UKadventurer
New member
The Mongolian traditional ger (aka yurt) uses all natural materials. I believe the inner and outer canvases are all cotton. In summer, they remove the felts, maybe down to no felt, or just one felt. As it gets colder they add felts, up to 3 layers typically. Since the rainy season is only Summer, I think they've figured out how to avoid mold. The traditional ger is quite well ventilated with the crown the door, and just lifting up the bottom of the canvas. In recent years, I've seen ger dwellers put plastic sheet under the canvas. Is that a good idea?
Also, synthetics weren't really available until last century. Personally I prefer to use natural, sustainable materials.
I'm not saying that works for temperate countries at all. It probably wouldn't work in rainy UK. London (a dry part of the UK) has 3x-4x the rainfall of Ulaanbaatar. It's rainy all year round in the UK, whereas Mongolia is just rainy in June to August. Cumbria is much rainier with 8x the rainfall. So a well-vented yurt, with probably synthetic materials would make a lot of sense.
Also, synthetics weren't really available until last century. Personally I prefer to use natural, sustainable materials.
I'm not saying that works for temperate countries at all. It probably wouldn't work in rainy UK. London (a dry part of the UK) has 3x-4x the rainfall of Ulaanbaatar. It's rainy all year round in the UK, whereas Mongolia is just rainy in June to August. Cumbria is much rainier with 8x the rainfall. So a well-vented yurt, with probably synthetic materials would make a lot of sense.
