
A big tree fell on the yurt during a spring storm. This photo shows the diameter and how it shattered through the deck railing.
The good news is, you won’t be crushed in your sleep by a falling poplar. You can see below the ceiling rafters splintered, but the roof didn’t even tear so it was still waterproof! I wonder what state a cabin roof would have been in… Or about the subsequent water damage from storms…

The ceiling in the living room – you can see how the roof splintered in from the force of the tree… but the yurt is still standing and still waterproof… amazing!
Thanks to our neighbors at Blue Ridge Yurts for recommending someone to fix it, even though it’s a Pacific Yurt! And of course, to Neal, who came upon the destruction and documented it for us! All told: damage < $1000. Time to fix: approximately one day (by a yurt specialist, and this doesn’t count the clean up of the tree debris outside, or fixing the deck).
Did I mention the same tree, after bouncing off the roof of the yurt, took out our deck railing and four five-year old conifers? I am most bummed about the trees, but we’ll put new ones in this summer.


Some debris in the living room from the splintered rafters.

The snow makes it hard to see, but the left side of the roof is sagging a little.
Thank you for writing this post! I live in a Yurt in Vermont and we are about to get a wind storm, so I was wondering what the damage from a tree might look like.
I’m so glad you found the post! It’s been a few years and we’ve never had any problems as a result of the tree. Good luck in the wind storms, and enjoy life in your yurt!