2025

When Hope Feels Distant: Survival Lessons from Faithful Generations

September 5, 2025
Packing a Family Vehicle for Long-Term Bug-Out Living

Packing a Family Vehicle for Long-Term Bug-Out Living

September 5, 2025

Raising Strong Kids in a Weak Culture

September 3, 2025











Recent Articles

Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

September 23, 2025

When Hope Feels Distant: Survival Lessons from Faithful Generations

September 5, 2025
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms&Conditions
  • Blogroll
  • Contact
  • Newsletter

© SURVIVOPEDIA.COM

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • GENERAL PREP
    • SHTF SCENARIOS
      • Survival Skills
      • Disaster Scenarios
      • Natural Disasters
      • WATER
      • FINANCIAL
      • WAR & CONFLICTS
      • emp
    • EQUIPMENT
      • Bug-Out-Vehicle
      • Firearms
      • COMMUNICATION
    • ENERGY
      • ENERGY
      • Energy Sources
      • Electric Equipments
      • Consumption Control
  • WEAPONS
    • Firearms
    • Cold Weapons
    • Defense
    • Privacy & Data Protection
    • Regulations
  • FOOD
    • Food Storage
    • Cooking
    • Farm Animals
    • Hunting
    • Plants & Gardening
  • Store
  • Newsletter

© SURVIVOPEDIA.COM