Blog about Heathenism, Asatru, Norse-Paganism, Norse-Wicca, Forn Sed, Anglo-Saxon Paganism, Theodism, Viking-Core, the modern Viking lifestyle, and Vanatru, and how to practice it in the modern world, as a spiritual path. Both rituals, and metaphysical musings about the Viking religion. You will find a good collection of Heathen seasonal rituals, all which are meaningful for the solitary.
Size: modest โ e.g. ~16 feet x 10 feet (5m x 3m), enough for gatherings, feasts, or rituals.
Structure: timber frame with post & beam (no complex joinery needed), using logs or squared timbers.
Walls: vertical plank, wattle & daub, or log walls.
Roof: simple gable with locally sourced poles + thatch, turf, or wooden shingles.
๐ฒ Preparing your wood
Since youโre sourcing from your own land:
Use straight young trees for posts & beams (oak, ash, hickory, pine).
Select green wood, easier to shape. Avoid rotted or insect-damaged logs.
Debark them to avoid insects & help drying.
Basic shapes:
Posts: ~6-8″ diameter (15-20 cm), stripped logs
Beams & rafters: ~4-6″ (10-15 cm)
Planks or split boards: for walls or roof
๐ช Tools youโll need
Axe (for felling & rough shaping)
Drawknife or spoke shave (for debarking & smoothing)
Saw (chainsaw or handsaw)
Auger or drill
Hammer & nails (or wood pegs if you want to go traditional)
Optional: adze or hatchet for shaping flat surfaces
๐๏ธ How to build it
1. Lay out your ground plan
Stake out a rectangle, e.g. 16โ x 10โ.
Set corner stakes, use cord to make sure itโs square.
2. Dig post holes
About 3 feet deep for corner posts + center posts if needed (depending on snow load & soil).
Place vertical posts, backfill with stones & soil, tamp down firmly.
3. Add horizontal beams (wall plates)
Lay beams across tops of posts, secure with lap joints or simply with heavy screws / wooden pegs.
Lash with strong cord or use steel brackets if traditional pegs are too tricky.
4. Roof framing
Run a ridge pole along the center line on top of posts.
Set rafters leaning from wall beams up to ridge pole.
Lash or nail rafters.
5. Roof covering
Options:
Thatch: bundle reeds, straw, or grasses and tie them to horizontal battens.
Wood shingles: split from logs with a froe & mallet, nail on overlapping.
Turf: layer birch bark over boards, then cut sod on top.
6. Wall infill
Three simple Viking-appropriate methods:
Plank walls: nail vertical planks to horizontal sills & beams.
Wattle & daub: weave small branches between stakes, smear clay+straw mix.
Log walls: stack small logs with notches or simply spike them together.
7. Floor
Leave dirt floor, or tamp gravel.
Could add simple wood planks if desired.
8. Finishing touches
Carve or burn runes on lintels.
Hang shields, weapons, or ritual objects.
Build a central fire pit (with vent hole in roof or smoke hole).
๐ก Tips for keeping costs minimal
โ Harvest all wood yourself. โ Use clay or cob from your own land for daub. โ Use stone from your property for post packing or hearth. โ Scavenge old nails / metal from barns or pallets. โ Learn simple lashings with natural rope (hemp or jute).
๐บ Viking soul โ modern tools
Even though Vikings used axes & adzes, you can use a chainsaw for quicker cuts.
Use battery drills to drive big screws or lag bolts instead of traditional wooden pegs if thatโs more practical.
๐ฟ In short
Simple post-in-ground structure.
Natural wood + basic joinery or lashings.
Walls of planks or wattle & daub.
Roof of local thatch, turf, or split shingles.
This creates a humble yet powerful Viking longhall, alive with the spirit of your own land. ๐