Helping You to Get a Yurt

Searching for the least expensive, most direct, simple, sustainable yurt solutions, to bridge you from longing to living, in the yurt of your dreams

Friday, April 16, 2010

Affordable Vacations: Yurts in Oregon State Parks


Young visitors scan the beach by the century-old shipwreck of the
Peter Iredale at Fort Stevens State Park, one of 18 Oregon
coastal parks with camping.


State Parks in Oregon offer vacations close to home in affordable yurts:

"What's more, most of the campgrounds feature free hot showers, many have yurts for rent, and even a full hookup site won't cost you more than $28 in the peak summer season at the most popular campground (or about $21 for a tent site) -- just down the road from hotels that might charge $200 a night. Got to give Oregon credit for keeping all those state parks open in tough times. It gives lots of folks a close-to-home vacation option that's hard to beat."

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Colorado Yurt Wins Grant for Solar Power

Former state SenatorJim Isgar, presents a  sybolic check for $13,071 to the Colorado Yurt Company
Former State Senator Jim Isgar presents a symbolic check for $13,071 to the Colorado Yurt Company

Colorado Yurt Company has won a grant for solar power. Read their story to find out how these grants can work for you.

Friday, April 9, 2010

A Woman's Fine Arts Show Presents Passionate Yurt Traditions



Yurt in Kazakhstan

Priska C. Juschka Fine Art presents Daughters of Turan, Almagul Menlibayeva’s third solo exhibition of video and photography at the gallery. In the Steppes of her native Kazakhstan, Menlibayeva stages and films complex mythological narratives, with reference to her own nomadic heritage and the Shamanistic traditions of the cultures of Central Asia.

Daughters of Turan explores the emotional and spiritual residues of an ancient belief system as well as a historic conflict, still resonating among the peoples of Central Asia today, between the Zoroastrian ideology of former Persia, spreading widely across Eurasia and influencing Western politicians and philosophers and the Tengriism (sky religion) of the Turkic tribes, reaching as far as the Pacific Ocean. Tūrān, the ancient Iranian name for Central Asia, the land of the Tur, inhabited by nomadic tribes, takes center stage signifying the relationship between the male and the female principles ingrained in the stories, myths and ritual practices of a widespread population and its cultures.

The nurturing earth goddess Umai and favorite wife of Tengri, the god of the sky, much like Gaia in the Greek mythology, created life also gynogenetic, out of herself, and symbolizes the close relationship of the people to the land and its given riches, without agriculture, by animals and humans feeding off her body and drinking her milk. The elusive sky god Tengri, foremost living on in Christianity, where then becoming omnipotent, is here still in his adolescent phase – while Umai satiates the voracious appetite of her inhabitants, Tengri watches over her body, the plains of the great Steppes of Central Asia, playfully entertaining several other wives and fathering many children.

Menlibayeva reaches further into the psychological fabric of the people living today on the Steppes which their ancestors had traversed before they were forced to settle down, first by Persia and China to become peasants and in the 20th century by the Soviet Union in a cultural genocide. Umai, said to have sixty golden strands, still has her ‘daughters’ today, the female population, engaging in the same acts as their predecessors, symbolizing the circle of life, the most powerful Shaman symbol by making sure the circle remains undisturbed and intact, reflected in Menlibayeva’s video, Milk for Lambs. From this perspective, all men remain ultimately adolescent- feeding on the female riches, “When I look at the Steppe, it reminds me of my body, dry and in some places hairy,” referenced in all roundness of all things, “When I look at the round yurts and tables, they remind me of my breasts.” (lyrics, Milk for Lambs, Menlibayeva).

Friday, March 5, 2010

Colorado Yurts Needs Your Help to Help Haiti

the 1st tent in our new batch!

The earthquake in Haiti has left thousands without shelter. The Colorado Yurt Company is producing and shipping tents to Haiti to help out, even before the figured out how to pay for them. You can help this project out by sending a check for a tax deductible donation made out to Colorado-Haiti Project. Send your check to

Colorado Yurt Company
28 W South 4th St
Montrose, CO 81401

More Info Here: http://info.coloradoyurt.com/bid/33872/More-Tents-to-Haiti-Wanna-Help

Phone Sam at 888.328.6494 or 970.240.2111 for answers to questions.

Thanks in advance for helping out.


David Cain's Yurt/Waitsfield VT



David Cain, with whom I am giving a yurt building workshop at Yestermorrow this coming June has designed and built a yurt, in Waitsfield, VT. Check it out! David is a thoughtful teacher, craftsman and designer, who has much to share with students.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Disaster For Mongolian Yurt/Ger People

Yurts more accurately are named"gers" in the Mongolian tradition. The following is from an article recently posted on Mongolia.

Mongolia
Reuters
SIMPLE LIFE: Mongolian herder's child play outside a tent in Gachuurt, around 40kms (25 miles) east of the capital Ulan Bator.

"Immense landscapes and warm hospitality make Mongolia an adventure like no other, writes Louise Southerden.

'Time isn't money out here," said our trip leader, the former Australian Geographic Adventurer of the Year, Tim Cope. 'Money has no value on the steppe. Animals have value.'"


An awareness: Last week a freeze killed 20 million animals belonging to nomadic Mongolian People.

More than one million head of livestock have died
Three-q

The bottom line for many Mongolain Yurt/Ger people: For many, their wealth is gone. For many, their families are starving.

Another awareness: International Red Cross is making rescue efforts.

You can get involved with a donation to the IRC here: http://donate.ifrc.org/

Some details on what donations are doing: http://www.ifrc.org/docs/news/10/10021101/