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Ethnographic Open-Air Museum

Local name: Zagroda Gburska i Rybacka

The Country Farm consists of a farmstead and a fisherman's homestead. Peasant cottage (“checz gburska”) comes from the middle of the XIX century. It has a skeletal structure, the walls are made of clay with the addition of chaff, and the roof covered with reed. A fisherman's house has a similar construction. In addition to the cottages and their equipment, in the heritage park you can see the fishing net storage, a cowshed, a barn and a free-standing bread oven, a smokehouse and a cellar.

The museum started its activity by purchasing and taking the conservation care of the so-called “zagroda gburska” (a farmstead). The name "gburowie" or "gburzy" was describing in the Kashubia the wealthy peasants who owned large farms (gburstwa). In 1987, a fisherman's homestead reconstructed in a short distance from the lake was added to the heritage park.

The history of the creation of the Country Farm in Nadole is connected to the most-known attempt to build the first nuclear power plant in Poland at Lake Żarnowieckie. When construction began in 1982, the idea appeared to create a museum that would preserve the evidence of the material culture of this place. The nuclear project ended in a fiasco, the museum exists to this day.

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    Bałtycka 284-250 Nadole , Poland