Thus endeth the lessons on stones. I learned a lot and hope you did too.
And now to consider some other topics.
Nikki
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Between a rock and a hard place
April —
the (unofficial) Month of Sauna Stones
My sauna stones —
mostly quarried peridotite rocks —
are wearing out. When I swept out recently, many tiny
rock crumbles were under the kiuas (the sauna heater), and I
noted a few pinholes had been burned into the duckboards by hot
falling chunks.
Occasionally, upon sprinkling a
dipperful of water, I hear a pop. Oops, another rock just cracked.
Research indicates that each reheating
weathers the rocks as the natural elements do, that they eventually lose
their heat-holding qualities. Rocks may need replacing in as little
as two years, depending on how often people heat up their sauna. I suppose I’ll be needing new ones soon.
What’s your suggestion — quarried
or round? Purchased or found?
Nikki
Sunday, April 20, 2014
Rock, Rock — who’s there?
April —
the (unofficial) Month of Sauna Stones
A
large box of rocks came with my sauna —
about 70 pounds of
peridotite, a dark-colored, angular rough rock. Quarried rocks have
lots of rough edges, all the more surface area to make löyly,
the steam. They look different than the sauna stones I grew up with, but I like
the way the water dances on them.
Over time, I’ve
added a pink granite sphere that was found on the Minnesota shores of
Lake Superior that reminds me of my grandpa’s sauna stones (the ones we moved).
Two
stones were gifts. One is etched with the word “Kuuma”
(meaning “hot” in Finnish). The other reads “Sisu”
(meaning “determination,
bravery and resilience” — and more). They warm both my heart and my sauna.
So I’m not a purist about sauna rocks. They do different jobs in my stove. What about the stones you use — are they traditional or new, similar or eclectic, decorative or functional?
So I’m not a purist about sauna rocks. They do different jobs in my stove. What about the stones you use — are they traditional or new, similar or eclectic, decorative or functional?
Nikki
Thursday, April 17, 2014
Crumbles happen
April —
the (unofficial) Month of Sauna Stones
Now
you know —
rocks crumble. When
they crumble in your sauna stove (the kiuas), the grit clogs up the air spaces between the rocks piled inside.
With poorer air circulation, the stove heats less efficiently.
Bernhard
Hillila wrote about sauna rocks in his book The
Sauna Is. He
said, “If they
can’t stand the
heat, they ought to stay out of the kiuas.”
heat, they ought to stay out of the kiuas.”
When you sweep up the crumbles, take time to check your stones. Are they holding up?
Nikki
Sunday, April 13, 2014
Sauna stones 102: ceramic rocks
April —
the (unofficial) Month of Sauna Stones
Ceramic rocks are today’s subject. They add technology to natural materials to create shaped stones with a porous enough structure that allows moisture to collect on their
surfaces. Amazing!
Ceramic rocks, unknown to our grandparents, were
developed for use in electric sauna stoves, perhaps specifically for
far-infrared saunas. They are manufactured to be less prone to
cracking, and thus more durable. While that’s an important quality for a
much-used public sauna, where replacing stones often (several times a
year!) would be a significant bother and expense, it’s less of an issue with home saunas.
A caveat —
people might stack them too closely, leaving too little space for air
to circulate, and possibly wearing out the heating element
prematurely. It’s more economical to replace the rocks than the
heater. And,
manufacturers recommend certain rocks for particular stoves — so stick
with what they suggest.
The
website writer at Sauna Site theorizes that hollow stones would be
the best for a single set of bathers. He wrote, “A hollow stone
gives up all of its energy, retaining none when the sauna-bathing is
over [whereas] stones with a large energy-storing capacity and all
large stones retain a lot of energy after a sauna-bath.” Hmmm.
Do you have
experience with ceramic rocks? Please comment — I’d
like to learn more, and so probably would other readers.
Nikki
Thursday, April 10, 2014
A short course — sauna stones 101
April —
the (unofficial) Month of Sauna Stones
Rocks
matter. Here’s
what I learned from Lowell, my geologist friend, and two Internet sites, Rock Collector and Visit Sauna.
The
qualities important in sauna rocks are durability (how quickly stones
degrade) and thermal
conductivity (how
long they hold, conduct and radiate heat).
All stones
eventually crumble (“friable” is the geological term) and
fluctuating temperatures and water speed that process, so rocks in a
sauna stove artificially weather even faster than they do in
nature. That decreases their durability.
Since metamorphic
and sedimentary rocks degrade more quickly than igneous rocks (those
created by vulcanism), enthusiasts have preferred igneous rocks, like
granite. Granite, however, can crumble at as low as 300 degrees
Fahrenheit, a temperature not uncommon in the sauna stove (not the air surrounding).
Stones that best withstand the
repeated temperature extremes of the sauna are those least exposed to
weather —
quarried from deep
down where lava never reached the earth’s
surface. (Geologists call them “plutons.”) Stones with iron and
magnesium will conduct heat more efficiently and last longer.
Quarried stones have more surface area than rounded rocks, thus more places to emit heat.
Peridotite,
quarried in Finland, and olivine are dense, granular, igneous rocks,
dark and heavy. They are among those with the highest thermal
capacity. Others include plutonite, vulcanite, diabase, black basalt,
chrome ore and diorite —
minerals I’m
quickly becoming familiar with.
Conecting technology to geology is the subject of my next post.
Conecting technology to geology is the subject of my next post.
Nikki
Friday, April 4, 2014
Rocks of ages
April —
the (unofficial) Month of Sauna Stones
My
dad, Ben Rajala, told me the legend that opened Chapter 15 (Sauna
Stones: Rocks of Ages) in my book, Some Like It Hot: The Sauna, Its Lore and Stories. It goes like this:
To be used in a
Finnish sauna stove, he said, stones had to withstand eons of being
rolled in the icy northern waters and further shaping by the ups and
downs of temperature changes.
Then,
the final touch (and his favorite part) —
every thousand years, great birds would wake from their sleep and
flock to those northern shores, seeking stones on which to sharpen
their beaks. After their intensive “rasping,”
the rocks became rounded.
For their sauna stones, early immigrants to northern Minnesota used
roundish ones, found on lake shores or riverbanks. Or maybe, when
their farmland “sprouted” its spring crop of rocks, the family
picked the biggest ones for their sauna.
For
some, sauna rocks have special meaning. A couple I met chose stones
that fit in
their luggage when
traveling around the world —
in Alaska, Spain,
France, Turkey, Egypt and Antarctica.
How did the stones
in your sauna come to be there?
Stay tuned for — a lesson in geology.
Stay tuned for — a lesson in geology.
Nikki
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Why saunas need stones
April —
the (unofficial) Month of Sauna Stones
You
might think of a sauna as a
room lined with clear wood paneling and tiers of benches —
or a room that is heated to (uncomfortably) high temps. While both are
true, neither defines the core of a sauna.
Actually, the
sauna is the container for hot stones. Its stove is meant not
to heat the sauna but the rocks. Surprised??
Without
its stones, sitting in a sauna would feel more like being in a
toaster. Rocks store heat and distribute it evenly, keeping the sauna hot
longer. Plus the rocks provide surfaces for water to hit and make
momentary steam —
the löyly.
The hotter the stones, the faster the water evaporates.
This photo of the savusauna in the Cokato Historical Society Museum of Cokato, Minnesota, gives an idea of the size of rocks that were sometimes used.
In
modern saunas with electric stoves, that energy-storing capacity is
less critical. The heating element stays on — to heat
the sauna and during the bath. We don’t
have to “save heat” for the next bather, as Finns did long ago. But the heat
radiated by the rocks makes our saunas so much more pleasant.
Next discussion: Why rocks were chosen, by legend, by sentiment and any other reason.
Next discussion: Why rocks were chosen, by legend, by sentiment and any other reason.
Nikki
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Yes! A whole month on rocks
Drum roll...
This month, I’ll take on the topic of sauna rocks — which stones we use today, those preferred by early sauna-goers and why some are better than others.
Really, it’s no
April Fool’s joke. I dub April the (unofficial) Month of Sauna Stones.
We’ll start with why rocks were important in the original saunas.
We’ll start with why rocks were important in the original saunas.
Nikki
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