Hi everyone! Long time lurker, but this is my first post. I've been dreaming of going off grid for a long time and it's finally happening.
The property I'm moving to has an old cabin on it. It's built from small 3-5" round timbers with some mud/clay/cob holding them all together. It also looks like they started adding cob to the outside, at least I'm assuming it's cob because the owner called it a "cob cabin". It has been empty and unused for a lot of years.
I am currently 13 hours away from the property, so I can't go look it over firsthand. I will be heading that way sometime in late August. I had a friend go check it out for me and send me some pictures though, so here are three for you to check out. I plan to build a cob house on the property, but it will be a few years down the road. I had originally planned to get a cheap RV to live in until then, but since the property I found has this neat old cabin, I'd really like to make it work somehow. What are your thoughts?
There is a tarp over the roof, so I will assume that it leaks. My friend said it had rained pretty good overnight last night and everything inside was nice and dry today, so the tarp must be doing it's job. The roof is really the least of my concerns. My main concern is freezing to death this winter. The walls are thin, although thicker where they've added the cob, so I don't see me being able to hold much heat in this place and the cob isn't going to do much to help that. I am also unsure about the foundation. The picture with the front door looks like there is a foundation there, but the picture of the inside looks like the logs are just on the ground, so I don't know for sure.
I'm doing this whole project on a tight budget, so please keep that in mind. If I had plenty of money, I'd just build something nice and move on with life, but I'm poor and have to figure out how to make due with what I have until I can do something better. And this is what I have LOL
Thank you for your time! I look forward to hearing from you and becoming a part of your community here