“The less I needed, the better I felt,” no truer words have ever been spoken 🙏🌞
@kirstendirksen2 күн бұрын
Indeed!
@Jesus_Saves_Believers2 күн бұрын
Yes!
@50millionmillilitremansion2 күн бұрын
Word
@christopherd.winnan87012 күн бұрын
This is only true until you need the toilet.
@elizabethmorton49042 күн бұрын
@@christopherd.winnan8701 You did a hole, then cover it when you are done.
@atlasiroh5095Күн бұрын
I'm happy that this worked out for you, particularly that the landowner gave you permission to keep the cabin. I was on a similar quest for freedom 10 years ago. I built several primitive homes in secluded spots in the wilderness over the years and lived in them, but every time people eventually found out, they came and destroyed them. "Foxes have their holes, and birds have their nests, but the son of man has no place to rest his head."
@Happyladybug143Күн бұрын
@@atlasiroh5095 Last Quote ,Beautiful Said.
@londonbabe246719 сағат бұрын
@@atlasiroh5095 100%, We all want to be free. I’d very much like to have a little home like this. I’d love to live like Tarzan & Jane ( me being Jane ) or would love a man like Grizzly Adams to live with who’d look after me. What a dream life.
@irishfruitandberries905911 сағат бұрын
An unfortunate circumstance of modernity is the concept of ownership whereby every inch of the planet (land, sea, and air) is owned by something or someone.
@YoniBaruch-y3m7 сағат бұрын
Landowner gave permission?! Gotta be Scandinavian.
@Itsmemaiteg2 күн бұрын
I am blown away by how mature and deep these young people are. They’re like old souls. I could never do what they’re doing but I take my hat off to them.
@kitchencarvings46212 күн бұрын
They are smart because they haven't bought into the programming that you have to have a lot of stuff to be happy. I'm getting old now and I feel like I have everything I need. It's a wonderful feeling.
@jody-annesullivan4547Күн бұрын
They have a very different educational strategy and system. Google it, it’s very interesting.
@The_CGAКүн бұрын
@@Itsmemaiteg Scandinavia raises them different. Its not a race thing, its something about the culture that places a high value in cultivating fortitude and well-roundedness
@raymondo162Күн бұрын
@@kitchencarvings4621 do you need a toilet tho ??
@carolewarner1012 күн бұрын
So jolting hearing her comment, "I wanted to see if it was possible to live on this planet without paying, just to exist." I thought, Wow. That's what we've come to. Everything and every place is owned by someone or some power...and everyone who doesn't "own" has to pay someone who does...just to exist. And yet, this young woman built a cozy home that cost "almost nothing." A cozy, peaceful, inspiring place that she and others are drawn to and inspired by. She lived in it while she pursued her studies, which freed her up not to have to work so many hours at a job just to pay for rent. No lights or power. No plumbing. Just wood and earth that she built herself into her home, and a stove of iron to stay warm by and cook on. Candles for light. Peace and security. What else do you need?! Beautiful.
@YUDNSAY2 күн бұрын
Primary need...A stable landowner.
@HarveyMillstone2 күн бұрын
What a contrast. I'm watching this video and then interrupted by an ad for Disney. Capitalism has its claws everywhere :(
@alterego1572 күн бұрын
Well the answer is an obvious no. Even if we ignore the land ownership, and already produced building materials... she's still paying for everything with her work.
@Romsimeo2 күн бұрын
@@alterego157 your comment doesn’t make sense.🤔
@JohannaVanWinkle2 күн бұрын
Yes.... this statement resonated with me!
@kevinmcgrane4279Күн бұрын
“I wanted to see if it was possible to live on this planet without paying just to exist.” Wow; that bowled me over. Amen. ❤
@darkstarprojekt23 сағат бұрын
You pay bills because someone had to work their ass off in the cold to keep the electricity on. If you don't want to partake, gladly go seek a hermit lifestyle. It's hard work, but maybe you have the skills to make it work. Living like this, especially Alaska, brings the threat of bears, as well as rodents stealing from you. Modern amenities like plumbing and electricity also vastly reduce the chance for plague.
@e.l.france513617 сағат бұрын
@@darkstarprojekt well, that "someone working their ass off" doesn't sound like a happy camper. "Paying just to exist" is far too real for far too many people these days. Just look at the cost (alone) for a simple roof over our heads. And true that we should always be grateful as well as mindful for modern conveniences.
@k.h.75752 күн бұрын
I long for this freedom too. Sadness in my heart of how the world is, everything is upside down. I long for simplicity, silence, beauty and nature..and freedom. I live as a minimalist in the city in the same amount of space as she does...but this is what I dream of ❤
@drunkvegangal80892 күн бұрын
Me too. I have always wished for a very small home (found out they were called 'tiny home' decades ago) on a bit of land where I could grow some food and flowers. Just me and my cat. I'd be drinking coffee and sitting in the sun. Sadly, I have always been relatively poor (in Canada) and soon will be over 60. Lived in a van for 2.5 years in my 50s (no cat) and that was as close as I ever got.
@ridingboy2 күн бұрын
If it's your dream, realize it. You are born free.
@drunkvegangal80892 күн бұрын
@@ridingboy Money, tho. Property is very expensive on the West Coast of British Columbia - even inland these days :D
@oscarinacan2 күн бұрын
I too wish I can just build a home on someone else's property
@rene-pu5yv2 күн бұрын
Neanderthal r still around. People call them Big foot. They could be good neighbors.
@gary4983Күн бұрын
I love how movingly Franciska describes her relationship with the wilderness around her home. After a while, living in such a place, you find it taking hold of you in a connection that is as real as anything in life.
@serenakoleno93382 күн бұрын
You're ending 2024 with a bang! This is so great. A community of students building a secluded retreat in the mountains for a few hundred dollars. It's magical. Happy New Year!🎉❤😊
@raymondo162Күн бұрын
NEXT: they build a toilet !!
@d4mdcykey2 күн бұрын
This was an amazing and inspiring journey, I am very impressed by this young lady!
@d4mdcykey2 күн бұрын
@@JamesWoodring-mu2iz Get to work, accomplish at least this level of remote build, show your work, and THEN get back to me, otherwise you are just a typical sad inept troll.
@kage6819 сағат бұрын
Norwegians seem like really gentle, good, salt of the Earth people who are in touch with nature. Such beautiful human beings. Thanks for sharing
@francoisg13932 күн бұрын
Seeing this beautiful woman thrive in living this minimally reinforces my belief that there are millions of recipes for a successful life, not just the one we're told to have.
@runcamyt2 күн бұрын
I love your content! Thanks for posting!!
@Jesus_Saves_Believers2 күн бұрын
Sheer and utter awesomeness, one of the most amazing things I have seen in 2024. One of your most amazing videos. EXCELLENT camerawork. You should be winning prizes for your camerawork.
@360.Tapestry2 күн бұрын
ah.... as soon as her voice started... so much serenity
@tinahardy93614 сағат бұрын
This piece of paradise is just breathtaking. The quote in the film "The Less I need the better I felt". Wow. I could not put it into words, but there you go. Absolutely love your beautiful paradise. Stay safe, so you may come home and reconnect and enjoy.
@edwarddomain67452 күн бұрын
This was an amazing story, and a brilliantly done video. I’m an avid outdoorsman and now I’m daydreaming about staying the gamme I absolutely loved it ❤
@lenwenzel74407 сағат бұрын
Magical place. I recommend you make your door open inward so snow or ice can't trap you because then you can always get out.
@katek10172 күн бұрын
By far my favourite in all the years I have followed you....thanks.
@Grizzmakes2 күн бұрын
10 minutes in and I’m writing a comment. What a woman. An amazing spirit. I’m in love with her and her outlook. I would love to build something here in England but of course the rules are different. Living vicariously through my KZbin videos and my own channel is good enough for me.
@tupackilla84052 күн бұрын
I literally love this channel so much , alternative living is so intriguing and also to me it’s so peaceful watching these late at night before bed … I start to fall asleep and not because it’s boring ! Because it’s so relaxing and peaceful ❤🎉
@kirstendirksen2 күн бұрын
Thanks! It's great to hear you find it relaxing, that's kind of the intention.
@elizabethcarrington58192 күн бұрын
So awesome! I absolutely love this channel. The woman who built this is so bold and impressive. Now sailing the seas? Even more badass. Thanks for sharing!
@kirstendirksen2 күн бұрын
Thanks, we agree, she's quite an inspiration! And Henrik too!
@BrandanLeeКүн бұрын
It's amazing what someone with no debts can do.
@TheRubytulipСағат бұрын
This way of life resonates with me so much. I have been living off the grid in a tiny house made from reclaimed wood for the past almost 10 years. The more time that passes the more I want to delve even further in this way of life. The peace and freedom that comes from living a minimalistic and close to nature way of life is immeasurable.
@braxtonperry19812 күн бұрын
Modern Walden 😊
@lancedaniels12 минут бұрын
Thanks for posting and sharing. I hope the young lady is able to know freedom. Very atmospheric, even just viewing on KZbin.
@batwood8 сағат бұрын
Very moving. Thanks for covering her story. Happy New Year everyone.
@mytakeonhowtoКүн бұрын
So inspiring and yet so ancient. People have lived like this for eons. That’s the true meaning of sustainability.
@mamemckee21902 күн бұрын
You find and bring such a great variety of ways to live! Thank you.
@TheCloudStick2 күн бұрын
the "you-know" guy strikes again with another stunning hideout
@WatZ-In-Ur-Head2 күн бұрын
That is the most beautiful place I've ever seen.
@OBieWolfMan-v5g2 күн бұрын
The actual dream, with a nice garden and some hearty chickens; Heaven on Earth
@trevorhalpin65813 сағат бұрын
Humanity rushes towards the edge of the cliff, some are turning back.
@kitchencarvings4621Күн бұрын
I used to work to help build houses, and I always thought about all the wasted space just to make the house large to impress people. It is so hard to clean and take care of, and of course, you are tied down by mortgage and property taxes. You have to work all the time to afford to live in it, and don't get started about heating it! Contrast that with this home “that (s)he live in all respects so compactly and preparedly that, if an enemy take the town, (s)he can, like the old philosopher, walk out the gate empty-handed without anxiety.” That is freedom. ― Henry David Thoreau, Walden
@OwnerBuildersUnite2 күн бұрын
So inspiring! Talk about an Earthship!
@AuntieBrendaWashington-tp5mqКүн бұрын
Thank you, Kirsten, for this breathtaking gift. Happy New Year to you and yours.
@StormWarningMom2 күн бұрын
Stunning... she is an adventurer at heart. Not surprised to find she and Henrick knew each other either. Thank you.
@ridingboy2 күн бұрын
What an amazing space to be. We need more exploration and experiments like those presented on this channel. However the oppressive building regulations - as an example here in Germany where I live at the moment - are a big hinderance to anything vaguely outside the box.
@shirleygardner54832 күн бұрын
No truer words spoken. From NC, USA
@gingerwilliams47182 күн бұрын
Bathrooms, septic systems, leach beds, all required in the state where I live.
@olliesear11512 күн бұрын
Thanks for yet another inspiring film! Happy New Year! 😁
@kirstendirksen2 күн бұрын
Same to you!
@C.Chandler_May2 күн бұрын
This, was Beautiful.
@50millionmillilitremansion2 күн бұрын
Always in awe of who you find.❤
@bluewhaleadventures1522 күн бұрын
A truly impressive accomplishment for a master of their craft. For a first timer, whilst studying, a feat beyond description. Bravo. And your description of the thoughtful reasoning behind the project…. Amazing. ❤
@kitchencarvings46212 күн бұрын
The vast majority of people trade freedom for comfort. You have a big house, you have lots of comfort but very little freedom. You have a tiny, primitive cabin you have a small amount of comfort but an incredible amount of freedom.
@elizabethmorton49042 күн бұрын
What a wonderful home Franciska has created; thank you for sharing it with us. I also very much enjoyed the video of Henrik's little hut - I thought I recognized him, and I was right! Delightful.
@indigowendigo84645 сағат бұрын
It just takes time, effort, skill, and courage. No wonder it's so rare. These qualities have been lost in modern times
@GatorLife572 күн бұрын
I love it ! I would live in it full time for sure. 👍👍👍👍
@Nerd39272 күн бұрын
Existing without paying only works when the authority that owns the land, allows you too. I am convinced that animals can talk. They are just wise enough to keep their mouth shut, otherwise they will have to pay for their nest location too. 🙂
@ridingboy2 күн бұрын
I've heard that some of the two-legged authorities are not wise as the rest of the animals..
@troywhite60392 күн бұрын
Authorities are predators too lazy to manage their own lives so they take from others by threats, demands, and scammery.
@alterego1572 күн бұрын
Animals are wise indeed 🤣
@smørpåflesk2 күн бұрын
my granfater built one hut like this in 1945 there they lived with 1 cow and 5 kids 1-10 years old as all houses was burned down in that area. "karasjok only one church survived as the germens retreted from the rushiian trops in late nowember 1944 and burned down everything "
@jeanniek2 күн бұрын
I made it most of the way through this video before I realized I'd been smiling the whole time
@tailgatecarpenter26Күн бұрын
An old saying I just made up is "If it hurts to smile it is time to change your life".
@togatampubolon59482 күн бұрын
I wish I could have done like this when I was young.
@obsidianjane44132 күн бұрын
Seems like the hermit lifestyle would be a waste of youth. I'm glad she left and went out adventuring.
@reverands5712 күн бұрын
I live on a $1 sailboat. Almost ready to become nomadic, again, in le Nomade (a 1983 Hunter 34) after 2 years work (not really that long. Months of health issues, along the way).
@reverands5712 күн бұрын
Waking to the first bird calls, enjoying my morning coffee listening to fish break the water to snatch a water bug, as the sky lightens up, announcing a new day. Hoping to leave the dock in January.
@youWILLknow_iffi_1232 күн бұрын
@@reverands571 ahoy
@PlanetEarth31412 күн бұрын
@@reverands571 Sounds great and you have earned the journey. 😊
@e.l.france51362 күн бұрын
@@reverands571Happy trails to you!
@lapsedluddite338111 сағат бұрын
@reverands571 - Fair winds!
@MrGenedancingmachine2 күн бұрын
It’s great being a rich kid, frivolous whims and all that good stuff
@marcoprolo14882 күн бұрын
Yes, in these hippy communities you very quickly understand there are 2 types of people. Those that spend time having fun but knowing they have a plan B because of family wealth and the others that are misled and will end up badly scattered with no safety net.
@obsidianjane44132 күн бұрын
What makes you think she was rich? The video emphasizes that she built it from scrap with volunteer help and hitchhiked across the Atlantic.
@MrGenedancingmachine8 сағат бұрын
@@obsidianjane4413 You know what grown ups are doing while she's doing whaever takes her fancy? They're working. Stop being so naive. Anybody you see on youtube, "doing what they want" "following their dreams" is someone in zero finanical danger
@obsidianjane44135 сағат бұрын
@@MrGenedancingmachine She built this while a university student. So she was working. There are lots of YTers who aren't "rich", many who are obviously not well off, or they make their income from making YT content, you know,... Working. Stop being so hateful. Oh and take your pills.
@PT-Wash21 сағат бұрын
so peaceful and calming
@janesmith9024Күн бұрын
Wonderful of FE - such a warm house. Here it the UK it would be harder as even if with landowner permission you would almost never obtain planning permission to build on land which is not already rural, or not easily,not least because we have 67m people here now and 900,000 more a year (1.2m gross immigration) and more than anywhere on the planet wants to come to the UK except for USA which is first.
@daviddjerassiКүн бұрын
Great admiration for your build and your pluck to follow your heart God keep you safe DD.
@AreHan19912 күн бұрын
Beautiful. I am Norwegian, but has never been to see that nature up north (only a bit of the coast)
@3bouldersurban6532 күн бұрын
That sentence hit the nail on the head for me: you need to spend to exist …😮
@obsidianjane44132 күн бұрын
Everyone does. Either in money or time and effort. Living off grid you spend a lot of time cutting firewood and foraging/growing/hunting for food. Nothing is free.
@BrandanLeeКүн бұрын
@@obsidianjane4413 -- the concept that "nothing is free" is a fallacy. If you count labor as capital, self-exploitation renders nothing free. That is what is true in your assertion. If you are not selling your labor and instead living a non-monetary lifestyle, as isolated and remote from the methods and means of monetary culture -- everything is free. Life is free, death is free, and all the in between. The air falling into your lungs is a non-monetary transaction. Until they find a way to cut off your oxygen supply and sell it to you, too. What we mean when we say freedom is the voluntary ability to choose your engagements, either because you believe in the effort or feel persuaded to engage in the effort. When you are forced to pay to live, be it because you're evicted by the dependency on parents early in life or forced into debt and rent by the inexorable slide into negligence as an adult -- *you are not free.* The tricks of evicting children when they're old enough to move out, despite parents owning their own inheritable property, and pushing children into debt through college, and debt for homes, and debt for marriage & weddings, debt for vehicles and debt for tools, debt for childbirth, debt for health maintenance, debt for food, debt for childcare -- *they built an entire civilization in an ant-lion nest, an inexorable slide into debt, with a culture that worships the fall.* The gravity of this situation cant be understated. The default state of humanity is homelessness, living on the land. They made that functionally illegal. They left nowhere to go. When nature has been replaced with an artificial life support machine, when they unplug the power, we all die. Climate control, transportation, agriculture, and life itself, is enslaved to this artificial ecosystem. There is a gun to our heads in an open air prison, a space ship parked on the ground, isolated from nature. If you think you're free, just walk out the door and find true freedom. See how long it takes til you're removed.
@speliotis23 сағат бұрын
what an inspiring woman...
@nightskylights4501Күн бұрын
In the US, the local Mafia, I mean the local government, will never allow these kind of homes to be build. Because then they won't be able to suck every penny out of you in form of building permits and tons of other taxes and fees! I was interested in a property for sale that was on well water. But if it was sold, the local Mafia would force the new owner to connected to the city water, for NO other reason that making money! It would cost the new owner about $85,000 in Mafia extortion money, I mean "connection fees" to connect the city water to the front of the house, which was only 50 feet, or about 15 meters, away!!! And then thousands more, to connect the line from in front of the house to the actual house!!! And that was over 12 years ago! With outrage increases in inflation, that amount must be at least trippeled by now! And that was just one "fee." And people in the US are under illusion of thinking they have "freedoms" and "democracy." Which is both laughable and sad at the same time. But the parapanda machine, I mean the corporate media in this country, has done it's job well. They have successfully brainwashed the modern day slaves to think they are free, so the billionaires can get richer!
@BrandanLeeКүн бұрын
It's amazing watching the ways reasonable protections for homebuyers and renters were transformed from sensible fire & anti-slum protection.... into a nonsensical extortion racket which keeps property values artificially high using contrived standards that keep things artificially and unnecessarily expensive. Amazing how that works.
@RamonaRayTodosSantosBCSКүн бұрын
Love it. Can’t grow on roof though. Lolol The country my Grandmothers family came from… She was Sami.
@mattyaustin3362 күн бұрын
What an amazing project! Beautifully simple and cosy. You could never have something like that in most areas in the UK... wouldn't be long before some idiots trashed it or burnt it down.
@bosse6412 күн бұрын
....or the landowner or government came and threw you out.
@persvedberglinden4514Күн бұрын
Love this story! This is something I want to do too..
@OscarRodriguez-jx4ft2 сағат бұрын
... y además de todas las cosas lindas y justas que dijeron los seguidores y amigos, el chico tenía un prendedor de un país muy necesitado de ayuda en su mochila, je. Gracias, gracias, gracias!!!
@izabelabhering70412 күн бұрын
Very impressive journey. I wonder how you managed food supplies, and other practicalities. Best wishes💐
@jwebbw2 күн бұрын
That was a lot of work even to build that small structure because they had to haul materials to its isolated location. And the hut doesn't appear to be getting the sun's southern exposure like the opposing lit up mountain to the north that I saw. It's very creative of them while keeping with tradition...until the next one...travel on !!
@kirstendirksen2 күн бұрын
Yes, the location is quite remote, and so is the cabin. It’s in Norway, above the Arctic Circle, quite to the north.
@jwebbw2 күн бұрын
@@kirstendirksen Hello, I enjoy you and your significant other's work and have a great new year !!
@jackieow2 күн бұрын
It is okay for grass to grow on the roof, but make sure to pull up any little trees that get started. Otherwise they will penetrate down through your waterproofing layers and the roof will leak badly. The book cases above the stove could have something fall (for instance if a mouse knocks something loose). Onto the stove it could start a big bad fire fast when you are asleep. If the door is challenged with a large snow drift, you could be trapped unless you are set up to get out the big window fast. This door opens outward, which is easiest to block off with snow drifts and so is the most dangerous kind. In the Iowa pioneer days, lots of people in frontier cabins died because their cabin caught fire and they couldn't escape fast enough with six foot drifts piled outside the door that wouldn't open. Here is what happened to a friend at his cabin in Northern Minnesota. Make sure it doesn't happen to you: he fell asleep in the cold of winter, and woke up to find his hair was glued to the wall in a block of ice. Family members had hot water to get him free, but if he had been alone and there was a fire he would have been in great danger. He had fallen asleep with his mouth close to the wall, and accumulated exhaled lung vapor bit by bit grew the block of ice to create his problem. If nobody is around to help, it pays to have scissors handy instead of waiting a month for the ice to thaw.
@IzzyZonКүн бұрын
@@jackieow seems you only see problems, taking away any capability to see possibilities.. Dare to dream and dare to live, life is short enough.. not to love it.. ❤️
@jackieowКүн бұрын
@@IzzyZon The problem is not preventing fire and getting yourself killed when a cabin catches fire. You need to study up on the Darwin Awards. You can't enjoy life if you're dead. Google "died in cabin fire" and you might learn about it.
@jackieowКүн бұрын
If you solve problems before they happen, they aren't problems. To enjoy life, it pays to not be dead.
@BrandanLeeКүн бұрын
@@jackieow -- This is all fantastic advice. It's good to dream, but always experiment before we set a course. Trust, but verify. The core of survival is preparation and proactive maintenance.
@jackieowКүн бұрын
@@BrandanLee Everything I said is based on experience and not dreams. But if you want to learn the hard way about tree roots, getting burned to death, etc. etc. that's up to you. Just don't risk the lives of innocent people. For instance, you can google "died in cabin fire" and get a feel for what the risks are.
@becca3182 күн бұрын
Really love this! ❤
@kaleygoode16812 күн бұрын
Some of Slartibartfast's finest work
@emilyfeagin26732 күн бұрын
Amazing story, beautiful place thanks for sharing
@raktoda707Күн бұрын
Peaceful, much needed in this world of ours 🌲Peace and Good health to you in 2025
@MichaelMartinussen2 күн бұрын
She's sooo brave !!!
@Timejumperk900023 сағат бұрын
Stay safe watch out for Wild life. Mike from Wyoming United States!😊😊😊
@e.l.france51362 күн бұрын
And to think how we've been reduced to playing YT videos of rain and nature sounds. 😢 I love the places and styles in living that you so beautifully showcase. Thank you 🙏
@hillarybanks82 күн бұрын
This was Lovely. ❤
@OldNorse75Күн бұрын
Oh i just love my butiful contry. Hope you find the peace you want. Take good care off it❤
@kimhobby8136Күн бұрын
Beautiful!
@silverlicious2086Күн бұрын
Kirsten, wonderful story and presentation. I Love all your work this past year and look forward to more in 2025. Happy New Year to you and family. Cheers from Loveland, Ohio - just NE of Cincinnati
@manicsurfingКүн бұрын
It's harder than it looks. Nature is beautiful and difficult. Consider the pbs documentary of the guy that went to Alaska and built his own log cabin and stayed there to a ripe old age. Eventually he came back to society because it was to difficult.
@tamonettX50023 сағат бұрын
I LOVED that documentary and watched it every single time it aired! PBS always aired it when doing one of their money runs because it had such appeal.
@bjorn8854Күн бұрын
the way to go absolutely 💚
@rougesaphir2 күн бұрын
Lucky people who live there : in France, no way to build such a small sweet home... Any construction is forbidden in natural lands, even fully underground.
@kimhorton6109Күн бұрын
Scandinavians took this hut building to the northern plains in America when they had learned to live with the Indians. Tales of people starting out this way are there in Nebraska and South Dakota during the period when settlers were homesteading
@MainelyNormal2 күн бұрын
My skoolie cabin in northern Maine has that same vibe. We gave\sold 95% of our belongings. Closed my business and we now live not only poor on purpose but purposefully poor. We live by, “Do,not have” ❤❤
@Robert_Hermigua2 күн бұрын
Many years ago a friend of mine said, when I was broke and told him I'm poor, "You are not poor. Poverty is a state of mind. You don't have this mindset. You are broke.". If you live with very little by purpose, it is not poverty. It is a conscious restriction. You are probably more rich than all the people with 2 SUVs in front of their way too big house with an even bigger mortgage on. Rich in choice, rich in inner peace.
@MainelyNormalКүн бұрын
@ love that.I do feel incredibly rich!
@janeysiegrist50612 күн бұрын
Another truly beautiful video. It was interesting watching her narrate.The first part.. Then having it finished with your tour
@DavidPaulNewtonScott2 күн бұрын
I have just such a plot of land behind my house in Portugal. I am planning to build something like this for while I work on the house. I also have a dugout stealth cabin in london. It's the second one I have built. My advice to anybody building such a cabin would be : face south and build a regular polygon. Personally I think a hexagon is the best shape. Also, place tinbers vertically they are easier to replace.
@meikala2114Күн бұрын
@@DavidPaulNewtonScott please don't build it to face South in Tasmania
@debbralehrman5957Күн бұрын
Old ways are some of the best ways.👍🏼
@RPRosen-ki2fkКүн бұрын
Happy New Year Kirsten and best wishes to the Boullosa-Dirksen team/fam in 2025. Thanks for all the interesting and heartwarming films you've shared this past year.
@kirstendirksenКүн бұрын
Thanks for your kind words. Happy New Year to you too!
@campbellcustom22 сағат бұрын
Currently reading "the $50 & up underground house book" by Mike Oehler. And this vid shows up. Excellent timing and great info. Your vid has inspired me to look up that way of building even more. Thank you.
@nicolasboullosa21 сағат бұрын
We feel so fortunate that we got to meet Mike. He emailed us with encouragement words and wise words during the winter holidays years ago. He passed not long after. We also got to meet Bill Mollison in Melbourne many years ago. But some legendary friends are still alive and inspiring us. Their work is inspirational and evergreen.
@campbellcustom21 сағат бұрын
@nicolasboullosa that's cool to hear. One of Bill Mollison's books is also on my stand. Thanks for replying. Happy New Year
@nicolasboullosa21 сағат бұрын
@ Same! Thanks for watching
@8Folge.Deiner.Intuition82 күн бұрын
Beautiful! Thanks for the video - and love from Hamburg!
@uzaytakip72212 күн бұрын
YOU ARE SO nice person man.. thank you..
@psycherevival27622 күн бұрын
I admire the industriousness, vision and boldness of Francesca. I also love to see such natural homebuilding practice practised…. What a gem. I don’t think that the air between the wood and the soil portion of the wall, crease insulation, but what does a gap where the temperature of the frozen soil isn’t directly transferred to the wood portion of the wall, which keep it warmer.
@serhandurmaz9002 күн бұрын
Beautiful...
@patturnweaver2 күн бұрын
how does she store water?
@joanneganon7157Күн бұрын
Nicely Done 🎉. Happy New Year 🎆🎇! JO JO IN VT 💞☃️🇺🇲
@kirstendirksenКүн бұрын
Thanks for watching and Happy New Year to you too!
@agnieszkakowalska63522 күн бұрын
what a story!
@rick-yo2 күн бұрын
Where’s the bathroom? And what does she do about bathing?
@obsidianjane44132 күн бұрын
Probably an outhouse and/or a bucket.
@ikoinoКүн бұрын
So, many levels: her voice, what she is saying, where we are, the motivation. Am deeply moved. Thank you so much ...
@reneharkamp4309Күн бұрын
Amsterdam, calling 📞 Touched by admiration, incredibly.... ❤😊
@benderbender123316 сағат бұрын
this is the way!!! 🖖🌝🖖
@spaghettihorse17 сағат бұрын
Very nice. For me I would put two exits in case not to get trapped by anything.
@fionntainmacbКүн бұрын
Wonderful video, great idea, might try one myself, what brand of black plastic did she use to water proof the roof and walls?
@charlottewilliams7866Күн бұрын
Lovely
@shirleygardner54832 күн бұрын
Happy New Year!
@ridingboy2 күн бұрын
Happy New Year from 80.000 km east of Australia :)
@kirstendirksen2 күн бұрын
Happy New Year to YOU ALL too from the Boullosa-Dirksen team/fam!
@nicolasboullosa2 күн бұрын
@@ridingboyVery “close” to us all as community indeed! A mere “thousands of miles” away indeed! Though Franciska is sailing across South America, she may emulate the Normegian Kon-Tiki and visit you LOL