Step inside a private Finnish merchant’s family home built in 1939 and experience everyday life, history, and traditions through personal stories. Visit private living spaces, explore traditional heating solutions, and finish with a warm herbal drink in the kitchen with your guide Piia.
The experience begins in the garden (weather permitting), where your local host Piia welcomes you and introduces the house and its role in village life. From there, the tour continues indoors — not into a museum, but into a living home where people still cook, heat, wash, and relax much as they have for generations.
In the kitchen, you’ll find original paper wallpapers, wooden floors, and a fully functioning wood-burning stove still in daily use. Here, Piia shares stories about Finnish everyday life, family traditions, and how homes were designed to endure long winters — calmly, practically, and close to nature.
The tour continues to a combined bedroom and workspace, offering a glimpse into modern Finnish family life, including what a teenager’s room looks like today. You’ll also learn how heating works in an old house where electricity exists, but firewood still plays an important role.
On the way to the cellar, Piia tells the storey of her mother — now over 75 years old — a true force of nature who has personally completed much of the house’s renovations herself. In the cellar, you’ll discover something rare: an indoor well that provided running water even in winter, a traditional sauna with a wood-heated water cauldron, and an indoor food cellar. Built inside the house in 1939, this practical solution spared the household from carrying food through deep snow during winter.
The tour ends back in the kitchen with a revitalising herbal drink made from local plants. You may take a photo with guide. This is a moment to ask questions, share impressions, and simply sit — the Finnish way.