Everything about Finland for foreigners who´s interested about my country.
Here is my website where i am gonna try to tell you about my country everything interesting. And if you can`t see something here what you need to know, feel free to ask! I hope you are interested and enjoy :)
Hae tästä blogista
maanantai 26. heinäkuuta 2010
Finland Agriculture
Hayfield
hayfield
The climate of Finland is such that it has made Finland Agriculture a tough undertaking. The reasons for this situation is that Finland has tough winter season, comparatively inadequate and acidic arable land, the growing seasons are also interrupted by the problem of frost. In the early days the farmers in Finland used to cultivate only grains to feed its inhabitants. Cheap grains from Russia and America were imported in the 1880s and 1890s.
At present the scenario of Finland Agriculture has changed. The production has increased and it has lead to the decreasing in the number of farms, since due to the advancement of agricultural technologies fewer people are required in the farms. The average farm size in Finland in the year 1999 was about 25 hectares only.
Forestry in Finland is now the most noteworthy provider to the agricultural production. Finland’s Timber reserves have also increased by more than 25 percent since 1970s due to the enhancement in harvest techniques. The forest production in Finland goes to the industrial sector for making paper products, wooden furniture etc. Finland exports 25 percent of the world production in the area of paper.
In the south western part of Finland farming is given significance and in the other parts the cultivation is limited to the forest boundaries. The number of farms in the year 2002 in Finland was 74, 328. The principal crops that are grown in Finland are oats, potatoes, sugar beets, and wheat. In Finland the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry was accountable for the policies which dealt with the agricultural issues.
Potato field
Midsummer day
Before 1316, the summer solstice was called Ukon juhla, after the Finnish god Ukko. In Karelian tradition, many bonfires were burned side by side, the biggest of which was called Ukko-kokko (the "bonfire of Ukko"). After the celebrations were Christianized, the holiday is known as juhannus after John the Baptist (Finnish: Johannes Kastaja).
Since 1955, the holiday is always on a Saturday (between June 20 and June 26). Earlier it was always on June 24. A lot of the celebration of midsummer takes place on midsummer eve, when many workplaces are closed and shops have to close their doors at noon.
In the Finnish midsummer celebration, bonfires (Finnish kokko) are very common and are burnt at lakesides and by the sea.Often two young birch trees (koivu) are placed on either side of the front door to welcome visitors. Swedish-speaking Finns often celebrate by erecting a midsummer or maypole (Swedish midsommarstång, majstång)
In folk magic, midsummer was a very potent night and the time for many small rituals, mostly for young maidens seeking suitors and fertility. Will o wisps were believed to be seen at midsummer night, particularly to finders of the mythical "fern in bloom" and possessors of the "fern seed", marking a treasure. An important feature of the midsummer in Finland is the white night and the midnight sun. Because of Finland's location spanning around the Arctic Circle the nights near the midsummer day are short or non-existent. This gives a great contrast to the darkness of the winter time.
Many Finns leave the cities for Midsummer and spend their holiday in the countryside. Rituals include bonfires, sauna and spending time together. Heavy drinking is also associated with the Finnish midsummer.
Many music festivals of all sizes are organized on the Midsummer weekend. It's also common to start summer holidays on Midsummer day. For many families the Midsummer is the time when they move to the countryside to their summer cottage by the lake. Midsummerday is also the Day of the Finnish Flag. The flag is hoisted at 6 pm on Midsummer eve and flown all night till 9 pm the following evening.
Finland and alcohol
Finland is considered a country of hard drinking people. Alcohol became a sad statistic in 2006 of becoming the number 1 cause of death for men and a close second for women in Finland. Figures for 2005 released by the state statistics agency showed alcohol killed more people aged 15 to 64 than cardiovascular disease or cancer.
Finland dropped the alcohol taxes radically on March 1st 2004. Prices of alcohol in Finland dropped around 22 percent. The primary reason for these taxes was to bring down the amount of alcohol brought outside Finnish borders, mainly from Russia and Estonia. But what did this booze-loving country do? Well started drinking more of course! And now they are considering of bringing the taxes back up...go figure =)
In my opinion, a Finn will keep on drinking no matter what the price is. At least I will (MetalGod).
Finlandia Vodka
Finlandia is a Finnish vodka produced from six-row barley. Of all Finnish products, it is the brand name that most foreigners associate with the country. Despite this it is almost exclusively directed at the export market. Finlandia was launched in Scandinavia in 1970 and in the United States in 1971. It is almost exactly the same alcohol as Koskenkorva[citation needed]. However, it has a slightly higher proof, 80, and lacks the small amount of sugar as in Koskenkorva. Even these minor modifications to the recipe result in a markedly dryer taste.
Today the Finlandia vodka brand is wholly owned by Brown-Forman Corporation, an American company. The contract between Altia and Brown-Forman determines that Altia remains the sole producer of Finlandia until at least 2017, and Altia produces the alcohol at the Koskenkorva distillery.
Koskenkorva
Koskenkorva Viina (also known simply as Koskenkorva, or Kossu) is the most common clear spirit drink (38%) in Finland, produced by Altia in the Koskenkorva distillery in Ilmajoki. The grain (barley) alcohol is produced using 200-step continuous distillation designed to produce high-purity industrial ethanol. The drink is produced by diluting this alcohol with spring water and a very small amount of sugar. Although commonly called a vodka in English, it is not considered a vodka in Finland. Instead, it is viina, simply "hard liquor", often used contextually similarly to the word "booze".
Besides the standard 38% near-unflavored there are several variants of Koskenkorva on the market, most notably the famous Salmiakki Koskenkorva, better known as Salmiakkikossu or Salmari, which is salmiakki-flavored. Another variant is the same Koskenkorva with rye instead of barley, marketed under the same concept as Koskenkorva Viina Ruis. There also exists a vanilla variant called Vanilja Koskenkorva. The Koskenkorva Vodka is the same drink, but with 40% or 60% alcohol instead of the traditional 38%, as this brand is intended for foreign markets. Finlandia Vodka, a vodka classified as "imported premium", is the same as Koskenkorva 40%, except that sugar is not added. Altia sold this brand, intended for foreign markets, to the American Brown-Forman Corporation, but remains the sole producer of Finlandia Vodka at least until 2017.
The Koskenkorva Viina bottle has a white label, with KOSKENKORVA VIINA - BRÄNNVIN in black, and a drawing of a scenery of fields with barns on them in light brown. The rye variant has a light brown field in pale, with the text RUIS. Salmiakki Koskenkorva has a completely different black label.
Kossu is at its best when it's cold, but can be also mixed for example with Coke (then it's called "Kossukola"), with Vichy water ("Kossuvissy"), orange juice ("screwdriver"), energy drink ("Kossu Battery") or certain (hard) salmiakki candies (Salmiakkikoskenkorva, Salmiakkikossu, Salmari). The last is often made by mixing ground Turkinpippuri with kossu, though other candies of similar type are also a possibilty and there also exists a ready salmiakki mixer for this particular purpose [1]. Another way of enjoying kossu, which has gained popularity recently, is mixing ground Fisherman's Friends to the drink.
The Altia Corporation is owned by the state of Finland. As an independent corporation, Altia would be free to relocate the distillery, if it were sold to a private investor. When the government considered selling the corporation, a popular movement grew to oppose this. The Koskenkorva distillery is the largest buyer for the barley farmers in the area. Without the distillery, cultivation of barley in the region would probably cease.
Furthermore, Finnish people recognize Koskenkorva as one of the symbols of Finnishness. It would be unlikely that "foreign Koskenkorva" would be accepted by the Finnish home market. Ironically, many other vodka brands brandishing symbols of Finnishness, such as Leijona with the Lion of Finland or Suomi-Viina, are partially produced from Estonian or other foreign raw materials. Koskenkorva Viina, and its unsugared counterpart Finlandia Vodka are one of the few actually Finnish vodkas on the market.
Trivia
- Koskenkorva is a small village - that belongs to municipality of Ilmajoki - in Finland that translates as "(area) by the rapids". The folk etymology "rapid's ear" is based on the fact that korva also means "ear".
- The original name of the drink was Koskenkorvan viina — notice the genetive 'n' — "liquor of Koskenkorva". The name was changed recently into Koskenkorva viina "Koskenkorva liquor". Furthermore, even older labels had the original name in the partitive as KOSKENKORVAN VIINAA "(some) liquor of Koskenkorva".
- Irwin Goodman's song repertoire included "Koskenkorvassa" ("In Koskenkorva"), where nearly every line is a double entendre interpretable as either a praise to either living in Koskenkorva village or being drunk of Koskenkorva Viina.
- In the song The Land Of Ice And Snow, Timo Tolkki, guitarist and songwriter of the Finnish heavy-metal band Stratovarius, describes Finland as the land "where Koskenkorva flows".
Salmiakkikoskenkorva (Salmari)
Salmiakki Koskenkorva, (also Salmiakkikossu for short or generically as Salmari) is a pre-mixed vodka cocktail which caused a minor revolution in drinking culture in Finland during the 1990s. Today, Salmiakkikossu is the number one drink amongst locals and tourists in many pubs and nightclubs in Finland. Canonically it consists of Koskenkorva Viina vodka and ground up Turkish Pepper brand salty liquorice.
Before the 1990s, Finland had a very thin and stratified cocktail culture. A single episode of The Simpsons changed all that[citation needed]; at Moe's Tavern, Homer Simpson invents a new cocktail, the Flaming Moe, which is a huge hit and earns Moe a fortune. The cocktail consisted of cough medicine amongst other ingredients. Inspired by this, some Finnish drinking establishments started serving a similar drink made out of ground ammonium chloride (salmiakki in Finnish) based candy. It became a trendy drink especially amongst the youth of the day, for which some consider and call it a "Teenager's vodka".
However, one must note that the origin and recipe of the beverage are based on anecdotal reference. The concept of mixing vodka and licorice probably existed long before the 1990s, since both Koskenkorva Viina vodka and Turkish Pepper licorice existed before the alleged invention the cocktail. On the other hand, Salmiakki Koskenkorva was one of the first pre-mixed cocktails that hit the market in Finland. Another well-known anecdote says that singer Jari Sillanpää invented the drink when he was working as a bartender in the late 1980s.
The taste of Salmiakki Koskenkorva resembles strongly that of black licorice and cough medicine (this is because the original mixture, see Apteekin salmiakki, used in Salmiakki Koskenkorva is also used in cough medicines), and has the additional effect of increasing salivation.
Tabloid scaremongering
Based on an urban legend of a mythical teenager who suffered a heart attack as a result of Salmari, tabloids were able to foment a furor strong enough for the state monopoly hard alcohol retailer to withdraw the premixed drink from sale throughout the country. They did not destroy their large stock, but merely warehoused it for five years, until the furor died down. Even when Salmiakkikossu was withdrawn, the effect it had on Finnish cocktail culture remained unabated. Salmari had brought cocktails to the masses.
Although the original rumor of heart attack was a hoax, the drink does have some dangerous properties (as do all strongly-flavored liquors). The strong flavor almost totally masks the presence of ethanol, and the imbiber may not realize he is consuming drink with almost 40% alcohol by volume (80-proof), leading to possible Alcohol poisoning.
Topography and geology
Repovesi National Park in southeastern Finland. <<
Finland is a country of thousands of lakes and islands – 187,888 lakes (larger than 500 m2/0.12 acres) and 179,584 islands. Its largest lake, Saimaa, is the fourth largest in Europe. The Finnish landscape is mostly flat with few hills, and its highest point, the Halti at 1,324 metres (4,344 ft), is found in the extreme north of Lapland at the border between Finland and Norway. Forest covers 86% of the country's area the largest forested area in Europe. The forest consists of pine, spruce, birch, larch and other species. Finland is the largest producer of wood in Europe and among the largest in the world.
The landscape is covered mostly (seventy-five percent of land area) by coniferous taiga forests and fens, with little arable land. The most common type of rock is granite. It is a ubiquitous part of the scenery, visible wherever there is no soil cover. Moraine or till is the most common type of soil, covered by a thin layer of humus of biological origin. Podzol profile development is seen in most forest soils except where drainage is poor. Gleysols and peat bogs occupy poorly drained areas. The greater part of the islands are found in the southwest in the Archipelago Sea, part of the archipelago of the Åland Islands, and along the southern coast in the Gulf of Finland.
Finland is one of the few countries in the world whose surface area is still expanding. Owing to the post-glacial rebound that has been taking place since the last ice age, the surface area of the country is expanding by about 7 square kilometres (2.70 sq mi) annually.
The distance from the southernmost – Hanko – to the northernmRepovesi National Park in southeastern Finland.
ost point in the country – Nuorgam – is 1,445 kilometres (898 miles).
Foreign relations
Foreign relations
According to the latest constitution of 2000, the president (currently Tarja Halonen) leads foreign policy in cooperation with the government (currently Prime Minister Mari Kiviniemi and Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb), except that the government leads EU affairs.[28]
In 2008, President Martti Ahtisaari was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.[29] Finland was considered a cooperative model state, and Finland did not oppose proposals for a common EU defence policy.[30] This was reversed in the 2000s, when Tarja Halonen and Erkki Tuomioja made Finland's official policy to resist other EU members' plans for common defense.[30
Finland
Finland (pronounced officially the Republic of Finland
Finnish: Suomi; Swedish: Finland is a Nordic country situated in the Fennoscandian region of Northern Europe. It is bordered by Sweden on the west, Norway on the north and Russia on the east, while Estonia lies to its south across the Gulf of Finland.
Around 5.4 million people reside in Finland, with the majority concentrated in the southern part of the country. It is the eighth largest country in Europe in terms of area and the most sparsely populated country in the European Union. Finland is a parliamentary republic with a central government based in Helsinki and local governments in 342 municipalities. A total of about one million residents live in the Greater Helsinki area (which includes Helsinki, Espoo, Kauniainen and Vantaa), and a third of the country's GDP is produced there. Other larger cities include Tampere, Turku, Oulu, Jyväskylä, Kuopio, Kouvola and Lahti.
Finland was historically a part of Sweden and from 1809 on, an autonomous Grand Duchy within the Russian Empire. Finland's declaration of independence from Russia in 1917 was followed by a civil war, wars against the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany, and a period of official neutrality during the Cold War. Finland joined the United Nations in 1955, the OECD in 1969, the European Union in 1995, and the eurozone since its beginning. Finland has been ranked the second most stable country in the world, in a survey based on social, economic, political and military indicators.
Finland was a relative latecomer to industrialization, remaining a largely agrarian country until the 1950s. Thereafter, economic development was rapid, and the country reached the world's top income levels in the 1970s. Between 1970 and 1990, Finland built an extensive welfare state. In the aftermath of the country's severe depression in the early 1990s, successive governments have changed the Finnish economic system through some privatisation, deregulation and tax cuts.
Finland is well placed in international comparisons of national performance such as the share of high-technology manufacturing and health care.[8] The country is ranked 1st in the 2009 Legatum Prosperity rating, which is based on economical performance and quality of lifeCoat of arms /Anthem: Maamme (Finnish)
Vårt land (Swedish)
"Our Land"(English).
Location of Finland (dark green) – on the European continent (light green & dark grey) | ||
Capital (and largest city) | Helsinki 60°10′N 024°56′E / 60.167°N 24.933°E / 60.167; 24.933 | |
Official language(s) | Finnish, Swedish | |
---|---|---|
Recognised regional languages | Saami | |
Demonym | Finns, Finnish | |
Government | Parliamentary republic[1] | |
- | President | Tarja Halonen |
- | Prime Minister | Mari Kiviniemi |
Independence | from Russian Empire | |
- | Autonomy | March 29, 1809 |
- | Declared | December 6, 1917 |
- | Recognized | January 4, 1918 |
EU accession | January 1, 1995 | |
Area | ||
- | Total | 338,424 km2 (64th) 130,596 sq mi |
- | Water (%) | 10 |
Population | ||
- | 2010 estimate | 5,359,538[2] (111th) |
- | 2000 census | 5,180,000 |
- | Density | 16/km2 (201st) 40/sq mi |
GDP (PPP) | 2009 estimate | |
- | Total | $179.598 billion[3] |
- | Per capita | $33,556[3] |
GDP (nominal) | 2009 estimate | |
- | Total | $238.128 billion[3] |
- | Per capita | $44,491[3] |
Gini (2000) | 26.9 (low) | |
HDI (2007) | ▲ 0.959[4] (very high) (12th) | |
Currency | Euro (€)¹ (EUR ) | |
Time zone | EET (UTC+2) | |
- | Summer (DST) | EEST (UTC+3) |
Drives on the | right | |
Internet TLD | .fi, .ax ² | |
Calling code | 358 | |
1 | Before 2002: Finnish markka | |
2 | The .eu domain is also used, as it is shared with other European Union member states. |