Monthly Archives: June 2024

A day on Suomenlinna – Island and Fortress of Helsinki!

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A day on Suomenlinna – Island and Fortress of Helsinki!

Monday, 03-June-2024


When I first talked to folks in Scandinavia about how I’d be visiting Helsinki, I believe the first place they recommended I visit was Suomenlinna. It came up so often, and so emphatically that it almost seemed a little weird, to be honest… but I dutifully looked it up, figured out how to make it happen, and set it as my second priority right after my traditional art museum adventure!

So.

What is Suomenlinna?

It’s an island! An Island in Helsinki Harbor, specifically eight islands all connected by bridges, that was turned into a massive bastion fortress to protect the city starting in 1748. From my explorations, though, I quickly realized that it was much more than a big island castle… there were schools, churches, houses and roads… it’s more of a miniature city, with people currently living there full time as far as I could tell.



I did have to take a ferry to get to it, a voyage I was a bit apprehensive for, but thankfully it was a short ride… and one that let me stand on the bow of the ferry, a spot that always reduces any motion sickness for me since I can see the horizon and feel the ocean spray on my face. And it was a 10min trip, so not nearly as bad as the multi-hour train ride that so ravaged my poor inner ear just a week or so prior.

After I stepped off the ferry and onto solid land, I quickly grabbed some lunch from a a nearby sit-down restaurant, and then started my explorations. The whole island was really neat – basically an open-air museum with beautiful nature areas, ruins, and my absolute favorite thing in the world… Informational Placards!



I wandered, read up on the history (they had so many extra cannons that the used them to make a fence for the church!), played around on the remaining (decommissioned) artillery pieces, and even found a nice quiet corner to read my book for a bit in the shade.

I fulfilled the old adage of “do something that scares you every day” by exploring a super dark cave under the battlements, and got something around 12 miles of walking under my shoes for the day. Please note – These pictures of that scary cave are WAY brighter than it looked. I literally used my camera almost as nightvision, taking pictures with the dark-vision filter every so often to supplement the meager light that my flashlight could shine. It was fun, and scary, and fun.



(As a funny aside – Suomenlinna has the second-most armored bathrooms I’ve ever seen. They used to be powder storage, from what I could tell, for the artillery positions nearby… and so are buried under multiple feet of rock and soil. The most armored bathrooms, in my memory, were those North of Mt. St. Helens, which for some reason resembled nuclear fallout shelters far more than bathrooms)



The ferry ride back home was, thankfully, just as easy as the ride out had been. Simple, lovely salt spray, and good views of some of the other smaller islands that weren’t quite close enough to add into the fortress chain.

Definitely a good day out of the city.

The Ateneum art museum of Helsinki

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Sunday, 02-June-2024


Continuing with tradition, I started my adventures in Helsinki with an Art Museum. As it turns out, Finland (and Helsinki in particular) have a whole series of art museums, sort of like the Smithsonian, of which the Ateneum is the “middle” museum chronologically… with one museum holding older paintings and another holding more contemporary works.

In retrospect, I do miss that I didn’t start with the gallery holding the older paintings, called the Sinebrychoff art museum. The Ateneum was amazing, no doubt, but its focus is targeted from the 1700s to the early 20th century, which is definitely more of a “traditional European” time… while interesting, it’s something I know fairly well… contrasted to older Finnish paintings, which could have given me a deeper view into the older culture of Finland.

All that being said – Ohh man I enjoyed this gallery. It was a good mix of paintings and sculptures, giving a really neat look into the evolution of the Finnish national psyche… paintings that dove into some of the challenges (Slash and burn farming), along with portraits and histories of some influential culture figures (Larin Paraske, specifically).

Of all the pieces, though, one specific standout piece seriously blew me away… blending older-style representational landscapes and modern commentary! check it out:



I could wax poetic about how cool of an idea this is, but in short it’s just such a neat way to combine beautiful paintings that let the viewer step into a beautiful scene, and still make a commentary on some of the issues that we’re facing today.

The rest of the pieces were excellent as well, without a doubt – but this specific one just stood out as my favorite. And since this is, in fact, my blog… I get to celebrate it!

Without further adieu, though – enjoy the other standouts!

Exploring Helsinki!

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Saturday, 01-June-2024, through Thursday, 06-June-2024


Helsinki. Capital of Finland, and my final stop of both the Nordics and the Scandinavian countries before forging south toward the Baltic region.

When I first planned this trip, I freely admit that I came into it with certain preconceptions. Particularly salient to this post was my vision of Finland as another of the Scandinavian countries… technically a correct assumption, but after wandering Helsinki and learning a bit more about the country’s history… I’m not quite so certain.

See, I learned that while Finland currently belongs to the Nordics, its history is a bit more unique – The Finnish language, for example, has roots as a Uralic language similar to Estonian and Hungarian… and frankly sounds similar to Slavic languages to my untrained ears. Culturally, Finland has been its own country, part of Sweden, part of Russia, and even sort of part of Germany during World War 2.

Complicated.


Exploring the city, however, was quite a bit less complex than the history. It was lovely – I found Helsinki to be similar to Oslo and Portland in that there were quite a few small parts scattered about, in contrast to Reykjavik or Stockholm that seemed to have larger homogenous sections of either big parks or big concrete. There was some street art, mainly on electrical boxes, but not nearly as many murals and such as in Reykjavik… but it still felt like more than I saw around Oslo or Stockholm.



As with all European Cities so far, Helsinki was extremely walkable… seriously, I think I walked around 10 miles every day, just wandering around and visiting near spots!

For food – everything was delicious, to the surprise of absolutely no one. After eating at Aifur in Stockholm, I finally broke through my mental barricade against going to “tourist restaurants”, and so started exploring some more clearly touristy venues in Helsinki… Which, as it turned out, was a really great idea! I was able to find quite a few great spots, ate some more traditional Northern Finnish cuisine, and got some options that I definitely wouldn’t have if I’d stuck with being a “cool” tourist:

  • Saaga – This was a tourist-focused place, but ohh man it was good! Focusing on Northern Finnish / Sami food, I fully recommend it for someone wanting to try out a traditional Finnish meal, like you’d get in a cabin up North in the deep winter.
  • Lazy Fox – Turns out, most Finnish places don’t really do breakfast. From the Finns that I met, it seems that most Finns simply don’t do breakfast, or have it at home, so that makes sense. I, however, wanted a hearty breakfast… and Lazy Fox provided that exceptionally well!
  • Lie Mi – A Thai spot I went to on a date! It was neat- I had a lot of Thai while I was living in North Portland, and this was… similar. Less spicy, but definitely good. Full recommendation.
  • Bastion Bistro – A nice and fancy bistro on Suomenlinna Island, with an excellent chicken cesear salad. The downside is that the outdoor seating is overgrown with stinging nettles, which I learned about the hard way. My leg stung for the rest of the day, which kind of outweighed the good food.
  • Woolshed Helsinki – an “Australian Gastropub” that I went to, because they were the only spot in town that served Chicken Parmesan. Like… what? None of the Italian restaurants had it… and what Woolshed had was an abomination – but an absolutely delicious abomination. Served over crispy French fries, with ham thrown into the Chicken Parm because why not, it was delicious and abominable.
  • La Lasagne – A full-day Lasagna restaurant that I went to for breakfast… and had breakfast lasagna (made with eggs and bacon instead of beef and ricotta). It was amazing.
  • Lappi Ravintola – Another amazing touristy-restaurant that I went to on a date, this was my favorite restaurant in Finland… and possibly my favorite on the whole trip so far, in terms of decor and “fun”. Aifur, ROK, and Cafe Unicorn were great (Stockholm, Reykjavik, and Nuuk, respectively), but Lappi Ravintola basically took a New Hampshire ski lodge and stuffed it into a building in the middle of Helsinki. Good food, great decor.