Sauna Facts: 10 Interesting
Facts about Sauna
1. A sauna is a great way to relax and burn off
a few calories without much effort, as your metabolic rate and
volume of perspiration increases when you are in a steam room
or sauna.
2. One of the rituals of sauna, which is practiced only rarely
in Finland today, consists of a medicine woman making small cuts
in the back of the person and then sucking out the blood! This
was believed to do a lot of good. This process is called couparri
and requires special permission from the Finnish National Board
of Health.
3. Another activity in saunas is the lashing of yourself and
your fellow bathers with
a bunch of silver birch twigs, called a vihta or a vasta. This
kind of gentle whipping is good for the skin and for circulation.
You can also use the same twigs and leaves to get a delightful
aroma by pouring hot water on them
4. In rural Finland, it was quite common for children to be
born in saunas, even as recently as the 1930s. Today, there are
competitions to see who can stay in a sauna for the longest time.
5. As part of their burial rites the dead were bathed in saunas
prior to being dressed for burial. Fortunately this practice
has fallen into disuse.
6. Usually, bathers are in the nude in Finnish
saunas, even with both sexes present. There is no stigma
attached to this nudity, and no sexual overtones - for the
sauna is considered to be a sacred place.
7. In the winter in Finland, people dash out into the open and
plunge themselves into fresh snow soon after a sauna!
8. Philadelphia in Pennsylvania was once called Sauna. The Finnish
and Swedish settlers who began to live there in the 1600s named
the area ‘Sauna’ in honour of the practice they love
so much.
9. The Infrared heaters used in saunas first
originated in Japan. They were invented in 1965 by Dr.Tadashi
Ishikava, of the R & D department of Fuji Medicals.
10. For about a thousand years after they came into use, saunas
were constructed without chimneys.
|