Reaction To Living with the Dark Winters in Sweden

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • Reaction To Living with the Dark Winters in Sweden | Swedish Culture and Geography React
    This is my reaction to Living with the Dark Winters in Sweden | Midnight sun & Polar night by Jonna Jinton
    In this video I react to the experience of a woman who lives in a remote part of Sweden and experiences 24 hours of night in the winter and 24 hours of sun in the summer. This features beautiful shots of Swedish landscape
    #sweden #geography #reaction
    Original Video - • Living with the Dark W...

Комментарии • 153

  • @aniieesteiner
    @aniieesteiner 11 месяцев назад +31

    Jonna lives, as far as i know, in a municipality in Sweden called Örnsökdsvik(s kommun/municipality). It is on the 63rd parallel, which is about south of Iceland or north of the Faraoes. The municipality as a whole is home to roughly 55 000 people. The main town, Örnsköldsvik, is home to roughly 33 000 people. Today, 17th October, the sun rose at 7:40 and will set at 17:55 where she is. I don't know where in Scotland you're from, but I lived in Glasgow for two months about a million years ago, and there the sun rose at 7:51 today and will set at 18:12. To get one more point of comparison, my father's mother was from further north. A little village called Nikkaloukta. It's a tiny place west of the town Kiruna, with less than 100 people living there (Kiruna town has about 17 000 inhabitants). There, the sun rose today at 7:52 and will set at 17:04. Now everyone will thing "But Aniiee, that's not a big difference at all! What's the fuss?" The fuss is December. On the 17th of December, the sun in Glasgow: 8:42-15:43, Örnsköldsvik: 9:22-13:59, Nikkaloukta: NONE! Polar Night.
    Fun to see you among all the people learning about Sweden! Looking forward to more.

    • @actionalex3611
      @actionalex3611 11 месяцев назад +5

      Laughed a little when he said. "How is it up there, is there any jobs, is there any sort of commerce". - North of Sweden is in the big picture scarcely populated, yet highly developed and quite settled. lol

    • @soderlund3610
      @soderlund3610 11 месяцев назад +3

      Same town as Peter Forsberg

    • @zpitzer
      @zpitzer 11 месяцев назад +1

      I live in Luleå far more north than her, It's a city with light pollution, so it's not like the further north you go the smaller the towns get.

  • @matseklundh8241
    @matseklundh8241 6 месяцев назад +6

    Remember that Sweden is roughly 2100km from north to south so we have many climate zones. The winter darkness is tough in Stockholm but furthest north it’s extreme. In the summer when the sun doesn’t set you can go skiing in the midnight sun.
    To put things in perspective, If you flip Sweden upside down you end up in south of Italy. Then you can imagine the scale of Sweden.
    Where I live now in Bali, close to the equator, there is no seasonal change other than rainy/non rainy season and I miss the seasonal changes we have in Sweden.

  • @agirlnamedsaskia
    @agirlnamedsaskia 11 месяцев назад +17

    I have followed Jonna for quite a while now. She is such a genuine, talented and just extraordinary person! Every time she posts a video it feels like a gift.
    I would move to an area like this in Sweden any day. It may sound funny coming from a Canadian as we have similar landscapes here, but there’s something about Swedish culture and lifestyle that just makes more sense to me 💙💛

    • @MrZeuz666
      @MrZeuz666 11 месяцев назад +2

      It seems like a vast majority of Canadians gravitate south, and I don't just mean the fact that they all live in the south of the country. But like, the Canadian majority culture looks towards the US (as most of the world does) and forgets about their massive expanse of land to the north with the Inuits etc. In the nordics there is more acceptance of where we really live, and somewhat of an appreciation for our very clear four seasons.
      While most humans know about "four seasons" or the concept of seasons changing across the year. Quite few places have the CLEAR spring-summer-autumn-winter divide that we do.
      You might've meant other political or cultural factors but I just wanted to focus on nature, as in the video.

    • @agirlnamedsaskia
      @agirlnamedsaskia 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@MrZeuz666 I think you are right about Canadians for the most part. There’s a substantial intermingling of American culture here. Appreciation of nature varies greatly depending on which region of the country you live in. I’m from a coastal province that has a rugged beauty to it, and it influences culture and lifestyle in a way that you might not find in other provinces.
      I personally embrace all four seasons, the outdoors and nature in general. I guess my draw to a country like Sweden is (and correct me if I’m wrong) a culture of more likeminded people living in the kind of landscape that I live in here in Canada. Sweden seems to have a much calmer vibe overall. (It’s difficult not to make sweeping generalizations here of course).

    • @MrZeuz666
      @MrZeuz666 11 месяцев назад

      @@agirlnamedsaskia Hmm. As much as I think I prefer living here. It's not the best of "vibes" atm. Though I am not one of those exaggerating trolls. We have been going down in economic equality, general good-country stuff and up in violent gang crime, a shitty government, inflation and a more polarized population (like most countries lately). We've also had a stress, depression and lonliness epidemic for even longer than that. I should know. :P
      But in the usual surveys and rankings we are still very high (ofc) but just letting you know the latest trends. Regional and personal differences in stress-levels obviously. Most swedes would like a break akin to the way this video portrays stuff. Though I can't speak to if we're still "calmer" than Canada. Luckily we still have very good laws around that for working people, but yah. We are well and truly integrated in the western cultural sphere with similar problems.
      You sure are welcome to come here and visit! It's a safe place to about 98% with these fkn gangs going crazy at each other, mostly. Finally, I think it's rather difficult to immigrate currently, unless you have some desired qualifications and can get a nice job before applying for citizenship, ofc.
      Big rant over. Haha. Take care!

    • @agirlnamedsaskia
      @agirlnamedsaskia 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@MrZeuz666 Thanks for the reality check! I was really only speaking about the nature-y side of things. I could actually write a similar rant about Canada. It would feel really good to get it all off my chest 😅!
      Agreed, the pandemic has left behind a myriad of problems.. economically, socially, etc. etc. etc. Now I’m off to google gang violence in Sweden 🥺.
      Cheers!

    • @MrZeuz666
      @MrZeuz666 11 месяцев назад

      @@agirlnamedsaskia Oof. I wouldn’t do that personally. Both because it’s very sad, but also because online there’s a lot of exaggerating! I heard a journalist from a big news org say “is Sweden becoming the crime capital of the world?”. One of the dumbest sentences I’ve heard from a journalist this year for sure! Every crime has gone down except for fraud and gang violence. But it’s a fragile era we’re living in for sure.
      The nature side of things I suppose you could in fact describe Sweden as very calm. Norway is the sensational geography, and Denmark is sorta dull. Sweden has a bit of everything but in moderation. Like in this video, there is a tasteful beauty to many areas.
      Google the Swedish word “lagom”. 😉
      GL HF!

  • @roxyhart5692
    @roxyhart5692 9 месяцев назад +20

    I actually am from and still live in the very far north of Sweden and the video you're watching just feels so homey to me ❤
    Edit: As I got further into your video I saw the part about ice baths! And yes, they're absolutely invigorating. It's a sincere outer body shock but you feel... Renewed afterwards. A strange, intense but amazing feeling.

  • @carinalind8726
    @carinalind8726 2 месяца назад +1

    This video is beutiful!! Sitting here on my balcony and it's almost ten in the evening and it's as light as in the middle of the day!!!!
    Well that's swedish summer for you!!😊❤❤

  • @P0intL3ader75
    @P0intL3ader75 11 месяцев назад +9

    I actually moved with my wife from Stockholm, which by the way is already about 6 plus hours of drive from south of Sweden. Now I love yet some more 4 plus hours north of Stockholm which is just above the middle of Sweden as its whole. This location is yet some 2-3 plus hours north of me by car and to drive from the very southern tip to the most north part takes roughly close to 24 plus hours to drive give or take and that's without brakes included. Even where I live I have cows looking out my window and farm lands all over the place and no "highway" nearby for at least an hours of drive away and I wouldn't trade it for anything either, I love it!

  • @Nekotaku_TV
    @Nekotaku_TV 11 месяцев назад +8

    Was waiting for this one. One of the best videos ever. Always get me chocked up a bit.
    Swedes LOVE the sun and sunlight. Me, not so much. But I do get a special feeling when the darkness is over. To feel it on my face again. I don't live in the north, but I stay up and wake up late.
    I like the heat of the summer. And light does affect your mood, not sure how true it is with me. But it's not always so easily fixed with black out curtains, because before you go to bed the light still seeps through and what's even worse are the bloody birds singing and chirping. During winter it's easier for me to sleep. And since I started using VR I've changed my mind about preferring summer.
    I would not wanna move up to the north, and there aren't many people living up there compared to the packed south part.
    She has a few more that I love and I hope you react to, like the Wolf song and national anthem.

    • @opethium647
      @opethium647 11 месяцев назад

      Northern Norway sucks, and so probably northern Sweden too. At least Sweden got flat lands and like 10 times more roads.
      And yeah probably a reason for not many people living up north yk, like isolation and no other incentives.

  • @actionalex3611
    @actionalex3611 11 месяцев назад +14

    Really like the way you articulate and appreciate your reaction to her video. I´ve seen it a couple of times through reactors and it´s been a pleasure every time. The quality and her poetic presentation is amazing imo. Live outside Stockholm but have a lot of relatives in the north like Arvidsjaur and also further north in Kiruna with a population of around 24.000 and 28 days of polar night. Kiruna is where the Ice hotel is rebuilt every year, you probably heard of that. I concur with Jonna regarding northern lights, hard to put into words. Been some time since my last visit during that time of year. This makes me wanna return there soon lol
    Edit; Btw subscribed

  • @LoneWolf731000
    @LoneWolf731000 8 месяцев назад +1

    FinnSwede here, It's just a simpel lesson of life and there's lot more to learn.

  • @morgansjodin4859
    @morgansjodin4859 9 месяцев назад +1

    Drow a car from Kiruna to Umeå airport.. When I where in the middle of nowhere I had to stop the car and layed on the hood for almost one hour and just gazed at the stars and the silence..I grew up in Umeå the eastern side where we don´t see this lights due to the light polution. Been living in Gothenburg sience 20 years, so now i only see my TV sadly enough.

  • @lottabjelkenborg8349
    @lottabjelkenborg8349 11 месяцев назад +10

    Love your reaction and comments. So insightful and knowledgeable.
    I live much further south in Gothenburg, would never be able to handle this long winter, but agree that Jonna is living as we all should - in harmony with nature. The Earth, all humans, flora and fauna would benefit from it. 😍
    Sadly a utopia...

  • @juliarust4909
    @juliarust4909 4 месяца назад +3

    I come from a town that many would say is the southernmost part of the North of Sweden and spent most of my summers and midwinters further north as a child, I moved further south to study a few years ago. I miss the summer nights where you could be out all night when the darkest it could be was like the beginning of a sunset before the sun would rise again. I never experienced the true midnight sun but very close. I miss being able to see the stars on a clear winter afternoon/night and seeing the northern lights. It is so breathtakingly beautiful. In a way, I miss the darkness too, even though I know I couldn't handle weeks without seeing the sun, but it becomes so special with the darkness. It feels different in a way I find hard to put into words. I know I'll someday probably move up north again since I miss it a lot!

  • @janskogsberg8668
    @janskogsberg8668 16 дней назад

    About icebaths in Sweden. This is something that you get to do in schools (you don’t have to if you don’t want to) so you know how to get out of the water if you fall thru the ice during winter.

  • @malinostman9187
    @malinostman9187 11 месяцев назад +9

    The northern parts of Sweden see a lot of mining and forestry, and is also home to the Sami people who herd reindeer. It has traditionally been a poor and sparsely populated area, but recently, due to some discoveries in the mining industry, there has been an uptick in available work and there's something of a building boom going on up there right now, as there aren't enough housing to accomodate everyone.

  • @carro-xb9oz
    @carro-xb9oz 11 месяцев назад +1

    living 50 km from jonna and this part of sweden is just the best:) it can be a challenge in the winter but its the best place ever!

  • @gellawella
    @gellawella 8 месяцев назад

    It’s a feeling of pure joy when the sun comes above the horizon again. Finally the wait is over and as Jonna says, the colours are breathtaking, and makes up for the blue light you got an inkling of, the months before. To be in Kiruna when the sun reappears are magical. The intense pastel colours: pink, yellow, orange, purple, lilac and green beside all the blue … ouff, it’s serene. 🙌🏼

  • @eue073
    @eue073 9 месяцев назад +1

    @4:00 I think Umeå and Luleå are the biggest towns in the north... and then there is Boden, Piteå and Kiruna to but they are smaller than Umeå and Luleå (correct me if im wrong, I Iive in Skåne (Terra Scaniae) so its the other end of Sweden). Btw Icebath is soooo good.

  • @macjonte
    @macjonte 11 месяцев назад +5

    Was at a festival in kiruna some years back in the middle of June. The sun was like a magic spotlight straight onto the stage where The Sounds played an epic concert. Great memories.

  • @SuperBenkoo
    @SuperBenkoo 10 месяцев назад +1

    I could think of moving there if I was younger, but I´m 78 now so I´ll stay here the rest of my time...I live in Stockholm now.

  • @sussi9674
    @sussi9674 9 месяцев назад +1

    Some time ago in the "never ending" dark season I asked a friend; "do you know who came up with the idea that we should settle and live here generation after generation? I would like to speak to that person right now."
    Last week my coat froze and turned into tin foil. Not happy about having to walk an hour to work because of the snow. Sit inside an office all day and do not see the sun at all for five days a week. Life should not have to be an Arctic expedition on top of everything else.
    Then I watch Jonna Jintons experience of this country, and suddenly everything feels alright ❄

  • @madeswe3165
    @madeswe3165 11 месяцев назад +5

    If you go further up, it’s different. She lives a bit over the middle of Sweden. You have a lot of miles to go to the top of Sweden. It’s a tall country ☀️💫🥶🇸🇪

    • @Sakuyamon
      @Sakuyamon 11 месяцев назад

      Lol yes its tall but its also quite small. There is a lot of shifting for such a small country.

    • @annicaesplund6613
      @annicaesplund6613 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@SakuyamonUkraine ranks second largest country in Europe, with 603,500 km², followed by France with 551,695 km², Spain with 505,992 km², and Sweden with 450,295 km².

    • @MathsOP
      @MathsOP 9 месяцев назад

      @@Sakuyamonits not small

  • @CocaLeeveStepper
    @CocaLeeveStepper 9 месяцев назад

    I live in nothern Sweden and I live in these conditions. It's not only remote villages that lives like this in Sweden, we have cities all the way to most nothern parts of Sweden. Bare in mind that when you born here this is as natural as I imagine tropical heat is to someone who is born into that kind of climate. Right now we have about 4 hours of semi-light per day. if we are lucky. Right about at christmas time it will switch and slowly get lighter and lighter to the end of june. If you find this interesting, I would recommend you to cover our fifth season - vårvinter ("spring winter"). Best and most beautiful time of the year. A time when its hot enough to sunbathe a T-shirt but still lots and lots of snow.

  • @aMp-
    @aMp- 11 месяцев назад +2

    I am a 33-year-old man, born, raised, and still living in Stockholm, Sweden. AMA in a reply here and I will do my best to answer! This is your chance to ask - one shot or one opportunity. Would you capture it or just let it slip?

    • @Kortcubain
      @Kortcubain 10 месяцев назад

      From Borås, moms spagetti

  • @pmophy17421
    @pmophy17421 11 месяцев назад +1

    Jonna is actually geographically speaking living in the middle of Sweden.

  • @Jooonas484
    @Jooonas484 9 месяцев назад

    Skål från 🇸🇪Norr 👍🤗

  • @wwklnd
    @wwklnd 11 месяцев назад +3

    I live just south of where Jonna Jinton lives, and yeah during the summer the sun just barely dips below the horizon and it never really gets dark, but in winter we get like 2-4 hours of sunlight depending on weather (and bc I live on the wrong side of a mountain, I hardly get any at home lol).
    The northern lights are gorgeous though. Absolutely lovely. But the winter darkness means I spend most of winter tired and depressed lmao.

  • @Tim_Nilsson
    @Tim_Nilsson 11 месяцев назад +1

    I live in southern Sweden about 100 km south of Gothenburg and I personally wouldn't consider moving to "Norrland".
    I struggle a bit with the 7-8 h or so of daylight we have in the winter down here and I'm not a fan of snow. =P
    I just like living on the west coast close to the sea even though it can be quite grey, wet and windy.
    About 90 % of the population lives in the bottom half of the country.
    Mining and logging are and have traditionally been large sectors of employment in the north.
    But today there's more diversity and there's currently a bit of an investment boom going on in the north so the employers are screaming for workers.

  • @soderlund3610
    @soderlund3610 11 месяцев назад +3

    Land of the gods

  • @kingwacky184
    @kingwacky184 11 месяцев назад

    I have seen the northern lights but not in the north. I saw it in Stockholm last year.

  • @SuperDalton72
    @SuperDalton72 6 месяцев назад

    like your scottish accent...thats old reel uk.. if you go to london today there words is whashed out by time,,

  • @rogerforsman5064
    @rogerforsman5064 11 месяцев назад

    Along the (east) coast you have the industrial side of the region. But in this age of interconnection you can work from anywhere. (But you need local help with physical stuff..)

  • @ispbrotherwolf
    @ispbrotherwolf 11 месяцев назад +1

    I´m winter born, winter is my element, wolves is my nature, through darkness I live.

  • @BerishStarr
    @BerishStarr 11 месяцев назад +1

    Around 85% of the Swedish population lives in the south third of the country. Further north most people live along the eastern coastline. The western parts of Sweden is part of the Scandinavian mountain chain. Big chunks of Sweden is sparsely populated, in some parts you can drive a car for hours without seeing a house. But if you drive North along the Eastern coast, you gonna find it very developed. Luleå is located in the far north, at the Northern part of the gulf of Bothnia. The town have almost 50k people, almost 80k in the municipality.
    But! Even if the country is sparsely populated in some parts, you can still live in a cottage out in nowhere an have fiber internet. About 98% of the Swedish population have internet in their home.

  • @lucindasweden5778
    @lucindasweden5778 8 месяцев назад

    For me it would be self torture , yes I have been up north ,Kiruna and Kebnekaise

  • @ssirfbrorsan
    @ssirfbrorsan 10 месяцев назад +1

    Did you know (know) you? That the Northern Lights have sounds? Out in the quiet wilderness you can hear how the Northern Lights "rustle"? Kind of like static electricity. To lie on your back and look up at the northern lights and the stars AND hear the sound! It sends shivers down your spine.

  • @zetsuki4207
    @zetsuki4207 9 месяцев назад +1

    I live a couple of hours drive away from where Jonna lives, closer to the coast and a bit further up north. But yeah, It really is like this in the countryside. (grew up in a tiny village outside of the city)
    When it comes to jobs, a lot of people still work in the cities even though the drive might be 100km or more one way. My dad had a colleague who travelled about 230 km twice a day to work... Because he didn't want to live in the city.

  • @Upe-f9c
    @Upe-f9c 8 месяцев назад +1

    Love her videos. She is giving us something of an ideal life style that can be hard to follow, but there is so much you can do wherever you live. Just start to grow some herbs in your window sill and then develop from there.

  • @menosproblemos6993
    @menosproblemos6993 7 месяцев назад

    Haha! Why are Swedish people so well versed?
    Because beyond just talking about the weather, we can also talk about the brightness. ;)
    - Sure is bright today.
    - Yeah, it's only 7 o'clock and you can see your shadow.
    X D

  • @Passioakka
    @Passioakka 11 месяцев назад +1

    I live on lat 64, about 250 km/155 English mile north of Jonna. There is still 395 km/245 English mile to reach the Artic Circle but if I get up on a mountain around midsummer I can see the midnight sun. She lives in a small village and the photos are from there and from the place where she has her vacation cabin, closer to the Scandic mountains in the county of Jämtland. The Scandic mountain range goes from the very north of Norway, Finland and Sweden to the south of Norway and Sweden. It is a young mountain range standing where once the Kaledonian mountain range (from the north of Irland over the north of Scotland, to Norway/Sweden and Svalbard) once was standing.
    When working the darkness of winter is a little hard to cope with, dark when you leave home and dark when you get home. Nowadays I do not work due to illness and that feels great because my illnes get worse in wintertime with degrees below cero, so I do not go out very often. But when I was young winter was as fun as summer; skiing, skating, icefishing, drive snowmobile... The darkness can be a little hard but it becomes what you make of it. In summertime (I feel quite well in summer) I sleep less and spend all my time outside; gardening growing my vegetables, foraging for herbs, berries and mushroom. Fishing in our river or go to the mountains hiking and making food outside on the grill or over campfire. Autumn is hard work taking care of the harvest and preserve it, smoke som fishes and pick the last mushrooms. Then X-mas comes, fixing the house, getting a X-mas tree and later on celebrating New Years eve. No time to get depressed! In January we start to see the sun and days with severe cold (Jan-Feb) I dedicate to hobbies like handicrafts; sewing, knitting, crocheting or read books and look at movies and make a lot of nice food and bake cookies (always gain weight in winter 😁). If you plan your days and follow your routine and do things that fun, a little a day, the winter is not so bad.

  • @adambohlin5112
    @adambohlin5112 5 месяцев назад

    Yea ofc Ice-bath is the way to go many many Swedes do this and in Norway and Finland too the Viking style hehe and when our military were mandatory all (guys) "back when" had to do the ice-bath, me being from Greece originally I came to Sweden when I was young during the civil war in Greece I have never adapted to the dark winters in Sweden, and even if the summers are amazing and so so beautiful it can not make up for winter Nov-Mar, But ofc my skin tone needs more light and I can absorb as much as fair skinned people during the summer so I had to move since I got so depressed for 6 months each year. But Scandinavia is breathtakingly wonderful and a clear wintersday when the sun is shining on snow clothed trees and to witness the Aurora borealis never gets old , but visiting my friends for a week each year is enough to satisfy my Northern lights "deficiency" then I want to go where it is warm and sunny.

  • @robustjonas
    @robustjonas 9 месяцев назад

    Some of the biggest cities in these northern parts of sweden have up to around 50~60 thousand inhabitants and living in these conditions for your entire life it isnt difficult or anything as it is simply natural, seeing the sun for the first time in weeks is just another day here, nothing particular.

  • @lassepienimaki3019
    @lassepienimaki3019 8 месяцев назад

    Am moved from Stockholm to "Norrland" nere Kalix 1000km travel one mille its 1,68 km but we have somfing kold
    Aled "mil" in Sveden mens 10km

  • @dvogonen
    @dvogonen 9 месяцев назад

    Most people growing up in the north adapt and can handle the darkness. But many people who move there do suffer depressions during the winter time.

  • @TheSmongo
    @TheSmongo 8 месяцев назад +1

    When me and my wife take day hikes in the woods of, for example, Dalsland, we say to our selves quite often, "I really do understand why all the fables existed, with trolls, fairies and other thing, back in the days." The woods are enchanting.
    If there is to be one reason to visit Sweden, it would be the nature. You can camp WHEREVER you want, whenever you want, probably heard of allemansrätt.. And in places like Dalsland, many of the lakes are drinkable, so you dont have to worry about water in many cases. Just awesome.

  • @melinaljung8105
    @melinaljung8105 11 месяцев назад +1

    She lives in a municipality on the sea coast I grew up about an hour from that municipality in another city (just as high up not on the coast though) so we have the same light conditions and this is just the middle of Sweden, still northern Sweden though, so it’s way worse even higher up. I do love the light conditions as well. I absolutely love the dark winters and then in the spring when we’re starting to get long days. I now live in the very south of Sweden because of my grandparents, but I hate the weather here. It is never really cold or any sort of winter here, only rain and windy. So I’m moving back up when I have the possibility.

  • @Congaman41
    @Congaman41 11 месяцев назад

    The fastest echonomical grotwth happens in the northern parts of Sweden. I live as far south possible in Sweden but could surely consider moving to the far north to get real winters, not only rain as we get her in the south.

  • @blissfull_ignorance8454
    @blissfull_ignorance8454 11 месяцев назад +8

    These same phenomena happen also in the northern parts of Finland and Norway, as well. In fact, the contrast in light conditions are even stronger in Finland and Norway, because both extend more north than the northernmost point of Sweden.

    • @MrZeuz666
      @MrZeuz666 11 месяцев назад +2

      The difference between Swe and Fin is negligible.

  • @anneliejohansson4425
    @anneliejohansson4425 6 месяцев назад

    Many big cities there. Kiruna, Gällivare, Kalix, Luleå. Im born in Kiruna.

  • @ofranzen
    @ofranzen 9 месяцев назад

    I'm from the south of Sweden (Stockholm) and did my non-weapon military service up in Lapland and the northern lights are amazing if you're lucky to catch a big one.

  • @menosproblemos6993
    @menosproblemos6993 7 месяцев назад

    She mentioned the Wim Hoff method. Check him up!
    I don't get why we feel cold and sometimes freeze to death when we can actually stand the cold.

  • @ispbrotherwolf
    @ispbrotherwolf 11 месяцев назад

    Sauna - Beer - ice bath = life

  • @devinruhl9706
    @devinruhl9706 7 месяцев назад

    Try Alaska there’s some places that experience 2 months of darkness

  • @stephaniechbakingtraveler4262
    @stephaniechbakingtraveler4262 11 месяцев назад +1

    Yes i can really live like this kind of life.

  • @miggymiggyorg
    @miggymiggyorg 6 месяцев назад

    That place is very remote and not many live there. We go there to live a few weeks in nature

  • @susanneericsson3871
    @susanneericsson3871 10 месяцев назад

    If you want this you shall move north in sweden to a red and white little cottage.😊

  • @bodilfrausing7966
    @bodilfrausing7966 11 месяцев назад +1

    Nice reaction. 😊👍
    Jonna Jinton actually once won YT's price for best cinematografic.🌄

  • @Steff2929again
    @Steff2929again 10 месяцев назад

    The northern part of Sweden is relatively sparsely populated. Urbanisation has been quite intense for the last 50 years. Nowadays, most people, well over 80 %, live in urban areas along the Bothnian coast. The two northern counties, Västerbotten (98,245 km2) and Norrbotten (55,186 km2) has a population 268,000 and 248,883 respectively.
    For comparison, Scotland has an area of 77,910 km2 with a population of 5.4 million, England 130,279 km2, pop. 56 million)

  • @Flum666
    @Flum666 6 месяцев назад

    Kiruna, Finland, more than 100.000 people

  • @einarvalentinoronn9870
    @einarvalentinoronn9870 11 месяцев назад +1

    Leva med importerat bus är det verkliga problemet i Sverige

  • @therucha
    @therucha 11 месяцев назад

    oh yah i've seen the northern lights ... i live up there in the north

  • @ShadowScoutSwede
    @ShadowScoutSwede 10 месяцев назад

    Well, i live in the northern parts of Sweden and i don´t mind long darker days in winter time i really enjoy it and i´m happier when it is dark and cold. I have more of a problem with the sunlight and the heat i feel constantly sick in summertime and in my opinion, you can have too much sunlight and that is not good for you either. This summer i had too much sunlight i will manage for the next 3 millennia's i don´t need that much sun at all. All temperatures over 12 degrees Celsius is too hot for me. And in the summer i also get depressed because of the sun and the heat and it is annoying and it makes me cranky. In the summer i´m so tired because of the heat and the sun i want to sleep all day long it is hard to do anything that is why i prefer the winter.

  • @northernswedenstories1028
    @northernswedenstories1028 11 месяцев назад +1

    Her channel reslly isnt very representative of how Sweden is as a whole. Basically no one lives like she portrays in her videos. It's mostly hipster RUclipsrs living like this.

    • @mrjallo9912
      @mrjallo9912 8 месяцев назад

      Why would it be representative, that’s not the point (however, it says something about our past and perhaps our future). Hipsters mostly live in Stockholm and wouldn’t survive a week out there. Jonna Jinton was born in Falun in central Sweden, grew up in Stenungsund (a town north of Gothenburg) and used to visit the region in the video during summers in her childhood (until she moved there), as I understand.

  • @broderperdurabo
    @broderperdurabo 5 месяцев назад

    Yes she lives near a couple of "big" cities.

  • @lucindasweden5778
    @lucindasweden5778 8 месяцев назад

    Beautiful , but U can get Lappsjuka

  • @Kelsea-2002
    @Kelsea-2002 10 месяцев назад +2

    I've been following Jonna since I was a teenager. She showed me the possibilities for an creative mind in such an environment.
    So I decided to go to the far north for a winter season to work on my first album.
    Spring came, summer came, autumn came, and winter is just around the corner again... and I'm still in the northwest of Finland.
    I haven't written a note for my album yet, but I've made a home for myself... work can wait, a home can't.

  • @swedesarewhite5984
    @swedesarewhite5984 9 месяцев назад

    The true white peoples land of Sweden

  • @ninagandersson9573
    @ninagandersson9573 11 месяцев назад +1

    Love your accent 😊

  • @beagustafsson5343
    @beagustafsson5343 5 месяцев назад

    We Swedes are use to it … but we don’t like it

  • @jeffstanford8799
    @jeffstanford8799 7 месяцев назад

    The first time I experienced the midnight sun was on a backpacking trip to Hammerfest, Norway, in the middle of the summer. We slept in a tent of light-colored materials, and I even had my flashlight with me. OMG, why? The daylight was the same all 24 hours. Now I have lived in Stockholm, Sweden the past 40 years and love the change of season from winter to spring, because the sun rises earlier each day.

  • @antiHUMANDesigns
    @antiHUMANDesigns 6 месяцев назад

    I live slightly to the south of this, where the sun does come up in the winter, but it barely makes it over the horizon, and if there's a hill or moutain in that direction you never get any sun.
    It's not too bad, really. I've never had it any other way, so it's just natural to me.
    And like Jonna says in the video, sometimes it's cloudy for perhaps weeks in a row, covering those few hours that the sun woudl otherwise have been visible.
    When the sun comes up at a low angle, the clouds completely negate the sunlight.
    It's true that you get that "is that the sun?" feeling when it comes back. It can be quite a surprise, like you forgot how bright it could get.
    And then you see all the Swedes standing with their eyes closed, facing the sun, like meerkats. :D

  • @antiHUMANDesigns
    @antiHUMANDesigns 6 месяцев назад

    The largest city above the pole circle in Sweden is Kiruna, population about 23'000.
    So, it is indeed quite remote and relatively devoid of people.
    But the pole circle really only covers the "tip" of Sweden, anyway.

  • @petter5721
    @petter5721 11 месяцев назад +1

    Love Sweden 😍

  • @carro-xb9oz
    @carro-xb9oz 11 месяцев назад

    adapt and enjoy ure life

  • @jimmylehto9346
    @jimmylehto9346 9 месяцев назад

    obviously it is visualizing beautiful to most people (through a camera licence) , but most people being there would want to leave. these are hard conditions (that us northerners love) that would turn most people away.

    • @jimmylehto9346
      @jimmylehto9346 9 месяцев назад

      and as I have commented before, the lack of vitamin d..

    • @jimmylehto9346
      @jimmylehto9346 9 месяцев назад

      Ask this guy how he would like to live there, mind you he isn't half way to the north..
      ruclips.net/video/XG3WfCWU9D0/видео.htmlsi=SumOO23ZsHwK1-63

  • @najroe
    @najroe 10 месяцев назад

    most populated city within 200km from her is roughly 100 000 ppl. and that is largest in the region by far, you will have to go over 500km for anything larger. up here we have population density around 1 person per square kilometer, and if you remove two largest towns/cities even more (I live north of her so even less population density).

  • @ssirfbrorsan
    @ssirfbrorsan 10 месяцев назад

    I live where darkness is a fact for about four months. Then I rejoice over my wood-burning stove Rejoice over ice fishing (angling). Rejoice in the light the snow brings. Rejoice in the dry air and how many animals visit me for help with food. Then spring comes! And everything comes to life.

  • @NennaC
    @NennaC 10 месяцев назад

    You asked about jobs in northern Sweden and if there are towns which are a bit more populated. Yes, there are towns also up north, the most populated ones are situated along the east coast but some also further in towards the mountain range. Although there are more job opportunities in our biggest cities down south, it’s also possible to find jobs up north. As always it depends on your experience and education if it will be easy to find one, or take a bit longer. The distances up north are quite long and you can have to drive for quite a while between towns through seemingly neverending forests. To live up north suits people who aren”t so easily affected by the light shifts and who like the tranquility and laid back, slower lifestyle up there. Some people get easily and severely depressed due to the changes in body chemistry which the dark winters can cause. Others don’t seem to be very affected by this and can make up for it with vitamins, exercise and artificial light.

  • @MariaNorell
    @MariaNorell 6 месяцев назад

    I live in the northern part of Sweden and I love the conteas in the light.. when it's dark you don't have to do a lot of things just enjoy life the mark, the northern lights, the stars and when it's bright around the clock I'm up very longing and enjoying the bright summer evenings/nights

  • @Sakuyamon
    @Sakuyamon 11 месяцев назад

    I live in the southern parts of the middle of Sweden, Im a bit too low for the midnight sun and the polar night but I almost get them... like I can still see that ribbon of light across the horison at midnights in the summer, and in the winter I get about 6 hours of light. Rarely but sometimes, we get the aurora however I have never seen it because it usually happens on days when its cloudy ><
    Even if we get some light during the winters, sometimes it can feel very dark due to cloudy weather...usually throughout november its almost always cloudy... sometimes it feels like there is a cloud cover from november to february...and yea, it can feel so strange to see the sun again when you have gone a long time without it, but its such a relief when you do see it...There is nothing like realizing you just passed through the darkest parts of the year and finally see that the days get longer. I swear, every year we keep freaking out that its light at 18.00 in the spring!
    Sweden has quite a few of well populated cities, like Stockholm and Goteborg, but most towns have pretty low populations. But even the cities, in compare to other european cities like Paris, are pretty calm even when there are a lot of people about. And yea, depending on where you are, it can feel very lonesome and scary in the nights, because there can be quite a large distance to the larger communities. Specially in the nights when there are animal sounds and you cant see any other lights...You will never feel as alone as when you cannot see any other light around you.
    And yes indeed! Sweden is incredibly beautiful. It isnt hard to imagine how the image of fairies and elves came to be in those forests!
    I wouldnt say that its peaceful to see the stars when you are out so far that there is less light pollution... its mighty and beautifull...but its also frighting. It make you realize how small and insignificant one is...
    There is a reason why old Swedish folk tales and folk songs are very melancholic.
    Im not sure if I could move up to the north of sweden, its rough as it is here where I live, but I have traveled up higher a few times. I think Dalarna or Gavle is as high up as I could consider to move. Gorgeous place, I highly recommend... Not much people but a lot of forests and beautiful views of rolling mountains!
    Never had an icebath, I only had cold baths in the summer while its really hot XD Closest I got to an icebath was when I visited a bathhouse where you could swim outside when you were in the pool. The water was warm but the outside was freezing as it was still february or something like that. Bizarre and cool at the same time.
    Living exactly the same life as Jonna wouldnt be possible for me. I dont like being out in the forest (I got arachnophobia), and I would need a job that would allow for that sort of lifestyle which is not always possible and might not suit me... but in some regards I could say my life is somewhat similar to Jonnas, trying to make use of the light I get in the winters, and try to roll with that it gets darker, try to eat well. Cant always get enough sleep in the winters due to jobs and stuff that force me to wake up before the sun rises...sigh, a lot of jobs dont account for the increased darkness and tiredness, they want you to perform same across the year...

  • @FuzzyFoot58
    @FuzzyFoot58 10 месяцев назад

    Where I live, in the southern north, the sun sets at 3 pm. It rises around 10am.
    The entire swedish population is smaller than the population in New York city and the southern half of Sweden has well over 60% of us or more.
    Where I live the first snow usually comes at Halloween and its like a switch being flipped; autumn one day and winter the next. The snow isnt gone until the last week in May, when the heat comes back with a vengeance; time to go to the nude beach again. The spring takes its time but in June summer comes just as fast as winter does.
    But I must say that the way that the woman in the video portrays her life is definately not how we all live; if anything, she is an oddity. Most people live in cities just as advanced as any Brittish or American city and, even though we have thousands of little hamlets in the vast countrysides and our deep forests, they often dont have a high population count compared to the cities.
    One thing that is great about Sweden is the allemans rätt, (every mans right) whuch makes it lwgal for everyone to walk in nature or camp fir a night or two even on land that is owned by someone else. As long as you dont overstay your welcome, or if you litter and make an awful racket, anyone is welcome in every forest, canyon, meadow and beach. You can even pick fruits, mushrooms or berries as long as it is within a reasonable amount.

  • @_Wolfsbane_
    @_Wolfsbane_ 11 месяцев назад

    I live much further south (outside the town of Gävle) but yes, I could live where she lives. It's not *that* far north after all =).

  • @hakanw8612
    @hakanw8612 7 месяцев назад

    Im working in a homecare health system (hemthänst), and the biggest problem with the darkest part of the year is to convice my patients that it is daytime. Especially patients with demethia.

  • @dromedda6810
    @dromedda6810 10 месяцев назад

    i love living in the north of sweden, its makes you extremely connected and dependent with nature, all my routines and how i generelly live change with the seasons. in the summer i sleep less and just try to enjoy it, while in the winter i work in the forests with preparing for the next winter by cutting down birch and pine for firewood for the next winter. things like shopping isnt trivial, it takes me about 2 hours to get to the nearest grocery store. and in the winter i have to take the fourwheeler to be able to get to the nearest real road. and if i need to have my car i need to shovel snow with the atv for like a whole day just to be able to get the car out because of the snow. its not for everyone and was really rough getting used to when i moved here a few years ago. but i really enjoy it, and its a great contrast to what i do for work ( im a remote programmer for a company in stockholm ) its a very individual way of living. im pretty much entirely self dependant ( except for groceries and all the tech things i need )

  • @pegr69
    @pegr69 11 месяцев назад

    There is a reason why October is called suicide month in Sweden, darkness comes, and ppl´s mood drops through the floor.

  • @Duececoupe
    @Duececoupe 9 месяцев назад

    Miss our nature, then again....I've got the highlands now to help me!
    All those northern lights and the midnight sun, if you haven't experienced it....
    Umpteen times I've been waking up thinking that it's daytime, but 2 in the morning....
    Then, during the winter, you sneeze....you miss the daylight! 😉😆😂
    Where I used to live before Glasgow! en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96stersund

    • @Duececoupe
      @Duececoupe 9 месяцев назад

      Winters in places like this, they're not for the week of heart and with the northern lights, then you really realise how tiny and insignificant you really are!
      With the midnight sun, been a few near enough 24 hour parties in my youth....
      If you play golf, I think that you can play 18 holes up in Kituna, if I remember correctly!
      Winter baths are something else, followed by a sauna! 🍻

  • @laggmonstret
    @laggmonstret 11 месяцев назад

    Umeå is the largest city in the north of sweden, but I would say Luleå is a good, vibrant and lively city in the real north with all you could think of that you expect from a city :)

  • @bertil3887
    @bertil3887 11 месяцев назад

    the largest city in that region depends on what you mean, i live in the largest city of northern sweden and we have a population of about 135 000
    but on the darkest time of the year we have 4 hours of sunlight per day if the weather is good
    if i would travel about 550 km north i would not experience any sunlight whatsooever from 14th of december to 31st and then iff you travel to the northernmost part of sweden they dont have any sunlight from 2nd of december to 11th of january so it varys a lot considering where you live

  • @wahaha6961
    @wahaha6961 11 месяцев назад

    I was born and raised in Norrköping (~1,5h South of Stockholm), but all my relatives are from up North (half of them moved to Stockholm). During the summer in Norrköping the sun would set at around 21:00-22:00.
    When we would visit my grandparents outside Luleå in the summer, it'd be bright at 22:00-23:00, and I'd be confused about being to to go sleep when the sun's still up. To make matters worse, I get sleepy when it's dark, and ONLY when it's dark, so falling asleep was a considerable challange in spite of blackout curtains..! ... The best (and the worst) part is that I'd get woken up every other "night" bcuz the rays of the sun found a gap between the curtains (where the string runs through), and the blackout curtain and just poke me right in the corner of my eye, and then I'd be up for three hours contemplating life cuz everybody else would get up at around 06:00, and the wooden floors creaked so loudly that granny and mother would wake right up if I got up! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Zubiila
    @Zubiila 10 месяцев назад

    Every winter I get the urge to move to Northern Sweden. I grew in the outskirts of the Stockholm region, and we'd go up North to ski every year. I've always loved going further up north in Sweden, the landscape is beautiful and I love the snow. But as I became an adult, I moved south instead - to Denmark. Despite living in Northern Denmark, winters here are quite depressing. We get about a week of snow, the rest of the the time it rains. I find these winters harder than the winters I grew up with, despite the fact that we have more sunlight. I think it's because of the lack of snow. I relish it whenever it comes here. But winters are definitely the times I miss Sweden the most. Going up north to ski is a tradtion we've kept doing and, besides Christmas, it is the highlight of my winter. But while waiting for the trip, I get through the winter by making things cozy, drinking lots of tea and watching TV shows from northern climates.

  • @daw7563
    @daw7563 11 месяцев назад

    I'd say Kiruna is the place to go if you want to experience the light conditions while still have a somewhat large town around. Kiruna can be pretty boring though. 🙂

  • @KimOfDrac
    @KimOfDrac 5 месяцев назад

    We see the Northern Lights on the west coast in middle Sweden too nowadays :)

  • @Stiligtdamen
    @Stiligtdamen 8 месяцев назад

    I saw the northenlights in the middle south of Sweden. Värmland.

  • @linusperez2158
    @linusperez2158 9 месяцев назад

    I live between south and middle of Sweden and in the mid of summer we have like i hour or so of dark at night, kind of cool

  • @jayamilapersson4030
    @jayamilapersson4030 11 месяцев назад

    Where I live the sun sets about 23 at mid summer and it usually dont get completely dark and in winter you have almost darkness all day but I live a bit more south then Jonna but still is regarded as being part of the north part of Sweden. So we dont get completely dark but have a few hours of daylight at least. But in all of Sweden when spring comes you will see Swedes turn like flowers to soak up the first rays of sunlight this new year. Its natrual to kind of greet the sun back into our life again.

  • @mairhydling631
    @mairhydling631 9 месяцев назад

    The mining industry is huge in northern Sweden! They're hiring people all the time 👍

  • @filiptervald9233
    @filiptervald9233 11 месяцев назад

    3:34 Yes! It is just like that. Such a strange but awesome feeling when you get the reminder that the sun still exists..

  • @Nisse49
    @Nisse49 11 месяцев назад

    I live in the same latitude in Sweden, but closer to the coast🙌

  • @tomaspersson1830
    @tomaspersson1830 11 месяцев назад

    Läs in på detta istället för att halvslabba, dra dit pepparn växer är ditt nästa klipp.

  • @MrBierbanger
    @MrBierbanger 11 месяцев назад

    At the end of the day, everyone just wants Jonna to sit on their faces

  • @bph9047
    @bph9047 11 месяцев назад

    I live in the same region as Jonna 😊