Favourite Photos: Part Eight

Posted in Favourite Photos (Weekly Serial)
Photography, Travel
Part Eight

October’s last sunset in Espoo, Finland. A bird’s eye view.

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Favourite Photos: Part Seven

Posted in Favourite Photos (Weekly Serial)
Photography, Travel

Part Seven

Snowy views from Southern Finland

winter view 1

winter view 2

Favourite Photos: Part Six

Posted in Favourite Photos (Weekly Serial)
Photography, Travel

Part Six

Sunrise over the harbour of Keilasatama in Espoo, Finland

sunrise 1

sunrise 2

Favourite Photos: Part Five

Posted in Favourite Photos (Weekly Serial)
Photography, Travel

Part Five

Black and white window view from the archipelago of Helsinki and Söderskär lighthouse.

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window 1

Favourite Photos: Part One

Posted in Favourite Photos (Weekly Serial)
Photography, Travel

Part One

Espoo springtime flora in the bloom and something a little abstract on the side; natures and man made pile-ups of sorts.

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Mini Cooper (Daily Photo)

Posted in the Daily Photo series
Poetry & Photography

mini cooper

“You Don’t Need A Big One To Be Happy!”

Mini Cooper (Daily Photo)

Baby I can drive my car?
Guess I will be going far?
I’m not going to be a star
But I like playing a guitar
Oh and driving my car,
My Mini Cooper car!

Beep, beep, beep – Yeah!

mini cooper

Shrove Tuesday (Daily Photo)

Posted in the Daily Photo series
Poetry & Photography

laskiaispulla

“I started a Shrove Tuesday and then by Ash Wednesday something had happened and I had a bottle of beer” Mick McCarthy

Shrove Tuesday (Daily Photo)

Shrove Tuesday (known in some countries as Pancake Tuesday or Pancake day) is a day in February or March preceding Ash Wednesday (the first day of Lent), which is celebrated in some countries by consuming pancakes. In others, especially those where it is called Mardi Gras or some translation thereof, this is a carnival day, and also the last day of “fat eating” or “gorging” before the fasting period of Lent.

In Finland, Shrovetide took on a new meaning after the Reformation started by the German Martin Luther (1483-1546) from ca 1520 on. In the rural calendar, it marked the date by which many springtime tasks and duties, like spinning etc, should be brought to conclusion.

Nowadays Shrovetide is more of a secular festival season, a time for winter sport enthusiasts as well as for feasts of fatty foods, although the Lenten fasting ritual is not practiced among the Finnish Evangelical-Lutheran Church.

On Shrove Tuesday, children in many kindergartens and schools are taken to spend the day tobogganing, ice skating or cross-country or downhill skiing.

Popular Finnish Shrovetide desserts are Shrove buns, almond paste and whipped cream-filled sweet buns, which you will find sold in every bakery and store at Shrovetide, and Finnish oven-baked pancake served with jam. In Finland, the habit of eating Shrove buns can be dated back to the 17th century, but this tradition is even older in Sweden, where it originally came from.

laskiaispulla

Buildings At Dusk (Daily Photo)

Posted in the Daily Photo series
Poetry & Photography

buildings 2

“98% of what gets built today is shit” – Frank Gehry

Buildings At Dusk (Daily Photo)

Tall buildings
Simple,
Without gilding
Built from glass
Possibly to last
Piercing the nightly sky
Lit up pretty
And aiming high

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buildings 1