Ologies with Alie Ward - Cabinology (CABINS) with Dale Mulfinger
Episode Date: June 25, 2019Log cabins, woodsy getaways, A-frame cuties, cottages, tiny homes, lake houses: WE GET INTO IT. World famous Minnesota architect, author, professional cabinologist and human delight Dale Mulfinger sit...s down to discuss everything from what makes a cabin a cabin, to why we bond better surrounded by wood, Scandinavian hygge-ness, where to situate windows, cabin history, horror flicks and vacation activities. Alie sits there starry-eyed and stammers a bunch because she's so excited.More on Dale Mulfinger: salaarc.comSALA Architects on InstagramDonations went to: Clarence Wigington Minority Architectural Scholarship & slavedwellingproject.orgSponsor links: Progressive.com, “You” podcast by Okta; Kiwico.com/Ologies; , OhMyGut.info/podcastMore links at alieward.com/ologies/cabinologyBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a month: www.Patreon.com/ologiesOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, pins, totes!Follow twitter.com/ologies or instagram.com/ologiesFollow twitter.com/AlieWard or instagram.com/AlieWardSound editing by Jarrett Sleeper of MindJam Media & Steven Ray MorrisTheme song by Nick ThorburnSupport the show: http://Patreon.com/ologies
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Oh hey, it's that friend who can't sit at a diner table without making modular sculptures
with the half and half creamers.
Can't not do it.
Allie Ward, back with another episode of Apologies.
Okay, great news kiddos, I got some news for you, you ready?
This episode is not about ticks.
Yes, are you stoked?
Now that we have covered some basic health and safety, i.e. me just reminding you, check
those crevices.
Kind of like a flight attendant demonstrating an inflatable vest.
But now, you know, let's get this summer show on the road.
There are sprinklers to run through, there's some campfire smoke to dodge, some sandal tans
to get, barbecues, reunions.
Okay, but before we get the road, let's make a pit stop at Thank Youville to say thanks
to all the folks supporting this podcast on Patreon.
I literally could not make the show without you.
Thank you to all the folks wearing Allie's merch on your actual physical bodies and talking
up the show to your fam while you make pies.
Thank you to everyone who for $0 rates and subscribes and leaves the reviews for me to
read because you know I do, like a lady creep and then I read you one aloud, such as this
fresh one from Crazy Dog Mom 1227 who compared me to a gently excited Richard Simmons, but
for science instead of high kicks.
And said that I'll teach you about all sorts of things, especially things that you didn't
think you'd find interesting.
Here's looking at you ticks, they say.
Also thank you, Fabulous with 4A is for the review.
You have my permission to cry in the car now on the way to work.
Okay, cabinology.
Whoa, how boy howdy.
Let me say right now, I love cabins.
I think I'm obsessed with them.
Like I look for cheap deals to rent them.
I have dreams about them.
I Pinterest them.
I don't Pinterest anything.
I covet them.
I admire them.
And in fact, this past week I found a photo in my phone from five years ago I took of
one of this guest's books without even knowing who he was or that I would meet him.
I follow many hashtag cabin porn, Instagrams, which has everything to do with cabins, literally
nothing to do with naked people.
I see pictures of cabins that I want to hug too hard, like something cute that you'd
squeeze to the point of peril.
So let's dive into a subject I could not be more excited about.
Okay, so the word cabin comes from the Latin for hut and PS Cabana is related.
How did I never realize that?
Wow.
Okay.
So cabinology is a relatively new but established term.
It was coined in relation to thisologist's work and career.
I first became aware of thisology blissfully enough actually while in a lodge in the wilds
of Montana.
It was the summer of 2017.
I was surrounded by my huge, weird family that I love.
Inside note, my dad is one of 11 kids and so the word family reunions, the roughly half
the size of like a summer music festival, TheraParty.
And I was drinking an evening margarita out of a chipped coffee mug and the sounds of my
elders crushing each other in a pinnacle game two tables over.
I thumbed through this outdoorsy magazine.
I saw the byline of this very guest touting himself as a cabinologist.
I was like, hot damn, I vowed to myself, I will find this cabinologist when I finally
launch that oligies podcast in my future and I will interview him.
And so indeed I did and you're about to listen to it.
The stuff dreams are made of.
So this spring I made my way to Minneapolis, Minnesota where his headquarters of his architecture
firm are.
It's Sala, which he said means special room in Italian and it also stands for the School
of Architecture and Landscape Architecture.
So I went up some breezy stairs to his crisp downtown office filled with light wood and
clean lines, high ceilings, a lot of airy white and we cabin chatted.
So we cover what is a cabin?
When does a cabin just become a house and why are they so cozy?
And what makes cabins horror flick fodder?
How is a summer cabin visit different than a winter one?
How do you build one?
What about those weird franken cabins built out of old stuff from a bunch of different
buildings?
How big should the windows be?
In which way should they face?
How do you even design a cabin?
And in all caps, bold italics, why are cabins the best?
So come watch the sunset, drag a chair to the fire pit, pour a mug of whatever's handy
and breathe in an episode with architect, author, expert and a warm bright lantern of
a person, cabinologist Dale Mulfinger.
And I might make you scooch into this just a little bit more.
These are stage mics, so they're like, get on up in it.
I know you are a cabinologist.
I am a cabinologist.
It was anointed upon me by an external person, actually a radio personality, who upon hearing
that I was researching cabins with students at the university, he announced on the radio
that I must be a cabinologist.
So I consider myself having an instantaneous PhD.
How long ago is that?
That was probably about 15 years ago.
Were you like, well, I'm changing my business cards?
That's it.
Yeah.
I adopted it immediately and I've been using it since and I wrote a book called Cabinology
after it and I always credit this person who gave me that name.
I didn't invent it for myself.
But quick aside, credit goes to Minnesota Garage Logic radio host Joe Satchery for dropping
that C-word so many years ago.
Now as for Dale's bibliography, it's extensive.
So between designing cabins, he's also managed to churn out a bunch of books including The
Cabin, Inspiration for the Classic American Getaway, The Getaway Home, Family Cabin, Inspiration
for Camps, Cottages and Cabins, Cabinology, A Handbook to Your Private Hideaway.
So in his author bio, he is credited as a cabinologist.
The dude has earned it.
You've been a cabinologist for at least 15 years, but how long have you been a cabinologist
in practice, not just in title?
Well probably about 30 years ago as a part of my architectural practice, which we designed
residential homes.
I was asked to do my first cabin design and I realized then that I didn't grow up, although
I grew up in cabin world, Minnesota and Wisconsin, I didn't grow up with a cabin in my family
background.
So I had not spent much time there.
And as I might often do, when I get asked to design something I'm not used to, I try
and do some research.
And in this instance, I thought, well it'd be fun to do some research with my students
at the university.
So I hustled a few students over to do a summer class.
And the essence of the summer class was, well let's go out into cabin land and every student
and myself included would have to document 10 cabins.
And out of that 10 cabins, we would say which cabin feels more cabin like than any of the
rest and why.
And so as I was telling them, search for the quintessential cabin.
So we did that and I think learned a little bit along that process.
And a good friend of mine who was editor of a local magazine said, well if you find anything
interesting in this process, why don't you write an article in my magazine.
So I wrote my first article and then I wrote my second article and third and fourth and
ultimately 72 articles over 12 years.
Always researching and so these were little brief vignettes about some cabin that interested
me for some reason.
So vertical log, we're all familiar with horizontal log cabins, but all of a sudden I noticed
some that have vertical logs which turns out that it's an old French trappers method.
So coming into Minnesota and the northern part of the country and northern Wisconsin,
you have French trappers who made quick cabins and the vertical log technique allowed them
essentially single-handedly to make a simple shelter.
Okay, so side note, I looked these up and apparently vertical log cabins are also easier
to build because you can use a bunch of 10 foot tall logs up and down instead of having
to find and drag perfectly straight 20 to 40 foot logs to lay horizontally.
Now in addition to vertical logs just being more slimming than horizontal logs, they were
also tested by time.
So before the French fur trappers traipsed about harvesting beavers and such, indigenous
folks like the Yerrick tribes and the Chinook peoples had been building vertical plank houses
out of Cedar and the Pacific Northwest for thousands of years.
They knew what was up.
And that tradition sustained itself for a while.
So finding out why for vertical log, who did it, all those things are fun.
It's fun to see somebody turn a building that you wouldn't expect to be a cabin into a cabin,
a church, or a small church, or a school, or whatever, a boxcar, a train car, a caboose.
So a lot of cabins are inventive as to somebody's got a crazy idea and they say, oh, that'd
be fun as a cabin and so they just try it, metal containers buildings.
So Dale explained two things that separate cabins from houses are one, cabins typically
don't have garages and the master bedrooms don't usually have ensuite bathrooms.
So rather than hide away in your big bedroom using your toilet away from the rest of the
family, all the bedrooms tend to branch off a main living space.
So people can spend this time in nature bonding together and being lovingly in each other's
business.
So privacy is not a particularly big issue in a cabin.
Tell me a little bit about square footage.
Can you have a 2,000 square foot cabin?
Yes.
Okay, you can.
Sure.
So what makes it a cabin?
I think what makes it a cabin are some of its attributes, how it flows, whether it captures
views or things that are important to the land that you're connected to.
But yes, you can have a larger structure that is a cabin, maybe because you're gathering
a lot of people there.
So my last book that I wrote was called The Family Cabin and it probably has projects
in it that range from 400 square feet to 2,500 square feet practically.
And some cabins are created for extended family.
So I have one for two sisters, they're each married, so they have husbands, they each
have four kids.
So now we're talking about whatever that is, 12 people, grandma and grandpa show up, there's
14.
You can't do that in a 400 square foot structure.
So you need more space, more place for the activities of those youth as they're growing
and changing and they're eventually bringing the Boy Scout troop with them or whatever.
So yes, cabins can be of quite a variety of sizes.
At some point when they get too large, we might call them a lodge.
Oh, I hadn't thought about that.
The family lodge.
I wonder if there's a lodgeology out there.
There you go.
You're going to have to look into it.
Somebody's going to have to step into the void.
Okay, side note.
I found one record for lodgeology from 1961 and I wanted to tell you about it.
It's from the University of Montana when the Student Union Gathering Center was called
the Lodge and Lodgeology was deemed by students the most popular course in sport on campus.
One student said, the most popular phases of the Lodgeology course are smoking 101 and
advanced time killing 201, which I suppose nowadays I guess would be upgraded to introduction
to vaping, perhaps extra credit, fixing the cultural and climatological mess we have inherited.
Not to get too dark.
Anyway, enough of lodges.
Where are cabins?
Now in terms of the culture of cabins in this part of the country, because there are more
lakes, are there more cabins?
Is this the best place to be a cabinologist?
I think this is one of the premier places to be a cabinologist because we really, really
do have an incredible cabin culture here, particularly in the Twin Cities and we go
out to the lakes of Minnesota and or the lakes of Wisconsin because although we may be better
known for our lakes, Wisconsin actually has quite a number of them as well.
So we probably have more cabin users per capita than any other part of the country.
And part of that is that when you're on the coast, for instance, where there certainly
are getaway places, often when you have a place on the coast, it might be referred to
as a cottage, a seaside cottage rather than a cabin.
Cabins plus etymology, I'm dying right now.
If you can't hear this in my voice, I was like starry-eyed, floating in a cloud this
entire interview.
Dale Mulfinger is like the Beyonce of cabin designers.
There are some names that cabin competes with and if you go into the Adirondacks or in Upper
New England, you will come across the name camp, which is commonly used for what we here
in the Midwest and or further west might refer to as a cabin.
And the name camp shows up again down in the bayous of Louisiana.
I'm not quite sure of the origins of that other than I think a lot of cabins in there
in the early days in New England were created as a part of an ensemble of many structures
and were part of what we might think of as a camp environment.
Oh, like maybe there's a main lodge and then some outbuildings that are the camps.
And also the name cottage shows up.
So you can take the same structure and slide it first out of Minnesota.
It might be called a cabin in Minnesota, but head further east and get to Michigan.
It might be called a cottage particular if it's along Lake Michigan.
And then if you hit the Adirondacks, it'll be a camp and then if you slide it all the
way to the coast of Maine, it'll be back to being a cottage again.
And what are some of your favorite styles of cabin?
A-frame, log cabin, modern.
All of the above.
All of the above.
I really am fascinated by the variety.
So no one singular thing stands out.
I'm as fascinated with an A-frame or a log cabin or a very contemporary structure or
one made out of containers.
Yeah, they all interest me and I love designing all of them.
So it's not just a matter of recording what others have done, but also being faced with
a challenge of design and trying to determine with my clients what seems most applicable
for them and their situation.
So he likes to freestyle as well as hark back to traditional designs of yore.
Now speaking of history, Dale grew up on a dairy farm and according to a 2013 article
in the Star Tribune, he had said about dairy farming that when he was a kid and his blue
ribbon yearling died, he knew that he didn't want to be a farmer.
But he was great at drafting.
So he enrolled in the Institute of Technology at the University of Minnesota in a time when
you had to be really good at rulers and pencils and precision.
There was no command Z.
There's no undo button.
And getting to your design career, when did you start an architecture?
When did you know that you were an architect?
I went into the university wondering what I might be doing, but I had excelled in drafting
in high school and so started into architecture at the university and gradually got to enjoy
it more and more and more and did quite well by the time I was exiting school, not so well
when I started.
And then I worked for the first decade actually in urban design.
So nothing to do with small little buildings, but rather city planning and large scale structures.
And then probably in about 10 years out into my working career, I started gradually to work
on smaller things.
When I got to houses, I really enjoyed being invited to dinner after you're all done.
So out of that came a firm which is now Sala and an initial partner, Sarah Susanka, who
wrote a book called The Not So Big House, which made her kind of famous.
And so we had a pretty swift start as a career in her and I and creating a firm that does
houses.
Out of houses came the possibility of doing a second home for someone which then led
me to cabin world.
Okay, so quick side note, I was wondering how many people have a second home though?
It's so hard to get just one.
So I looked it up and according to 2017 stats, 9.3 million Americans live in a house that
has a second home.
So a very slim percentage, but I did some digging and one figure estimated that folks
in the state of Minnesota are three times more likely to own a cabin or a lake house
than the rest of Americans.
But the average age of cabin ownership is 68 and no one's quite sure what's going to
happen.
Are millennials going to take over the cabins?
Are they going to sell them?
Who knows.
But Minnesota is the land of 10,000 lakes.
That's a lot of shoreline to cozy up to.
So Dale's in the right place.
But what about the rest of the country or world?
Are there places in the country where it's more common to have a house that you would
go enjoy the seasons in?
Is there something maybe about the cold weather that you really appreciate the snow or really
appreciate the spring or summer?
Well, I think people who appreciate being outdoors in the snow, whether you're cross
country skiing, downhill skiing or ice skating or whatever, those people enjoy their cabin
year round or if they just enjoy sitting by the fire reading a book when the snow is falling
outside.
Obviously, if you have a cabin in the Rocky Mountains, it might be because you really enjoy
skiing and therefore you've chosen a location next to Big Sky or something like that.
Here in the Midwest, people seem to vary.
Either they are truly just one season cabin goers or they actually enjoy going year round
as I do.
I love the solitude of winter and some cross country skiing even though it might be minus
20 degrees outside.
I know, I don't know how you guys, I literally don't know how you survive as a Californian.
I'm like, the amount of layers, if I can grow a beard though, I think I would gain a beard.
That's helpful.
Come on.
I'm Italian.
Do you have a favorite cabin that you've designed?
I know it's got to be so hard, but was something that's really memorable or was a challenge?
The next one.
The next one?
No, I think one that I did up on Madeleine Island where people wanted a unique retreat
and one of the couples said, I want something quite unique for me and I designed a 100 foot
long wall with a portal in the middle and after you pass through the wall, you step
into a glass pavilion and look out over Lake Superior and then if you want to go into a
private space, you walk down inside the wall to a blue box where you have a private sleeping
area.
It's a very unconventional structure and it probably still stands out in my repertoire
of work as a very unique structure and it's all about the notion of a retreat, having
a phenomenal place of a retreat that leaves the other world behind.
I think that's one of the things that when you say a cabin be a year-round house, one
of the challenges with that is cabins often work best when they are the other world, when
they're not the everyday.
They're kind of like the mistress of the house world.
I guess so.
Yes.
It's a side piece.
And does a cabin have to have a fireplace?
No, it doesn't.
In fact, wood stoves can be an economical way of having fire without, say, having the
cost of a fireplace and wood stoves are very effective in terms of really heating space.
Do they have to have fire?
No.
I mean a cabin can, we've done cabins without any fire in them and it helps with the insurance
rates if you don't have it.
And what do you think about, you know, in the last few years, the tiny house movements
and tinier spaces, where do you feel like cabins fit in with that or is it a completely
different thing?
Well, there's an overlap between tiny houses and cabins.
I think the tiny house movement is a fleeting movement and it'll disappear as fast as it
has arrived because I think resale on it is challenging.
So much like dome homes and other fads that we jump into every once in a while, I think
this one will leave.
But I think cabins will remain and having a tiny structure be a cabin will still be
out there.
And I think tiny homes as far as actually being one's home and living in it 365 days
a year, you know, it'll be questionable whether people do that in the long haul or whether
it'll just be for two years of their life or a segment of their life and then they'll
move on to whatever.
I will say in researching tiny home living, a little abode tends to cost between $20,000
to $30,000 on average to build.
And in looking this up, I stumbled upon an article about a woman who built a 196 square
foot tiny house out of an old $500 RV, some upcycled wood pallets, very resourceful.
But then she adopted a Great Dane, a 150 pound Great Dane to live in it with her.
Oh, then she got married and then they had a kid and I had to stop reading in the middle
of this article and just paste the floor and do like a meditation because woman, what?
So sometimes life throws you curveballs in the form of quadruple the number of people
living in a space the size of a kitchen.
Also I asked Dale about this Danish concept that's all about cozy living all year round,
but I had to ask my Swedish friend Simone Jetsch, aka the gizmology episode gizmologist,
aka the host of shitty robots.
Also she just turned her Tesla Model 3 into a truck and named it Truckla.
It's glorious.
I had to ask her how to pronounce this word that looks like Higgy.
She helped me out.
So it's pronounced higget, higget.
I know that you have talked about cabins and huga and I would love to know a little bit
about that concept and how you think it relates to the feeling of a cabin, not just the architecture
but the emotions of being in that kind of retreat.
Well I think huga comes from Scandinavia and it's been common in Scandinavia to live
in small space.
They don't really need luxurious houses in Scandinavia or haven't felt they've needed
it.
So they have defined ways of using space that are effective and therefore the notion of
huga overlaps with the notion of cabins as we understand them.
So how you use that space and how you not say over decorate it, over fill it with too
many things, I think there is some common overlap.
I must confess that I'm rather new to the term huga and so I've been playing with it
if you will and doing a little writing about it but I'm probably not as well averse to
it as others might be in this country.
Yeah.
I came across it pretty recently myself.
I have a friend who married a Norwegian woman and so their Instagram is just rife with huga
in the winter and so I'm learning about what it is but just shout out here to the Lepidopterology
episodes butterfly expert Phil Torres and his charming and kind new bride Celia Danielsen.
Just get all up in their Instagrams for some breezy summer living, some really high quality
cozy winterness.
They got it on lock.
Okay, speaking of, how do you feel that social media culture or Instagram culture has maybe
changed the way we appreciate these remote buildings or structures or retreats?
Well, one big difference is that we now can rent structures everywhere and part of that
is made accessible through social media.
So we can now not just have our say our own cabin but we can rent everybody on everybody
else's cabin almost anywhere in the world and I think that's really changed and then
we can immediately share that experience with an innumerable number of people.
So those are probably the big things that have changed through the media as we understand
it today.
Are you okay?
Are you okay with that?
With cabin sharing?
Sure.
Absolutely.
In fact, I think one of the phenomena about cabins is that we feel much more comfortable
with sharing our cabin with others than we say to our home.
So we're less likely to offer up our home as a place for strangers to stay in whereas
cabins traditionally were places where maybe we weren't accommodating strangers but we
were accommodating Uncle Harry and cousin Beth and the colleague we work with.
So we've often shared our cabin with many diverse people.
Do you have any memories of being in a cabin that are some of your favorites?
Well, I think snow falling and sitting quietly reading a book with a fire crackling and my
wife's good cooking smells in the background is probably one of my best experiences or
looking out the window and seeing the five or six deer that are eating the corn just
set out there.
Those are some of the best.
I think then I've had an opportunity to gather larger family groups together, not necessarily
in my cabin because my cabin is a bit too small for that.
But through the borrowing of friends' cabins or renting the friends' cabin, I've been
able to gather say 16 of my wife's family members together and that made for a special
occasion.
Okay.
Quick aside, I made you a list of things you can do in a cabin this summer.
You can play dominoes, you can read a book, you can gossip, you can ask older people
important questions about their lives, you can carve spoons, you can learn to needlepoint,
you can roast marshmallows, you can write a list of all the things you want to do in
your life.
You can make your friends all tell stories about how they met each other, you can enjoy
a poem, you can bake a pie, you can sip coffee out of one of those metal enamel mugs that
they sell in camping stores.
You can write a short story.
You can learn to fry a fish, you can nap, you can throw your phone into the lake, you
can quit your job, you can disappear from the internet, you can live off the land like
that Walden Thoreau guy, hope you don't get arrested, you can wish on a shooting star.
I also like playing Rummy Cube.
Okay.
Now let's say you want a taste of that cabin life, but maybe a little closer.
You could fashion a garbyn, which sounds like a portmanteau for garbage and bin, but it's
actually a cabin you fashion in the rafters above a garage, a garbyn.
Now what about a straight up cabin in your backyard?
Is that okay?
I've certainly recorded cabins that occur in the backyard of somebody's home.
Now they might think of their cabin as a man cave to escape to or her writing, you know,
place that she can retreat to for writing.
We call that a scriptorium.
Oh, I've heard it called a she shed.
Yes, and as she said.
So I think that's not uncommon and I've recorded a few of those in books I've done and in articles
I've written.
Yeah.
I guess a cabin is kind of like our childhood version of a fort, but realized and with plumbing.
Yes.
And some not with plumbing or the outhouse or whatever nearby, but yeah, it might have
some monocom and plumbing in it, some way to heat it up, which maybe our little fort
when we were kids did either of those.
And did you have a tree house or a fort when you were growing up?
I grew up in a farm and a fort might be a few bales of hay thrown together with a tarp
over it or something quite temporal and there were lots of places to go build in the forest
nearby.
So yes, I had all kinds of inventions of space that were getaways to hide out so I wouldn't
have to do the chores.
I wonder if that's something about the mindset of a cabin or a shed or anything that we get
out of our normal space to go to a new space.
Do you think that makes people more creative?
Do you think it freezes up emotionally?
Well, I think when these environments are small enough, we imagine that maybe we can
have a hand in making them because it's not a super task to do that.
I'm always amazed as I drive to my cabin and I pull up behind a pickup truck loaded with
things that are going to in someone's cabin, whether it's a door they just pulled out of
the church remodeling and I'm often tailgating and my wife is complaining that I'm too close
to the back of the pickup truck because I'm trying to figure out how in the heck are they
going to put that thing in their cabin.
So I think cabins have some freedom of personal expression attached to them that makes them
special places so you're inclined in a cabin to say cut the notches of the height of your
children as they're growing, to score that in the door frame and you wouldn't do that
in your house.
That would be defacing your house in a way you wouldn't accept and in a cabin you're
willing to do that.
See, cabins are casual.
They are the taking off your pants as soon as you walk in the door vibe of the architectural
world.
They allow us to dream of a life with fewer restrictions.
Perhaps this is because there are fewer judgy neighbors in the middle of the woods, maybe?
I don't know.
Do you ever dream about cabins?
No, I don't.
I don't dream very much about cabins.
No, it's not a pervasive dream.
Yeah, I was just wondering.
I have this dream.
Okay, tell me if you've ever had this, where you're in your house or you're in some house
that you live in or whatever and then you realize that there's a door or a cabinet that you've
never noticed before and then there's another room or another area that you've never realized
that you've had.
Have you ever had that dream?
No, but I think we should talk about your dream for a while because it's going to tell
a lot about you.
There's this place you're trying to escape to but you're just trying to escape to one
of my cabins.
I know.
I just really want a cabin.
Okay, I look this up.
Virtually every decoding dream website seems to just plagiarize directly off each other
verbatim but apparently this is a really, really common dream.
It means that we're discovering new abilities and strengths within ourselves.
Okay, so let's say this is not flimflim and has some kind of psychological merit.
I just decided to stare out the window for a minute and think, okay, what part of me
am I neglecting truly?
Let's get honest with myself.
The main thing that came to mind was just general grooming but I think I also had these
dreams more when I was working from home and just living in a studio apartment, which
isn't quite like Great Dane's spouse and baby level cramped but it was a little tight.
Any hoosal, dreams, windows to your gross soul.
Now, speaking of windows, when you are designing a cabin, do you decide to face the windows
a certain way or is it different for every, oh, where do the windows go?
It depends on the view, depends on the sunlight.
So if you told me, boy, I really like waking up in the morning with sun coming in, where
I'm going to have my morning coffee, well, that's the east or there are trees over here
that are going to block this kind of sun or whatever.
So yes, window locations are extremely important and here in the Midwest, we are putting our
cabins quite often at lake on lakes and I have to remind my clients that lakes are a
horizontal view, not a vertical view.
So we see a lot of people building cabins with very tall windows climbing up under the
roof for what, to see more and more and more sky, not more and more and more lake.
So horizontally banding windows here is great.
Now, if I'm in the Rocky Mountains, their views are often very vertical looking up trying
to catch the mountain peak and then a different kind of architecture evolves out of it.
Huh, that's so brilliant, that's so interesting to know.
Anything in pop culture, any cabins that you've loved in movies or TV or maybe like a cabin
in the woods is always a scene for a horror setting.
Oh, whoa, it's a cabin in the woods, we need to go hide over in there.
Nah, man, I'm not going in there, reminds me of a horror movie I once saw.
What horror movie?
The one with the cabin in the woods.
How do you feel about how we see cabins?
Well, oftentimes I think cabins are connected to some of the horror films, you know, that
they're out in that dark wilderness of heavy forest and, or they're next to a lake and
somebody drowns or whatever.
So they are often attached to that genre of movie in a way.
There's certainly exceptions to that where the cabin is seen as a tranquil place of escape.
I don't think I have any singular cabin or singular movie that jumps out at me on Golden
Pond or something like that.
Yes, that was going to be what I mentioned.
Okay, so on Golden Pond is a classic 1981 Academy Award darling starring Peter Fonda,
Katherine Hepburn and Jane Fonda.
It involves a lot of sun shimmer on the lake, a lot of soft focus filters, some difficult
family relationships, there's some emotional reflection, some struggle, there's some
trout, some growth.
Also Katherine Hepburn wailing in ecstasy multiple times about loons.
The loons, the loons are welcoming us back.
I get it, Kat.
Loons are tits, which, yes, is an egregious ornithology pun.
What about myths about cabins?
What about something people misunderstand about cabins at Eude?
Well, I think they think they're not going to be high maintenance.
They do require levels of maintenance depending upon what you want to be there when you show
up.
They're not inexpensive to make, even though you might think, well, shouldn't something
primitive and shouldn't I be able to find labors in remote places that are going to
work for dirt cheap?
No, almost anywhere today, you're going to pay pretty much the same price for a decent
window, and you're probably going to pay as much per hour for a craftsman in the woods
as you would for a craftsman in the metropolitan area.
Those are probably a few of the myths.
Is there an easiest type of cabin to make?
Is it a log cabin?
Is it a shed type of cabin?
If someone is like, I'm desperate for a cabin, maybe don't have all the resources, what would
you say is like an entry level setup?
Creating a cabin that only has four corners rather than 20 is a good start.
Log construction is a possibility, and certainly homeowners have educated themselves on how
to do log construction and done it for themselves.
It is a lot of unique attributes that people don't think about.
It looks more attainable than it is, and there's a lot to learn about the nature of
what happens to a tree after you cut it down and how it shrinks.
Shrinks in diameter, not in length, and so you set log upon log upon log.
They're all shrinking in diameter, which means your wall is starting to drop, and it will
crush the top of the door, the top of the window if you haven't designed it to take
it.
So there's a lot of nuance to log that people don't fully understand.
A little kid might have a Lincoln log set and think, well, that's a really easy way
to build, but it's probably much more complicated than just a standard frame wall made out of
2x4s.
Did you ever see that PBS?
Well, it was on PBS, but did you ever see, is it Dale Wernicke's Cabin in the Woods?
It was good to be back in the wilderness again, where everything seems at peace.
I was alone, just me and the animals.
Oh man, oh side note, oops, I meant Dick Prennicki, not Dale Wernicke.
Who's Dale Wernicke?
I don't even know.
Where, what the hell, Ward?
Also thanks to Jared Sleeper's very on brand gift of this DVD set a few years ago, I own
this in its entirety, and it's been a dream of mine to host like a screening party with
a mandatory flannel dress code.
Friends all just hanging out, maybe silently whittling as we watch, but if you need some
Dick Prennicki ASAP, a quick Google will bring you to a YouTube clip of Alone in the
Wilderness, which by the way has 11 million views.
So apparently we are just united in our lust for solitude.
He's just filming himself on like a eight millimeter, six millimeter, just hand-hewing
and just think, oh my God, how is he doing this?
To actually do logs and do them well so they're going to last is a skill that you don't get
overnight.
And I've certainly known plenty of people who have done their own log cabin, but I've
also known a lot of people who might have done their own log cabin that had a lot of
problems with it later because they didn't really understand some of the nuances.
And on the other hand, in many of the areas of cabin world, there are log vendors who
will do these things for you.
And they will build the log cabin at their, what they call their yard, which is where
they work in their place.
And then they dismantle the cabin and number the logs as they're dismantling them.
And then they reassemble it on your site.
Like a puzzle, exactly.
So it may take them five months to make the cabin in their yard, but then only three days
to reassemble it on your site.
And they'll bring it all there on a big truck.
And is there a cabin that you have on like a lifelong goal list that you really want
to see some cabin on a cliff in Iceland or?
No, not a singular cabin.
I mean, I love the cabin experience.
One of the fun things about being a cabinologist or someone who designs cabins is I often
get to stay in the cabins that I've created for others.
So it's pretty easy to ask a cabin owner for whom we've done a cabin to say, can I use
this on weekend when you're not there?
And I prefer the weekends when they're not there because I like bringing my wife along
and she's one of my toughest critics, of course.
The spouses will be.
But I like waking up in the morning and saying, how does this thing really work?
Is there's a sun coming in where I thought it was going to come in?
And how does it feel with the wind outside?
So that's been a nice opportunity in this line of work.
Oh, man.
Lesson, design things you want to use for yourself.
It's sneaky and I like it.
And can I ask you a couple of Patreon questions?
Sure.
OK, great.
Great.
OK, but before we get to your Patreon submitted questions, we'll take a break and chat about
some sponsors that I really like.
But before that, the sponsors make it possible to donate a portion of the ad proceeds to
a charity of the oligarchs choosing.
And this week, Dale would like the episode to support the Clarence Wigginton Fund at
the American Institute of Architects of Minnesota.
So the Clarence Wigginton Minority Architectural Scholarship recognizes the extraordinary professional
and civic accomplishments of the first African-American municipal architect in the United States.
He was also the first licensed African-American architect in Minnesota.
So the Clarence Wigginton Fund supports racial, ethnic minority students who have a specific
interest in pursuing professional architecture degrees.
And Dale adds that it's really well-administered and it assigns mentors to each recipient.
So thank you, Dale, for that.
And there's a link to find out more about that organization in the shout-out.
So that's the Clarence Wigginton Fund at the AIA of Minnesota.
OK, so some ads from sponsors of oligies.
OK, so back to your questions.
Now, this first one, think about falling asleep.
It's summer, you're hearing crickets and water maybe lapping somewhere, maybe a window's
open with a little breeze, but you're under one of those heavy quilts that your aunt
made in the late 80s out of old denim when she was going through a divorce.
OK.
Ginger Nutt wants to know, why do wood caverns seem like the coziest thing ever?
What is it about wood that makes us feel cozy?
Well, I think wood has a variety built into it.
It also feels like it's connecting us to the forest that might be right around it, around
us.
So it might be a local wood.
And it has a nice auditory characteristic.
So it's a softening.
It softens the sounds, whether the sound is crackling fire or the chatter, the quiet chatter
of the friend you're with, and it's something pretty to look at.
So it creates a nice background to a warm, welcoming environment.
Let's repeat that, because it's like peak Huga cabinology vibes.
So it's a softening.
It softens the sounds, whether the sound is crackling fire or the chatter, the quiet
chatter of the friend you're with.
Sydney Brown wants to know, do cabin makers still utilize techniques that homesteaders
used back in the day?
Somewhat, yes.
Obviously, the logs, log building was common to homesteaders.
I have a log cabin on my property that I use as a guest cabin.
And I'm quite certain that its original life was that of a settler's cabin.
I don't think it actually was originally on my property.
I think it was put on, you know, was one of the things about logs is you can dismantle
a log cabin and reassemble it in another location.
And I think that happened with a lot of early settler cabins.
So in this area where there was a preponderance of wood available within arms reach practically,
of where settlers were coming in, they often built log structures.
And some of our earliest cabins that we associate with getting away to, kind of places, were
the recreation or actually the reuse of those early settler cabins.
Oh, I didn't realize that.
OK, now a quick aside here, because for all of the history of North American settlers,
there's also the history of indigenous displacement and resource exhaustion and architecture borrowed
from native customs.
So that narrative is a huge part of American history and can't be ignored.
I was doing a little more research.
I just found a book through the University of Tennessee Press called Native American Log
Cabins in the Southeast, which was published No Joke Last Week.
I looked at the publication date and I was like, June 2019 what?
So good timing there.
And it tracks the origins of Native American cabins and building traditions.
They look at the Cherokee, Creek, Choctaw, and Katamua peoples.
It also really interestingly looks at elements introduced by Africans and African-Americans.
And the Smithsonian National Museum of African-American History and Culture has relocated plantation
cabins used as slave quarters for exhibit as a reminder of our country's not too distant
history.
Also, speaking of not so great things, where do cabins factor in the apocalypse?
Mike Monakowski wants to know, what's the biggest obstacle of going off the grid if
one wanted to do that?
Water.
What's your access to water?
If you're off grid, are you going to be willing to have, say, a hand well or somehow treat
water that you're getting out of a lake or stream?
So that's probably one of the bigger challenge.
Toiletry, you know, what are you going to do about a bathroom or you're going to accept
having an outhouse?
And then bathing, a lot of people who are off grid, in other words, they don't have
power to run a well, therefore they're not going to have a bathroom in the same sense.
And they will often use a sauna as a form of bathing.
P.S., if you're in Minnesota or around a Finnish person, don't you dare say sauna.
Just say sauna.
Just say it with me.
You're going to feel like a fraud, but you will avoid a lecture or correction.
Also many high fives to my sweet and gentle Innovation Nation producer, Stephanie Hemango,
for teaching me about how much fins dig saunas.
Winter, summer, you just go sweat it out in this wooden box.
You beat yourself with a birch branch and jump in a lake.
I'm so into it.
Anyway.
So they'll have a modicum of water available, somehow they bring it with them, and that
may be enough to take a steam sauna, and so the sauna is really their form of bathing
and cleanliness.
And are there a lot of those up here in this?
Yes.
Yes.
Yeah.
There are a fair number of off-grid.
We did one just recently in off-grid, Kevin, and it has a sauna and it has an outhouse
and it has a hand pump well.
Oh, what a dream.
And Jen Anathas wants to know, what eco-friendly, upcycled, or non-traditional materials other
than wood can cabins be made out of?
And I guess we did actually cover this because we talked about anything from containers.
Right.
It could be made out of many, many different things, from straw bales to, and again, these
are probably best if they're materials that are readily available to that region or area.
So containers aren't the best product if you're building, say, high in a mountain
cliff in Montana because they're heavy and you have to have a big crane to lift them
into place.
But you can buy them dirt cheap.
For $1,000, you can have a 20 by 8 foot by 8 foot container.
Well, to get it on your property might cost you another $50,000.
And then you need a welding torch to open up a window in it.
Right.
Hey, hi.
I look this up for you and you can buy a used 40 foot shipping container for less than the
value of my 2007 Prius, which, if you must know, according to Kelly Blue Book, is less
than $5,000.
So soup up that container house.
Maybe $20,000 later, you can live in it.
Just don't adopt a Great Dane.
Or if you do, just don't tell me about it because I can't handle that stress right
now.
And Carolyn Butler wants to know, do you believe that cabins should A, be a minimalist escape
from the modern world, or B, that they can include most if not all of the features of
a modern home in a more compact form?
So minimalist or?
I think they can be either and really has to do with your proclivity for what you want
there, what you need there, what you feel comfortable with.
They certainly can be primitive, particularly if you enjoy the out of doors and all you're
really looking for is shelter that will warm you up a little bit and provide you a place
to store a few articles and maybe some food.
Then you really don't need much, but a lot of early cabins really are just that.
That is to say they are just shelter, and it was kind of common to imagine you're going
to be outdoors to snip the beans, you're going to be outdoors to chop the wood.
So you're going to be outdoors a lot, and you're really just sleeping and maybe putting
together a little bit of the food indoors, but you might actually be doing it for one
of the cooking outdoors.
So that was common with settler's houses, where settler's houses were primitive shelter,
but a lot of their food prep and even some of the eating all occurred out of doors.
So if you're going to be indoors a lot, if you're going to use it in the winter a lot,
then you probably need a few more facilities, maybe a bathroom, a proper kitchen.
What have we learned?
Sauntering into the summer in tiny pants, armpits out, just check your crevices.
So the next question is about offsetting the energy you use by way of generating renewable
energy.
J.C.W. wants to know, is it financially worth it to build net zero energy cabins?
Which I don't really know what that is.
Well, that depends on how you, what kind of dollars you have up front.
It's going to cost you more to build net zero, but think of it as money that you're putting
in up front that you'll save down line, but you have to have that money up front available
to you.
So as I say, it depends on how you get your money as to whether or not you can afford
to build the extra, do the extra finances up front versus putting them into mortgage
and paying them off over time.
And yeah, if you have the money, you can, you can build net zero and save those dollars
down line.
I guess, yeah, just what do you have in your pockets?
And I think it might have to do with your lifestyle.
A lot of saving energy has to do with making sure that you have a hands on approach to
being a participant in how you use energy in your dwelling.
You may think of it as passive energy, but it's maybe active in terms of your, the need
for you to participate in that, whether it's for you to chop the wood or for you to manage
the thermostat through your iPhone or whatever, in order for you to keep tabs on just how energy
is performing in that structure.
So you can't just build it and then let it do the work.
You have to be active.
Yeah, it can do some of that work, like the extra insulation you put on, it's like putting
on a warm coat, you know, you can leave it on and you know, all you have to do is button
it up.
Some of the needs you have for, for energy performance such as for solar panels that
have battery storage and stuff like that do require maintenance.
Okay.
Just a little heads up, your grandpa dad sent me an article a few days ago about an Irish
team of researchers who are using carbon nanotubes in batteries to increase energy storage capacity
by 2.5 times.
Everyone is just as hell about this.
This is like a huge major leap.
Hell yeah, nanotechnologist, malaria, Nicolosi and chemical physicist Jonathan Coleman working
on that.
We all want better batteries.
I owe you a margarita and a mug or a perfectly toasted marshmallow for that work.
I think we covered a lot of these things already, so I'll ask the last two questions I always
ask you.
Sure.
What is the most annoying thing about your job?
Is there anything about?
Well, I have to do a lot of driving.
Oh, okay.
I enjoy driving, but it is a lot of driving, so I put a fair amount of miles in my car
and I certainly know the Midwest extremely well because of all that driving.
So sometimes having to drive four hours, five hours to a cabin site and I never want to
design anything where I don't see the land.
People will bring me pictures and they'll say, oh, we don't want to pay for you to go
all that distance.
Sorry.
Yeah.
And land talks to me and more than you, the owner, the land tells me a lot about what
it is I need to do here, so I always want to go see land.
Do you listen to audio books?
No, I listen to local radio stations a lot and a lot of public radio in various locales
and even though I would consider myself a liberal politically, I sometimes the one
and only time I'll listen to conservative talk radio is when I'm driving and I'd like
to hear what the other side is talking about and how they say it.
So whereas I'm not likely to listen to that at work or in my home.
When you get to your cabin, then I guess you can decompress if it's been upsetting to you,
right?
Yes, that's right.
What is your favorite thing about cabins or about what you do?
Well, I really enjoy the act of creating something out of nothing, standing in a piece of land,
whether it's in the Rocky Mountains or in the Wingland or here in the Midwest and using
only one's imagination while you're standing there trying to figure out, well, how should
I create this thing?
Standing there just daydreaming about or doodling and or pacing off saying, well, it could
be in this direction, it would be about this big and I need to borrow a ladder and climb
up this tree so I can see what the view is like on the second floor and that's to me
the most fun part is that very initial, as I say, going from nothing to something in
one's imagination and then trying to record it on a sketchbook or something so that you
can start to manipulate it, that idea when you get back to your office or sometimes sitting
at the local coffee shop not far from the cabin and doing all one's doodles, recording
what you were thinking about when you were out in the land, I'm more likely to do that
to record it quickly before I even get back to my home or office.
Do you give the cabin owners those sketches?
Sometimes.
Yeah.
I usually have nothing against giving it to them.
I sometimes forget about giving it to them but most of them certainly appreciate when
you do.
Then fairly early on, I make little cardboard models and many of my cabin owners now have
those models sitting in their cabins somewhere.
I think it would be great to have that too at your desk at work just so you have that
to think of.
Yeah.
We make a lot of models in our office and it's usually the designer themselves who
makes the models and we're not hiring, say, student interns to make models where models
are like our doodles, they're a form of our own artistic expression.
This has been such a dream.
Thank you so, so much for the work.
So I was wondering if you'd like one of my books.
Oh, I would start crying.
I would love that.
All right.
Well, it's all yours and if you want me to sign it, I'll do that too.
Yes.
Okay.
This is so exciting.
Thank you so, so, so much.
What a dream.
So get yourself in the presence of an expert and then ask smart people, giddy, stupid questions,
all you want.
And then maybe go in with some pals, save up for a night or two away if you can or you
can crash a friend's family reunion.
If there are enough relatives, they may not even notice.
That would happen at mine.
So to learn more about Dale Mulfinger, go find his wonderful books, just Google Cabinology.
It's going to lead you down a little sunny, leafy path right to him.
So his architecture firm is Sala and they're on Instagram at Sala Architects and I'll link
that in the show notes along with all the sponsor and donation links and there are more
links up at alleyward.com slash ologies slash cabinology.
We are at ologies on Instagram and Twitter and I'm at alleyward with 1L on both.
You can do follow.
Say hi.
This week, especially, I get to reunite with toothologist Sarah McEnulty from the Squid
episode and coloniologist, AKA, fertile expert Cameron Allen for a science trip to Hawaii
with Atlas Obscura.
So you're going to find some fun posts this week, including some nighttime bobtail squid
dives on my Instagram and on the ologies Instagram.
So do go there, if you please.
I'm also naturally taking my recording equipment to hopefully get a few episodes in when I'm
there.
Thank you to Shannon Feltis and Bonnie Dutch of the podcast You Are That for managing ologiesmerch.com
where you can get summer bathing suits with the ologies logo on your butt and t-shirts
and stuff.
To Aaron Talbert and Hannah Lipover, I'm admitting the Facebook ologies group.
Thank you, Jared Sleeper, for supporting my love of cabins and for doing assistant editing
on this.
And to editor, the Hearthstone, Stephen Ray Morris, for stitching together all these
sound clips every week, Nick Thorburn wrote and performed the theme music.
And now, if you listen through to the credits, you know, I tell you a secret at the end.
And this week's secret is number one.
I didn't have a secret.
I was like, I don't have a secret for this week, I'm trying to think.
But now I have one.
So I decided to record this in a different closet because I moved.
And so I'm in this little closet with some recording equipment and some foam up on the
wall, like, in not a permanent way.
And I was like, this is gonna be great.
And I started recording this and I'm sweating so hardcore right now.
This might not be a good idea.
I don't know what I'm gonna do.
It's very warm in here.
Please cross your fingers, I find a better solution.
Okay, that is all.
Go out, have fun.
Mr. Marshmallow, tell some secrets and have a good summer.
I will be back next week with a new episode.
Okay.
Bye-bye.
Hack-a-dermatology, homeology, cryptozoology, lithology, nanotechnology, meteorology, nephrology,
nephrology, cereology, selenology.
Friday 13?
No.
The one with the cabin in the woods.
Texas Chainsaw Massacre?
No.
The one with the cabin in the woods.
Rain?
Uh-uh.
The one with the cabin in the woods.
Player Witch Project?
No, man.
The one with the cabin in the woods.
The monsters.
That wasn't in the woods.
That wasn't even a damn movie.
Look, man, we ain't got time for this shit right now.
We need to get you that cabin in the woods.