Finland 3: The King’s Road

We pushed south from Matilda reaching Hanko on southern tip of Finland just ahead of the storms. Hanko’s August 25 end of summer celebration was our goal all along and we made it.

In Hanko we stayed with our Finnish counterpart Liisa and her daughter Saila for a three days. Did some visiting, did some mushroom hunting, did some sightseeing, and did some laundry.

Generally had a great time.

Together all of us said our final farewells to my Mom and tossed her ashes into the Baltic as she had wanted.

Then Sharon and I bicycled back up the coast to Helsinki along the historic King’s road.

Day 11  Friday August 24 Matilda to Hanko

We were up early. We had a big day ahead. The final push to Hanko.

The challenge of the day would be our route. We now knew enough to know that our bike computer had us riding many miles on gravel roads. Those dashed lines on our paper map were a dead give-away, and gravel was not for us. 

We came up with a plan, but first another wonderful Finnish breakfast. 

Then, we picked up a loaf of fresh bread from the baker behind Terho and lashed it on top of our trunk bag. Sharon and the baker had hit it off the day before, when Sharon was exploring. The baker threw in a couple of most appreciated extra treats.

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Sharon’s baker friend

After leaving the woods of Matilda the roads got bigger and and the traffic picked up

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We took the smaller side roads where we could. And were rewarded accordingly.

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Our rear bag bread shrank as the miles added up.

We had some nice wide smooth roads through some big trees.

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We finally hit the main route to Hanko a bit worse for wear, and running empty on water.

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We were huddled over our map, plotting our next move, when a car pulled up. 

Remarkably it was Saila. Helsinki family headed south to Hanko. We asked her how she knew it was us. 

“Not too many tandems in Finland.”

5 minutes earlier or later, and we would have missed each other. 

Synchronicity Magic. 

Perhaps it was the bag of my Mom’s ashes in the back of the car. Who knows? 

In any case, it was all for the good. 

Saila took our water bottles back up the road for refills. On her return we transferred our bike bags to her car. Another blessing. 

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We were able to ride the last 20 miles into Hanko on an unloaded bike. We followed the bike paths when available. We would veer off onto pieces of the old road to Hanko when directed. Once again weather was threatening. 

We arrived in Hanko only a bit damp. A half hour later, the heavens opened up.

By then we were safe and sound in Liisa’s house.

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Days 12 & 13; August 25 & 26;  0 miles 

My great grandfather Alexander and Liisa’s great grandmother Fredrika and were brother and sister. Our families diverged when all 5 of Alexander’s children and his wife emigrated to the USA in the early 1900s.

Liisa’s family, and Alexander, stayed in Finland.

The photo below from the 1880s is Alexander, his wife Heta, and probably my grandfather’s older brother Abraham, the first born. 

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Alexander and Heta’s was a family-arranged marriage. It didn’t work out. From what I gather, he was more refined intellectual than businessman. Heta was a bottom line kind of gal.

After the split-up, Alexander wrote a book, “The Pitfalls of Marriage.” No copies survive that I am aware of, but the title does kind-of say it all.  

I feel for the guy.

Hi marriage hit the rocks. His wife left him. And to top it off all of his children and ex-wife emigrate to the USA and he never sees any of them again.

Liisa says her side of the family held Alexander in high regard. He was said to be a thoughtful, responsible, and all-round nice guy. He had beautiful handwriting and a prodigious memory. Story has it that he memorized the whole Bible. 

Apparently all this wasn’t enough for Heta. 

In 1901, Alexander’s 2nd son Peter, my grandfather, was working in Helsinki as a watchmaker and engaged to the bosses daughter Signe, when he was drafted by the Russians to fight the Japanese. The photo below is from that time.

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Peter was a tough guy, faced with hard choices. He chose to emigrate to the USA, where eventually he married my grandmother Tyyne, another Finn, in 1919. By then he was an established successful businessman owning a jewelry store in Duluth MN.

Tyyne was a catch, if you like young, really smart, no nonsense, professional women, which apparently my grandfather did. Tyyne was an MD.

By all accounts theirs was a happy marriage. Complicated, but happy. I wish I had known them, but I grew up a couple of thousand miles away in California. But that’s another story.

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But Peter never forgot Signe back in Helsinki, keeping her gold snake ring his whole life, hidden away: engraved with her name inside the band. My Mom found it sorting through odds and ends. 

Years ago I nabbed it. I didn’t care about the story, I simple liked the look. The diamond on top of the snake head was the clincher.

I’m still wearing the ring as I write this. I find it curious that the ring and its memories have survived more than a 100 years. 

When Peter emigrated to the USA, he left from Hanko, the southernmost port in Finland. Because of its location and the mild sea climate, Hanko was the only harbor open year round.

In the early 1900s, Finland was ruled by Russia and a popular destination for Russian nobility who built quaint charming summer homes, restaurants, casinos and so forth. Much of that charm lives on today, including Liisa’s house.

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We were all up early. The next two days were pretty much open. Plenty of time for laundry, a visit to the robot boat, mushroom hunting, sightseeing, a swim in the Baltic, and a farewell to Mom.

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Great to have access to a washing machine
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Our visit to the Finnish “Robot” Boat
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Mushroom hunting

When the hour finally arrived to send my mother on her way. The four of us piled into Liisa’s car and headed for Mannerheim’s Café. It had closed for the day.  We had the place to ourselves.

We walked around back to the rocks on the Baltic. On a rock outcropping, a millstone was setup as a table. This was the place. On cue, the sun dropped down below the clouds. All was still, save for the waves gently lapping.

Saila and Liisa had brought the champagne and glasses. I brought Mom’s ashes. 

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Saila poured the Champagne

Time to say goodbye. 

Almost.  

We needed a cup or spoon or something to scoop ashes. In an ah-ha moment Liisa remembered the wooden, antique, hand carved Finnish bowl, spoon, plate and ladle we had brought as house warming gifts.

They had come down in my family through my Mom. It had seemed fitting they return to Finland. 

Twenty minutes later Liisa was back. The wooden implements were perfectly practical and appropriate. 

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We toasted my Mom. I seem to remember saying something along the lines of: she did it her way. And that she was a bit of a free- spirit. Both creative and stubborn. Not an easy path.

Each of us took turns tossing her ashes into the sea, as we said our final goodbyes.

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We said our final goodbyes

I think my Mom would have been most pleased. She never explained her reasoning behind her request to have her ashes thrown into the Baltic here, and I never asked why. But, I think I know.

Many angles. Clever woman. 

Her ashes were to be returned to the homeland of her spirit. Hanko was both a gesture respect to her father, and Liisa’s family. And, our coming to Finland, would be a bonding between favorites in both family lines.

She was very attached to both Liisa and Saila. I suspect that she hoped that both would be here to send her off. Which is how it happened.

Well done Mom. 

Our next stop was a beach for the bonfires and fireworks of the end of summer celebration. The bonfires were pagan tradition. The fireworks, a 21st century Hanko icing-on-the-cake. 

We had been in Hanko for the festival in 2005, on another beach. A far more vivid and raw experience. The bonfire that night had been big as a house. The guy next to me, had handed me a bottle of a horrible, awful, stiff, licorice drink. I had looked up the coast and could see huge bonfires on islands disappearing up into the archipelago. 

This iteration felt a bit too refined. Candles were placed along the water’s edge every 10 feet or so. I’m not sure if there actually was new age background music, but there were lighters, swaying and singing-along, so I think there was.

No matter. The magic was still there, swaying lighters and all. Fireworks coupled with the poignancy of Winter’s knock above the 59th parallel. 

Suspect Mom would have approved.

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Day 14; August 27 Hanko to Inkoo

Our mission accomplished, we still had another 2 days and 89 miles up the coast to Helsinki. The first stretch would be a retracing of our ride down the peninsula to Hanko. 

Not all that exciting.

Liisa suggested that we take the local train up to Raseborg, knocking a big chunk of mileage off the day. Not much downside as long as our tandem would fit on the train. A short field trip confirmed it would.

We rode our tandem to the station. Liisa drove over to see us off.

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We had purchased our tickets the night before online – 2 pensioners & 1 bicycle. It’s kind of an honor system with a big stick. Every now and then someone inspects for tickets. If you don’t have one you pay not only for the ticket, but also a very stiff inspection fee.

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Our bike strapped in next to us, we settled into our seats. It was the Monday morning commute. The young woman opposite us was putting on her face. Sharon had the window seat. In a stretch through the woods, she saw a young moose – watching our train roll by.

It wasn’t long before we were in Raseborg. Far larger commuter crowds were ready to board. Once off the train we found a quiet spot to put ourselves together and come up with a plan. We were far off our computer-based route and would have to find our way on our own.

10 miles later we were back on our coastal route. We had passed the test.

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While we were standing by this sign, we got a good news email from Gunilla at Westerby Gard, our inn for the night. They would be opening their kitchen that night for a group which had just booked. Were we interested in dinner as well?

Yes!

The next stretch was the oldest road in Finland once linking Sweden and Russia. It’s also the likely route my grandfather took in 1902 when he traveled from Helsinki to Hanko and then on to the USA.

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Sharon still talks about about the wonderful, clean, fresh, cutting smell on this stretch. I suspect is was the ozone after the rains. Or perhaps it was just the earth at the end of summer in these parts of rural Finland. 

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Cheesecake and Coffee on the Museum Road

We stopped for cheesecake and coffee on a special section designated as a “Museum Road”. It was great riding- no traffic, scenic, rolling and winding.

And the sign confirmed that indeed we were at ground zero for historic roads in Finland – in four languages – Finnish, Swedish, English and German :

“Fagervik museum road follows the route of the medieval Great Coastal Road from Turku to Vyborg. The coastal road ran along the southern coast through the oldest parishes and ports. It is not known when the road was first established, but it is considered to be Finland’s oldest road.

Evidence of the age of the road includes 15th century records of bridges across branches of the mouth of the river Kymijoki. The coastal road was a national highway between Sweden and Russia and also a connecting link between castles of Turku and Vyborg.”

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The magic came to an abrupt halt when we hit route 186. We had choices. Gravel roads, or big roads with big trucks? We had sworn off gravel roads, but the semi’s were articulated and the shoulders were pretty much not there. 

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Gravel it would be. We crossed route 186 and rode on the as-it-turned-out, not so bad gravel road to Inkoo and Westerby Gard. 

I was expecting Westerby Gård to be interesting and charming. It didn’t disappoint.

Set on a 17th-century farm in the Inkoo archipelago, Westerby Gård was a relaxed, clapboard hotel in the middle of nowhere. But only a bit over an hour or so, by car, from Helsinki, it catered to sophisticated folks looking for a break from the rat race.

Sharon made friends with Gunilla’s dog, we unloaded our bags, and then I parked the tandem in the barn.

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Sharon, Gunilla and a new friend

The dining area had a white theme. Check out that white wood stove! You won’t see too many of these. 

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After showering and relaxing it was time for dinner. We asked if we could eat early, before the group. No problem. Thanks Gunilla.

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It was all pretty much perfect for our last night on the road. Good food. Good drink. Nice folks. Great bed. Farmland quiet.

Day 15; August 28 Inkoo to Helsinki

After a great breakfast, we checked out, loaded the bike, and waved goodbye to Gunilla. We thought for the last time, but au contraire, we would see her later up the road.

Our last day of riding from Inkoo to Helsinki started with a few miles of gravel road. We stopped for this pic at the fork. 

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It was a nice gravel road.

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Then we were back once again back on the King’s Road which had stretched from Oslo to St Petersburg. Some of the old forgotten granite road markers had survived the centuries. Sharon noticed them first. No surprise there. 

After the third or fourth marker, I finally stopped for a closer look. These were the real deal from days long gone by. 

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Then my phone started ringing. In Finland I never answered my calls. USA robo-calls were forwarded and if I answered, I paid. 

For some reason I answered this one. It was Gunilla.

Did I still have our room key? A quick pat on my back jersey pocket confirmed that I did. 

I had meant to pass it over at check-out, but the conversation was very entertaining and I hadn’t.

This was a very valuable key. Ironically, Sharon and I had joked about the sign in our room, that if the key was lost, there would be a 200 Euro charge. 

It looked like the joke would be on us. 

Gunilla said, “No problem. I’ll come get it. Where are you?”

Well, we were about an hour out, by bicycle, which was only 20 minutes by car for Gunilla. We explained about where we were. She suggested, we not move, so we didn’t. 

As we were waiting, up strolled a guy with a charming little dog. He was also a bicyclist, and we shared stories as Sharon made another friend.

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Gunilla pulled up and we passed over the 200 Euro key. All’s well that ends well. A tip of the hat to Westerby Gård.

Back on the road, we passed a few more historic granite road markers along the old wooded rolling rural road, and then abruptly the mood shifted as we hit the extended Helsinki suburban sprawl. 

The bad news was that we exchanged the woods for 21st century strip malls and heavy traffic.

The good news was that we had bicycle paths and were into our home stretch. Soon we were paralleling the freeway to Helsinki. 

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Some paths crossed bridges. I didn’t take any pictures of the crazy twisting bike paths in obscure neighborhoods. Bike computer humor.

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By early afternoon we were approaching Helsinki. We had been worried about rain all day. Roads had been wet from recent showers, but we were lucky. Only a few scattered drops.

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After one last bridge we arrived in Helsinki. We stopped shortly thereafter at this public sculpture. It was really big and kind-of wedged onto plaza alongside big traffic.

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This 50 foot high, black-painted, aluminum sculpture is named “Rumba.” The official interpretation is that: 

“Rumba’s lively figure has inspired a host of interpretations. Some have seen it as the Nike, the winged god of victory from Greek mythology while others have taken it as a depiction of the dynamics of movement, referring only to itself as is typical of the 1990s modernist sculpture. The title is a reference to music, and in Martti Aiha’s opinion, it also refers to the “Rumba” of the passing traffic.”

The back story is that Alko, the Finnish government-owned alcohol company, donated the sculpture as part of its 60th anniversary. Alko’s headquarters are nearby. 

To me this sculpture epitomizes the Finns evolving relationship with alcohol. Something of a twisted tale. 

Back in 2005 my Mom told me that Finns have a reputation for liking to drink, but our family in Finland didn’t drink at all. Suspiciously, this line was repeated far more often than necessary. 

Once in Finland, Sharon and I exchanged amused and knowing glances, at each meal, when the wine came out, then were the mid-afternoon cocktails and the after dinner apertifs. Might have been some schnapps as well.

Mom loved it. Held her own. Never mentioned family drinking habits again.

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Photo above is from Hanko 2005. Liisa’s mother Kaija is on the left. Fun, generous woman and a beauty in her day. The boy next to her is Erik, Kaija’s grandson and Hannu’s son. Lisa’s brother Hannu had married German and lives in Majorca.

Which kind-of explains how Erik grew up to be a talented Finno-German musician who raps in Spanish. 

Erik

We wove our way into Helsinki, on the city’s bike paths. Left of the tree- bike path. Right of the tree – pedestrians.

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We pulled up to Hotel F6 in the early afternoon. Our friend Riku at the front desk, was happy to see us. He knew our story and plan and like many along the way, I suspect wasn’t sure we’d make it.

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Riku went for coffees and we exhaled.

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We walked the bike into the courtyard and pulled our bags off. Doesn’t look like all that much for two people, 13 days on the road. Then again, less is better – doubly so on a tandem. No regrets.

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We took the bike apart and started packing it up. Then it was time for showers and out on the town for a great dinner. 

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Day 16; August 29 Back to Boston

We finished packing in the morning and had a relatively smooth return to Boston.

Liisa picked us up for the drive to the Helsinki airport, but we had time to spare so we headed to her Helsinki apartment. We chatted, met her cats, and enjoyed the view.

She had a portrait on the wall.

Liisa explained that she had inherited it early. No one in the family seemed to like it. 

So Liisa asked us, “So who do you think it is?”

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Kaija Portrait

Of course, it was her Mom, Kaija.  The portrait is dated 1957.  So she probably would have been in her early 30s. 

I love this portrait, the severity and intensity. Although I never saw this side of Kaija. I knew it in my mother. Most knew her as polite, friendly, artistic, and fun. But underneath all that, there burned this same Finnish severity and intensity.

On the way to the airport, Liisa told us a Finnish saying, which explains nothing and everything. A bit of Finnish Zen if you will. 

Oma maa mansikka; muu maa mustikka.

My country strawberry; other country is blueberry. 

I remember thinking at the time, how it made perfect sense. 

Now, I’m not so sure.

The very Finnish state of mind was fading.

Finland 2: The Turku Archipelago

We crossed the Archipelago on the Northern Route from Åland to Kustavi. Kustavi was the northernmost point of our journey at about the same latitude as the southern border of the Yukon and the Northwest territories in Canada.

From Kustavi, we looped south on the well-known circular Turku Archipelago Trail and then back up to the Finnish mainland @ Kaarina on the outskirts of Turku.

From Kaarina it was around and down on the Finnish mainland to Mathildedal, home of hipsters and namesake of our granddaughter.

From Mathildedal, the next leg (and next post) would take us down to Hanko on the southern tip of Finland, at the Southeastern corner of the Archipelago.

It would have been far more straightforward, and adventurous, to travel south through the inner archipelago from Korpoström, the southernmost town on the Ring Road, through the inner Archipelago to Hanko via water buses and ferries.

But it wasn’t meant to be. And not for want of trying. We were just too late in the season. Ferries had shut down and critical waterbuses had suspended operations for the year.

The Inner Archipelago will have to wait for another day.

Day 7  Monday August 20 Vardo Island to Kustavi

I breathed a sigh of relief when we pulled up to the ferry at Hummelvik. There were lines of cars and trucks, waiting to board. We pulled up and took our place. Then we noticed a few bicyclists upfront and to the side. We rode around and hung out with them. 

Motor vehicles board first, bicyclists last. 

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The Hummelvik ferry- A 6 euro 2.5 hour scenic ride from Hummelvik to Torsholma

Once on the ferry, we lashed our bike to a rail with our trusty plastic covered steel/kevlar cinch lock. We weren’t expecting choppy water, but you never know. Then we headed upstairs to the lounge where everyone hung out.

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We found a home upfront at a corner window and when the cafe opened, Sharon headed off to place an order for meat pies, another culinary favorite of the archipelago. 

We were both a bit stunned when they were delivered.

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meat pies

Where to start? We tentatively picked them up and took a couple of bites. An elderly gentleman and his wife at the next table were watching. He got got up and disappeared. A couple of minutes later he reappeared with knives, forks and napkins – and mustard and ketchup, which he placed as if he were a waiter. He returned to his table without a word. 

And then we all laughed.

Sharon scoured the lounge for reading material. After her morning Swedish lesson, she konked out. 

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The ferries had great public WiFi. I checked email and so forth and then took a stroll up top outside to watch the archipelago slide by. Another couple, also dressed spandex, were doing the same. We struck up a conversation. They were Austrians, probably in their late 30s, riding mountain bikes, out for the day. Clearly in great shape, and having a good time.

“Yeah, we love Scandinavia for bicycling, our next stop will be Norway for Birken, the world’s largest MTB race.”  They weren’t worried about the race or much else for that matter. I was starting to relax.

At noon, the ferry arrived in Torsholma, we were last off – after the cars and trucks and after all the other bicyclists. We took our time as we walked down the metal grating of the ramp.

So began our ride across the Åland archipelago municipality of Brändö which consists of over one thousand islands, ten of which are inhabited and connected to each other by bridges, causeways and small ferries.

The municipality covers an area 634 square miles: 39 square miles of land and 595 square miles of water. Population 465. 

Those 465 have their own coat of arms, which pretty much sums the situation up perfectly. Birds and fish, but no people.

Brändö coat of arms wikipedia
Brändö coat of arms

We loved Brändö. Quintessential archipelago. A highlight of the trip. Our road below.

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Borrowed Aerial photo Brändö

In planning, I would joke, that I hoped we wouldn’t fall off the edge of the world.

Afterwards I say, that while we didn’t fall off, we did get to peer over the edge – While thinking of Brändö. 

Not surprisingly, there was no traffic, as virtually no one lives here and virtually no one passes through. Beautiful undulating roads, with postcard-perfect Baltic vistas in every direction. 

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Sharon on road- taken on one of the curves in the causeway in the aerial photo above

Curiously the landscape itself reminded me of one of my favorite places, the high Sierras in California above Tuolumne Meadows – gnarled low wind-swept trees and glaciated granite. Curiously, because Tuolumne Meadows is upwards of 8600 feet in elevation and alpine. Here we were perhaps 10 feet in elevation in a landscape flat as a pancake. 

 We had one more long ferry ride to reach the other side of the archipelago. We pulled up at the ferry landing. Just as a ferry was about to leave. It was smaller than I’d been expecting and I hesitated. Next thing I knew, it was too late. The ferry was pulling away.

I kicked myself for the next 45 minutes, until I looked more carefully at the posted ferry schedule. Thank god we hadn’t rushed on. 

Another on of those life lessons: There is one thing worse that missing your ferry –

Getting on the wrong one. 

As it turned out, we had time to kill. A couple of most-entertaining Lithuanian cyclists were waiting with us. A filmmaker and a bio-tech grad student. Mid twenties, they had bicycled their way over from Helsinki and were now heading back to Lithuania.

They had been stopping at yard sales across the archipelago, and showed us their treasures. We offered them one of our favorite energy bars … on one condition: 

That we get a Garuka Bar photo, which we had promised the makers after telling them of this adventure. Photo below:

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Garuka Jonas

After the photo shoot, it was fishing for dinner. A few bites, but no catch.

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And then Sharon and I posed for a photo.

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I wore my “Bike NYC 2018” jersey the first half of the trip, because I thought it was amusing. Sharon thought it was tasteless, which I also found amusing. I stashed it away in the home stretch after deciding she was right.

Our ferry finally did arrive and it was a big one.

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We settled back and watched the archipelago slide by.

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There was some traffic on our route

The cafe opened and we offered to buy a round of ice-cream for our Lithuanian friends.

All of us went for the most unusual ice-cream bars – chocolate covered vanilla ice-cream with a licorice core with hot pepper. 

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You probably have to be a Finn to like them. Once in a lifetime was enough for us. The Lithuanians were of a similar mind. 

Once off the ferry, we thought it would be a straight shot to Petersen’s Boathouse, our evening destination. It would have been, if we had had a good GPS signal. 

As it was, we lost 45 minutes on a dead-end ride, one turn too soon, which took us into a forest, then onto a dirt road and finally to a loop of cabins at the end of the line.

We backtracked and eventually arrived at our destination.

Home sweet home in cabin #9 at Peterzens Boathouse below.

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We liked Petersen’s: nice folks, great food, sophisticated design, and antique boats. We were now in the Turku archipelago – the Finnish side. No more Swedish. 

I had been thinking of showering in the sauna, but on second thought, passed when the only signs were in Finnish for “Men’s” and “Women’s.” Which would you choose: Naiset or Miehet? No graphic clues provided.

Peterzens was more marina that B&B – a Finnish boat resort, if you will. And a nice one at that.

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Only an of hour by car from Turku, the oldest city in in Finland, and a tech center today, Turku’s prosperity and sophistication had reached Peterzens. 

Day 8  Tuesday August 21 Kustavi to Nauvo

The weather looked good for our ride into the heart of the Turku Archipelago.  This would be a full day of island hopping: The big islands: Iniö, Houtskär, Korppoo, and Nauvo.  Smaller islands: Jumo, Mossala, Björko.

At breakfast at Peterzens when we asked about the antique sailboats moored outside, we were told,

“They belong to the big men.” Translation: The high-end wealthy, probably from Turku. 

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Another couple were eating off by another window. Interesting match: He was older- 50ish, perhaps 145 lbs, a bit grey and grizzled, and on the short side. She was much younger- 30ish, perhaps 170 lbs, blond and vigorous, and at least a head taller. 

Clearly they got along just fine and had been together for a while. I thought to myself, 

“Way to go Finland.”

We checked out of our cabin and headed for the ferry. 

We arrived just in time. Rolled right on along with the Lithuanians, the odd couple from breakfast and a couple of Germans.

The seemingly-mismatched couple from breakfast were not Finnish after all, but another couple of Americans. 

Good folks from Brooklyn. He had been in a motorcycle accident and bicycling was therapeutic. They had taken a flier on a self-guided tour and had ended up here, in the Turku archipelago. 

Once we were rolling, we geared up. Pretty good country for tandems. We started passing the other bicyclists. One of the last was the German couple. 

We had chatted on the ferry. He had been trying to get a rise out of us by calling us “Asshole Americans,” which we found rather amusing. After a while he started calling himself an “Asshole German,” which he kind of was.

When the ferry had arrived at Mossala, he had sprinted off, leaving his girlfriend trying to catch up. First we caught her, and then eventually, we passed him. We smiled and waved. He grimaced.

Shortly thereafter we stopped for photos. He flew by. And after a bit, his better half rolled by as well. Photos below.

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We crossed paths for the last time at the next ferry. Sharon asked him if he was a doctor.

He looked incredulous, “How did you know?”

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“It was your use of Angioplastik.” 

Angioplasty is a fancy word for hip replacement, which Sharon unconsciously delivered in dead-on German. Score one for the Asshole Americans.

Sharon noticed that Oreos were being sold on the ferry for 1 euro each or $1.14 ±. We had been going through a misguided junk food = bicycling food thing right before this trip and it just so happened we were loaded with Oreos.

Which Sharon found most amusing.

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Before the trip, I had worked out our daily routes and entered them into our RideWithGPS software on our laptop, which then, thanks to some cloud-magic provided turn-by-turn directions for our Wahoo Elemnt Bolt Bike Computer monitored by Sharon. 

For the most part I just had to enter the beginning and the end of each day and our software generated the route.

Which worked pretty much flawlessly as long as we had a dependable GPS signal. We did have a wrinkle though- for some curious reason, the software was partial to gravel roads – which we were not.

On the day’s home stretch into Nagu on Nauvo Island, we were directed North off the main road. The first mile with a tailwind was great, but then we hit the gravel. 

Decision time. 

The question was whether to continue and hope for the best, or turn around and fight the headwind back to the main road. We forged ahead. 

Bad choice.

Scenery was great and there was zero traffic, but the gravel just kept on keeping on.  We rode slowly while I worried about our tires.

Our tandem is a road bike. We ride with 110 lbs of tire pressure. Not so great for gravel.  We blew out a tire in Italy after a gravel stretch. 

My mood was foul, as I waited for the blowout as we sliced ahead through the sharp rocks.

7 miles ± later we were back on pavement. We stopped for a break and looked around. Rich, slightly rolling farmland. A bit of forrest. It could have been our trial run in Vermont. I tenderly spun the tires against my riding gloves to scrape off the last of the gravel.

Perhaps all would be OK.  Which it was. But we made a vow to each other. No more gravel.

We had received a text message earlier in the day with a code for the front door of our evening destination, the Lanterna Hotel. We pulled up, entered the code and we were in.

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The key to our room was on the front desk as noted, and we made ourselves at home. After showers, it was off to dinner at the highly recommended L’Escale Restaurant, right around the corner. 

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L’Escale restaurant photo, courtesy of restaurant

Dinner was great. Seafood with a French influence. The good life. The archipelago has its own black bread, svartbrod. Pretty wonderful. Not many other customers. The high season had passed. School in Finland begins mid-August. All the better for us.

We turned in early, but not before a bit more Duolingo Swedish study for Sharon. We still hadn’t seen anyone from the hotel. Mr. Tandem was happy to serve as an overflow clothesline. We had hung the rest outside on an empty clothesline, “For Hotel Use Only.” 

No harm, no foul.

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Day 9  Wednesday August 22 Nauvo to Kaarina

Today we would loop back up out of the archipelago into the urban suburbs of Turku. 

I am up early. So I took a walk. Nagu is a most pleasant resort town. 

Our ride in below:

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180 degrees from the above was another view of the L’Escale restaurant- the white building centered on the road in the distance. 

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I still hadn’t seen anyone from the hotel & we needed breakfast. Concern flickered.

On return, from the bustle and aromas, it was clear all was well. After a chat with the proprietress we would be in for entertainment as well. 

Breakfast on the enclosed sun porch was totally wonderful. See below. Eggs – cooked to order – not shown.

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The decor of the hotel was a reflection of the personality of the proprietress. Scandinavian minimalism it was not.

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The walls were full of pictures, a kaleidoscope of genres and intent. A bit of hardcore religion here, a bit of kitsch there, and in between primordial landscapes. This woman was not blocked.

Along the way she explained that property values were up in Nagu, approaching those of Helsinki. Our Helsinki relatives rolled their eyes on hearing that one.

Back on the road it was soon clear that the remote stretches of the archipelago were behind us. Traffic picked up and the roads were sized accordingly. In a half hour or so we reached Pargas ferry – our 11th – and last of the trip. 

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Soon we were on bike paths, which we rode the last 15 miles or so into Kaarina. The Finns take their bike paths seriously – to their credit. Wherever possible, traffic is separated.

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A stretch of one path had been used for construction access. 

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Our bike path crossed bridges. The one below was the last of the archipelago.

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As we made our way into the suburbs of Turku, our path ducked under cross traffic with bike/ pedestrian underpasses. A nice touch. No broken glass in the tunnels. For that matter we didn’t find broken glass anywhere on our route. 

When we pulled up to Väliaikaisasunto, our inn/hostel for the night, we noticed what seemed to be a “Beware of Dog” sign in some language or other. Not Finnish or Swedish. Looked like Polish and was: Exact Translation: “Bad Dog and the Owner Even Worse”

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And thus we were introduced to “Believe in Santa Claus”, the biggest dog I have ever met. 100 kg or 220 lbs. 

A totally nice guy too. And yes that was his full name.

Generally though he went by “Bélieve”, English, accent on first syllable.

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We asked about his breed, and were told “Danish Dog.” Which as best we can tell is a Broholmer, a descendant of Viking dogs, crossbred with Great Danes and English Mastiffs. 

 “Bélieve” had an artificial knee, made in Estonia. Surgery in Switzerland. He was 6 years old. The third Broholmer of the couple running the place.

We parked our tandem by Bélieve’s mattress in the carport on the other side of the fence, confident that no one was going to bother it.

Relaxing in our room, we heard Bélieve bark, though the word doesn’t do the sound justice. It was a foghorn burst, rolling out in the lowest of registers.

Väliaikaisasunto was closer to hostel than B&B. We had a private room, but the toilets were shared and downstairs. No food provided. We asked about destinations within walking distance for dinner and breakfast.

And settled on Hesburger for dinner. Hesburger is the king of fast food Finland with all the expected variations of burgers and fries. Founded in 1966 in Turku, there are now over 260 restaurants in 60 towns across Finland. 

The appealing Finnish twist for us were the Turkish-Mexican options.

We both ordered the Kebab Tortilla. A tortilla wrapped around kebab meat, iceberg lettuce, tomatoes, jalapeños and paprika mayonnaise. We found a table where we happily munched away, entertained by the drive-though on one side and indoor kiddie play area on the other. 

Back at Väliaikaisasunto we climbed the stairs to our room. We nodded greetings to the smiling guy in the hall, still dripping from the sauna, wearing nothing but a towel. Fell asleep to the wind in trees and the traffic noise from the divided highway down the hill.

Day 10  Thursday August 23 Kaarina to Matilda

We stopped for breakfast at Naantalin Aurinkoinen Oy on our way out of town. Bélieve’s Dad had told us, “Best Breakfast in Kaarina.” It was far from fancy, but pretty great.

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Pastries to die for. Avocado and feta lettuce and tomato on toasted focaccia. Best focaccia we have ever had. When we told the cute young platinum blond at the register we were headed for Mathildedal, she blinked unknowingly. Clearly a Turku local. 

We followed the bicycle paths out of town, but soon they dribbled out. We rode on the highway for a while, but soon we were faced with a decision. Stay on the main highway or take the longer secondary route?

It was an easy choice, our nice wide shoulder had disappeared and the traffic had picked up. And our bike computer sided with the longer more scenic route. We gave in and turned north towards the town of Paimio. 

Traffic into Paimio was on the heavy side, but we had a shoulder. We worked our way through the Paimio bike paths and headed south and east. After a couple of turns, the traffic was gone and the landscape opened up into rolling farmland. It was mid morning. Clouds threatened, but that was all. 

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We saw more tractors than cars on this stretch. We rode by a remarkable log house, and then looped back for a closer look. Check out the hay bale on the front corner.

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Not a soul was around. We found out later that it dated from the 18th century and perhaps had been a hunting lodge for Swedish royalty when they were in the mood for roughing it. The door couldn’t have been more than 4 foot 6 inches tall. 

My Finnish grandmother Tyyne might have had to duck. But not much.

Soon we were in the town of Salo, and turned south into a headwind. Threatening, but no rain yet. 

Mid Afternoon we pulled into Mathildedal, having outrun the wet weather. 

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Our inn for the night, was Sypressi, an 1840s log house in the middle of Mathildedal perhaps 100 feet from the sign above. Right off Sharon was fast friends with Mr. Dog. He wasn’t so sure about me.  

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We were staying in the Matilda Room. Our granddaughter’s name is Matilda so it was pretty much perfect. 

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This place was the real historic deal, with log walls inside.

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Our friends at hotel F6 in Helsinki had quipped, “All the hipsters are in Matilda,” which seemed to us, an odd comment to make about a small town in rural Finland, pretty much in the middle of nowhere.

We were curious.

We know from hipsters. Our son and his family live in Williamsburg, Brooklyn NY. Ground zero for hipsters in the USA. Walk down the street in Williamsburg and get a preview of what will be media-celebrated, as the latest fashion trends, 6 months hence.

Back home in Massachusetts, we play a game, walking through Harvard Square – “Guess who’s from Williamsburg.” Lots of pretenders. Few keep pace.

We wandered over to Kyläravintola Terho, the eatery next door. Terho bills itself as Mathildedal’s living room. Local craft brews, food, live music and so forth. 

Terho photo below is from Cosmopolitan Magazine.

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I was most pleased to discover that they served flights of local craft beer. 

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We settled back into our pillows and struck up a conversation with the most pleasant, most stylish, late 20s-ish blonde at the next table. She was a local, kind-of.  

Owned a house in Mathildedal. She was “living with renovation”. Telecommuting now to Helsinki. She worked in advertising copy. We laughed about the complexities of the Finnish language. She said that even as a professional and a native speaker, she wasn’t sure sometimes, that she had it right.

Truth-be-told, she and her fashionable little dog were more Cosmo Magazine than Williamsburg hipster. Other young folk filtered in and out. One young guy had the eye of the girl behind the bar. 

He had come in with a very large, very clean, very expensive backpack, and had settled in on the other side of the room. I had no doubt that his body fat percentage was very low. He looked a bit like a model from a catalog. 

Mathildedal is surrounded by a national forrest, so that fit. But something was off.

Then it hit me, his leather boots were waxed just so, but there was no mud, no scuffs. His haircut fashionable. His clothes more distressed than worn out, and on the tight side.

He was a bit more self-aware of his appearance than the run-of-the-mill trail junky.

Bingo. Mathildedal Hipster.

We wandered down the hill towards our recommended restaurant Ruukkifest Oy, overlooking the marina on this, the southwestern, edge of the archipelago.

Almost there, Sharon spotted the alpacas so we had to head over for a closer look.

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A couple of things to note in the above photo. This alpaca had just been sheared and that’s me in the red bicycle jacket up the hill. I’m averting my eyes because I knew Sharon would not be deterred. She was going to pet this guy, no matter what the signs said. 

I didn’t want to be watching when her fingers were nipped off.

No fingers were lost and the wool was said to be wonderfully soft.

At Ruukkifest Oy, we had the best seat in the house. No one else was there. Our waiter was a mild-mannered, pleasant guy. One of those folks who had walked to the end of the plank. And jumped. Landed on his feet here in Mathildedal.

We struck up a conversation. Driving into work, he had passed us, on our way into Mathildedal. Once we said “Tandem”, he knew it had been us. Not too many on these roads.

From the Netherlands, he had fallen in love with a Finnish woman. She didn’t want to move, because she felt that the Dutch language would be too hard to learn. It was those “H” sounds. 

So here he was in Finland, struggling to learn Finnish, at least an order of magnitude more difficult. So how difficult is Finnish? 

Not so bad if you speak Mongolian. If not, well, Buena Suerte. Good Luck.

Finnish has no connection to Latin or Germanic language groups. The graphic below sums it up pretty well. 

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Lohi is salmon. Käärme is snake. So a dragon is salmon snake. Simple. ¿No?.

Not only are words unrecognizable, but Finnish has 15 grammatical cases and the smallest change in the end of the word can change its meaning.

Back at our inn, we turned in early. Terho next door was pumping out Cat Power’s “Greatest” CD onto their back patio, which was pretty much under our window. Chan Marshall was a NYC hipster, 10 years ago.

Still a favorite of mine. Some folks used to go to her concerts just to see if she would break down, which she did on a regular basis. 

Thankfully, soon it was quiet. Small-town-Finland quiet, and I was gone.

Next: Hanko & the Kings Road [add new link. This one is old]