Building a tiny house for someone else

Ahoy! Long time between posts and apologies for the radio-silence.

Shortly before completing the majority of our P2 guesthouse space and having guests stay in succession, I was contacted by the daughter of an elderly friend of Heidi’s who was a single woman looking to both downsize and give herself affordable living autonomy in this crazy real estate market (hell). I offered my services with the caveat that my skillset was limited to semi-trailer tiny homes and that was something she quickly agreed to. We were able to show her a couple of examples of semi-trailer tiny homes and it is easy to see the virtues.

Fast forward 11 months, and I am reminded at how much work is involved in building a house (especially when you do it all yourself!) and how little I have been updating my progress (hence the lack of posts on this blog!). It was somewhat liberating not to film everything I was doing this time around like when I built our place, but I’m sure I’ll miss seeing the evolution of all the work once it is done. I’ve included a little gallery of pics here to give you an idea and I’ll do a proper “tour” once it is done. Here is a walk-through I did about 75% of the way through:

Here’s a few photos from early on til now!

5 Pros and Cons to semi-trailer homes

What sorts of things should you consider when thinking about building your tiny house out of an ex-refrigerated semi-trailer? It is a great way to build especially for DIYers, but there are things to watch out for as well. Mike looks at his top 5 pros and top 5 cons for going this route for your future tiny home.

Check out the video at the bottom of this post if you’d rather watch than read 🙂

The Surprising Pros and Cons of Building a Tiny House Inside a Semi-Trailer

If you’ve ever looked at a tiny house and thought, “I love it… but could I possibly have more space, more stability, and a little less anxiety?” — then let me welcome you into the peculiar, underrated world of the ex-refrigerated semi-trailer tiny house.

Heidi and I live in two of these gentle giants, and over time we’ve learned what works, what doesn’t, and what simply makes you smile and shake your head at your own life choices.

Here are the top pros and cons — the things you absolutely want to know before diving into one of these beasts.

The Pros: Why a Semi-Trailer Makes an Amazing Tiny Home

1. The Sheer Size (It’s Basically a Studio Apartment on Wheels)

It still surprises people when they step inside. A typical refrigerated trailer is around 12–13 metres long2.5 metres wide, and 2.7 metres high inside. That gives you a huge rectangular canvas — no odd angles, no quirky rooflines, no sloping ceilings designed for hobbits.

Just… space.

Space to design.
Space to breathe.
Space to spread out your tools and pretend you know exactly what you’re doing.

And when you’re building a tiny home, that simplicity is priceless.

A person pointing towards a modified ex-refrigerated semi-trailer tiny house, showcasing its green exterior and window

2. The Price (Yes, Really)

This is where semi-trailers quietly destroy the competition.

Our two trailers cost $10,000 total — that’s 64 square metres of ready-made structural envelope for less than the price of a bare tiny house chassis.

Walls, roof, floor, frame — all done.
Made from fibreglass, steel, and aluminium built for endurance.

In tiny-house-land, that’s a unicorn-level bargain.

Two ex-refrigerated semi-trailers converted into tiny homes, situated in a grassy area with trees in the background.

3. The Ease of Building (A First-Time Builder’s Dream)

The joy of building inside a semi-trailer is that the structure is already doing the heavy lifting.

Want a door?
Cut the hole, weatherproof it, pop the door in.

No structural framing.
No load-bearing walls.
No engineering anxiety about whether that cute light fixture secretly weighs as much as a small goat.

Inside, weight restrictions vanish. Marble benchtops? Concrete floors? Go wild.

It’s the closest thing a DIY builder will ever get to playing a life-sized version of The Sims.

A person using a circular saw to cut the exterior wall of a semi-trailer while standing on a yellow ladder, wearing safety gear including headphones and a dust mask, against a backdrop of partly cloudy blue sky.

4. Road Safety and Stability (A Heavy Beast Is a Safe Beast)

A semi-trailer is built to carry 35 tons at full load, cruising down highways like it’s nothing.

So your tiny house ends up with:

  • Airbag suspension
  • Massive wheels
  • A bulletproof steel chassis
  • Remarkable stability in all weather

Compared to towing a lightweight tiny house, this thing is a zen monk rolling down the freeway.

A semi-trailer converted into a tiny house, parked in a grassy area under a cloudy sky.

5. No Loft Living (Depending on Who You Are, This Is Glorious)

Some people love lofts. Some people love not smacking their head at 2am because they forgot to duck.

We chose single-level living: high ceilings, no ladders, no crawling into bed like a tired cat.

We even installed a lift bed to reclaim floor space when needed.

Interior view of a tiny house built inside a semi-trailer, featuring a kitchen area with blue cabinets, a refrigerator, shelves with dishes, and large windows allowing natural light.

Bonus: Giving Industrial Waste a Second Life

Each trailer is around 15 tons of metal and fibreglass. Most end up rusting in paddocks.

Repurposing one is an act of quiet environmental kindness — rescuing literal tonnes of material from landfill and turning it into a home.


The Cons: What You Need to Know Before Buying One

1. You’re Building Inside an Old Vehicle

Let’s be honest — these things spent their lives hauling frozen goods across Australia.

Expect rust, dents, roof repairs, bowed walls, and strange angles that test your patience.

The cheaper the trailer, the more quirks you inherit. You’re buying character… sometimes more than you bargained for.

2. It’s… a Big Box

If you dream of a tiny cottage with a pitched roof and storybook charm, this may not scratch that itch.

Semi-trailers are functional rectangles. You can beautify them, but they’ll still be rectangles with a very practical past.

An ex-refrigerated semi-trailer converted into a tiny house, showcasing its rear view with closed doors and a simple wooden staircase leading up to its entrance.

3. Flat Roof = No Easy Rainwater Harvesting

The flat roof simplifies building but complicates water collection.

If you’re off-grid, you’ll need a false roof, angled structure, or separate catchment setup. Skylights can add another layer of complexity.

A flat roof of an ex-refrigerated semi-trailer

4. The Monster Tires

Six per trailer. Twelve total. Each one is $1,000 new or about $100 used.

They elevate the house beautifully and give great under-floor access, but they also age, crack, and occasionally explode at inopportune times.

A person inspecting the tire of a semi-trailer, highlighting its size and condition.

5. Moving Isn’t Something You Do on a Whim

To move a semi-trailer tiny house, you need:

  • A heavy-duty truck
  • A driver
  • Scheduling
  • A little luck

You can’t just hitch it to your family ute and head off. If you ever need to move quickly — bushfires, land issues — it takes planning.

Final Thoughts

Semi-trailer tiny houses aren’t for everyone, but they’re incredible for the right person.

If you value space, stability, affordability, and the satisfaction of upcycling a multi-tonne industrial relic into a cosy home… this might be the path for you.

I hope this guide helps you think through your options. If you want to explore your own ideas or run designs by someone who’s made all the mistakes already, I’m always happy to help.

Mike chats on TinyHouse podcast

It was a pleasure to be asked to join tiny house expert and aficionado Ethan Waldman on his The Tiny House podcast recently while I was in Canada (Ethan is based in Vermont). He has done hundreds of episodes and has a great blog and channel interviewing tiny house owners from all over and diving into all-things tiny living.

Throughout this episode, Ethan and I chatted about the lifestyle and building journey that Heidi and I have done, exploring not just the practical aspects of the build like custom cabinetry and space-saving features like our innovative elevator bed, but also the sustainable lifestyle that drives us. We got into the nitty-gritty of what converting a semi-trailer entails, creating a comfortable and functional living space, as well as addressing the challenges and rewards such a project brings. I appreciated being asked to come onto the programme and the smart questions and curious nature of Ethan. Thanks for the opportunity and I hope you had some interested listeners!

Have a listen to the Podcast here:

Transforming a Semi-Trailer into a Stylish Tiny Home Tiny House Lifestyle Podcast

I am thrilled to introduce our guest, Mike Crowhurst, a seasoned tiny house dweller and the creative mind behind one of the most unique tiny homes I’ve seen in a while! Mike and his wife Heidi spent three years crafting a 45-foot ex-refrigerated semi-trailer into a gorgeous tiny home. Throughout this episode, we'll dive into Mike's journey of tiny house living, exploring not just the practical aspects like custom cabinetry and space-saving features like an innovative elevator bed, but also the sustainable lifestyle that drives him. We'll also get into the nitty-gritty of converting a semi-trailer into a comfortable and functional living space, addressing the challenges and rewards such a project brings. So buckle up as we get a tour of Mike’s impressive tiny house and learn how he has optimized every inch of his home for maximum living.In This Episode:🚚 Tiny House Towing Challenges: The intricacies involved in transporting a tiny house safely, including the type of vehicle required and the importance of professional trucking expertise to avoid potential hazards.🏠 Semi-Trailer Conversion Journey: Mike's personal adventure of converting a 45-foot refrigerated semi-trailer into a sustainable and innovative tiny home.❄️☀️ Insulation and Climate Adaptation: The insulation options used in the semi-trailer, Mike's additional insulation efforts, and adaptation to the Adelaide climate.💡 Procuring a Trailer: Insight into the process of acquiring a semi-trailer, highlighting considerations like checking for rust, maintenance history, and tips on where to find decommissioned trailers.🗄️ Tiny House Storage Solutions: Mike outlines the storage enhancements in his tiny home, describing various built-in options that maximize space without creating a cramped feeling.🛏️ Elevator Bed Innovation: The unique design and functionality of the elevator bed in the tiny house are explained, showcasing how space-saving features contribute to the minimalist lifestyle.🤝 Online and Real-Life Communities: Encouragement for listeners to seek advice and share experiences within the tiny house community, both in-person and online, to foster collective wisdom and support.Send us a textSupport the showListen. Subscribe. Rate. Review. Apple Podcasts Spotify More… Follow Ethan. Mastodon Instagram Pinterest Facebook Want to say 'thank you' for the show? Buy me a coffee!

Peek into my other world

I’ve been a bit quiet on the tiny house content-production front as a few things in other life realms have been occupying my time. Despite having brushes in a few pots, I am still thankful for a flexible lifestyle that allows me to attend to other things when they come up. Honestly, I don’t know how people with families, 2 jobs and big mortgages do it and stay sane. So while this post feels like it digresses into other areas, I feel like it does dovetail full-circle with regards to minimalist living…

So, besides going through our slowest time of the year financially (Heidi and I are self-employed freelancers and the Australian summer season post-Christmas is a flat time where no one is spending money on what we do), I am making a trip overseas soon to help my ageing parents who have requested some help around medical-related issues. I have had to figure out more ways to bring home the vegan bacon so it has meant more gig work (UberEats) and returning back to my old career of filmmaking.

Well, I’m not quite cobbling the gear together and doing any video jobs (yet), I realised that my video production company, Red Earth Films, has a lot of quality material just lying around doing nothing. My business partner and I were trying to make a living on this over a decade ago, and YouTube plus streaming networks weren’t quite where they are now in terms of being a solid option for monetising indie films. While we did trial a digital platform, it was alongside DVD/BluRay releases and attempts at getting public broadcasters (SBS, ABC) or theatrical operators to show our stuff (and pay us for it!). So the idea came about to just release our offerings online for free with hopes that we might gain a following and drive eventual earnings through YouTube and the like. Until now, everything was locked up because we still thought we could get pay-per-view earnings.

So with that in mind, take a quick break and watch this short little Red Earth intro video I did yesterday to advertise this new direction. After this shameless plug, continue reading the post below! 😀

Thanks for watching. You did watch, right? 🤗

Life as a freelance creative is actually the perfect pairing with tiny house living. For the bulk of my life, being an independent creative has involved patchy earnings whilst still having the same bills to pay as everyone else. Sometimes you have a waterfall windfall job, and sometimes it is like the desert with not an oasis in sight. Worst then is when the latter happens (and you busily blew the excess of the windfall on travel and eating out rather than saving for a rainy day), and you need to plug the money gaps with work outside your skill area just to make ends meet.

I definitely find there are far less of those extremes lately with minimalist and tiny living. It’s obviously happening to us at the moment to a degree, but the pressure for other folks doing it tough is far more intense when inflation, soaring rent rates and so on keep biting you. If you are someone who has dedicated your life to creative pursuits, then you know how much harder again it is in this day and age.

Returning to my filmmaking material has been good to revisit as well, as it is like looking at a photo album and realising that you have actually done some good work in the past which informs the future you. My work revolved around compassionate human stories and so I feel like there is a tie-in with sustainable, minimalist and vegan living: compassion is at the heart of it all. Heidi and I live minimally as we believe that it is the healthy thing to do not only for our life-balance but for the planet. Choosing not to eat animal products is compassionate to animals, the planet and other people. We choose sustainable shopping options because we believe it is helping others. All this suggested altruism sounds like a lot of self back-patting but I honestly believe that there isn’t enough sacrifice in the lives of a typical westerner. Heidi and I are far from perfect in this regard, but I feel like there’s a strong desire in both of us to leave the planet as minimally scarred from our existence as possible once we are gone.

Thanks for reading my ramble and for following me along on our journey. I’ll be trying to produce some new content soon for Big Tiny Adventure, but if you are interested to take a peek into my Other World, please have a poke around on Red Earth Films’ YouTube channel as we continue to upload blasts from the past, like those mentioned in the video above. Peace!! ✌🏼💚🌱

PS. If you are looking for a talented graphic designer who has a impressive repertoire of working with NGOs and other honourable clients, please visit Heidi Rurade Design!

Examining our DIY composting toilet system

Given that toilets and sewage are something that most people – including myself for most of my life – never really think too much about, when I express just how much I am thankful for the idea of composting toilets, it probably sounds like a strange exaggeration. Composting toilets are not only environmentally sound, clean and functionally simple but they are also the most natural way (figuratively and metaphorically) to deal with human waste. Ours is particularly simple and that is its beauty, along with being inexpensive. Let’s have a look at what sorts of benefits that this type of system offers over flushing toilets and where they work best, how ours works and where we might make improvements.

Benefits and Uses

First up, let’s look at 10 reasons why composting toilets can be seen as superior to flushing toilets (especially in the right context).

  1. Water Conservation:
  • Composting toilets do not require water for flushing, contributing to significant water conservation. For example, even with water-saving loos in Australia (3L per half flush, 6L per full) meaning a family of 4 flushes around 28,000 litres of drinking-quality water down the bog every year. In Adelaide, this constitutes 18% (32 GL) of all mains water use from the 200 gigalitres we use every year. It takes energy and resources to purify water, a lot of energy to operate desalination plants and in a state where rainfall is due to decline by as much as 30% by 2050, we can’t afford to minimise the importance of fresh water.
  1. Environmental Impact:
  • Flushing toilets contribute to water pollution through the release of sewage into water bodies. Composting toilets eliminate this form of pollution, as they do not produce liquid waste that requires treatment. Best of all, “humanure” is natural and, when composted and dealt with appropriately, can be used as a positive way to restore soil health.
  1. Significant Reduction in Energy Use:
  • Traditional sewage treatment and water supply systems involve significant energy consumption. Composting toilets effectively take away all the energy consumption from the system other than some manual labour in managing your compost.
  1. Off-Grid Capability:
  • Composting toilets are perfectly suited for off-grid living or in remote areas where access to water and sewage infrastructure is limited. They provide a sanitation solution without the need for extensive plumbing. Once you remove “black water” from your waste system (in most areas, only toilet water is black water now), it is easy to deal with grey water with zero sewage involvement.
  1. Nutrient-Rich Compost:
  • Not only environmentally friendly from a water or energy perspective, compost produced by composting toilets can be a valuable resource for gardening and agriculture. It is rich in nutrients and can be safely used as fertilizer after proper composting.
  1. Odour Control:
  • A common concern is that composting toilets smell worse than flushing loos. A properly set up composting one is designed to minimize or eliminate odours through proper ventilation and microbial decomposition. A dry bucket loo will have no odour (other than smells created “in-progress” which is the same as any toilet! 😛 Advanced models often have features like fans and venting systems to keep the compost dry as moisture is usually the only contributor to smell.
  1. Reduced Infrastructure Costs:
  • Installing traditional sewage systems and water supply infrastructure can be expensive. A composting toilet can be as simple as a bucket under a toilet seat with organic covering material up to a traditional-looking toilet with a chambered unit under the house. Not having a “wet” system means plumbing can be DIY and is very simple to maintain or repair.
  1. Resilience to Water Shortages:
  • During droughts or water shortages, traditional flushing toilets may face restrictions or challenges. Some eco-minded folks will put a brick in the toilet tank to conserve water or other modifications, but the fact is, toilets need water to work effectively without blocking up. Composting toilets provide a reliable and independent sanitation solution that doesn’t rely on water availability.
  1. Reduced Strain on Sewage Systems:
  • In areas with overburdened sewage systems, composting toilets can help reduce the strain on infrastructure, preventing issues like sewage overflows and backups. On a localised level, a “blocked toilet” is a thing of the past with a composting toilet, rendering a toilet plunger permanently unneeded! Hooray! It doesn’t matter what you throw down the loo as long as it can naturally break down. In one house we lived in, our old pipes would be routinely infiltrated by tree roots which resulted in horror scenes of raw sewage burbling up through a backyard grate. Yuck-o.
  1. Adaptability to Various Climates:
  • Composting toilets can function effectively in a range of climates, including cold and remote areas, where traditional sewage systems may be challenging to implement. Frozen pipes aren’t going to affect this system, and hot environments only help get the composting process moving along faster.

Bonus point: Silence. Rather than worrying about plopping or tinkling sounds in a wet loo, nor the sound of a toilet flushing (eg. in the quiet of the night or numerous times with guests over), there is complete silence. Not something to be underestimated in its importance.

Based on many of these reasons, I personally think that we should see a whole lot more people giving composting toilets a try, however the reality is of course much different. Local regulations, and the specific needs of a given community will dictate what is “allowed” or not. Sadly, despite fresh water being a disappearing resource, city councils will probably never adopt any other system other than the one they have as they see human waste as a public health (even though flushing toilets are still reliant on people using and maintaining them properly). However, with more people going off-grid and expanding into semi-rural areas, this is entirely a possible solution.

composting toilet, off-grid, custom design, tiny house on wheels

Our composting toilet experience

We came into the composting toilet idea early on after seeing how effective they were and how many people used them during our Intentional Community trips. There were indoor and outdoor loos-with-views, fancy loos, simple loos. The one thing in common was that they were all inoffensive to use, clean and required no special plumbing. Including our time building our tiny house, we haven’t had a flushing toilet since early 2019. Largely we have not missed it at all:

Pros: the environmental considerations listed above, easy to keep clean, quiet, no unclogging or flooding concerns, no mechanical issues like tank stuck filling.

Cons: requires manually levelling the accumulated pile occasionally for better coverage, can get smelly if people wee in it (see challenges below), no flushing water should things stick to the bowl, every 6 weeks or so the bin needs swapping and old compost needs burying.

composting toilet, Eco-loo, tiny house, off-grid

Our set-up is based on ones that we saw for sale by companies like Green-Loo who have large multi-chamber polycarbonate units that can fit under tiny houses and will allow the composting activity to occur within. Some units like the Separett include unique urine diverters but you still need to empty compartments plus it requires you to always sit down and I just don’t personally like the way they look. The Green-Loo system is well thought out but much more expensive than we wanted to spend, but we modelled ours off that idea.

The perk to building in a semi-trailer body is the height from the ground. Having just over a meter of clearance means that we could slip a standard wheelie bin underneath which would provide us with a waste receptacle at a fraction of the price of a dedicated system ($75 per bin from Paramount Browns, delivered). We found some handy plans of how to fit-out a bin for this purpose and then just modified it to work with the Green-Loo pedestal toilet, which was our biggest expense ($450). A good-quality fan which sits in-line in the large exhaust pipe out of the bin ran us about $100 too.

the outdoor set-up of the composting wheelie bin and exhaust system

The design is based around the idea that there is a sub-compartment separated by a mesh barrier that allows liquids to accumulate in the lower reservoir and then a hose from that lower area allows fluids to leak into a run-off pit as needed. The mesh barrier keeps the solids compost up top and then near the very top of the bin is a hole for the vent pipe and fan. The wheelie bin has its attached lid hanging off the back, unused until it gets swapped for a fresh bin, then closed up and sat in the sun to ferment. A standalone lid with a hole cut in the middle hugs the main toilet shaft from the house above and sits snug over the bin to keep it sealed up. In the house, the toilet pedestal looks like any other toilet and the only giveaway is no tank or flusher. To further conceal the nature of the system, we have a couple of storage boxes built into the wall as drawers which hold the bulking material that you use to cover your business in the toilet after you’ve gone. Added innovation: the bulking material boxes are in a two-way hole that leads out to the back of the trailer where two large bulk storage bins reside in the wall of the trailer. They can each hold about 200 litres of material so it allows us to easily top up the internal bins without having to drag anything in through the house.

Watch the video at the bottom of this page of how I put it all together and what the system looks like.

The result: a largely fuss-free toilet experience but not without both some caveats and planned changes. Initially, we used the toilet for all activities with the intent to allow liquids to drain out, keeping things dry enough not to smell with the fan doing its job to dry out what was there and draw away remaining smells. In the winter and when the bin is less than half full, this worked well enough. If we didn’t use enough covering material (or the right covering material…it took us time to get that right) then it might smell for a short time after a wee until it got soaked up into the pile (we tend to use bulk garden compost mixed with soil from our yard for solids and pet bedding sawdust for liquids). With two of us working from home, it was just too much fluid in the system so I just went outside for my contribution (which wasn’t terrible: there is no one around where we are and it gets me outside). Come summer, the toilet smelled a bit more which led to Heidi avoiding weeing into the toilet at all and using a bucket and then dumping outside. Obviously this is not rendering our toilet system too useful if we are only using it each once a day!

With the decision to keep our other semi-trailer (P2) and fit it out as a guest space, we decided it made sense to add a toilet there too. On a couple of our intentional community visits we came across duel toilet set-ups and thought this made sense in P2. This way we can make the toilet in our main house (P1) a dedicated wee-only toilet which will allow it to be used many times a day, with a dedicated wee-only toilet right next to a dedicated poo-only toilet in P2. The only downsides to this idea are that it means someone must use the poo-only (which is really just like the one in P1 now, so it can take fluids too if someone is unsure of what might come out 😱) for poo, and never never do a number 2 in the wee toilet which will be fitted with essentially a funnel connected to a hose! Also, my handy-dandy bulking material bins will be rendered useless in P1 (although, I’ll set it up so that the original set-up can be easily implemented if that suits us in some future scenario).

Overall, we really like the composting toilet set-up. We have a special microbacterial spray that speeds up the process of composting in the toilet and doubles as a cleaner so keeping the bowl clean is easy. It looks good, there is no splashing or flushing or brushing required. There is no plumbing, septic, sewage costs and most importantly, water wastage. It does require a slightly more hands-on approach to swap out bins and bury compost, plus manage bulking/covering material.

If you want to visually check out the process and the result, have a watch of the video below. Let me know if you have any questions or comments in the section below!

Bryce and Rasa

Bryce Langston

If you are one of those people who see these two names and immediately know who I am referring to then Congrats! You are definitely a tiny house nerd like us 😃 If not, then – don’t worry! – you are still allowed to read this post haha. For those who don’t watch as much online Tiny House content, Bryce Langston is a YouTuber who has gained a sizeable following with a channel he created called Living Big In A Tiny House. Since about 2015, his life partner and now camerawoman extraordinaire is Rasa Pescud and the two of them recently paid us a visit.

We were lucky enough to catch their eye with our unique semi-trailer based tiny house design. In late October they were coming to South Australia anyway (for Adelaide’s first tiny house expo) and hoped to film some content for their show. I haven’t mentioned this until now as I wanted to make the big surprise reveal on this page when the show was edited and ready for launch…and now here we are! The show link is embedded at the end of this page, but if you’re interested in our impressions and details of the experience then read on…

Having watched the show for many years but not recently, it came as a surprise to see that some of their top-rated videos had view counts of 15, 25 and even 50 million! Heidi and I were pleasantly surprised that we had made the cut but also started to get those feelings of inferiority creeping in. Suddenly we didn’t feel like the exterior of our place was up to scratch compared to all the cute “house-y” looking places that are typically featured on the show. Even though it has been a financial barrier to get our deck put up already, we suddenly felt the urge to try to figure out how we could best showcase our place for an audience of potentially millions. In the end, we realised that stressing ourselves was unnecessary and that the setting of our place, the work we’d done on the interior and even the semi-trailer look of the place were what made it unique enough. I guess time will tell if people feel the same once they watch the episode!

What did happen with precision timing however was that 2 weeks prior to filming, a leak developed in the kitchen skylight, something that have never been an issue before (in THIS skylight. You can experience the full trials and tribulations of the saga of the other skylight in the original construction video series). The original troublesome skylight eventually got properly fibreglassed but since this kitchen one had never been an issue, I had been lazy and left it. So I needed to drop everything and get it done. On top of that, the roof looked patchy from different paints over different times, so I would also need to repaint the entire thing as I knew Bryce would be doing his aerial drone shots. Skip to the end and the job was done with 2 days to spare. It still holds rainwater like a little lake up there, but that’s tomorrow’s problem 😅

The house got its best clean in a year, Heidi put on her room-dressing hat and made the place look as close to a showroom as possible and then bam, Bryce and Rasa were suddenly in our lounge room. It wasn’t as trippy as I thought it’d be to see them on their channel one minute and in our space the next, but I could chalk some of that up to the fact that they are a very unintimidating 2-person team and of course because they are very friendly and approachable. For me it helped to have done a lot of video production to know the mechanics of what to expect and not be put off by speaking to the camera. Heidi got a bit tongue-tied due to not having that kind of experience but did very well all things considered. She just needed to be reminded that editing will do wonders with helping achieve a tight, coherent video and so hopefully that comes across in the final video as she was concerned afterwards about that.

As far as the actual experience, it was a long 12-hour day on the first of the 2 days that they were here but it was broken up by having Heidi, Bryce and I involved at different times while Rasa set up the shots she wanted. The take away for both Heidi and I was being able to spend a few quality hours just chatting with Bryce who is well-read and interesting plus a good listener. We feel like we connected well with each other over the weekend, went out to breakfast together and then subsequently caught up with them the following weekend at the Expo. Knowing just how many people they connect with in a given week, it was nice to be able to have that focused time and establish a good relationship.

Have a watch of the video they produced and see what you think!

Living Simply in practice: is it truly possible?

Twelve years ago, I had a lightbulb moment: living simply will solve many of my problems, plus those of the world as well.

I wrote this blog post about my initial thoughts on the subject which were largely based on: theory, watching my girlfriend (now wife) and her friends living that way, plus early positive experiences of my own. In the intervening years, Heidi and I had honed our practices and eventually put our money where our mouths are by building a tiny house to experience a true sense of *minimalist living.

At the time in 2011, human-induced climate change was only just getting a bit more coverage at last but I recognised the strong link between our lifestyles and the significant impact it was having on the planet. I’m glad that I felt the need to make personal changes (I even started to document my accountability) as it has served me quite well over the years plus I have felt confident about advocating for greater change amongst my peers and the community at large.

So is it possible to Live Simply in a manner that is both satisfying and fulfilling but honest, mindful and effective? Is it possible to be comfortable enough to not feel like you are missing out on life’s highlights while knowing that your ethical commitment to sustainability is truly having the desired effect on the climate and wellbeing of the Earth?

From a Western perspective, I think my answer is yes and no.

Heidi and I live in a tiny house, buy very few “luxuries”, purchase hardly any new clothes (me) or nearly all clothes secondhand/homemade (Heidi), travel on flights increasingly less, own one car, don’t eat meat or dairy and largely limit our general spending to essentials. Part of this is economic as my earnings have been scattered the past few years. If I were earning more, there’s a good chance that I would buy (or at least upgrade) more tech gear as I am a sucker for that. I might eat out a bit more. And if there was a bit more money available I might be inclined to travel overseas a bit more as my family are overseas but also one of my loves is exploring the world. Importantly though, having begun my simpler living journey, I recognise how liberating it is, therefore any tweaks or added perks I might add would stay within a construct of this lower-consumption framework and therefore kept in check.

At the core though, I am still a spoiled Westerner who has opportunities that many don’t have in this world, and this will always inform the idea of what “comfortable living” is compared to, say, Somalia or Bangladesh.

My current earning constraints are of course keeping me in check for now then; but am I happy about that? Is it healthy to limit ourselves for big picture improvements? I personally think that restraint is always good with humans as we have shown time and time again that when given limitless power or money, our greed is fairly insatiable. By living in both a tiny house AND on a low income, I am confining my ability to expand my collection of STUFF as I have no money to buy it and no place to put the stuff anyway.

Interestingly, with inflation and housing prices going through the roof over the past couple of years, the ratio of my cost of living to earnings has actually levelled out far more than that of a more mainstream lifestyle in Australia. As our house cost relatively little making us mortgage-free and our low-expenditure lifestyle means outgoings are easily controlled, the fact that we have a modest income balances out things well. In fact, between us, Heidi and I don’t even work one full-time job which gives us far more time to “smell the roses” in life and not be robbed of our best years working ourselves to death.

Now, I could say “I wish everyone lived more like this” so that we could make true change in the world, but I know that we benefit from things like generous hosts for where our home is parked plus generous family that helped us build the house in the first place. There are not only a great deal of laws in Australia and other Western countries (in particular) that would need to change in order for more tiny houses to be parked anywhere legally, but cultural shifts would need to change from a wealth-acquisition mindset to an environment-first one not to mention minimising dramatically (eg. Australians live in the largest houses in the world, on average).

I still hope for some shift away from our affluenza as it will not only benefit people individually by escaping the cycle of modern-day poverty where people living on six-figure incomes are still struggling to get by due to their huge mortgages and consumption-based lifestyles, but actually will have the effect of giving people back stolen time that they could be spending with family, slowing things down and increasing true happiness, not temporary happiness that they purchased in some form. Critically, a trend to minimalism and reduction will take enormous strains off our planet – from improved air quality to reduced rubbish in waterways to fewer raw materials being consumed to less land clearing to lower stress and improved health of people at all levels of the system. The only ones standing in our way are the billionaires who stand to make far less wealth under such a Minimalism Revolution.

Returning to the idea of “missing out” on parts of life if we choose to reel in our consumption, it really just comes down to practicing restraint compared to now. I am convinced that the West will never be able to reverse course completely, but the incredible strides that could be made by vast reduction – not necessarily elimination – of our most damaging desires, would have a profoundly positive impact. For example, a common one is to reduce meat and dairy several times a week; if everyone halved their typical consumption, this industry – one of the most polluting of them all – would shrink proportionately, leading to significant improving air, water, land use, animal welfare and human health.

In this way, the restraint becomes something to value and give personal strength, so you can appreciate something more when you get to have it again rather than taking it for granted. If we wind back the clock to a 70 or more years ago, the “Sunday roast” was still a special thing because people didn’t consume meat every day like now (with meat and dairy in most meals for some people). I think the perception now is that these traditions justify the idea that humans should eat meat whenever they’d like, where in fact if they were taken more literally it would show that occasional meat-eating was the norm and far better both for health and the environment. Of course, my hope would be that people would realise that giving up animal products is the best option of all, but that’s a different conversation!

Another example would be using the repair, reuse, recycle philosophy: rather than getting rid of something because it is slightly old or has some wear or even some damage, we learn to fix/mend/improve or be part of a community that can help us where we cannot do it. For this we would also need to pressure companies to make more things reparable, have stronger communities that can efficiently tend to these items and re-jig society to slow down consumerism in exchange with promoting pride in our ability to be resourceful. The personal outcomes for individuals here are expansive: a lower-consumption society vastly reduces waste and costs associated with it, it significantly lowers emissions, it reduces financial stress and the need to earn as much or work as long/hard, it reduces slave labour demands and resource depletion, it fosters community through sharing/repair, and much more.

So can we enjoy life living simply? Most definitely yes! The power of restraint leads to inner strength. The reduced financial stress of not over-consuming and needing a larger home and/or wasting more time working to support your lifestyle, is liberating. Smaller homes are easier to clean and maintain, reducing chore time. Living simply gets you outdoors more and encourages healthy activities. It’s not about denying some of our needs and pastimes like eating out, buying a new item, going on a trip or types of entertainment; it’s about being smart and resourceful while exercising healthy restraint.

*minimalist living in the Western sense. Having travelled to places like parts of SE Asia, Ethiopia, South America and Papua New Guinea, I recognise what true simple living looks like. I still live in a comfortable home protected from the elements, with heating and cooling, technical conveniences and safety.

Unintentional community

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day 095  : :  blog post 004

I’m looking forward to exploring the aspect of community living at our property’s collective. We are an organically created group who have initially come together with the common interest of building tiny houses.

But I feel that there is much more to our group as interest in tiny houses usually carry a value set along with it, such as subsistence living, low-impact low-consumerism repair-culture mindset, environmental awareness, small footprint, non-mainstream thinking driven less about finances and more about interconnectedness. I haven’t had the chance to suss all this out with our group yet but I sense (with hopeful anticipation!) that a lot of this is present.

What is interesting about this is that Heidi and I have been thinking for a decade about the idea of living in an intentional community, and here we are in an unintentional one and it looks exciting. The tiny house part is of course the feature presentation and we are delighted to be neighbours with a couple of people, Pete and Rob, who have built tiny houses already. On top of that, of the 8 people who comprise our community, all but one is building semi trailer tiny houses like us. So that’s currently 4 concurrent builds. Very cool and fortuitous!

Even though we are all coming from different parts of Adelaide with a mix of previous jobs and lingering attachments to the city, we are starting to mix, share in activities and have social gatherings. Most recently, Pete and Lyn, our “landlords” (I hesitate to use such a cold label, it’s just shorter than “land owners where we are spending time during our tiny house build” ☺️) took us all on a traditional paddlewheeler cruise on the Murray River as a form of welcome to our new community. What’s nice is that personalities are meshing on top of our common interests and near 50 year age span from oldest to youngest.

Lucy and Sammy have get stuck into doing some food growing in our semi-community garden patch. Once I get my head out of being mired in getting our so-called temporary accomodation sorted, I am looking forward to getting involved in community projects and working bees, etc. like this.

In the meantime, it’s just nice knowing that we have some exciting times ahead getting to know our group, beginning cooperatively building our respective homes, learning new skills together and from one another plus involving the wider tiny house community in what we’re doing. There’s lots of space for some weekender camp-outs and tiny house events! We just have to make sure Pete and Lyn are up for all the shenanigans that we are all brewing☺️

Dharmananda in photos

If you haven’t read about our journey visiting Australian intentional communities, check out either my 2015 or 2016 introductions. This gallery features some of the photos from our visit to Dharmananda in northeastern New South Wales, a lush rainforested region of incredible beauty.

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The community house just after sunrise

 

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The bunkhouse – our home during our stay

 

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Leigh preparing a field with his trusty tractor

 

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Creative owner-built homes

 

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The cows doing their morning routine

 

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Lots of healthy grazing country for these cows

 

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The community kitchen

 

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You can’t get fresher bananas than this!

 

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Maggie is making cheese

 

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Stunning light through the meditation forest

 

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The community kitchen in the forest

 

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Thank you guerrilla artists who decorate the brutal potholes around here!!

 

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The Channon’s famous monthly markets

 

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Musicians at The Channon market

 

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Folks selling stuff at The Channon market

 

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Amazing plants at Dharmananda

 

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Wildlife taking refuge in this healthy wilderness

 

 

Dharmananda: on the farm with the Dharm.

~ DESTINATION FOUR: THE CHANNON, NSW ~

Cows, creepy-crawlies and communal living.

One of the most common remarks that I have heard by folks who lived at or know the Dharmananda community is that they think it’s one of the best they have come across. For two weeks Heidi and I incorporated ourselves into this community discovering that the quality relationships, good ethos, strong values and beautiful location does indeed support the high esteem that this community is held in.

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Interestingly (well, to me anyway), this trip has consisted of us randomly picking communities that we know nothing about but sound good to visit and then turn out to be historically significant in one way or another. It turns out that communal living on the Dharmananda property actually preceded the 1973 Aquarius festival. Aquarius is largely considered to be the birthplace of most of the communities in Australia that have existed for over 40 years. In this region (and arguably Australia), Dharmananda and Tuntable Falls (our second choice while researching) are considered the best known and well-respected communities, with Bodhi Farm right up there (a place we might visit as we head south in July). It was a privilege therefore to be opportunity to spend time with this group and find out what makes it so unique.IMG_8794

Right off the bat, our day-one first impressions were a mingling of the people, the place, the creatures and the dairy. The people were outgoing and friendly though you could sense that WWOOFers and other visitors were a common occurrence seeing as how well-oiled their guest machine worked! My first thoughts of the place itself are rich with adjectives: densely lush tropical forest; creative open-plan homes made from recycled materials; a homey and cozy community house; buggy, rough, open, remote, quiet. IMG_8772The creatures were quite visible from the outset with the web of a hand-sized spider positioned strategically by the door to the community kitchen, a large huntsman welcoming us to our room, skittling cockroaches in and on everything when we opened the door, and a carpet python living in the rafters above our bed. Welcome to the jungle! Lastly, as we were welcomed by mooing bovines, the fact that this is a working dairy farm wasn’t lost on us during planning (an interesting challenge given our leaning towards veganism), but we decided to look past that initially and focus on the people and relationships before delving more deeply into the state of the cows.

What makes Dharmananda such an intriguing place? Well, a few things: the members of the community are an eclectic mix of personalities, many of whom (particularly the founders and those born into the community) have been here more than half their lives. They care for the land and for each other, their bond with both ensuring ongoing health and unity. There is a good blend of creative, practical and relational skills with everyone participating in their roles with dutiful acceptance. There’s also not too few or too many folks here: at around 20-25 at any given time, a good balance has been struck between in-your-face-all-the-time and I-never-see-some-people. DSC02528There is a shared meal available nearly every night at the community house with most people taking part at some point through the week. Besides the humans, an abundance of wildlife and wildness in general is both a virtue and something that you need to get accustomed to, but for the most part it is stunningly beautiful, tranquil and a wondrous thing to be able to be so close to nature. Credit for this forested and lush environment goes to the founders who rehabilitated barren animal-grazing land and made it what it now is. You’d scarcely believe that it was largely devoid of trees 45 years ago given the current diversity of native flora (and, increasingly, eradication of non-native weeds) plus rich habit for birds and creatures.

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The people and the place. That’s pretty much Dharmananda’s magic ingredients in a nutshell!

For Heidi and I, coming in again under the label of WWOOFers, the deceptively simple idea of “people and place” needed to be experienced first-hand, and it reminds me again of the importance of staying in a community for a little while. As we pulled out weeds for folks like Sho – a Japanese chap who came 15 years ago as a WWOOFer and never left – or Leigh – a fixture since 1979 who is the King of the Cows – we gleaned a great deal of interesting info about the community at different stages. IMG_8825Maggie – a stylish, humorous and feisty 84 year old member – makes cheese during the week and has regaled us with stories of the farm. Carol (pictured) – one of the original founders and a sassy tell-it-like-it-is woman with a beautiful house on the hill – was quite candid about Dharm’s history and her thoughts on her ageing community family. We were also lucky enough to experience the group in social activities together, like Saturday dinner where everyone is looser with wine, laughs and board games, or at their monthly meeting where we got to experience their decision-making and democratic behavior with one another at work.

You might note that above I said pulling “weeds” and not “weed”. Dope. Pot. Ganja. Marijuana: no matter what you call it, it’s not available here. Dharmananda has had a strict “No Dope, No Dole” policy for most of its existence which is probably why it is a tight and focused community still after 44 years. Where other communities have to worry about raids and secretive activity surrounding what their community gets up to, Dharmananda seems pretty clean. According to neighbour Chris, that’s not to say that they haven’t been lumped together with the other communities in the eyes of the police. Chris regaled us with stories of actual gunships that have landed on the property from time-to-time as the Australian Federal Police (AFP) periodically perform drug raids. Apparently the AFP refer to Dharmananda as “Sector 4” while Chris’ place has defiantly actually used their Sector 5 moniker as their official community name – in true rebellious activist spirit. Those early days and the busts of the 80’s and 90’s must have been some wild times in this region!

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Leigh, one of the early members, on his trusty tractor

From a farming point of view, the heart of Dharm is the dairy operation. A number of interesting things transpired to do with this, as I went in as a staunch believer that dairy is part of a cruel industry, somewhat unhealthy and ultimately an unnecessary activity. However, heading onto the farm, I wasn’t wearing my Vegan hat and didn’t feel trepidation about the forthcoming experience, likely due to the fact that I really had no basis for comparison having never spent any time on a dairy farm. IMG_8789On about day 3 at Dharm, however, male calves were just being separated from their mother (and due for slaughter; a cruel by-product of the dairy industry) and had started a two day-long crying out to each other, day and night, which was difficult to experience. That evening, at a dinner table filled with community members who spend hours a week processing the dairy and living off of it, we had a fairly lively conversation about the ethics behind it and Leigh surprised me with taking a firm but compassionate stand about how he struggles with parts of the dairy routine, like separating the calves. A sly reminder to the other members at the table, he commented that “this is all done so we can eat our cheese and butter.” This impressive show of humanity was coming from the man who has carefully tended to the cows 7 days a week for over 30 years. I would learn over the rest of our stay that he treats those cows with diligent care, talking to them and calling them by name. Watching the cows follow him around made me realise that there was a lot of heart invested into what he does. It’s one of those strange hypocrisies that humans are often involved with, and despite my inherent objection to the whole idea of dairy, I could see genuine caring and good intentions behind the way the cows were treated here which says a lot about the type of people who live at Dharmananda. Due to the lengths that they go to to care for the animals, who in turn fertilise the land for their veggies, I could no more condemn them than I could myself for driving a petrol-powered car and contributing to polluting the Earth. It was a healthy thing to experience; I could more clearly separate intensified factory dairy farming done by faceless corporations from this sort of small, bio-dynamic and holistic approach. IMG_8788My feelings about consuming dairy remain the same, but I am not lumping everyone together into one box.

The farming part of life inspired some interesting conversations with community members. From at least 4 separate conversations, I was told that Dharmananda wouldn’t have been someone’s first choice anymore if they knew how centred around the dairy, labour and food production that it is. In fact, each of these people mentioned neighbouring Bodhi Farm as their preferred choice. In their next breath though, all those individuals also said that it was the people that kept them here and they were all family so they endured. It did cause Heidi and I to perk up our ears with interest about Bodhi Farm, however. We are considering visiting there on this trip too; from comments we heard, it sounds like the virtues are that that Bodhi is in the quiet forest, more aesthetically-oriented, more focused on music and creativity and less on farming and labour, less about vehicles and more practising/observing Buddhism. Certainly some of those considerations would likely be shared by Heidi and I as we are interested in arts-centred communities with a spiritual core. It therefore makes Dharmananda even more of an enigma; people are compelled to come and stay despite the lifestyle not necessarily being their first choice. It says something about the vibe or people or location or something deeper….but I also sense that change is in the air. IMG_8833The big question will be: once this particular “constellation” of folks (as Carol calls the founders and current group) moves on, will the next generation maintain this type of farm-centric existence?

Overall, our experience of life in the community was very positive. As WWOOFers, we generally worked 4 hours a day from 9am til about 1 or 2pm with generous morning tea and lunch breaks, after which we could do as we pleased. We probably had our fill of weeding tasks as about 75% of what everyone wanted us to do involved that, but we did learn a lot about native vs non-native plants, prepared the food beds for Dharm’s next crops, participated in the regeneration of the bushland and IMG_8839helped improve the community in general. The downside might be that we also got bitten by ticks, jumping ants and leeches in the process, but we worked alongside a 2 metre carpet python one day, which was pretty exciting. We got to spend most of our days outdoors, chatting with community folks, basking in the unusually warm late-autumn sunshine and soaking up the clean air in the beautiful forest.

One of our exciting WWOOFing assignments was to go up to the meditation centre that was co-built and co-owned by Dharm and Bodhi, on the top of their hilly property in the untouched, ancient rainforest. This retreat was graced by hundreds-of-years-old trees, with little “cootees” (or sleeping/mediation huts) dotted around, a communal kitchen and a large centre for group mediation. I thought the farm was pretty peaceful, but up here there were no human-created sounds except the whip birds and wildlife. DSC02501Even the sun and wind could barely get through the dense trees.  We were very thankful for the invite to come up with Jen and her partner and stay over night as this place clearly illustrated to me one of the reasons that people are so passionate to save these forests and to live in this soul-filling region. (I’ve posted a bunch more photos from this beautiful spot plus the rest of Dharmananda in my photo gallery)

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DSC02485We rounded out our visit with trips to the local village, The Channon, which had a throw-back feel to it, plus we saw their famous monthly market which was all local arts and crafts complete with all the old hippies and other locals walking around there. A must-see on our list was also famous Nimbin and it’s healthy hemp and pot industry, but it had a bit of a seedier feel to it than I expected. Still, it was a very interesting spot and worth a visit. The countryside in the region is impossibly pretty; truly Australia’s Tuscany in my opinion. Without a doubt, we need to explore the area more as it is thick with intentional communities and the exciting community-at-large makes it one of the most interesting parts of the country for like-minded folks, I imagine. Dharmananda was a great introduction to the area and I hope we can experience more of it and learn from the pioneers of communal living in Australia!

There was so many amazing photo opportunities in this region and on the property that I made a separate gallery to show off more pics than what fits in this blog post.

As always, please check out Heidi’s site about this visit as well for her unique insights on our journey.

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