We darted across the frozen lake wearing wool socks and swimsuits, the icy snow crunching beneath our feet.
Under the pitch-black night sky, steam radiated off our bodies like translucent capes in the below-freezing air after sitting in the 200-degree sauna. A lantern on the ground marked the ominous black hole carved in the ice. One by one, my three friends fearlessly leapt into the frigid water, exhaling in shock before dashing up the wooden ladder back to the Finnish sauna.
Rinse and repeat.
"It's magical," I said as we sat breathlessly in the dim light from a single kerosene lamp hanging in the window.
Camp du Nord outside Ely, Minn., is a quiet escape to a winter wonderland on the edge of the wilderness.
The northern Minnesota YMCA facility may be best known for its popular summer camps that draw hundreds of families for a packed schedule of activities, meals and presentations after selling out in a December lottery each year. In a sign of just how popular the family camps are, YMCA of the Greater Twin Cities, which owns Camp du Nord, just bought two lake resorts in nearby Babbitt to open Camp Northern Lights, its eighth overnight camp.
But camps like du Nord are also increasingly catering more to adults, women's groups and couples in the spring, winter and fall, offering a calmer retreat to a rental cabin that allows you to explore on your own.
"It has just been getting busier and busier," said Emily Weise, who grew up attending the camp and now runs its fall, winter and spring programs. "It becomes more of a focus every year. It's like our worst-kept secret. ... It's just an amazing time to be up there."