If you get a chance to live in a tree top house what problem would you face & enjoy
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The benefits of growing up with a treehouse
More hours are spent physically active, encouraging a healthy heart and general fitness
Different stages of the build provide regular and varied exercise
Drawing up treehouse plans as a family promotes teamwork and problem solving
Builds a closer connection with natural processes
Teaches a balanced approach to risk
the disadvantages :-
1. Birds.
The *#)@(*% birds wake up before the sun at 4am. If the chirping doesn’t wake you up, the repetitive full-speed body slams into the windows will. If you somehow manage to sleep through that (alcohol), then the incessant pecking at the glass will most definitely arouse you from your slumber and rocket you in to a hate-filled rage that results in the purchase of a pellet gun on Earth Day.
2. Water from above.
Jungle tree houses spring leaks. It happens. Murphy’s Jungle Tree House Law: Water will only leak over your bed or electronics, and only when you are not at home to stop it.
If there is no rain, and no water to leak in to your house, then you are having a drought, which means you have another problem on your hands – a water shortage, aka water from below.
3. Water from below.
The municipality might decide to shut the water off at any time without warning for an unspecified length of time. Awesooooome. Filling a bucket of water becomes as much of a habit as brushing your teeth. Furthermore, when the water is on, it may or may not make its way up the pipe to the faucet, depending on how many people downstairs are using it. Imagine the water is off all day, then it is on again in the evening and everyone below you is doing dishes, taking showers, washing children, frolicking in geyser-like water spouts – you aren’t getting any water in your tree house. (Experienced jungle plumbers needed, apply using the contact form!)

This dragonfly is beautiful and harmless, and if he can figure out how to fly off of my back porch, he won’t become spider food.
4. Spiders or Bugs.
You have to choose one. I highly recommend spiders because they eat almost all the bugs. My housekeeper cleaned all the spider webs in my house one time and the following two weeks were Bugdemic: Shock and Terror. It was a bug invasion of massive proportions. I felt like I was camping in the Florida Everglades without a tent. Ugh. The only negative to chilling with spiders is that they leave dead bug carcasses all over the place. Not ideal, but soooooo much better than bug invasion.
More hours are spent physically active, encouraging a healthy heart and general fitness
Different stages of the build provide regular and varied exercise
Drawing up treehouse plans as a family promotes teamwork and problem solving
Builds a closer connection with natural processes
Teaches a balanced approach to risk
the disadvantages :-
1. Birds.
The *#)@(*% birds wake up before the sun at 4am. If the chirping doesn’t wake you up, the repetitive full-speed body slams into the windows will. If you somehow manage to sleep through that (alcohol), then the incessant pecking at the glass will most definitely arouse you from your slumber and rocket you in to a hate-filled rage that results in the purchase of a pellet gun on Earth Day.
2. Water from above.
Jungle tree houses spring leaks. It happens. Murphy’s Jungle Tree House Law: Water will only leak over your bed or electronics, and only when you are not at home to stop it.
If there is no rain, and no water to leak in to your house, then you are having a drought, which means you have another problem on your hands – a water shortage, aka water from below.
3. Water from below.
The municipality might decide to shut the water off at any time without warning for an unspecified length of time. Awesooooome. Filling a bucket of water becomes as much of a habit as brushing your teeth. Furthermore, when the water is on, it may or may not make its way up the pipe to the faucet, depending on how many people downstairs are using it. Imagine the water is off all day, then it is on again in the evening and everyone below you is doing dishes, taking showers, washing children, frolicking in geyser-like water spouts – you aren’t getting any water in your tree house. (Experienced jungle plumbers needed, apply using the contact form!)

This dragonfly is beautiful and harmless, and if he can figure out how to fly off of my back porch, he won’t become spider food.
4. Spiders or Bugs.
You have to choose one. I highly recommend spiders because they eat almost all the bugs. My housekeeper cleaned all the spider webs in my house one time and the following two weeks were Bugdemic: Shock and Terror. It was a bug invasion of massive proportions. I felt like I was camping in the Florida Everglades without a tent. Ugh. The only negative to chilling with spiders is that they leave dead bug carcasses all over the place. Not ideal, but soooooo much better than bug invasion.
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