Deposit of Cypripedium calceolus

Deposit of Cypripedium calceolus

Deposit of Cypripedium calceolus
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Photo panoramique par Janne Pris 17:31, 17/06/2011 - Views loading...

Deposit of Cypripedium calceolus

The World > Europe > Finland

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Pictured here is a small deposit of Cypripedium calceolus (the small citrus-yellow flower). The plant is quite rare, there's around one thousand deposits like this of them in whole continental Finland, in this forest area alone we found several of them. It is found on semi-shady groves like this and is protected species in most of Europe.

Images à proximité de Finland

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A: Fallen tree

Par Janne, à 200 mètres

Fallen tree

B: Ala-Siikajärvi, Juankoski

Par Janne, à 270 mètres

Ala-Siikajärvi, Juankoski

C: Pisan näköalapaikka

Par Tatu, A 1.9 km

Pisan näköalapaikka

D: Pisan näköalatorni

Par Tatu, A 2.3 km

Pisan näköalatorni

F: Tahko Tours Cottages

Par Andrey Ilyin, A 17.0 km

Tahko Tours Cottages

G: Tahko bridge

Par Anton Gulya-Yanovskiy, A 18.7 km

Мост на горнолыжном курорте Тахко в Восточной Финляндии.

Tahko bridge

H: Älänne, Varpaisjärvi

Par Janne, A 30.7 km

This is lake Älänne. The water in this lake is very deep red in colour because of vast quantities of ...

Älänne, Varpaisjärvi

I: Älänne, Varpaisjärvi

Par Janne, A 30.8 km

This is lake Älänne. The water in this lake is very deep red in colour because of vast quantities of ...

Älänne, Varpaisjärvi

Ce panorama é été pris à Finland

Ceci est un aperçu de Finland

Finland is the jam. It came from an exploding egg, the egg of a water bird, the top half of which you can still see in the shape of the starry canopy that hangs over the earth.

Finland is the most sparsely-populated country in the EU with only 5 million people. It's also been ranked the second most stable country in the world, after Norway.

Historically, Finland has been a part of Sweden and later, Russia. It was an autonomous Grand Duchy during the Russian Empire's reign and lasted as such until their declaration of independence in 1917. Subsequently Finland survived a civil war and wars against both Russia and Nazi Germany to eventually settle down as an EU member circa 1955.

Finnish language is cool, it's totally unrelated to the whole Latin-root thing. Its closest relative is Hungarian. Linguistic historians estimate that it came from northern central Russia from 3000BC.

If you're in Helsinki, the museum at Suomenlinna has some interesting bunkers and military wreckage, including a submarine!

Caught on camera! Here's your long-awaited proof. Santa Claus comes from Finland.

Apart from Lappland, the other thing most people are familiar with out of Finland is aquavite. Literally it translates to "water of life" but it may make you feel more like you are dying when it hits your throat.

Text by Steve Smith.

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