Korvatunturi

Korvatunturi is a fell in Lapland, on the border between Finland and Russia. Its Finnish part is within Urho Kekkonen National Park in the municipality of Savukoski. Its name literally means "Ear Fell" in Finnish due to its unique shape.

Korvatunturi
Korvatunturi seen from southwest, i.e. from the Finnish side
Highest point
Elevation486 m (1,594 ft)
Prominence210 m (690 ft)
Listing
Coordinates68°04′25″N 29°18′55″E
Geography
Korvatunturi
Location within Finland
LocationSavukoski, Lapland, Finland

Characterised by its thick pine forest, frozen lakes and hundreds of thousands of reindeer which roam the land,[1] Korvatunturi stands 486 metres (1,594 ft) above sea level. It has three peaks, with the middle one between Finland and Russia's borders. Since Korvatunturi is located within the boundaries of the country, all visitors are required to secure written permission from the Finnish Border Guard.[2] There are also no roads that directly lead to the fell, but there are hike trails that provide access, such as the one found in the Savukoski area.[3]

Cultural significance

Korvatunturi in winter

Korvatunturi is best known as the home of Father Christmas (or Joulupukki in Finnish). According to Finnish folklore, this land is the location of Father Christmas’ secret workshop, where toys, trinkets and gifts are made and eventually wrapped by elves. Known for their good-natured demeanour and their role as guardians of homes, these gnomes are also responsible for analysing weather patterns for the yearly gift-giving trip around the world.[2] People have also said that the ear-shaped structure of the fell allows Father Christmas to hear the wishes of every child on Earth.[4] In popular media, this legend has been adapted into the film Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale.

For letter mail to Father Christmas Korvatunturi has postal code 99999 Korvatunturi, even though all post sent to this address will actually be carried to Santa Claus Village at Rovaniemi.

A 360 degree panorama from Korvatunturi, the building is a watchtower of the Finnish Border Guard
gollark: Elliptic curve cryptography.
gollark: Also, you can. (EDIT: can install Opus I mean)
gollark: <@151391317740486657> If you can find a flaw in ECC I think you could also steal bitcoin...
gollark: If you have the private key, you can generate signatures for any startup. You don't, though. The stuff written onto disks *also* has a UUID embedded (on the more complex ones), which is part of the signed bit.
gollark: The signatures are programatically generated from the contents of the file and my private key. PotatOS has the *public* key, so it can verify that the signature was generated from the corresponding private key.

See also

  • Christmas in Finland

References

  1. Butler, Sophie. "Father Christmas in Lapland". The Sophie Buter Report. Telegraph UK. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
  2. Robbins, Danny. "Meeting Father Christmas". Danny Robbins’ Indie Travel Guide. BBC. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
  3. "Hiking". Savukoski Wilderness Travel. Archived from the original on 29 September 2013. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
  4. "Finnish Christmas". Nordic Recipe Archive. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.