Friday 24 February 2012

Finnish Sauna in Arusha

The Sauna at the Arusha Masai Cafe
 24.02 - It was a day of printing the Rock Art on hand made papers. There are dozens of files now prepared for print and with the Epson SP 9900 printing on the heavily deckled edges is quite a simple process. By disabling the paper size check and the paper skew check the bottom rough edged media can be put into the printer feed about 2cm from the feel rollers and the machine will ignore the fact that the paper isn't square. So the printing went really smoothly and the prints started coming out fast.

Seppo and the Rock Art prints on hand made paper

Rock Art Print on Hand Made paper




Arrangements with the students from St Constantine International School to come in the evening for presentations somehow never materialized and after waiting for them to turn up for a while we decided to have sauna.

Now - how on earth did there come to be a Finnish Sauna at the Arusha Masai Cafe? When Seppo and Julieth took over the property there was a building used for storage between the outdoor restaurant and the kitchen. Seppo noticed a chimney sticking out of the roof - and inside a paneled up room - clearly with an area smaller than the shape of the building. Removing the panels he discovered a kiuas (sauna stove) and benches - a complete Finnish Sauna! So, as it happens the people who originally owned the place had been Finns and typically no home is complete without one.

Changing room
The last thing I expected on coming to Tanzania was to spend an evening under the African stars sweating it out in a Finnish sauna - but there we were in that 'holy' place enjoying our Kilimanjaro beers - eating locally made makkara (sausage) and relaxing in the cool late summer night.

Kiuas (stove)

3 comments:

  1. In such a fine sauna you certainly had 'hyvät löylyt' too !

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  2. I’m not an art connoisseur, but the primitive style of the Rock Art amazes me. Thumbs up! On another note, it’s very wise of Seppo and Juliet to integrate a sauna with their café. If Jjimjilbangs (Korean public bath) have snack bars, you have the Arusha Masai Café there. A pretty clever combination, I must say. :] -->Neil Dalby

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    1. Neil, yes the Rock Art of the Kondoa district is fabulous. I am not an expert on the different ages of the works, but they are also very diverse in style - coming from different centuries. The sauna was a discovery by Seppo - it had been hidden behind a wooden partition for many years - and Seppo noticed the chimney and thought - now that is interesting.... I'm not sure how much they use it, but we had sauna together one night - you know - like Finns do.

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