Reacting To Jonna Jinton - Living With Dark Winters In Sweden - Much Different Than Kentucky

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  • čas přidán 11. 06. 2024
  • After seeing many recommendations to react to Jonna Jinton (This video specifically) I am even more fascinated with the idea of travelling to places like this. Thank you so much for the requests, please continue to suggest ideas for future videos!
    Happy Halloween Everyone, Last video featuring the two skeletons.
    Original Content Creator: / @jonnajinton
    Original Content Video: • Living with the Dark W...
    00:00 Introduction to Reaction
    00:57 Reaction Begins, Sorry For Name Pronunciation
    01:46 Such An Inspiration Already!
    02:13 Wow! How Dark It Is At 2:19pm
    02:54 The Deepest Snow I've Experienced
    03:14 The Midnight Sun
    03:35 My Midnight Sun Mouse Pad
    04:03 The Polar Nights
    05:10 Feeling The Warmth Of The Sun
    06:15 How Light It Is At 12:39am
    07:00 The Most Beautiful Kind Of Daylight
    08:27 When It Gets Dark Very Early
    08:56 The Night Sky Is Amazing!
    10:11 Seeing The Northern Lights
    10:45 Sleeping While It's Daylight
    12:08 Losing Track Of Time In Winter
    13:34 Helping Adapt To Lack Of Sunlight
    14:21 Keeping Your Circadian Rhythm In Sync
    15:39 Health Benefits Of Cold Baths & Showers
    16:47 What I've Grown In My Own Garden
    18:52 Vitamin D Supplements
    19:42 It's Okay To Slow Down For Winter
    21:01 This Is Such A Inspiring Video
    23:17 Final Thoughts & Goodbye

Komentáře • 226

  • @jonnajinton
    @jonnajinton Před 2 lety +434

    Aww!! It was so beautiful to see your reactions to my video! Thank you so much for this!!

    • @itsmebrysonp
      @itsmebrysonp  Před 2 lety +75

      Thank you so much for viewing my reaction and for making such amazing content! Hope you have a wonderful day!

    • @ingvartorma9789
      @ingvartorma9789 Před 2 lety +3

      Jonna Jinton!
      Why are you lying to your followers on CZcams? You live in Falun, so it is impossible to see the Midnight Sun down there because you can not see the Midnight Sun south of Gällivare. Much of what you describe applies up here where I live in Kiruna and Gällivare but not where you live. So you live 715 miles south of Kiruna.
      So you have built your CZcams on lies. I hope your followers read this.
      Because if your followers came to Falun, they would see that you have built your entire Yoytube on lies, because they would not get to experience what you claim you are doing down there in Falun BUT if these came up to Kiruna, your followers would see that what you describe agrees with Kiruna and not where you live ..

    • @siksjonas1
      @siksjonas1 Před 2 lety +89

      @@ingvartorma9789 Stäng igen korken på flaskan!! För det första bor hon i Västernorrland och hon säger klart och tydligt att i nordligaste Sverige har dom midnattsol och att där hon bor kan dom bara se solen en kort stund mitt på dagen. Är det den berömda Svenska avundsjukan som tittar fram månntro? Tycker du borde se om videon och sen be om ursäkt för att du klantat till det!

    • @carlpantell6706
      @carlpantell6706 Před 2 lety +51

      @@ingvartorma9789 She has a cottage near Sorsele witch is near to the polar circle.
      She lives near Sollefteå witch is 400 km north of Falun.
      You must have eating to much falukorv!

    • @ezezezezujh3EARHG
      @ezezezezujh3EARHG Před 2 lety +25

      @@ingvartorma9789 Why are you lying?

  • @_Wolfsbane_
    @_Wolfsbane_ Před 2 lety +22

    The Jonna Jinton videos are usually brilliant. She's a brilliant ambassador for nothern Sweden.

  • @perkarlsson9087
    @perkarlsson9087 Před 2 lety +121

    Swedish blueberries and American blueberries are not the same. They are like "cousins". The Swedish ones have the dark color right through and not only in the skin. They are also half the size and personally I think they taste just a little bit more.

    • @DivineFalcon
      @DivineFalcon Před 2 lety +41

      European blueberries are also called bilberries in English. And yes, they do have a stronger taste. Then again, that is common to berries in Northern Europe, as the colder climate makes them ripen more slowly and concentrate their sugar contents. Photosynthesis slowing down has delicious side effects!

    • @kronop8884
      @kronop8884 Před 2 lety +25

      @@DivineFalcon Thats why strawberrys grown close to the Arctic Circle in Scandinavia are the best, lots of light in the summer, moderate temperatures and no need for pesticides.

    • @jayamilapersson4030
      @jayamilapersson4030 Před 2 lety +3

      @@DivineFalcon but you can buy and grow American bluberries here too but they somehow taste a bit less then billberries.

    • @Ohris
      @Ohris Před 2 lety +5

      @@DivineFalcon Ive noticed that for example strawberrys the bigger ones often (not always) taste very watery and the smaller ones are packed with flavour.
      The years first strawberrys come from more southern countries and they taste like nothing or water. But when domestic strawberries start to appear here in Finland where I live they are usually packed with flavour compared to the ones stores first sell and are from southern europe or other places. I wonder if there are any good strawberrys in other places sometimes.

    • @Rolf-farmedfacts-supervisor
      @Rolf-farmedfacts-supervisor Před 2 lety +3

      We call the american blueberries "fake news" in Norway😂😂😂 Because they are bigger, but when you chew them its a huuuge difference.

  • @Zandain
    @Zandain Před 2 lety +61

    J's in Scandinavia are often pronounced with a soft J, like a Y, in English, yam, yes, yet
    She is a very inspirational person, with a lovely narrative voice
    I can hear your joy, Bryson..happy watching 👀
    hello from Denmark 🌸 🌱

  • @attesmatte
    @attesmatte Před 2 lety +47

    I get quite emotional watching Jonna's videos, because this is where I live (about two hours from her, but the same type of nature), and she describes my love for the landscape and nature here in a way I could never do... I take lots of photos of course, but her cinematography is just stunning and soooo descriptive of how it really feels to live here. 😍
    Just last night we had a fabulous starry night, and it doesn't matter how many times I see it, I'm still in absolute awe. ❤️ Same with the aurora... It just never gets old! 😍

  • @jenka_79
    @jenka_79 Před 2 lety +20

    I love Jonna Jintons CZcams channel. You should watch it out some more. They way she capture the beauty in the Swedish nature is breathtaking but she also show you how rough it can be. She is so funny to.

  • @squidcaps4308
    @squidcaps4308 Před 2 lety +17

    In February it is not uncommon to see someone just stop walking, close their eyes and feel the warmth of the sun for a moment. You don't understand it until you have been thru a Nordic winter.

  • @victorcapel2755
    @victorcapel2755 Před 2 lety +21

    Ouf, we're heading in to the dark period now, in Stockholm it's dark at 4.30 PM at the moment and getting darker and darker every day. November-early Januari is the hardest period here, since we don't get real winter (like the one in the video) until Januari-Februari in Stockholm. The snow makes everything brighter and more quiet, thats really nice. But November-Januari is really hard, even if there is some sunlight still, the weather is usually overcast for weeks and weeks on end. Last year, Stockholm had like 2 hours of sunlight all of November.
    The summers makes it all worth it though.

  • @DNA350ppm
    @DNA350ppm Před 2 lety +36

    The video is overwhelmingly poetic and beautiful. I love that you, Bryson, went deep into the feeling and experience of this ambience and magic! I sincerely hope you will get to feel it on your skin, in your eyes, in your lungs, under your feet, many times! Thank you for sharing your reaction.

  • @louiseerbslisbjerg7854
    @louiseerbslisbjerg7854 Před 2 lety +35

    She's an amazing content creator, I'm glad you got her recommended and I hope you'll watch more because it's so beautiful and interesting :)
    You look so serene just watching it...

    • @DNA350ppm
      @DNA350ppm Před 2 lety +2

      True - Jonna Jinton beautifully acts out the nature fairy and nature child of her soul in her videos. She really is so lovely and lovable, and I'm so glad, and not a little relieved, that she has a companion and that they have a dog and a cat, and a sturdy house, an earlier homestead, I guess. I think no man would have any difficulty living through the dark months in the company of an adorable and creative Lady of the Wild things, like her. And ice-bathing and all that - it is not safe to do it all alone, on the contrary.
      The Milky Way is breath-taking, as are the Northern lights and sunsets and sunrises and all the colors! We call the Milky Way - Vintergatan - the Winter Street. Jonna made me miss my simple nature experiences of all seasons in my childhood...

  • @majaaxholt1927
    @majaaxholt1927 Před 2 lety +4

    What a fantastic and soulful video. Here in Denmark, we don't have midnight sun or polar nights (even though it gets dark in the early afternoon in the winter), but in the summer the sun is just below the horizon, so it never gets dark. In that period we often have "glowing night clouds", where the clouds are kind of luminescent. It's really beautiful. I'm planning a trip to Bodø in Norway by train next year to experience the midnight sun myself.

  • @tilltugg
    @tilltugg Před 2 lety +6

    2 years ago I moved back home to the north of sweden after like 18 years in the south.. And I love it. The dark/light.. it's a contrast for sure - but It's a way of life.. and if You learn to appreciate it.. it is just so great. I think You would do just fine up here. You seem to appreciate nature and the beauty of real seasons.

  • @brostenen
    @brostenen Před 2 lety +41

    For some reason, I think you will fitt right into Scandinavia. You are thinking about things and you are a laid back person. Perhaps you will end up staying and in time you will learn the language.

    • @FamousGirlfriend
      @FamousGirlfriend Před 2 lety +7

      Totally agree. And he wouldn't have to struggle with everything that's utter shite in the US. I understand that he can't because he's got his family in the US, but it's like... Well, I know this sounds so horrible and boastful, but it's like I want them to have all the free education, sick days and subsidised healthcare. By making his videos he's doing so much for Scandinavia, it's like: why shouldn't he get to be a part of it? Sorry for sounding condescending, but there it is: he's too good to not getting to travel the world and further educate himself and others.
      I'm in education and have educated people abroad on Swedish and Scandinavian culture, society and languages and when I get back to Sweden I'm always slightly shocked by how little many Swedes know about their own country (while still trying to lecture foreigners on it, despite their lack of perspective, mind). In contrast, we've got people like Bryson, who are basically educating the world on what it actually means to be Scandinavian, and he doesn't get to enjoy it.

    • @Rolf-farmedfacts-supervisor
      @Rolf-farmedfacts-supervisor Před rokem +1

      @@FamousGirlfriend I hear you! We have the same issue in Norway. Our kids doesnt know shite about Norway either. We NEEEED people like this in the education dept. He conveys the message and trivia right on the nose, and with the numbers to follow if necess. And he is CHILLED! I still have scars on my soul from some of my teachers.
      Keep doing your thing,🇳🇴🌹👍👍👍

  • @annina134
    @annina134 Před 2 lety +9

    She is an inspiration for us all! I loved this video of Jonna and thank you Bryson to reacting to it. :)

  • @the.trollgubbe2642
    @the.trollgubbe2642 Před 2 lety +5

    North of Sweden feels lighter in the winter because of the snow, southern Sweden barely gets snow, it's just gray cold and rainy

  • @martinostlund1879
    @martinostlund1879 Před 2 lety +10

    Bryson, you are one of my favorite youtubers, and so are Jonna. This was a perfect combo of the two of you.

    • @itsmebrysonp
      @itsmebrysonp  Před 2 lety

      Thank you so much and hope you have a wonderful day!

  • @tone2913
    @tone2913 Před 2 lety +4

    I grew up in the northern part of Norway. We have 2 months of polar night (no daylight) in the winter, from end of November to the end of January, and then in the summer, from middle of May till end of July, we have midnightsun, the sun never sets during those two months. It is very beautiful...

  • @gustavmeyrink_2.0
    @gustavmeyrink_2.0 Před 2 lety +6

    If you want to experience really deep snow you don't have to leave the country. Just head west to...sunny California!
    Mammoth Lakes holds the record for most snow in a month with 390 inches (10m)! Tamarack, California has the record of the greatest recorded snow depth with 451 inches.

  • @camste82
    @camste82 Před 2 lety +2

    When I was a kid in Northern Norway we would get the rest of the day off from school on the first day of the year we could see the sun. After two months of no sun at all the kids would be able to play in the sun again.

  • @Nekotaku_TV
    @Nekotaku_TV Před 2 lety +5

    Yeees, I was one of those who recommended her. And she has a few videos I really like and want people like you to react to. I wrote each of the best videos in my last comment I think. She also has a really cool video with recording of the sound of a frozen lake, it's really an amazing thing to hear and I've used to it to fall asleep to. Not a good video for a reaction video but something you might wanna have a listen to.
    I love that you've learnt the 24h clock and add that to when you're talking about the time.

  • @melnerud
    @melnerud Před 2 lety +5

    I would recommend that you watch "Light in the darkness, Swedish Lucia tradtion" or/and "LUCIA - The night of light" also by Jonna , Celebrating the Lucia tradtion, on the darkest day of the years, celebrating light. December 13th was the darkest night/day before they changed the calendar, that's why the date remains and are celebrated. It's 11 nights before christmas.

  • @carro-xb9oz
    @carro-xb9oz Před 2 lety +2

    im living about 20km from jonna and the deepest snow we had so far is 2 metres.and 24 cm of snow so there canbe alot:) and we had a couiple of years ago - 39 degrees for a week..it can be colder aswell but not that often. our four seasons is absolutley something to enjoy if u havent..welcome to us in the north

  • @uniquename111
    @uniquename111 Před 2 lety +7

    Did you see the Icehotell in Jukkasjärvi yet? It is redone every year and everything is made out of ice. Your room, the bed, the glasses a church and so on. Really beutiful =)

  • @petragrevstad2714
    @petragrevstad2714 Před 2 lety +4

    Her videos are simply stunning 🙌🏻. I live on the West Coast, Southern part of Sweden. We hardly get any snow here and I think we have like six or seven hours of daylight during the darkest month. Watching videos like this almost makes me want to go live up North 😂👍🏻.

  • @Svafniir386
    @Svafniir386 Před 2 lety +1

    Nice reaction! If you are traveling to sweden and want to experience the cold you should travel to the northern part of sweden. This year on the 6th of December there where a coldrecord. Shortly after lunchtime on Monday, the season's lowest temperature of -43.8 C° (preliminary value) was measured in Naimakka in northernmost Lapland. In the southern part of sweden we have only had about -14 C. there is a insane differens.

  • @AlexKall
    @AlexKall Před 2 lety +6

    You should react to her music, she's not just an amazing person (based on the videos), artist, storyteller and cinematographer but she's also a great musician and singer and all with great video scenes from Sweden to go with it!

    • @itsmebrysonp
      @itsmebrysonp  Před 2 lety +3

      I will definitely have to check out more of her content for sure!

    • @AlexKall
      @AlexKall Před 2 lety

      @Alf Calzon I put that into "artist" 🙂

  • @pedroconcha1715
    @pedroconcha1715 Před rokem

    I love going out fishing at midnight in summer in sweden, its amazing....

  • @SteamboatW
    @SteamboatW Před 2 lety +4

    I get the question sometimes, if we (Norwegians and Swedes) get depressed because of the cold. The answer is: no. The cold isn't depressing. If anything it's invigorating. Like taking the ice bath. If anything gets you down it's the darkness and lack of vitamin D.

    • @DivineFalcon
      @DivineFalcon Před 2 lety

      I actually function better with the darkness and cold. I'm more awake, more aware, more focused. On the other hand I hate the light and heat. I get blinded extremely easily, and I get migraines as soon as the outside temperature hits 25 degrees. So the Norwegian climate suits me well, as I obviously must be part vampire...

  • @snorpenbass4196
    @snorpenbass4196 Před 2 lety +3

    There's three major archipelagos in Sweden - the one outside Stockholm, the one outside Göteborg (Gothenburg) and the one outside Karlskrona. Most have ferries and regular boat tours and the likes, and most have plenty of hostels, hotels and bed and breakfasts in the region. And Karlskrona is in Blekinge, and often has the second highest amount of good weather in summertime (number one is usually Öland, an island a couple hours drive from Blekinge).
    *Edit:* One huge warning about the north - BRING MOSQUITO REPELLENT OF ALL KINDS OR YOU WILL BE EATEN. There's an old joke about an American traveling to the north of Sweden by train, but deciding to fly home. So he asks a local where the airport is. The northerner shakes his head. "No airport." The American looks confused. "But I can hear the planes?" The northerner shrugs. "Mosquitos."

  • @KimOfDrac
    @KimOfDrac Před 2 lety +2

    You really need to check out her video with her version of the Swedish national anthem💕

  • @Aconda
    @Aconda Před 2 lety

    I'm following Jonna so that was probably why you showed up in my feed. Whoever you are behind the name Itsmebrysonp it was a nice 'react' video. Never seen any of your videos before. You seem to be a nice person. Take care.

    • @itsmebrysonp
      @itsmebrysonp  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you, hope you have a great day! 😊

  • @justusdk
    @justusdk Před 2 lety

    winter also approaching here in Denmark, calm sunday, a cup of herbal tea, with one of my favourite CZcamsrs - as always, the positivity and the open mind you have, is inspiring for us all. Best wishes to you and your family.

  • @larsdahl5528
    @larsdahl5528 Před 2 lety +6

    There is one important thing she do not mention in this video: The mosquitoes!
    But she has another video about it: czcams.com/video/ZBlppCk7Dx8/video.html

    • @DivineFalcon
      @DivineFalcon Před 2 lety

      And when the mosquitoes aren't trying to bleed you dry, swarms of blackflies tries to eat you alive. Yay...

    • @larsdahl5528
      @larsdahl5528 Před 2 lety +2

      I have been to Norrland.
      Nature can be breathtaking on a clear day... Though... Even on a clear day, there is a low-hanging mist over the landscape.
      This "mist" is mosquitoes! (I found somewhere on the internet that Norrland has around 2500 different species of mosquitoes.)
      Norrland sucks... litterally!

  • @jadu79
    @jadu79 Před 2 lety +2

    when it comes to the differences between seasons, the large and northern part has snow that remains until late spring while in the middle part it is still warm (5-10C but it is mostly due to heat from southern Europe). I live at latitude 60 and here it is 13 hours longer days that are longest compared to shortest.
    Read your other answers here and that with lingonberries is that they could be stored during the winter and were the best source of vitamin C so those who did not have access to it got scurvy, but a few hundred years ago apples were imported that were easier to harvest slightly larger amounts of which also contained vitamin c but not in the same amounts, they led to lingonberries or apple puree being common with food and later came potatoes which are also easy to store and last a long time if handled properly.
    Another Swedish girl who lives in northern Norway (Svalbard) who does not know if there are videos to make reactions to but clearly worth seeing and you should premiere on her channel about her life in the most necessary "city" on earth and here are three videos I think you would like (the middle one about the northern lights)
    czcams.com/video/KLd-it8zAJc/video.html
    czcams.com/video/6uQ9Nhlhpa0/video.html
    czcams.com/video/MSAQxhtJ9RY/video.html

  • @GryLi
    @GryLi Před 2 lety +2

    Love her channel, greetings from Denmark

  • @RunningLowOnSerotonin
    @RunningLowOnSerotonin Před 2 lety +2

    Great reaction!Hope you enjoyed your birthday Bryson.😊

  • @svampen7782
    @svampen7782 Před 2 lety +1

    Scandinavia is so far up north that even in the southern parts it gets dark early. I live in Svealand which is the center of Sweden and the sun comes up around 08:00 or so this time of the year and sets around 15:00 more or less.

  • @anderssigfeldt335
    @anderssigfeldt335 Před 11 měsíci

    Not only Sweden which looks amazingly good 😚

  • @Rackelhane
    @Rackelhane Před 2 lety +2

    Welcome to the land of the midnight sun!

  • @ginafromcologne9281
    @ginafromcologne9281 Před 2 lety

    Great reaction! I hope you will be able to visit this amazing place. :)

  • @Lyrazel
    @Lyrazel Před 2 lety +1

    Sweden is stunning and you should visit the north to experience real winter but I have to tell you, living a bit further South where there seldom is a lot of snow any more to offset the darkness winters are kind of bleak. From this point on (november) daylight is so short it's almost nonexistent, skies are overcast a lot, cold rain every other day, mud and dirt everywhere... it's depressing to live in.

  • @SteamboatW
    @SteamboatW Před 2 lety +2

    ... and, well, they say that 17% of Sweden is covered in lingonberries, and about the same in blueberries. Other very nice wild berries in Sweden are Wild Strawberries or Smultron (my favourite) and Cloudberries.

    • @havrekli
      @havrekli Před 2 lety +1

      Don't forget the Arctic raspberry(åkerbär). That is my favorite.

  • @AbsSolut
    @AbsSolut Před 2 lety

    Great footage and commentary.

  • @LyricalSteeler
    @LyricalSteeler Před 2 lety +2

    Sweden is beautiful as a whole but the northern part of the country is an untouched jewel. Norrland.

  • @TheNismo777
    @TheNismo777 Před 2 lety +1

    Life is humble here at north, in harmony with the nature :)

  • @martinericsson2055
    @martinericsson2055 Před 2 lety

    Hahaha watch that...Not Her you said hahaha.. of course you will watch jonna! Thats our beautiful wimmens from the North.. They are beautiful and very special aswell. I know cause im a swede aswell..

  • @nancyrafnson4780
    @nancyrafnson4780 Před 2 lety +1

    Right now in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada (Nov. 1), sunrise is at 8:20 a.m. and sunset is 6:03 p.m. So we have slightly less than 8 hours of daylight. We will lose at least another hour by Dec. 22, the Winter Solstice.
    Also, in the Nordic languages (don’t know about Finnish), the J is always soft. My father’s name was Johann - pronounced like Yohann (long o).

  • @danyelPitmon
    @danyelPitmon Před 2 lety +1

    The video you just showed and talked about I have seen it and it has made me fall in love more with Sweden I grew up in North West Indiana off of Lake Michigan so I know what the snow the winds and long nights are like up there and as a kid I spent more time out in the snow and the cold weather and I still love it today I would give anything to be up in Sweden and enjoying the winters at the half that they have

    • @itsmebrysonp
      @itsmebrysonp  Před 2 lety +2

      I'm hoping to visit my brother in Denver during their winter to get more adapted to snow before North Sweden winters

    • @danyelPitmon
      @danyelPitmon Před 2 lety +1

      @@itsmebrysonp advice you might actually want to go to Minnesota in the northern states of the US were that actually is more of a good representation of what winter would be like in Sweden it’s not entirely but I can guarantee you’ll get a pretty good idea even Wisconsin would be a good state to go to to find out in the dead of winter like December through February

  • @swedishmetalbear
    @swedishmetalbear Před 2 lety

    @Itsmebrysonp You should watch more of Jonnas content. In particular when she does the ancient Swedish herding calls passed down for generations... I used to sing to the cattle when I was little the same way. Now that I am old I can't reach the right pitch anymore. :-)

  • @karl-erikmumler9820
    @karl-erikmumler9820 Před 2 lety +1

    You won't see it turn (that's timelapse) but the unfiltered night sky is awesome. Scandinavia has a lot of light pollution though so you have to actively move away from major infrastructure. You don't have to go too far even from major urban centers though as long as you pick the right direction. You should have deserts and stuff in the USA where you can see it though. It's also easier to find an unlit road over there. You also won't see sh1t during the summer because night is just a variation of twilight.

  • @mr.sts.p
    @mr.sts.p Před 2 lety +2

    I hope you travel to The north of Sweden see it and feel it for your self and I follow Jonna i love ❤️ what she is doing. 👍😀

  • @mr.sts.p
    @mr.sts.p Před 2 lety +2

    I will tell you little aboute Jonna Bryson she juse to live in Gothenburg but got tyierd of The hettic live there and her uncle died left her a house in The north so she moved there and now she is making Great art take fotos and filming live her life there. 👍😀

  • @rickardelimaa
    @rickardelimaa Před 2 lety

    Will be adding some of your expressions to my vocabulary: "quarter past midnight", and "get the winter blues". :)

  • @Rolf-farmedfacts-supervisor

    You should try revisiting Scandinavia in the wintertime. Its soo worth it! (You should by your mom another troll, but a more realistic one\Get her the movie "Trolljegeren")

    • @itsmebrysonp
      @itsmebrysonp  Před 2 lety +1

      I definitely want to go back there during the winter and to go much further up north too. She really liked the Troll I got her so I'm sure she would like a different one in the future.

    • @Rolf-farmedfacts-supervisor
      @Rolf-farmedfacts-supervisor Před 2 lety +1

      @@itsmebrysonp that movie I mentioned, present itself as a documentary. It has scared a few japanese tourists in its past😊 I reaally recommend it😂😂 Mothers and parents tends to love it🤗 Trolljegeren,with Otto Jespersen👍👍👍

  • @madeleinewahlstrom5092
    @madeleinewahlstrom5092 Před 10 měsíci

    and we still go to school even in the deep snow there are no snow days for us unless its really bad

  • @squidcaps4308
    @squidcaps4308 Před 2 lety +3

    The starry skies when there is no light pollution is not like in the video. Cameras can use various techniques to enhance the image. Don't get me wrong, it is beautiful but you don't see that many stars with eyes only, but enough to take your breath away.

    • @Eutha
      @Eutha Před 2 lety

      Important point, thank you for commenting! :)

  • @hannavictoriamorck5313
    @hannavictoriamorck5313 Před 2 lety +1

    Show us your salsa, caning or something of your agricultural crafting! It would be nice.

  • @DivineFalcon
    @DivineFalcon Před 2 lety

    You should check out glass igloo hotels, like Lyngen North, for your winter trip. Those are designed to give you the northern lights and sleeping under the stars experience.

  • @absolutmichel6
    @absolutmichel6 Před rokem

    Recommendation go to kiruna in the winter.....

  • @lionbacca
    @lionbacca Před 2 lety

    Scandinavian nature and season variations are much the same in Sweden, Finland and Norway. The only difference is that Norway streches further to the north and east, and that Norway has a coastline. That brings some other challanges in winter, like powerful wind up to 35-40 m/sec, that combined with snow can be difficult.

  • @vikingburger
    @vikingburger Před 2 lety

    If you haven't seen:
    An Amerikan take about 2 months semester in Sweden: czcams.com/video/2-vBiLsDR00/video.html
    Amerikan girl living partvice in Sweden: czcams.com/video/40EKQ71vRdY/video.html
    Amerikan girl who wants to live in Sweden but have to go back: czcams.com/video/I031QdQNHBE/video.html
    Amerikan guy who just love the Swedish architecture and nature: czcams.com/video/nr5P1zHn_K8/video.html
    Canadian girl who has been living all over the world, finds Sweden at home: czcams.com/video/M0CwMFiCx2Q/video.html
    Amerikan guy love and hate for Sweden: czcams.com/video/9QUGticY0H8/video.html

  • @Eivind.A
    @Eivind.A Před 2 lety +17

    There's no doubt that Sweden outside of the big cities, is a beautifull country.
    Skjærgården in Sweden is also a very nice place to spend summers if you travel by boat.
    We've got a family place in Sweden that we bought some years ago, and I love spending parts of the summer there (when I'm fit for it that is..🤔😋).
    Btw I noticed that you've gone past 1.3 million views now Bryson!!
    EXCELLENT I SAY! You deserve it!🤘😀🤘

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před 2 lety

      Perpahs, but I personally prefer the nature of Svealand over the harsh Norrland. In my book, Stockholm is the most cosy and beautiful place, with its old planning and architecture. (Some 70% of it survived the brutal socialist demolitions around the 1960s, compared to typically 10-25% in most smaller towns.)

    • @grisflyt
      @grisflyt Před 2 lety +1

      @@herrbonk3635 I agree with your post except "brutal socialist demolitions around the 1960s"
      I do not agree with the demolitions, but it was a different time. Some of those buildings did not have indoor plumbing. It was about improving the standard of the working people. You have the "projects" in the US. If you go back further, the once beautiful city of Houston was bulldozed and replaced with parking lots. On top of that, they drew the highway through the city.
      If you were invited to your neighbor in the 1970s, you were not just likely to get factory-made cookies with your coffee, they would proudly tell you they are store bought. Store bought was considered better than cheap home made.
      Things change. Now everything is about retro. Back then, everything was about the new and improved. Ikea was a success not just because it was cheap, but because it was fresh and modern. Lets not pretend money isn't involved.
      Lastly, "postmodern architecture" was a response to the "logical postivist architecture," perhaps especially post-WWII architecture.

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před 2 lety

      @@grisflyt Pardon me, but that's nonsense. First, the fact that you made the same (or worse) brutal mistakes in the US does not make anything better. And few Swedish buildings from the 1840s up until the 1910s had indoor WC from the start. I'm talking about the kind of buildnings that were torn down (about 700 only in central Stockholm, Klara) which is also exactly the same category that has Stockholm's most prestigious and expensive appartments today. (Forgot to mention Gamla Stan, Old Town, with its charming buildings from the 1600s and back.)
      The socialists wanted to make motorways, parking lots and DDR/USA-like social housing projects all over central Stockholm (including Le Corbusier's plans for Gamla Stan in 1933). I'm not even exaggerating here. They tried to destroy it all, and they talked hatefully about us that were seen as "bourgeois". They were stopped at the very last minute. Mainly by the 1973/74 oil crisis, by increasing violent protests, and other factors. That's why most of Stockholm still has thousands of beautiful buildings, to this day.
      Too many people are totally fooled by socialist and modernist propaganda. (Yes, modernism was indeed marxism, via the fascist Le Corbusier, the ultra socialist Bauhaus school, and many others.)
      Postmodernism is pure crap in my book. I hated it already in the 1970s, when it was pretty new here (introduced by Erskine). It lacks skills, kraftsmen, proportions, good and tasteful materials, seriousness and spirit. It even looks anglo saxon with it's peculiar carrot+white color scheme... :((

    • @grisflyt
      @grisflyt Před 2 lety +1

      @@herrbonk3635 "First, the fact that you made the same (or worse) brutal mistakes in the US does not make anything better."
      That's my point. There were lots of optimism about the future. "Better living through chemicals" sounds like a joke today, but was sort of real back then.
      "And few Swedish buildings from the 1840s up until the 1910s had indoor WC from the start."
      I don't know which were which. Doesn't matter. It was about improving living standard. Lots of people were moving into the cities at the time.
      Who are the socialists of who you speak? Almstriden was the "socialists."
      Modernism was optimism and faith in machines. It was ultimately dehumanizing.
      Postmodernism is American. That's not the issue. Nor does is matter what you think about it.
      I wasn't talking about postmodernism in general, but specifically architecture. Like most things, it was a reaction to that which preceded it. The "postmodern" architects may have taken it too far, but they were certainly right that's it's not just about square meters/feet, and things like that. As you say, people rather prefer to live in old, poorly planned but beautiful apartments.
      People are idiots. Have always been, and will always be. The Iraq War proves we didn't learn a thing from Vietnam. The European refugee crisis of 2015 was created by Europe. How stupid is that?
      Those who opposed the war will have to pay for it forever like everybody else.

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před 2 lety

      @@grisflyt _"I don't know which were which. Doesn't matter. It was about improving living standard."_ Well, I just told you which... :D and it looks like you are avoiding my main point. So again, the buildings that were torn down were largely of exactly the same kind as the most beautiful and prestigious buildings for which Stockholm is known, and where people pay fantasy money to get a flat today. Many of the demolished buildings were not even 50 years of age (say 1912-1960), so it was pure capital destruction. A majority of them already had indoor WC. Fixing plumbing was never a problem, it had already been done in thousands of old houses. That old "argument" was always pure deception, a lie.
      Already when the socialist took power in 1932, they gave order to "their" state owned Kreditbanken, that no loans should be allowed for renovation or support of buildings older than 1930. They publiced a propaganda leaflet "Acceptera!" trying to brainwash architects, city planners and others that the "bourgeois" styles and mentality are a thing of the past. They really wanted to eradicate Swedish culture, or at least the culture of the "bourgeois class". (That's what they called us when they were at their most polite. People like Hjalmar Mehr, Joakim Garpe and others also used words like "stinking rat nests" about us. It was pretty hateful.) That's why socialists (and their young followers) hate it when you tell people that Sweden had culture, science, research, technological industry and so on, long before socialism.
      _Who are the socialists of who you speak? Almstriden was the "socialists."_ Yes, the youngsters there were largely socialists and communists. That's what scared the socialist regime, that even their own "class" and (future) voters now turned against them. Non socialists usually protested against the madness in more civilized manners. By writing debate articles (hoping they got published), by polite letters, telephone calls to bureaucrats, politicians, media, city hall meetings, and so on.
      Modernism was dehumanizing, that's true, because it was all based on brutal collectivist marxist theories, just like fascism was. Having faith in machines is much older than modernism though, rather a trait of the 1800s. In many ways, the beautiful Art Nouveau styles of the late 1890s to late 1910s were a more true "modernism", in a good sense. But that's what the socialists killed off and replaced by a square and inhuman approach from their great leader, the autistic fascist Le Corbusier. (And yes, there has been a lot of marxist thinking in the USA too, both in the 1960s and today... say no more...)
      I was talking exclusively about postmodern "architecure". Postmodernism in a wider sense is a huge and complex topic (and not only american, rather Frankfurt school.) The postmodernist wasn't really taking it "too far", as I see it. The were simply not serious, and modernisms had already killed of all crafts (-men). So they didn't even have hands for doing any real job (which they knew). It was always just a kindergarten and usually much worse than modernism. Early modernism (1920s/30s) could actually be pretty elegant, simply because it inherited proportions, materials, techniques, mentality, even architects and personel from the preceeding styles, like Art Nouveau and "Neo Barock" (or even the older "Neo Renaissance").

  • @n0namesowhatblerp362
    @n0namesowhatblerp362 Před 2 lety

    In mz hometown the sun never reached the horiyon but it was still light from 9 am til 1 pm

  • @Ethrax2
    @Ethrax2 Před rokem

    Bruh. We need to get you to visit the Scandies. I believe there are communities on Reddit and Imgur, where people who travel for work will donate their fly miles to give free tickets to people. You should definitely look into it.

  • @appleskum6520
    @appleskum6520 Před 2 lety

    Also there is only that little amount of light and that much snow in the north of Sweden, not in the South, and in the middle, just want to let you people know, otherwise it is just gonna confused you, there is no snow in Sweden in the middle or south, I want snow, but not yet, and for me the sun went down all the way at 16:00

  • @SubwaySweden
    @SubwaySweden Před 2 lety +3

    My ex. came to visit from Texas in open toe sandals in January...... First thing we did was to go get her a real jacket, shoes, hat, gloves scarf and all that.... 5 suitcases full of crap, nothing usable in Sweden in January

  • @zetsuki4207
    @zetsuki4207 Před 2 lety

    Watching her videos is just like being at home for me, i grew up and still live about an hour north of her. But i live in the city now, but i grew up in the country. Collecting an chopping wood for the winters, snowmobile rides, skiing, ice fishing and the northern lights.

  • @keithmoore5224
    @keithmoore5224 Před 2 lety

    when i was in sweden and norway it was unreal at 2am left my tent to go to the tiolet and it was daylight also nearly every one spoke english and you forgot your not home in northen england (cumbia lake district) which has a lot like scandinavia but a lot smaller) i rode 4 thousand miles that year on my swedish style c yam chop (3 meter wheel base) happy memorys ) im yammie now in thailand 7 years 35 c today just saying good night all

  • @Shadowthevampire
    @Shadowthevampire Před 2 lety

    Also we have 3 types of snow early winter late winter when its warmer we have slush then thereres real snow in 2 categorys: powder snow basicly like picking up flour or fake snow as in movies, then we call it "squish-snow" its this clay like snow that has some tiny bit sof water in it and it makes the snow squisable and shapable it also makes this squicky noise when you walk on it" so different times in winter gives different kind

  • @xanosdarkpaw1
    @xanosdarkpaw1 Před 2 lety

    In sweden right now. Sun is currently rising. It's nine in the morning. It's going to setting in 6 hours or so.

  • @yummi4tunekookie
    @yummi4tunekookie Před 2 lety

    Greetings from GA! What is snow?

  • @xYarbx
    @xYarbx Před 2 lety

    20:00 i wish i could tell this to my boss when they evaluate performance

  • @erikjohansson647
    @erikjohansson647 Před 2 lety +1

    just do it came to Sweden. came to winter

  • @Shadowthevampire
    @Shadowthevampire Před 2 lety +1

    South sweden is flat, has more leafy trees and big meadows filled with theese yellow flowers you make butter from also trees covered in poison ivy, norht sweden has none of those instead has rougher landscapeing and mountains and allot of untouched forest with moss covered and pine trees also northern lights is mostly up in north sweden, also north of sweden is where its most snow. Stockholm and skåne gets more of the slushy snow.
    Its pitch black at winter in mid day and in summertime its like daylight in the middle of the night so its hard to sleep.
    Summer has flowers sunshine grass leaves
    Winter has snow crystalized branches and thick iced lakes
    Fall has yellow and orange levaes mostly atleast where i live we dont have many maple leaves in my town cant speak for rest of sweden
    Point is we get these contrasts we really have 4 seasons.
    I would recoomend you visiting both north abd south sweden atleast 2 times each 1 on summer one on winter and comoare both places their climate and poulation.
    South sweden is more people and bumdings.
    Did you know onky 6% of sweden is populated. The more north the more space between villages and or citys it gets as I said lush-untouched odl forests like in a fantasy tale.

  • @erikalulea3608
    @erikalulea3608 Před 2 lety

    I live in the north of Sweden and I DO NOT like that it is light in the night and yes you can put curtains but in the end of the day its still light. I have much easier sleep in winter then summer. By the way , Sweden have the Best Strawberries. Natural Sweet. And yeah the trouble in winter can be that your clock in your body kind of get confused.

  • @Belnick6666
    @Belnick6666 Před 2 lety

    Tinfoil on the windows works too, cheap solution, BUT people might think you do some illegal "#"¤ in there lol

  • @carro-xb9oz
    @carro-xb9oz Před 2 lety

    dont know what u have there m8 but here in sweden we have four seasons..spring ..summer --autumn.and winter.

  • @citizenkane4831
    @citizenkane4831 Před 2 lety

    You should see her movie about our tradition how we celebrate the darkest day of the year, the 13 of december with saint lucia. Or how she captured the northern light. Also when she take a winteerbath.

    • @BB-dl5vg
      @BB-dl5vg Před 2 lety +1

      Darkest day of the year is actually 21st of December and I have no idea why we celebrate Lucia the 13th 😊

    • @rasmuswi
      @rasmuswi Před 2 lety +1

      @@BB-dl5vg because the midwinter solstice happened around the 13th in the old Julian Calendar. The Gregorian calendar fixed this.

    • @BB-dl5vg
      @BB-dl5vg Před 2 lety +1

      @@rasmuswi Ah ok That makes sense 👍

  • @bjrnjensen7074
    @bjrnjensen7074 Před 2 lety

    Where exactly is this? somewhere along the 63rd to 65th paralell north?

  • @Shadowthevampire
    @Shadowthevampire Před 2 lety

    Correction NORRLAND (north sweden) is amazing. Souths sweden looks different, it looks awsm too but in another way.

  • @anne-christineacpetersson6870

    The tiredness comes from a lack of vitamin D in winter.

  • @HalkerVeil
    @HalkerVeil Před 2 lety

    Her video killed off the last flat earther. All that's left is sophism.

  • @melkor3496
    @melkor3496 Před 2 lety

    Can you react to geography Sweden?

  • @UltraCasualPenguin
    @UltraCasualPenguin Před 4 měsíci

    Who is Dzjonna?

  • @ore_red1684
    @ore_red1684 Před 2 lety

    Whare you from dude?

    • @itsmebrysonp
      @itsmebrysonp  Před 2 lety

      Born and raised in Southern Kentucky on the Tennessee border. USA

    • @ore_red1684
      @ore_red1684 Před 2 lety

      @@itsmebrysonp Damn you answered fast 😄

  • @MrLogo73
    @MrLogo73 Před rokem

    Check that out ... not her.... 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Fulafilip
    @Fulafilip Před 2 lety

    If you ar loky its can bi 1 meter hi snow

  • @absolutehonor141
    @absolutehonor141 Před 2 lety

    has nothing to do with the video, but would like to draw attention if you want to book a parking space on the ferry to Oslo nearby en May 17, it should be done as soon as possible

    • @itsmebrysonp
      @itsmebrysonp  Před 2 lety

      Thanks for bringing my attention back to booking the ferry. I now have the booking complete and another step closer! Have a great day

  • @kewsoner7924
    @kewsoner7924 Před 2 lety

    Yes Sweden is really beautiful, and have some amazing nature. But It has one huge downside.....it's filled with Swedish people, just so you can't say you wasn't warned.
    You know we love you sweden, greetings from Denmark.🥰

    • @friis908
      @friis908 Před rokem

      Hahaha......den sande danske følelse

  • @enkidu77
    @enkidu77 Před 2 lety

    A part of the info is not applicable for whole Sweden, it's about the North only ..

  • @ptsitius
    @ptsitius Před 2 lety

    I dont think you pronounce jonna/jouna any wrong, its most likely the same name but in another language, like christian or christiano beeing the "same" name but in different languages

  • @Insolation1
    @Insolation1 Před 2 lety

    It's peaceful but that's still hard life, she does all this to elevate the long winters. The suicide rate increases exponentially the further north you go, living for long periods in the dark is not good for peoples mental health. So don't romanticise what you see here, most people couldn't adapt.

  • @ingvartorma9789
    @ingvartorma9789 Před 2 lety

    Regarding Jonna Jinton, I hear and see that she lies to all followers on CZcams. She lives 715 miles (English miles) south of where I live and I live at the top of Sweden and in a city called Kiruna. You can only see Midnight Sun in Kiruna and in Gällivare which is 65.6 miles south of Kiruna, further down in Sweden you do not have midnight sun. The city Jonna Jinton lives in is called Falun and where you do not see the midnight sun. Then it is only up here that the sun never sets from mid-May to mid-July. Then when it comes to winter, from around December 8th to January 8th, you do not see the sun. It will be light at 09.00 am and it will be dark at 1.00 pm BUT down in Falun you can see the sun during this time. So I who live at the top of Sweden get angry at Jonna Jinton, because it is as she describes how it is in Kiruna but she does not live here but 715 miles south of Kiruna. So you are free to look at the Map and you will see her city Falun and then my city Kiruna. so you see that Kiruna is much higher up in Sweden.

    • @carlpantell6706
      @carlpantell6706 Před 2 lety +2

      She lives near Sollefteå which is 400 km north of Falun AND she has a cottage near Sorsele which is very close to the polar circle.
      You must have been eating to much falukorv!

    • @ingvartorma9789
      @ingvartorma9789 Před 2 lety

      @@carlpantell6706 Although she lives in Sorsele, you can not see the midnight sun as gon påsår. You have to be far above the Arctic Circle. Then it says if you Google that she lives in Falun

    • @rasmuswi
      @rasmuswi Před 2 lety +4

      @@ingvartorma9789 she lives in Grundtjärn. I just checked on the map, Grundtjärn is nowhere near Falun.
      Also, if you had actually listened to the video, you would have noticed that she clearly states that she doesn't have polar nights in Grundtjärn.

    • @jvs9467
      @jvs9467 Před 2 lety +4

      Dear Ingvar ... Why so angry (rhetorical question nota bene!)
      You definitely did not understand a shit Jonna said in the video ... 🤪🤛🏼
      Stop vodka and chew your vitamin D instead ... U will feel better I promise💪🏼

    • @johanwatz8593
      @johanwatz8593 Před 2 lety +2

      It's so sad that you're turning this into a contest about who lives farthest north. Jonna is a nice person who loves nature and makes fantastic youtube movies. In this film, she tells us that she loves the variety of light that comes with the seasons and what it means to her. She tell us that she doesn't have full polar nights and midnight sun where she lives (in Grundtjärn). She does not spread lies or hurt anyone so I can not understand what it is that makes you angry about it?
      And it gets so embarrassing for you when you keep arguing for your opinion which is completely uninteresting to everyone else.

  • @Hafutsuri
    @Hafutsuri Před 2 lety

    Dane here: Dont travel to the big cities in sweden, we have had a nation wide warning here in denmark that one shouldnt travel to central locations in sweden because of the extreme crime (Brazil levels of crime) and extreme health hazards.. but yeah outside of the cities its still decent.. but not compared to denmark ;D

    • @TheCephalus
      @TheCephalus Před 2 lety +6

      funny, we get the same warnings about Denmark.

    • @Hafutsuri
      @Hafutsuri Před 2 lety

      @@TheCephalus Oof spot the salty swede xD yikes

    • @TheCephalus
      @TheCephalus Před 2 lety

      @@Hafutsuri for what its worth I do not believe the warnings about Denmark ;)

    • @victorcapel2755
      @victorcapel2755 Před 2 lety +9

      Yeah, not really true at all. If you're deep into the cocaine-trade then yes, it can be dangerous in Stockholm. If you're, like most people, not part of an organized crime ring then it's among the safest countries on earth.
      To say "Brazil levels of crime" is insane. Anyone that claims that has never, ever been to Brazil or Sweden, neither do they understand the words "crime" or "level".
      Just for your info: Brazil has a murder rate of about 310 per million, Sweden has a murder rate about 9 per million. And a google search for nationwide warnings in Denmark for traveling to sweden turned up nothing, except covid-stuff. So you might want to check your sources on that...

    • @karl-erikmumler9820
      @karl-erikmumler9820 Před 2 lety

      Could you tell those of us who live here what they are? I know we screwed up the corona but what health hazards? Also the Brazilians here would certainly disagree. Just ask them.