2024
As we continue to close in on the completion of the restoration of the Aslak Lie House, the autumn of 2024 finds us with an almost completed sval added to the front of the building, complete with hand-built stairway joining the first and second stories, temporary doors to be able to secure the building for the winter, and lower-story windows being worked on behind the scenes.
2022
May 21, 2022: We had an an Aslak Lie House Community Barn Raising! Great progress was made by a crew of volunteers, erecting the timber framing for the second story. We followed with a celebratory barn dance and some delicious kransekake. Check out a lovely article on the Aslak Lie House, and on Folklore Village in general, in the Wisconsin State Journal. Thanks to Barry Adams, and photographer John Hart! Old-school ways retained in multi-year reconstruction of 1848 cabin
Additionally, in 2022 we turned our intern program into a professional operation, completing the second story and the roof of the building before closing down for the winter.
2020
Winter 2020: Nels and crew have stayed busy this winter, cleaning and repairing the timbers for the second story. We anticipate a second floor, sometime in 2020!
Summer 2020: With three new interns this summer, progress is going well! Welcome Zach Small, Ronan Restle, and welcome back to the team Lauren Newby. They have been challenged by needing to wear masks or social distance, and have arisen to the occasion with grace and aplomb.
End of Summer 2020: We bid adieu to our industrious interns and thank them for their hard work in getting us to the point where the rafters for the first floor/floor joists for the second floor are now in place! Everything is currently covered with a temporary plywood “roof” and a heavy-duty tarp, which will hold until the spring when work at the site may continue again.
2019
Spring: As we prepare to embark upon another summer of building at the Aslak Lie site, we reflect back on the snowy winter, and all of the work that was accomplished in the realm of acquiring the needed oak logs for finishing the first story, and to create the boards needed for the second story. Many tanks to Mark and Sarah Weier, who provided logs from their woods and workspace for the sawyer, and to Adam Helt-Baldwin for a donation of some very large oak logs!
Summer: We enjoyed the help of three interns again this summer – Ian Decker, Peter Thurlow, and Max Schulte, who was followed by John Hertel – all of whom were stalwart in fending off the hordes of hungry gnats that harassed them the entire working season. We also had several good builders join us during a folk school session in June. Work on the all-log first floor is completed, and building has commenced on the second floor – inside of the storage barn. The idea is to completely assemble the second floor on the ground through the fall and winter, before hoisting it into place next year. We were also able to purchase the cedar shakes for the roof. Thanks to Sandy Wilson, who sponsored the interns, as well as the purchase of the roof materials! And as always, thanks to Nels Diller, volunteer foreman for the project, and without whose vision, this project would have never progressed so far.
Fall 2018
October 29, 2018
As we near the end of our 2018 building season, we celebrate the work that has been accomplished this year! We are capping off the final rows of some of the walls, with only 4 more logs to be laid next season – then on to the second floor!
November 2018
The final log laid for the end of the 2018 season was the “summer beam,” a large log which spans the top beams of the house. A crew gathered to hoist the beam into place, followed by a traditional kissing of the summer beam!
Summer 2018
June 2018 Update
This year, thanks to a generous donation, we were able to hire interns to work on the Aslak Lie house for the summer. On June 4, we welcomed the three new interns – Dustin McKindsey, Lauren Newby, and Alyssa O’Connor!
August 2, 2018
Our fabulous interns have helped us make significant progress on the Aslak Lie cabin this summer. The south side of the cabin is all the way to the top plate, and they are now moving to another section of the cabin. Take a look!
August 17, 2018
We are celebrating how much work was accomplished on the Aslak Lie Cabin this summer – thanks to a generous donation from Sandy Wilson, who funded the hiring of our three wonderful interns. We’re not finished for the season, as yet, for there are two more rounds of logs that will finish the lower log portion of the cabin. Come help as a volunteer, or come work as a student at Sustainability Weekend! Thank you, Sandy – and we were so glad you were able to come for a visit!
August 2, 2018: Our fabulous interns have helped us make significant progress on the Aslak Lie cabin this summer. The south side of the cabin is all the way to the top plate,
Fall 2017/
Winter 2018
Sustainability Weekend Update (September 2017)
Four students joined instructor Nels Diller in learning traditional log cabin building at the Aslak Lie site!
October 2017 Update
This cabin is really looking great! Work continues in this unusually warm fall. Last weekend, Nels Diller was joined by the 4 Lakes chapter of the Midwest Tool Collectors organization!
Winter 2017/2018
The crew worked in the woods this winter, felling more oak trees, due to the generous in-kind donation from Mark and Sarah Weier. Thank you so much!
Spring/Summer 2017
March 16, 2017 Update
The crew is preparing the site for the 2017 season of building. Join this great team of volunteers, and ensure that the Aslak Lie House is preserved for posterity.
May 18, 2017 Update
Yesterday, Folklore Village was happily surprised by a visit from a group of craftspeople who had traveled all the way from Norway. They knew about Aslak Lie, and had heard that we are rebuilding his home, so decided to come see what we were doing. Four of the visitors were carpenters, one was a joiner, and the other a ‘blacksmith” who also crafted very fine woodworking blades. Here is a link to their traditional woodworking site in Norway: https://tradisjonshandverk.com/ And here is a blog posting about the visit, in English: https://skottbenk.com/2017/06/04/about-the-norsk-skottbenk-union-trip-to-usa/ The northeast corner of the cabin is now completed, and work has moved to another corner of the building.
July 26, 2017 Update
What happens when you are inspecting an historical log, and rot is discovered? The part that contains the rot must be cut away, and the log spliced with fresh wood, carved to match the original.
2016
August 2, 2016 Update
Great news – The volunteer crew of the Aslak Lie House has laid the first of the historic logs!! Working since spring to bring the logs to the proper height, the structure is really beginning to look like a building now.
August 16, 2016 Update
Thanks to a grant from the Wisconsin Arts Board, Folklore Village is pleased to welcome Nels Diller’s apprentice, Alex Aakre. As an Eagle Scout, Alex had built a stabbur for Norskedalen, after seeing Nels’ stabbur in Mount Horeb. Now a student at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa, Alex will be with us for three weeks to learn techniques of dove-tailing logs for construction in an historical context. His arrival has spurred a flurry of activity, as he pledged to his academic institution and his advisor to work full weeks with Nels while he is here.
So much progress was made on the Aslak Lie house this year, thanks to our many volunteers, and to our apprentice, Alex Aakre. Special thanks to Nels Diller and Steve Sprain, who have been at the site week-in, week-out, making sure and steady progress.
Fall 2015
September 3, 2015 update
Approximately one entire day is required for two men to prepare a log for placement. This process is being done with hand tools, which allows for slow and measured progress on hand-perfected logs. Nels Diller has some beautiful and unusual hand tools expressly for the purpose of working logs. Our new tarp allows log workers respite from the hot sun, or from a light rain.
September 24, 2015 update
Construction of the Aslak Lie Log Cabin was an integral part of our newest event, Sustainability Weekend, held September 11 – 13. Students and Norwegian visitors came to observe, and to participate in the building.
November 30, 2015 update
Construction of the Aslak Lie House continued through the fall, with students helping during our Fall Swedish event. Progress was halted by the first snowfall of the season, and the project has been put to bed until next spring. We felt that we accomplished a tremendous amount this first year – securing permits, building a temporary driveway, constructing the foundation, and carving and placing the first two rounds of logs. We can accomplish even more next year with your help! Sign up to volunteer your time and labor, learning the art of woodworking and historic log reconstruction in the process, or send donations to help us pay for a couple hundred feet more of replacement logs, and a roof when the time comes. For now, the logs have been covered to protect them from the winter elements. See you next spring!
Summer 2015
July 9, 2015 Update:
We continue to make progress on the Aslak Lie house! The foundation perimeter has been staked out, then thirteen 4-foot deep pier foundation holes were dug, and filled with concrete. Next week, steel rods will be embedded into the concrete, in preparation for building the stone piers. Once the stone piers are completed, we will be ready to start laying logs. We hope to have an educational opportunity available to you during Sustainability Weekend, September 11-13. Have a hand in preserving this great historical legacy! Left to right: Steve Sprain, Nels Diller, Greg Winz, and Wendy Frances lay out the foundation perimeter; Steve Sprain and Nels Diller assist Bill Dolan with the augur for the pier foundation holes; Wendy Frances and Greg Winz move and sort cabin building materials.
August 5, 2015 update:
Last Sunday, volunteers gathered to install the elaborate pier system fabricated by Greg Winz. The piers serve multiple functions – to lift the logs above the ground, to level the building, to enable bolting of the logs to the foundation, and to provide a stable core around which the stone piers will be built. Next step – laying the bottom course of logs.
August 17, 2015 update:
With the foundation now in place, the wood work can begin! Last weekend, volunteers Nels Diller and Steve Sprain worked diligently in the heat to hew and notch the first of the bottom row of foundation logs. These “new” oak logs will form the base to which the floor joists will be attached. This step is probably the most informative of the process, as the steps to historical log rebuilding are being executed, including the technique of Norwegian-style dove-tailing (different from American log-building techniques), using hand-tools whose style is contemporary to the Aslak Lie immigration period.
August 24, 2015 Update:
Log work continues, as this is a slow process. The goal is to have the new bottom row of logs in place before Sustainability Weekend September 11 – 13, when students will be on hand to learn first-hand the process of building with logs and stone. The first log has been placed on its supports and a couple more are ready to be placed. On Wednesday, another of the huge, red oak replacement logs was split in half using wedges, pry bars and sledge hammers. Then one of the halves was transported to the saw horses, where it will undergo shaping with broad axes and draw knives.