September 2024

Apple Cider in an Apple cup at our Apple Fest! Please enjoy the September Newsletter for more info about what we have been up to!

Flower Ceremony 2024

September went by so fast! From our Flower Ceremony to welcome the start of the school year to our Autumn Festival last week, what a beautiful month for outdoor school at the yurts! For our celebration of Michaelmas, (a Waldorf tradition of courage to get us through the coming cold and dark months) we enjoyed Dragon Bread and a Dragon Play and families brought apple themed treats to our Apple Fest. The beautiful images will inspire us as the days grow short!

Dragon Play

Yurt Raising August 2022

Two Augusts ago we were getting ready for our yurts to arrive! I had ordered 2 yurts, each 22 foot in diameter, from Groovy Yurts. We had built the frames that would go under the insulated decks and cut down several trees that were either in the way, or becoming unsafe as they aged. I had such a wonderful dedicated staff (and still do) plus friends and family that helped prepare the sites. I am ever grateful to Jess at Rail River Folk School for allowing me to rent property and build yurts for our Outdoor School.

The big day arrived! The semi pulled in with Yves from Groovy Yurts and our 2 yurts were unloaded. My husband and I went early that morning to do some pre-work and then get started on the deck installation. Volunteers began to trickle in by 9:00 am and with a crew of about 10 volunteers plus Yves to guide us, we raised 2 yurts in 10 hours. A huge thank you to local yurt experts, Sarah Wilson and husband Scott Jorgenson, who worked all day non-stop. Others with knowledge of yurts were there too, as well as others of us with very little knowledge, but ready to work hard. We all came together and got it done!

The day was long and exhausting, but it was one of the most memorable and fulfilling days of my life. To have a dream and see it take shape before your eyes over 10 hours with others that support you -that is truly a wonderful experience.

The multi-cultural sharing was a beautiful part of the experience as well. Yves is originally from Switzerland and spoke French and German and English and shared with us about his travels and the Mongolian culture that the yurts had come from. One of the reasons that I chose Groovy Yurts is that they are handmade by Mongolian families. Honor and respect for Indigenous culture has been a part of Apple Blossom’s values and mission statement since the beginning, so this was an easy choice. The yurts or gers as they are more correctly called, are a beautiful teaching tool in themselves. The children quickly learned to step over the door frame and walk clockwise. Similar to Anishinaabe teachings when inside a lodge. Each part of the yurt has significance, connecting the sky and the earth, the toono or dome open to the sky, and the huns or rafters forming rays like the sun.

More reasons for choosing Groovy Yurts is listed on their website and fit so well with our Apple Blossom values:

  • Mostly natural and organic materials

  • It’s more comfortable : with its unique construction and material, the yurt naturally breathes.

  • Easy to move and install

  • It has a spirit!

  • It is so wonderfully decorated, – it’s a hand made work of art.

  • Nothing beats the felt for insulating this compact structure. It keeps it warm in the Winter, but maintains it cool in the Summer.

  • More energy efficient!

When our long day of work was done, Yves presented me with a blue silk scarf, a khata,(blue for the sky) that is a traditional sign of welcome and departure in a Mongolian Yurt and it is hung near the doorway from the huns or roof rafters. What a special end to a special day.

Click here to read more about Groovy Yurts and their company story!

Summer 2024

Me in about 2018 at one of our summer camps

Welcome to my new blog! My name is Dacia Dauner and I am the director and owner of Apple Blossom Village. I wanted to begin documenting about our journey and how we teach at Apple Blossom Village with Yurts as classrooms. We are now in our second summer of having yurts as outdoor shelters and have already spent 2 school years with yurts as classrooms. As we move towards a new school year at the yurts, I will begin writing about a variety of topics including the care and maintenance of our yurts, how we manage things like cooking, water, and lights, how we combine Forest School philosophy and Waldorf-inspired curriculum to teach, nature arts ideas, recipes and snack ideas for outdoor school, and how nature teaches us everything! I just finished reading the book, There's no Such Thing as Bad Weather by Linda Åkeson McGurk, and wow this book says everything I believe in!

I had already read Balanced and Barefoot by Angela J. Hanscom and that book heavily influenced my ideas for outdoor school and summer camps. I began Apple Blossom Village in 2016 as I began to see the need for more outdoor play (and more free play in general) especially in the early childhood years. My own childhood was spent in the woods and gardens in northern Minnesota and I wanted a childhood like that for my own kids and all kids. We began small in the building at Rail River Folk School and used the yurt in the outdoor space that was generously shared with us by the Indigenous Environmental Network. We had a Kindergarten group of 9 kids and a small group of homeschooled 1st - 5th graders that met 2 - 3 days per week. The IEN Yurt became central to our days as we stayed outside longer and longer into the fall in those first few years. One year we managed to stay outside until the first snow fall on October 31st. And in 2021 as we were still in the COVID years, we stayed outside until the first week in December in a 4 season tent! Then we would move the classroom into the building space for the winter, still coming outside to play everyday unless temperatures were too dangerous.

Those early years taught us that if we had yurts of our own and dedicated space outdoors, we could easily just keep our classrooms outdoors and not have to move into the building. Yurts or Gers are built by the people of Mongolia who live in a harsh climate where it gets very cold and windy. The round shape of the yurt is meant to withstand high winds. After researching, we decided on the Groovy Yurts Company whose yurts are built by Mongolian families and shipped to Canada for inspection and distribution. Now 2 years later, we have been cozy through 2 winters, and look forward to another school year coming soon!