![]() |
| first fire in the yurt |
We also got 10 loggers cords of oak firewood delivered this past week. A logger's cord measures 4' x 4' x 8'. That means a mountain of wood! We began cutting and splitting it tonight. We will be working on it every night until it's all cut up. Winter is coming, and I feel it's going to be soon. An Ol' Timer once said that after the Tamarack (Larch) looses their needle's snow is on it's way. That happened last week. We are getting temp's down into the 20's f at night now and just over 40 during the day. I'll be wearing my wool longjohn's from here until April....not the same pair, well ok, the same pair, but I wash them! Wool longjohns aren't cheap.
![]() |
| my bad ass wife swinging the splitting maul |
This past weekend I went over to the Winter Camping Symposium. It's held just south of Duluth Mn. I taught a class on making the crooked knife and had a great time. One of the highlights was getting to meet and hear presentations and stories form Two men. One lived in the far north of the Northwest Territory of 30 years with the Dogrib Indians. He lived pretty much a subsistence lifestyle hunting caribou, fishing and trapping. What stories he had! The other man spent a great deal of time on the other side of Canada with the Cree near Hudson bay and Inuit of Baffin Island. Both men knew well and the use of dogs for travel. They had a few wooden toboggans for us to see. The best part for me was the rigging of one dog to a toboggan. After seeing this the light bulb went on. I might just get a pup and train it to pull. A rig like that might be a great help on the trap line in the winter. I am sorry but I forgot my camera and don't have any pictures, save for in my head.
April just finished up processing the last of the wild rice we harvested this year. I took a few shots in the rice house and will do a post on that next. Until then....


the yurt looks sweet, congratulations on getting that baby running!
ReplyDeleteHey Jarrod!
ReplyDeleteAs we say in Yorkshire, your yurt looks really well. And it must be even smaller than my little workshop in the woods. Glad to see you've got plenty of cord wood in and someone strong to help you split it! Unfortunately my helper is an 11 tonne (pressure) hydraulic robot (very noisy!).
Make sure those long johns're dry before you put them on after washing.
Kind regards,
Richard (flyingshavings) Law
You are a funny man Richard. My back wishes I had a 11 tonne robot.
DeleteHi Jarrod, I was wondering if you used any insulation in your yurt? looks really good, maybe one day I will built or buy one for a shop...
ReplyDeleteCheers
David