Tuesday, February 24, 2009

I want to live in a TENT!

SERIOUSLY!
We all live in these square houses, but who decided that everybody had to live in more or less a CUBE? Why can't we think a little more "out of the box" - literally?

Since I first visited Amsterdam - at age 5 - I've had a romantic dream of living in a houseboat. But apparently the dream hasn't been strong or sincere enough. Or else I'd be living in one now. Which I might have been - hadn't it been for my terrible tendency to sea-sickness.

I've recently started to feel claustrophopic confined inside this concrete-cage of four walls with a glass front at one end. A box stacked on top of another box with other boxes over it - forming all together one big box divided in smaller cells.
So I started searching my mind for memories of spaces which I had enjoyed.

TENT was what came to my mind.


As a child I've spent hundreds of nights in tents with all the other kids from our 'hood. I had agreed to sleep closest to the exit in order not to hurt the other kids so much with my violent nightly movement (some people are sleep-walkers. I'm a sleep-fighter it seems). Result: 5 kids cramped up at rear end of tent and me taking up the remaining 3/4 of the space...

But that was a stray thought.
Back to serious talk of alternative housing now.

I figured it would be nice to have a tent for a home.
Tents don't have to be like small triangular 2x1m with a faulty rain-cover types.
People have been living in tents for thousands of years all over the world.

What - you think the hunter-gatherers of the Stone Age all lived in caves? Well no. There were more people than could be housed in caves even back then. The rest of them lived in TENTS. And did they freeze to death there? I think not. If they had, neither of us would be here today...

It is a myth that tenting is too cold in the North European climate. In Mongolia where the majority of the population live in tents (Yurts/Gers/Ghers) the temperature easily drops to minus 20C during the night.
And the aboriginal Americans (also known as American Indians) of the prairies were erradicated by other means than cold from living in a teepee I tell you.

So - the logical thing for me to do was to conduct a search for tent-living information on my almighty oracle; the internet. The oracle informs me, that there are in fact communities dedicated to yurt living.
Yurt villages, yurt "enthusiasts", several D-I-Y yurt sites and books and even yurt web-shops. Unfortunately these communities are located on the utmost outskirts of the world seen from a Copenhagenoncentric point-of-view. California (of course), Mongolia (naturally) and - of all places - Tasmania. Closest community must be the UK, but still too remote for commuting daily if working in Cph...

There goes my luck in finding fellow tent-enthusiasts. Nobody to help me convince anybody that living in a tent all year is a good idea. From a comfort-point of view, as well as an echo-friendly one.
Imagine all the building material saved. All the Co2 saved from truckloads of brick and concrete NOT being driven back and forth and the money saved on repairing roads damaged from all the heavy transport. And all the space saved - even a big tent will always have a smaller circumference than a house because it's walls are thinner.

So my dear urbanized fellow human beings - let's start thinking out of the boX. And check below how nice living in a tent can be if you still don't believe me

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

I found your blog by Googling "live in a tent." Great post you have here. Best of luck with your extended camping trip. Have fun.
Sam

Mona said...

I also found your blog by googling "live in a tent"! I sincerely hope that you decide to live in a tent as your livelihood. I am also making plans to live in a tent for the long haul.

Michel said...

I've thought of tent life often. Like having a piece of land somewhere, with the basics and then tents. But still being able to do my computer related job. Solar power and stuff like that. I believe it can be done.

Unknown said...

thank you!!!!!!!

Anonymous said...

"Live in a tent" = Awesome blog post. A big beautiful canvas wall tent with a raised plank floor and a sheepherder's stove is my idea of heaven on earth!

Anonymous said...

ive been doing this for two years straight in the black hills of south dakota since 2008 and by choice successfully until this year because it is apparently a felony to live this way in the national forest but i have no regrets as it has been the most enlightening and life changing experiences ever the meaning of what it takes to be truly human you learn to adapt and not live a life of unhealthy waste and you live as god intended for the greatest potential mw i just need to find my other half where r u? PHONE ME TIME IS SHORT 605 415 5452 kim sue

Sophia said...

wow this is something i always wanted to do. after this long grueling winter of being cooped up inside i felt as i would suffocate if i stayed indoors any longer. and even now i for some reason cant stand it inside *sigh* so i would definitely live in a tent if given the chance. buildings are nice but i can only tolerate them so long. i camped out in our fenced in backyard once and even that was fun. right now its just a far away dream, but i hope that one day it will become a reality. to live in a tent, away from all the modern distractions.