Santa Claus

in Finnish Lapland and Northern Finland

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 Thursday, May 10, 2007

An exciting range of holidays throughout December from London and Manchester to meet Santa!

 

 

Emagine are once again offering an exciting and diverse range of holidays to Lapland and Northern Finland this coming December.

 

Choose from holidays packed with activities in  a range of wonderful accommodation where you are

guaranteed personal care and attention.

Hotel Riekonlinna in Saariselka, Hotels Harriniva and Hotel Jeris in Muonio, Hotels Syote Keskus and Hotel Iso-Syote in Syote.

At all of these locations Emagine includes meeting Santa twice (once as a family in a forest cabin and again at a Christmas party), snowmobile safari, reindeer rides, a husky safari, ice fishing, full board, outer thermal clothing and the Emagine team on hand throughout your stay.

 

For those wanting a little more independence, new for this year is Simply Saariselka featuring   Hotel Holiday Club and Hotel Tunturi. The concept allows you to decide on the level of activity and meals included in your holiday. We have included the essentials such as flights, accommodation, breakfast and a fun activity day where you get to meet Santa as a family, then they let you decide what to do with that precious free time.

 

Emagine clients frequently comment on the levels of care and the attention to detail that goes into making their holiday to Lapland so special. They love the small finishing touches and the personal, thoughtful and friendly sevice from the guides  

   

To learn more about the holidays contact reservations on Tel: 0870 902 5399 

Click here to order a brochure.

To look at the holidays on the Emagine website click here.

posted on 5/10/2007 2:31:54 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Mr Wogan is enroute to Helsinki - it must be that time of year again!

 

 

As Terry heads to Finlands capital, Helsinki, to prepare for the coming weekends Eurovision final we are guaranteed a couple of mornings, thanks to his popular BBC2 radio show, filled with gems and insight about this small, pretty city and the Finnish people.

 

Lets hope he is more popular in Helsinki than he was in Copenhagen. Finnish friends in the UK that live for the annual Eurovision fix are not keen on Mr Wogan. They are disgusted that he does not take the whole thing more seriously. They simply don't believe that Brits only watch the Eurovision for Wogan and not for the event........

 

So tomorrow we can awaken to comments about the Finnish language (impossible), people (initially perceived as dour but once the shyness wears off friendly), hopefully how pretty Helsinki is when the sunshines and how wonderfully efficient everything is (Finns in the UK never fail to mention how inefficient Uk transport, banking, etc, etc is but then there are only 5.6 million people in Finland)

 

To learn more about the Eurovision click here.

 

To visit Helsinki one the Eurovison circus has left town click here.  

 

posted on 5/9/2007 3:57:10 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Monday, April 23, 2007

Lapland - Europes last true wilderness.........breathtaking!

 

 

I have just returned from the most amazing adventure. With a group of close firends we travelled to the Kilpisjarvi area of Finnish Lapland.  It was a bit of a trek to get there but boy was it worth it.

 

We flew from London Heathrow via Helsinki to Kittila and then headed an hour north to Harriniva. Here we met our amazing guides, Pasi,Kaitsu and Jussi. Over dinner they went through the plans for the next 5 days, they filled us with confidence even though we all felt as if we were taking a step into the unknown. They kitted us out with outer thermal clothing, helmets, hats, sleeping bags then told us to have a good nights sleep in what would be our last night in civilisation. 

 

The next morning started with lessons in snowmobiling and on handling a husky sled and then after lunch it was onto the coach departing Hariniva for a two and half hour journey north to the small village of Kilpisjarvi.

 

We had planned that half the gang would snowmobile and half the gang would husky, swapping activities each day. The excited huskies were awaiting our arrival on the ice. We loaded all of the kit into the snowmobile sleds (tents, food, cooking equipment, we had to take everything with us) and then we were off across the fells. It was just exhilirating heading up hill from the village towards the fells pulled by a team of 5 huskies and looking back over the frozen lake.

 

After about an hour a storm closed in and we started to experience real Arctic conditions with snow blowing from left to right but it was all part of the adventure. As conditions closed in the guides decided that we should set up camp for the evening! This involved pitch huge army tents at the centre of which was a wood burning stove that was lit in no time at all. As we rolled out our reindeer skings and sleeping bags and settled in we wre met by the most amazing aromas from Kaitsu's kitchen tent. Over the whole trip he never failed to amaze us with the mouth watering menus, steak, salmon with shrimp sauce, Lapp burgers, reindeer stew......and full cooked breakfast!     

 

The next morning the storm had cleared and we were met by blue skies and sunshine. After we packed up camp we were off again across the fells. This time I was snowmobiling, what a buzz. We could travel for an hour without seeing anyone and then come across 3 cross country skies pulling their kit in little sleds, crazy people.  We came across herds of reindeer and the guides pointed out Wolverine tracks.

 

We set up base camp, home for the coming days while we explored the area. Once the tents were in place (we wre camping on a huge lake) we drilled holes and set about catching dinner! Some were more successful than others.

I could go on for ever about how beautiful this area is and what amazing activities we did but I think I will let the pictures do the talking.

Thanks to all at Emagine for making it happen, when we said we wanted a once in life time experience you really delivered. Also a big thanks to our guides Pasi, Kaitsu and Jussi for taking such good care of us and for being such fun.

posted on 4/23/2007 3:10:30 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Sunday, November 26, 2006

Telegraph article tells all about visiting Santa in Finnish Lapland.......

 

 

 

When the travel presenter Judith Chalmers took her grandsons on a surprise trip to see Father Christmas she was just as excited as they were.

  
You know when you have been planning something secret for a long time? As the occasion nears you get excited: you want it to be the day to reveal all, yet you almost want to hold the pleasure back as it will all be over so quickly.


 

For the full story click here.

 

Limited availability remaining, click here for details.

posted on 11/26/2006 10:36:56 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Thursday, November 16, 2006

Work has started on the igloo at Harriniva.

 

 

 

The team at Harriniva in Finnish Lapland have started work on their Igloo. The excellent snow levels and cold nights, already at times as low as -30, are ideal conditions for building.

 

Guests staying at Harriniva during the winter can book a room in the igloo to stay in for the night. At Harriniva they build this one large igloo with a central chamber which will be furnished with an ice table and chairs in the coming weeks. Individual bedroom chambers then lead off the central room.

 

The cosy sleeping bag and crisp clean air are the ideal conditions for a good nights sleep, even when it is -30 outside.

 

 

Pictures of the finished, decorated igllo to follow shortly.

For further details on visiting Harriniva this coming winter click here.

posted on 11/16/2006 6:02:24 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Malcolm McLaren headlines at FutureDesignDays conference in Stockholm.

 

 

The list of adjectives that has been used to describe Malcolm McLaren, the notorious manager of punk rock band the Sex Pistols, is long, and not entirely pretty. McLaren was one of the headliners at the sixth annual FutureDesignDays conference in Stockholm this week.

 

He was joined in Stockholm by a motley crew of artists, architects, fashionistas, and other creative types that travelled from all over the world to contemplate the future of design.
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 “I’ve been accused of being many, many things… a con man, a charlatan, a thief, a murderer, a person inadvertently responsible for turning British culture into nothing more than some cheap marketing gimmick. But I’ve never ever been accused of being an artist,” the sixty-year-old Brit told The Local.

After dropping out of London art school in the early 1970s, McLaren has dabbled in a variety of creative mediums ranging from fashion design to music. And whatever others may think, McLaren considers himself to be an artist – although for him this does not necessarily mean picking up a paintbrush.

“I developed the art of provocation. I got rid of the idea of objective beauty as the classical vision of art. And I turned art into anything you wanted it to be,” he explained.

“What I had gathered and learned in art school, I was just carrying on. You could do it as the manager of a surrogate pop group that you could call the Sex Pistols and you could make these young sexy little assassins go off and create terrorist acts for the cultural good of the planet.”

 

With a grandmother who loved Christian Dior and a grandfather who was a tailor, McLaren was exposed to fashion at an early age. But in spite of these early experiences, or perhaps because of them, McLaren is very wary of what he calls the “treadmill.”
“I don’t really think it’s an interesting life to be on that treadmill and have to come up with next season’s big thing,” he said.

“If it wasn’t art enough, if it didn’t have a philosophy that had an inbuilt subversive quality and had all the style and sexuality to sell it…it just wasn’t worth doing. I wasn’t interested in fashion for fashion’s sake,” he said.

 

In 1971, McLaren and his girlfriend Vivienne Westwood opened their first clothing shop, Let it Rock, on the King’s Road in London.

“Vivienne just wanted to be a successful fashion designer, and I helped her because she was such a brilliant foot soldier in the beginning,” McLaren reminisced. “And I did that for ten years. But ultimately I had to part because it just wasn’t intellectually interesting enough for me. And to be perfectly honest, I couldn’t emotionally connect.”

 

Although McLaren was perhaps the most well known and infamous personality descending on Stockholm for FutureDesignDays, he was not the only big name there. Other speakers included Japanese fashion designer Tsumori Chisato and British fashion stylist Alexia Somerville, who has dressed stars such as Robbie Williams and Pink.

 

FutureDesignDays was initially held in Borås in 2001, organized by FutureLab, a business development and communications agency based in western Sweden. The event took off and was moved to the vast Stockholm International Fairs exhibition centre in the capital in 2004.

Other highlights of this year’s event included the FutureDesignDays Award, which is presented to up-and-coming young designers. The winner of the 50,000 kronor award was the Swedish industrial design firm, FolkForm, with designers Anna Holmquist and Chandra Ahlsell picking up the cheque at a ceremony in the Blue Hall of Stockholm City Hall on Monday night.

Holmquist and Ahlsell experiment with innovative uses of natural materials. For instance, they have embedded a real butterfly in a masonite tabletop, aiming to create a “permanent organic decoration” on their furniture.

 

The other nominees for the FutureDesignDays Award were Cheap Monday, RAW Sweden, and Norwegian designer Marius Watz.

 

Cheap Monday, a rock-n-roll inspired Stockholm-based jeans label, has received notoriety in its own right. Last year, it came under fire in the American media due to the supposed anti-Christian messages communicated by its logo, a skull with an upside down cross on the forehead.

“We received some emails stating that we were going to burn in hell,” said assistant designer Carl Malmgren. “But it’s not an anti-Christian statement, and the logo is actually a Mexican symbol from the beginning. It looks a lot like the Day of the Dead skulls.”

 

Like McLaren, the self-proclaimed agent provocateur, Malmgren explained that for Cheap Monday, it has become “a provocative thing. Like an aesthetic rather than a political statement.”

Although attention the brand received from the Christian right was initially unintentional, Malmgren admitted, “we’re enjoying it.”

 

Charlotte West  Published: 15th November 2006 16:01 CET
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/5519/

posted on 11/15/2006 5:27:10 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Monday, November 13, 2006

According to EU survey 77% of homes in Sweden have access to the Internet.

 

 

Swedish Internet access compares very well to that of other European countries, according to data released today by Eurostat. The European statistics office looked at access to the Internet in the EU25, as well as Norway and Iceland, for the first quarter of 2006.
For the period in question Sweden recorded more regular Internet users, 80 per cent, than any other European country.

 

A full 77 per cent of households in Sweden have access to the Internet. Only the Netherlands and Denmark, 80 and 79 per cent respectively, have more homes hooked up to the net.

Finland pipped Sweden to third spot when it came to broadband connections. Again the Netherlands led the pack with 66 per cent of its population wired up to high speed connections. Sweden’s 51 per cent was enough for fourth position.

 

Latvia, at 80 per cent, had the lowest proportion of businesses with Internet access. The equivalent figure for Sweden was 96 per cent.

 

Swedes and Danes in the 55-74 age range are active Internet users, with 56 per cent of the older group spending time online. In Greece only 4 per cent of people in this age group used the Internet.

Across the European Union more men (51%) than women (43%) use the Internet regularly. The corresponding figures for Sweden were 84 per cent of man and 76 per cent of women.

 

posted on 11/13/2006 5:29:49 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Sunday, November 12, 2006

Results not great for the Finns but event is a success.

 

 

After a false start in Sölden, when the racing was cancelled owing to rain and unseasonably warm weather, the FIS World Cup season got under way at the Lapland resort of Levi over the weekend, with a women's slalom competition on Saturday and the first-ever men's World Cup competition hosted in Finland on Sunday.


By contrast with the inaugural 2004 Levi event, when Finnish #1 Tanja Poutainen took the women's slalom competition, the Finns were much more generous hosts, and neither Poutiainen nor Kalle Palander, who was returning after a long layoff from injury, could get into the top ten.


     
Poutiainen, who has normally shown a sunny disposition even when things did not go as planned, was visibly disappointed with her 14th place in the season's opener, while Palander was left with mixed feelings about his race. 
Poutiainen was fully 2.7 seconds behind winner Marlies Schild of Austria, with nearly two seconds of the gap coming on a rather erratic first run. Schild was followed home by Nicole Hosp and Katrin Zettel to give the Austrians a clean sweep. 
In recent years it has been unusual not to see Poutiainen's name among the top ten finishers. Apart from a few falls, she has been remarkably consistent and has only been outside the top ten once in the last four years, back in January 2004. She blamed her poor showing in part on early season excitement.
     

Kalle Palander, on the other hand, demonstrated eventually that he has recovered his old form after surgery on a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his knee. His first run was something of a trainwreck, however, leaving him dangerously close to not qualifying, down in 25th place. 
But his second try at the Levi Black hill produced a much better performance and the 3rd fastest time, hauling him up to 11th overall and putting a smile on his face. 
It was also a pleasant experience for the Finn to ski home safely in front of his mother: on the previous occasion in Åre in the spring, the first at which his mother had been present to see him ski at the top level, he had the accident that obliged a visit to the operating theatre.
     

Top honours in the men's event went to Benjamin Raich of Austria, making the weekend something of a family celebration, since Marlies Schild is Raich's girlfriend. 
Raich was the Olympic gold medallist in Torino, and so his win - the 23rd of his career - came as no great surprise. Second place went to Markus Larsson of Sweden, and the other spot on the podium was taken by Italy's Giorgio Rocca, the defending World Cup slalom champion. 

The next races on the calendar will be in Lake Louise, Canada (for the men) and Aspen (for the women) in two weeks' time.

For details on visiting Levi click here.

posted on 11/12/2006 5:21:02 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]

 

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Visit Santa December 2007
Eurovision is coming
The Top of the World
Judith Chalmers raves about Lapland
It must be winter...the igloos are coming!
Sex Pistols legend provokes by design
Swedes among most connected in Europe
Finns play host to FIS World Cup slalom in Levi

 

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