The sauna is among the most Finnish things there are. The word sauna itself is a Finnish word. You have the midsummer sauna, Christmas sauna, bridal sauna, the Saturday evenig sauna and the regular everyday sauna as well... Most Finnish summer cottages and cabins will have a separate sauna, and many old apartment buildings has a mutual one, while new apartments tend to have their own small saunas next to the bathroom. I've never been that much of a sauna goer at home really, the sauna at my parents' house was mainly used for drying clothes in . We have a weekly sauna hour in our building that we sometimes manage to make it to. I mostly just go to the sauna when at the gym.
But being in a wooden sauna on an island or by the lake, being able to jump right into the water straight from the heat, is a different thing. This midsummer when out in the archipelago we heated the sauna, which I haven't actually bathed in for a few years, in spite of sleeping in the sauna chamber every time we are over at the island.
The sauna window view.
When we were small gathering pine cones was one of our "duties". It works as a spark together with the wood when you heat the sauna (or any other fire; we mainly collected these for heating the house.)
(There used to be sauna championships where the contestants tried to out-sit each other in the heat, with very high temperatures. Some years ago one finalist died, while the other got really sick and was in a coma for a long time. That's insane.)
Where the harbour opposite of us is, there used to be an island, just in front of the mainland. They blew it away.
Midsummer flowers in newly washed hair.
3 comments:
Do people in Finland go in the sauna (even at your building) au naturel? I remember going to the saunas in Austria and noticing that the only people who kept their bathing suit were French! of course all the eyes were on them...
Anonymous: Yes, in general! The sauna in the buildings have separate shifts per household (for example we have tuesdays at 7:30). Public saunas have separate saunas and washrooms for men and women.
Saunas are definitely Finnish in nature. Their very structure is built around necessity, with Finland being susceptible to more punishing winters. So they need to be heavily insulated for that reason. Thanks for sharing how saunas have been very much a part of your life, as well as Finnish lives in general. Cheers!
Ronni Casillas @ JNH Lifestyles
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