I know that place. Not the best area but not the worst. The further you get from the train stations, the more relaxed it gets. Of nearby attractions, I recommend Shoku Burger in Mikkola, near Korso. It is unbelievable to me that such good burgers can exist in such a ghetto. There are also good views at a hill or täyttömäki north from Leinelä. You need to walk there for around 3 km on a gravel path through a forest.
There's not that much hills here, where I live we have mountains, Finland is mostly flat. There will be an update, but I am not staying here. I already lived here for 25 years
Yea a normal hill in 99% of the country is about 50 meters tall. extremely flat. When i was hiking in the alps, a normal hill where locals were just on a walk could easily be 1000-1500 or even 2500 meters tall. So 50 times as tall if i calculated correctly
@@Hikingandnatureforpeople-st7ctNorthern, Eastern and central (middle part) Finland are not flat. South Finland you find only some rare hills. And West Finlad its the same, quite flat too.
Relax. 99, 99 % keep their dogs on a leash. And there's only one snake in Finland that can harm you. Viper. But it's very rare that it will be a problem when you're walking on a trail. And thanks for showing that there's still green in our cities. Hopefully our coverment understands the value of that in the future also. By the way. We are hospitable people, even we just don*t show it. Just different culture and habbits.
@@Hikingandnatureforpeople-st7ct Maybe we need to cut down trees/forest now, because a lot of wood we use were imported from east, mainly from Rus and Belarus. Now because of the situation in Europe we need to use our own resources more.
@@Hikingandnatureforpeople-st7ct also EU may limit cutting forests so better take those down while you still can ! I find it interesting that trying to save world you force people to cut down forests, it just shows how little these green people can think ahead of their ideas and how it will end.
I know that place. Not the best area but not the worst. The further you get from the train stations, the more relaxed it gets. Of nearby attractions, I recommend Shoku Burger in Mikkola, near Korso. It is unbelievable to me that such good burgers can exist in such a ghetto. There are also good views at a hill or täyttömäki north from Leinelä. You need to walk there for around 3 km on a gravel path through a forest.
This ain’t no ghetto, I live in the hood in Atlanta. This is Beverly Hills compared to it 🤣
Well, thats finnish "ghetto", or just a periferia. Of course we dont have ghettos like big cities in the U.S.
That looks very nice, thank you!
Come and join me for a walk, I could use a guide, things here have changed lol
We are really sick people physically and mentally here in Finland really.
Chile might be similarly healthy by hills. Or Tibet. Or Norway. Or USA. Or Japan. Or Venezuela. Curious about doing an update to this in 6 months. 🎉
There's not that much hills here, where I live we have mountains, Finland is mostly flat. There will be an update, but I am not staying here. I already lived here for 25 years
Yea a normal hill in 99% of the country is about 50 meters tall. extremely flat.
When i was hiking in the alps, a normal hill where locals were just on a walk could easily be 1000-1500 or even 2500 meters tall. So 50 times as tall if i calculated correctly
@@Hikingandnatureforpeople-st7ctNorthern, Eastern and central (middle part) Finland are not flat. South Finland you find only some rare hills. And West Finlad its the same, quite flat too.
@@mikemilk2653 Compared to where I live, this whole country is all flat. You will see it in other videos once I get back home
@@moonliteX Very true.
Relax. 99, 99 % keep their dogs on a leash. And there's only one snake in Finland that can harm you. Viper. But it's very rare that it will be a problem when you're walking on a trail.
And thanks for showing that there's still green in our cities. Hopefully our coverment understands the value of that in the future also.
By the way. We are hospitable people, even we just don*t show it. Just different culture and habbits.
Yup very true. I am actually from here, born and raised. What I have noticed on this trip that a lot of greenery has been chopped down. I wonder why.
@@Hikingandnatureforpeople-st7ct
Maybe we need to cut down trees/forest now, because a lot of wood we use were imported from east, mainly from Rus and Belarus.
Now because of the situation in Europe we need to use our own resources more.
@@SiilGrathat could be the case, who knows
@@Hikingandnatureforpeople-st7ct also EU may limit cutting forests so better take those down while you still can ! I find it interesting that trying to save world you force people to cut down forests, it just shows how little these green people can think ahead of their ideas and how it will end.
Too cold.
It can be, cold is fine, but when it gets slippery that is the killer
Not as cold as you think.
27 C is not cold
Dude....Enjoy....
Enjoying every minute of it ✌️