SCIENCE and HISTORY at the Arctic Museum Rovaniemi Arktikum

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WAY AWAY

WAY AWAY

Күн бұрын

Today we learn all about Finland and the arctic from the arctic museum in Ronvaniemi, Arktikum!
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Пікірлер: 104
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
Do you have a skin care routine?I want to know! forms.gle/A5HZdNcMir3s1Z2f8
@lauraschlueter287
@lauraschlueter287 5 жыл бұрын
I love museums and I feel like many travel vloggers don't show that type of content so this was great.
@veinfreak
@veinfreak 5 жыл бұрын
If you dont get partnership , it usually not permitted to film inside exhibition = reason why there are not much content about it.
@Aquelll
@Aquelll 5 жыл бұрын
Sámi people are not only the only indigenous people represented but they are actually the only indigenous group of people in the whole of Europe. That is important to remember.
@magyar5615
@magyar5615 5 жыл бұрын
Your passion for other cultures is so evident, and you really shined in this video!!! Would love to see more like this where you visit a country (or area) and really take a deeper dive into the culture, history, backstory, and science. This was so much more interesting than a travel vlog that clearly was made to just say "we went to this country" (not that those are not fun, just getting old) yours are truly interesting and I felt like I learned a lot, as I always do from your style of fun travel with more substantive content !!!
@Daydreameruk
@Daydreameruk 5 жыл бұрын
Best blog in ages!! And Josh your confidence with pronunciation is charming. Thanks for all the info, really enjoyed this one.
@irishinusa1615
@irishinusa1615 5 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed very much. Thank you. We are now adding Finland to our travel bucket list
@lauren110
@lauren110 5 жыл бұрын
I loved this one, you guys. I'm home sick from work and so enjoyed hanging with you guys in the museum while I had my chicken soup! Happy trails :) Lauren
@LKAnnAKL
@LKAnnAKL 5 жыл бұрын
Such a good video! Loving your guys style of fun but informative content. I'm planning a road trip through the nordics for next year at the moment and getting super inspired by you guys! Finland is definitely on the list now!
@Travelingmel
@Travelingmel 5 жыл бұрын
Loving your Arctic series. We've booked tickets to go to St Petersburgh by ferry and love learning about Finland and Estonia (where we are now adn from your older vids). Love the north. Thanks so much - H
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
Whaaaat! That's awesome yay!
@Travelingmel
@Travelingmel 5 жыл бұрын
@@WAYAWAYWithAsh Yep! Thanks for the vids and tips. Love watching how much fun and enjoyment you two have traveling. -H
@brittanyverlenich3039
@brittanyverlenich3039 5 жыл бұрын
This couldn't be more timely! I just started planning a trip this week for Finland. I'll be going with some fellow educators to check out Helsinki, so I just got here from your Helsinki video. Thanks for producing such consistently awesome content! :)
@jaanaviit3847
@jaanaviit3847 5 жыл бұрын
So Awesome! I am loving the education on science and history you give on your videos also. :)
@alinapetrea23
@alinapetrea23 5 жыл бұрын
hello friends !! ty for the airbnb code. we've put it to good use, traveling in my country for a surgery. now that i'm fine, i'm watching the last ep that i've missed :) ty for the museum tour :)
@Andy_U
@Andy_U 5 жыл бұрын
Hiya. Another non-ordinary video. This is what we want! So professionally done, too. I used to write training/instructional stuff back in the day so I know how hard and time consuming it is to put something like this together - and there's just TWO of you! You're leaving the pack well behind, IMO, and I still can't believe that you've not hit 200k yet. But subs aren't everything, are they? All the best to you.
@Ilonah83
@Ilonah83 5 жыл бұрын
They were at my home city or the city I grew up on. I agree, they did a great job of explaining about those things and introducing Sami people, who are partly my heritage :)
@lauralenau590
@lauralenau590 5 жыл бұрын
So fun! Thanks for taking us on your learning adventure; I love museums, too 😊 We're very fortunate here in St. Louis to have free admission to them (and the zoo), so more learning for everyone!
@selinawilson2872
@selinawilson2872 5 жыл бұрын
I think I've just used up all of my you learn something new everyday in one vlog!
@christinematias8144
@christinematias8144 5 жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing information ten points guys this was so awesome to learn all of this. Thank you so much I really enjoyed it
@geraldine645
@geraldine645 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you for explaining why it's so sunny there even past midnight! I never knew and i kept wondering how during your videos. You guys made it so easy to understand. 😁
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
Yay! Glad it made sense!
@Saravon
@Saravon 5 жыл бұрын
I am loving this whole Nordic series! What interesting info, I'm definitely going to google the indigenous peoples of Finland.
@mariezp
@mariezp 5 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video! Really interesting learning how the aurora bourealis works and about the Sámi people. Good tip to know it's easy to pick out those bachelors when you are in the Arctic! lol! Ashley, if you ever get a chance watch the movie "Last of the Dogmen". It might be tricky to find because it is an older movie but you would love the ending as it fits right in with that dream of yours. I don't think it was a widely known film but it is one of my favorite movies of all time.
@ildiko1vt
@ildiko1vt 5 жыл бұрын
you would make a great teacher team Ashley & Josh! well explained sun/earth relationship Josh!
@brittanyverlenich3039
@brittanyverlenich3039 5 жыл бұрын
I was just thinking the same thing, as a teacher! :) I love the enthusiasm for the content.
@nanp544
@nanp544 5 жыл бұрын
We have Moose here in Newfoundland Labrador, Canada. Yes they can do a lot of damage to your car and the passengers!! Love your videos.🤗
@LadyOfSummer
@LadyOfSummer 5 жыл бұрын
The Sami are super interesting, I definitely recommend looking into them further when you have free-time. Sami music is great too!
@timomastosalo
@timomastosalo 5 жыл бұрын
The lumber jacks were like Finnish cowboys, or like sailors for centuries. They were a bit like rock stars are now: a menace to the local maidens when they came to the village, and there was a dance night coming. A flirting group of exciting strangers, with strength of guys working outside - physically pretty healthy - and skipping on the logs gives you a good balance, sense of rhythm. Local boys didn't have chance in the comparison. And fathers and brothers were ready with axes - maybe shotguns too. Maybe not all of the lumber jacks were like that - but how many guys do you need to start a fight and other mayhem in a dancing place?
@jasonevans8403
@jasonevans8403 5 жыл бұрын
JB & AB in: Night at the Museum 😅 Good job 👍
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
Haha 🏃‍♀️🦖
@timomastosalo
@timomastosalo 5 жыл бұрын
AB JoB?
@patrickbrookings
@patrickbrookings 5 жыл бұрын
Ahhh, more memories! I was at the Arktikum at least 3 times while I lived there. Did you see that circular room where you can lay down and view the Aurora Borealis? If they still have it, of course. Talking of Aurora Borealis, I'm happy to be one of those who has seen it very often. Especially in Winter, I could just pop out onto my balcony and admire the beauty of it
@ralfhaggstrom9862
@ralfhaggstrom9862 5 жыл бұрын
Do you know, that you can see the aurora borealis (some times ) even in South Finland ?. First time I saw the aurora borealis was when I was alone, skiing home ( 4 or 5 years of age ) over a frozen lake near Kilpisjärvi, and I just stayed for a while looking, it was BEAUTIFUL !. Dark, Night, Alone, and that "scenery" Fantastique ! ......... ( maybe I`m a wee bit crazy ? ) .............
@Ilonah83
@Ilonah83 5 жыл бұрын
I live in Oulu, and we can still see the Northern Lights here. Not as well especially where I live close to the city cause of the light pollution. But they do exist here too :)
@pvahanen
@pvahanen 3 жыл бұрын
The most impressive Northern lights like this in the middle of nowhere at night around 11:30 p.m. The car was able to drive without lights, was so bright! -35 C. It was a must! stop, turn off the car and step on the road to look at the sky!
@pvahanen
@pvahanen 3 жыл бұрын
It was so special I had never seen before. The lights were everywhere. Around above from one horizon to another. A tulle dress came to mind around a under seen from under, with so many different layers and colors. It scared my bride and didn’t dare get out of the car. I am local and have seen a lot of those ordinary. But This was different. aim sixty! And mostly in countryside were they are wide visible.
@toobydude41
@toobydude41 5 жыл бұрын
Looked like you had the museum to yourselves! I guess those people didn't gave their deer ...free.....rein :) hehehe couldn't resist! Surprised Ash didn't come up with that :) I saw the northern lights one night in Fall 1991 at my college, on the shore of Lake Ontario NY . Like a curtain of green and red gently dancing over the lake. So cool. Of course nothing compared to what's observed around the Arctic Circle! Who needs Bill Nye when you have Josh and Ash! Truly fascinating and interesting. The animals look so real! @ i.e.10:15 Very cute display @10:05!
@GorgeousRandyFlamethrower-
@GorgeousRandyFlamethrower- 5 жыл бұрын
The Sami "teepee" is called a kota
@riippumatonlinja
@riippumatonlinja 5 жыл бұрын
And also you cant diffirate finlands sami people from finns by genetics, because we were mixed over thousand years. By language, yes, and there is four diffirent dialect of sami language, witch kolttasaami is most rare, only two about 3000 sami speakers in finland speaks its natively. Bit sad that old languages like sami dissappears:/ In here easthern finland its same with karelian people. Most of karelian istmas and living areas were lost in last world war to russia, and in russia there isnt much karelian tribes left. Whole family of finno-ugric languages besides finnish, estonian and hungarian is also dying away like kolttasaami. No more vepsä, mari, komsa, mordva, permi, manti, hamsi or samojedi. Sad. I like to try learn some of them:/
@timomastosalo
@timomastosalo 5 жыл бұрын
@@riippumatonlinja There is actually no single Sámi language - like kolttasaami (Colta Sámi?) is different than Northern Sámi. Which is the most widespread, most populous of the Sámi languages. Istmas is actually isthmus. Sounds like English took it from Greek (sthm) and mixed it with Latin (-us).
@timomastosalo
@timomastosalo 5 жыл бұрын
And the funny thing is that even the Finnish word for home is derived from the same origin as kota - both the older koto and the modern koti. This is further proven by some of the names of the main compass directions: etelä (South) is related to the word front, in front etc. & the -lä in the end is the same as in place and house names. And pohjoinen (North) comes from the word pohja (still used also as North as a poetic version), which is where the 'bottom' aka the back of the tent was. Itä is related to the verb itää (to sprout), so like the plants start to grow, so does the sun 'grow' from the East. Länsi (West) is in its oldest form länte, which is possibly derived from the Indo-European, Germanic word land - so länte, now länsi, was where the sun was 'landing'. Further: koillinen (Northeast) is related to the verb koittaa, as in aamunkoitto (sunrise, 'morning break?' - aamu is morning, koittaa means rising only in this context, nor does it mean breaking in other contexts. It's married with the morning). Lounas (Southeast) used to mean South - the names of the compass directins were not that settled in the old days. Lounas is the direction were Finland gets its warmest summer winds, always appreciated in a cold country. Sometimes that's South, mostly Southeast. Likely the name meant the Lovely, miLd, Lively, meLLow wind. - That lunch is nowadays also lounas, is just a later quite modern coincidence. I vote for lunssi, to give lunch a new name. And kurkka for cucumber, instead of kurkku, which for ages has meant 'throat' - and now the plant too. Swedish gurka is where we took the name for the cucumber, so I'd like kurkka as more logical - kurkku is more cumbersome. I'd like cutting cucumber and cutting throat to be different sounding :) Kurkka! Lost my directions there for a moment. Back to the compass, don't want to break the wind ... directions. Luode (Northwest) is coincidently the same word as ebb - or tide, ebb and flow. Don't remember which is which, they just switch. As I'm not a sailor, I tend to mix them up. Vuoksi is the opposite. So I'm thinking the word was made in the Finnish West Coast, where the waters go Northwest or Southeast, depending on the tide: that shoreline is for its longest part, lying in Southwest-Northeast direction, so the rivers and tide go Southeast-Northwest. Kaakko (Southeast) is a name I don't know where it comes from. But based on the others, it has something with the nature or man's tent life to do.
@donc5786
@donc5786 5 жыл бұрын
Well done vlog. One of my favorites. Looking forward to more. Be careful of the Meese.
@Ilonah83
@Ilonah83 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you for doing this video, and especially about telling about Sami people! First, I want to comment is that, to have the Sami status officially, if I remember correctly, you also need to have at least your grandparent as native Sami speaker. You guys did not talk about the language, but there are several Sami languages. The most used and what all Sami's probably know is the Northern Sami. In Finland we have the Inari Sami, which is a dying language unfortunately with only 400 speakers in 2010. There has been other Sami languages that have died already. I would courage you two to go to northern Finland, Sweden or Norway where you can meet Sami people. Thank you again for the videos! Great work!
@tihk89
@tihk89 5 жыл бұрын
Aurora borealis (northern lights) are called Aurora australis in the southern hemisphere :) The "southern lights" are actually more rare than northern lights because magnetic storms hit the northern Earth easier than the southern.
@megalomanninen
@megalomanninen 5 жыл бұрын
Arktikum was awesome on our Lapland roadtrip in 2017!
@misob4913
@misob4913 5 жыл бұрын
Love this style of video.
@onr-o1h
@onr-o1h 5 жыл бұрын
Ashley, you already belong to a nomadic tribe! It’s a modern tribe of KZbin travellers! 😉 Loving the Nordic series! 👍🏻
@28tlh
@28tlh 5 жыл бұрын
“She blinded me with science!!” Great video! I love history, thank you so much for making this video. I was excited to see Ashley’s love of learning as well❤️🤔. 882 view, 99th like and 22nd comment. Hi from central Illinois. Kudos if you get the pop culture song reference 😎
@MarinaandAfshinTravel
@MarinaandAfshinTravel 5 жыл бұрын
Very nice video again by wayaway, you guys are awesome, hope i can be good as you guys 👌🏻 much love keep safe 👍🏻❤❤
@PlanesTrainsEverything
@PlanesTrainsEverything 5 жыл бұрын
That was a cool video. Thanks for sharing.
@TOPTRAVELVLOG
@TOPTRAVELVLOG 5 жыл бұрын
Wonderful place. Very beautiful video. Nice creation. Great work friends.
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
🤗 Thank you!
@ragingelch5042
@ragingelch5042 5 жыл бұрын
Good museums are so cool! This one seems no exception, very nice lighting in the place! Did you guys just literally adress what I said about the arctic under the last video? :D Alway looking foreward to these nordic summer series, great theme!!
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
Haha, it was just a coincidence but we already knew there was a discussion to be had about the Arctic circle position.
@gerdpapenburg7050
@gerdpapenburg7050 5 жыл бұрын
9:25 relationship status - did you know that this also exists in southern Germany (to be seen at the Oktoberfest traditional garment ("Tracht")): waistbelt ribbon on the left -single, looking for adventures waistbelt ribbon in the middle - virgin, don't want to be touched waistbelt ribbon on the right - married, don't touch me waistbelt ribbon on the back - widow
@timomastosalo
@timomastosalo 5 жыл бұрын
Moose lives (Meese live - like geese? Sorry, Monty Python) in South Finland too - not just in Lapland. And it's harder to spot from a dense wood, where it might jump to the road. Lapland hasn't that many trees, South Finland has a lot. Was it that the trees end soon after Rovaniemi, except by rivers and lakes. Anyway, the most northern Finland doesn't have trees, just open swampy fields - tundra. The cars are also more numerous in the South (like the people), though in the North they are all vital - for the distances. So the car crashes happen more on the South. In Lapland it's a higher risk to run into a reindeer, than a moose. Which you'd have to pay, the same as killing or injuring a lamb or a cow. In the Norwegian Lapland lambs are more common on the roads than reindeers. The reindeers also come as a herd - so if one comes, dozens are about to come. And they don't much fear the cars, maybe they associate them wit people - their herders use a lot of vehicles of many sorts: cars, atvs, motor sledges, crossbikes. If driving, slow down, or stop - it's gonna be a while. In the twilight or dark the reindeers have a tendency to stay in front of the car, in its headlights. Preferring the better view I guess :) Killing the lights makes it/them get off the road quicker - not necessarily right away. The mooses don't do that: across the road, when they feel like it's the time. And they normally run. The mooses don't seem to get that cars have people in them, maybe they see them as different beasts. Either they are not very afraid of them, of they just don't get how fast the cars move. But they often miscalculate, uhm, estimate wrong the car speed, so they just run on the road when they think it's good to go, and the car that was 100m-50m away has a high risk of driving into them. You can watch a few KZbin videos how it works. Just search like Moose crossing road. I mean they are afraid of people, if they hear their noice in the woods. Then they tend to avoid us. But in a dense wood, it's possible to accidentally sneak up on them. I was in the Finnish army - well, 80-90 % of Finnish men around 20 yrs old serve there for 6-12 months - and there we nearly ran into a moose. There was 5-6 of us, we were looking for a nice camp site to cook some food. We likely hadn't spoken for a while, exhausted, and we just happened to a small dell, a hollow - not really a dale. Small mounds surrounded it about 15-20m apart. We descended to the dell, and then I saw on my left a moose about 10m away, maybe even less. So ,30 feet maybe to our friend of 400 pounds or more - high on its feet, so that a sports car would fit under its feet - if it wasn't very wide. It had turned it's head to its right side, chew some hay or grass, or the leaf buds from trees. I was the closest guy towards it. I realized it was not afraid, just viewed me lazily probably thinking also, what to do. I was carrying an assault rifle, but I felt pretty helpless there, because of course I didn't have bullets. What good would that gun do :) So I back stepped slowly, side eying suitable trees for cover, if it wanted to charge. There where only thigh thick trunks nearby, might help - or not. My buddies backed away with me and we were talking in low voices. We didn't want it to get startled. Soon it stepped amidst the tree trunks slowly and majestically, in no hurry - like we wouldn't really matter. Don't remember exactly how it left, it's almost 30 years ago. We were mostly amazed it hadn't heard us coming. I don't remember us trying to be stealthy - I thought we had been panting, coursing, clanking ur kit, and muttering about our hunger, dissatisfied of the nice camp site avoiding us. Of course we forgot about the moose when the food was smelling. But it popped back to our mind later, and it did occur to all of us, it would've been a hard spot to avoid a charging moose. It's antlers could get you behind a thigh thick tree. Especially in the undergrowth hampering you in getting your feet of the ground quickly - on the ground where one foot sinks, when the other is lifted. The moose has no such limitations. It can walk or swim in a swamp where we would sink, and even a bear can't keep up with it. It has split hooves, more like a pig or cow than a horse, so its hooves spread quite wide when it walks. So it has kinda 'flippers' when it swims, or walks the swamps. And 3 legs carry, when it lifts one - whereas for us it's 50-50. We're pretty awkward when on one leg in a mushy swamp :) So a charging moose in the forest is in its element, and people are walking like on - in - a soft couch. Olé?
@pswilson1000
@pswilson1000 5 жыл бұрын
I love your museum vlogs!
@christinaauer1563
@christinaauer1563 5 жыл бұрын
Was I in the middle of something? Yes. Yes I was. Did I stop what I was doing in order to watch this video? Yes. Yes I did. Do I pick this video over what I was doing? Yes. Yes I do. ❤️❤️❤️
@mrbig3386
@mrbig3386 5 жыл бұрын
Haha same! Was working in Photoshop but saw the video and decided to have a watch and eat pizza. :D
@ralfhaggstrom9862
@ralfhaggstrom9862 5 жыл бұрын
Confused ? ...........
@veli-pekkakultanen2353
@veli-pekkakultanen2353 5 жыл бұрын
Glad to see some americans (and I mean USA citizens) are happy to learn sciense.
@jmr7480
@jmr7480 5 жыл бұрын
You should go to that beach beside that river in Rovaniemi. There's often reindeers too at the beach. 🙂🦌
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
Oh well be there in the next video!! Keep an eye out.
@jmr7480
@jmr7480 5 жыл бұрын
Just saw in instagram that there were few reindeers 30min ago. 🙂
@ThomasKossatz
@ThomasKossatz 5 жыл бұрын
One of your best videos for a long time! I watched it twice. And I asked wikipedia about the tents; they are called Lavvu. Do you remember your stay in Scotland? It is so far in the north that dusk is immediately followed by dawn. And even here in Germany we do not have what scientists call an "astronomical nights" for a few months, so it never gets completely dark. Thanks!
@Jenkkimie
@Jenkkimie 5 жыл бұрын
Laavu, yeah they are pretty fun and cozy. Here in Finland we have them in woids that can be freely used by anyone, they have cut wood for campfire and other equipment. All you need is a good German sausage. :)
@ThomasKossatz
@ThomasKossatz 5 жыл бұрын
@@trumpjongun8831 How is it different, I saw es picture and it matches for me ?
@ThomasKossatz
@ThomasKossatz 5 жыл бұрын
@@trumpjongun8831 "Lavvu (or Northern Sami: lávvu, Lule Sami: låvdagoahte, Inari Sami: láávu, Skolt Sami: kååvas, Kildin Sami: koavas, Finnish: kota or umpilaavu, Estonian: koda, Norwegian: lavvo or sametelt, and Swedish: kåta) is a temporary dwelling used by the Sami people of northern Scandinavia." Obviously it is a real word.
@emilyrhodus8688
@emilyrhodus8688 5 жыл бұрын
I had no idea that was included as part of the Arctic circle! Does it make you guys want to continue upwards to get a bit more in the "meat" of that circle? to go over the tree line, so there is no debate? I am sadly so petty I would possibly change all plans if able to do so. ;D
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
While it's not exactly Arctic, I feel like Iceland is probably about as close as we'll ever get to "real" arctic.
@sikrijo
@sikrijo 5 жыл бұрын
It would take you only about 2-3 hour drive north from Rovaniemi to reach the part of Lapland where trees grow significantly smaller and the fell tops hover above the tree line. It is absolutely gorgeous. However as you are heading to Kiruna, you'll see similar landscape there as well. Are you planning on visiting Jukkasjärvi near Kiruna? It is a beautiful Sami village with one of the most interesting churches I've ever visited.
@chiasanzes9770
@chiasanzes9770 5 жыл бұрын
I had an English boyfriend a mommy's son as they seem to be, I took him to him to Rovaniemi and I found very amusing the fuss he made " being the thrid person to go across the Artic Circle in their close relative Paul McCartney family :D." I don't find anything special up there it would be different if it would be acrossing the North Pole or something else And yes, people Do sleep normal with the summer lightness in Finland.
@consciouspiedy5909
@consciouspiedy5909 5 жыл бұрын
Boreales. It's the inner sun (from inner earth land and oceans called Agartha,) shining through ocean water, causing the lights, does sound easiest.
@timomastosalo
@timomastosalo 5 жыл бұрын
If the Sámi parliament in EU has representatives form Norwegian Sámis as well - that would create an interesting situation: Norway is not an EU member.
@1000tumppi
@1000tumppi 5 жыл бұрын
At my homecity☺️☺️👌👌
@lassemanninen4750
@lassemanninen4750 4 жыл бұрын
Northern ligths =Revontulet. Sami people story: The Firefox was running in the sky, hunting, and wushing its tail around milkyway. Stars produce fire and ligth , and that is norther ligths. Repo (old word) =fox. Kettu (modern) Revon = Foxes own. Made by fox.
@jyrkisinkkonen1512
@jyrkisinkkonen1512 5 жыл бұрын
13:48 It is 15.15 o’clock☝🏻🕺🏼🙂
@timomastosalo
@timomastosalo 5 жыл бұрын
Seems like 'Don't be square' has a different meaning in Sámi culture :) Maiden wedding dreams.
@juhamakinen2804
@juhamakinen2804 5 жыл бұрын
Next time when you come to Tampere,you have try and eat "Edus Herkkukeidas" its Finnish homefood restaurant (they cabbage rolls melting you mouth) :) PS: i work they many yrs ;)
@katajha831
@katajha831 5 жыл бұрын
If you are ever in Victoria British Columbia they have an amazing museum there very similar interactive, at least it was when I was there as I think about it 35 years ago... :/ But... it even had the smells of things like the bakery or the black smith it was really good.
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
OOhhh that sounds really cool!
@stephaniebranch2267
@stephaniebranch2267 5 жыл бұрын
I also have been to the museum!! One of my favorite childhood memories going to Victoria BC and going to the natural history museum!
@timomastosalo
@timomastosalo 5 жыл бұрын
Nomadic life style might be tempting at first. But it would be tenting day in, day out, summer or winter, in rain and snow too - sometimes 20-40 degrees below the freezing point, when you'd need some appliable fat to your face when going out, and breathing outside would make your nose stuck. A balaklava or ski mask might feel obligatory. There would be no option to go into a modern house, if really being a Nomad. Would need to keep that fire burning. The tent village might need to pack and go just after a day of staying in one place - no more firewood around. Pack the tents (heavy hides, no light plastic 'curtains'. Wooden stakes, no light metallic telescopes) in maybe half an our. Keep the ambers glowing during the trip. Would take a long time to make a new fire in the winter blizzard. Make the new camp in that same blizzard you just walked in for 5 hours - quarter to half an hour again before you have a warm meal. Washing wouldn't be all that easy. Looking for food might mean having to travel 10 miles or more for a food source - at least for the herd, so you could live on the herd. You would slaughter the animals yourself, eating the intestines too (for vitamins - not much fresh vegies around) - OK, JB could do the slaughtering, of course - np :) Ash would then make clothes from the hide - it takes a few bites to soften that skin for making clothes. But as a week long tourist experience during summer - why not! :)
@anttihiltula6317
@anttihiltula6317 5 жыл бұрын
Did you visit at Ranua Zoo? There is polar bears.
@sumeett8826
@sumeett8826 5 жыл бұрын
Why do northern lights occur in the arctic circle only?
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
They don't. They have recently been recorded as far south as the latitude near Paris
@TheTravelingClatt
@TheTravelingClatt 5 жыл бұрын
Way away? MORE LIKE WAY COOLER THAN EVERYONE ON PLANET EARTH
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂😎You know us cool cats 🐈
@sebmartinez3091
@sebmartinez3091 5 жыл бұрын
Ashley: They live like "normal" people now😂😂😂
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
Words sometimes aren't her strong suit.
@leannes1825
@leannes1825 5 жыл бұрын
Just wanted to let you guys know, for some reason I was no longer a subscriber. I went looking for you as I hadn’t seen a update in a while..... not sure how or why!
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
Welcome back!
@derplinkster
@derplinkster 5 жыл бұрын
Awesome History Lesson You Guy"s
@hallieshouse13
@hallieshouse13 5 жыл бұрын
Stop with the freaky smiling 😂😂😂😂
@alexandergarcia.671
@alexandergarcia.671 5 жыл бұрын
I want to see the cities and their surroundings and it is tired to see their faces
@erkanguner3409
@erkanguner3409 5 жыл бұрын
HI..I.TURKEY İZMİR
@leohoward7282
@leohoward7282 5 жыл бұрын
I wounder if Ashley was humouring you and she could pronounce it and she was just stuttering out of girlfriend solidarity with her man
@WAYAWAYWithAsh
@WAYAWAYWithAsh 5 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah yeah that’s what I was doing...nail on the head 😂🤣😂👍🏻-Ash
@leohoward7282
@leohoward7282 5 жыл бұрын
@@WAYAWAYWithAsh oh cool I'm glad to be a little perceptive
@leohoward7282
@leohoward7282 5 жыл бұрын
@@WAYAWAYWithAsh the idium nail on the head cleared up definitively
@leohoward7282
@leohoward7282 5 жыл бұрын
@@WAYAWAYWithAsh love your videos guys
@sapsantravel848
@sapsantravel848 5 жыл бұрын
Hallo mein Coupon geht nicht!!!
@timomastosalo
@timomastosalo 5 жыл бұрын
Seems like 'Don't be square' has a different meaning in Sámi culture :) Maiden wedding dreams.
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