is taking the yurtpill a good investment?
Is taking the yurtpill a good investment?
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based and hairyalloverchicknest-pilled
San francisco niggas be like thatll be 1 million dollars plus tax plus tip
I want to move to move to the praries and live in a Yurt
Take the yurtpill user
I've often thought of just getting a small shed with running water, shower, & toilet, & then just live in a yurt while owning a small patch of land.
I would avoid any housing tax & a huge amount of money being spent but having my own place to live just to either sell the land at a market high or build eventually.
I've often thought of buying a cheap piece of land not prone to flooding, building a small bathroom enclosure, water, restroom, sink, shower - yeah going full redneck - just to have yurt.
I could avoid housing taxes for the most part & either sell the land on a market high or eventually build a house. Save a lot of money while really learning to live on the land more.
Thoughts?
Uhhh u ok
>Build Yert House
>Save money
>Spend your excess money to build a chain link fence around the small property
>Your friend's & their families bring in their own yurts during a SHFT
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I updated my cache like 3 times.
I didn't think my post went through.
better than defaulting on a mortgage.
this post was brought to you by coronavirus.
I went to Kyrgyzstan once, it was pretty cool.
lmao, the final form of the wagekek
>just live in a tent bro
Absolutely. As long as the area has GSM coverage, of course.
I looked into it. They really aren't the best for long term living. Originally designed to be able to pack up and move.
God imagine stepping outside and having all that grassland to take a shit in and not having to do it in a designated street while Ramesh keeps making eye contact with you
>buy a house
>go into debt
>house falls apart
Or...
>yurt
>Can come down in a single day
>No more than 27K on average including a platform
>Avoid housing tax
>Living off the land
>Material is easily replaced
>Sell the land if needed, but keep the yurt.
>Originally designed to be able to pack up and move.
Considering where society is headed this may be the best option user.
**Also you will only need to replace the outer covering after 8 to 15 years.
>27k
AAHHHAHAHAH
Not bad desu senpai. How are they for cold climates? I know they are originally a north east asia thing but i have a hard time believing I would survive a winter in that thing.
Very good because they use wood stoves. You can heat the interior very well.
>not shitting in the ganges
ngmi
wood stove yes, but be prepared to ensure you can scrape your roof at least twice a day. When you wake up & when you go to bed.
Solar panels are now common among yurts where some lighting may be used during the night & refrigeration. Be ready to maintain a generator as back up too. If you ask me ever house owner should really know how to run a generator.
Initial cost will bring you to just about $30K.
Elaborate Yurts cost $40K.
You may be looking at purchasing land as well.
Depending on your location land will cost just under $20K in a more isolated state area or well above $50K in a dense state.
If you're purchasing in a dense populated state than you may be better off buying a home.
However 10 archers for $22K plus maybe $30K max on a yurt is seems extremely feasible even on the most basic of incomes. That's 52K which if you've been working 2 years basic minimum wage you can pay out right for a yurt & only take out about 25k - 32K in good measure with a bank with a mortgage rate in the U.S as low as 3% down payment. That's not bad all.
Catholic Monks in New Zealand build their houses with just 10K each.
we $50-$90k now
for a tent
>nope.jpg
for that money, you would be (infinitely) better off with a mobile, trailer, caravan or whatever the fuck.
I'm seeing 12K yurts.
No one wants to buy a 40K yurt.
The benefits to land is not having others around you & home steading.
Anyone interested in a Yurt doesn't want to live in the city or suburbs for $90K.
$52K for yurt on your own land & growing your own food opposed to living in a trailer home where you have to pay service & community fees.
Again, if you're in a dense state this doesn't work.
Are you from a more dense state or city living area yourself? If so than I can understand how this sounds crazy, but I'm not in a heavily populated state, but cities aren't proving their worth at this point.
no, I'm not claiming disadvantages to owning land - outwith whatever applicable taxes, there being basically none. from a purely building (and living) technical perspective tho, for the kind of money under discussion, even $12k - you will be (lots) happier living in a trailer, mobile home, camper, whatever. On whatever land you like, yours owned or otherwise. Same/more advantages (mobile, not taxed as building.etc) and more comfort. Tents are a PITA, like shipping containers, another meme. Time you make that shit comfy, be as well building properly. Tents ok for occasional use, events, workshop, whatever -uncomfy material for living in tho, I'd rather sleep in a shed
>10 archers for 22k
We Mongols now.
Watch out civilized cucks, we back to raping and pillaging boys
lmao
On the real though? I'll be buying a yurt or something like that with my SUTER gains eventually
This thread has convinced me to build a yurt like these guys.
doityurtself dot com
Look at this sick fucker
they said 60k to build
Based and modernitypilled
That's lame as shit but yurts are awesome. Fuck filling it with modern normcore, put animal pelts on the ground and tapestries on the walls. Keep sharp bladed weapons by your side and roast hunted meat on the fire.
If you're going to yurt, fucking YURT.