My yurt idea came about when I was still living in my 2500 sq ft home that I didn’t like to clean in a subdivision that I didn’t like. I had heard about yurts years before but never really knew much about them. After doing some research online, I was really sold. I’ve always liked the unusual homes you see on the diy network but it was hard to find people who actually lived year-round in their yurts, especially in a climate like that in Colorado.
I found 10 acres of property for sale in a great spot next to the national forest. It was a beautiful piece of property with well and electric already on it and a few months later, I bought it. Now with two mortgages on my hands, I really needed to sell my house before I could do anything on the vacant land.
I finally found a couple who was living in their yurt outside of Fairplay, CO. I drove out to see their yurt to see if it would really work for me. Their yurt was pretty crowded but still very appealing to me. Another weekend I drove all the way out to Montrose, CO to check the yurts of the Colorado Yurt Company.
When my house was finally under contract, it was mid November. I had less than two months to figure out where to live. My property had water and electric, but it was further back on the property where a mobile home had been, not where I would be building. Still unsure about the yurt decision, I decided to buy a 16′ yurt and live in that for however long it took to decide if living in a yurt was really something I wanted to do. I thought if I can live in a 16′ yurt, I can certainly live in a 30′ yurt.
I had the electric run up to the barn and I started building a platform for the hence-named yurtlet. It would be without plumbing, and I’d have to go down the drive about 40 yards to fetch fresh water. This would certainly simplify my living style by drastic measures. I packed up a few things, and stuffed what I could in a POD storage container and gave away the rest.
Let the yurtlet building begin!



