Thursday, 20 October 2016

Sipoonkorpi



What is it?


Sipoonkorpi is a large national park to the east of Helsinki. It feels different to many a Finnish forest as instead of endless, and sometimes monotonous, trees it has a continuously changing landscape of woods, giant boulders, farmland, cliffs, and peaks.  


Where is it?


To the east of Helsinki between e75 and e18. The main entrance to the trekking routes are near the villages of Sotunki/Nygârd in the west and Helgtrask in the east.


When to go.


This is Finland so although you can go to the park all year, take warm clothing from October to May and expect snow in the winter months. There are beautiful and maintained ski tracks in the west side of the park.



    
Why go?


Firstly, because it’s so much fun. There are ups and downs and cliffs and caves, summits, duckboards, steep climbs, beautiful houses, thick forest, ancient forest, great views, laavus and mysterious old remains.

Secondly, because in comparison to Nuksio, it’s relatively peaceful yet is equally easy to get to.

Thirdly, it seems to be full of things to pick. Near the laavu we saw dozens of people with baskets and buckets full of fungi.


 
Routes

There is a lovely route that walks a loop in the south-west of the park. There are signposts and the trees are marked regularly with green and white ribbons/plaques.


Green and white plaques and ribbons mark the route



A more challenging option is to start from Bakunkarr and walk across the park eventually joining the above route.

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GPS for both routes are available at this link The main ski route starts in the North of the park, depending on conditions.


There are maps available with the trekking routes and ski-routes clearly marked.

This map is excellent. Link here

Sunday, 16 October 2016

Holiday in Hammerfest, 1953

Staying in Tampere with the mother-in-law reminded me of an amazing story she told about her father deciding to pack all six kids, one tent and his pregnant wife into the Ford Prefect and drive over 1500km from Helsinki to Hammerfest in Norway.

They also picked up a hitcher.

Ford Prefect

If that wasn't exciting enough, this was 1953 and the countryside war still riddled with German mines and munitions. 

"My father told us not to play away from the road, but of course my brother did anyway", she said. 




Thursday, 13 October 2016

Wenger's greatest achievement - that everyone has overlooked.

As we all know, Arsene has been the boss at Arsenal for 20 years now. Over the last few weeks many an article/ex-player has told us of how the modern game formed in his wake, his trophies have been listed, whilst his detractors remind us of how many times he didn’t win The League/Champions League/an Oscar. 

This argument has unfortunately rather overshadowed what should be the true legacy of Wenger, that is as an exemplary role model, perhaps the only example of a decent human being while all about him football falls into into a mire of nastiness and stupidity.   

Wenger has the kind of standards that you might tell your kids to maintain; fair play, decency and prioritising other values over winning; values such as loyalty, faith, patience and good old how you play the game.


He looks after his players, he even lets them move on if they want, even when they’re clearly the best in the team, he never throws them under the bus, he doesn’t criticise them after they’ve left, he gives them chance after chance to prove themselves, he rarely whines or makes excuses, he never tries to steals the limelight, nor blow his own trumpet. He’s clean living, dedicated, incredibly hardworking and ambitious. 

Is there a better role model in popular culture? Would you rather your kid look up to England Captain and habitual face-screamer Wayne Rooney? Maybe serial league winner and ego-monster Ibrahimovic? How about The Special One and eye-gouger Jose Mourinho?

EYE GOUGER!

FROM BEHIND! 

Football (and politics) seems to be more and more about idolising quite horrible people be it managers or players, until they go too far of course and then we ask ourselves (for about five minutes) what kind of example they give to young footballers. So ridiculous has it become that this season they`ve actually had to bring in laws to stop players shouting in the referee’s face. Far be it from the players and managers themselves to behave like any normal civilised person might. 

And amongst it all, Wenger. For my money perhaps the only half decent role model in professional football. 



 - A final thought. When Arsene has left, the Premier League will be like a band you like that turned out to be a bunch of racists. You still enjoy the music but a part of you knows you shouldn't really listen to it.

Thursday, 6 October 2016

Top Podcasts

I'm a huge podcast fan. We're so lucky to live in an age where the internet gives us access to such amazing work by talented people and podcasts are perhaps the best manifestation of this.

I've been listening to podcasts for years now and they're getting better and better. There are serious journalistic podcasts like Serial and brilliant interview podcasts like RHLSTP and WTF, sports podcasts like Football Weekly and historical podcasts like In Our Time.

Here is my list of favourite podcasts, the ones I always look forward to downloading and recommend that you do too.



  1. RadiolabA work of art. Radiolab takes amazing stories, often scientific, and then presents them in the most compelling way with clever sound effects and use of conversation to help you catch the most important details. It's truly wonderful.
  2. This American Life. One of the podcast pioneers, it almost seems dated now but the same level of professionalism is still there and there's a huge back catalogue of every kind of story you can imagine.
  3. The Smartest Man In The World Podcast. Greg Proops takes to the stage and records, in front of a live audience, an awesome monologue/ramble/sermon often about his life experiences, overlooked people who have just died and why we should appreciate them more, music and a lot about feminism. It's fascinating and funny and light-hearted and all told with Proops' crazy self-mocking but honest conviction.

  4. Conversations. This Australian podcast gets some great guests, some famous, some not, all interesting, and has long interviews on a huge range of topics.
  5. Rear Vision. Another Australian podcast but this time one that picks a topic, often one in the news at the time, and tells us about it with the help of expert contributors. Great for catching up on current affairs you know nothing about.
  6. Adam Buxton. Once part of the amazing Adam and Joe team, now media-meddler Buxton seems to have found his place with a series of great interviews. To date there have only been around 30 episodes but they've all been excellent and are broken up with the host's madness and insane jingles.

  7. Second captains. My favourite general football podcast. The three hosts ramble their way through the week's top football stories and always manage to offer an interesting alternative to the normal boring/summary/aren't we crazy football podcasts. Great musical interludes too.
  8. Arsenal Vision. The best Arsenal podcast. If you're a football geek, this one is great. No bollocks analysis filled with empty explanations of motivation or desire here. These boys break it down and tell you why the team is working or why it's not. Stats and formations abound. 
  9. Witness. Short but fascinating podcast from the BBC. 1st or second hand accounts of and variety of historical events. Often powerful stuff. 

Special mentions. The following can be a bit hit or miss but are definitely worth a listen.

  1. Doug Stanhope. Often more like a live recording of a psychology case study; comedian Doug Stanhope records at his bar/home with his neighbours randomly popping in. The Bingo Is Missing episode, where his girlfriend disappears and Doug and his (ex) girlfriend's new love interest sit at the bar and talk about where she might be whilst waiting for the phone to ring, is incredible.
  2. WTF. Maybe the most famous podcast of all. If the guest is interesting then it's worth a listen. Host Marc Maron's self-analysis/open style is also kind of fascinating. Skip the first 15mins though.
  3. Stuff You Should Know. Two guys that sound like old hippies explain stuff. Some great episodes to dig out.
  4. The Infinite Monkey Cage. Great science talk but too often ruined by people trying to be funny.
Some blasts from the pasts. Podcasts that are unfortunately no longer recorded. 


  1. The Russell Brand Podcast. The mp3 version of the radio show. First on 6Music then later on Radio2. Love or hate his later incarnations, his radio show has some of the funniest moments I've ever heard in my life. This Cry For Help Playlist on YouTube is wonderful.

  2. The Adam and Joe podcast. Again, a podcast version of their BBC radio show. Great regular items, listener contributions and a lot of two old friends talking nonsense.

Some BBC podcasts. 

  1. Desert Island Discs. Good when the guest is good. 
  2. David Baddiel. tries to understand. Quite new but some surprisingly interesting (and nicely short) episodes. 
  3. In Our Time. Interesting historians try to explain interesting topics whilst getting badgered by an increasingly stressed/senile Melvyn Bragg. 
  4. Shortcuts. Comedian Josie Long does a sort of dreamy British version of This American Life.