Monday, June 6, 2016

Building with Cob

One of my projects this summer is to help a friend's son build a little cob house. This ancient earth building-material is a carefully proportioned mixture of clay, sand, straw, and water. The first step is to do a shake test of several soil samples around your proposed building location. The less you have to buy and cart in, the more money you will save. And clay and sand are both abundant in the United States, although different areas have different proportions (sometimes even within a few hundred feet). Take a 1/3 cup sample of subsoil, below the topsoil, and put it in a large glass canning jar. Fill the jar almost to the top with water. Add 1 heaping teaspoon of salt. Screw the lid on tightly, shake very vigorously to break up all the clumps and help the soil separate into its components. Set the jar down. At the five second mark, large pieces of sand will fall. At the 10-20 minute mark, the silt will fall and make a layer on top of the sand. The clay (which is the smallest particle) will still be mixed in with the water at this point. Therefore, take a piece of masking tape and label the side of your jar at the top of the silt layer. Let the jar stand for several days until the water is completely clear. The clay has now fallen and you can see how much of it you have. Organic material will float on top of the clear water, but if you dug below your topsoil you shouldn't have too much organic material to worry about. It's not helpful in housebuilding.

The number one book I recommend for this project -- to me, an essential part of the grade 3 Housebuilding block -- is



The Hand-Sculpted House:
A Practical and Philosophical Guide to Building a Cob Cottage

by Ianto Evans, et al.

You DON'T have to build a house. We did a garden bench at the entrance to our nature path. A simple low garden edging could also be a starter project. Of course, if you want to tie it in with 3rd grade Baking (Time, Temperature, Weight, and Volume) you could go for


Build Your Own Earth Oven:
A Low-Cost Wood-Fired Mud Oven, Simple Sourdough Bread, Perfect Loaves

by Kiko Denzer

Other great resources for the Housebuilding block, besides the list of excellent books for Native Houses Around the World (on my website), are


The Forgotten Arts & Crafts

by John Seymour



Housebuilding for Children 2nd ed:
Step-By-Step Guides For Houses Children Can Build Themselves

by Lester Walker


Vine-Covered Bamboo Tipi -- use yards of finger knitting to weave a trellis
blog post - Switzerite

Kid-Sized Geodesic Dome
blog post - DesertWind

It would be nice to do some wet felting and make a model of a yurt.

I'm also really inspired by Finger-Knitting a Tent. This isn't really housebuilding, probably, but it's A-M-A-Z-I-N-G. And it would be art and handwork, for sure.


Roy Wilkinson wrote the best book on this block. His work is so concise and inexpensive. Far out-shadowed by people like Donna Simmons and Charles Kovacs. But I love him! WaldorfBooks still has a lot of his things but this book is, unfortunately, out of print!


Teaching Practical Activities: Farming, Gardening, Housebuilding for ages 9 and 10

by Roy Wilkinson

If you find this used, GET IT.


Last, but not least, I really like Jeffrey Gottlieb's books WIGWAM: Building the Northeastern Domed Shelter and Teaching Primitive Skills to Children: An Instructor's Manual (link is to a book review, not a shop). The only place I know where you can get them is the gift shop at the Jefferson Patterson Park and Museum in Southern Maryland, but I'm sure if you called they'd be happy to sell you a copy and mail it.

AHA! Actually, in looking for a picture of this book, I found the following at http://www.mountaincraft.org/instructors/:

JEFFREY GOTTLIEB, MS (IN BIOLOGY), HAS BEEN A NATURALIST, OUTDOOR EDUCATOR AND PRIMITIVE SKILLS INSTRUCTOR FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS. HE WORKS WITH SCHOOL GROUPS, NATURE CENTERS, MUSEUMS, SCOUT TROOPS AND SUMMER CAMPS, BUILDS FULL-SIZED WIGWAMS AND LONGHOUSES AND REPLICATES PRIMITIVE TOOLS AND ARTIFACTS FOR DISPLAY. HIS AREAS OF SPECIAL INTEREST INCLUDE FIBER ARTS, FLINTKNAPPING, BASKETRY, EDIBLE AND UTILITARIAN PLANTS, AND NATURE AWARENESS. HE TRAVELS WIDELY IN THE EASTERN U.S. TEACHING AT RENDEZVOUS, GATHERINGS AND HISTORIC FAIRS. HE HAS WRITTEN A HOW-TO MANUAL ON BUILDING WIGWAMS, AND AN INSTRUCTORS’ MANUAL ENTITLED TEACHING PRIMITIVE SKILLS TO CHILDREN. HIS NEW BOOK ON NATURAL FIBERS AND ROPEMAKING IS AVAILABLE DIRECTLY FROM HIM. HE WELCOMES CORRESPONDENCE AND CAN BE REACHED VIA EMAIL AT ARGSKIDS@OPTONLINE.NET, OR AT 245 RED DOG LANE, WHITTIER, NC, 28789.

I'd be interested in his natural fibers book. If anyone gets it, please post a comment with a review!

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