rinso wrote:Ideas sound good. But the target group might be smaller than you expect.
So far it looks like a one day trip, so location and transportation are important.
and
CH wrote:So... most is for free, but I wonder where you are actually going to get your income? It seems like you have a fun structures for kids & a crafts village for adults. A little bit of this and a little bit of that, but not really enough for neither. So I would ponder on which one you really want to do. Do you want a crafts village with something to do for the children, or the other way around. If it doesn't have "enough" on either side, you may not have enough power to draw people all the way to Heinävesi (at least I understood from your homepages that that is where you are going to build it). But, you might be able to tap into the tourists that are visiting that area for other reasons, so I would take the amount of tourists in that area and calculate from that how many would potentially be interested in visiting your site... and how many of those would actually buy some crafts, as that seems to be your main income (or renting the places to crafts people, I assume, but they still would want to actually sell someting).
Well, our target groups are a mix really:
1) Families travelling in a car. [I would say that getting people from more than 100 km radius is just a little bit optimistic, but many families makes long journeys to one direction or another.]
2) Single-moms [that never can afford anything much and can't get *anywhere*]. Well, that was a litle bit black and white, but if a single mom wants to get on a course, she has to put the kid(s) somewhere. The options are:
- To a similar course for kids. [I am the grand-pa taking care of wood-work and electronics.] These courses for the kids are also useful at rainy days.
CH wrote:Anyway, I would be more interested if the craft courses would be family based. I'm not going to leave my child running around unsupervised while I go do crafts somewhere. I would love to do some real hands on crafts like pottery or blacksmithing with my daughter though.

But like I said, it would have to have something really substantial for it to draw me all the way there, and at least from your current plans I don't see it.
As
CH here above tells , the parents can also attend e.g. the courses for children.
- Take the kids to the never-ending-work with the Pirate-ship. I fix the presawn boards and such where ever dangerous equipment are needed. This kind of work for the kids teach them to work in groups and they learn to know each other. They will not be able to do something the whole day, but there will be many different tasks.
As you can understand from this, we will not expect thousands of people coming.
- Single or not single pa's can show their children how to build. There is no opportunities to do such things together with the child/children, living in a city. Been there - seen that.
3) Those that are interested of handicraft and culture, the culture around hundreds of years of handicraft. Restauration is also quite interesting for many.
4) Those that wants to learn a trade, building houses of straw and other natural products. We use stones, clay, straw-bales, thinning-wood, sand, second-hand glass. The only thing we really buy for the main constuction are: waterproof materials for the roof, lime, and the technical stuff like wires, some tubes, nails and so on. E.g. the draining of the gray and black water will be built by ourselves and according to the law and regulations.
It takes some 12 - 16 months for two persons to build such a house. Much work, but the costs are just a joke compared with 'normative' houses. If these two assumed persons would also like to build their own saw-mill and saw everything by themselves, they have to add some 4 - 8 months to the project.
5) Those that just want to help. Usually foreigners that wants to spend their summer in some "strange" country and Finns that lives in the cities.
And these guys:
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xa4755 ... one_webcam
A Canadian, not giving up too easy.

RESPECT!
6) Firms. And that is a long, too long story, so I save it until "we are there".
I probly forgot some groups, but I come back to that later.
Heney