What is a Yurt?

When one of our favorite family campground started offering Yurts, I was very excited. Then I looked up the rates: $1,395 a week during peak summer season. I was shocked. That’s what I pay for a Cape Cod bungalow by the water. How could an outdoor cost as much to rent as a Cape Cod house?

If you’ve never heard of a Yurt, it’s the epitome of . Yurt stands for: Year-round Universal Recreation Tent. Each yurt has a wooden circular platform, and a lattice framework and conical roof covered with a heavy, wind- and weatherproof canvas. The roof has a plastic skylight through which you can see the trees or watch snow falling or the moon rising.

On this particular campground’s website, along with that $1,395/week price tag, is a list of what comes inside your yurt (!):


- Pots & Pans
- Toaster
- Cooking Utensils
- Eating Utensils (plates, cups, glasses, silverware, etc)
- Paper Towels
- Toilet Tissue
- Kleenex
- Bar Soap
- Sponge and scrub pad
- Dish Detergent
- Broom
- Gas Grill
- Patio Table & Chairs
- TV with DVD
- Heat and A/C
- Complimentary bundle of firewood
- Unit provides sleeping accommodations for 6

I mean, what is there left to pack?

Yurts are popping up like mushrooms not just in private campground resorts but also in State Parks. Next time you check out a campground, ask about yurts. If you have stayed in a yurt before, drop us a comment and tell us how you like it.

 yurt-wallroof1  The following are examples of the construction steps our yurt will go through

yurt-wallouter

Loft Yurt!

 inside of the yurt

Yurt interior 2

The Original Mongolian Yurt  —>

Ger (Yurt), Mongolia

Filed under Find Campground, Family Camping by Myrtha Chang.
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[…] Well, it’s the 21st century folks. Leave the camping tent at home. Many campgrounds come with move-in-ready tents. They are called yurts. You may feel like you are cheating a little but completely squish that unreasonable emotion and enjoy the comfort of a yurt. […]

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