Lapland guide

Bloggers Guide To Arctic Finland

The Arctic environment in Lapland is an excellent environment for photography, a fantastic way to share the unique real Arctic environment with friends and family that may not have the opportunity to physically experience the Arctic environment. The Arctic environment goes through extreme changes of the seasons, and each season is uniquely stunning to experience. 

Summer to autumn experience.

The climate in the Nordic Lapland summer season temperature is temperate for trekking, with open views of rolling tundra hills, bubbling fresh arctic freshwater springs, dríggling creeks, running rivers and calm lakes.

Brilliantly vivid colors of the ground cover in the Autumn season. There is a splash of colors over the landscape, from the conifers and the deciduous trees, various deciduous wild berry shrubs, and the moss-covered ground cover. The autumn colors of Lapland are an array of green, Auburn, blue, orange, red and yellow.

Winter experience

Snow covered winter wonderland, dark days of the midwinter solstice. Calm weather and constant snowfall that may go on for days. Spring season around February opens up with longer days and sunlight. Occasionally completely clear night skies with twinkling stars and at times the ebb and flow of the Northern lights in the freezing black night air. Morning clear blue skies and glistening white snow with a snow crust on top that lasts for several hours.

Spring Season experience

The spring season sunshine is a pleasure to experience while traveling backcountry along rolling hills and tundra mountains.

The summer season is also fantastic in the natural environment, with the new life that springs up from a long cold winter. Bird migration is often a sure sign of the coming summer, also the new growth on deciduous trees that springs up bursting with new life.        

Where to go for a holiday in Arctic Finland

There are at least 12 regions that have a hub of seasonal activities during the holiday seasons.  Here are some of them listed.

1.            Kilpisjärvi

2.            Inari

3.            Ivalo

4.            Saariselka.

5.            Pyhä / Luosto

6.            Äkäslompolo

7.            Pallas.

8.            Ylläs

9.            Salla

10.         Lewi

11.         Karigasniemi

12.         Rovaniemi

This list being numbered is not in any particular order, each region is unique with its own history, culture, facilities, and cultural traditions.  In order of size and modernization of destination hubs in Lapland could start from Rovaniemi, Lewi, Saariselkä,  Ylläs, Pyhä/luosto, Salla, Kilpisjärvi, Ivalo, Inari, and Pallas. 

The above is not an exhaustive list of all the holiday hub destination locations in Lapland, it does give a general idea of the variations of the size, and the urban modernization of the facilities, holiday centers, and Ski Resorts.

Pallas is a national park, with very little development made there, in comparison to other locations like Lewi and Saariselkä. Rovaniemi is a city, while Salla, Karigasniemi, Ivalo, and Inari are towns. Ylläs Tundra and Lewi mountains are the only ones with a Gondola to the summit.

Know your holiday destination as much as possible

To know your holiday destination in advance much as possible does provide many benefits, it can eliminate the loss of your valuable time, loss of resources, and loss of the holiday expectations that you may have had before departing on a memorable exotic location holiday of a lifetime.

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