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Wooden panel yurt in South Australia

Hi Rod, I don't think you sound any whinier (is that a word?) than I do : )
I am a bit freaked out by the whole idea of buying land, and connecting to all the services, or being able to survive 'off grid' down the road. However, the idea of living on spacious land and not in a subdivision surrounded by other houses is stronger than my fear. My husband and I are not very DIY, so it will be a very interesting journey. Like you, I am where I am because I chose to be here...it was a childhood dream of mine to live in Australia (I'm from Arizona) - so really, I am living my dream - now I just prefer to do it in a yurt (luckily my husband is on board ).

Good luck with your decisions and projects as well!
 
Your yurt will be a minimal investment relative to the property. You can't really screw up a yurt to where it will be extremely costly to repair. It is a tent. Tents are a snap to build relative to a house. Screwing up a house is a whole lot more expensive, a big headache. I've worked on a few old homes that were totally messed up, a hundred years old, in disrepair, and had been remodeled numerous times. Now that IS expensive and no fun for the owner. Doing dang near any repair work on those is at least a grand, and way the heck over that. Everything takes 3x as long as new.

You'll be fine. It's a tent. Go for it.
 
Hi Bob, yes, the yurt will be much less expensive than any land we can find, however, the wood yurt is bit more daunting than the canvas type - even though Yurtworks will send us the kit with prefab walls. Will still need to find tradies to help erect, install plumbing, etc. Like building a house, just smaller scale. Here is a picture of the type of yurt we are looking at:
Page 10 « Gallery | Goulburn Yurtworks
I know it will be worth it when all is said and done!
 
I have been looking in to composting toilets and this seems like a nice chioce,

Nature's Earthly Way
I took the vent idea and put it to work on a friends bathhouse, I hated the smell when taking a shower, took a 4 inch duct booster fan and ran 2 inch PVC to both boxes that the toilets were constructed of and now the bathroom smell like a regular bathroom.
 
Building the walls are really quite simple, if you do choose getting the wall package you would be standing your standing your walls in no time.
We built the walls and stood them in a weekend for a 35 ft yurt.
My friend bought the roof package which was pricey, but made it so we could erect the roof in a weekend with a handful of friends.
 
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Thanks for the reassurance Rick. My brother in law doesn't think it will be difficult, he's pretty good with construction/handy work and will help us.
 
Hi Melissa
Really interested in your post ~ did you build your yurt ? We are hoping to build one when we find the right block on the Limestone Coast S.A.
How did you go with council regulations / planning permission etc .
Thanks in advance for any advice you can give
Cheers Shelly
 
Hi Shelly, unfortunately my yurt dream is on hold. It turned out to be too much of a drama trying to find the right land in the right location with our budget. We’ve decided to build a passive solar/energy efficient eco house instead. Hopefully I can have a baby yurt studio in the backyard one day : ). Good luck with your yurt adventure!
 
Thanks for replying so quickly Melissa ~ I will post the progress of our yurt dream ( still have to sell our Qld house ~ then find the right location )
Good luck with your eco house
Kind regards Shelly
 
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