What should we react to next? Channel Membership: th-cam.com/channels/QsmCKwNbJS-GmCfFZ9i7Pg.htmljoin Buymeacoffee: www.buymeacoffee.com/maxsujyreact (you can request a video with your donation) We have 12 rescue dogs at home, including 1 with diabetes who is fully blind. All Channel Membership and Donations go toward her home treatment (insulin, diet, etc). Thank you so much!
those "cabins" are storage for hay, they are distributed like that because they are madd with timber in very specific way to manage up to 3m thick snow on the roof, it is/ was actually a chore to dig DOWN to be able to open the door and if one roof collapsed the other cabins would still be ok, of only one big storage any collapse would be a death sentence for the farm animals during the 6 months of winter so several small made more sense,
The small cabins at 4:15 are barns to store hay. The field get harvested, the hay get dried and then stored in those barns until winter when it's was easier to bring it back home on sledges on the snow. Not many roads but forest and marshland that made moving things difficult. Huskies are not a traditional breed here but now they are more common. Dog sleds were not common. The Sami people used reindeers to pull their sledges when moving and they use a different dog breed, the lapphund for hunting and such. Other common breeds are the gråhund and jämthund, and of course the västgötaspets aka wolf corgi :p
There is the Thai Pavilion in Utanede, Bispgården, by the Indals River (Indalsälven). A memorial building to King Chulalongkorn's honor in the county of Jämtland in Norrland, Sweden for his visit there the 19th of July 1897. Very beautiful Temple in lovely surroundings. 💛
The cabins on the mountain of Luppio (at 2:50) is in Sweden then you have the Torneå river in the back. On the other side of the river you can see Finland. Many of the small cities and villages on the Swedish sides have Finnish names.
In that area where they are (Tornedalen) they have their own language called Tornedalsfinska / meiänkieli. Its kind of a mix between swedish and finish. Thats why many of the names of the places "sounds finish ". You are really good in noticing the small things, and remember what you seen before.
The northern half of Sweden is very Finn influenced, and particularly in the mountain areas the Sami are there and their language stems from the same language group as Finnish
When you see this, I think you understand why the Finns and Swedes are historically known as being "the forest people", just based on the geography. Norwegians are "the mountain people", while the Danes are "the sea people" (this sounds better as opposed to "the flatlands people". The forest played a huge role during the cold war defense planning, and I'm sure it still does. To learn more about this, you can watch the Swedish short series called "If the War Came". I have seen other react to it, but not sure where they found a version with English subtitles.
If you like salmon, raw salmon, then maybe you would like the Swedish version, "gravad lax". Basically meaning "buried salmon". Don't worry, it is nothing bad. It just means that it has been left in the fridge for up to three days, covered in salt, sugar, pepper and dill. I guess buried under salt, sugar, and so on, thus the name. So it is basically raw salmon, but flavored. You can serve it in different ways, but a common one would be with boiled potatoes, boiled asparagus, and "hovmästarsås", a cold sauce made by mixing mustard, pepper, salt, sugar, vinegar and oil. And then dill, which is added last. The name "hovmästarsås" means "sauce de maître d'hôtel" or something similar.
The reason many of the names in Lappland sound Finnish is because they are of Sami origin, and the Sami language is related to Finnish. Lappland is very big and sparsely populated so unless you live in one of the cities or villages there, the distance between neighbours is pretty long. You can find a lot of lone houses and farms up there.
I think the black root vegetable you mentioned is something we call Svartrot. I think in English it's commonly called black salsify, and it's the root part used here.
@@farrier1234 How fun! I did not know about the one in Åsele. -There is a memorial building to King Chulalongkorn's honor in the county of Jämtland in Norrland, Sweden for his visit there the 19th of July 1897. -The Thai Pavilion in Utanede, Bispgården, by the Indals River (Indalsälven). Very beautiful Temple in lovely surroundings. 💛
Finally! Welcome to my part of Sweden! Next vid should be from the western part of county Lappland and the western area of Sapmi. The mountain range of Skanderna is very beautiful. One of my favourite place is Stekenjokk with it surroundings and this is a pretty good video from there; th-cam.com/video/0hKSDcQkkXo/w-d-xo.html in wintertime Vildmarksvägen/Wilderness road is closed due to the deep snow; th-cam.com/video/a7dh4SA1Vis/w-d-xo.html (short about plowing the road in may for opening in June 6, Swedish spoking but the view speaks for itself). Best time for visiting is late August and beginning of september, earlier in summer there is mosquitos and "broms" a fly that bites, not very nice. If you come here, give me a shout and I take you from my place south of Vilhelmina to Östersund and back, we go there a couple of times every summer! Welcome!
Sweden are safe in general, and even if I have been visited about 90 countries, and some of them many times, I still think Sweden is a beuty..... and yes Im a swede... There is a lots of nice places in the world, but the moste beutiful are Norway with the fjords... amazing plase for hiking....
Stranger names up north. Further to Finland and Russia. Even Norway has borders with Russia. Maby you should seek for a video from Samer. We still working on if they were norways natives or swedish. Still they have their own way of life, laws and Parliament.
The predators in Scandinavia are basically just brown bears, wolves and wolverines, and they're more scared of humans than we are of them so our wilderness is very safe in that regard. But then of course you never know what beings from folklore and mythology may be there🙃
I think it was in 18th century, however, the workers got an agreement that they didn’t have to eat salmon more than twice a week finally. Depending on season, make sure you ware long leggings and sleeves. There is a funny T-short slogan up there with the text “Norrland is fantastic says 1 billion mosquitos”. There are means to protect you…
if u come to sweden ure welcome to stay with me we have an apartment for visitors in my house so its just a room with a kitchen and bathroom so on and im just next door so if and when u can come to sweden u will be soo welcome to my house:) it would be awsome to have u here with me:)
Beautiful produced film but I get mixed feelings. It really shows how beautiful the nature is in north Sweden and Finland. But I guess this actually is a commercial, isn’t it? But I hope you someday can pack your bags, find someone who can care for your dogs and travel here.
Lappland is a part of northen sweden and finland.. its named after the old name of that population.. Lappar! Now a day we use there own name, "Sami people" but the name for the land stuck.. but Sami call it Sapmi! In anyway.. its kind of Nunavuk of norden scandinavia and finland! There is very few reindeer hearders left, moste of them have ordinary jobs! Anyhow, its altso a place where Thai farmers end up to pick "lingonberrys" and make a buck, not everyone get lucky!
Lapland and Sapmi are not the same - the former is the northernmost region of Sweden, whereas Sapmi is an area comprising the northern parts of Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia where the Sami people traditionally herded the reindeer.
Do you follow British TH-camrs that buy houses in Sweden? In middle and nort of Sweden you can buy houses with land for almost nothing. Like 50000 dollars. You should watch. If you want I can send you links to channels.
th-cam.com/video/gLfq6x8h4RE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=lKuRPDttw3ekegHt Here comes the first link. If you ever come to south of Sweden I’ll give you a tour. But it’s more expensive buying house. But it’s close to the beach 😊
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We have 12 rescue dogs at home, including 1 with diabetes who is fully blind. All Channel Membership and Donations go toward her home treatment (insulin, diet, etc).
Thank you so much!
those "cabins" are storage for hay, they are distributed like that because they are madd with timber in very specific way to manage up to 3m thick snow on the roof, it is/ was actually a chore to dig DOWN to be able to open the door and if one roof collapsed the other cabins would still be ok, of only one big storage any collapse would be a death sentence for the farm animals during the 6 months of winter so several small made more sense,
U should check out the treehouses in Harads, Uppland. A bunch of cabins u can rent in the trees made by different architects.
De er danskere.
The small cabins at 4:15 are barns to store hay. The field get harvested, the hay get dried and then stored in those barns until winter when it's was easier to bring it back home on sledges on the snow. Not many roads but forest and marshland that made moving things difficult.
Huskies are not a traditional breed here but now they are more common. Dog sleds were not common. The Sami people used reindeers to pull their sledges when moving and they use a different dog breed, the lapphund for hunting and such. Other common breeds are the gråhund and jämthund, and of course the västgötaspets aka wolf corgi :p
There is the Thai Pavilion in Utanede, Bispgården, by the Indals River (Indalsälven).
A memorial building to King Chulalongkorn's honor in the county of Jämtland in Norrland, Sweden for his visit there the 19th of July 1897.
Very beautiful Temple in lovely surroundings. 💛
It's very beautyful and inside is a brons statue of the king in natural size and a lot of flowers. Monks make sure to take care of it.
The cabins on the mountain of Luppio (at 2:50) is in Sweden then you have the Torneå river in the back. On the other side of the river you can see Finland. Many of the small cities and villages on the Swedish sides have Finnish names.
The small houses in the field are for putting the hay during the winter
Hi Sujy! I live about 10 kilometers outside Stockholm City. I feel completely safe. Walk alone outside both day and night. 🙋♀️
I will tell Sujy! :)
The cabins before was used for hay harvests, due to the limitations of machinery they instead built cabins to put it there.
Max!yeah~total beautiful - godseped! =)
I realy like your reactions,and tell your wife that she is very pretty,and i was born highest upp in lappland sweden
Thank you, I will!
Love this reaction ❤
You are so welcome to visit us here up north in Sweden.❤️välkommen
In that area where they are (Tornedalen) they have their own language called Tornedalsfinska / meiänkieli. Its kind of a mix between swedish and finish. Thats why many of the names of the places "sounds finish ".
You are really good in noticing the small things, and remember what you seen before.
Thank you!
The northern half of Sweden is very Finn influenced, and particularly in the mountain areas the Sami are there and their language stems from the same language group as Finnish
When you see this, I think you understand why the Finns and Swedes are historically known as being "the forest people", just based on the geography. Norwegians are "the mountain people", while the Danes are "the sea people" (this sounds better as opposed to "the flatlands people".
The forest played a huge role during the cold war defense planning, and I'm sure it still does. To learn more about this, you can watch the Swedish short series called "If the War Came". I have seen other react to it, but not sure where they found a version with English subtitles.
If you like salmon, raw salmon, then maybe you would like the Swedish version, "gravad lax". Basically meaning "buried salmon". Don't worry, it is nothing bad. It just means that it has been left in the fridge for up to three days, covered in salt, sugar, pepper and dill. I guess buried under salt, sugar, and so on, thus the name. So it is basically raw salmon, but flavored.
You can serve it in different ways, but a common one would be with boiled potatoes, boiled asparagus, and "hovmästarsås", a cold sauce made by mixing mustard, pepper, salt, sugar, vinegar and oil. And then dill, which is added last.
The name "hovmästarsås" means "sauce de maître d'hôtel" or something similar.
The reason many of the names in Lappland sound Finnish is because they are of Sami origin, and the Sami language is related to Finnish.
Lappland is very big and sparsely populated so unless you live in one of the cities or villages there, the distance between neighbours is pretty long. You can find a lot of lone houses and farms up there.
Would you like more videos from northern Sweden to react on, just let me know.
Yep, please share some if you have.
I think the black root vegetable you mentioned is something we call Svartrot. I think in English it's commonly called black salsify, and it's the root part used here.
I find it quite good, but taste differs. I never was a fan of black soup. Some people love that.
In summer sun never go done
If you love ❤ nature with rivers and mountines with less people North off Sweden 🇸🇪 is the place fore you!😊
Buddaharamat templet i Fredrika.
Chulalongkorn 1897.
@@farrier1234 How fun! I did not know about the one in Åsele.
-There is a memorial building to King Chulalongkorn's honor in the county of Jämtland in Norrland, Sweden for his visit there the 19th of July 1897.
-The Thai Pavilion in Utanede, Bispgården, by the Indals River (Indalsälven). Very beautiful Temple in lovely surroundings. 💛
In the north, Swedish and Finnish meld together, they are almost the same.
Finally! Welcome to my part of Sweden! Next vid should be from the western part of county Lappland and the western area of Sapmi. The mountain range of Skanderna is very beautiful. One of my favourite place is Stekenjokk with it surroundings and this is a pretty good video from there; th-cam.com/video/0hKSDcQkkXo/w-d-xo.html in wintertime Vildmarksvägen/Wilderness road is closed due to the deep snow; th-cam.com/video/a7dh4SA1Vis/w-d-xo.html (short about plowing the road in may for opening in June 6, Swedish spoking but the view speaks for itself). Best time for visiting is late August and beginning of september, earlier in summer there is mosquitos and "broms" a fly that bites, not very nice. If you come here, give me a shout and I take you from my place south of Vilhelmina to Östersund and back, we go there a couple of times every summer! Welcome!
Sweden are safe in general, and even if I have been visited about 90 countries, and some of them many times, I still think Sweden is a beuty..... and yes Im a swede... There is a lots of nice places in the world, but the moste beutiful are Norway with the fjords... amazing plase for hiking....
90!!
Stranger names up north. Further to Finland and Russia. Even Norway has borders with Russia. Maby you should seek for a video from Samer. We still working on if they were norways natives or swedish. Still they have their own way of life, laws and Parliament.
The predators in Scandinavia are basically just brown bears, wolves and wolverines, and they're more scared of humans than we are of them so our wilderness is very safe in that regard.
But then of course you never know what beings from folklore and mythology may be there🙃
Fun fact, workers went on strike because they were served Salmon too often, back in the 18th c
I think it was in 18th century, however, the workers got an agreement that they didn’t have to eat salmon more than twice a week finally.
Depending on season, make sure you ware long leggings and sleeves. There is a funny T-short slogan up there with the text “Norrland is fantastic says 1 billion mosquitos”. There are means to protect you…
if u come to sweden ure welcome to stay with me we have an apartment for visitors in my house so its just a room with a kitchen and bathroom so on and im just next door so if and when u can come to sweden u will be soo welcome to my house:) it would be awsome to have u here with me:)
We need to get out of debt before traveling again :(
We have 11 more left on the car, and 16 months student loans!
Those two travellers are Danish, I believe.
I think so too, sounded like it when they talked to each other, and also their accent.
Beautiful produced film but I get mixed feelings. It really shows how beautiful the nature is in north Sweden and Finland. But I guess this actually is a commercial, isn’t it?
But I hope you someday can pack your bags, find someone who can care for your dogs and travel here.
This indeed felt like paid promotion, but at least it was done well! We will react to more from the north of Sweden soon.
Lappland is a part of northen sweden and finland.. its named after the old name of that population.. Lappar!
Now a day we use there own name, "Sami people" but the name for the land stuck.. but Sami call it Sapmi!
In anyway.. its kind of Nunavuk of norden scandinavia and finland!
There is very few reindeer hearders left, moste of them have ordinary jobs!
Anyhow, its altso a place where Thai farmers end up to pick "lingonberrys" and make a buck, not everyone get lucky!
Lapland and Sapmi are not the same - the former is the northernmost region of Sweden, whereas Sapmi is an area comprising the northern parts of Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia where the Sami people traditionally herded the reindeer.
There aren't much population in Lapland in any nordic countries so distances to your neighbor might be 10 kilometers or more....it's wilderness.
Arent you from Canada? Isnt Lappland like Canada?
Canada is way bigger. When you buy a house, you get a piece of land the size of Laponia.
Except, almost nobody lives North Canada, it's way too cold.
Dont you have similar nature in Canada?
Depend where you live.
Do you follow British TH-camrs that buy houses in Sweden? In middle and nort of Sweden you can buy houses with land for almost nothing. Like 50000 dollars. You should watch. If you want I can send you links to channels.
Please do. I'm curious! :)
th-cam.com/video/gLfq6x8h4RE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=lKuRPDttw3ekegHt
Here comes the first link. If you ever come to south of Sweden I’ll give you a tour. But it’s more expensive buying house. But it’s close to the beach 😊
De er danskere.