Skip to content

Lycksele - Staden i Lappland

Click on the slide!

A golden position

We can offer wilderness around the corner, proper winters, light summers and time for one another. Lycksele, Town in Lapland, with a gilt-edged life.

Click on the slide!

Eight Seasons

Nyheter >> Senaste nytt

This year the Eight Seasons exhibition will be on display at the Forestry Museum in Lycksele - an object and picture narrative on the life and history of the Sami people.

The name of the exhibition refers to the Sami traditionally having divided the year into eight seasons in order to describe the seasonal changes.

More...
Frontpage Slideshow (version 2.0.0) - Copyright © 2006-2008 by JoomlaWorks
The Lycksele Sami heritage is on display at the Sami residence. Here you will find cots, sheds and an old Sami girls' school. We welcome anyone with an interest in the culture of the Nordic indigenous people. The Sámi Association
 
Lycksele's own Team Pontare wound up third in the 2009 Körslaget (Choir Battle) competition on TV4.
 
Home arrow Sights/adventures arrow The Forestry Museum
The Forestry Museum PDF Print E-mail
torsdag, 24 april 2008

Häst och timmersläde, foto: Samuel Arnfjell/skogsmuseetThe Forestry Museum in Lycksele has several very interesting collections and exhibitions.

Its basic exhibitions are The Lumberjack Era and The Machine Era. Quite recently the collection "Sámi Treasures" was acquired in cooperation with the Sparbanken Foundation for Northern Sweden, the Lycksele Sámi Association, the Forestry Museum Ltd and the Municipality of Lycksele. A large part of these items are now on display in the "Eight Seasons" exhibition.

The Lumberjack & Machine Eras
In the two exhibitions, the Lumberjack Era and the Machine Era, we make a journey from the early days of forestry with an axe and heavy work to the machines of today.. On our journey we meet e.g. thieving sawmill owners, tender boys afraid of the forest and a worn-out smallholder's wife. Have a look at how lumberjacks lived and what tools were used. Follow the toil of the horses to transport the timber to the log-floating routes. The logs were then floated on in brooks and rivers towards the coast, and from there further on out in the world - perhaps board, a plank  or as paper pulp.

In the Machine Era we can follow the development from the early 50s to today's modern machines. Here the visitors can sit in several of the machines and feel what it could be like to drive them. Old tractor drivers can become very nostalgic. There is also a driving station where you can test your driving skills. Or why not have a seat in our mini cinema and look at a newsreel about forestry.

  The Forestry Museum home page

Last Updated ( tisdag, 02 juni 2009 )