cookie

We use cookies to improve your browsing experience. By clicking «Accept all», you agree to the use of cookies.

avatar

Beginner Homesteader

A community to share homesteading skills as we stumble our way through what my ancestors knew how to do. Sociable people will be appreciated ❤️ Discourteous people will be banned No Religious debate No racial epithets Antiwhites will be banned

Show more
Advertising posts
5 571
Subscribers
+424 hours
+277 days
+11530 days

Data loading in progress...

Subscriber growth rate

Data loading in progress...

00:25
Video unavailableShow in Telegram
8.12 MB
Photo unavailableShow in Telegram
There is a century old back to the land movement that I recently found out about — the Catholic Land Movement. There is a modern resurgence of it and it is amazing in a number of facets. There is a video to watch that will give you a very broad understanding of it — beautiful. https://catholiclandmovement.info/
Show all...
Scammer just dm'd me impersonating...me. lol
Show all...
Photo unavailableShow in Telegram
A long time ago, I read a storybook to my little daughters. When I turned the page, I found a dream — a sweet little house tucked in the woods with a fire in the hearth, a garden, bee boxes, rabbitry, and a family coming home. I cut the illustration out and framed it — knowing that some day our family would live in our own little house tucked in the woods. Dream your dreams. "I still remember the days that I prayed for the life I have today."
Show all...
https://youtu.be/RV7pmE4MC-I?si=zWRkS0hDS_k2_vM- A beautiful video. There are a number of timber frame institutes where you can go for hands in instruction.
Show all...
The Birth Of A Wooden House. Extended

We unexpectedly found missing footage of two more scenes from the building process - moss collection in the local swamp and finishing of the frame. So we decided to make another version - extended edition (2 mins longer) to add those scenes to the movie and share them with you all. This is a documentary movie uncovering the process of building a wooden house with mostly hand tools from (as much as possible) local natural materials starting from forest till the living space. "I built my house from trees that I felled in winter time (-20C) with an axe and two man crosscut saw in my own forest. I did it following the research of old carpenter's calendar that coniferous trees should be felled in January's first days when the new moon rises and the deciduous trees should be felled in the winter time during the old moon. In winter time trees are sleeping and the juice and moisture content is very low in them. As time passes timber felled in winter becomes light and strong. In the building process I used mostly traditional carpenters hand tools - axes, hand saws, timber framing chisels and slicks, old Stanley planes, augers, draw knives and mostly human energy. All the ground work for fundaments and the basement earth digging was done by hand with shovels. The foundation consists mostly of bigger and smaller rocks and boulders. Lime, sand and concrete mixture are using only in small amounts - to hold the boulders together. The visible part over the ground level - boulder mosaic has been masoned with hand split local granite. The House has been built based on the western part of Latvia - Kurland/Kurzeme (German influence) historical wooden architecture typical technique - Timber Frame construction with sliding log walls between the posts. House is two carpentry technique union - Timber Frame (that is typical in France, Germany, Great Britain, North America and other countries) and traditional Latvian log building technique, between the logs using moss from the local swamp. In the walls, timber frame and roof construction there I used only wood joints and wooden pegs to hold the main construction together - no nails, screws or steel plates. Walls are insulated with 250mm thick dry pine and larch shaving layer (leftover from the local cabinet makers workshop). Overall exterior wall thickness is 50cm. In the walls (except wind vapour breathable membrane over the roof) has not been used any plastic or modern synthetic materials. To preserve the wood from the spoiling, fame posts, sills, top beams and final cladding boards are treated with fire and pine tar mixed with Tung oil. This wood preservation technique was adapted from the Japanese traditional wood preservation technique Shou Sugi Ban (焼杉板). Exterior cladding boards recoating each 10-15 years with Tung oil and pine or birch tar mixture, the house can last more than 500 years. As an example is taken Norwegian stave churches that stands more than 500 years until nowadays. Roofing is three layer white oak shingles (each 10mm thick, 120mm wide and 720mm long) laid in two directional technique. Overall amount of shingles used is 15 000 pieces. Roof walls are insulated with ecological wood fibre wool and wood fibre panels. Over the wood fibre panels are plastered natural plaster - mixture of sand, clay powder, lime, linen fibre, salt, wheat flour. Overall thickness of the plaster is 20mm and over all amount of plaster used on the walls are 5000 kilos. It works also as thermal mass and improves energy performance. Exterior measurements of the house is 6.5 x 13 meters. Living space in both floors are 120sq/m. The house is being heated with clay plastered brick bread oven and smaller oven made of clay tiles in the kitchen. To heat up both floors of the house, when outside it is minus 10 degrees (Celsium) only small oven is heated once a day. When freeze gets below -15, -20 C, we heat up the bread oven. Once it is heated, because of it’s thermal mass of 5 tons, it keeps the warmth 2-3 days. To heat up all the house (120 sq/m) in the winter time we use not more than 4 m3 (1.1 cord)…

Photo unavailableShow in Telegram
What are skills that rural residents need to know? We live in the woods. This means a lot of opportunities for downed trees. We weren't far from home yesterday when we had to hike up to the Homestead and bring back a chainsaw to clear the road.
Show all...
Photo unavailableShow in Telegram
Not that long ago, many of our people had only one spoon — a large, table serving sized spoon that they used for every meal. And in every meal, they'd scrape the bowl clean because food was in scarcity and none would be left. After many many years of this, the spoon would become worn down on one corner. You can find these old spoons of our ancestors in those big boxes of old junk silverware at flea markets — that's where I found this one. I bought this to remind myself that I come from a hardy people — a people who owned little and scraped their plates. And it was these people who lived hard lives hewing a homeland out of a wilderness for me and mine.  I am thankful for my ancestors' example of what we can accomplish with little more than the nature of our race. And for a reminder of what is and is not important and necessary.
Show all...
Choose a Different Plan

Your current plan allows analytics for only 5 channels. To get more, please choose a different plan.