A dark-wood A-frame cabin at the edge of a mirror-still glacial lake at dawn, mist on the water.

Four cabins. One lake.
No bars on your phone, on purpose.

What off-grid means

Solar runs the lights. The lake runs everything else.

There's no wifi here, and cell signal is spotty on purpose. Each cabin runs on a small solar array — plenty for the reading lamps and charging a phone or camera, and nothing heavier.

The warmth, the hot water, the quiet — those ask for your participation. Stoke the fire, haul the rowboat down to the water, and let the days get slower than you're used to.

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Same lake, four front doors

Meet the cabins

The hot tub and the rowboat

Heat the water with a fire. Cross the water with your arms.

The hot tubs aren't run by a thermostat — you stoke a small firebox and it comes to temperature in about an hour. The rowboats don't have motors, just oars and your own steady rhythm. These aren't inconveniences. They're the point.

local_fire_department

The fire-fed soak

About an hour of tending the firebox for a long, still soak under the stars.

rowing

The morning row

A rowboat waits at every dock. The lake is yours to cross, one stroke at a time.

A cedar wood-fired hot tub steaming into the cold forest air at twilight, lit by a lantern.

What guests say

People who came to unplug — and what they remember.

“I forgot what quiet sounded like until the second morning. Then I didn’t want it to end.”

Mara Olsen

Stayed at Heron — Came for a long weekend in September, rowed out every morning before coffee.

“The kids didn’t ask for a screen once. They were too busy hauling firewood for the hot tub.”

Devin Roy

Stayed at Cedar — Stayed five nights with two children, already rebooked for next summer.

“The rowboat morning ritual was my favorite. The mist on the water feels like another world.”

Sarah Jenkins

Stayed at Spruce — A quiet week in June — slept more deeply than she had in years.

Pick your nights. We'll hold the rowboat.

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landscape

Before you book

Read this part. Then bring a sweater you don't mind smelling like woodsmoke. There's no shop nearby and no cell signal at the lake — that's the whole idea.

Getting here

A gravel road for the last stretch. We email full directions when we confirm — GPS gets confused out here.

What to pack

Layers, closed shoes, a headlamp, and food for the whole stay. There's a printable checklist on Plan Your Stay.

Staying reachable

The nearest reliable signal is about fifteen minutes back up the road in town. Tell people you'll be slow to reply.