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For the past six years, every spring nortth tu tun on the movements of the north Sweden on the direct stream of a goal-grain of mold.
The “The Great Moose Migration” tracks the animals when they swim across the Angranon River and their annual travel in green, summer pastures.
This year, SVT Play for Sweden’s National Broadcaster, 24 -hour program started on Tuesday – a week ahead of April’s warm weather.
The broadcast has become a “Slow TV” phenomenon, a loyal fanbase has been conserved since established in 2019.
Cavid -1 ((partner’s disease) all over the country (or companionship), the 60 -year -old Kat Borjson, who was trapped on the annual direct stream, said her TV had been straight for 16 hours since the beginning of Tuesday.
“It is incredibly comfortable,” she said. “There are natural sounds of birds, winds, trees. It gives you a sense that you are in nature even if you are not”.
For Kat, watching migration has become an annual tradition, so much that it gives time to work completely in a three -week transmission.
She said this stream is “like therapy” who helped her anxiety and scared attacks.
And she is not alone. There are a wide range of SVT’s livestime, including the Facebook group, more than 000 77,3 members who come together to share their memorable moments, emotional reactions to broadcasts and their shared attraction.
A prominent part of his journey by SVT is from the village of Kulberg in North Sweden next to Angerman.
Dean Goron Erickson of Forest Sciences University of Swedish Agricultural Sciences said that the moose migrates back to the summer range after combining in spots with good winter temperatures.
“Historically, this migratory is running from the snowy age,” he said. “Spring and you and in the summer, the moose spreads more evenly in the landscape.”
He further said that about 100%or Mous in North Sweden migrates every year and further said that the early migration was not new due to low snow on this year’s land.
“As soon as possible, there are springs,” he said. “We are still in the normal range of variations.”
More than 30 cameras are used to catch the moose passing through a huge landscape, he said.
Before receiving nine million audiences in 224, the show entered the show among about one million people during the launch in 2019.
Myh-Zuan True, researchers at the University of Agricultural Sciences of the University of Swedish, who surveyed the direct stream, said in a fast-paced medium environment that people experience nature through this “slow TV” style-a style characterized by long, unpredictable and real-timed broadcasts.
He says, “Many people say it is like an open window of the forest.” “When you ask them whether they prefer to have music or comment on the background, they say they just prefer the sound of winds, birds and trees.”
Sweden’s Woodlands has about 300,000 mouses. This animal is known as the “king of the forest” in the Scandinavian country.
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