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Thread: Iglu Building in England

  1. #11
    Moderator Adam Savage's Avatar
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    Great fun had I see. Nice job you've done there.

    It's a shame we don't get more snow. With a good foot or so you can build a good sized iglo with full thickness walls, it's just you need a nice big area to gather the snow from. Packing it into bricks uses a surprising amount. That's why Eskimo and Inuit peoples rarely made iglos from snow. They used to build a frame and cover it in seal skins
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  2. #12
    Moderator Adam Savage's Avatar
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    Edit. By good sized I mean about 3m+ diameter, so more XL than good sized lol.
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  3. #13
    One with Nature CanadianMike's Avatar
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    Igloo is more a temperary shelter cut from dense packed snow. Rather like pitching a yurt for a few days or weeks while out on the hunt. Pretty cool to watch them work to build one though, the precision of the cuts and how they fill the gaps.

  4. #14
    Moderator Adam Savage's Avatar
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    But the advantage of an igloo (sorry for earlier spelling mistakes, of "iglo" ), is you don't have to take it down when you leave
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  5. #15
    One with Nature CanadianMike's Avatar
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    Is ok, thought it was the Brit way of spelling it. Lol, iglu, iglo, igloo........ tomato, tomatoe.

    But ya, you are right, leave it as it is and move one. Might save someone else's life actually. Besides, it's camoflaged!

  6. #16
    Whatever the case i said "English" igloo which means filling hand held recycle bins with powdery snow and compressing it by standing on it until you have a propper block that you can chissle and sculpt into shape. That is how we did it and let me tell you there are about 40 to 50 bricks in that thing and it is about a foot thick and it held warmth like nobodys business it was incredible! Also allowed us to sit down and stretch out but if we wanted to sleep in it we would have had to lay with our legs bent.
    Still a good size and i dont think i have ever seen someone in England build an Igloo before.
    Last edited by BushcraftCambsUk; 06-02-2012 at 04:35 PM.

  7. #17
    Moderator Adam Savage's Avatar
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    Oh I wasn't underestimating your igloo mate, sorry if it sounded like that. That's a great method for making the block, and a foot thick is darn good going with the relatively small amount of snow we've had.

    Tried making an igloo with my father about 14-16 years ago, but we used all of the snow in the garden and it still only came to half height lol.

    I take my hat of to you sir.
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  8. #18
    One with Nature CanadianMike's Avatar
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    Agreed, sounds like a monstrous effort in making it with what you had around you. Further proof as well, how awesome packed snow is as an insulator!

  9. #19
    Yea you know and i never for a sec thought you were critasising me Saint i was just trying to explain how it was done and that

  10. #20
    Moderator Adam Savage's Avatar
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    Cool. Hopefully we'll get some more snow at some point (might have to wait another year or two though lol), you could judge an igloo building comp
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