Land of the Vikings (LOV)


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LOV in winter




LOV in winter


The natural beauty of the endless mountains of Pennsylvania.

District 3, Sons of Norway Cultural and Recreational Center

 
Contact Information:


 
The Land of the Vikings
461 Big Valley Road
Susquehanna, PA 18847

Email: VikingLand@mail.tds.net
Phone: (570) 461-3500
Fax: (570) 461-7500





Managers - Beverly And Richard Budrick


General Information:

Land of the Vikings (generally known simply as LOV) can accommodate more than 70 overnight guests. The rooms are simple but comfortable, and all have private baths. There is a dining room, a lounge area with a circular fireplace, a game room and a library/conference room.

The property consists of 150 acres surrounded by 5000 acres of state game land. In addition to the main lodge, a large barn and several smaller buildings serve as a reminder of the property’s former existence as a Dude Ranch.

Behind the main building is a rebuilt swimming pool, a small pond, two gazebos, a basketball court, and  a viking ship playground. The hills surrounding the lodge are wooded and suitable for hiking in the summer and cross-country skiing in the winter. Logging trails crisscross the game land and a network of snowmobile trails covers the general area.








 Available Activities


Available on Site:


 Hiking

 Fishing in the pond or creek

 Ice-skating on pond. 
(A few pairs of skates available for rental.)
Cross Country skiing. (Rental of equipment on property)
 Horseshoes Swimming Shuffleboard - indoor/outdoor  TV with satellite reception and VCR (lounge)
Soccer  Hunting (in season) Tobogganing Shopping in “The Viking Butikk”
 Volleyball  Indoor games
Table tennis  Children’s Playground
Basketball  Dancing  Piano  




Available Nearby:
Golf Course Location  Holes
Golden Oak Golf Course Windsor, NY 18  
Afton Golf Club Afton NY 18  
Panorama Golf Club Crystal Lake, PA  18  
Scotts Golf Club,  Oquaga Lake, NY     9  
Hancock Golf Club Hancock, NY     9  



CANOEING

For a trip down the Delaware River, canoes can be rented at Jeff Smith, Smith’s Colonial Motel, Hancock, (607) 637-2989. The Delaware River is suitable for all ages and levels of experience.

FISHING

The nearby Delaware River attracts fishermen from near and far. Please check the website below for more information, or contact the
Pennsylvania Fishing Commission

HUNTING

Hunting can be done in season on the surrounding game land. Please check the website below for more information, or contact the Pennsylvania Gaming Commission.

DOWNHILL SKIING

Elk Mountain is located in Union Dale, PA Phone #: (570)6794400.  Greek Peak, NY is the largest in the area and is located 30 miles north of Binghamton on Interstate 81. Phone#: (607) 835-6111.

OQUAGA CREEK STATE PARK

This is a State Park offering a 55-acre lake for swimming and boating,There is also a playground, picnic area, a snack bar and camp groundThe park is located 8 miles north of Deposit















For more information on activities and events in the region., please visit the following webs sites:

www.theoutdoprshoo.stat.pa.us. (PA Fishing, Hunting)

www.fish.state.pa.us (PA Fish & Boat commission)

www.pgc.pa.us (PA Game Commission)

www.skimountains.com/Pennsylvania.html (PA skiing)

www.roundthebend.corn/central (NY golfing, camping, skiing)

www.tds.net/depositchamber/vacation.html (Deposit Chamber of Commerce.)



Making a Reservation at "The Land of Vikings"

Reservations at Land of the Vikings are strictly or a first come - first served basis. Groups can hold a block of rooms at $20 per room, with the balance due two months before the event. Individual room reservations require a $40 deposit, with the balance due three weeks before the event. All deposits are fully refundable if the Managers receive cancellation notice no later than three weeks before the event. After that, deposits will only be refunded if the room can be rented under the same pack as was originally sold.

The purchase of a LOV package, in any form, requires payment in full for the complete package, even if a meal interruption occurs on the part of the guest or the group. There will be no refunds for early departures or missed meals.

Please note that the following policy is set for the New Year's Eve holiday:  No reservation will be taken before July 1st. Reservation must be by mail, accompanied by a $100 deposit. No refund will be given after November 1st, unless the room is sold.

Click on the appropriate rates below:

Rates as of February 1, 2008 (Word)

Rates as of February 1, 2008 (Adobe/pdf)



 


 

 





 

Directions to the Land of the Vikings
Use your odometer. Many of these roads are small and easy to miss!


From
New York City/New Jersey:

Take Exit 16 on the N.Y. Thruway and proceed west on Rt. 17.

Go past exit 87 (Hancock) for seven miles to Hale Eddy.  (Mile marker 278).

Turn left, cross RR tracks and bridge. 

Bear right after the bridge.

Go 1/2
mile to end of road and turn left.  (River Rd). 

Follow River Road about 4 - 5 miles and you
will be at Land of the Vikings.


From the South
 
From Rte. 81N in PA

Take Exit 230 to PA-171 “GREAT BEND / SUSQUEHANNA"

Make a right on this exit, traveling East on Rte. 171 going towards Susquehanna.

About 8.5 miles later, you will take a sharp right turn and go over a bridge to keep on following Rt. 171.
At the end of the bridge there will be a stoplight.
You are now in the town of Susquehanna.

(If you’re hungry, there’s a local diner about 200 ft. down on the right called the Town Restaurant).

Continue following the street signs for Route 171 and/or Main Street and/or South Main Street for 2.4 miles.

Route 171 continues to the right and South Main Street continues to the Left.
Take the left split (South Main Street).
You will drive under a very high and large cement train trestle.

Follow South Main Street until you get to a widened “T” in the road.
Take the road to the right. (Viaduct Street.)
You will see an enormous stone Viaduct and you will drive underneath it.
Viaduct Street is also Route SR 1009, and later up the road it’s known as Starucca CR Road.

Follow this series of roads 4 miles
Turn left on Stevens Point Road. Follow Stevens Point Road for 1.5 miles.  (Watch closely; it's small.)

Make a slight right onto a dirt road called Mountain Road. (Pay even closer attention here.  It almost looks like someone’s driveway -- a narrow dirt road that goes uphill. You can see the street sign for it on your left before you take the road.

Drive on Mountain Road until it ends (about 4 miles).

Make a right turn to drive onto the Land of Vikings’ long driveway.


From Northern New York:


Take Interstate 81S to Binghamton.

Follow 17E  4 miles past Exit 84

proceed as above.

  

The Local Area

Town of Deposit

Indians first inhabited the land between the two rivers now known as the Susquehanna and the Delaware.

They named it Koo Koose, meaning The Place of Owls.

When the white man followed, he pronounced it The Cook House, and so it was called for many years. On April 5, 1811, the village was incorporated and given the name Deposit.

The lumber industry was the main occupation in the area. Logs were hauled, by sleighs during the winter, and deposited in great piles along the banks of the Delaware River - hence the name “Deposit.” The lumber was then put on huge rafts and floated down the river to as far away as Philadelphia.

Around 1900, the only bank in Deposit went under, dragging with it the fortunes of private citizens and businesses. Years later, the depression contributed further to the decline of Deposit.

Today, Deposit has a population of 1,936, and only small reminders of the logging industry remains. Other industry has settled in the area, but conditions are far from what they once were.


Village of Sherman

The small town of Sherman was also once a busy industrial center. By 1895, when the population had reached 300, there were two grocery stores, a post office, one sleigh and wagon repairing shop, two churches, one schoolhouse, one hotel, two chemical factories, several stone quarries, and “shoemakers too numerous to mention”.

One of the earliest industries was the stone quarries. Eventually many blocks of New York City streets were paved with blue flag stone from the Sherman quarries. Skilled stonemasons settled in the area and built, among other things, numerous stone arch bridges, many of which are still intact today, more than 100 years after their construction.

On July 13th 1889, a severe rainstorm flooded and devastated Sherman. In 2 ½ hours more than 6 inches of rain fell. Bridges were washed out, and lost manufacturing goods were found all along the road to Hale Eddy.

After the flood disaster, many people moved away, and - like Deposit - Sherman never returned to its past role as a busy industrial center.


A Little History

The 1972 Third District Convention directed the District Board to study the feasibility of the District acquiring real property for the recreational and educational use of the members.  However, the District Boards had given serious consideration to this directive but could not take any action for financial reasons.

At the 1977 Spring Third District Board of Directors Meeting, District President Bjarne Eikevik asked for confirmation, and the Board approved, of the formation of a long-range planning committee to consist of John Kaare Hagen, former Supreme President as Chairman, together with Supreme Directors Jan Henriksen and Edmond Trabulsy as members.
The Board approved three basic
concepts:

(1) The District Board agreed to purchase a property;
(2) the location
of the property to be within approximately 200 miles of New York City; and (3) the cost of the property should be in the range of $100,000. Popularly known as the
Wilderness Project, this then became the vision for the future - a Third District Recreational and Cultural Center.

At the 1978 District Convention, the District Board was authorized to acquire property as a District Recreational and Education Center and to raise funds for that purpose but without assessing the membership. The Long-Range Planning Group was continued with John Kaare Hagen as its Chairman and Frank Tepper and Charles Gardner as members. Late in July 1978 word was received that the Big Valley Ranch in Sherman, Pennsylvania might be available at a reduced price from the original asking figure of $185,000. Big Valley Ranch was one of the 40+ sites evaluated earlier but the asking price had been too high.

On August 9, 1978, Third District President Egil Olsen, John Kaare Hagen, and Charles Gardner met with the owners of Big Valley Ranch and negotiated for its purchase at a price of $120,000 with 25% down, and a 20-year mortgage at 8 1/2 % interest. These three then put down $1,000 each to secure a 60-day option. The site located in Sherman, Pennsylvania, had been operated as a Dude Ranch. It consisted of 151 acres of open- and woodland, with a trout pond, a stocked trout stream running through the property, and bordered on three sides by Pennsylvania State-owned Game Land. Included in the purchase was a main lodge with sleeping accommodations for fifty people, large kitchen and dining area, tennis court, two remodeled homes, a sturdy large barn, plus a separate office building, and an in ground swimming pool. Included in the purchase price was the furniture and other equipment needed to operate.

The property was quickly renamed “Land of the Vikings” (LOV), an intensive fund-drive, spearheaded by  Sandy Ginsberg, the Third District’s Counselor, resulting in obtaining the initial money required.

On November 16, 1978, with a $40,000 down payment ($10,000 over the minimum required), the title was transferred to Sons of Norway -3/D Ltd., a newly-formed Corporation (the “owners” of the property) with the Third District Executive Committee as its Officers.

The Operating Corporation that had been formed - Sons of Norway, Land of the Vikings, Ltd. - with Brothers Kaare Hagen, Frank Tepper, Charles Gardner, and Kip Denega as its Officers, began running LOV on November 16, 1978, and signed a lease on that day with the owner, S/N-3/D Ltd.

Over the years the management of the Land of the Vikings has been entrusted to the LOV Operating Group (representing LOV, Ltd.) with its first Chairman - John Kaare Hagen, followed by Chairman Kjell Hansen, and in 1985 by Chairman Sandy Ginsberg. The resident full-time managers have been Nils and Lauren Floden, Stanley and Marta Bergesen, and Johnny and Kitty Delin, Charlie and Wenche Velilis, Bjarne and Louise Rasmussen, Jens and Elsie Kristiansen, Carl and Cass Kwan, and Beverly and Rick Budrick. Temporary managerial assistance was also received from Clara Johnsen, Bjorn and Lillian Bolstad, Richard and Judith Meadow and Walter and Clair Eriksen.

Additionally, and very importantly, there have been scores of members who have contributed their time, talents, and money to improve and upgrade LOV. It would have been impossible to achieve our present state of Land of the Vikings development had it not been for a legion of willing contributors - skilled craftsmen, many unskilled helpers, word engineers, cooks and bakers, accountants, planners, publicity representatives, homemakers, and so many others who willingly poured their hearts and love into our “Home Away from Home”.

A number of Zones, local Lodges, and individuals have enjoyed the peaceful surroundings and fellowship found at LOV. A variety of events such as skiing weekends, Unge Venner Conferences, Blind Sportsmen activities, District Board Meetings, Youth Camps, St. Hans Fests, Folk Dances, Festive Holiday events, Country Western Weekends, private weddings and other parties, Rosemaling Seminars, and many other affairs have been held at LOV.

The basic philosophy which has guided LOV was endorsed by the District Board on October 20, 1979 and is as follows:

The primary purposes of the Land of the Vikings is for utilization and enjoyment of the Third District members, other S/N members and their guests. Secondly, all others are to be accommodated (insofar as practicable). This is in consonance with the requirements established by our Pennsylvania State LOV, Ltd. Charter.

 To the hundreds of Third District members who have participated by blood, sweat, and tears (and lots of joy too) to bring our dream into a great reality, you can be enormously proud that you leave to those who follow us a legacy that will be remembered and cherished for all time.






DIRECTIONS TO LAND OF THE VIKINGS

 VIA NY ROUTE # 17

Traveling WEST on Route # 17   (Pass by Hancock, NY)

Look for and make a Left turn to Hale Eddy, this turn is just after Milepost # 278.

Cross Hale Eddy Bridge, turn Right after crossing Bridge

Drive approximately 3/4 mile, to a T-intersection (a cemetery on your right corner), turn Left.

Straight Ahead through Sherman, PA (church on Left) to Land of the Vikings (approximately 4 miles)

 

Traveling EAST on Route # 17

 (Pass by Deposit, NY)

Look for and make a Right turn to Hale Eddy, this turn is shortly after Milepost # 277

Cross Hale Eddy Bridge, turn Right after crossing Bridge

Drive approximately 3/4 mile, to a T-intersection (a cemetery on your right corner), turn Left.

Straight Ahead through Sherman, PA (church on Left) to Land of the Vikings (approximately 4 miles)

 

From New England

Take the Mass Pike to Route 84

Take Exit 4W in New York to Route 17.

Follow directions from /above (Route 17).