[Greenbuilding] building a wall (not a building) out of strawbales

Reuben Deumling 9watts at gmail.com
Thu Oct 9 09:47:44 CDT 2014


out climate is dry in the summer (no rain, low humidity) and high humidity
pretty much the rest of the year. We get about forty inches of rain, that
used to mostly fall between October and April, but these days it is hard to
know when to expect it.
Rob's suggestion of planting trees is looking more promising. Thanks for
the suggestions.

On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 4:39 AM, Frank Tettemer <frank at livingsol.com> wrote:

> Sam's Straw Bale mantra is true for all buildings, of course. Also true
> for straw bale and cob walls.
>
> Here in Ontario, Canada, the climate, as such, is too frequently rainy for
> long-term life of an exposed straw bale wall, in my opinion.  Arizona would
> elicit a different response.
>
> I've attached a photo of what may be a successfully sustainable straw bale
> wall, here in Ontario. Time will tell us more. The owners have built this
> only this year.
>
> The first question, really: What's your climate like, Reuben?
>
> Frank Tettemer
> Living Sol ~ Building and Design
> www.livingsol.com
> 613 756 3884
>
> On Oct 9, 2014 4:49 AM, Sam Ewbank wrote:
> The mantra of the strawbale builder I know is "hat and boots".
> Get the bales up off the ground and and big enough roof overhangs to
> protect the wall.
> A lime plaster finish or add some horse pucky for strength.
>
> Sam
>
> On Oct 9, 2014 12:42 AM, "Reuben Deumling" <9watts at gmail.com <mailto:
> 9watts at gmail.com>> wrote:
> I'm not a member of any strawbale forum so I'll pose my question here
> since we used to talk about strawbale construction quite a bit here on the
> greenbuilding list and some of you surely know enough to set me straight.
>
>  I'm considering surrounding a large garden with a wall to keep the deer
> out. Since strawbales are plentiful and cheap around these parts I thought
> of them first. To keep the wall from disintegrating (assuming the plan to
> use straw bales for the purpose has merit) I'm expecting to seal up the
> wall with plaster or some equivalent layer. Is this difficult? Foolish?
> Necessary? Will I need a roof over the top of the wall or can I plaster the
> top as well as the sides?
>
> --
>
>
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