From yesterdays walkies in the forest behind Mum's neighbourhood.
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From yesterdays walkies in the forest behind Mum's neighbourhood.
@sinituulia I am envious. This winter I’ve only seen few centimetres of snow, most of which is gone by afternoon.
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One more, why not. I don't think it's very special as a photo, but it is a very quintessential view of a normal little forest in Finland, and thus perhaps of some interest.
@sinituulia Oh, it's so beautiful!
And you have lingonberries growing wild in your forests? My Dad's parents were Swedish immigrants, so I have had lingonberry preserves--I don't think fresh berries are available in the US--but even in NYC, where you can find almost anything, lingonberry preserves are available in only a few stores and cost more than other preserves. But they're delicious and it's worth it.
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Extra photo not quite in the same mood:
Trees, they're really quite good.@sinituulia The Scots Pine, the least-known cultivar to be bred from Brassica Oleracea.
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There's this Finnish thing, where you might gaze upon the most beautiful pool of water in the deepest of wild, untouched Lapland, fresh water glittering in the sunlight and teeming with fish, its shores lush with berries and forage, and when a cartographer from the south comes in and asks you what it's called, to put it on a map, you say it's "Onpahanvaanlampi" or "well it's a pond, innit" in Finnish, because it is just a pond, millions like it...
I watched a video once, where an immigrant was like "Fucking STOP it, Finns, it's wonderful! What's wrong with you!" because apparently we're just. Not suitably appreciative?

@sinituulia I've got a heap of grey clouds outside my window, so obviously biased today, but: oh wow, the light in that. It's the angle of the light.

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@sinituulia I've got a heap of grey clouds outside my window, so obviously biased today, but: oh wow, the light in that. It's the angle of the light.

@leahbobet It was a very crisp and pretty day! And of course it wasn't very late but the days are still fairly short

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@sinituulia The Scots Pine, the least-known cultivar to be bred from Brassica Oleracea.
@adriano Brassica, my beloved 🥦
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@sinituulia Oh, it's so beautiful!
And you have lingonberries growing wild in your forests? My Dad's parents were Swedish immigrants, so I have had lingonberry preserves--I don't think fresh berries are available in the US--but even in NYC, where you can find almost anything, lingonberry preserves are available in only a few stores and cost more than other preserves. But they're delicious and it's worth it.
@Karen5Lund Those, Eurasian blueberries, cloudberries, crowberries, bog bilberry... There's also a couple of berries that are not edible, but I don't even know their names beyond "don't eat that"

You can just walk into any forest and gather them to your heart's content, as long as it's roughly the season and you're willing to get blood-let by all the insects. My mum usually goes out at some point, with a bunch of buckets, and then spends a couple of days removing leaves and twigs from her catch so she can actually freeze and preserve them... But you can also just get the jam from any grocery store, just not the fresh ones. -
@sinituulia I am envious. This winter I’ve only seen few centimetres of snow, most of which is gone by afternoon.
@multipass We've had steady small quantities of snow, apart from a couple of blizzards! Here there aren't all that high snow banks or anything, because it seems like most of it got stuck to the trees... But it's certainly very pretty.
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From yesterdays walkies in the forest behind Mum's neighbourhood.
@sinituulia@eldritch.cafe pretty!
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@sinituulia@eldritch.cafe pretty!
@azucat Thank! Weather did most of the work!
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From yesterdays walkies in the forest behind Mum's neighbourhood.
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From yesterdays walkies in the forest behind Mum's neighbourhood.
@sinituulia Suomessa.
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