09-08-2015, 08:15 AM
Nope, not a spelling error; it's a great open air museum in Aarhus, Denmark. My wife and I spent a really interesting half day there and could have spent much longer. There are many buildings from the 1500 - 1900's, and period dressed staff who help explain various facets of life back then. There were a couple of buildings dedicated to several facets of woodworking - joinery, windows, buildings, even caskets. Being an apprentice woodworker back then got you 12 hour work days with a boss who did his best to make your life miserable. If you worked hard you got a small, spartan place to sleep and enough to eat to work another day. On a lighter note, the methods used back then to join wood are still very much how we do it today. So while the work conditions have progressed substantially the processes for turning wood into useful items has stayed fundamentally the same.
If you are ever in the area it's worth the effort to visit. Christmas time is said to be really special. And virtually everyone in Denmark speaks English (seemingly as well as we do), so language is not a problem.
John
If you are ever in the area it's worth the effort to visit. Christmas time is said to be really special. And virtually everyone in Denmark speaks English (seemingly as well as we do), so language is not a problem.
John