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True North Saunas has been handcrafting outdoor saunas in Owen Sound, Ontario since 1989, when Michael Vokes joined his father Alvin to grow Vokes Furniture Inc. into a dedicated sauna workshop. Three generations of woodworking tradition sit behind every barrel that ships out of the facility, and you can feel it in the joinery the first time you assemble one.
The lineup carried here covers the full barrel range: from the compact 2-4 person 6' barrel for couples and small yards, up through the family-sized 4-6 person 8' barrel, the 6-8 person 9' model for entertainers, the 8-person 10' barrel, and the flagship True North Schooner that scales from 2 to 8 people across multiple length configurations. Every model is built to the same construction spec. What changes is footprint, capacity, and porch options.
Marketed capacity is generous. A "6-person" barrel comfortably seats 3 or 4 adults who actually want to stretch out and stay a while. If you're buying for a family of four or plan to host friends regularly, the 8' or 9' barrel is the safer call than the 6'. Tight on yard space? The 6' barrel slots into a 5-by-7-foot pad with room to spare and still seats two people in real comfort. Cross-reference against all outdoor barrel sauna models if you want to see how True North's dimensions stack against the broader category.
Every True North barrel ships in three wood options, and the choice has real consequences for cost, longevity, and aesthetics. Pine is the budget pick. It works, it's solid 1.55"-thick wall stock, and it gets you into a real Canadian-built sauna at the lowest price. White Cedar (Eastern White Cedar, the same species Dundalk uses) lands in the middle: lighter colored, slightly stronger than Red Cedar, and naturally resistant to decay. Red Cedar is the premium spec: the most weather-resistant, the most aromatic when heated, and the wood that holds up best after a decade of four-season exposure. If your sauna will sit somewhere with hard winters and humid summers, we'd put the upgrade money into Red Cedar before any other option.
True North barrels don't ship with a heater. That's intentional, because cubic footage and the heater you pick should match. The 6' barrel runs nicely on a 4.5kW electric heater; the 9' and 10' models want 8kW or larger. We carry the full range of sauna heaters from Harvia and HUUM, including wood-burning sauna heaters for off-grid setups. The barrel shape itself is one of the most thermally efficient designs going. The curved walls eliminate dead-air corners and circulate heat evenly, so you'll typically hit 165°F in 30 to 40 minutes with a properly sized electric heater.
Most True North barrel models offer an optional 1' or 2' covered porch on the entry side. It's a small upgrade in dollars and a significant one in usability. Stepping out of the sauna under cover, especially in winter rain or snow, is the difference between a quick session and a proper Nordic ritual. The porch reduces interior length by the same dimension, so factor that into your capacity math.
People shopping True North barrels are almost always also looking at Dundalk LeisureCraft's Canadian Timber line and SaunaLife's E-series. Here's the honest read.
Dundalk and True North are both Ontario-made, both available in Eastern White Cedar, and both engineered for harsh winters. Dundalk's Harmony and Serenity barrels have a longer track record in the US market and a thicker enthusiast following, which makes them the safer reputation play. True North tends to come in a few hundred to a couple thousand dollars cheaper on equivalent footprints, and the construction quality is genuinely comparable. The double-layer roof, fascia boards protecting the end grain, and tempered glass door are all standard on True North, features some competitors charge extra for.
SaunaLife's E-series barrels (E6, E7, E8) and the glass-front EE-series use Thermo-Spruce rather than cedar. The Thermo wood is treated for stability and looks more contemporary, and the EE models with full glass fronts are a different aesthetic entirely. If you want the modern glass-fronted look, SaunaLife is the better fit; if you want the traditional all-wood barrel with classic stave construction, True North is closer to that mark and usually at a friendlier price.
The build spec on a True North barrel is where the brand quietly outperforms its price bracket. Wall stave thickness is 1.55" of solid wood, thicker than the entry-level barrels you'll see online for under $5,000, and meaningful for heat retention in winter. The roof gets a waterproof membrane plus a second layer of roof boards, which is what keeps these saunas from leaking or warping after a few Canadian snow seasons. Fascia boards cap the end grain of the stave wood at both ends of the barrel, a small detail that prevents the most common long-term failure point on cheaper barrel saunas. Every model ships with a tempered glass door, a vent kit with cover, premium benches, three wooden cradle supports, and a flat interior floor for footing.
Optional add-ons include front windows, rear windows, the porch noted above, and an upgraded heater package if you'd rather buy everything in one shipment. If the barrel format isn't quite right, the True North pod saunas use the same cedar and construction quality in a more vertical, headroom-friendly shape, and the broader True North saunas catalog includes cabin and Quattro models worth comparing.
Every True North barrel ships flat-pack as a kit with pre-cut, pre-drilled components. Two people can put a 6' or 8' barrel together in 4 to 8 hours; the 9' and 10' models add a couple of hours to that estimate. The cradle-and-stave design is forgiving once you get the first few staves aligned, but the base has to be perfectly level before you start. Gaps cascade if it isn't, and over-tightening the steel bands at the ends can crack the wood. Our outdoor sauna foundation walkthrough covers gravel pad versus concrete slab tradeoffs in detail.
You'll need a level surface (compacted gravel pad, concrete slab, or a deck rated for the weight), a dedicated 240V circuit if you're going electric (typically 30A or 40A, depending on the heater's spec sheet), and basic hand tools plus a rubber mallet. A licensed electrician should handle the heater hookup. Most True North barrels ship free to the continental US, and the support team is reachable by phone or text if assembly hits a snag.
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