This should give a flavour of the rural atmosphere of the Hylkedam site.

This is a fantastic summer for hacker camps and I was very happy to make it to BornHack this year. This week-long camp attracts hackers from all over Europe and the mix of a few hundred friends and soon-to-be friends who gathered on the Danish island of Fyn delivered a unique experience for the curious traveller.

The camp takes place at the Hylkedam Danish scout camp, located in a forest amid the rolling Danish famland not too far from the small town of Gelsted. It’s a few kilometres from a motorway junction, but easy enough to find after the long haul up from the UK via the Channel Tunnel. As an aside, every bored cop between France and the Danish border wanted to stop my 20-year-old right-hand-drive Volkswagen on UK plates, but soon lost interest after walking up to the passenger side and finding no driver. It seems Brits are considered harmless, which is good to hear.

Hylkedam is at the end of a long dirt track, which opens out into a spacious campsite with good quality permanent facilities. At a guess it is a former sand quarry or similar as it seems to be set below the level of the forrest, as well as having what appears to be a former railway cutting that conveniently housed the bar.

The hot tub in its woodland surroundings became a popular place to unwind. Thanks [Jesper] for the image.

A wellness area was placed in the forest, including a wood-fired hot tub for a unique experience among hacker camps. There were three camping zones separated by trees, the main site, with noisy and quiet fields on opposite sides of it. With only a few hundred attendees who by no means filled the available space there was plenty of room for expansion here. As one of very few Brits I pitched myself between the Labitat Copenhagen hackerspace village and the Netherlands village, and threw my lot in with my Dutch friends.

A Less Frantic Pace Of Life Means More Time For Important Stuff

This should give a flavour of the rural atmosphere of the Hylkedam site.

The larger camps are very high-energy affairs, in which everyone is busy showing of their work and in which it feels impossible to catch everything. By contrast this smaller camp was much more relaxed, with an emphasis on hanging out and more time to get to know people. My impression was that more of the attendees were from a software or infosec background than a hardware one, so some of the builds such as EMF Camp’s Hacky Racers or CCCamp’s home made trains were absent. This did not detract from the experience for the visitor because there was still plenty with which to keep occupied in the talk schedule, and if that was not enough there were still the sights of Denmark to provide plenty of distraction.

Talks on Physical Keys, Sustainability, and Retrocomputing

<img data-attachment-id="374472" data-permalink="https://hackaday.com/2019/09/04/bornhack-2019-a-laid-back-hacker-camp-in-a-danish-forest/bornhack-2019-badge/" data-orig-file="https://hackaday.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/bornhack-2019-badge.jpg" data-orig-size="1000,1200" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta='{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}' data-image-title="bornhack-2019-badge" data-image-description="" data-medium-file="https://hackaday.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/bornhack-2019-badge.jpg?w=333" data-large-file="https://hackaday.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/bornhack-2019-badge.jpg?w=521" …read more

Source:: Hackaday