Jingle! jingle! jingle! Where
does the merry sound come from? It comes from
a sleigh drawn by a reindeer. The sleigh is called
a “pulk’ha.” It is made of
birch wood. It has no runners. It goes
on a little keel like that on the bottom of a boat.
The sleigh is very low. It is pointed at the
front like a rowboat, and is flat at the back.
There are no seats in it. The driver sits in
the bottom. The reindeer draws the sleigh, and
goes very fast. If the driver is not very careful
the sleigh may be upset.
It is in Lapland that you may see
this kind of a sleigh. The people who live there
are called Lapps. They are short and stout.
You would think the men and women were boys and girls.
It is very cold in Lapland.
The summer is short, and the winter is long.
So the Lapps have to wear warm clothes most of the
year.
The men and women and boys and girls
in Lapland dress much alike. In the winter they
wear a long outside coat called a kap’ta.
It reaches below the knees. It is made of
reindeer skin with the hair left on. Under the
kapta they wear warm clothes made of wool.
Their shoes are also made of reindeer
skin. They wear two pairs of thick woolen stockings.
When they put on the stockings, they wrap their feet
in dry grass. Then they put on their shoes.
The grass helps to keep their feet warm. They
also wear two pairs of mittens at the same time.
One pair is made of wool. The other pair is
made of reindeer skin. Their hats or caps are
also made of reindeer skin. They are lined with
eider down. Perhaps you do not know what eider
down is. It is the soft, fine feathers of a bird
called the eider duck. A great many of these
ducks are found in Lapland. Their down is very
soft and warm.
Sometimes the Lapps have to go long
distances in the snow. Then they put on skees.
If you saw a pair of skees, you would think that a
person could not walk with them. They are flat
pieces of wood, four or five inches wide, and very
long. Some skees are six feet long. Some
are ten or twelve feet long. They are turned
up a little in the front. In the middle of each
there is a hollow place. The shoe is strapped
to the foot there, as you see in the picture.
When the Lapps go on skees, they do not raise their
feet from the ground. They slide along, one
foot after the other. They have a long pole,
or staff, in their hands to beep themselves from falling.
They can go very fast in this way. Sometimes
they go ten or fifteen miles an hour.
In some parts of Lapland the people
live in houses made of earth and stone. Each
house has only one room. The Lapps have no carpets.
They have no tables or chairs. They cover their
floor with twigs of trees. They eat and sleep
on skins spread on the twigs. They burn wood
for fires. The fire is made on the ground in
the middle of the floor. The smoke goes out
through a hole in the roof.
The Lapps do not all live in the same
way. Some of them are called mountain Lapps.
In summer the mountain Lapps live in tents among the
hills. Their tents are made of reindeer skin.
They have a great many reindeer.
The reindeer is very useful to the
Lapps. It gives them milk. It draws their
sleighs. Its flesh is good to eat. They
make clothes of its skin. They make knives and
spoons of its horns.
In summer the reindeer eat the soft
shoots of shrubs and trees. In winter they feed
on moss called lichen. They get the lichen themselves.
They would not eat it if it were gathered for them.
In winter they dig down through the snow with their
feet to get at the lichen. They dig first with
one fore foot and then with the other. The snow
is often so deep that the reindeer has to dig a hole
so large that its body is almost hidden.
The reindeer are not put in stables.
They like to be out in the cold and snow. They
are able to take care of themselves.
The Lapps eat a good deal of meat.
Their meat is the flesh of the reindeer. They
are very fond of fat. All people who live in
very cold countries eat a great deal of fat.
It helps to keep them warm. The Lapps also
have milk and cheese. They eat rye bread and
fish and berries. They drink coffee.
In winter they have to melt snow in a pot over the
fire to get water.
The rivers and lakes are all frozen.
The Lapps cook their food in a large
pot over the fire. They sit around the fire
to eat. The father takes a piece of meat out
of the pot. Then he serves a piece to each.
The Lapps use no forks. They use their fingers
instead.
In some places they have a funny way
of storing their food. They make a little log
house on the top of a post. They have a ladder
to go up to it. In this little house they store
cheese and milk and other things. Then wild
animals cannot reach them.
There are bears and wolves and foxes
in Lapland. These animals are sometimes very
fierce. They would come into the people’s
tents and houses at night, were it not for the dogs.
Nearly every person has a dog. Even the hoys
and girls have dogs. The dogs are very brave.
They are not afraid to attack wolves or bears.
But you will wish to know about the
children in Lapland. You have heard about the
old woman who lived in a shoe. The Lapp baby
has a cradle shaped like a shoe. It is made
of a single piece of wood. It is lined with
moss and other warm things. The mother often
carries it in her arms. Sometimes she carries
it on her back, slung from her shoulders. The
baby plays with strings of buttons or glass beads.
When a baby is born in Lapland they
give it a reindeer. If the reindeer has any
young ones, they keep them for the baby until it is
a man or woman. They also give a reindeer to
the person who is the first to find that the baby
has cut a tooth.
The Lapp boys and girls have very
few toys. The toys they have they make themselves.
The boys make willow flutes and play on them.
When the boys go on the water they have long, narrow
boats like canoes. Some boys also make sleighs.
Many of the boys and girls go to school.
They learn to read and write and count.
There are towns near the sea and by
the rivers and lakes. In these towns they have
schools and churches.