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Whilst Finland has been among those countries with low infection rates and strict regulations, we have had our share of covid-19 pandemic this spring and summer. As the pandemic is still a big player globally in almost anything we do, we need to try and find positive sides of everyday living like it was normal. Normality needs some adjustments, of course, but we all know staying safe is always a priority, especially when traveling abroad. We in Alpland think that traveling

Dear readers. However strong this current Covid rollercoaster ride is going, we still think we could share some beautiful thoughts and up-to-date feelings to you from Lapland. What else could we do than to daydream for now and travel later when we can! It is spring in Lapland – oh yes, only now in the middle of May! - and what else could be a better time to observe around you than this season of rapid changes. For Lappish people one

Something big is happening. There is undoubtedly news about the on-going Covid-19 pandemic in every single World’s media right now. Countries around the globe are reacting to this threat one by one as the virus moves forward. Suddenly everyday life has become very strict and routined on micro level, whereas on macro level, globally, everything escalates and transforms daily. Everything is stable and still so unstable. Travel has faced its biggest transformation since innovating motor vehicles. Flights are being cancelled, borders are

There is a saying in Finnish that goes “the years are not brothers”. This means, seasons vary. Last winter snow came very late to Finnish Lapland. It was almost Christmas before the ground was covered with a layer of white powdery snow. This year winter arrived already in October and Lappish people are facing a record amount of whiteness. For sure, years are not brothers. Perhaps you did not know but Finnish people have a special relationship with winters and snow.

2010s was a radical wake-up call for the World. We started facing worrying signs of changing climate, hazardous peaking of extreme weather conditions and thus, too many lost opportunities, homes and even lives. Too cold old too warm, too much rain or too little. The overall ecosystem is aching, and it is showing. Traveling has a huge carbon footprint on this delicate ecosystem. As we know that flying or tourism can’t be thoroughly cancelled as they are a needed part of