Up north we're pretty close with Sweden when it comes to latitude but Sweden goes much further south.
My grandfather was born in Norway and lived in Sweden for awhile before emigrating in the early 1920s. He told me that Sweden (the area where he lived) was actually fairly warm much of the time, due to the Gulf Stream.
Yeah, I might do that next time I'm on that particular trail. Maybe next week. Do you have beavers or any particular equivalent? There are quite a lot of beaver dams around the trails I use.
For now, these will have to do. These were taken on a very popular trail they call The Crack. You hike and it it gradually gets steeper until you come to a large crack in a rock which you climb through and up onto the top to get a magnificent view.
And then actually on the same property I originally talked about, overlooking a different area:
These remind me of the aerial views from the old TV show
Adventures in Rainbow Country. That was my first introduction to how Ontario looks.
This thread is making me think of the episode of South Park where they drive from Colorado to Nebraska and on the state line the terrain instantly changes from snowy mountains to cornfields.
A lot of stereotyping goes on when people are unfamiliar with a region's geography. A lot of Eastern Canadians think my province is flat because it's one of the three "Prairie Provinces."
Actually, we've got a smorgasbord of many types of terrain. I live in an area that's in the zone where the prairie meets the foothills, and 90 minutes south of me is Calgary, which is a foothills city. There's one particular spot in my city where, on a clear day, I can just barely see the Rockies. So it's mostly not flat here.
I learned something about Iowa recently. Apparently there's a small wide spot in the road (population less than 200) called Gravity.
It was a relief to learn this, because one of the sample assignments in my province's new draft curriculum for elementary students is to locate gravity on a globe (yes, this curriculum was written by people with absolutely not a shred of scientific literacy).
So now, when the teachers complain on Facebook, I let them know that you actually can find Gravity on the globe - if you had a globe that had a good enough resolution to see the tiny villages (I used Google and Wikipedia just out of curiosity to see if there actually was anywhere in the world with "gravity" in its name).
But of course this isn't what the question is supposed to be about. I think. More puzzling is how to find Regina on a map of Alberta. Regina is not in Alberta; it's the capital city of Saskatchewan.
As for Finland, the question I have is, how long do the non-winter seasons last?
"Non-winter" is a good way to phrase it. One of our seasons is known as Construction.
It varies yearly especially now with global warming happening. I think it's winter when there's snow on the ground. Back in the day snow came down even in late October or early November, now late November. (if memory serves) Not much, more in December. Winter goes as far as late Febryary. March is a mixed bag, a lot of snow, maybe few signs of spring. In April and May it's spring and in late May it starts to feel summer may begin any day and few years back in was basically summer in mid May. Summer happens in June, July and August. During September it feels like sun doesn't shine that much and waiting for the winter begins. And then waiting for the next summer begins.

Basically, winter is November to February or March, non-winter is from April to (mid) October. Did that make any sense? All of that goes for central Finland, things are bit different up north or down south. Finland is about 1100km tall, there are differences in weather. (had to search for the measurement, fopefully I got it right) Winter is longer in the north, summer is longer in the south. My friend moved to south Finland and it rarely snows there these days. If the are any Finnish people reading this and don't agree with any of this, tell us, I don't want lie to people here.
Climate change has resulted in some very bizarre changes here. My childhood memories tell me that winter used to be from November to about mid-April, but my grandmother always made us pack at least one heavier coat for the annual trip through the Rockies (Central Alberta to the north Okanagan region of British Columbia), in case it snowed in or around Rogers Pass.
Sound weird? I've seen snow in every month of the year here (thankfully not all in the
same year). I have seen snow on the highway in the middle of July in the mountains (naturally there's snow on the mountains, though not as much now as there was 50 years ago, and some of our glaciers have been shrinking very noticeably).
Just yesterday Environment Canada issued a snow warning for Banff-Jasper National Parks (30-40 cm). This is following the heat wave we just got through with.
In recent years, the first snow in my province has been happening in August. Fall starts in August as well (I define fall as when the leaves start to turn). First frost is usually in September, and it's now not unusual to have a few days of snow in September (except for 2013 when we had temperatures of 30C - insane for that time of year). The snow has been sticking around until May.
It's not a bad thing to get a decent amount of snow each month. This year marks the 5th anniversary of the Fort McMurray fire - a forest fire that burned for months, and the smoke spread over most of North America. I'm several hundred miles south of there and breathing was difficult here, between that fire and the fires in BC. Winter in 2016 was mostly a dry one - not much snow, so the fire just kept going.