A unique New Year at Hotel Harriniva, Finnish Lapland.

Hotel Harriniva’s unique location, and the hosts’ Kopi and Maria’s thirst for festivity and fun, mean that guests to the hotel get to see in the New Year not once but twice, first with the Swedes and then with the Finns!
Harriniva is in an idyllic setting on the banks of the Muonio River, which is the natural border between Sweden and Finland, in North western Lapland.
For many guests the New Year’s Eve celebrations round off a visit crammed with amazing, and for most, once in a lifetime activities. The location is breathtaking with snow encrusted trees, natural ice formations and those carved by local craftsmen, and the highlight for many, if lucky, seeing the Northern Lights.
As well as the warm welcome, upon arrival hotel guests are provided with special clothing that will allow them to make the most of the Arctic conditions; after all, it is over 200km above the Arctic Circle!
During their stay, guests will get to test the clothing and their taste for adventure to the limit, taking part in exhilarating safaris. A full day is spent on snowmobiles exploring the beautiful forests and fells enjoying lunch in an isolated chalet. A particular highlight is a tour of the hotel’s husky farm, home to over 350 dogs, before harnessing up a team and setting off on a husky sled adventure. There is also time to learn about local culture and the native reindeers who roam the area. In the quieter moments there is an opportunity to don cross country skis or snowshoes and explore the surroundings. For those still looking for excitement there are always the toboggans.
Accommodation is in warm, cosy rooms, made of local wood and stone. All have private facilities. You will not find a TV in the room, but with so much going on outside and a welcoming bar where everyone meets to share stories of their day’s adventures, you won’t miss it.
The New Year’s Eve celebrations start with a wonderful dinner in the fireside restaurant, later moving outside onto the ice for the countdown and fireworks to see in the Swedish New Year. Afterwards, the brave can stay outside and enjoy drinks from the ice bar, keeping watch for the northern lights, and explore the igloo and carvings. An hour later it all takes place again! The party then continues inside in the bar with dancing until the early hours.
Harriniva really is the place for New Year, new experiences, new friends………….
To experience New Year at Harriniva for yourself click here.
Image provides by flickr, Scott Robinson
Interview with Dalai Lama during visit to Helsinki.
Tibet's political and spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, says that his successor might come from somewhere other than Tibet. "If I would die now, it would be logical for my reincarnation to come from outside Tibet", the Dalai Lama said on Saturday in Helsinki.
The Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, was speaking to journalists at a press conference in Finlandia Hall before addressing a larger public gathering. The Dalai Lama, who lives in exile in India, says that it will fall to his successor to continue the struggle for the autonomy of Tibet, which is under Chinese rule. He leaves it up to the Tibetans to decide how the next leader is to be chosen. "An election is one option", he says.
Under prevailing Tibetan tradition, based on reincarnation, the leader is chosen in a ritual in which the right child is found to fill the place of the previous Dalai Lama. "My successor could even be found in Finland", joked the cheery 71-year-old Dalai Lama as flash cameras went off. He added that a woman would be quite suitable for the post. Talk of a successor from outside Tibet could be seen as a political statement. In 1995 the Dalai Lama chose a six-year-old boy as his second in command, the Panchen Lama, who later disappeared. Chinese officials are refusing to say where he is.
The Dalai Lama briefly criticised Chinese policy in Tibet. He said that a cultural genocide, either deliberate or otherwise, is taking place in Tibet. China has stated that it wants to integrate Tibet more closely with the rest of the country. July saw the completion of the long-awaited direct train link from the Chinese capital Beijing to the Tibetan capital Lhasa.
The Dalai Lama also said that he was concerned for the fate of Tibet's sensitive mountain environment, which he fears could suffer at the hands of China, which is focusing on economic growth. "The world needs to teach the Chinese brothers and sisters. Nature is very important", he said.
The Dalai Lama asked a Chinese journalist attending the press conference some tough questions, but clearly preferred to focus on understanding between religions, rather than politics. At the public gathering he answered a question about the meaning of life. "Live happy and spread happiness around you", was his instruction.
The Dalai Lama was originally scheduled to visit Finland already in the summer, but his arrival was postponed for health reasons. He was invited to Finland by the Service Centre for Development Cooperation (KEPA), and the Finnish-Tibetan Culture Society. Tuula Saarikoski, a member of the executive of the culture society, said that Finnish top political leaders had been offered a chance to meet with the Dalai Lama, but no such meetings could be arranged. On Sunday he was scheduled to meet with the chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Finnish Parliament, Liisa Jaakonsaari (SDP).
As reported in Helsinki Sanomat.
Wonderful image of Northern Lights in Lapland gets the votes.
If there's one lesson to be learned from Max Pickering's winning picture, it is that persistence pays off. The picture was taken by Max earlier this year, while on holiday in Lapland - his seventh visit to within the Arctic Circle.
"I go primarily for the photography," says Max, of Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire. "It's pretty much become an annual holiday because of the aurora, which is at its best around the spring and autumn equinox."
The winning picture was taken on the last night of his week-long visit and owes much to his careful planning. "In the evening at about 9pm I'd go out to a location and set up the cameras and plant myself there for several hours, just trying to stay warm." Temperatures at the time were averaging -25C, he says. With light levels so low, long exposures of 20-30 seconds were required for each shot. But so as not to miss a shot if one camera was in the middle of an exposure, Max took three cameras - all digital SLRs (single lens reflexes) - which snapped in rotation.
Max's mantra The winning image was taken with a specialist ultra-wide angle lens (an expensive piece of equipment) to capture that broad sweep of sky.
So what are his tips for anyone who might hope to take a picture to rival this winning image? Some pricey kit, perhaps? "For me photography is 75% anticipation. I'm always looking for a shot that's about to happen, but staying open minded enough to switch at the last minute. You don't need expensive equipment to take good pictures. It's in the eye," says Max, who, since taking the picture, has gone professional.
"This picture is a good example - getting everything ready to be in the right place, at the right time; setting stuff up so you can operate it with boxing gloves on and then just being ready to get the shot."
Did he use any post production to boost the colour? "Absolutely not. The aurora is amazing. I took it to be printed up and they said they couldn't - the printer couldn't render that amount of green."
To see the winning image click here.
To visit Lapland to take your own images and experience the Northern Lights click here.
Irishman wins world oyster opening championship.

Ireland was the proud winner on Saturday of the 2006 World Oyster Opening Championship, beating off competition from 17 other countries to open 30 oysters in the fastest time.
At 2 minutes 35 seconds, Irish restaurateur Michael Moran was five seconds ahead of Sweden's Hasse Johannesson and 46 seconds faster than Britain's Frederick Lindford. "It's just great to bring it home for Ireland," said Moran, whose father Willie took the title twice in the 1970s and whose time of 1 minute 31 seconds is unbeaten. "I put in a big effort and it paid off -- I can't believe it," Moran, 23, told Reuters. The secret, he said, was a steady hand with the oyster knife. "It has to be a smooth movement or you risk crunching the shell and then you get points taken off for grit," he said.
It was the first win for Ireland in 10 years but the country's 15th overall in the four-decade history of the competition, which has long been a major feature of the Galway Oyster Festival, now in its 52nd year. "He was a bold man that first ate an oyster," observed 18th century Irish writer Jonathan Swift, and by that measure there were a lot of bold men -- and women -- gathered in the mediaeval "City of the Tribes" on Ireland's rugged west coast on Saturday
"We reckon there are around 12,000 people here this year and they'll scoff somewhere in the region of 100,000 oysters in the four days of the festival," said organiser John Rabbitt. The festival draws visitors from around the world, as much for the Irish "craic" -- dancing and drinking -- as for the oysters, which mollusc aficionados say derive a distinctive sweetness from Ireland's Atlantic waters.
"I've had more oysters than I've eaten in my life," said first-time British visitor Michael Codrington. "At least 50 -- all washed down with a lot of Guinness."
The festival, dreamt up by a Galway hotelier to mark the start of the oyster season -- and drum up post-summer business.
As reported by By Kevin Smith on Reuters uk online
The Two Faces of Mexico opens at the Helsinki Design Museum 29 September 2006 - 14 January 2007.

Mexican culture is a fascinating mix of different influences, combining the way of life and art of the European conquistadors with the millennia-old heritage of the indigenous peoples. It has produced an artistically magnificent, versatile and unique tradition of craftsmanship and applied art that is without parallel. The Two Faces of Mexico, Design Museum’s main exhibition for the autumn 2006, is a colour-drenched journey into the heart of Mexico, areas such as Oaxaca, Chihuahua and Chiapas, famous for their heritage of applied arts.
The exhibition features the collections of two famous Mexican collectors. On show for the first time outside Mexico is the anthropologist and photographer Ruth D. Lechuga’s unique collection of the country’s indigenous cultures. Ruth D. Lechuga was an Austrian physician who fled the Second World War to Mexico in 1939. She soon ceased to practise medicine and concentrated on collecting the culture of the Indians. For over fifty years, Lechuga travelled around the country, accumulating a collection of Indian crafts and applied art. This material includes the world’s largest collection of skilfully made masks used in different religious rituals and celebrations and reflecting the variety, richness and colourful nature of Mexican culture. Selected for the Design Museum exhibition are 500 masks in addition to hand-woven sarape cloths, embroidered textiles, fine lacquerwork, ceramics, items for celebrating the Day of the Dead, etc. The photographs taken by Lechuga of Indian rituals and traditions during her fieldwork are valuable additions to the image of Mexican culture.
Another aspect of Mexican culture is provided by the collection of Franz Mayer 1882-1975). Mayer was a German businessman, who moved to Mexico in 1905 and made his fortune there as a stockbroker. His collection presents the traditions of art and craftsmanship introduced and maintained by the Spanish in Mexico. In these traditions, features from the indigenous peoples merged with European artefact forms and techniques. The Mayer collection contains artefacts from the period of Spanish rule (1521-1821), including work in silver, gold, mother-of-pearl, leather and lacquer.
The Two Faces of Mexico will include a published book and a series of lectures presenting the art and culture of Mexico in broader perspective. The museum shop will offer a wide range of Mexican applied art products.
For further details about the design museum click here.
For information about visiting Helsinki click here.
Breakfast view from restaurant at Hotel Iso-Syote!

We took the above photo while we were sat enjoying a leisurely breakfast on our final morning at Hotel Iso-Syote in northern Finland last December.
After 4 crazy and wonderful days of snowmobiling, husky sledging and of course meeting Santa we were all quietly sat reflecting on our trip when the cloud settled and this amazing view opened up before us.
It just summed up our breathtaking location and unforgettable Santa holiday.
Alec.
Nokia hopes to lead the market with slimmer and more powerful phones.
Finland's Nokia , the world's top cell phone maker, on Tuesday unveiled a pair of media phones and a music service in a bid to increase revenue and win back popularity lost to rivals. Nokia hopes to regain ground lost to phones such as Motorola Inc.'s fast-selling Razr with sleeker devices equipped with music players and powerful cameras in what it sees as the fastest-growing cell phone market segment.
Nokia unveiled the N95, a high powered camera phone, and a slimmer model called the N75, which has dedicated music player buttons and is aimed at U.S. consumers. It also plans to boost demand with a service for sampling new music.
"We have left nothing out," said Nokia general manager of multimedia Anssi Vanjoki at a launch in New York.
Nokia said the N95, its first phone with location mapping and a 5 megapixel camera, will sell in volume in the first quarter via a number of European and Asian providers. It is priced at about 550 euros ($700), before subsidies and taxes.
It expects the N75, a folding model slimmer than most of its N-Series phone line, to be "widely available" in the United States in the fourth quarter of this year, Vanjoki said.
Nokia did not reveal deals with U.S. carriers on Tuesday, but the phone is based on a high-speed wireless technology only used in the United States by market leader Cingular Wireless, a venture of AT&T Inc. and BellSouth Corp.
"This phone could sell well. Nokia users have been looking for a slimmer model," said eQ analyst Jari Honko. Nokia's N-series, which it first launched last year, represented a push toward more stylish and lighter phone models. Critics have said previous phones in the lineup fell short of Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd's and Motorola's thin models.
For the full story from Reuters click here
Young Swedish director aims for an Oscar with his debut film.
The Swedish Film Institute has named Farewell Falkenberg as Sweden's official selection for the Oscar nominations for Best Foreign Language Film.
The film opened in cinemas across Sweden on September 22 and has received glowing reviews from the Swedish press. It was also highly acclaimed when screened at the Venice and Toronto Film Festivals. The west coast town of Falkenberg is home to director Jesper Ganslandt, Born in 1978, Granslandt is a self-taught director who has previously worked with music videos and feature films.
With Farewell Falkenberg - Granslandt's feature film debut - he will be attempting to add a fifth Oscar to the Swedish trophy cabinet. Ingmar Bergman is a three-time winner, while Bille August picked up a statuette for Pelle the Conqueror in 1988.
The film is about five childhood friends growing into young men in a small Swedish town. Europeanfilms.net describes it as "a freewheeling dive into the hermetically sealed world of all-male friendships that […] feels natural and true."
Granslandt was not exactly overcome by emotion upon being told that his film was to Sweden's official selection. "I plan to celebrate in the Swedish way, with a cup of coffee", he told Metro.
The young director will have to wait until January 23 to find out whether his film is to be one of the final five nominees for Best Foreign Language Film.
Paul O'Mahony The Local
Finland ranked 2nd and Sweden 3rd in Global Competitiveness Report 2006-2007

Switzerland, Finland and Sweden are the world’s most competitive economies according to The Global Competitiveness Report 2006-2007, released by the World Economic Forum on 26 September 2006.
The rankings are drawn from a combination of publicly available hard data and the results of the Executive Opinion Survey, a comprehensive annual survey conducted by the World Economic Forum.
Countries that, like the Nordics, are investing heavily in education are likely to see rising levels of income per capita, growing success in reducing poverty and an increasing ability to establish a presence in the global economy," said Augusto Lopez-Claros, Chief Economist and Director of the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Network.
Finland has a very healthy macroeconomic environment and transparent and efficient institutions, as well as an excellent educational system and a highly innovative business community.
“Finland is very well managed at the macroeconomic level, at a time when many other industrialized countries are struggling in this area. The willingness of Finnish governments to run budget surpluses, so as to be able to meet future social commitments linked to the aging of the population, is particularly impressive. The country is also endowed with public and private institutions that are assessed as being the most efficient and transparent in the world. Finland is also unsurpassed with regards to the quality of higher education available to citizens, which is so critical for adaptation in a fast-moving global economy. Furthermore, the private sector shows a high proclivity for adopting new technologies and nurturing a culture of innovation, placing Finland very firmly among those countries closest to the high tech frontier,” said Augusto Lopez-Claros.
Sweden's position on the Business Competitive Index, a sister rating focusing purely on business conditions in 121 countries, was seventh. Despite being ranked third for 'sophistication of company operations and strategy', Sweden came eighth for the 'quality of the national business environment'.
High tax rates and restrictive labour regulations were highlighted as the most problematic factors for doing business in Sweden.
|
Global Competitiveness Index 2006 and 2005 comparisons |
|
Country |
GCI
Rank 2006 |
GCI
Score 2006 |
GCI
Rank 2005 |
|
Switzerland |
1 |
5.81 |
4 |
|
Finland |
2 |
5.76 |
2 |
|
Sweden |
3 |
5.74 |
7 |
|
Denmark |
4 |
5.70 |
3 |
|
Singapore |
5 |
5.63 |
5 |
|
United States |
6 |
5.61 |
1 |
|
Japan |
7 |
5.60 |
3 |
|
Germany |
8 |
5.58 |
6 |
|
Netherlands |
9 |
5.56 |
11 |
|
United Kingdom |
10 |
5.54 |
9 |
Source: World Economic Forum click here.
Storage problems means an early start to Christmas in Cornwall.
Shoppers in St Austell were checking their calendars on Monday to make sure they hadn't missed three months and it was September 25 and not December 25.People coming into the town were surprised to find that the Christmas lights, including a large sign saying 'Merry Christmas', had been put up over the weekend in Fore Street and Truro Road, three months before Christmas Day.
The surprise left many people bemused and has also attracted the attention of the national media with the belief that St Austell is the first and only town in the country to have its festive lights up in September.
St Austell and District Chamber of Commerce and Industry was forced to put the lights up early after failing to find a new place to store them.
The chamber is set to move out of its current base in the Engine House this week as work starts on preparing the building for demolition next month.
The chamber is set to relocate to an office in Sembal House.
Chamber chairman Paul Scott said: "We were left with a choice of leaving them in the Engine House and having them trashed or putting them up, so we decided to put them up.
"Nobody has come forward to provide a store for them, despite me asking around the town and the appeal in the Cornish Guardian.
"At the end of the day they are only really up a month early, but I am surprised by the fuss it has caused.
"I think there are more important things in the world to worry about - we should be worrying about the cars in Fore Street for a start.
"The lights won't be turned on until the end of November, so I don't see why everyone is talking about it."
However, many shoppers in the town were left laughing about the decision.
One commented: "It has certainly brightened up the town, although it looks a bit daft having them up so early.
"We might be the first town to have Christmas lights, but we are probably already the first town with no town centre."
Another said: "I'm surprised they haven't gone the whole way and set up a Santa's Grotto."
One trader in the town said: "It makes the town a laughing stock, as if we didn't have enough problems already.
"I feel sorry for the chamber in a way because they have had no choice.
"The fact that nowhere could be found to store the lights shows just how little support there is for the town from Restormel Borough Council and the Regional Development Agency."
However, there is some good news with hopes for a new storage area for the lights under the Woolworths store in the town being made available after Christmas.
Mr Scott added: "There have been Christmas puddings in the shops for weeks and nobody says anything about that - why is this any different?"
Cornish Guardian.
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