Kayleigh Uden

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since Jan 23, 2025
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Biography
Family of four who moved from England to Bulgaria. We're slowly bringing an abandoned vineyard back to life and transforming it into a beautiful off-grid homestead for us and our two children.
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Recent posts by Kayleigh Uden

Rico Loma wrote:Good to see all your progress,it looks sturdy and practical.  Will the walls be load bearing, or more of the in-fill method?



The walls are all load bearing. The corner supports you can see here will be removed soon, they are just there to help us position the bales correctly. ❤️
1 day ago

John C Daley wrote:Interesting project, I am pleased to see you having a go.
- Is the roof structure in place yet?
- Have you any books on the subject?
- looking ahead, will you collect rainfall for consumption? look at my signature
- will you be insulating the roof?
- Will you use wool or a modern insulation?
- what is the floor made from?



- Is the roof structure in place yet? Not yet. This is the next step.
- Have you any books on the subject? Yes. We've read a few but found Barbara Jones book particularly helpful and easy to read.
- looking ahead, will you collect rainfall for consumption? look at my signature. (There was no signature on your post to look at). Yes, we will collect as much rainfall as we can as we live off grid.
- will you be insulating the roof? Absolutely. We just need to get the finances together to afford the insulation.
- Will you use wool or a modern insulation? We will probably go for modern insulation.
- what is the floor made from?
1 day ago
Hi everyone — I’ve posted here before but then went very quiet once the reality of building, parenting, and off-grid life fully kicked in.

Just over three years ago, we completed a strawbale building course at the Brighton Earthship, which really cemented our desire to build with natural materials. Not long after, we made a big leap — moving from the UK to rural Bulgaria to live off grid and build a life that felt more intentional and values-led.

We’ve been documenting our strawbale tiny home build on YouTube, which has become our main way of tracking progress and sharing the reality — the good days, the messy days, and the “what have we taken on?” days.

Although there are a handful of strawbale builds in Bulgaria, it’s still a fairly new concept locally. Many of our neighbours are curious, supportive, baffled, and occasionally convinced we’re completely mad. There’s been a lot of interest from locals — but also a fair amount of explaining, translating, and gently defending our choices.

One ongoing challenge has been sourcing materials. Availability here can be unpredictable, certain natural or specialist materials are harder to find, and we’ve had to adapt plans based on what’s realistically accessible. Another big factor has been financing the build in stages — moving forward bit by bit as funds allow, rather than powering through in one continuous push. It’s made the timeline slower, but it’s also forced us to be resourceful, patient, and thoughtful.

We’re now just about to start the roof build, which feels like a huge milestone. Getting the structure dried-in is the next major psychological and practical step.

One area we’re still unsure about is our gable end. We’re hoping to create a strawbale infill gable, but we’re not fully confident we can pull it off well — structurally or practically — given our skills, time, and constraints. If anyone here has experience with strawbale gable infill, detailing, or lessons learned, we’d genuinely appreciate hearing your thoughts before we commit.

This build hasn’t been fast or perfect. It’s been hands-on, experimental, sometimes exhausting, and deeply rewarding. Building a natural home while raising a family and establishing an off-grid life has stretched us in ways we didn’t fully anticipate — but it’s also given us confidence, resilience, and a deep respect for this way of building.

If it’s useful, I’m happy to share more detail — technical choices, costs, timelines, mistakes, or what we’d do differently next time. For now, this is mostly a long-overdue hello, and a thank-you to this community for being a steady source of knowledge and reassurance.

Kayleigh
Off Grid With The Udens
2 days ago
Not much difference - however we want it baled as compressed as possible which they do not do here for the conventional bale. The farmer will be using the highest setting on his baler for ours.
5 months ago
This is our first build here. We are originally from the UK and moved to Bulgaria. We are negotiating a language barrier and also many logistical issues - so it's quite a challenge even without the rain!
5 months ago
Annoyingly the forecasts haven't been too accurate and we are reliant on the local farmer and his availability.

Hopefully we can bale next week. It's quite a rollercoaster of emotions isn't it?
5 months ago
We honestly feel like we’ve been hit with the worst luck. Every single time we’ve gone to bale with the farmer, the skies have opened and we’ve had to stop. We were due to bale today, but again the rain came.

It’s so disheartening, especially as we’re about to start our very first strawbale build and we know how important it is to have dry bales from the start. We’re living off-grid as a family in southern Bulgaria, and this build is a big step for us.

Has anyone else run into this problem? Do you have any advice for getting ahead of the weather, or tips for making sure the bales we do manage to get are properly dry and suitable for building?

Any thoughts or shared experiences would mean a lot right now.

Kayleigh and Phil
@offgridwiththeudens
5 months ago
Just wanted to thank you all for your comments and help. We've taken it onboard and we are at the first stage of our strawbale build for the 8mx5m site. Super excited and nervous but cannot wait. We decided to go with strawbale as that's the method we would really like to, one day, build the main house with, so this will be a great trial run for us.
Thank you again ❤️
Hi 👋

We are currently looking at rebuilding on the footprint of our old barn, turning it into a tiny house. The hope is we can live in there whilst we attack the main house build.

We live in Bulgaria and the quality of the wood varies greatly, as well as the price. Our barn is about 8m long and 5m wide. I was just wondering if anybody had built a similar sized timber frame tiny home structure that would be willing to share some pointers.

We've come across a couple of builds documented on YouTube but quite enough to give us the final push to build! The alternative for us is a brick built building but we had hoped to find an alternative.

Kayleigh
Just finished building our new ground mounted solar array. Our previous ground mount was supposed to be temporary so this has been a long time coming.

Done a walkthrough on our YT channel but our set-up now includes:

*10 410w Canadian Solar Panels and 2 VTAC panels
*Luxpower Tek 12K hybrid inverter
*25kw of battery storage using 2x Fogstar 5kw server racks and a 15kw Fogstar Home Solar Battery.

We are at the start of our off grid journey here in Southern Bulgaria where we moved to from England. Our progress can seem slow as we are financing projects month to month and completing all the work ourselves. We currently live in a caravan on our land and are about to rebuild our barn into a tiny home before starting our big project of building our house - which we hope to be straw bale.
We are currently building our geodesic dome greenhouse so that we can start our planting journey this year also!

@offgridwiththeudens
10 months ago