Cabin reno with 2‑month deadline
A renovation vlogger published 'I ONLY Have 2 Months Left to Finish My Cabin', documenting a time‑bound build that frames the project as a deadline challenge. (youtube.com) The episode structures work around the two‑month limit, highlighting schedule pressure and progress checkpoints. (youtube.com)
Becca Y. told viewers she has two months left to finish key work on the abandoned cabin she bought in March 2025, turning the project into a deadline build. (youtube.com) The video, posted on April 13, 2026, shows her moving through a checklist that includes smoke testing, water testing, outlet covers, countertop installation, plumbing work and sink setup. The channel says the cabin series follows a property she bought to camp on and eventually live in while renovating it into a home. (youtube.com) Becca Y.’s channel lists about 201,000 subscribers, and the cabin project has been running for roughly 11 months since the first episode, “I Bought an ABANDONED Cabin (No Shower or Bathroom).” That launch video said the property sits on 4 acres and lacked a shower or bathroom when she bought it. (youtube.com 1) (youtube.com 2) The new deadline did not appear out of nowhere. In a video published about five months earlier, Becca Y. said, “6 months.. and then I have to be ready no matter what,” setting up the current two-month countdown as the back end of a longer schedule. (youtube.com) That framing shifts the series from open-ended renovation content to a timed finish, with each episode measuring whether the cabin is becoming livable fast enough. The channel description says an addition with a bedroom and bathroom is also coming, which raises the amount of work still ahead. (youtube.com) The backlog is visible in earlier episodes. Over the past several months, Becca Y. documented exterior work before snow, winter preparation, interior ceiling installation, kitchen construction and the first night sleeping inside the cabin. (youtube.com 1) (youtube.com 2) (youtube.com 3) (youtube.com 4) The cabin series also leans on the fact that Becca Y. presents herself as learning while building. The current video description says the project has included “mice, raccoons, and little to no experience,” a line that helps explain why routine steps like plumbing and testing become episode-level milestones. (youtube.com) For now, the story is simple: a creator who bought a rough cabin in March 2025 has publicly put the remaining work on a two-month clock, and the next videos will show whether that clock holds. (youtube.com)