There are several small things that have led to Susanne's year in a tent on the island. The question of the meaning of life and whether it should be like this has followed her for a long time.
Susanne Holmqvist, or @Susanne Vandraren (Susanne the Hiker) who is her profile name on various social media, has for many years made long walks during her holidays. She has sought refuge in the mountains and spent a few late summer weeks recovering. During the past year, Susanne has vlogged about her experiences and adventures.
– It's the feeling of living outside, carrying everything I need in my backpack. Being able to set up the tent and it is no more complicated than that to live, says Susanne when asked what is best about hiking.
– Remarkably little is actually needed, to really live.
When the hikes and the holiday were over, Susanne did not want to go home. She wanted to stay and get more of the outdoors and always longed for the next time she could stay out again. She tells about how she could to come home, after the work for the week, and have dinner with the family and then go out and set up her tent, sleep outside and look at the starry sky.
Part of the decision to live in a tent is that Susanne likes to challenge herself. She has made longer and tougher hikes to see if she would be able to do it, and there were more and more thoughts about the challenge of living outdoors as an everyday life.
Possibilities
– I got help from many people to find my place. The criteria were that there would be running water all year round, that it would be safe and secure to live there and that there would be a car road fairly close so that I would not have to walk several kilometres in the terrain to get home, Susanne tells.
– When I first came to the island, I felt that this was where I wanted to live, she states.
To see if the island would serve as a settlement, Susanne spent quite a few nights there during January and February, when it was windy and cold. She found the best place for the tent on a small hill next to a ridge that protects against the westerly winds that are common in the area.
– I watched the trees to see how the winds came in towards the island to decide where I would pitch the tent.
Residence
Susanne wants to live without consuming more than she needs. She recycles and reuses as much as she can to keep costs down and to save the environment. The wood for the wooden deck, where the tent stands, comes from an old barn that was collapsing. It was on the mainland and all the timber was transported by Susanne across the river in her boat.
– I am not a carpenter and could not build a house, but it is so fun to be able to be creative with materials that do not cost a lot of money. It is allowed to fail and redo, to try to see how things work, Susanne states and adds that during the summer she has been so creative that she longs for the stillness and rest that automatically occurs when it gets colder and the days become shorter. In the winter to come, Susanne wants to learn to make woven bands to be more in a rest together with nature.
How come you chose a Nordic tipi from Tentipi?
Susanne answers that she searched online for different tent solutions and thought that a tent from Tentipi was the best choice. In Sandviken, in the middle of Sweden, where Susanne used to live, there were tents pitched all year round, for many years. They stood there and looked the same over time and Susanne felt it was a good measure of sustainability.
– I also thought that when you make tents in Moskosel in Lapland, these tents would be adapted to the weather and wind in northern Sweden and the choice wasn’t too difficult to make, Susanne tells.
She says that she found Kenneth Edin at Tentz in Stugun, a place nearby Åre, and has received help from him when she has had questions about the tent and what concerns life in a tent. (Kenneth Edin is a reseller for Tentipi and has rented tents in the middle part of Sweden for many years, editor's note.) The tent hut that Susanne lives in is a Safir 15 with a wooden pole set to get as much surface and stability as possible, and she has not one day regretted that she bought it and moved out into the wilderness.
– It is not possible to imagine in advance what it will be like to live like this. I have had to take it from day to day all the time and then it is good to have people nearby that you can ask for advice, Susanne says. But it's not as tough as I thought, living in a tent. I do not know why it feels like that, but it's easier somehow.
Autumn winds and shadows
- It has worked very well. I'm never worried about the wind and feel completely safe here in my tent, notes Susanne.
The tent cloth and the shadows that come and go around it during the day, and at night, fascinate Susanne. She talks about the big differences in the light during spring, summer and autumn. The glow of the full moon during late autumn against a clear, dark sky has provided another light experience.
- There will be such beautiful motifs against the tent cloth from all the shadows formed by the trees and the sunlight. I have seen how the full moon makes the image against the tent fabric completely different. It is a light with less contrasts than in sunshine. The same kind of shadows but so different to them during the summer months.
- I wonder how it will be with the northern lights, if there will be any other colors that penetrate the tent cloth, Susanne thinks.
Protection and food
What are your best tips on what to take with you when hiking?
- It naturally depends on the time of year you hike and in what environment, in the mountain world you don't need to carry water with you, for example. But the most important thing is to have protection - tent and sleeping bag - so that you can keep warm and escape the weather. Then there is the food – it is important to carry with you. And a knife.
Susanne thinks a bit and then says that it is actually shelter, warmth and food that are the most important things to live wherever you live and whatever you do. Her challenge during the summer was to store the food so that it was not spoiled by heat. During the autumn when there can be frosty nights, it is instead to keep the food above the freezing point. In terms of protection and warmth, she has gradually learned how to do it, she says and returns to the fact that it is day by day that counts. She cannot predict how it will turn out.
The future
Susanne notes that she will never be able to live in a house or apartment in the same way as before.
- I'll see how I manage this winter. It's not like I have to live in my tent during the winter at all costs. If it doesn't work as well as it has so far, I'll have to work it out somehow. But this is my home now. I meet friends and leave in the same way as if I had lived in a house. I am a little more guided by making sure to keep the heat in the tent and sometimes I may choose to stay at home to make a fire.
Susanne tells us that every week a group of friends meet and eat lunch. Then she takes the opportunity to charge her power banks and to send film clips to her daughter in New Zealand. It is the daughter who cuts together the vlogs that Susanne posts on YouTube.
- I have some adventures planned for next year and I hope that even then I will be able to have the tent on the island as my home base and start from here. I have planned to hike more again, this year a lot of time has been spent tidying up the place and learning about how to live here with different conditions and close to nature, says Susanne.
When this post was written, Susanne had lived out in the wilderness for almost 200 days. She has learned a lot and thinks it is wonderful to be inspired by nature.
- I have never been interested in birds before, but during the summer I learned bird sounds with the help of Sweden's radio's P1 and the program Naturmorgon. It will be really exciting to see and hear which birds stay here during the winter, Susanne continues.
- If I stay here, there are a few things I want to fix... I probably want one more room - make more trolleys and connect two tents so that there is a little more space for guests, for example, Susanne dreams of her island in the Indalsälven .