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In the last six years, millions of people are moving in the movement of millions of people in the north of Sweden, Moose-Toose-Toose-Toose.
“Great Moose Migration” follows animals as floating in the Angerman River and offers the annual summer pastures and summer pastures.
This year, a 24-hour program from SVT Play, the flow platform for the Swedish National Broadcast, started a week before the warm weather in April.
The broadcast has become a “slow TV” phenomenon with a loyal fan cultivation since the beginning of 2019.
Since the coviet-19 pandemia has stumbled during the pandemia, the annual Livestream Borjesson has been announced in 60 years since the beginning of Tuesday, the TV has been reported in 16 straight hours.
“It’s incredibly comfortable,” he said. “Birds have natural sounds, there are winds, trees. In a sense that you are in nature,” he said.
To Cait, watching migration turned into an annual tradition that take time to fully immerse himself in the three-week summer.
He said he was “like a therapy” that attacked the streaming and panic.
And he is not alone. More than 77,000 members and emotional reactions and emotional reactions, including SVT Livestream, including a Facebook group, including a Facebook group, also increases emotional reactions and migration.
A large part of his travels detained by the SVT is in the northern Swedish village of Kullberg next to Angerman.
Goran Ericsson, Swedish Agricultural Sciences and Science Adviser, Dean of the Faculty of Forest Sciences, in summer, in the summer, in winter, in winter, the summer was rose to the summer.
“Historically, this migration lasts since the ice cycle,” he said. “In the spring and summer months, the moose spreads more evenly in the landscape.”
He added that 95% of Moose in Northern Sweden migrates every year that the early migration was asked for a new snow this year.
“Early springs occur sometimes,” he said. “We are still in the range of normal change.”
He added that more than 30 cameras are used to catch the Moose through extensive landscapes.
The show drew about a million people in 2024 during the beginning of nine million followers in 2019.
Investigating Livestream’s followers, Minh-Juan Truong, a researcher at the University of Agricultural Sciences, is experiencing nature with the “slow TV” style – a genre characterized by long, edited and real-time broadcasts.
“Many people say as an open window in a forest,” he says. “When you ask them, if they prefer music or comments in the background, they simply say they choose the sound of the wind, birds and trees.”
Sweden’s forests are about 300,000 moose houses. The animal is known as the “king of the forest” in the Scandinavian country.