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This blog is about our winter trip to Finland and Lapland.

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January 25/26 - Flight to Helsinki and our first day in Finland

The first leg of our flight took us from Las Vegas to London Heathrow.  We departed late enough that we thought we would have a good chance of getting some sleep in our business class fully reclining seats.  No such luck.  Neither of us slept much at all.  We had about a 4‑hour our layover in London before catching our Finnair flight to Helsinki. 

We arrived in Helsinki around 11:30 at night and were met by our guide, Raila, and our driver.  It didn’t take too long to get to our hotel.  After getting maps and getting last minute information we headed to our room. 

Since neither of us had slept on the plane we opted to not set the alarms and just miss the free breakfast.  The plan was to get up later, have a leisurely lunch and then hit the streets for some sightseeing.  Sounded like a good day and a good way to semi-adjust to the time change.  At 2:15pm the maid tapped on our door.  We were both still dead to the world.  Since sunsets at 4:17 today it looks like we will have a very short day of sightseeing.

We did make it out for an hour or two of walking around the main area of town…a long esplanade where they still had the Christmas lights up.  It was very pretty…especially when it started getting a dark and it started snowing.





Many of the buildings bordering the esplanade and along the nearby streets are from the art nouveau period and are very beautiful. 






Because of COVID, the current regulations are that restaurant and eateries must close no later than 6:00pm, so we had an early dinner in the hotel.  

We were still pretty tired so we opted to go to bed rather early. 

January 27 - Helsinki Walking tour

While Paul seemed to sleep most of the night Mary woke up about 2:00 and couldn’t get back to sleep.  Looks like it’s’ going to take us a while to get on the new time zone.  We had breakfast at the breakfast buffet in the hotel…pretty routine breakfast items (they even had cheerios) plus some Finnish breakfast items like various fish and cheeses. 

Since the sun rises quite late in Finland (8:45am) our walking tour of Helsinki doesn’t start until 10:00.  The day is dreary and overcast but not too cold.  The temperatures seem to be hovering around freezing. The guide said it was unseasonably warm.

Our walk took us to a nearby square where we saw an interesting statue, the memorial to the Winter War (a 3 1/2 month war in 1939/40 between Finland and Russia).


The square was surrounded by interesting old buildings. 


Our first stop was the Old Market Hall (Vanha Kauppahalli) on the waterfront.  They were just opening up so some of the stall and shops weren’t yet open or fully set up but there was stuff to see…even a robbery.  A guy grabbed a couple of beers from one of the stalls and high tailed it out right in front of us.  The shop keeper grabbed security who went after the robber.  We didn’t see how it ended.

The picture of the reindeer head...yes, the shop was selling Rudolph steaks. 




The harbor area is relatively small but does have a lot of interesting buildings facing it, a big Ferris wheel and a masted sailing ship.


From there we took the tram to the Temppeliaukion KIrkolla (Rock Church).  This church was blasted out of solid rock and is partially underground.  The walls are rock... 





 and the roof is copper and glass. 


 The beautiful organ is of copper.

This of the domed roof from the outside.

Raila said that the interior is very dramatic when sunlight streams through the glass roof.  However, with the overcast skies we won’t get to see that.  However, the church on it’s own is very dramatic.  Apparently, the Finns didn’t particularly like it when it was first built but it has grown on them and is now one of the biggest tourist draws in the city and is the only church in town that charges an admission fee).  The church is a Lutheran Church. 

What an interesting fact we learned about Finland.  Anyone who is a member of the Lutheran church or the Finnish Orthodox church pays an income-based church tax of 1 to 2% of their income, depending on the municipality.  One doesn't have to belong to the church but if they want to be married or buried in the church and aren't a member then it costs a lot. 

A statue called "Singing Fish", with the Helsinki Central Library in the background.

We continued on Helsinki Central Library which is much more than a library.  



The second floor had meeting rooms (very large and very small), computers for use on a first come first serve basis, music studios, a set up for sewing, art rooms, printers for printing posters and 3-D printers and just about any other activity you could think of.

The spacious library on the third floor had tons of places for lounging and reading, a café...




and a children’s play area (complete with a stroller parking lot).  It was pretty amazing. 

We saw the Parliament House

and the Sanoma House that houses the major Finland newspaper,

and we saw bears on buildings.  Bears are the national animal of Finland.


There was also a massive underground Mall where we saw all types of shops and interesting eateries.


We had lunch at Restaurant Savotta.  It is billed as featuring authentic Finnish cuisine.  As vegetarians we passed on the reindeer.  But our pumpkin soup and barley risotto were very good.

A bit more walking and a stop at the department store eyeglasses department to get Paul’s glasses fixed and we were done for the day.

It was snowing again this evening when we went for dinner. 

Interesting tidbit about Finnish - The schools don't do spelling bees like we do in the US.  Seems that in Finnish there are no silent letters.  Every letter in the word is pronounce.  

More Finland tidbits (as told by our guide - some confirmed via Google checks):

There are no pronouns in Finnish for "he" and "she".  Apparently the "pronouns" are all gender neutral.

Finland has been named the happiest country on earth for the last 4 straight years (per the United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network - ranking based in interviews with actual citizens and not on measurable factors like income, health or life expectancy.

It seems that Finland has this concept of "every man's land".  Every year when it is berry picking (turns out Finland has 20 types of edible berries) or mushroom picking time, anyone can go berry or mushroom picking anywhere.  
That means, if you own woodlands you can expect berry and mushroom pickers on your private land and it is allowed by law (or maybe just culture...not sure).  For purposes of berry and mushroom picking, all land, including private land, is "every man's land."
A rather interesting attitude.  Not quite our approach to the use and control of private land in the US but it actually has a very nice feel to it.  Sort of an "I own it but my neighbors are welcome to share in the bounty of my land" attitude.

January 28 - Flight to Lapland, Kakslauttanen Resort

We had an 8:00am pickup for our transfer to the airport.  Fortunately, we both managed a good nights sleep and we are beginning to feel human again.  Everything was smooth at the airport.  We did notice that the Finns are quite civilized when comes to boarding the planes.  No one was in a rush.  No lining up early.  When boarding groups were called people took their time wandering to the gate.  And when waiting for the luggage to come out a luggage claim they all stood well back, only approaching the belt when their luggage came out.  It was all quite pleasant and civilized.

From the plane it looked like there was a lot of snow on the ground...confirmed after we landed. 


We were picked up at the airport by a very silent driver for our drive to our new home for the next three days, Kakslauttanen Resort.  There is snow on the ground and in the trees and it is quite magical.  We are spending a few days at the Kakslauttanen Resort in far Northern Finland (latitude 68.7N - just north of the Arctic Circle) with the hope of seeing some Northern Lights.  

Our room is a large log cabin with fireplace, kitchenette (which we won’t use) and an attached glass igloo that gives us great viewing of the skies.  



Map of the resort.

Now the skies just need to cooperate and give us a good display of Northern Lights. 

At this latitude the days are very short (about 5 hours of sunlight) and the sun sets about 3:00pm  The high clouds started clearing as we neared the resort and by 2:30 or so we started getting a spectacular sunset (the sun sets at 2:52PM…!!!!).  However, the sunset lasted a very long time.  And today's sunset was ethereal...like the most delicate watercolor painting you can imagine.  





We walked down to the lodge for dinner.  The walk was beautiful but a bit cold.  

Dinner selections were quite limited…Russian salad (sort of a potato, veggie and mayo salad) or salmon soup, fish, cabbage stuffed with mushrooms or turkey with root vegetables.  Paul, the long time vegetarian, opted for turkey.  He can’t stand mushrooms.  And a mango mousse with cloudberries for dessert.  It was all very tasty.

We were back in the room by 5:00.  It seems so very late because it gets dark so very early.  Seems like it is time to go to bed.