Sunday 28 February 2010

Big Wet Thaw

This morning it was raining, washing away all the snow along the edge of my terrace but then it changed to snow - big, fat, fluffy, wet and windy snowflakes - coming down almost horizontally! As seen here....












mid January






mid February




this morning




In theory there are spring bulbs in those blue pots! I wonder if they've survived?

Saturday 27 February 2010

I Love Snow!

It's clean, white, fluffy, bright, quiet, gentle and beautiful. And it's not.... 

...in the last few days, after a few months of minus temperatures, regular snowfall and deep snow banks I have noticed a change. The piles of snow along the roadsides, left by the ploughs, are no longer white, or even grey, but black - black snow! Traffic pollution on the busiest roads has left the surface coated.
 (this picture was taken mid Jan when the snow was just grey and not yet black)









The temperature is slowly rising. Yesterday we experienced our first positive temperatures this year, this morning it was as high as 2 degrees centigrade. We even opened the windows to let in some fresh, cool air. Our apartment is so well heated & so well insulated that the indoor temperature can be as high as 26 C, 29 C in the bathroom! Recently our landlord brought in a fancy infrared camera to check for leaks and we discovered that the surface of our kitchen floor is 33 C!! No wonder I need slippers - to prevent my feet from burning, not to keep them warm... the joys of underfloor heating. But I digress...

The low temperatures and regular snowfall since New Year has meant deep snow everywhere including on rooftops. Now that the temperature is rising, the snow is beginning to melt and the heavy snow is falling from the roofs, causing damage to roofs, cars, gardens & of course people. Today, YLE online reported many people hospitalised due to injuries caused by clearing the snow from the roofs - they were up there with shovels trying to prevent damage from uncontrolled, unexpected falls! 30 people in Helsinki alone underwent surgery! 

As I write, J is outside, he has moved the car away from the house - just in case - and is now chipping the ice off the front steps. Although our snow is generally dry & crunchy, it gets compressed quite quickly on regularly used routes and the lowest layers turn to solid ice. As long as the snowfall continues, there is a crunchy layer to walk on but as soon as that goes, either swept away or melted, it reveals the nasty slippery surface below. So, J is there with a garden hoe chipping the ice off the front steps.

Just before the big thaw began (and there's no guarantee it won't all freeze again) we managed to have some fun in the snow. J, Monkey & I spent a few hours one sunny afternoon clearing the previous night's snowfall from the driveway. We swept, scraped and scooped the snow off the steps and off the car and off the paths and up onto the piles around the garden - lining the paths in the same way the as the ploughed snow lines the roadsides. On the busier roads a digger & truck later come along and remove all the piles of snow but on the side streest and cul-de-sacs, like ours, a large bank builds up.


- Monkey is about a metre tall, so you can see how high the bank is!
- She decided to go climbing and as she got over the other side, needed rescuing.....
- of course, then I needed rescuing too! J very helpfully took a picture first...cheeky!

We also went tobogganing in a friends garden - they had prepared a run from the hill beyond the garden, down onto the snow above the lawn (about a foot above!!) and the mothers & babies group along with daddies & older siblings all had a go... even I braved it. I was terrible but Monkey obviously has the knack - leaning well back to streamline herself... maybe she could compete in the 2018 winter Olympic games as the youngest skeleton competitor ever?... ;D


Friday 26 February 2010

In the beginning.....

Welcome to my first attempt at blogging. For a long time I have been wanting to share my thoughts about life in Finland but wasn't sure how. Then recently I was reading a friend's blog and I was entranced. She is visiting from the US for a few months and is absorbing as much Finnish Culture and experience as she can. She has done more in the last few months than I have in almost three years and so puts me to shame. Her blog is a fascinating insight into her adventures - a record of her trip as well as keeping all her friends & family back home up-to-date on what she's doing and what she isn't! 

So, I thought, this is what I need - a blog - to jot down my observations and thoughts mainly about the differences between life in Finland and life back in UK but also about the changing seasons and my growing children. 

When I first visited Finland it was 1st March (almost 14 years ago to the day!) and there was snow on the ground. Six weeks later the snow had all melted and within days of that there were green shoots on all the trees. It seemed like only minutes later we were all sweltering in the heat! To me, then, Spring had lasted maybe 2 days and I concluded that Finland only has 2 seasons - freezing cold snow and sweltering heat! 

I was wrong, SO wrong....