YURTS... Affordable Home Solution? Or Too Good to be True? Expert Explains PROS and CONS

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 16. 01. 2023
  • Yurts are an amazing portable and cost effective home that you can build and be move into in just a few weeks! But nothing is perfect...
    In this interview with Paul from Nomad Shelter we cover the Pros and Cons of the yurt to try to figure out if a yurt is right for you and your family on your homestead!
    Checkout Nomad Shelter
    www.nomadshelter.com/
    All the Yurt Footage from Nomad Shelter CZcams Channel
    / @nomadshelteralaskanyu...
    Pioneer Podcast Version
    www.thisishomesteady.com/pion...
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 632

  • @jasonlassen7599
    @jasonlassen7599 Před rokem +550

    My wife and I live in a yurt in North Carolina. It's a 30 ft yurt with ten ft high walls. We have normal double pane windows, normal house doors, actually very beautiful doors. The insides are much like a normal house. And that's where things get expensive. A modern kitchen, bathroom septic, etc. In a yurt isn't any cheaper to build than a normal house. Yes, the outside of the structure is less expensive but everything else is the same. In the end I think we have about as much money in our yurt as we could have spent on a smaller double wide. Yurts are way cooler, to be sure, but I suppose that's a matter of opinion.

    • @Homesteadyshow
      @Homesteadyshow  Před rokem +41

      Yeah, you for sure can sink a lot of money into them if you want to 😆

    • @debbieday6885
      @debbieday6885 Před rokem +17

      What is the humidity and temperature like in the summer? My tiny house stays at 62*F.

    • @jasonlassen7599
      @jasonlassen7599 Před rokem +35

      @@debbieday6885 Hi Debbie. We heat and cool out yurt with a heat pump and two pretty good size mini splits. We don't have any issues with humidity, the heat pump works great for that. I will say that yurts are easier to heat than cool but we keep it at about 68 in the summer. In retrospect I'd heat with some kind of radiant heat and cool with the heat pump. We may be adding radiators to the heat mix because radiant heat works so much better than convection in a yurt. One tip on cooling, lots of modern yurts have a plastic dome on the top that opens for ventilation. Make sure that dome is tinted, not clear. Even with a tint, it's almost like a magnifying glass up there in the summer.

    • @1337farm
      @1337farm Před rokem +1

      @@debbieday6885 62 F should be a crime against your electric bill and the planet

    • @debbieday6885
      @debbieday6885 Před rokem +16

      @@1337farm I have a 73 SQ ft tiny house that I love with a mini split. My electric bill is $50/month

  • @eco35758
    @eco35758 Před rokem +226

    I’ve lived in my 24’ diameter yurt since 2014, I’m 70 yrs old now. I live 20 miles south of Tennessee state line in northern Alabama, we have four full seasons here. I rented space on friends land while looking for my on land to purchase. I hooked on to her electricity as an “out building”. I also used her water source, running a water line in trench with electrical line. I have a composting toilet. We dug a 6x6x2’ deep pond to use as grey water wetland for the sink, shower and washing machine. For heat I used propane.
    In three years I was ready to move to my new permanent home. Having a solid level platform is critical.
    This is my sixth year living here since the move. We have big thunderstorms here and my yurt always feels secure. We used mobile home tie-downs which attaches yurt to platform/footers. My propane heater keeps it warm, we even had 2*F low temps this winter and nothing inside, or under my yurt froze.
    I use an energy-star window air conditioner for a 700sf space, I have 750 cubic feet with my tall ceiling. It stays very comfortable year round and I do use a dehumidifier when using propane heat.
    I would highly recommend yurt living, it serves me very well.

    • @Homesteadyshow
      @Homesteadyshow  Před rokem +22

      So nice to read this firsthand knowledge! Thanks for sharing!

    • @talesfromtheleashexpatdogl1426
      @talesfromtheleashexpatdogl1426 Před rokem +8

      What was your final cost? What company manufactured your yurt?

    • @pattycakesxo1758
      @pattycakesxo1758 Před rokem

      Dehumidifier for propane heat...I'm missing something here.
      Why use propane heat.

    • @FortniteOG420
      @FortniteOG420 Před rokem +4

      I've been trying to find a fellow Alabamian who lived in something like this, glad to know its not a sauna in the summer with a small AC

    • @pouncepounce7417
      @pouncepounce7417 Před rokem +13

      @@pattycakesxo1758 An propane can heat during night when you are not up feeding an wood stove.
      If you are more permanent you can build an stove with enough mass to heat overnight, if you want to stay semi mobile or have the structure only a few month/years propane is a solution.
      Then you should plan for illness, you really do not want to get up every other hour feeding an stove while sick, always have some solution that allows you to suffer in dignity for a few days.

  • @ChadWilson
    @ChadWilson Před rokem +176

    Over time, you can end up with a colony of yurts! A yurt for your office, a yurt for your mother-in-law, a yurt for that ultimate gaming setup!

    • @lowowl
      @lowowl Před rokem +27

      I’d skip the mother in law, but that’s a personal preference.

    • @Skinny_Pimp
      @Skinny_Pimp Před rokem +17

      That mother in law home would be close to a stream. Right by the bear path.

    • @martymcfly8535
      @martymcfly8535 Před rokem +5

      But that would be a waste of a perfectly good Yurt.

    • @Space_Pilgrim
      @Space_Pilgrim Před rokem +1

      Finally a good use case for the hot tent stove collection.

    • @steringp1434
      @steringp1434 Před rokem +2

      @@martymcfly8535 Actually putting the mother-in-law in a yurt near a bear trail might be the very best use of a yurt!

  • @timmjackson
    @timmjackson Před rokem +232

    I lived in a 30' yurt with a second 12' yurt (bathroom) connected by a covered breezeway in Northern California for around 8 years. The first two years without electricity before I installed a micro hydro system and had power. Loved it, although in 2006 it rained for 28 days out of 31 in January and what was normally fun (listening to the rain on the roof) became so oppressively loud, I nearly lost my mind!
    They've probably tightened up the law since, but at the time, in the late 90s, I contacted the county building department and asked if I needed a permit to build a free-standing deck in the woods on my property. I was told no, not if it isn't attached to a home. I called them about a week later and asked if I needed a permit to erect a tent on a free-standing deck and the answer was again no!

    • @teeheeteeheeish
      @teeheeteeheeish Před rokem +25

      Wow you have much more courtesy towards petty tyrants than I do 😂

    • @tibo5828
      @tibo5828 Před rokem +25

      We have been manipulated into thinking that we have to accept the superstition of government permission.

    • @timmjackson
      @timmjackson Před rokem +16

      @@tibo5828 To both you and Nathan, the penalties for not accepting are pretty stiff. They've even granted themselves the authority to condemn and make people deconstruct what has been constructed.

    • @tibo5828
      @tibo5828 Před rokem +15

      @@timmjackson I hear what your saying... I've had similar threats (from government) held over my head. I still did what I wanted to do and I'm still here! One finds a way and needs to be willing to push back. Choose your battles, choose where you will take a stand. If you don't, they will choose for you!

    • @NehemiahHughes
      @NehemiahHughes Před rokem +2

      @@tibo5828 What City do you live in?

  • @francisfischer7620
    @francisfischer7620 Před 8 měsíci +24

    We lived in a Pacific Yurt for 14 years, in rural Minnesota. Honestly, I can't say I'd do it again. But we certainly weren't any the worse for it! And living in a yurt all that time allowed us to save enough to buy a 100 year old farm house! I love having solid walls in a storm. It's all good!!

  • @RB01138
    @RB01138 Před 9 měsíci +41

    The main issue I see with Yurts is the materials they use to make them. The reason traditional ones are made of soft materials is because they are meant to be torn down and moved by an extended family group. Having them as a stationary, permanent structure while made of soft materials just means 90% of the cost of a traditional structure with a fraction of the lifespan. They were really popular a few years back here in the Yukon, and any of the ones more than a decade old look ratty and gross.

  • @jonphillips2123
    @jonphillips2123 Před rokem +189

    My wife and I have lived in a 20ft yurt for 3 years now. We built the whole thing ourselves. With the platform, the yurt itself, and the marine canvass wrap that my wife sewed we moved on to our land for less than 5k. I understand why people buy kits but the only hard part of a yurt is the "crown" or center top piece. You can find those online at reasonable prices and DIY the rest for much cheaper than a kit.

    • @KrustyKlown
      @KrustyKlown Před rokem

      What about heating/cooling with what appears to be something with little or no insulation???

    • @justaspivoriunas9416
      @justaspivoriunas9416 Před rokem +10

      @@KrustyKlown You can put as much insulation as you want or as much as you can afford. Nomads in Central Asia actually put more layers of felt in winter and less during the summer. Heating traditionally iron stove and cooling used only by rich who shouldn't live in a yurt anyway.

    • @jonphillips2123
      @jonphillips2123 Před rokem +7

      @@KrustyKlown I've got a mini split ac and a propane heater that both work well.

    • @Space_Pilgrim
      @Space_Pilgrim Před rokem +2

      I was looking into the materials to sew my own yurt. I ended up finding something called duck canvas. Would you specify what you used exactly, what weight or thickness it was? Thanks.

    • @jonphillips2123
      @jonphillips2123 Před rokem +7

      @@Space_Pilgrim We used poly coated marine vinyl. I don't remember the exact thickness but we also put a coat of flex seal on the roof.

  • @DesiRush1
    @DesiRush1 Před rokem +80

    You just need to understand that a yurt is not the be-all-end-all solution to all of life's problems, so don't expect it to magically fix everything about your life, wherever you go, there you are.

  • @heidiwilde5574
    @heidiwilde5574 Před rokem +25

    I built my own 18 foot yurt from scratch out of mostly sawmill discards and 2x4s. The crown was quite a challenge and all of it took almost a year to build in my little spare time. Each piece of wood needed to be cut, planed, sanded, drilled and the wall slats steam bent. I used Nylon rope to tie hundreds of knots for all the connections and sewed all the covers and used felt for insulation. I've live in it for 3 years now and love it. If I was to do it over again, I would probably make it 20 to 24 feet diameter to fit a kitchen and bathroom into it. Both of those are outside now and that gets a little uncomfortable when it's freezing out. This yurt has withstood some pretty heavy winds and snow loads. After living in tents for several years, this is like a palace and it gets super cozy inside with a wood stove. I don't think I'd want to ever buy a kit, I really enjoyed the process of creating this and my yurt makes a wondeful home that can move with me.

    • @jeffreyallen1290
      @jeffreyallen1290 Před rokem +2

      Go with the 24 footer, I did the 16 foot size for a year and it's way to small. I would like to do the yurt thing again but finding a location is always the most difficult part.

  • @shirleygreen2397
    @shirleygreen2397 Před rokem +20

    If you want an honest opinion. Check out the fit farmer. They have lived in a yurt for many years They have also put mini splits in their home. They are getting ready to put up a 2nd yurt, and they are going to join them. They also heat with wood. Shirley

  • @AgnesMariaL
    @AgnesMariaL Před 6 měsíci +5

    We had briefly - VERY briefly - considered a yurt when we purchased raw land. But for the cost, it is FAR cheaper to buy a house on wheels that is already fully equipped and plug-and-play for power/water/septic! We wound up buying a 42' park model RV (2 bedroom, full bath - as in, it has a proper tub!) for only $1900 and were able to move into it right away! The master bedroom and its slide were rotted out, but we resealed the roof, replaced the framing, removed the slide and added an 8x10 addition off that opening which has our woodstove, water supply and solar power supply.

    • @IPlead5
      @IPlead5 Před měsícem

      I am trying to imagine what that looks like. Yurts aren't the cheapest livable space, but they are dang cool.

    • @RyanBarnes
      @RyanBarnes Před 7 dny +1

      Sounds like you bought the Walter White edition RV.

  • @ClareAndAlec
    @ClareAndAlec Před rokem +20

    I dream of living in a yurt. For me, it's that connection to nature that I crave. I've spent a lot of time sleeping in tents, and while sleeping on the ground isn't my favorite, I love hearing the birds in the morning so loud that they wake you up and the pitter patter of rain on the roof. Ntm, circles are pleasant.

    • @kimk2635
      @kimk2635 Před rokem

      You could have the same connection in a log cabin

  • @teeheeteeheeish
    @teeheeteeheeish Před rokem +27

    Lived in a canvas wall tent comfortably for almost a month. Everyone has their limits to how “rough” they can hack it, but usually your limit is way more rugged than you thought

  • @sheenamac2382
    @sheenamac2382 Před rokem +37

    I am in a 26’ Yurt with family of 6 since September. I would probably go with two smaller Yurts instead of one big one. A sleeping and a cooking. Mostly because I need to reach out for help to move it which is why I like the Yurt. It was put up in 2 days we had the foundation for the platform ready when it arrived. We are at my parents hooked into their power at the moment and planning to move to our land once we have an out building for electricity and water hookup. We got our Yurt just before Hurricane hit and often have 100km/h wine gusts. It definitely is doing very well. It is really loud with all the kids so having other space for those needing quiet is also why I have smaller second Yurt in mind.
    I love hearing the wind and trees and wildlife and rain. You really know what’s going on just outside.
    So far definitely loving the Yurt life .

    • @slee7991
      @slee7991 Před rokem

      How is your set up inside? Is there any recommendations you have to cut costs?
      We're trying to figure out how to get electric and plumbing without it costing and arm and a leg but I guess if you don't want to live off grid these expenses are unavoidable

    • @sheenamac2382
      @sheenamac2382 Před rokem

      @@slee7991 we don’t have running water currently so I have a plastic laundry sink with a Blue Water jug propped on it and a waste bucket under for dishes.
      For Electricity we have an electrical box wired up to 4 plugs that then feeds out to a Rv Plug in to the main house. We don’t have high electricity needs mostly the fridge. We have a wood cook stove and an Instantpot for cooking that serve most needs. I plan to get an RV switchable box unit that can power off batter or direct line in the future which is more costly but it will give me a chance to use solar.
      Set up is a bench with hooks inside the main door and then a corner cabinet that is sectioned off as a water closet for a pee bucket and washing/changing. Just washing with cloths and bowls. The flush washroom in the main house is where regular showers/#2 happens. Then there is two bunk beds with a shelf for clothes between them and angled towards the center to make a bedroom for the kids. A partition and then a pull out bed couch for adults and then a catch space for things then dining room table and shelving for kitchen area sink and fridge. The Woodstove is in the center.

  • @maxinedurling3425
    @maxinedurling3425 Před rokem +39

    I've seen a yurt set up with a main yurt and having smaller yurts coming off of it as bedrooms which I think if you have a large family is a good idea

  • @aaronevans7713
    @aaronevans7713 Před rokem +14

    I have a 30’ yurt here in Montana. The wood stove keeps it warm as long as it stays above zero, but it takes a while to heat up and a lot of wood to keep it warm.
    I got it for a temporary shelter on our property, but then continued using it for guests and AirBnB.
    Now it’s my home office, but that’s overkill and I’m thinking about selling it.

  • @mikegamba580
    @mikegamba580 Před rokem +8

    A few years ago I was helping a friend build a yurt but sadly addiction ended my friends dream. We had the whole foundation down but that was it. I haven't seen my friend in a few years I pray he's staying clean

    • @tinahammond4438
      @tinahammond4438 Před rokem

      Wow, so much to look forward to...many prayers sent!!!.

  • @kimieann1975
    @kimieann1975 Před rokem +10

    Have y'all considered a cordwood home? We built one. They're pretty cheap to build. Way cheaper than straw bale. Our walls are a ft thick and solid wood with mortar. Now ours is only 750 Sq ft 2bdrm 1 bath. Total cost was 12k. That includes appliances, electrical, plumbing. Everything. One of the cheapest, sturdier homes you can build. We love our little cabin. It's been through tropical storms, hurricanes and it's held up great.

    • @jimyeats
      @jimyeats Před rokem

      So is it 1ft pieces of cordwood with mortar filling the chinks and securing the wood? Is the exterior just expose butt ends of wood? What did you do to finish the inside? Exposed wood or some sort of interior sheathing/plaster/drywall.

    • @kimieann1975
      @kimieann1975 Před rokem +3

      @jim yeats ours is 1ft long split loblolly pine. You put down a row of mortar on the inside & outside with a mixture of sawdust and Lyme in between them. Stack a row of split wood. The wood can't touch eachother. You want gaps between them or you'll get rot. Repeat with mortar and sawdust. We did our cabin with a post & beam frame, then used cordwood for the infill. Electrical we ran through the post & beam frame. Everything is exposed wood. Like a log cabin. Look them up on Google. They're pretty cool. Everyone thinks ours is a stone house. It looks like stone from a distance. Interior walls we framed out the standard way then used wood from pallets. I hate drywall. To expensive and it's useless to hang anything on.

    • @kimieann1975
      @kimieann1975 Před rokem +1

      @jim yeats You can look up cordwood construction on CZcams to. It's been around for hundreds of yrs. If I remember right there's a cordwood barn somewhere over in the UK still standing and it's 300yrs old.

    • @kimieann1975
      @kimieann1975 Před rokem

      @@jimyeats czcams.com/video/demOpsDA9jU/video.html

    • @MrBottlecapBill
      @MrBottlecapBill Před 6 měsíci

      @@kimieann1975 There was one around here too, it didn't last 100. The wood rots away eventually.

  • @kathleensanderson3082
    @kathleensanderson3082 Před rokem +18

    Electric fence -- a hot one -- is a really good bear deterrent. That's what a lot of beekeepers put around their bee yards.
    I've always wanted to live in a yurt. Someone down in the comments said, Just get an RV. But travel trailers and motor homes are long, skinny rectangles, and they feel cramped, even the ones with slide-outs. They can also be very expensive, especially the larger ones or the better quality ones. If I had a choice between living in a yurt or an RV, I'd take the yurt (and I've lived in both tents and RV's, so I'm not just talking through my hat).

    • @sheenamac2382
      @sheenamac2382 Před rokem +3

      Debated an RV before we got our Yurt but realized I can fix everything that could go wrong with the Yurt fairly easily vs. technical know how required for RV maintenance.

    • @kathleensanderson3082
      @kathleensanderson3082 Před rokem +1

      @@sheenamac2382 That's a very good point, too!

    • @eibbor171
      @eibbor171 Před rokem

      also have to put fuel in that bitch car is enough id hate to go the pumps with that it would be such a financial ooooooof

  • @bohd3
    @bohd3 Před 7 měsíci +6

    I love the idea of a yurt, my biggest concern is the HVAC, but that's one of my biggest concerns on any house. I'd probably do it treehouse style for some added protection, views and for fun.

  • @judge831
    @judge831 Před 8 měsíci +7

    I like the shape, but I'd definitely add insulation, heater vents/wood furnace smoke pipes around the base, and a vent & powerful fan for the top hole. I'd also want to reinforce the walls and roof with more wood.

  • @lindaward3156
    @lindaward3156 Před rokem +5

    I lived in a rustic yurt 50 years ago in Nethers VA, a place still very rural today. it's still some of my fondest memories, even w/o plumbing. it was magical.

  • @ttrestle
    @ttrestle Před rokem +7

    I built a yurt for a friend over a weekend while I was in college. It was wild! The most expensive part was the window part center top.

  • @jenniferstewarts4851
    @jenniferstewarts4851 Před rokem +19

    This doesn't just apply to Yurts. Sidewall tents can be done like this too.
    18x23 sidewall tent, but instead of a normal opening on the front you put in a framed door and windows. Same as at the back. Often a simple plywood frame on the sides as well. So the sides up to 6' have wood backing, the front up to the roof has wood, then the same goes for the back with the stove passing through the front or back. wood or steel framing (i prefer steel) providing MASSIVE snow loading. With the inside then being able to be configured however you want.
    414 square feet gives you more then enough space for a 2 bedroom 1 bathroom. Kitchen... hot water on demand shower, propane appliances. nice cast iron wood stove, double walled, canvas outer, and insulting inner. Can be built and set up in a weekend (or a day if you have enough people)

  • @amandab9252
    @amandab9252 Před rokem +7

    A yurt has been my dream for years now! I’m loving this video so far!

  • @abbycole7485
    @abbycole7485 Před rokem +44

    I understand the history and structure of a yurt, but these were quite frankly temporary style. I’ve seen permanent structured yurts, really really big. I wish you guys could have touched on that. I assume because a traditional yurt is indeed a movable structure.

    • @goshu7009
      @goshu7009 Před rokem +6

      Yurts are supposed to be temrorary.... its for Nomads to move with their cattle.

    • @AnhH88
      @AnhH88 Před rokem

      We’ve stayed at a wooden yurt structure in WV and it was definitely an experience. Most are made of moveable material but you can do it with wood too.

    • @steringp1434
      @steringp1434 Před rokem +3

      The person speaking is a salesman for a particular company. He is only going to promote yurt kits that his company sells. This video wasn't a public service announcement.

    • @Mico-Xiyeas
      @Mico-Xiyeas Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@AnhH88HEY MAN!!! Can i please get some advice on this??? im in wv right now, wheeling. Did you erect your yurt in ohio county? what was your experience, favorite parts and cons of the yurt? any advice or solutions to your cons?

    • @alicetebo4426
      @alicetebo4426 Před 5 měsíci

      We have been thinking about building a 2 story wooden yurt because of where we are and the weather. What companies would you suggest?

  • @judyferguson3185
    @judyferguson3185 Před rokem +1

    Please keep showing some videos as you or your buyer builds. I think they are wonderful and would like to see how different people arrange their living spaces and can you build lofts, how many? They just look wonderful❤️

  • @pattycakesxo1758
    @pattycakesxo1758 Před rokem

    So happy to watch this!!

  • @tonyderrow5241
    @tonyderrow5241 Před rokem

    been thinking about buying a yurt for a few years now, this video was useful thanks for the content

  • @derekp6636
    @derekp6636 Před rokem +5

    stayed in one this winter in colorado! had a blast, the wind noise was a bit much and the creaking....but we got used to it very quickly. Heating wise it was very efficient and warm even in the middle of a snow storm

  • @salemthorup9536
    @salemthorup9536 Před rokem +9

    I LOOOVE when you do videos like this!!! I mean, you really nail the content pretty much ALL the time. I always know I can watch your videos and pay attention and enjoy them, which is a huge deal. You're a rare channel. But this video in particular was just so well done. I really am enjoying it. You have me sold on a yurt so far!

  • @gabrielbennett5162
    @gabrielbennett5162 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I rented a yurt once on the Oregon coast. It was surprisingly comfortable and spacious.

  • @egyptwns89_26
    @egyptwns89_26 Před rokem +5

    I’d rather stick with a regular cabin. I don’t like how light yurts are (despite durability). At least with cabins, you can make them a couple of feet thick with four inch thick doors and withstand any storm or whatever.

  • @SpencerFarris
    @SpencerFarris Před 9 měsíci

    We are in the west desert of Utah and just bought 2 30' yurts. We are very excited to get them set up for our current home!

  • @DuderScooter
    @DuderScooter Před rokem +5

    I hope I can learn more about yurts than I think I need to ☺️ hopefully Mrs Scooter and I can agree on one if it’s right for us 🙏

  • @GMgrow44
    @GMgrow44 Před rokem +4

    I would live in a yurt! Easy to build and portable, sign me up!

  • @thomasoreilly6140
    @thomasoreilly6140 Před rokem +1

    This was really informative. Thank you!

  • @tomasr64
    @tomasr64 Před rokem +4

    I've lived in a traditional Mongolian Ger, yurt for 5 years now full time. No running water inside. Sand floor. Wood stove. Mobile solar power unit. Four season well insulated I chose. Its great but takes discipline to keep things tidy. And Its not a rental. I show and tell on my channel.

  • @joycemaurer3588
    @joycemaurer3588 Před rokem +5

    Wow, well that was very informative.

  • @shawnlinnehan7349
    @shawnlinnehan7349 Před rokem +4

    We put a24’ up on land we have in north Florida. Since it’s Florida, we got extra support against hurricanes so it took longer as everything is screwed together which you don’t normally do. The platform did take awhile as I am not a carpenter and it didn’t come with it, we had to just build it. We just have a temporary trailer permit for the land and aren’t allowed a permanent structure so we are getting around it with a yurt. We have a travel trailer also there with water and electricity. We just run extension cords to the yurt for now and there’s no running water, compost toilet.

    • @doughendricks9912
      @doughendricks9912 Před rokem +1

      What’s the wind rating on it? I’m in Tampa Bay Area near coast.

  • @diannt9583
    @diannt9583 Před rokem

    I checked out their website and did the "Build your own" thing they have on their website. I can see making a greenhouse outbuilding here -if I keep it under 200 square feet and don't live in it, I can do it without permitting here. (If I tried to build a structure for living here, it would be an Epic Fail, permit-wise.) Strongly considering it, with the greenhouse model at 14-foot diameter. Taking some time to consider, before I order. And the sense from reading comments is that this particular brand stands well up against wind is a major plus. I am near the top of a hillside. Many regular greenhouses seem to collapse readily with wind and/or snow load.
    Great video!!

  • @MrKingsley
    @MrKingsley Před rokem +5

    Traditional yurts didn't have permanent platforms; I would argue that the modern yurt is more of a yurt styled semi permanent home\shelter than it is a true yurt. Ether way I like them both a lot. I would like to have a more traditional yurt I can pack up into a sledge to take to outback property for winter activities or to serve as a guest house. Someday I hope to build a modern interpretation of a yurt on a platform on my own land as a cottage.

  • @Jentalks380
    @Jentalks380 Před 9 měsíci

    Fantastic video. Id love to see more footage of inside designs.

  • @RickysFarmAndHatchery
    @RickysFarmAndHatchery Před rokem +2

    Yurt in LA means you came up on good material for your homeless tent. Pallet jacks old chicken wire and homedepot blue 5x10 covers. Still good idea.

  • @anniecochrane3359
    @anniecochrane3359 Před rokem +7

    I have wanted to live in a yurt for a very long time. Problems with council diverted my yurt journey. But i'm back with it and trying to find suitable land where I live. We dont have bears in Aotearoa/New Zealand, the most dangerous creatures here are two legged :)

  • @tylorban
    @tylorban Před rokem

    Perfect timing

  • @mattharvey8712
    @mattharvey8712 Před 9 měsíci

    Bravo.......I was in one .....Mendocino.......80 mile winds.......the whole thing was shaking...... no problem ......anchor the floor to ground.....big footings ......cheers

  • @brendafulmernickel1218
    @brendafulmernickel1218 Před 2 měsíci

    I would love to have a Yurt!! The cost and efficiency are progressive aspects in New Earth! The Wave of The New !!

  • @eequezada
    @eequezada Před rokem

    Thanks.

  • @justindie7543
    @justindie7543 Před 7 měsíci +2

    My grandparents have used 2 large yurts on their lakefront property in montana for 20ish years now. They solved the insulation issue by simply travelling to visit family during the winter, they just have to remember to empty the pipes before they leave. Funny enough, my cousin and I got trapped with a black bear that was trying to get into the place, we were both around 5, but the dog scared him off. Granparents are getting up there in age now and want to stay year round more often so my grampa built a well insulated small cabin which they move to during the winter. They still pay almost nothing in property taxes on the improved value, and recently got offered 2 million for the property. I hope they don't sell until I can afford to buy it off them myself!

  • @100musicplaylists3
    @100musicplaylists3 Před rokem +3

    A steel or aluminium trailer with sides that fold down to form a circular yurt platform is a cool idea. Ive seen a video of someone who has already made a 5m circular trailer yurt platform.

  • @kpbarbee
    @kpbarbee Před rokem

    Love that 'stache! AND the video is great, wonderful content!

  • @betawolfhd
    @betawolfhd Před 8 měsíci

    I fell in love the yurt idea after seeing it in a game "Cradle".

  • @NadesikoRose
    @NadesikoRose Před 11 měsíci

    I fell in love with yurts ages ago as it was something that didn’t cost a fortune to build nor did you have to fork out money for land, you could just get permission from family who own large amounts of land to see if you could ‘rent’ an acre or two from them for you to settle down on until you decide to move on.
    I am going to get my yurts from Groovey Yurts, based here in Ontario…Canada.
    They also have several set up that prospective clients can rent for a few days to see if they will actually enjoy living in a yurt. Something I plan on doing once I have enough money saved up…

  • @Atownforevilones
    @Atownforevilones Před rokem +8

    I really feel like a properly built house is going to have less maintenance than a yurt. I do general construction so I'm pretty familiar with traditional construction. Most steel roofing/siding has a 30-50 year warranty, I don't see the cover of a yurt lasting nearly that long. The vinyl/poly windows also aren't going to last nearly as long as glass ones.
    While I'm know it varies depending where you are, you can post and truss style buildings really economically. Probably fairly competitively with yurts of a similar size.
    I think trying to sell a yurt or really anything on features that don't really fit is a poor way to go. Especially when there are plenty of genuinely good perks to it. Stuff like being portable, being able to do it yourself, just the coolness of it,. I think a lot of people that have yurts really like the "yurtness" of them. I mean convertible cars are cool because you can take the top off, not necessarily because they're better or cheaper than hard tops. I'd also bet there are a lot of situations where permitting would be easier due to them not being permanent too.

    • @jelliottlein
      @jelliottlein Před rokem +1

      I have a lot of experience in conventional construction as well, and I'm working on building my own yurt now. I'm planning to go with a treated canvas cover (~10 year lifespan) and framed glass windows. A vinyl cover is usually rated around 25-30 years. My thinking is, it's cheap and easy to replace the cover in the future. No regular painting or sanding of the siding, a fraction of the hard work, danger, and waste of ripping off old shingles. Current budget for all materials (excluding interiors): under $5k for three yurts (a 24' and two 16'). And I can build most of the parts in my garage over the winter and transport them on a small trailer to the property when ready.

  • @kenkiekens7746
    @kenkiekens7746 Před rokem

    I stayed in a Yurt, a real one, where everyone lives in Yurts, and it was great.

  • @noah786
    @noah786 Před rokem +6

    I would imagine it would be a good candidate for a mini split to heat and cool.

  • @iamtmckendry
    @iamtmckendry Před 3 měsíci

    The bones and basic furnishings are super affordable. They are even liveable in a cold, wet climate. I got a somewhat broken used yurt, a platform, and basic insulation/furnishings(+ stove/pipe, fridge/freezer ect.) Fixed it all up and installed for $15,000. It was roughly that amount in labor costs(mostly my labor). To build a 900sq ft of a stick-home would be roughly 5-10x the cost.
    Now, and as its been mentioned already, the lifestyle is different than a standard stick frame house. It requires more care to keep the yurt and living conditions comfortable. If you are looking to have nice furnishings, super high insulation and such... that's where the huge monies comes in. Nice floors/walls($3k+), semi-finished kitchen/bathroom($5k+) and other finishings.. will cost almost the same amount as the entire structure+basic furnishings.

  • @CeasiusC
    @CeasiusC Před 6 měsíci

    Saw the thumbnail. Still wasn't prepared for that mustashe.
    I appreciate it.

  • @gailboudreau6624
    @gailboudreau6624 Před rokem +4

    Fit farmer has a yurt they love it

  • @AKDragonFish3D
    @AKDragonFish3D Před rokem +1

    My brother and I both have significant sized families. We've been looking at yurts for the fams on a big piece of land for awhile now. One big platform or multiple platforms, yurts on top, rudimentary plumbing and wiring, and let our kids grow up in nature instead of the city. Can't seem to get our wives on board though, even after showing them the costs and this vid.

  • @dragonflyfarm9154
    @dragonflyfarm9154 Před rokem

    We have purchased our yurt and plan to pick it up early May! Very excited. Our 30’ yurt will be simple outside and simple inside, the goal is to live a self reliant minimalist life. Yes we will have framed construction windows and doors, but we will bypass all the modern normal society modern features. I love the fact that we can be much closer to nature, so why would we modernize the interior to take away from nature and simplicity?

  • @LadysFarm
    @LadysFarm Před rokem +6

    I’ve been thinking about getting a Yurt for a off grid homestead on our property for a Little getaway for a ABNB

  • @omeraktas4821
    @omeraktas4821 Před 7 měsíci

    as a turk this was very interesting to watch, i had no idea that yurts were used in northern america

  • @heatherfarthing5661
    @heatherfarthing5661 Před rokem +20

    You didn't mention the worst con which is that yurts can not be sealed up. So they become full of bugs, roaches, rodents and small animals. No matter how clean you are or pack foods in storage containers.

    • @kevinjohnson1139
      @kevinjohnson1139 Před rokem +6

      What about building a mini-yurt full of food scraps lure those critters away?

    • @heatherfarthing5661
      @heatherfarthing5661 Před rokem +1

      @@kevinjohnson1139 That's funny. I would be worried about attracting bears but I suppose it depends where you live.

    • @householdgooding9174
      @householdgooding9174 Před rokem +3

      So does my standard walled house. 😂

    • @hirokomlm131
      @hirokomlm131 Před rokem +1

      So the one benefit of paying an extra 200k to build a regular house is that you get to keep pests out. Seems like there's got to be a cheaper way to keep pests out of a Yurt. Native Americans lived in tents, I'm sure they figured this out.

    • @murray7851
      @murray7851 Před rokem +8

      Cats are the ticket... you feed them breakfast and nothing more for the rest of the day. Most rodents are nocturnal so they start coming out when the cats are getting very hungry. Once they start living off mice they will be total predators. They learn from each other too. So it's only a question of numbers. Do you have two or four.

  • @lileelisamc.4722
    @lileelisamc.4722 Před rokem +1

    I'm sorry, I'm imagining you in a little red super Mario hat, blue cover alls, and white gloves.. The yurt info was great too

  • @donwalton2314
    @donwalton2314 Před rokem +5

    I have lived in a yurt for 5-6 years now. (Pacific Yurts - 24' dia) - Oregon - willamette valley - it is really great. ALTHOUGH - there are some cons - summer heat abatement - and cold in winter. Wood stove and a mini-split has helped. Along with adding trees for shade in the summer. - more venting (opening windows and screen door along with dome vent). I would not want to go back to living in a normal stick built house.

    • @BootsOfLeather
      @BootsOfLeather Před rokem

      hey Don, I'm in the same area. Benton county. Have you experienced any issues due to the rain?

    • @donwalton2314
      @donwalton2314 Před rokem

      @@BootsOfLeather no issues with the rain / besides that rain can get loud lol - real loud. But not from being too damp or leaking. Only drops we get inside is when we forget to close the dome vent when a windy rainstorm comes through.

    • @laurenjenkins5181
      @laurenjenkins5181 Před 11 měsíci

      We’re looking for land and considering a yurt for a few years while we build. We’re looking at southern clackamas co or Marion.. any pearls of wisdom about where we should be looking to be able to do this? We’ll be calling the counties, but I’d love some knowledge from someone with experience.

    • @donwalton2314
      @donwalton2314 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@laurenjenkins5181 well I would start with - good luck finding reasonable property prices in Clackamas county - but maybe better chances in Marion - but I am not sure. Definitely, away from metro areas - and you may get lucky.
      We built the yurt on an acre which was owned by my father-in-law to help take care of him. He didn't want anyone living with him in his home - so we built the yurt as an alternative. After he passed - we inherited the place and decided we liked the yurt and still wanted to live in it.
      But - we are riding a fine line as far as the authorities go. We built a 24' dia. yurt because the deck is under 500 sq. feet - and avoids a building permit process. Also, Oregon uses international building code - and the yurt itself is classified as a "car-port" under code (soft side - membrane structure). So no need to be permitted to build it at the time. Lastly, we put in a composting toilet - which avoided a whole can of worms with permitting as well.
      You can get around this by building an external stick build structure as a bathroom / wash house. You would still need to hook into existing drainage - or get that part permitted (sans yurt).
      If you have children whom are under 18 living with you... in a yurt - it could be an issue. For us - our kids are grown and not living with us - so one less thing for the state to be concerned about.
      Take this with a grain of salt - we built the yurt many years ago - so things may have changed depending on the county.
      If you have not checked out Pacific Yurts in Cottage Grove (south of Eugene) I advise checking them out - they have demo yurts on site as well. They didn't advise on permitting though.

  • @fluxfaze
    @fluxfaze Před 9 měsíci +9

    The bear factor convinced me to never construct a yurt in wilderness. The criminal human factor convinced me to never construct a yurt anywhere.

    • @RyanBarnes
      @RyanBarnes Před 7 dny

      That's part of why 2A is so important.

  • @Kayumari
    @Kayumari Před 9 měsíci

    so far amazing.

  • @walouinsanityshed
    @walouinsanityshed Před 11 měsíci +1

    Nice ad bro

  • @joanneganon7157
    @joanneganon7157 Před rokem

    Awesome Video Austin 👍.
    JO JO IN VT 💞💨❄️

  • @thomasreto2997
    @thomasreto2997 Před rokem

    This is very informative! Thinking about getting one for our iHawaiian rainforest 2 acre agricultural lot couldn’t help but wonder about the skin materials….UV degradation? Things like rodent damage…thinking about a large platform…mostly covered for rain protection and water catchment (probably go with 2500 gallon (our house has 10000 gallon) outhouse separate, off grid 12 volt so,ar system as well

  • @mayhewfisher62
    @mayhewfisher62 Před 6 měsíci

    a pro not mentioned is how much the family hound seems to enjoy the process of the yurt going up! haha. Great and informative video.

  • @CassieDavis613
    @CassieDavis613 Před rokem +1

    Now I want a yurt. Every month, I want something different: a tiny house, manufactured home, modular home, shed conversion, RV conversion, etc.

    • @nikkion2140
      @nikkion2140 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yep, I can relate to this feeling!
      I just dont have land for them all or even a single one.

  • @RobertSpitzer
    @RobertSpitzer Před 7 měsíci

    I never thought I would find an video on Yurts fascinating. Glad I was wrong.

  • @NoWayIsWay86
    @NoWayIsWay86 Před rokem +2

    As a student of building science, I would say to use a dehumidifier and tighten the yurt up.

  • @joerock1736
    @joerock1736 Před rokem

    Bears,no problem have a 30/6 180 grain bullet for them. We have been looking at them for awhile.

  • @katiesiouxlamoureaux7757

    My dad's friends lived in one for years in south Dakota

  • @null2470
    @null2470 Před 5 měsíci

    I lived in a yurt in northern CA for about a year. It's somewhere between a hole in the ground and a hunting cabin with three times the maintenance of either, would never do it again.

  • @betawolfhd
    @betawolfhd Před rokem +1

    I enjoyed the idea of a yurt after seeing it inside an atmospheric puzzle game

  • @PriestessAusetRaAmen
    @PriestessAusetRaAmen Před 7 měsíci

    This was a download, I received from the Mother Source, in the future yurts will, be the homes people will live in. She also said pack light, consumerism is dead, and we are going to move back, to a more natural holistic style of living.

    • @steverose3318
      @steverose3318 Před 6 měsíci

      But Jesus is planning on stopping by (during his vacation) first.

  • @jacktravler6105
    @jacktravler6105 Před rokem

    yes i want one

  • @jaredkyle5987
    @jaredkyle5987 Před 9 měsíci +1

    It’s basically a big, sturdy ⛺️ tent….

  • @makaylaforbes6719
    @makaylaforbes6719 Před rokem

    I could easily be comfortable in one of these, so long as it holds un under heavy wind and heavier snow. As long as I can have a real kitchen, a place where I don't need to dig holes every 6 months to do my business, have a couple chairs and a comfortable place to sleep, I'm good

  • @allisonshaw9341
    @allisonshaw9341 Před rokem +2

    The only negative I see is that in lacking gutters, it's much harder to collect rainwater. Otherwise, it's a plus all the way around. I'm planning on retiring soon and have considered putting a yurt up the holler for an off-grid home.

    • @jeffreyallen1290
      @jeffreyallen1290 Před rokem

      Many of the yurt kit builders offer gutters for rain water collection as an option. Check some of them out online.

  • @ResponseDigitalMedia
    @ResponseDigitalMedia Před rokem

    Thanks for the video! Can you do a comparison between a yurt and a comparable dome home?

  • @sliipknoot
    @sliipknoot Před 2 měsíci

    You could maybe build a log frame around the yurt to make it harder for bears to get through.

  • @wouterke9871
    @wouterke9871 Před rokem

    I live on a GRP boat for 15 years now. A friend of me dreams of living in a Yurt.
    Close to nature.
    Boat or Yurt; picture yourself in a tent with regards to sound insulation.
    Think of privacy, neighbours, road traffic on a quiet night, airplanes, workshops or industry in the surrounding (especially low frequency noise), waterbirds competing late at night and early in the morning, cats, dogs, chickens. Bears and pumas and what do you have over the pond...
    For ventilation; a Yurt or boat is just a small volume, so any activity immediately effects the relative humidity. It peaks very quickly and often. Continous attention to ventilation but at the same time trying to not waste energy for heating.
    Personally thinking of buying a house, because I need more room to store my tools and am tired of the long cold moist winters and the discomfort of bad sound insulation.

  • @morganplisken7271
    @morganplisken7271 Před 3 měsíci

    Imagine a permanent yurt with Earth Bag fortified walls. Tornado and bear proof? Also the R-value with earth bags making up exterior walls would be top shelf and helps stop bullets too

  • @katrinafrost7442
    @katrinafrost7442 Před rokem +1

    I plan to put up five yurts on my property as homes for my children or short term rentals to help aid in financial stability. I would love to figure out how to do this the most cost-effective way, and what are some of the best T-shirts to get the best brands the best sellers to look at?

  • @OS0RIN
    @OS0RIN Před rokem +2

    Can you do a video on Pacific domes?

  • @JoeSmith-cy9wj
    @JoeSmith-cy9wj Před rokem

    It's as beautiful as it is interesting on the inside. It would be a shame to cover it. But I would think a simi-rigid material like Rockwood panels might be a good choice. If it would fit outside the lattice even better. Might that be accommodated in the design? Is there not a breathable yet water resistant material for covering? Perhaps venting around the upper perimeter could be improved without too much heat loss?

  • @ayafresh4075
    @ayafresh4075 Před rokem

    This is cool! I thought it was a tutorial on how to build one, although you do kind of show the process. Do you build in every country, and does the price vary depending on which country? Thanks!

  • @pedrothewise2584
    @pedrothewise2584 Před 2 měsíci

    i just got well lucky, a 4m yurt with felt lining , new inner, round pole trlliss and rafters, oak wheel 500e yep 500e. must have been my lucky day.

  • @MIchelleIsHere..
    @MIchelleIsHere.. Před 2 měsíci

    We were looking into living in a Pole Building. That seems do-able BUT a Yurt may also be an idea, maybe we can afford both. Move the Yurt into the Pole Building in Winter

  • @user-ey2io5of2d
    @user-ey2io5of2d Před rokem +1

    Buy a Sirroco 20 Blaze King wood stove, fill it once a day will heat in -40. Was too hot for 800 sq ft cabin.

  • @kenairockband
    @kenairockband Před rokem

    We have a 34’ Nomad shelter with a 14’er attached for bedroom.

  • @steverose3318
    @steverose3318 Před 6 měsíci

    Yurts were a nomad's mobile home.
    Buy a used grain silo and go from there.
    Or build a metal pole barn
    and finish the interior.
    30x50 is less than 30k finished.

  • @Hypnotically_Caucasian
    @Hypnotically_Caucasian Před rokem +1

    “What if we kissed in the yurt?”
    * Mongolian throat singing heard in the distance *

  • @mattsweet7918
    @mattsweet7918 Před 6 měsíci +1

    It’s all fun and games until the temperatures drop below zero.