Tag: #Kolarbyn

Enjoying Forest Learning

students standing on a forest trail with a ecologist standing on plants in a pine forest
Students listening to our guest speaker, forest ecologist Sebastian Kirppu in the forest around Kolarbyn Eco-lodge.

(Post and Image provided by Courtney Hohnholt)

Michigan Tech students have a reputation for enjoying the outdoors and our time at Kolarbyn Eco-Lodge certainly proved that true. While we celebrated the many comforts and privileges provided by our hosts, there was a lot of old fashion labor that went into our adventure as well.  

Some of us were camping veterans and some had never slept outdooors in their lives, but every person tried their hand at wood chopping, building fires and tending them, and crafting meals with random ingredients, using odd tools, and cooking those meals over a campfire. All pitched in to carry wood, haul water from the stream-fed pump, heat water over the fire for washing dishes, chop the vegetables, stir the soup, innovate meals, sort the recycling, and tend fires while still finding time for high-quality art, forest exploration, lake and sauna enjoyment, and bonding in a peaceful setting.

We were visited by Sebastian Kirppu, a forest ecologist and nature educator, who described Sweden’s environmental past, current forest management policy, and the the threats Sweden faces in the onslaught of climate change.  He showed us an endangered species, the lesser rattlesnake plantain (Goodyera repens), the carnivorous plant, round-leaved sundew (Drosera rotundifolia), taught us about wood ants in Sweden, and described the ecology of the spruce and pine forest all around our camp.  We shared our lunch with him and invited him to come visit the Keweenaw. Kolarbyn Eco-Lodge is featured on the popular app, Calm, as a story about drifting off to sleep in the peace and beauty of the north woods.

Camping at Kolarbyn

Cooking over the fire with sleeping huts in the background in a forest.
Students warming water over the campfire at Kolarbyn.

(Post and image provided by Lauren Hemmeke)

We arrived at Kolarbyn on Sunday afternoon and met Malin, who was our host! Malin gave us a tour of the Kolarbyn Eco-lodge site and told us a little bit about the history, which you can also read more about at their website, https://kolarbyn.se/en/. Kolarbyn means “coal village” in Swedish, and the camp is based on an old charcoal burning village where men would go into the forest for months at a time to make charcoal. Malin showed us the huts where we would be sleeping, how to chop firewood, where to wash our dishes and get water from the steam, and how to ask the forest lady for permission to collect water from the spring! She emphasized the importance of treating the earth well in everything that we do here and being mindful of how our actions are impacting nature. 

After we finished our tour, it was time to make dinner. We had to chop our own firewood for the fire. We were provided with a variety of vegetables and ingredients for dinner, and we cooked our dinner over the fire that we made ourselves. 

After dinner, some of us headed to the sauna, which was floating on the lake. Some people went in the lake, but the water was really cold. After the sauna, we had a campfire down by the lake. Sunset was at about 10pm, but it never got very dark out.