Thanks for your response Glenn!
Glenn Herbert wrote:You will need some way to eat and pay for basic necessities even if you build your own house in the wild, so you need to think about how you are going to manage that.
True, and one of the many things I'm planning (and budgeting) around. I'll more than likely be spending a while living a more conventional life in the country I move to (solidifying knowledge of the language, getting citizenship, padding my savings, etc.) while building up more knowledge, skills, and tools. I'm also not going it wholly alone, so being able to build and being able to eat won't be
quite mutually exclusive.
Glenn Herbert wrote:There are many ways to build a handcrafted house, so you will need to narrow the focus to get detailed advice.
I have some leanings, mostly to green, round-wood timber framing, undressed or lightly-dressed stone masonry, straw bale/strawcob, and sod roofing, but I've tried not to marry myself to any particular idea, since the land I end up on and what's around it have the last word. My main concerns are around heating, insulation, and thermal mass, since there seem to be
disagreements between several camps on... everything to do with those.
Glenn Herbert wrote:One easy way to get started when you move to a piece of land would be like this: Kolarbyn Ecolodge. That would give you a safe place while you work on a whole house. You could build a small rocket mass heater into it and stay comfortable through the first winter no matter what.
Thanks! Always looking for examples, especially in the same or similar climates as Scandinavia's.