Finns with fins make a splash at 'mermaiding'
classes
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[January 16, 2019]
By Anne Kauranen
ESPOO (Reuters) - At a pool in Espoo, near
Finland's capital Helsinki, Maija Mottonen is teaching adults to swim
like mermaids in a class that combines fantasy with fitness.
Since August, more than 200 women and men have attended the classes run
by Mottonen, a former kindergarten teacher who is Finland's first
professional mermaid instructor.
"It's my childhood dream-come-true," the 28-year-old told Reuters. "When
I was a kid, I always wanted to be a mermaid or a dolphin. But I think
it's easier to become a mermaid because it's half-human."
Would-be mermaids and mermen wear "tails" that combine a monofin flipper
with fabric from the waist down.
"It's kind of magical," said construction worker Markus Parviainen, 29,
describing the feeling of diving with the green tail he bought online
for 170 euros ($195).
Parviainen, who also enjoys cheerleading, said his new hobby was a good
way of keeping fit, but acknowledged it had raised some eyebrows among
his co-workers.
"People think, or mostly men, are thinking that this is only for girls
or women. But I disagree, this is for everyone ... as long as you love
swimming," he added.
Mottonen, whose own tail is bright pink, teaches her pupils how to
undulate their entire body from head to toe, "like a snake" as she
describes it, followed by a dolphin kick with the monofin flipper to
move forward.
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Wellness expert Maija Mottonen and her student Markus Parviainen
with their mermaid tails swim in the pool in Espoo, Finland January
11, 2019. REUTERS/Attila Cser
More experienced students like Parviainen practise tricks such as
flapping their tail on the surface while hanging with their head
down underwater.
"When I had tried this once, I was hooked. I feel real powerful in
water," said Annika Ihatsu, who had driven for 40 minutes on icy
roads from her home in Hyvinkaa to attend the class.
While few people would want to make a splash during the cold Finnish
winter, instructor Mottonen said the country's roughly 180,000 lakes
were better for mermaiding in summertime than beaches with salty
seawater that would make her tail float.
"We have a lot of lakes so it's easy in summer," she said.
(Reporting by Anne Kauranen; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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