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Thursday 31 January 2013

Aussie Summer to Finnish Winter!


Goodbye Mum and Dad!- Adelaide Airport
Farewell Australia!- Melbourne Airport
These last 2 weeks have been crazy! I think my flight time was almost 30 hours not including stop overs! Our flight itinerary was in local times so some of us didn't realise how big the time differences were and what we thought was only a 6 hour flight (already long enough!) from Singapore to Heathrow was actually 14 hours or so and that was only 1 stretch out of 4! It was at this realisation that I resigned myself to death by boredom! Boy was I glad when I finally landed in Helsinki! 


It was 5pm and already so dark! It felt like the middle of the night! I had watched the sun set out of my window on the plane as we flew over Sweden and came over Finland, so beautiful! Before take-off in Heathrow the pilot told us the current weather in Helsinki… -30˚C! Luckily for us it ‘warmed up’ to about -20˚C by the time we arrived… Still a shock to us Aussies coming out of the Australian Summer! Although we were lucky that it was a relatively cool day around 28˚C when we left so it was easy to wear pants without dying from the heat.


Us Aussies arrived a day before we were due at orientation camp so Helsinki Rotary had organised us to stay with families in the city for the night. Jemima and I stayed with an absolutely amazing family! They were so lovely! That night we walked their dog with their two teenage girls, Elise and Iiris, but we were back within 10 minutes as we were all frozen to the core! The perfect night for Jemima and I to experience our first Finnish sauna! It was so nice to defrost and warm up!

A casual January day the beach...

The next day the family showed us around Helsinki which included going to the beach. For some reason I don’t understand, I knew that their lakes froze but didn’t even consider that their beaches would freeze too! We walked on the sea! There were people with ski’s there as well! It was really a weird concept for my Aussie mind but they were just as gob smacked that our beaches are always flowing, even in our winter! It was really sad to leave the family that night when they took us to the bus stop for camp. I’d had such a great time! I have a year though, so I plan to go back down and see them at some point.


A nice dip in the lake
Camp was a lot of fun. Along with about 6 hours of language lessons each day we also had the chance to do a lot of activities. Twice we went to sauna and had the chance to dip in the hole in the frozen lake and roll in the snow. We ran from the 80˚C sauna out into about -20˚C outside and rolled in the snow and made snow angels and ran down to the lake for a dip! I went in, not just once but 3 times! I’m not sure if that qualifies me as totally insane, I guess I’ll leave that up to you to decide!

Exchange student
toboggan train!



Throughout the week we went tobogganing and also played a variation of ice hockey but with half the team being pulled in toboggans by their teammates as they used the hockey sticks to try and score goals. It was so much fun! It got quite competitive! People were flying left right and centre out of toboggans and even a few people pulling them were toppled over, including me! 


One night we went for a sort of hike. We were split up into small groups and did a collection of things including cooking Finnish pancakes over a fire in a little hut and we went and met some ice fishermen who had a campfire going in the middle of the lake and were fishing. We each had a turn and used the metre long drill to manually drill a hole in the ice. It was hard work but we all managed to get there! They told us that the ice was between 60cm-1m thick! None of us campers managed to catch anything but we were all chuffed with our drilling efforts none the less!


Next stop was to eat some salmon and cook some traditional sausages over the fire with some fisherman in their open wooden type hut, it was all so nice! We also had the chance to try on snow shoes and walk on the deep snow, use a sledge and also try some cross country skiing but as I only went a few metres on them I didn’t really count it as my first time skiing, that would come in a week’s time!

Tampere Cathedral

We also had a day excursion to Tampere where we went on a bus tour of the city, went and visited a beautiful cathedral and also had the chance afterwards to have a look around and do some of our own shopping if we wanted. I think just about everyone made a visit to ‘Hesburger’, I suppose you could think of it as the Finnish version of McDonalds.


In no time camp was over and we were packing our bags once again to make another trip! Our host families started arriving and after their own small briefing, our farewell and a last lunch together we were each off to our different parts of Finland to officially start our exchange year!

I slept most of the 400km journey to my host family’s house in Oulainen, Northern Finland. We arrived at around 6pm but, again, it could have been midnight it was so dark!



My first night, after eating something, I already was out to meet some of Riina, my host sister’s, friends. I was so knackered but it was also nice to already have some contact with people here. 


After sleeping quite late on Sunday we went out to do some cross country skiing! However, what I had the most fun doing was the tobogganing! I still am yet to master the whole steering concept but I think the falling out into the snow is a big part in the fun of it all! I think, so far tobogganing is my favourite snow activity.


Emilia
My youngest sibling, 5 year old Emilia, has learnt 3 English words that she likes to use at every opportunity… The other night she came up to my room, knocked on my door and then went to me… “Emmy, let’s go eat!”

Monday was a full on day! I started school in morning at 8am. After tagging along with Riina to 2 hours of Advanced Maths and then an hour of Swedish taught in Finnish I was ready for my own timetable! I am now taking Biology, History and a final year English class. Whilst I don’t understand History at all I don’t really mind Biology because even though it is taught in Finnish I can basically follow along because all of the scientific words are fairly similar to in English and I take Biology in Australia so I understand! 


School is quite different here compared to Australia. After every lesson of 45 minutes there is a 10-15 minute break. Also, the lunch every day is a proper hot meal which is free, same as their schooling as it is all paid for through taxes. The Lukio (senior high school, equivalent to Australian grades 10-12) is really different to our high schools. Attending there feels like you are in a higher education like Uni. You have no bells and there aren’t teachers telling you were to be or chasing you up for things, you call all the teachers by their first names and you have no set uniform. Each student has to attain a certain grade in year 9 to be able to move on to Lukio so at this stage it is your education so it is your responsibility.


At lunchtime on my first day everyone was called to the cafeteria and was introduced to me. It was nice but I was keen to get out of the limelight! So many people looking at me all at once!

Oulainen famous!

That night I went to my first Rotary meeting. My host club is so friendly! I had a really good time chatting to everyone there. In the meeting they gave a little welcome in English for me which was really nice and they invited me to make a presentation about myself and about Australia which I will do on the 11th of February. I even stared in the local paper this week!


Usually Finland in the middle of winter is too cold to make snowmen. It is so cold here that the snow is just powder and cannot actually stick together! But the last couple of days it has been a little warmer so the other night we went out and I made my first snowman! He was just the generic snowman, nothing compared to the cute Snow-Muumi made by Riina and Emilia. Muumi is a very popular cartoon troll here; you can basically buy anything with Muumi on it!


Last night I went along with Juulia and Riina, my host sisters, to their floorball game and I even played as well! I had so much fun! I had never heard of floorball before I came to Finland and no one here has heard of Netball but both sports are extremely popular and common in their respective countries. I got a few goals and had an absolute ball! They go every week and I am now going to join the team too!


These last two weeks have been a rollercoaster! Such huge changes but it didn’t take long to settle into life here and into the family. I am really enjoying myself and loving the family I am staying with! My sisters and I get along really well! They’re both teaching me Finnish and I can already see a difference from a few days ago. In class I can pick up a couple of words that the teacher says and whilst I can’t work out what the rest of the sentence means those couple of recognitions, however small, confirms to me that I’m on the right track and that if I continue to try I will get there eventually! 


Australia, Brazil, South Africa, Colombia, Argentina... Finland!!

Thursday 17 January 2013

Ready to rumble!


Finally all packed and ready to go!
So… The time has finally come where I can say, “I leave tomorrow”!
As I hug my parents goodnight for the last time for a long time I can’t help but think about how truly different this year is going to be from the previous one!
My last week in Australia has been a bit of a blur! If anyone has been driving around Gawler this week and has seen two suspicious people taking photos of all kinds of random landmarks, don’t stress it was more than likely just my dad and I! We have been taking photos of the town to put with my presentation I have been working on for when I get to my host club in Oulainen, Finland. Covering topics of family, school, my town and more it should be interesting trying to get my point across to people who may or may not understand a single word of English! I think my first task when I get there is to work on writing and practicing it in Finnish so at the very least they can understand what my name is!



Me speaking at the Rotary Club of
Gawler Light's 
meeting- Tuesday 15/1/13 

Rotary is an international organisation, with clubs all around the world. My local Rotary club is the Rotary Club of Gawler Light and they are sponsoring my exchange this year. They meet weekly and on Tuesday night I went and gave a small impromptu talk where I spoke a bit about whatever came to mind in relation to myself, my exchange and Finland. I talked about my host families, about my Finnish language skills (or lack thereof!) and also about the Finnish weather… It sure is going to be a shock after the heat we’ve been having here!

My Outbound Counsellor and I



My first week in Finland will be spent in Karkku not too far from the capital, Helsinki but around 400kms from my host town, Oulainen. There I will be with all of the other newly arrived exchange students on a camp. We haven’t been told exactly what we will actually be doing but from what past students have said I believe we will learn a little about the language and culture and basically settle into the ridiculously awkward time difference. (Finland is about 8 and a half hours behind us here in SA which will prove difficult when it comes time to wanting to Skype Mum and Dad or friends back home…)
I have been told that at some point we will have a day trip into Tampere where we can do a bit of shopping which would be awesome as I am going with the warmest clothes I own which I can 100% guarantee I am going to freeze in over there!

Today has been such a mad rush of final farewells to friends and family and organising so many little last minute things! Tonight’s packing turned into a very demanding exercise when my luggage totalled 27kgs! With only 7 of those kilos being my own things I finally came to the conclusion that I may have overdone the souvenir and gift shopping a little bit!! The drama of deciding what to take and what Australian goodies would have to stay in Australia was extremely trying! The sad moment came where the Tim tams were told they were not going on their European holiday and out they went…
With our bathroom scales giving us all kinds of answers we resorted to weighing items 1kg at a time on the kitchen scales! After the drama of packing was over which took much longer than expected I am finally about to call it a night!

I will be getting up bright and early in the morning for what I am sure will be yet another last minute rush to be ready to get to the airport for my morning flight to Melbourne. It will be weird to drive away from home tomorrow. It may not change a lot in the year I am away but I am curious as to how I will see it after seeing so many different places of the world and experiencing so many new and different things; how I change and how that affects how I view places, people and situations will be interesting to see.
January has been a hectic month so far! I have been on a total of 5 planes rides already and I haven’t even left the country! It’s been a crazy month of farewells, souvenir shopping, badge making, packing, and that trip to Canberra for the allusive ‘biometric scan’ which turned out to only involve my two index fingers being placed on a scanner!


Euro, Singapore Dollars and British Pounds... All prepared for the stop overs!

I think as challenging as this year will be I will probably feel relief when I finally sit down on that plane tomorrow! The preparation for this has been madness and it’ll be nice when it’s all finished and all I have to think about is what everyone has been working hard towards this past year, the exchange itself!

Rotary exchange students from all around the globe have blazers of different colours depending on the country they are from. In Australia we are given green blazers. It is a sort of tradition that each student sources a variety of small pins that relate to where they’re from or themselves in some way. They then go on to share them with all of the different people they meet throughout their year away, including other exchange students they may meet along the way! Exchange students will often come home after their year abroad with their blazer absolutely covered! Filled with pins, badges and other nicknacks from their adventures you can barely see what colour the blazer actually is!
For my badges I tried really hard to look for some that related to South Australia and my town of Gawler specifically rather than a generic Australian flag pin. It was really difficult to find but I really wanted to have some distinctive badges so when I couldn’t buy any I had to think outside of the box. My Mum and I thought it would be really unique to make my own badges! We borrowed badge making materials and a machine from some family friends and came up with a whole range of designs on the computer for some small button badges. They are very special as my family have all worked together to produce them! I have over 20 different designs with Gawler printed on them along with different Australian animals, and South Australian icons and trademarks. I also have a badge that has my Rotary district and sponsor club on it (Gawler Light D9500). My family and I have made around 250 badges altogether that I will share throughout my year abroad!

Already stitched to the pocket on my blazer in front of my heart is a small angel charm my work friends gave to me as a part of my going away gift. It is a travel angel that stays with me so that where ever I am, I will never be alone.  One of a few thoughtful little pins and charms that have already started to fill my blazer!
For my going away my Grandparents gave me a beautiful little necklace which is of Saint Christopher, the Patron Saint of safe travel.
I am so blessed to have such caring friends and family. Whilst a year is a long time, you will neither leave my mind nor my heart…