Completely fascinated with your personal experience making a yurt. Jay, maybe we could start a thread about wool insulation and different techniques for processing it? I can wax poetic about wool for hours. I would really like to pick your brain on the other aspects of yurt building too.
Good point about the wool and moisture condensation. I would definitely put good ventilation high on my list for any small living space. I wonder how other natural insulation materials would hold up with that problem? I've seen wool batting between two metal walls, but I don't know if it's air tight or given breathing holes - if the former, it would have to be VERY dry before sealing off. Perhaps wall hangings that can be taken down and washed? But that's added maintenance... Going to give this more thought.
Thanks for the great thoughts about insulating the bus.
What are your thoughts on a cooker inside the bus? What kind of cooker would you go for? What other things do we have to consider like the moisture from the cooking, or the airflow to stop us gassing ourselves?
Now that leads me to the next aspect of wool as an insulation. I like wool insulation...this is not the same material that comes off the animal...by a long shot. It is highly processed and condition, as raw wool would never last as an insulation under the best of conditions, and the cleaning and processing that it would require is far outside the scope of a DIY project. So whether making felt for a Ger or Yurt (which I have done) or possibly specing wool batts for a structure I design and build...raw wool...as would be thrown away...is not going into either without lots and lots of processing...
I do hope I'm allowed to both agree and disagree at the same time. I know the forum rules say we aren't to say, "I agree with you, but..." so hopefully this won't come across that way. There is definitely merit to what you write, however, I wonder if the method you use to process wool isn't the most efficient thus making it seem like a difficult task when it needn't be?
I totally agree with you that raw wool isn't appropriate as insulation. For those of you new to wool: Raw wool attracts moths, often has dung tags, and there may be bacteria on it that encourages the wool to break down. Besides, it's all lumpy. It can also stink.
Clean wool seldom attracts moths - they are attracted to the dirt first, then the larvae eat the wool. Clean wool smells better, in fact it smells great (to me). And can last hundreds/thousands of years when well cared for.
Full agreement with the needing to process wool part.
With regards to the amount of work involved in cleaning, picking, carding, and felting wool... I've noticed that some people find this a lot of work. I had a lot of trouble figuring out why.
A 5 pound fleece can be washed, picked, carded, and spun in under two weeks - on about an hour a day. I once did two fleeces washed, picked, carded, blended, re-carded, spun and knit in under 10 days, but I had two hours a day to work on it, so it doesn't count. This is all using hand tools, not even a drum carder.
Felting takes a different concentration of effort so we can ignore the spinning and knitting bit. It also doesn't require the fleece be carded - but that does help. Basically, the prep work and time requirements for felting is usually considerably less.
Why does it take me that little time, and others 5 times as many hours? I'm not a fast worker by any means, I'm a plodder. I follow the way of the tortoise and say the heck with the hare.
Maybe it's because I'm lazy. I do things the simplest way that gives the best quality results (I'm lazy and a perfectionist - it's
not an awesome combination). For example, cleaning the wool I don't use dish detergent like other fibre artists, that has too many additives in it and requires extra rinsing, sometimes up to 4 washes and 6 rinses. I use a product designed for agricultural use called Orvus paste which gets the wool remarkably clean in one go, but may require a second application for especially stubborn wool. But only one rinse. Orvus is designed to be used on living animals, so it's also designed to be rinsed off quickly. It's also considerably cheaper to wash a fleece with than dish detergent. What's more, it biodegrades so that takes care of some of my ecological soppyness. (Orvus isn't perfect however, but that's a topic for another thread).
Once you know the tips and tricks, processing a fleece is fast and easy.
But (a 'but' to negate what I just wrote,
not a 'yes...but' intended to negate anyone else) felting for insulation is not one fleece. It is a lot of fleeces.
A traditional mongolian yurt can have multiple layers of felted wool, half an inch thick each and takes 60 to 190 fleeces - or so the book says... still gathering fleeces to make my first yurt, so I can't wait to find out how many it actually takes. The same book also says that only the outside of the felt is washed. So, to make the felt, you lay down a layer of washed fleece, lay down many layers of unwashed, picked/fluffed fleece, lay down a final layer of washed fleece - again going by that book I got from the library. (Yurts; Living in the Round by Becky Kemery). I'm not certain I fully agree with this book on this or many other issues - but not having made my own yet, I can't really justify my position.
I've helped make a few felted wall hangings with friends before. It took about the same time to make the felt as it did to cook a meal for them. It would be quite daunting to make even a moderate sized one on my own. With friends and some good wine, it's fast and easy. Friends with kids make it faster because kids seem to love making felt.