A fun day, starting with emergency skiingthe quickly disappearing snow on my local hill at 6am, continued with sailingto Suomenlinna on Markus’ boat - thanks! From then on the company picnic day was just startingLot more fun followed, e.g., a saunaand swimin the Suomenlinna boat harbor.
Now I just need to go collect my carfrom the starting pointDid I mention interesting discussionsand first time seeing new colleagues? And, why no meetings today? Because it is the Independence Day in SwedenCongrats!
On the sailing we also went past the Finnish snake island (Käärmesaari).
And in the sauna, we had an interesting discussion about the rocks for the stove. They obviously have to be changed regularly in order to clean up the debris from cracking stones. But are the uncracked stones ok, or do they lose their ability to function well also? The Saunologia blog article outlines nicely the cracking behavior of different types of rocks (see here). And this Yle article mentions that aging stone can become porous and lose its heat retaining capacity, but without describing the details. And Norwegian researchers have looked at the physics of sauna's heat absorption on wood here, but not dealt with the stones.
I have been unable to find any research results on other aspects of aging-related performance degredation in the sauna stove rocks.... does anyone know?
Information about guest boat harbor in Suomenlinna can be found here. And it is served by Cafe Bar Valimo few meters away, hosting both a restaurant and the sauna. Much recommended!
Video:
Ski:
Sail:
Sauna:
Swim in the harbor:
This article has also been published at TGR. For more skiing, sauna and swimming stories, check out planetskier.net, planetswimmer.com and saunablogger.cool websites! And of course the blogs for other stories in Blogspot and TGR! The photos and text (c) 2022 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved. I never take photos of other saunagoers or swimmers and visit when there is simply no one else or the facility has been closed or booked only for me.
This article was originally published in the Planetskier Blogspot article series.
"Mongolia is kind of close, right? Story about an attempt to ski everywhere in the world where there's snow. And in some places where there isn't. On and off-piste skiing on all continents, skiing into craters of live volcanoes, climbing, photography, and travel." The Planetskier blog focuses on skiing, caving, climbing, biking, flying, sauna, and swimming adventures around the world. See the other Planetskier blog articles about skiing, caving, urban exploration, climbing, cycling, flying, swimming, and saunas.