Friday, February 1, 2013
Gertee DIY Homes - Promotional Materials
Saturday, December 1, 2012
Team Gertee Rides Like the Wind - video
Monday, April 9, 2012
Gearing up for a summer of fun!
this one is made almost entirely out of USPS cardboard.
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Stuck in my own dialectic
Spring is always an anxious time for many Alaskans, especially those of us that survive in the winter by working summer jobs. Last year was such a bad one for me, except for my grandsons, so I have to focus on making money now, no matter how many ACL related articles or books I need to be writing. I'm sorry I haven't responded to the wonderful comments I've been getting. Gertee simply has more potential to feed and clothe me, so that's what I have to work on now.
It may be that my life took such a dive when I began "debating" Amitai Etzioni that I am doomed to fail no matter what path I choose. In that case I should probably keep researching and writing for the ACL until I starve or freeze to death. I'm known all over the world now, and a lot of people do respect my work, but many, many more think I'm crazy. In any case, like Connie said, all you have to do is type my last name into a google search and you find me. This limits my regular job options as any potential employer can easily find out a lot about me online.
I've been invited to speak about communitarianism at the Santa Rosa Democrats Post Sustainability Conference in September 2011. It's my first official invitation to speak since the Libertarian Convention in 2000. At this point, I have to decline. I can't afford the ticket down and I really can't go speak in front of anyone without getting false teeth first! It's not a paying engagement but I can certainly bring a bunch of 2020/TACMS along to sell. Maybe I 'm just a dreamer, but I'm hoping Gertee will fund my ACL work, since nothing else does anymore.
Monday, April 25, 2011
Miniature Yurt Greenhouse 1:12 scale builder's model
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=110679488972&ssPageName=STRK:MESELX:IT
Monday, April 11, 2011
Mini Gertee featured in my new youtube video
What's okay is each time I return to writing for the ACL, my style improves. During the rewrite for 2020 I found so much good new source material it was almost as exciting writing as it was when I first found the theory in 2000. But the legal research is a brain drain, and I decided to take an extended break from the ACL. Now, I am suddenly engaged in a discussion about Communitarian Law with Peter Myers. Regular readers are familiar with my reposts of his elists. Myers is a highly educated national socialist from Australia (as opposed to the international socialists) whose research website called Neither Aryan nor Jew was tremendously helpful to my early and continued ACL education. I've been reposting his research for eight years now, and he's never shown much interest in discussing globalized communitarianism, let alone global communitarian law. This means I will, by default, be working on the ACL again! I will be revising the ACL Communitarian Law pages, using my back and forth with Peter to form my presentation. It's perfect that the first page back up at the ACL will be the law.
Last fall Nordica and Fred helped me finish the 20" interior. My 3 yr old grandson sat and looked into it for several minutes before he stated simply, "Gramma, I want to live in there."
My Gertees and I were featured in an article by Lori Leahy in the April 7, 2011 edition of the Copper River Record, under a story line called "True Alaskans."
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Public Safety Employer-Employee Cooperation Act
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Gertee gets dressed for winter
Thought about maybe renting it out to adventurers who want to see if they can survive living in a gertee during an Alaskan winter. Hate to leave it sit empty all winter. It's very well organized now, finally, and I can see a certain type of person getting a real healthy experience out of it. Then I thought about the dangers, the brutal reality, and how some people are just too wimpy to do what needs to be done. I'd need to ask a lot of very invasive questions in order to determine the capacity level of the applicants... sounds too communitarian to me.
Our apologies go out to all the people who are finding 404 errors on every page at the ACL. We will be reformatting the site over the winter but it's going to take time and there are only two of us working on this project, since the beginning of it over TEN years ago. We cannot afford to work on it every second of every day like we used to... and almost every article and research paper was written by me. The only way I was able to produce so much was I went camping full time and lived on practically nothing. Along the way I built the best tents I could possibly afford and learned to cook all my food on a wood stove. I'm just not willing to die for the ACL anymore.
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Gertee Instructable becomes popular!
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Gerteeville grows!


Monday, April 12, 2010
The snow's almost all melted!
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Making lemonade

Big gertee and two runaways
PVC walls are tied just like the wood
My laptop crashed just after I made the last post. My entire gertee book was on it, as well as all my videos and pictures from the last 4 years. At first I was so bummed I almost cried. But then, within minutes actually, I thought (again) how much of my life has been spent on the computer since I began studying the communitarian takeover in 1999. And from that moment I decided to let it all go for now, maybe it can be recovered but even if it can't, I'm still going to write the book and make the DVD... it will just be written the old fashioned way, on paper with a pen, with all new copy, pictures and video of the new gertees I'm making now.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
The International Journal of Neighbourhood Renewal
Mt Wrangell peeking out behind gertee
revised platform bed with new shower!
We're having a gorgeous spring in Kenny Lake this year. I got a little ahead of myself when I put my sleeping bag in the wash and store pile though. After two nights of freezing and thrashing about and finally dragging myself awake to start a fire and get the house above 20 degrees, I dug my dirty, smelly down sleeping bag out of the laundry pile and slept like a baby last night. It's so lovely in my gertee now I almost forget I'm still camping in sub zero temps, until early morning comes and it always reminds me. Got another cord of wood delivered which means I can burn hot fires and make use of the new shower set-up I built in the living area. Put it right next to my bed where the coat/winter gear closet was. Pure luxury and I really don't mind having all the nice smelling soaps and lotions near my head while I sleep. With a steady water source I could take a bath every night!
Still having lots of trouble with my browsers but sometimes, like today, super slow but it works well enough to blog. facebook barely loads. http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/politics/sns-ap-us-feds-on-facebook,0,6183802.story
So here's the link that's the title of this post:
http://www.neighbourhoodjournal.com/index.html
"We provide training and development services for a range of organisations in the field of evaluation, appraisal, programme management, project development and strategy development. Training is provided at over 40 locations across the UK and Ireland and is also available for in house training if required. "
Somehow I'm on their email list and now I get these updates from them. So today since my browser is working so well I opened their link and poked around their site. Not much there... not much at all... just dates and times where they'll be around England and Ireland training facilitators to evaluate and manage local people. No link to Common Purpose but it's hard to imagine they're not affiliates of this. John?
Been thinking a lot about new articles I'd like to write, and one about neighborhood groups and councils keeps popping up in my brain. Everything at the ACL that deals with these local yokel groups was written in 2000 when I was a pilot test subject under their communiy policing programme. My perspective has changed a wee bit since then and I'm no longer begging them for explanations and definitions of their terms. I know what neighbourhood renewal is today. I know what strategy development is too.
I'm thinking it might be a big ol' hoot to call myself the Kenny Lake Chitina Development Association. I have been working in neighborhood economic revitalization since I got here four and a half years ago and made the deal to build Tim and Lorayne's website in exchange for a campsite with electric at Camp Redington (called R's RV Park then). I fulfilled the plans for a community website which was part of Copper River Development Association's master plan for my community. I've made local fun maps and promoted local businesses online via all my gertee projects and somewhat through the ACL. I can claim to have the best interests of the community at heart, because my record here shows I do. I am just another unelected, self proclaimed development "expert" in what my community "needs." uh huh.
And I didn't give BJ (owner of Pippen Lake Gifts) any trouble when she showed up last Sunday to do the 2010 Census like we were old best friends (we've never met). She accidentally dropped some computer labled readouts of our personally identifiable information. I helped her pick them up and saw names alonside a bar code and a bunch of other codes that I'd be interested in knowing what they were. When I asked where was my address in this new census "short version", she assured me the feds didn't need my actual address since she was making a small dot on the GIS map she was carrying that identified my exact geographical location. I agreed to answer the questions if she placed my dot in an unpopulated, inaccessible roadless area of the map. Oh no worries she said, the ONLY purpose of all that personally identifiable information was to make sure Alaska gets another US Congressman! When I told her I am a political researcher, she said she knew that. hmm. Wonder what else BJ "knows" about me.
As I plod through my chores and spring cleaning my mind drifts to articles I wish I had time to work on. I really want to write something about the Madonna-whore dialectic and the influence it's had on my entire life. I think less about research and validating my position anymore, and more about how many ways the communitarian dialectic has affected my life and the lives of everyone I've ever met. I've also started singing, stretching, dancing and walking, my way of respecting the needs of my aging body. The harsh environment has made me leaner and much, much stronger but if I don't make time to stretch and relax too I will become all hunched over and crippled. Etzioni made me hate the word "balance" because of the way he uses it to destroy freedom, but I have to get over that now. I need balance between my hard core writing and my hard core lifestyle, the need is real and it's always been real. Etzioni didn't coin the term and he doesn't own it, just as the many other words he co-opted for communitarianism and changed the meanings of. He used the word "spirit" in his book title The Spirit of Community and I've avoided using that term too. Most everyone knows how I see/use the word "community".. heh.
The gertee book is coming along, especially now that I can barely get online! heh. We've worked out the PVC yurt design and Tim went to town and bought enough pipe to make 2, 16 footers! He's thinking the PVC gertee may actually be stronger than the wood. I designed it to all fit in a max 4' long box for shipping and easy carrying, but I may need to modify the lengths because the pipe all comes in 10 foot pieces. Adding the specs to the tutorial after we build it and test it in the spring winds. Thinking of ways to cover interior plastic and how to hold the materials up. I want to make one of them my greenhouse this summer and the other into a cute little guest house. Tim thinks I should sell them. :)
Monday, February 8, 2010
Gertee: houses made from scraps
By Niki Raapana
February 8, 2010
scraps used for first 16' gertee, spring 2007
Gertees are basically standard yurts made from raw or salvaged materials. Unlike the Mongolian and Western versions (exquisitely crafted and covered in gorgeous fabrics), gertee is the budget variety. It utilizes many items that would otherwise go to the dump.

The roof ring is by far the hardest piece to make. It may take more imagination than the rest of the parts, unless there is a carpenter handy who can fashion one out of leftover wood pieces and has a drill to make the holes. I've made one roof ring (my first) from a piece of metal screen that I curved into a circle, and I think teepee roof poles tied together might also work, although I haven't tried it yet. I also think a square roof ring may be okay. The roof rings we make for the gertees we live in now are 2' wide octagon shape.
The door frame can be made of 4 boards screwed together to form a rectangle or a standard door with a frame can be used, even if the walls are shorter than the door.
The roof cover can be made from anything waterproof. I have used a combination of tent bottoms scraps, airplane covers and one time I used a slghtly ripped up sheet of construction plastic. Some sort of weatherproof glue is necessary if you don't have one piece large enough to cover the entire roof. Square tarps work perfectly.
Today I cover all my gertees in recycled 24x24' billboards, which are already fire, mold and UV treated.
The exterior walls can be covered in pieces of fabric or plastic/tarps/canvas. The interior walls can be covered in screens, sheets, blankets and bolts of fabric.
As for staying warm in a gertee… well, I'm in one right now (written on 1/24/10). It's a brisk 40 below zero outside and I'm sitting at my desk in a thin sleeveless dress, wool socks and my slippers.
I have RadiantGUARD foil insulation on all the walls and the ceilings plus an extra layer of R19 in the new addition. I have one long strip of canvas on the outside walls and this year I used the same canvas on the inside walls. I still use old blankets and scrap materials too.
We have two gertees attached together this winter. The main gertee is now the kitchen with a wood stove in the center. The new room is the bedroom and bath and it has its own woodstove with the stack going out through the wall. With both fires going steady neither one has to burn too hot to keep it at around 68 degrees. Of course smaller fires means more work feeding them constantly, and a thermostat heater is on our wish list, for sure.
I just took a nice hot shower. My gertees have no plumbing so my winter shower is a 2 gal solar bag filled with hot water from big metal pots kept on our woodstove 24/7. I stand in a 2' metal wash bucket with a plastic shower curtain tucked inside it. Works beautifully.
While the gertee lifestyle is certainly not for everyone, we believe it has changed our lives for the better. The ability to eliminate many of the costs that come along with renting someone's four square walls has been a boost to our spirits and our creativity.
There is something very nurturing about living in a round room, once you get the hang of how to arrange the furniture. We now think in circles and "pies" and not squares and rectangles.
We're set up in a year round campground, have electric and phone (usually) and the rest we do for ourselves. It's been amazing to see what kinds of things we need and how hard it is to find some of them. Sometimes it hits us how we could be making things we've always bought, like rope, and now we make our own. Gertee has caused me to try things I never imagined I wanted to learn, like my chainsaw, which I started using to cut firewood but now have made 2 doors and all kinds of structural changes with it.
I have to say the best part of my gertee experience is the satisfaction of knowing I live in my own house I built with my own two hands. I own it free and clear and can change it anytime I choose (which is often because I'm an American middle aged woman).
The best part for everyone else like me who needs a home is, Gertee is an affordable, livable option that can be modified to adapt to any climate. Green by natural design, yurts have a low carbon footprint and are a proven sustainable house; the Mongolians have been living in them for more than 3000 years without it destroying their environment.
Our Gertee book is under development and will be available in April 2010.