One of the joys of our travels over the last few years has been sampling the local bread in the countries we have visited. France, obviously, is brilliant at it, but is probably trumped by Galicia, the taste of whose rustic loaves lives on in the memory. On our current trip we managed to find lovely bread in Sweden and Denmark, while Norwegian supermarkets had a fantastic range of artisan loaves made from a variety of flours including barley and spelt. Finland has been something of a disappointment in this respect. Rye is the predominant flour, which is fine, but the Finns obviously prefer their bread factory made, sliced, and sold in plastic wrapping. We look forward to improvements as we go south.
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Musk Ox having tea |
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Wolverines are very engaging |
I was ambivalent about the polar bear enclosure. While large it was bare and rocky, most unlike the natural Arctic habitat of these beautiful animals which like to roam over vast distances. No doubt the one bear we saw sleeping among the rocks will be happier when winter comes but I was left feeling a little sad about its surroundings. I was cheered up by discovering two animals of which I had never heard. Pallas's Cat is a small wildcat with a grumpy expression which is a native of Central Asia. There it is hunted for its fur and the appalling trade in oriental medicines which values its fat. Another endangered species we saw was the Dhole, a type of wild dog which looks much like our own fox, although without the bushy tail.
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A Dhole having a bath |
We were able to relax that evening in a forest glade. the state-owned forestry authority provides dry toilets, shelters and fire pits at a number of sites, so we found ourselves sitting by a wood fire while the spaniels wandered about sniffing at the undergrowth. It was the epitome of getting away from it all, watching the smoke rise and listening to the silence.
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The pups enjoyed the camp fire |
The next morning we took the spaniels for a walk through the woodland which gave us a chance to let them off the lead.We then headed south planning to spend no more than a couple of hours on the road. As I have mentioned before, driving in this part of Finland, with its long straight roads and forests on either side can become quite tedious. However, we were surprised when the road suddenly widened out for no apparent reason. It turns out that during the Cold War, the Finns had taken the option to land fighter aircraft on remote stretches of highway to counter any threat from Russia, Given the history of Finland, it's little wonder they are somewhat cautious about their larger neighbour to the East.
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Luckily there wasn't an F15 coming the other way |
We had planned to spend the night south of the small town of Paltamo where we stopped to take on fresh water and dump the cassette. However, the position by the lake was so inviting we decided to stay the night, the only disturbance being the long freight trains rattling over a nearby bridge carrying an iron-bearing ore called taconite from Russia to the Finnish port of Kokkola. It rained that night so the air was fresh the next morning when we took the spaniels for a run on wet grass alongside the lake.
As we drove south the landscape began to open up with fields taking the place of forest.
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Ski-jumps. Common as muck |
Finland floats |
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Water, water everywhere |
We saw some ski jumps in Norway, they look terrifying.
ReplyDeleteDon't they just! I watched a guy go down a dry one in Lillehammer, it was almost vertical.
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