
L
ast April, I booked a sauna and cold plunge session with Sauna Tramuntana, just ten minutes from Palma, with seven girlfriends. Each of us had already experienced a sauna, whether at a gym, spa or hotel. However, this time, the setting changed everything. We were in the countryside, facing green hills and surrounded by citrus groves, in a small Ibizan-style finca. Between curiosity and excitement, we left our clothes, and worries, on chairs at the foot of a pine tree before entering the sauna.
Built of wood, this round sauna is shaped like a caravan and has large windows that offer an immediate connection with the landscape. We were surrounded by lemon trees, flowers, early-spring blossoms and the deep pink sunset sky. In front of the sauna, chairs invite you to sit down and chat, enjoy a cup of tea or lemonade, and nibble on a few almonds, clementines or grapes. This is where you can relax, cup in hand, continuing your conversation before taking a cold shower outside or diving into the cool water of the pool, and returning to the enveloping warmth of the wood. After several trips back and forth between hot and cold, time seems to have expanded. Tensions dissolve, giving way to a feeling of absolute fulfilment. You leave feeling as though you have “cleansed” both your mind and body, while having enjoyed a pleasant time with friends.
Jonathan and Kikki, the couple behind Sauna Tramuntana, embarked on this adventure in 2024, but the project had been germinating for several years in Oslo. At the time, Jonathan was working in documentary film production. Travelling constantly between Pakistan, China and the United States, he saw little of his family and worked himself into exhaustion, eventually suffering burnout. He then spent a year with his family in Mallorca. Back in Oslo, he threw himself into a community sauna project to regain balance. “We set up a sauna for the neighbours by the very clean river that runs through Oslo. It worked very well. After renting a sauna for a few weeks, we were able to buy one and make the project permanent,” he explains.















