>>2704006>Adultslets try this:
>Is he supposed to live in a mud hut?There are lots of ways to build a house in a forest that maximizes safety and minimizes the amount of lumber needed to build it. Ironically there is probably a lot of clay in the soil around you if you live near a wetland so that is actually a very good option to literally build it out of mud and seal it with a polymer. The only wood you'd need would be for cabinetry and furniture.
https://www.monolithic.org/monolithic>Maps don't predict where beavers will build a damBeavers don't cause floods, the rain does. Beavers actually mitigate flooding by slowing down water influx.
The Map will tell you where your house sits on your watershed. If you live in an area that is known to have beavers, especially protected ones, than the first assumption you must make is that you cant build within a 10 foot elevation gain of the max river level.
You need to be able to read a map to see this as obvious.
>Ohh so we cant cut down trees for firewoodI never said that, I said dead standing trees are vital part of forests. Over cutting forest is a dead tell that you don't have enough acreage to support your wood demand though.
>Bog water isn't fresh waterNo, I'm picturing exactly what you described and I love it. Except the mosquitos, Excessive mosquito population tells me you have a low bird population and your riparian forest is too thin.
Bug infestations are a result of the problem, not the actual problem you need to solve beyond bug netting and screen doors.
You probably have a very low--if any--frog population.