The older I have gotten, the less tolerant I am of the heat, and the range of temperatures that I find comfortable has gotten very narrow. If it gets any warmer than 75 degrees Fahrenheit then I think it is too, too hot! It was 90 degrees Fahrenheit here yesterday. If it weren't for air conditioning, I think I'd just shoot myself in the head.
That is, unfortunately for me, a highly unlikely probability, as I am 65 years old, extremely damaged from a motorcycle accident 20 years ago, and do not/cannot travel. Which is, by the way, why I am so appreciative of photos that you post of your home country. They are things that I would otherwise not get to see.
Anyway, the same kind of thing occurs in Mongolia, only with horses instead of reindeer. If you live in Mongolia, the more horses you have, the richer you are.
When I lived in Philadelphia I ran into a musical group performing in public for change (coins donated). The name of the group was H uun-Huur-Tu. I bought one of their albums that they had for sale. The name of the album was "60 horses in my herd" . But I don't know if that meant that they were bragging because they had so many horses or because they were lamenting that they were so poor because they didn't have more horses. The music by the way was very interesting. Perhaps not something that you would want to listen to every day, but certainly something that everyone should get to listen to once at least. The genre of the music, its style, isvcalled Tuvan throat-singing.
I only know of one Finnish musical group... Amberian Dawn... are you familiar with them?
As long as I am here, posting a reply, let me tell you about something that I just read about Finland. There's kind of a contest, or maybe just a disagreement, about who has the most lakes Canada or Finland. I read a brief article at quora.com that said
According to various sources, Finland has about 180,000 lakes but they appear to count a ‘lake’ as being anything over 500 square metres; Canada does not.
Canada has over 31,000 lakes that are over three square KILOMETRES, and countless ‘ponds’ and other small bodies of water. Canada is about 10 million square kilometres, about 30 times the size of Finland (340,000 sq. km.)
Canada also has about 20% of the world’s fresh water.