With their domed roofs, the new yurts at Afton State Park look like two giant mushrooms rising from the rolling landscape.
A crew of young adults from Conservation Corps installed them over the summer. DNR officials hope the yurts will be available for overnight stays by the New Year or sooner — the organization is still working on installing wood-burning stoves.
Afton State Park already has four rustic camper cabins available for overnight guests. Opened in early 2010, the cabins have proved very popular. "They're booked every day during the summer, and every weekend for the rest of the year," said Tamara Simonich, assistant manager at the park.
The new yurts will help meet this overwhelming demand for overnight accommodations in the park. Officials also hope the cool digs will entice a new, perhaps younger, set of visitors.
What is a yurt?
A yurt is a portable, circular, wind-resistant structure indigenous to ancient Mongolia. Yurts were popularized by prehistoric nomadic herdsmen on the vast central Asian steppe. Only later did yurts become status symbols: From the years 1206 to 1227, Genghis Khan reigned over the Mongol Empire from the comforts of his posh yurt.
Designed to be portable and light, early yurts were made from wooden frames and fabric walls — often felt or sheep's wool. The contemporary yurts at Afton State Park also feature wooden frames, but the walls demonstrate the progress of humankind — a layer of insulation is sandwiched by two sheets of heavy-duty canvas. With flexible walls, roofs and central support structures, the yurts have much in common with tents, except when it comes to aesthetics — they look more like geodesic domes.
Inside the yurts, walls wrapped with foldout lattice and wooden rafters provide an attractive, even soothing, pattern for tired eyes. Even more appealing: Each yurt is crowned with a skylight dome, providing sunshine by day and dapples of starlight by night. Furnishings include two sets of bunks (they sleep up to seven), a dining table with chairs, even a comfy leather glider with a handy end table to set your drink.
Measuring 16 to 20 feet in diameter, the yurts feel open and spacious compared to the camper cabins. They cost the Minnesota DNR $11,000 apiece, said Cliff Connaughton, chief operating officer for Colorado Yurt Company, which manufactures these particular structures.