The sun rises on another birthday for Anne, blue sky and sunshine as ordered. As often happens, we are on the road again which precludes me from buying and bringing presents. No room in the motorcycle saddle bags, oh I forgot we have suitcases. Well there is always next year. This will be a first for Anne as her birthday will be spent in two countries, Estonia first, then Finland. Does that count as a present?Anne wanted to see the oldest Pharmacy in Tallinn in Town Hall Square, so a short tram ride to town sees us at the doors at opening time. First recorded mention is in 1422 making it the oldest in Europe, operating continuously at the same location for over 600 years! The pharmacy is now both a working pharmacy and museum although I suspect most customers are here for the history. The Burchart family ran the business at one time for 10 generations. Very impressive and the reason the owners’ children never attend a career day at school.
Museum in the oldest operating pharmacy in Europe.
Another smooth ride across the Baltic Sea and we are back in Helsinki and off to the Hilton Helsinki Kalastajaatorppa hotel for something little different, called the IGLUX Experience. In addition to the normal hotel room, we get a waterfront igloo. Well, not quite made of blocks of ice, our igloo shaped room with glass ceiling is made of something a little stronger, and hopefully warmer.
Our “igloo” on the far right overlooking Laajalahti Bay
Entering the IGLUX reminds me of the Apollo space capsules, the door is at an angle and opens more like a hatch. Note to Elon Musk as he prepares the next Starship launch that the 2slowspeeds are still up for a little off world travel when we can no longer ride. Please keep us in mind Elon. We settle into our own little igloo world looking out over a bay off the Baltic Sea.
Our evening is spent drinking champagne to celebrate Anne’s birthday and watch the slowly setting sun through the roof of the igloo. All nice and cosy as the temperature drops outside. I think we are the only occupants in the six igloos so we have the place to ourselves. Birds come and go, oblivious to our presence thanks to the one way glass. One way as long as you leave the lights off!
Anne enjoying a birthday champagne in our “igloo”, HelsinkiRelaxing in our “igloo” and watching the sun setBirthday sunset from our “igloo” over Laajalahti Bay
Our last day in Helsinki sees the morning taken up with an oceanside walk around Laajalahti bay, a stop for coffee and cake in an old house, then we get the latest hotel checkout ever: 8pm. Perfect timing for the departure of our flight to Singapore and then home. A chance to visit the centre of Helsinki and visit the impressive Central Station which is a convenient tram ride from our hotel at the end of the 4 tram line at Saunalahdentie.
This is as heavy as it looks. Finnish exercise machines.Gorgeous forest walk along the bay’s edge
Helsinki Central Station building was inaugurated in 1919 but its tracks date back to the 1860s when emperor Alexander II of Russia proposed an improvement program for Finland, connecting the inland country with the marine harbours. Part of the cavernous entrance has been converted into restaurant and we take an early dinner
Helsinki station Lantern Bearer statues by Emil WikströmCafe inside the Helsinki train station served great food
A pleasant tram ride back to the hotel, relax until our 8pm checkout and while still light, make our way to the Airport. There are only a couple of international departures around midnight and pretty much everything is closed. With the quiet, we fortuitously walk through a 77 metre long multimedia installation showing the best of Finnish scenery which we might have missed if the place had been busy. A haven of peace in what is normally a hectic space.
Sights and sounds in Helsinki Airport.What a great idea inside Helsinki Airport
After an emotional couple of weeks in Europe, we have enjoyed the relaxation for a few days here in Helsinki and Tallinn. Both are worth a visit and only a couple of hours apart by high quality ferries. Now let’s get Anne back to work in Cairns.
The weather is perfect, blue skies, calm seas. We are on the ferry from Helsinki to Tallinn. A short two hour crossing will see us in Estonia, the first time we have visited that country. We came close to Estonia in 2014 when we rode through Latvia en route to Russia. The route out of the harbour takes us past many low rocky outposts. Not somewhere to run aground – much less forgiving than the sands of Morton Bay where we live.
With both Finland and Estonia being in the EU, no border controls mean that you just walk off the ship, via a very long walkway and straight to the taxi line. Most people on the ferry have little or no luggage – we must really look like those tourists dragging the kitchen sink around with them. “Do not travel like them” they tell their children.
As we drive to our hotel, Anne says some of the architecture reminds her of St Petersburg, which I guess with the long history of Russian influence is not surprising. Russia had control of Estonia from the early 1700’s till the Russian revolution of 1917. Independence only lasted until 1939 following the signing of the German-Soviet Non-aggression Pact. Estonia has been independent again from the Soviet Union since 1991 and an EU member since 2004 which is celebrated by posters we see in the city. I also notice leaves on the trees in the park opposite the hotel which were not as evident in Helsinki. Seems just a short ferry ride can see a marked change in the advancement of Spring.
Spring is in the air, Tallinn
After a nice gluten free meal with wine specially organised in the Executive lounge at our Hilton hotel, we wait for the sunset over the view towards the old city, but no, it’s only 7pm with two hours and a half hours to sunset! A walk to the old city walls and our first exploration of the city beckons, so off we go. I do enjoy the long summer evenings, not something Queensland can offer.
Anthony’s executive lounge special meal
Our hotel is hosting a global Wikipedia Technical Conference. I have been wondering how far database indexing has come since I worked in the industry some 30 years ago. You can type just about anything into a search engine and it can be found. I did not ask, oh well probably just use the internet to get the answer or ask AI. A few fun facts: in 2012, Tallinn had the highest number of startup companies per person among all capitals and larger cities in Europe. Tallinn is the birthplace of many international high-technology companies, including Skype and Wise. The city is home to the headquarters of the European Union’s IT agency, and to the NATO Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence. world, and in 2022, Tallinn was listed among the top-10 “medium-sized European cities of the future”.
The weather is perfect, clear blue skies, crisp temperature but not as cold as it was last week when they got snow.
Lots of modern buildings outside Tallinn’s old town. Not sure about walking underneath!
As we walk towards the city centre, we soon notice a lot of Russian spoken by older people. According to the latest census, 27% of Estonians speak Russian – a legacy of history and multiple Soviet occupations – but this will change as Estonia started moving towards a unified Estonian language education system in December 2022, with a full transition finalised by 2033. While in a shop, we ask if the shopkeeper speaks English?, “русский” “russkiy” is the firm answer. There must have been a huge upheaval for older Russian speakers with the demise of the Soviet Union in 1991.
The origins of Tallinn date back to the 13th century, when a castle was built there by the crusading knights of the Teutonic Order. It developed as a major centre of the Hanseatic League, and its wealth is demonstrated by the opulence of the public buildings (the churches in particular) and the domestic architecture of the merchants’ houses, which have survived to a remarkable degree despite the ravages of fire and war in the intervening centuries. We even discover that the city has a Dominican connection as we spy a sign indicating that the building was once a Dominican Convent.
Dominican Monastery established 1246, Tallinn
Tallinn Old Town is one of the best-preserved medieval cities in Europe and was listed as a Unesco World Heritage site in 1997.
Katariina Kaik – one of Tallinn’s oldest passages
We enter Tallinn Old Town through the impressive Viru Gate which was part of the Tallinn city wall built in the 14th century. This blog is so late, I will let the photos do the talking now:
Inside the Viru Gate, TallinnMust get a selfie in Tallinn
The Tallinn bus and tram pass has an interesting feature, a day pass runs from time of first use for 24 hours. Yesterday we acquired a tram/bus pass which allows us unlimited travel for 24 hours from the time of first use. As we start at 11am we can use it tomorrow before our ferry departure. What a good idea for tourists. We head to the Soviet Statue Graveyard by the Maarjamäe palace, behind the Estonian History Museum. All the Soviet heroes are there, minus their original pedestal, Lenin, Stalin – some are just decapitated bronze heads, some still have bodies. Each statue has a plaque with the history of the person, the statue and its removal. So much history, so much turmoil . We note that multiple statues have the year of passing as 1937. Stalin’s “Great Purge” or “Большой террор” “Bolshoy terror” the most likely cause of death for 700,000 to 1.2 million people estimated to have been executed between September 1936 and August 1938.
Monument of 1 Dec 1924 communist coup and unveiled in 1975 to commemorate 35 years of Soviet Estonia Lenin, the face that stared down over Estonia for decades.Maarjamäe Memorial Complex, Tallinn – commemorates the Bolshevik victims of the 1918 Russian Civil War. The eternal flame no longer burns at this Bolshevik memorialKadriorg Park, Tallinn – construction began in 1718 on the orders of Russian Tsar Peter 1Kadriorg Park – each tree is dedicated to a loved one
We head back to town and up to the area known as “High Town”. We enter the Russian Orthodox Alexander Nevsky cathedral to discover a hive of activity, no not us tourists, but large number of local women decorating the cathedral with flowers and laying out cakes. It is Sunday after all. We feel wrong to be visiting or taking photos at this time and we withdraw.
Estonia’s main Russian Orthodox cathedral, Aerxander Nevsky Cathedral, Tallinn
By contrast the nearby Cathedral of St Mary, run by the Lutheran Church is much quieter. Built on the location of the first Church in Tallinn, the first stone was laid in 1240. With the organist playing, we can quietly contemplate the interior and history of such a beautiful building.
St Mary’s Cathedral, Tallinn’s oldest churchWonderful organ music was being played at St Mary’s Cathedral, Tallinn
While the Naval museum was closed for renovation, but one can still admire the scale of the seaplane hanger that houses the museum, we visit historic ships mored nearby. Until the dissolution of Soviet Union, this was part of a naval base.
The old Seaplane hangers now a museum.Suur Tõll, Estonian Steam powered icebreaker
We then travel to a gluten free cafe in the suburb of Kalamaja just behind the station. Colourful houses line the streets and it seems like it would be a good suburb to live in. Then onto the Linnahall formally known as the V.I.Lenin Palace of Culture and Sports, a multi purpose venue opened in 1980 when Tallinn hosed sailing for the Moscow Olympics. It contained a skating rink and concert hall. Both are now closed and the vast concrete structure is closed and slowly falling into disrepair. Will it every return to its former glory?
Colourful wooden houses in the suburb of Kalamaja.Clever park bench feature, TallinnV I Lenin Palace of Culture and Sports or the ruins of the 1980 Moscow Olympics Yachting Centre – now called Linnahall.
We have really enjoyed our visit to Tallinn and know if we come back this way, there is more for us to explore.