Hiya, Alder. Not at all opposed to wood stoves. "Whaaat had happened was"… I hand-built a house on my old land (conventional construction) after a first land partner sabotaged a thin-shell burlap and magnesium cement structure on frame of remesh in a big circle. I was going to live in that until I got earthbags around it, but... sabotage. (Can you tell I’ve had my share of learning who not to trust

I consider it 8 years of Tolerance Paradox learning. I kept trying to be tolerant of people who were crossing boundaries when now I know to set those firmly upfront. And if people speak poorly of others or are intolerant of marginalized groups, they'll speak poorly of me to others, and ostracize me too)
I only went with conventional construction then because a neighbor kept insisting that’s what I should do and that he could “help.” After the whole “partner” mess, I thought that sounded supportive. Long story short: the only projects that ever gave me trouble were the few instances where I let someone else take over.
When I tackle something I research or use common sense to make sure it's a solid plan. I thought since he knew conventional construction I could follow his advice, but he basically cut corners and didn't inform me of those choices along the way.
AND then the guy ended up thinking I owed him social slavery or something. I still did 90% of the labor, but he’d drop by, show me how to build a wall or beam, then leave me to it. It’s a shame he and his wife turned out to be bigoted, because for a short time I thought I had a tinker-builder buddy. Nope.
Years later I was forced to move because of violent neighbors (as mentioned briefly) — him included. Gunfire intimidation, you name it. It's pretty hard to build a fence, work on mushroom logs or whatever when there's neighbors intentionally trying to scare the shit out of you with guns. Real pieces of work.
Side note: I worry people might think I was the problem, but I was nothing but kind until these neighbors started actively hurting me, spreading lies, engulfing me in trash smoke for days. When I stood my ground, they took that as “proof” I was the problem. Sorry to ramble about that but I'm still processing it.
For years I thought I’d never leave — I had paid-for land! But the stress took its toll. You can imagine the kind of situation it took for me to give up everything I built.
So when I left I made do with what I had... A few years back a friend camped out on my land a year or so and bought a prebuilt shed — surprisingly solid for what howthose things tend to be built. I paid to have it moved. Before that, last winter I was in a tent on the new land with a wood stove. Wow what a tent flapping cold ass winter. Ha!
When the stove kept having issues smoking me out, I switched to a diesel heater. Very happy with how it got me through winter. I think I just need a tighter-seal stove and to cut wood smaller. Might use the old one on the porch since it’s drafty.
The mini-split AC is necessary — way more efficient on my small solar setup than anything else. I can work in heat (“lizard mode” haha), but AC keeps my brain sharp for computer work. I dream of adding a badgir/windcatcher to my longer term cabin because here the hotter it gets, the breezier it gets — probably the mountain
In an ideal world, I’d have built less “modern,” but I had to survive that gauntlet. I’m a little envious of folks who’ve gotten to build their bushcraft or permaculture homes.
The upside is I get to build my long-term cabin exactly how I want, and this survival pod can become a guest cabin or a hydroponic grow shed.
Your cabin sounds rad! I want mine to be like yours sounds it was...my scale, with nooks for my uses, a loft. That's easy to get into. Ive long thought an attached greenhouse to transfer heat inside in winter would be great. How was your greenhouse set up?
Are you still on the land you moved to after your bad experience? Ive found one nice thing about starting over is you can improve all the things you learned from the first time. How did you build your next home?
I haven’t decided exactly how to build the next cabin yet... big fresh brainstorm!
but before that I need a tornado shelter for next season. This spring’s winds were humbling. I’m picturing a dugout with vertical logs, horizontal logs for walls and the roof — plenty of trees within 30 feet of the dig site. I could cut and roll then right into place.
A local suggested a culvert for longevity, but I think building a dugout sounds fun and, with some attention to keeping the top dry, it could last 20 years easy. I figure if it lasts even just a few years it's worth it. Besides once I get the area I want to build on cleared I'll need a closer second storm shelter anyway. What do you think?