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Expensive?
The reason I am thinking of a log home is the cost.
I can build it myself and do it over time with lumber from the property or close by.
Just the sales tax on a lumber package is a bit of loot here in Washington. I can do everything but the foundation for cash with cheap or free materials from locals and off of craigslist.
Bugs? I have occupied exposed solid wood building before. You can see where the bugs are in a matter of days. Then kill them and relax.
In a stick built house you will find the bugs after something leads to a small sheetrock repair then you notice the inside of the wall infested. By that time they are living in the WHOLE house and need to be treated by pros.
Cranes? Like the ones the pioneers had?
As far as termites and such, it depends where you live. In the north west, they can't survive the winters, so there really is no such thing as termite problems. I live in a full masonry house (no wood framing in any exterior wall) so I'm pretty well protected from insect damage, although if I were to build new I wouldn't even consider brick on brick construction, but the neighborhood I wanted to live in has 50's brick so 50's brick is what I have.
I have access to a mill for cheap/trade.
Termites thrive in the Puget sound/NW area.
The last building I rented that was all solid wood beams and ruffcutt roof sheeting was built in the 20s. I could wipe the sawdust off my press every night and it would be a 3 inch tall cone of dust again by morning time. They loved them old grown beams.
We deffinately have termite problems.
About 2 months ago I was standing out in the driveway BSing with a friend and we noticed the birds going crazy, diving all over in front. We walked over to what was wackin the birds out and found a small hole in the ground with termites jamming out of it one at a time like stormtroopers leaving the base. Every 6 inches there was termite coming out. It looked like a dotted line going into the sky. The birds were grabbin them up as fast as they could get in the air. Like a termite buffet for the birds.
I still think a log has less places for bugs to hide compared to a hollow walled stick built with lots of dead space inside, above and under walls.
THe bugs dont bother me.
The R value is comparable or better than the standard stick frame depending on log size.
If you can mill your own lumber, I don't think you could build much cheaper than that. You still might consider timber framing with your own trees if speed is an issue.
I'd debate that. Granted, I've seen stick built done poorly that couldn't keep the drafts out. But the nature of log home construction allows the possibility of a lot of gaps for air infiltration - then add in the expansion and contraction both from temperature as well as moisture level of the wood.
We Love ours...
The wife and I with help from the neighbors built it. The only things we subbed was the concrete, drywall/unsulation and the hvac.
First several years of oiling the exterior are a pita, but once it gets to the saturation point it gets easier.
I drafted the plans, American Log Homes from Pueblo Co. fabricated the package and shipped it.