But, now having had a few days with Maarit in Helsinki which were full of great conversations about pretty much everything, and having had just begun conversations with Kai, my host in Tallinn, Estonia, I now have an answer, or at least an answer for the first wish.
Genie, I want to have a didactic memory. Or maybe it's an eidetic memory. Looking at the two I can't be sure based on the sketchy definitions I've come across. Maybe it should be two wishes. Ah heck, Genie, I want to have as good a memory and observational skills as Sherlock Holmes, the Benedict Cumberbatch one, and I'll take a pass on the heroin addiction and being such a prick to everyone, but maybe get me playing the violin again while we're at it.
This travelling thing would be a whole lot simpler if I just remembered everything I saw and heard perfectly. It may even improve the quality of information and prose in the blog. Sadly though nothing sprang forth from the teapot I rubbed in lieu of a lamp, so for now you're all stuck with my current skillset. Perhaps I'll try again in Marrakech.
And yes, there are lots of interesting things to read in museums and on plaques in parks and all sorts of other good places, but that information can be looked at again, or found online, or tatooed on your back. Conversations happen once. Okay, that's not true, and as a parent I should know better. We spend lots of time seemingly having the same conversation over and over, with kids, with spouses, with co-workers. So I will caveat that and say, good conversations only happen once. You can't go back and recapture a discussion. It happens. Then it is gone, except for what is left in our relatively flawed memories that we try and coax out into the open from time to time, or have spring upon us as some mnemonic unwittingly triggers one.
Said differently, I'm really enjoying talking to people and learning things and I wish I could remember it all. I actually hear this little voice in my head every so often going "please, please, please try to remember this part" as either Maarit or now Kai, or Noah and Jake, my cousins, Tanya and Simon, John and Helen, or anyone else who I've connected with along the way is talking. Perhaps if that little voice stopped interrupting I would remember more.
See, I decided to start with the digression right away this time and then just show somee pictures of Helsinki. Almost there.
Actually, I think we are there.
This is Maarit. She of the three wishes question, and my very lovely couch surfing host in Helsinki. Aside from chatting up a storm for a few days together, she was also kind enough to show me about bits of the city, share a few pints and meals, help me make sense of the public transit, and of course, gave me a comfortable couch to sleep on when I wasn't wandering the streets. Maarit teaches kids with different learning challenges, or "exception-abilities", which is a term I heard used at Noah's high school and which drives me totally batty. It's not a word people! Even with the hyphen. So yes, she works with some pretty difficult young children on a daily basis. This is likely what gave her the patience to talk with me.
This is her dog Pipo. Pronounce it like Peepo, which is, funnily enough, what Noah and Jake call my Dad.
Pipo is apparently the Spanish name for those beanie type hats. I will need to get one for my Dad. Peepo in his Pipo. Too bad Salvador Dali isn't alive to do the portrait.
Pipo, unlike my father, or at least I think so anyway, enjoys eviscerating his toys. And he does an excellent job of it. And then he wants you to play fetch with the carcass with him. Which also is fun, even if it doesn't travel too far.
Why my father is called Peepo is another story, which I may share, but I said I wouldn't digress.
Ah heck, it's short.
There was a cartoon the kids used to watch about a stuffed bear named Corduroy who, like all stuffed animals, came to life when the little girl who owned him left the room. So did all of the other animals. One of the other animals was this old one named Grumpa that they all called Pipo. Well, my Dad started as Grandpa, the ears of young Noah heard Grumpa (or perhaps it was my poor ennunciation), and then called him Peepo. This all happened at the Yorkdale Shopping Centre when we went to see Santa. We normally went to Dufferin Mall who have, in my opinion, the best Santa ever, but for some reason we were at Yorkdale, my father was with us, and Peepo was born.
This is me. I've gotten a few notes asking to see pictures of me more often, perhaps to prove that I have not been turned into an infinite number of monkeys with typewriters.
This is Helsinki Cathedral. It's at the top of the a steep, tall, staircase leading down to Senate Square. The square, Cathedral, and three other major buildings surronding the square were designed by Carl Ludwig Engel in the mid 1800's. If you're not familiar with Engel, just think of him as the Christopher Wren of Finland. Very prolific.
This time you get a diptych.
It's a lovely sounding organ, based upon the practice someone was doing that I got to listen in on for a few minutes. Sadly no Bach D minor.
This is from the top of the steps looking out over the square.
This is a better view, okay maybe just closer, so I'm saving you zooming, of what I'm pretty sure is the Government Palace.
This is Upsenski Cathedral, the largest Orthodox Cathedral in Western Europe. I've tried my best to make it look like the Bates' house, but it remains a lovely building despite my intentions.
No organ so instead you get this awesome altar/screen combo that dominates the space.
And it's essentially a square, so no long shots trying to show the whole place.
Perhaps this will become the standard for my Orthodox triptychs. We will all have to wait and see.
Honestly, the thing I did the most in Helsinki was walk. Outside. I didn't spend much time in museums, galleries, or the like. The exception is Suomenlinna, but I'll tell you about that another day. Tomorrow perhaps. And it's not that there aren't a plethora of museums, galleries, and such to go to. There are. And it's not like I'm not interested in such things as they relate to Finland, or as it is called there, Suomi. I am. Very. So I don't know. I just felt like walking, taking it easy, exploring, seeing what I saw without running after every scrap of information I could come up with. I even considered getting a Helsinki Card, which would have given me not only free access to loads of places, but also the incentive to scurry between them having already made the financial commitment.
I just walked, hung out with Maarit and Pipo, and had a really nice time doing so. Oh, and I took pictures, so that's pretty much what you're gonna get now.
Here is another view of Uspenski Cathedral.
It's not my fault it looks imposing, it's on a hill.
Helsinki has some great Art Nouveau Architecture, and if I've got my periods right, which quite possibly I do not, these are some of those buildings. In any case they're kinda nice.
This is Esplanade Park.
In 1808 most of Helsinki went up in smoke. Fire. Wood buildings. Bad. This apparently happens everywhere. Fire in Tonnwanda comes to mind.
Anyway, in 1812 they got a new city plan that made room for a promenade style park that would separate the new city from the remaining wood building community to the south. Bring in Wren. No, wrong century and country. Bring in Engel. Lovely, enduring design. Everyone goes to it. It's good to stroll along. Which is good given that it is a promenade.
There are a few statues in the park, and each of them has a QR code that you can scan to "hear the statue" talk. My phone was not up to the task so I have no idea what these statues say. I would suspect though that is more than "Please will someone wipe the seagull crap off my head" though, so if you're ever in Helsinki and want to scan a QR code thingy, then let me know.
This is the market down by the port near where the ferry I took from Stockholm came in. You know, in my last blog entry I had originally ended with pictures about the ferry trip, and then I cut them when I bothered to write some text, and at that time promised I'd get to them here. I'm not keeping that promise. No particular reason. It was a ferry/cruise boat. It takes about 18 hours to get from Stockholm to Helsinki. Many people take it there and back again on the weekend to essentially party for 32 hours, and buy tax free alcohol and cigarettes. It was fun. Met some neat people, enjoyed a few beer. If we're friends on Facebook then you know that part already. So ya, it got me to Helsinki.
And here's the market.
These are, I think she called them, Bait fish. Tossed in rye flour and fried in oil. Very tasty.
I have no idea if this was tasty, but it did look it.
Apparently Scandinavians are really big on mushrooms. I think I've mentioned the foraging aspect as well. Anyway, there was a market in Stockholm where the mushrooms were overwhelming there were so many, and I failed to get a picture. This picture is nowhere near as good as the other one, and how could it be as the other one does not exist, but yes, mushrooms. Revel in their glory.
Perhaps that could have gone up front. Not wanting to end at the beginning, here are a few more pictures of the city.
This fellow is what greeted us when we disembarked from the ship.
And this piece I believe is called Links, and is in City Hall, where they offer free WiFi. Given it's location right in the old town and by the port I think I have spent more time in the Helsinki City Hall then I have in Toronto's.
And this is a final view of Helsinki taken from the ferry to Suomenlinna, which I will tell you all about another day.



























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