Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Kangasalan jäähalli gives me the cold treatment

I had failed. Did not find skiable snow in May in Tampere. Not on the ski hills, not by the skating hall that was next to the swimming hall I went to. Nowhere. Until... I stopped for gas in Kangasala, and happened to see a glimpse of the coveted white stuff. Finally, a cold treatment! 

Recycled snow and frozen hockey player spit, served by the Kangasala skating hall. Nice!

I was coming back from the cottage, where I remote worked:

The skating hall's home page is here. Inside they have two skating rinks, after an expansion. But their snow is always outside, if there's any, no entrance fees or bookings needed for that...

Read the full Planetskier series at planetskier.net, or all blog articles from BlogspotTGR. Photos, videos, and text (c) 2025 by Jari Arkko. Photos in saunas and water have been taken when no one else was present.

Sunday, May 11, 2025

Tampere swims

I did my first proper visit to the summer cottage in early May, did a quick dip to the lake from the cottage sauna, but a more proper swim was on the way to the cottage in Tampere, at the Tesoma swimming hall. This is a small swimming hall, but quite a positive surprise. Five pools, including a cold dip pool and a jumping platform pool that doubles as a warm therapy pool. Nice.

This is the newest of Tampere's many swimming halls, built in 1998. It was recently renovated for the dressing rooms. Unlike most other swimming halls in Finland, the dressing rooms are joint for men and women, with personal cabins for changing clothes.

The pools are:

  • Main 25 meter pool (but with enough lanes)
  • Jacuzzi pool
  • Cold plunge pool
  • The jumping platform pool/warm pool
  • Kiddie pool

The official website is here. Single time entrance fee for adults is 8 €.

I also had my (mini) skis with me, in case the next door ice skating rink -- Tesoman jäähalli -- would have had some excess snow piled outside. Alas, no... no luck then. Ok.

Outside pictures from the swimming hall:


Cottage pictures, first two sauna pictures and then an overall view with the lake behind:

Ice skating hall:

For more sauna and swimming stories, check out planetswimmer.com and saunablogger.cool websites! And of course the Planetcaver, and Planetskier blogs for other stories in Blogspot and TGR! The photos and text (c) 2025 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved. I never take photos of saunagoers or swimmers, all photos are taken when the facility is closed or empty. In this case the pool photo is from Tampereen kaupunki and that Tampere.fi retains all rights to it.

Saturday, May 10, 2025

Mini-vacation in Forssa


Can I have an evening mini-vacation, swimming in the waves? Yes I can! Just drive to Forssa (only 104 km away from home) and enjoy the wave machine at the Vesihelmi spa. 

They have a 25-meter pool, two jacuzzis, the wave pool (itself almost the size of the 25-meter pool), a side pool with some water jets, a warm therapy pool, a cold (non-therapy?) pool, and a kiddie pool. Impressive!

Two saunas, nicely curving wooden seats, and one steam room. Not bad at all. Much recommended. 

Here's the link to their web page, and the corresponding Forssa city page. It is now closed for renovations from May 11th, 2025 though.

Photos, first their brochure:


Pool (from their website):


Construction style around the site:


The building from the street:


For more sauna and swimming stories, check out planetswimmer.com and saunablogger.cool websites! And of course the Planetcaver, and Planetskier blogs for other stories in Blogspot and TGR! The photos and text (c) 2025 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved. I never take photos of saunagoers or swimmers, all photos are taken when the facility is closed or empty. In this case the pool photo is from vesihelmi.fi and that website retain all rights to it.

Sunday, May 4, 2025

Salish Lodge - Spa above the Snoqualmie Falls

Salish Lodge is a luxury hotel ledged right above the spectacular 82 meter Snoqualmie Falls. The falls and the lodge are iconic and well known, not least due to their presence in the 1990s TV series Twin Peaks. It is a wonderful park to visit, and the views really are something else, I think objectively a more beautiful place than the Niagara Falls, for instance. And the hotel is superb.

So is the restaurant. Wonderful food, never have had edible candle appetizer for instance :-) 

The spa is fairly compact though, compared to the outsize reputation of the hotel. There are two pools, but only one of the is usable for hotel guests, and there is just one Finnish sauna. Very nice spa, but be sure to book your visit, it is not guaranteed that there are slots for your visit. Hotel staff is very nice though, for instance we were able to visit the spa without any extra payment or reservation, luckily it happened to free at the time.

The falls continue to be spectacular, although some or perhaps most of the water is diverted to two power plants, one built inside the cliffs in 1899, and another one half a kilometer downstream in 1910. The plants are owned by Puget Sound Energy.  

The land was also owned by them (I think), but in 2007 the Muckleshoot tribe purchased the land surrounding the falls, and planned to develop the area with a hotel and homes. Arguments about building on this land that was sacred to the Snoqualmie people ensued. The place is a burial site and the location for their fabled history, "the place where First Woman and First Man were created by Moon the Transformer".

Then in 2019, the Snoqualmie Tribe purchased the lodge and the area surrounding it. 

The park by the hotel has viewing platforms on the cliff ledges above the river canyon, probably the best viewing spot. But there's a very nice path down to the river. Here you can see the 1910 power plant and the massive water pipes leading to it. You can also walk a few hundred meters forward on a platform built by the riverside, to view the falls from a different angle, at the river level. 

There's a lot of nature and trees on the path down to the river, much recommended. It does descend 100 meters though, so if you're not equipped to climb that back up you should know there's also a way to get to the same spot by the riverside by car. (Or get an Uber to haul you back up.)

The lodge home page is here, and more information from it can be found from the Snoqualmie Falls wikipedia page. Room prices at the lodge start from four hundred dollars per night even on low season weeknights.

More photos, first the hotel and falls:





Then the walk down the park trail to see view from the riverside:



Then the spa, first the private party pool (not for hotel guests) and then the sauna:


For more sauna and swimming stories, check out planetswimmer.com and saunablogger.cool websites! And of course the Planetcaver, and Planetskier blogs for other stories in Blogspot and TGR! The photos and text (c) 2025 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved. I never take photos of saunagoers or swimmers, all photos are taken when the facility is closed or empty. In this case the pool photos are by the Salish Lodge (from salishlodge.com) and they retain all rights to them.

Thursday, May 1, 2025

May turns on the melting slope

May ski turns on the melting local ski hill, some snow still left despite the early spring. Also a visit to the smoke saunas in Kuusijärvi that were empty due to the May Day.

Much of the snow on the Kauniainen ski hill has been stored again for next year, but some is left outside the covered pile as well. It is quickly melting, but even on the upper part there is enough to ski several turns. There's a thicker snow cover near the bottom, but that was further away from where I parked, so I skied the upper one. It was also steeper :-)

Probably not enough to stay for June, however.

This place has of course been my go-to-place for many, many years for May 1st ski runs. See for instance year 20112012, 2016201720202021, 2023, and 2024.

Video:


Grani:




Kuusijärvi:



Read the full Planetskier series at planetskier.net, or all blog articles from BlogspotTGR. For more sauna and swimming stories, check out planetswimmer.com and saunablogger.cool websites! Photos, videos, and text (c) 2025 by Jari Arkko. Photos in saunas and water have been taken when no one else was present.

Steigenberger Frankfurt Airport sauna & pool

I had an extra hour plus at the Frankfurt Airport, so instead of hanging around in the sorry Air France lounge (see another report), I decided to exit the airport and check out the spa the the Steigenberger hotel.

There's a nice and well lit pool, maybe 15 meters long (?). Then there's a separate sauna area, where there are two Finnish-style saunas (one hotter than the other one), one steam sauna, and showers. 

The cost to enter for non-hotel guests is high, €, but worth it :-)

I used a taxi to get to the hotel, though it turned out that it would have been easily walkable, too. And the taxis charged plenty, because they felt like they need to get big bucks from any airport rides, sigh. Oh well. I had a nice time at the spa! Much recommended.

It was quite challenging though to figure out which of the hotels around would actually take non-guests to their spas, most didn't. I'm glad Steigenberger did though!

More information here, here, and here.

For more sauna and swimming stories, check out planetswimmer.com and saunablogger.cool websites! And of course the Planetcaver, and Planetskier blogs for other stories in Blogspot and TGR! The photos and text (c) 2025 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved. No photos were taken inside the facility, the photo above from the pool is taken from the Steigenberger website, and retains their copyright and rights

Lufthansa business class upgrade for 55€

Sometimes the flight upgrades can be caught at a reasonable price. I got an offer for an upgrade to business class on a short Lufthansa intra-European flight, for only 55€. Took it. Got a nice meal and space for it, when tourist class would have been packed. 

At a different flight, when returning, I struggled to get the same upgrade. There was an offer for 110€ which I wanted, but it always failed upon payment. Of course the Lufthansa systems were at fault, they couldn't see upgrades expect at the check-in by this time, just before flight. But why wouldn't the offering web application know this? Sigh... lots to improve in airline IT systems :-) 

And, since I had combined two flights, my earlier flight was on Finnair. I turned out that I had been voluntarily upgrade by Finnair, one of the rare (3-4 times out of thousands). Nice!

Lufthansa, the lounge in Frankfurt and the meals:



On a later flight this is what I got:


Finnair:



For more flying stories, check out the planetflier.com website! And of course the Planetcaver, and Planetskier blogs for other stories in Blogspot and TGR! The photos and text (c) 2025 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved. 

DUFRY Business Club lounge in Belgrade

 

Since I had an upgrade on Lufthansa, I got access to another lounge, this time at the Belgrade airport. The DUFRY Business Club. Small but semi functional, and not too packed.

The lounge is one of the two (I think) lounges at the airport, the other one being for Air Serbia.

There are (limited) drinks and some sandwiches at the lounge.

The main downside is that there are no bathrooms in the lounge, they are just around the corner but unwelcoming/busy/in bad shape. 



Somewhat odd rules, or maybe it is odd that they feel they have to have such rules:

For more flying stories, check out the planetflier.com website! And of course the Planetcaver, and Planetskier blogs for other stories in Blogspot and TGR! The photos and text (c) 2025 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved.