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Breakfast at 10 am. Pekka goes to do some shopping, meanwhile I take a shower in his small shower chamber with white wooden walls.

At half past twelve we start moving my stuff to Jari´s new appartement, his future flat-mate Tuomas hasn´t moved in yet, so i can have his room for the week. Jari returns from shopping and cooks noudle soup with fresh carrots and garlic, he apologizes for having forgotten to buy some chicken, but that doesn´t matter. We talk, he shows me some Waltari stuff like singles from the first years and old tour t-shirts which were kept in a removal cardboard somehwhere for the last years.


At 4 pm he goes to meet a friend, i walk into town again to check my email in the cable book library, where everybody can get an internet computer for 30 minutes for free. Later i take a look at Kiasma museum of modern art, decide to visit the exhibition later this week, and i visit the Helsingin Sanomat (newspaper) building, a huge glass and steel cube, not easy to photograph.


On my way home i buy some food, tea bags and milk and call up Kärtsy, who offered to show me his part of town and some local pubs later this evening. To improve my Helsinki knowledge, i inspect Eerikinkatu (Eric street), passing the "Moskwa" and "Corona" Bar (Kaurismäki place), up to hotel Torni and back. A huge pizza in "Pub 28", Pekka´s recommendation, prevents me from starving and then it´s time to go to meet Kärtsy.

The tram carries me to Kallio, the north-eastern part of Helsinki, where Kärtsy picks me up at the tram stop; first he introduces me to "his" gym, where he goes to work out; his knee had some serious problems in the past. Walking through Kallio to find some nice pubs he tells me about his childhood in this area and about his school years he spent together with Jari, about their first steps into music, when he started to play piano and Jari learned guitar; their first band project "The Draculas" - the roots of Waltari. Kallio was sort of a middle-class area then, but in the last years a lot of young people from finnish countryside and almost every Helsinki musician moved here.


We end up in a typical finnish Karaoke Bar, drinking mysterious X-mas drink, listening to strange people singing Karaoke and talking to some stone-real rockmusic experts (so they say, funny enough they don´t know Kärtsy), who join our table after assuring that we are hetero sexual. I take some pictures with my Lomo.