Yep, just your regular smartphone zombie, like we in our family call these... Our 4 kids aged 5-14 have no smartphones. Greetings from Ulvila, Finland 🎉
@@jakemaanimeikalainen248 ..and this is why parenting is, in a way, a lot easier in Finland. American parents typically spend a lot of time every day driving their kids: to school, to hobbies, to parks, to see friends. Kids can't go anywhere on their own until they turn 16 and get a driving licence themselves because it's considered too dangerous. In Finland, kids start walking to school when they are 7, and the older they get, the more they are able to move on their own. This is one reason why stay-at-home-mothers/fathers are much more rare in Finland: there is no need for one of the parents to stay home because the kids don't need to be driven around all the time. Because work days are also a lot shorter here, combining work & family life is a lot easier.
The Vilkku buses have the graphic showing the Puijo towe on them. The Puijo tower is a landmark of Kuopio. Tottijärvi (there was a sign to it in the Vesilahti round) is a former municipality. Its name is due to, according to a legend, a dog called Totti who drowned in the lake in the 1400s. Totti was presumably Matti Kurki's dog. Matti Kurki is a character in stories, and his historicity is disputed.
The list of ingredients of Gatorade Cool Blue sold in Finland: Water, sugar, maltodextrin, citric acid, sodium citrate, sodium chloride, potassium phosphate, magnesium oxide, emulsifiers (gum arabic, gum rosin), natural flavors, sucralose, acesulfame potassium, and color (Blue 1).
Nice map by Seppo the hedgehog :) I believe that I remember quite well most of the places where you have been in your Finland games and this time there really were rounds in places you hadn't seen before in any game.
I wonder if there's a game about libraries? Google tells me that there are more than 700 libraries in Finland. The biggest ones are usually also architecturally interesting buildings. The smaller ones, on the other hand, can be in all kinds of places, so a game like that might include lots of different types of locations.
Basically in the more rural areas and outside the greater Helsinki region Sale is the local market, when as in the Helsinki area it's Alepa. The logos and colors are the same.
Basically the same concept and market placement with Alepa, but for historical reasons (Alepa was an independent chain originally in Helsinki area until 1987) they kept their previous name, since it was well established in the area.
@0:43 Yes Sale stores are part of the S-Group. The s-kaupat webpage has items from all levels of S-Group grocery stores, not just Sale, so not everything you saw could be found from Sale. @4:57 Yeah it is pretty common for kids to move on their own to school. I remember walking (or from third year onwards biking) alone (or with friends) to school all the way starting from 1st grade. That being said our school wasn't far from our home, like 800m on first 2 grades, about 2km until 6th grade. @18:43 It is actually fairly new coverage (July 2022), it's just taken really late in the day, so the lighting isn't great. As you can see the Sun is really low, if not set when that was taken. No idea why they've been driving that late, judging from the angle of the Sun, it must be at least 10pm. It's also pretty good clue for Tornio. I don't remember seeing official dusk coverage during summer from any other city / town in Finland. @22:32 No Tornio is not at the Arctic Circle. Arctic Circle goes slightly North from Rovaniemi. Haven't been to a Sale recently, as I have an S-Market closer, where I usually do my groceries. They have wider selection.
Vesilahti literally means "water bay" (what else you're supposed to have in a bay), but it seems that it's the more archaic meaning of vesi, "a lake", thus it's a bay that almost is an independent lake.
2:18 That is my nearstore. Almost 200 meters away where i living. 5:42 That Sale Linnanpelto located about kilometer away from Sale Saarijärvi what is first. Actually funny coincidence when my nearstore and my mom nearstore is one and second on this video 😁
Christmas shopping? It's not even December yet ... Then again, I don't do any special shopping. I use K-Market instead of Sale, it's much closer to me than any other larger or smaller store. I guess streetview images are old enough that they don't show (or have caught) those cute Sale deliverry robots near Sales in more urban areas.
Thanks for watching! Kiitos katsomisesta!
Come check me out on X : twitter.com/AllOverTheMapYT
in Finland its perfectly normal for kids to walk to/from school on their own
And not only to school but around towns too. We encourage kids to be independent while respecting the given boundaries the parents give them.
Yep, just your regular smartphone zombie, like we in our family call these...
Our 4 kids aged 5-14 have no smartphones.
Greetings from Ulvila, Finland 🎉
@@jakemaanimeikalainen248 ..and this is why parenting is, in a way, a lot easier in Finland. American parents typically spend a lot of time every day driving their kids: to school, to hobbies, to parks, to see friends. Kids can't go anywhere on their own until they turn 16 and get a driving licence themselves because it's considered too dangerous. In Finland, kids start walking to school when they are 7, and the older they get, the more they are able to move on their own. This is one reason why stay-at-home-mothers/fathers are much more rare in Finland: there is no need for one of the parents to stay home because the kids don't need to be driven around all the time. Because work days are also a lot shorter here, combining work & family life is a lot easier.
The Vilkku buses have the graphic showing the Puijo towe on them. The Puijo tower is a landmark of Kuopio.
Tottijärvi (there was a sign to it in the Vesilahti round) is a former municipality. Its name is due to, according to a legend, a dog called Totti who drowned in the lake in the 1400s. Totti was presumably Matti Kurki's dog. Matti Kurki is a character in stories, and his historicity is disputed.
The list of ingredients of Gatorade Cool Blue sold in Finland:
Water, sugar, maltodextrin, citric acid, sodium citrate, sodium chloride, potassium phosphate, magnesium oxide, emulsifiers (gum arabic, gum rosin), natural flavors, sucralose, acesulfame potassium, and color (Blue 1).
Nice map by Seppo the hedgehog :)
I believe that I remember quite well most of the places where you have been in your Finland games and this time there really were rounds in places you hadn't seen before in any game.
I wonder if there's a game about libraries? Google tells me that there are more than 700 libraries in Finland. The biggest ones are usually also architecturally interesting buildings. The smaller ones, on the other hand, can be in all kinds of places, so a game like that might include lots of different types of locations.
Basically in the more rural areas and outside the greater Helsinki region Sale is the local market, when as in the Helsinki area it's Alepa. The logos and colors are the same.
Basically the same concept and market placement with Alepa, but for historical reasons (Alepa was an independent chain originally in Helsinki area until 1987) they kept their previous name, since it was well established in the area.
LOL. That translated Long drinks to tentacles🤣😂
@0:43 Yes Sale stores are part of the S-Group. The s-kaupat webpage has items from all levels of S-Group grocery stores, not just Sale, so not everything you saw could be found from Sale.
@4:57 Yeah it is pretty common for kids to move on their own to school. I remember walking (or from third year onwards biking) alone (or with friends) to school all the way starting from 1st grade. That being said our school wasn't far from our home, like 800m on first 2 grades, about 2km until 6th grade.
@18:43 It is actually fairly new coverage (July 2022), it's just taken really late in the day, so the lighting isn't great. As you can see the Sun is really low, if not set when that was taken. No idea why they've been driving that late, judging from the angle of the Sun, it must be at least 10pm. It's also pretty good clue for Tornio. I don't remember seeing official dusk coverage during summer from any other city / town in Finland.
@22:32 No Tornio is not at the Arctic Circle. Arctic Circle goes slightly North from Rovaniemi.
Haven't been to a Sale recently, as I have an S-Market closer, where I usually do my groceries. They have wider selection.
Vesilahti literally means "water bay" (what else you're supposed to have in a bay), but it seems that it's the more archaic meaning of vesi, "a lake", thus it's a bay that almost is an independent lake.
2:18 That is my nearstore. Almost 200 meters away where i living. 5:42 That Sale Linnanpelto located about kilometer away from Sale Saarijärvi what is first. Actually funny coincidence when my nearstore and my mom nearstore is one and second on this video 😁
LOL! It translated Lonkero(Long Drink) to Tentacle!🤣🤣🤣
18:07 I have been in the Tornio Sale couple of times. And didn't know that it had been demolished. That now was news to me. :)
Christmas shopping? It's not even December yet ... Then again, I don't do any special shopping.
I use K-Market instead of Sale, it's much closer to me than any other larger or smaller store.
I guess streetview images are old enough that they don't show (or have caught) those cute Sale deliverry robots near Sales in more urban areas.
capital area has alepa and outsiders has sale
Trump MAHA...Making America Healthy Again
That fits in a video featuring Finland because the Finnish word "maha" means 'stomach'.
And that is never going to happen. Just because he is cutting fundings from healthcare