Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Pilvijärvi swim

Small but cute. And very sandy. A most of all, near my work place in Kirkkonummi, just a 14 minute drive... good evening exercise. 

I swam back and forth near the shore for some time. Lots of kids and families in the hot summer evening.

This is a very small beach, small enough that it isn't even listed in Kirkkonummi's official swimming spots. Or perhaps it isn't listed as it is not maintained? But there is still a lifebuoy, and even a toilet. Odd.

Anyway, the only links I can give are the Google Maps link for the beach (coordinates N 60.07875 E 24.42359) and the Wikipedia entry for the lake. 

There's some amount of parking.

While the lake shores are generally low-lying, there are higher hills around, including a steep cliff entering the lake around the middle.

Photos:


This article has also been published at Planetswimmer.com here. Read the full series of swimming and sauna stories from planetswimmer.com and saunablogger.cool, or all blog articles from Blogspot and of course skiing articles from planetskier.net. Photos and text (c) 2026 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved. There are no photos of beachgoers or sauna visitors, and I generally visit when there are no other people present.

Summer car

My summer car in sunshine! 

Running smoothly with the engine repaired.

This article has also been published here. Check out other car stories in Blogspot, among the skiing and caving ones! Photos, videos and text (c) 2026 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Plaža Rogačić swim

A pristine beach, likely no one else visiting when you are. Even in the middle of the hottest tourist season. So pristine that marine life -- such as starfish or sea urchins -- like to hang out there. Still, the beach is easily accessible. This is Rogačić beach, a couple of kilometers north from the town of Vis on the island of Vis.

The beach is reachable from a small roadside parking place, by walking down a marked (but slightly difficult) trail.

The beach is rocky, and indeed there are sea urchins (black, furry/spiky looking things at the bottom) that you absolutely must not step on or touch. Or else there will be pain, severe stings can even be dangerous. Try to navigate around them for the few meters that are needed to exit the low sea 

Coordinates are N 43.07545 E 16.18208. More information here.

Photos:









Entry to the path down to the beach from the road:


This article has also been published at Planetswimmer.com here. Read the full series of swimming and sauna stories from planetswimmer.com and saunablogger.cool, or all blog articles from Blogspot and of course skiing articles from planetskier.net. Photos and text (c) 2026 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved. There are no photos of beachgoers or sauna visitors, and I generally visit when there are no other people present.



Tuesday, June 16, 2026

You have three choices

After engine work the Volvo now runs smooth, no leaks, all cylinders firing. The only question is does the owner have “all Moomins in the valley” when there’s a choice between an Amazon, a Jaguar, and then he picks the 740??

(I was picking up the car -- and a hefty bill -- after all the engine work that was done because the head gasket was broken, see the previous article (alt. link).)

This article has also been published here. Check out other car stories in Blogspot, among the skiing and caving ones! Photos, videos and text (c) 2026 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved.

Head gasket

What now? Head gasket… expensive repair ahead

This article has also been published here. Check out other car stories in Blogspot, among the skiing and caving ones! Photos, videos and text (c) 2026 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

No luck in Grani, no luck in Tampere

Sigh, more summer woes. Stopped at the Grani ski hill in Kauniainen, and Mustavuori in Tampere. Not a single spot of snow available in either. 

Well, in Grani there is a massive mould of snow, but it is covered by blankets, saving it for the coming winter. Not skiable.

Previous article in this series was from Turku. No luck there either (link, alt. link).

Grani:


Mustavuori:

This article has also been published at Planetskier.net here. Read the full Planetskier series at planetskier.net, and all articles in Blogspot. Photos and text (c) 2026 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved.

Lufthansa... IT

Yeah. Airline IT systems are a wonderful thing. Now Lufthansa's app is reporting that I have been collecting more points than most other people in the last three months. But I didn't fly with them at all during that time... 

And if I click on their special offer for that occasion, I get a 404.


Nothing new here, and Lufthansa isn't any worse than other airlines, but in general the industry's apps and websites do leave many things to be desired.

This article has also been published in Planetflier.com here. For more flying stories, check out the Planetflier.com website! And of course the Planetcaver, and Planetskier blogs for other stories in Blogspot! Photos, videos and text (c) 2026 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved.





Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Turku: skis, no snow, but at least there was a sauna

Wow, I dragged my skis here for 200 kilometers, but there's absolutely no snow left in Hirvensalo ski hill. Sigh. Late May and June really are difficult, just a few weeks earlier it likely would have been some snow left on the ski slopes. Oh well, at least my other activities during the day allowed me to visit a sauna.

The sauna was at the Turku YMCA's facilities, where the caving association was having a meeting (alt. link).

Skis in the back seat:

YMCA:


This article has also been published at Planetskier.net here. Read the full Planetskier series at planetskier.net, sauna and swimming stories from planetswimmer.com and saunablogger.cool, or all blog articles from Blogspot. Photos and text (c) 2026 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved.

Sunday, June 7, 2026

Research trip to Torhola

In June, the caving association did a combined research & training trip to Torhola cave in Lohja - Finland's largest limestone cave. The event was a in-cave training part of our basic caving course held by Ralf Strandell, the in-cave training was by Dare Talvitie and Jaakko Jääskeläinen, with five trainees (youngest was three). Jari Arkko was testing a new spatial information application that pinpoints where the cave is underneath on the map when you walk in the environment. Jari and Taina Nyman also scanned Torhola's two side caves. Dare, Taina, Jari and Jarmo Ruuth also observed flora and fauna in the cave.

That's a lot! Let's start unpacking the above with the new application. Jari had developed an application that can take as input cave coordinates, cave 3D models, and the orientation of those models with respect to the coordinate system. 

The application is used on the surface, and can then pinpoint in real time on a map display where the underlying caves passages are in relation to the user's position. This can be useful to understand where the cave is. It could reveal, for instance if there's any chance of finding additional entrances or points of the cave that are near the surface.

This is early work and needs further development. One of the issues observed during the test was the accuracy of GPS positions in phones. We observed +- 10 meter fluctuations, particularly in an area with foliage and cliffs. Similarly, the accuracy of the recorded cave coordinates and which part of the cave they point is an issue. There's also a need to obviously have either a 3D model or a plan view map to do this, and those need to be oriented in terms of their compass direction, altitude, and where on the map the published cave coordinates are.

Here's an example of using the system in its current state, with the blue dot showing where the user is and the black drawing indicating the outline of the cave underground.




Then to the training. This seemed to go very well, with some of the most eager cavers entering the lower tunnel from the basement of the Torhola cave from the outside. There's a rock blocking going to the actual cave, but we have not seen people go into this extremely small hole this far before. The hole is so small that only the people with thinnest bones can actually enter. Helmets, for instance, cannot be worn when entering, and even those who can enter need to twist and turn their body to go in. Well done!

What the small tunnel looks inside is shown in the opening picture of this article.

Here's a picture of what the entrance looks from outside:


Then to the scanning exercise. There are two side caves of the main Torhola cave, which we call Torhola 2 and Torhola 3. Their coordinates are N 60.252333 E 23.857586 and N 60.252292 E 23.857464, respectively. Torhola 2 is right behind the main cave and is small, the 3D model says 7 meters but some of that is probably not something a human can enter, the cave gets very low. Torhola 2 is larger and quite interesting to explore. The 3D model says 16 meters long, a dogleg shaped cave. The entrance is a crack that allows you to drop down to the cave.

Here is Taina and Jari scanning Torhola 2 & 3:




The Torhola 2 map can be seen in high-resolution here, the model downloaded here, and rotated in your browser here.

The Torhola 3 map can be seen in high-resolution here, the model downloaded here, and rotated in your browser here.

And here are the resulting 3D models and maps:





Finally, we looked especially carefully in Torhola 3 about if we can spot any living things or traces of them. The main occupants seemed to be spiders, of which there were plenty. The brave explorers in the lower tunnel of the main cave reported seeing many spiders there as well. 

In Torhola 3 there were also big roots growing through the floor of the cave and signs of organic material such as oak acorns/nuts.

Here are some pictures of the team looking Torhola 3, roots, and nuts, and spiderweb:







The cave is well marked, one of the most well-known caves in Finland. And a protected area. There's a parking lot with a sign pointing to the short trail leading to the cave:

This article has also been published at Planetcaver.net here. Read the full Planetskier series at planetskier.net, urban exploration stories from theurbanexplorer.net, and other underground stories from planetcaver.net, or all blog articles from Blogspot. Photos and text (c) 2026 by Jari Arkko, Jarmo Ruuth, and Taina Nyman. All rights reserved.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Karkalinniemi cliffs & devil's churns

An evening. Not enough time to drive to any swimming place before they close, but maybe I could look up a nearby cave that I have not been to yet. How about in Pumminmäki, Lohja? This is on the famous Karkalinniemi (Karkali peninsula) that hosts also Finland's premier karst cave, the Torhola cave.

But this time we are not looking at karst or limestone, we're looking at ... gneiss? Hard rock in any case. And we are looking at a massive devil's churn. Or rather what's left of it, maybe 40%. This massive devil's churn was formed during the ice age when rapid water flows captured a rock to act like a drill that over a long period of time drilled a hole in the ground rock. Only for that ground rock to later crumble and have half of the cliff fall away.

Very interesting. Coordinates are N 60.283873 E 23.909360.

This has been listed in the book of Finnish caves as a cave, but it is a borderline case. There's clearly no darkness here, but there's a shelter from rain from the negatively leaning face of the churn. But it is also pretty high, so doesn't feel closed.

Still, interesting. And part of why I'm doing this is to go to different caves known in Finland, and check out what there actually is, take photos for the caving association's map and database, make a cave map if relevant. And often I find other things around the main target, such as additional small caves. See further down in the article.

Here's a 3D model about the devil's churn: downloadable model, model to rotate the place on your browser.

The model shows that the furthest point that's under the "roof" is about 6 meters from how far the roof extends to. Quite remarkable negative lean on the this thing! I don't have an exact number on how high the roof is but my sensor readings reach to 8.5 meters higher from the ground, but the roof goes further than that.

Retkipaikka has some more information about this place.

Photos:


But on the way here I noticed two shelter caves on an earlier part of the cliff. Nothing spectacular, also borderline cave or not, but wanted to record them in any case. The first one was maybe 9 meters long and perhaps 1-2 meters sheltered. The second one was right next to the first one, and maybe 11 meters long and maybe up to 3 meters sheltered.

Location of the first one was N 60.282078 E 23.910886.

Photos:


Location of the seance one was N 60.282183 E 23.910822.

Photos:



This article has also been published at Planetcaver.net here. Read the full Planetskier series at planetskier.net, urban exploration stories from theurbanexplorer.net, and other underground stories from planetcaver.net, or all blog articles from Blogspot. Photos and text (c) 2026 by Jari Arkko. All rights reserved.