It's been a year since I started this blog. The idea was to write and share and that's what I've done.
I, we, started in Chile with just a plan and now we've navigated our way through bureaucracy, flights, vaccinations, garage sales and goodbye-parties to welcome parties, more bureaucracy and a stable home and happy life here in Finland.
And so this blog has reached an end. It's time to think of something else to write.
Thanks to all the people who have visited the site (1,982 pageviews). The image below shows details of the amount of visitors by country. Looking at it I think I can guess who most of you are though I'm yet to meet any of my Russian or Portugese fans (big love to you all the same).
Thanks for reading, I've really appreciated the good vibes.
That's all for now. Watch this space.
From Chile to Finland
I was in Chile. Now I live in Helsinki. Each post is a bit rambly. If you're after specific information check the labels (right).
Tampere
Wednesday, 16 March 2016
Wednesday, 27 January 2016
Open Mic. Night - Siltanen
Monday nights from 21.00 (more like 21.30). Hämeentie 13 B
Siltanen is a cool cafe up on the Hämeentie hill. It sits just off the normal road and you have to cross a bridge to get in; Presumably it will also serve as a hipster fortress when the skinny-jean revolution kicks off proper. Inside it's v-cool. Beautiful hipster-staff, bearded hipster-DJ and obscure IPA's. The lights were stolen from a hospital in the 70s and the bar, annoyingly, has no stools.
NO STOOLS!!! |
The acts, this week at least, were brilliantly varied and all nicely amateur. First was a Neil Young lookalike in leather trousers and cowboy boots who played guitar like Richard Thompson and growled lyrics in Finnish. I have no idea what the words were but I'd bet my shoes they involved dragons and elves.
Richard Thompson - Scary good
Then up came a bouncy Uruguayan reggae singer in a giant Rasta hat so lop-sided that my OCD gene started to short-circuit.
Next were stand-up comedians, rappers, guitar players dedicating songs to their girlfriends and in between the bearded hipster DJ played mostly excellent records (bit too many versions of Hotline Bling for my taste).
Perhaps the high point of the evening was the wild-haired guy (think Lionel Richie in the 80s) who stumbled on to the stage and let go a relentless monologue, half Richard Pryor half Steve Buscemi in The Wedding Singer, swerving (and crashing) from awesome stream of consciousness to probably offensive. Eventually he was dragged off whilst the audience sat in confused silence.
Steve Buscemi |
Lionel Richie
A great Monday night. Beers are a good price, lovely place, nice atmosphere and lots of fun acts to watch so you don't even have to talk to your friends.
Go there.
Sunday, 24 January 2016
Helsinki is white, but not in a racist way.
Helsinki has frozen. Today temperatures raced up to a tropical -5 but in the past weeks the average has been around -15 with lows as low as -25. And it's snowing. "Too much snow" said my retired neighbor who has been diligently clearing the paths whilst Cat watches from the window like a prison guard.
In Finland, freeze or no freeze, life goes on. Buses pick up and drop off, offices open, pubs serve, schools teach. You get the idea. No problem. But some precautions are necessary. My skin has now been replaced temporarily by a Merino base layer. Wool is the key, wool is your friend. Cotton is evil.
If I'm out on my bike then I'll use a total of at least three layers as well as a (synthetic) furry hat and three pairs of gloves. I cover my face up with a balaclava which then causes the water vapour in my breath to flow out past my eyes and freeze my eyelashes shut. This may sound inconvenient but blindness is better that leaving your poor nose abandoned to the elements. In the north my nose froze on a snowmobile/ice fishing trip and the skin began to peel like with sunburn. Not nice.
The other fun things about the cold are:
Exciting times.
In Finland, freeze or no freeze, life goes on. Buses pick up and drop off, offices open, pubs serve, schools teach. You get the idea. No problem. But some precautions are necessary. My skin has now been replaced temporarily by a Merino base layer. Wool is the key, wool is your friend. Cotton is evil.
Before venturing out take a photo so the police can recognise the body. |
The other fun things about the cold are:
- Crazy static electricty. There's some scientific rule about cold air, relative humidity and central heating causing static. I don't understand it but I do know that if I rub Cat on my jumper for a few minutes then I can stick him to the wall.
Static Cat - Crazy headphone wires. My usually cool white headphone cord freezes and stiffens like a metre long wonky pipe cleaner. Sometimes the ear buds come out and float around like charmed snakes.
- Clean shoes. Nothing here sticks to your shoes except snow and that melts off when you get inside. You could eat your dinner off 'em.
Winter = Wool socks and clean shoes - Exploding plastics. Not many people know that at -21c plastic turns to glass. So far two zip-toggles have broken off in my hand and the lock-holder on my bike shattered spectacularly when I went down some steps.
Exciting times.
Thursday, 14 January 2016
Goodbye Ruka.
Hello again everyone. It's been a while. Working up north left me little time to waffle here but now I'm back in Helsinki which, overcome with Star Wars fever, has dressed up as Ice Planet Hoth.
More about the frozen fun later, first let me first wrap up all things Ruka-related.
Christmas came and went and Girlf. arrived with Dog to makes things festive but mostly so we could watch Dog's first experience with snow. We have now established that her feet are cold-proof down to about -10 degrees. At -25 she malfunctions completely and I have to carry her home in my arms.
Christmas in Finland consisted of making lamps out of snowballs and a candle, and fantastically complicated and improvised lies about Joulupukki (Father Christmas) and his family/wife/elf sweat shop.
For Christmas dinner we were kindly invited to Kuksa, a swish restaurant with an all-you-can-eat buffet. The traditional offerings in Finland include a variety of what are called casseroles but are actually mashed vegetables (the swede is particularly good). These accompany salads, delicious mushrooms and lots of delicious fish including the wonderful smoked perch.
The guides had been assuring me that you could eat the perch that we'd been catching all month so it was nice to finally do so. These were certainly more goodies on offer but the bosses decided to buy a three-litre bottle of wine so the details are a little groggy.
The next day I was back at work then Girlf. went back to the capital and soon it was New Years Eve. Again, the bosses looked after us and treated us to beers and sauna. Here we also discussed the local hooch, Jalovina, which according to Wikipedia is a Cut Brandy.
The one-star has a generous 30% of brandy mixed in with the white-spirit/anti freeze that fills up the rest of the plastic bottle. However, it ain't too bad. Outside fireworks exploded all over the moonlit valley flashing the skies and booming across the frozen lakes. Pretty good start to 2016.
Helsinki
More about the frozen fun later, first let me first wrap up all things Ruka-related.
Christmas came and went and Girlf. arrived with Dog to makes things festive but mostly so we could watch Dog's first experience with snow. We have now established that her feet are cold-proof down to about -10 degrees. At -25 she malfunctions completely and I have to carry her home in my arms.
Dog auditioning for Cinderella
Christmas in Finland consisted of making lamps out of snowballs and a candle, and fantastically complicated and improvised lies about Joulupukki (Father Christmas) and his family/wife/elf sweat shop.
Girlf's snow lamp. So talented. |
Perch (pre-smoking. Low-tar)
The guides had been assuring me that you could eat the perch that we'd been catching all month so it was nice to finally do so. These were certainly more goodies on offer but the bosses decided to buy a three-litre bottle of wine so the details are a little groggy.
How the world looks when you buy giant wine |
The next day I was back at work then Girlf. went back to the capital and soon it was New Years Eve. Again, the bosses looked after us and treated us to beers and sauna. Here we also discussed the local hooch, Jalovina, which according to Wikipedia is a Cut Brandy.
The one-star has a generous 30% of brandy mixed in with the white-spirit/anti freeze that fills up the rest of the plastic bottle. However, it ain't too bad. Outside fireworks exploded all over the moonlit valley flashing the skies and booming across the frozen lakes. Pretty good start to 2016.
- Ruka Adventures. Great company, lovely people and the guides really know their stuff. Thanks to them I now know how many hairs per cm2 of reindeer and I can catch perch in a frozen lake.
- Motel Willis West. Cheap and Cheerful and the German boss is the finest caterer in the region.
- Sport House Ruka. Lovely people. Sorted me out with some cross country skis.
- Erä-Susi Husky Farm. 200 huskies and an owner that looks like a Lord Of The Rings character. What's not to like? Also, driving a husky sled is something that everyone should do before they die.
In conclusion. An amazing experience. I want to go back and I'm already hatching a brilliant plan as to how. Ruka/Kuusamo is a great place to live. The contact with nature is so satisfying and the people that live there, like the trees covered in snow, seem to get along calmly and happily and with a glint in their eye that knowingly says, "my life is better than yours".
Guiding (or assisting to the guide) can be hard work. Thirty Spanish people can have a lot of problems and dealing with them takes patience and there wasn't a day that I didn't get home exhausted, but also happy. When your work day involves driving snowmobiles to the lake for ice-fishing you know you're onto a winner.
This video is insane
Finally, the area is perfect. In winter, as well as all the activities mentioned above, there is ice climbing and masses of cross country skiing, In summer the area is popular for its rivers and trekking, especally the 80km Karhunkierros trail (the Bear Trail). There are also bears. And Elk. Go there.
Labels:
dog,
Pubs,
Restaurants,
Tourism
Thursday, 10 December 2015
Hello everybody. It's been a while but life just got a bit crazy. I'm no longer in Helsinki but before I get to that I'll just mention two places which you must visit.
Pub Sirdie.
This place is wonderful, the best I've seen in Finland. It's website alone is brilliantly nostalgic. Tiny, toasty, no frills. Just how I like a pub. Go there,
Sandro.
There are two of these in Helsinki. We went to the new one in Punavuori (Tehtaankatu 34 D).
Girlf. reserved a table (recommended) for the brunch, which seems to be a more acceptable way for middle-class people to say All-You-Can-Eat. The food is vegetarian and north-african/middle eastern and I honsetly don't remeber a time I ate so well (and so much). Go there.
So. On with the story.
The reason we went to Sandro was because Girlf. was treating me to a celebration brunch because I'd just been offered a job in Ruka.
Basically we'd been talking about the possibility of working in Lapland so I sent a general enquiry type email to a tourism company Girlf. knew. A few weeks later a reply arrived asking if I could come and work for them the following week. The ever-amazing Girlf. agreed to take on the responsibility for Dog and Cat so I dashed to the train station, sprinted past Bill Murray, ran along the platform and jumped onto the overnight train heading north.
Here's a video of it all.
I've been here almost a week and it's great. Ruka is a ski and tourism centre for (mostly) Spanish tourists who want lots of photos of the real Christmas. My job is to translate the instructions they need to understand in order not to die whilst Ice-Fishing, Snowmobiling, Ice-Karting and riding in reindeer or dog sleds. A lot of the time my job is trying to keep kids happy whilst they're shivering on a frozen lake. It's an amazing place. The monochrome indifference of the landscape is so exciting. Cold winds with cold ice and cold toes. It makes you feel tough and crazed at the same time. How did I get here? What are we doing!
As for the activities. In case you were wondering, here's my round-up.
I'm here until the first week of January and I've already realised that from now on I will need a northern winter for at least one month of every year for the rest of my life.
Here are some photos.
Pub Sirdie.
This place is wonderful, the best I've seen in Finland. It's website alone is brilliantly nostalgic. Tiny, toasty, no frills. Just how I like a pub. Go there,
Sandro.
There are two of these in Helsinki. We went to the new one in Punavuori (Tehtaankatu 34 D).
Girlf. reserved a table (recommended) for the brunch, which seems to be a more acceptable way for middle-class people to say All-You-Can-Eat. The food is vegetarian and north-african/middle eastern and I honsetly don't remeber a time I ate so well (and so much). Go there.
So. On with the story.
The reason we went to Sandro was because Girlf. was treating me to a celebration brunch because I'd just been offered a job in Ruka.
Basically we'd been talking about the possibility of working in Lapland so I sent a general enquiry type email to a tourism company Girlf. knew. A few weeks later a reply arrived asking if I could come and work for them the following week. The ever-amazing Girlf. agreed to take on the responsibility for Dog and Cat so I dashed to the train station, sprinted past Bill Murray, ran along the platform and jumped onto the overnight train heading north.
Here's a video of it all.
I've been here almost a week and it's great. Ruka is a ski and tourism centre for (mostly) Spanish tourists who want lots of photos of the real Christmas. My job is to translate the instructions they need to understand in order not to die whilst Ice-Fishing, Snowmobiling, Ice-Karting and riding in reindeer or dog sleds. A lot of the time my job is trying to keep kids happy whilst they're shivering on a frozen lake. It's an amazing place. The monochrome indifference of the landscape is so exciting. Cold winds with cold ice and cold toes. It makes you feel tough and crazed at the same time. How did I get here? What are we doing!
As for the activities. In case you were wondering, here's my round-up.
- Ice-fishing. Surprisingly effective. Often bleak. Cold.
- Ice Karting. Slidy. Makes me hear bleeps and music of Mario Kart all day.
- Reindeer sled rides. Nice view of a Reindeer's arse. Reindeers very good at looking unimpressed by the guests, especially the kids.
- Dog sled rides. The single most beautiful activity ever. Silent sliding through wintry twilight, leaning into curves, tapping the foot brake and watching dogs ahead bounce along like schools of porpoise. Glorious.
- Snowmobiling. Noisy, stinky, obnoxious but haring across a frozen lake at 70 kmph is great.
I'm here until the first week of January and I've already realised that from now on I will need a northern winter for at least one month of every year for the rest of my life.
Here are some photos.
Overnight train.
Dining car. Vodka Martini please.
Noisy up the forest!
If I ever live here this will be my first purchase
Leave us alone
Un reined-deer
Happiness is cross-country skiing
Some people really want to fish
Labels:
Eating Out,
Pubs,
Restaurants,
Tourism
Sunday, 15 November 2015
Kotiharjun Sauna
Up here in Finland the sauna came first. Presumably, 10,000 years ago, as the Ice Age retreated and the Finnish forefathers tried to convince the foremothers that moving into this freezing land was a good idea the foremothers accepted solely on the condition that their new house would have a sauna.
From that browbeaten beginning was born the modern state of Finland and the genetic love of sauna has been handed down, generation to generation, ever since (those born without the gene soon met a wintry end).
Nowadays saunas abound, as do the different styles. In the sliding scale of good to bad people seem to prefer smoke saunas (discussed here) and traditional wood burning saunas. Modern electric saunas are seen very much as a means to a sweaty end.
Though many apartments, and most apartment buildings, have an electric sauna, having a wood sauna in your house is very unusual, especially if you live in the Helsinki metropolis, so sauna aficionados looking for a more traditional sweat visit the public saunas hidden among the dark streets. Perhaps the most famous of them all is Kotiharju.
The Kotiharjun Sauna is wonderful from the moment you walk in. It's absolutely not luxurious, this is not a spa. It's more like a working mens' club but based around a sauna rather than skittles and tribute acts. Immediately next to the door is a fridge where you can leave your beers, or you can buy some from the lady in the tiny booth with two dogs sleeping next to her. Then off into the changing room which seems to have been kitted out in Victorian times and untouched ever since. Next there's a shower room with a certain prison feel to it where you can get a special washing from a little lady (very not sexual despite her poorly translated sign (below)) and finally off to the magnificent sauna.
The sauna stove itself looks like it formerly served to power ocean going ships. According to the website, the stove has "1500 kg (3300 pounds) of stones and it takes one cubic meter (35 cubic feet) of logs and five to six hours to heat them glowing hot".
The seating is arranged ampitheatre style and overlooking everything is a small balcony where it gets really hot. The rules are that you ask the masters up top if they want more löyly (steam/heat/water) before hoiking a bowlful of water into the furnace entrance above your head.
Then you sit and enjoy. And chat. Finnish people have a reputation for economy of conversation but there's something about naked proximity that really breaks the ice. You talk in the sauna until you feel dizzy and run to the shower where you chat through to the dressing rooms where people are playing cards and chess and then to the fridge to pick up your now-cold beer before walking out onto the freezing dark street in nothing but a towel, where you continue to chat as the rest of the world walks enviously by on their way home.
A really amazing place.
The Kotiharjun Sauna is wonderful from the moment you walk in. It's absolutely not luxurious, this is not a spa. It's more like a working mens' club but based around a sauna rather than skittles and tribute acts. Immediately next to the door is a fridge where you can leave your beers, or you can buy some from the lady in the tiny booth with two dogs sleeping next to her. Then off into the changing room which seems to have been kitted out in Victorian times and untouched ever since. Next there's a shower room with a certain prison feel to it where you can get a special washing from a little lady (very not sexual despite her poorly translated sign (below)) and finally off to the magnificent sauna.
Well done to that translator
The sauna stove itself looks like it formerly served to power ocean going ships. According to the website, the stove has "1500 kg (3300 pounds) of stones and it takes one cubic meter (35 cubic feet) of logs and five to six hours to heat them glowing hot".
The seating is arranged ampitheatre style and overlooking everything is a small balcony where it gets really hot. The rules are that you ask the masters up top if they want more löyly (steam/heat/water) before hoiking a bowlful of water into the furnace entrance above your head.
A photo of a photo from Kotiharjun
Then you sit and enjoy. And chat. Finnish people have a reputation for economy of conversation but there's something about naked proximity that really breaks the ice. You talk in the sauna until you feel dizzy and run to the shower where you chat through to the dressing rooms where people are playing cards and chess and then to the fridge to pick up your now-cold beer before walking out onto the freezing dark street in nothing but a towel, where you continue to chat as the rest of the world walks enviously by on their way home.
A really amazing place.
Labels:
Kotiharjun,
Sauna,
Tourism
Monday, 26 October 2015
Suomenliina - Island fortress
On the weekend I had a visitor from Germania so I took off my unemployed-immigrant hat, put on my Official Tour Guide hat and headed out on the town. Of the many very typical things we did, sauna flagellation included, perhaps the nicest was to take the 20 min. ferry over to Suomenliinea, The Island Fortress.
IMPORTANT NOTE HERE. When you go to Suomenliina you'll need to buy a ticket for the ferry. Make sure you do this with plenty of time to spare because the SINGLE ticket machine inevitably has a huge queue of people unfamiliar with said machine and if you're not careful you'll end up having to make a last minute dash/jump for the boat as it sails away from the quay.
Once on board head to the back of the boat to watch Helsinki sail away (sure as the sun goes round the earth) and get great views of the Cathedral and Giant cruise ships readying for their journey to Sweden.
HISTORY TIME. Suomenliina importance is a result of its geographical position. Perhaps this map will help.
Sauna fun
IMPORTANT NOTE HERE. When you go to Suomenliina you'll need to buy a ticket for the ferry. Make sure you do this with plenty of time to spare because the SINGLE ticket machine inevitably has a huge queue of people unfamiliar with said machine and if you're not careful you'll end up having to make a last minute dash/jump for the boat as it sails away from the quay.
Once on board head to the back of the boat to watch Helsinki sail away (sure as the sun goes round the earth) and get great views of the Cathedral and Giant cruise ships readying for their journey to Sweden.
HISTORY TIME. Suomenliina importance is a result of its geographical position. Perhaps this map will help.
Helpful map
Back in the olden times Finland (the green bit) was part of the Swedish empire. King Ryvita II decided that the island would be a useful place to defend his lovely pink land from the scary Russians to the east under Tzar Nicolas The Bear Wrestler, so he set about building a fortress there. At this time the island was incorrectly know as Sveaborg.
However, the fortress did little to resist the Russians and surrendered during the Russo-Swedish war. Russia, happy with their vacations, decided to stay (and annex the rest of Finland while they were at it) and things would stay like that for the next 110 years.
In 1918 the Finns decided that it was revolution time (click here now) so they kicked out the Russians from island and mainland and installed a single ticket machine on the docks to ferry tourists to the newly named Suomenliina. Hooray.
TODAY. The island is really lovely. It's a sort of mix of GOT (the bits in King's Landing) and LOTR*. Old ruins, windy cobbly streets, little tunnels, caves in grassy knolls, huge Russian cannons and everywhere the sea. As well as all that there aren't any cars and the best thing is that you can touch and climb on or pose next to pretty much everything. A brilliant day out. Go there.
Here are lots of photos.
*If you put GOT and LOTR together and say them out loud it's a word in Irish.
Labels:
Sauna,
suomenliina,
Tourism
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