How lucky I was to find this B & B -service from Hanko a few
years ago!
Hanko is one of those towns, where the price-level of accomodation
varies a lot. If you wish, you can spend manyfold the price of
Mama's Park Inn for your overnight stay. But how many come to
Hanko with the principle objective to sleep? Anyway, one wakes
up in better mood when one has SAVED while asleep.
Neat, cozy rooms. Showers and WC in the corridor. Mamas's Park
Inn is situated nearby both the railway- and bus-stations. A five
minutes walk downtown. A ten minutes walk to the beach.
Breakfast possibility. Internet access. Some rooms and the reception
have a TV.
A lunch restaurant downstairs. Home-made food. Once, I was served
reindeer stew there. Delicious!
I like the entrance from Tarhakatu's side. The gate surrounded
by the trees is so funny!
And the new owners, Petra and Terhi... Flexibility and etrepreneurship!
Everything works.
Hanko is unique in Finland both geographically, culturally and
historically. So close to Helsinki, and yet so different.
The tourist season in Hanko, Finland's southernmost tip, last
a few mid-summer weeks.
Once upon a time I spent a few August days here. What an experience!
The days still hot, the sea warm to swim, the nights already dark.
The air in the evenings soft as velvet. Butterflies flying towards
the lamps at nights. Tourists mostly gone away, a pleasant End-of-the-season
-athmosphere. Lazy waves beating to the empty beach. The restaurant
in the park almost empty, only the personnel killing time with
party games. The sound of the locusts, the croaking of the frogs.
Summer is fading... Plenty of space in the fish-restaurant.
Yes, Hanko... Sometimes it's amusing to imagine, how extravacant
the social life here in "Gangut" must have been during
the time Finland was part of the Russian Empire. When the wooden
villas were built for the aristocracy of Saint Petersburg. And
the railway was built to connect Hanko with the then capital of
Russia.
It's worth mentioning, that the restaurant "Neljän
Tuulen Tupa" ("Four Winds Cottage") on the beach
was once owned by Marshal Carl Gustav Emil Mannerheim. Evidently
during those more silent years of his life, when the country's
affairs didn't demand his full attention. He is told to have walked
to the restaurant from his residence every day to count the day's
sales.
One place worth paying a visit is the old railway-station building.
Please note the panelling of the walls, the details of the lamps
and the shade of blue on the pillars in the hall!
Regarding activities Hanko offers a lot, starting from the classical
swimming, sailing and tennis. But there is so much more to do
in Hanko: Diving, fishing, ice-swimming, bird-watching - or simply
being idle! For the practice of laziness Hanko is an ideal place,
being a total opposite to the rat-race in Helsinki and other metropoles.
So, Dear Friends, do visit Hanko also out-of-season!
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