Salolampi Work Weekend

Salolampi Work Weekend

Have you heard of Salolampi yet? Salolampi is a Finnish language camp that offers programming for all ages and stages of learners. It is located in Bemidji, Minnesota USA. It is part of Concordia Language Villages, which operates villages for 15 different languages (including English!).

It is where I started my infatuation with Finland, the cultures and the languages. You might call it a Finnfatuation. I first started attending as a 10 year old and fell in love immediately. To read more about that and my personal journey with the Finnish language and culture, check out this blog post.

Mapping Finnish America

Mapping Finnish America

Calling all Finns and friends of Finnish America!

As a Geographer and curious mind, I searched for a visual database of Finnish American places. After looking and not finding anything comprehensive, I set out in September 2022 to create an approachable map of places with Finnish connections in the United States and Canada. “Places” include city/town names, homesteads, museums, cultural institutions, churches, historic sites, and anything else with an inherent Finnish connection. I have added more places of interest over time sourced from personal travels, Finns in Minnesota (Alanen, A.), They Chose Minnesota (Riippa, T.), and DeLorme gazetteers of Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan.

The goal is to compile a comprehensive collection of locations with Finnish connection in the United States and Canada. I am open to anything with a relevant connection. Now, I am calling on others to help add additional places to the map. Take some time to review the map and digest the locations currently pinned.

FinnFest 2023 wrap up and thoughts

FinnFest 2023 wrap up and thoughts

Well, that was quite the weekend in Duluth (or 5 days, if you were one of the lucky ones to participate in all 5 days of programming!). FinnFest is a time to make new connections, while saying Terve! to the people you know well already. It is never the same year to year, but it is always a powerful driver of new connections and edification of continued ones.

This FinnFest was arguably the most fruitful for me personally. It was the first one since attending as a teenager where the festival was open to me to explore without strong affiliation to any one particular organization. I was a vapaa lintu (free bird) and I loved it. As expected, familiar faces were around every corner, but there were also many new folks to meet — Finns and friends of Finland alike.