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  • The landscape of the frozen lake of Jerisjarvi, Kalapirtit fishing village in Finnish Lapland on 14th February 2018. Jerisjarvi lake is situated in Pallas-Yllastunturi National Park, the third largest national park in Finland
    A0039948cc_1.jpg
  • The landscape of the frozen lake of Jerisjarvi at Kalapirtit fishing village in Finnish Lapland on 14th February 2018. Jerisjarvi lake is situated in Pallas-Yllastunturi National Park, the third largest national park in Finland
    DSCF4708cc_1.jpg
  • Snowy Winter landscape of the forest and frozen lake of Immeljarvi near Levi in Finnish Lapland on 14th February 2018.
    A0040003cc_1.jpg
  • After a sauna, a man gets into the hole cut into a frozen lake for ice-swimming, Kallavesi, Kuopio, Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    A_7727_1.jpg
  • After a brief dip, a man gets out the hole cut into a frozen lake for ice-swimming, Kallavesi, Kuopio, Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    A_7712_1.jpg
  • A woman enjoys the sunshine whilst relaxing after cross country ski-ing on the frozen lake Paijanne, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Jyvaskyla is the capital of Central Finland and the largest city in the Finnish Lakeland, an area of more than 188,000 lakes. During the Winter, the city is transformed and the lakes which surround it become a temporary urban park with a specially constructed ice skating and other paths carved out by ski-ers, dog walkers and pedestrians.
    11-07_1.jpg
  • View from a bridge looking over the frozen lake of Jyvasjarvi, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Jyvaskyla is the capital of Central Finland and the largest city in the Finnish Lakeland, an area of more than 188,000 lakes. During the Winter, the city is transformed and the lakes which surround it become a temporary urban park with a specially constructed ice skating and other paths carved out by ski-ers, dog walkers and pedestrians.
    02-15_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a baby being pulled on a sledge across the frozen lake of Jyvasjarvi, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Jyvaskyla is the capital of Central Finland and the largest city in the Finnish Lakeland, an area of more than 188,000 lakes. During the Winter, the city is transformed and the lakes which surround it become a temporary urban park with a specially constructed ice skating and other paths carved out by ski-ers, dog walkers and pedestrians.
    01-18_1.jpg
  • A woman walks past several boats which are stuck in the frozen lake of Jyvasjarvi during a blizzard Jyvaskyla, Central Finland
    A_7789_1.jpg
  • Residents fish on a frozen lake in Yinchuan, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, China on 21 December  2012.  With its dry climates and ample sunshine, and encouraged by the huge boom in Chinese consumer's demand for wine, Ningxia is quickly becoming one of the biggest wine producing regions in China.
    QS121221Yingchuan020_1_1.jpg
  • Residents fish on a frozen lake in Yinchuan, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, China on 21 December  2012.  With its dry climates and ample sunshine, and encouraged by the huge boom in Chinese consumer's demand for wine, Ningxia is quickly becoming one of the biggest wine producing regions in China.
    QS121221Yingchuan019_1_1.jpg
  • Three children play poking sticks into the frozen glacial lake below Doddick Fell near the summit of Blencathra Mountain, Lake District, Cumbria, UK.  The temperature is so cold and the strong wind caused the water to freeze in wave formations. Two adults walk around the water.
    UK-Tourism-Lake-District-9129.jpg
  • Frozen ripples in a small glacial lake below Doddick Fell near the summit of Blencathra Mountain, Lake District, Cumbria, UK. The temperature is so cold and the strong wind caused the water to freeze in wave formations.
    UK-Tourism-Lake-District-9125.jpg
  • Portrait of a women in a flowery swimming costume standing on the path down to the hole in the ice on the small lake Vuorilampi, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    18-07_1.jpg
  • Three men going ice swimming after a sauna at the small lake of Vuorilampi, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    18-05_1.jpg
  • A portrait of a man after ice swimming at the small lake Vuorilampi, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    13-01_1.jpg
  • Three men going ice swimming after a sauna at the small lake of Vuorilampi, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    12-01_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a man wearing a woollen hat, surrounded by steam, after going ice swimming at the small lake of Vuorilampi, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    11-18_1.jpg
  • A portrait of a man after ice swimming at Luonetjarvi lake, Tikkakoski; Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    06-13_1.jpg
  • A portrait of a woman after ice swimming at Luonetjarvi lake, Tikkakoski; Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    06-09_1.jpg
  • Two women chatting whilst ice swimming at Luonetjarvi lake, Tikkakoski; Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    06-06_1.jpg
  • A pair of awkwardly splayed legs disappear into the cold, murky waters of the Serpentine Lake in London's Hyde Park. Having just dived head-first off a platform that juts out into the lake, the person is half in and half out and the splash is frozen in time. He or she is in incopetent diver with such ungainly plunge into the waters. It is otherwise a quiet moment. The water is largely undisturbed apart from the dive and buoy markers float to for a boundary line to keep rowing boats and bathers apart. This bathing area is where the normally busy Serpentine Swimming Club have the use of this Royal lake known as Lansbury's Lido. It is now normally open only in the summer, but one traditional event occurs each year on New Year's Day, when the ice is broken and brave bathers dive into the cold waters of the lake. The Serpentine will be used for the swimming leg of the triathlon at the London 2012 Olympics. The Serpentine gets its name from its supposedly snakelike, curving shape. It was formed in 1730 when Queen Caroline, wife of George II, ordered the damming of the River Westbourne and other natural ponds in Hyde Park.
    RB-0191.jpg
  • A frozen pond and tree landscape in Dulwich Park, south London during mid-winter snow. During a prolonged cold spell of bad weather, snow fell continuously on the capital, rendering this natural place into a Narnia-like scene. Dulwich Park is a 29 hectare (72 acre) park in Dulwich in the London Borough of Southwark, south London, England. The initial design was by Charles Barry (junior), later refined by Lt Col J J Sexby (who also designed Battersea and parts of Southwark Parks). It was opened in 1890 by Lord Rosebery. In 2004–6, the park was restored to its original Victorian layout, following a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund.
    dulwich_snow08-21-01-2013_1.jpg
  • A female ice swimmer gets dressed after a sauna and a brief dip in a hole in the ice, Tuomiojarvi, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    A_7838_1.jpg
  • Following a sauna, a female ice swimmer waits while another gets out after a brief dip in a hole in the ice, Tuomiojarvi, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    A_7832_1.jpg
  • A frozen pond and tree landscape in Dulwich Park, south London during mid-winter snow. During a prolonged cold spell of bad weather, snow fell continuously on the capital, rendering this natural place into a Narnia-like scene. Dulwich Park is a 29 hectare (72 acre) park in Dulwich in the London Borough of Southwark, south London, England. The initial design was by Charles Barry (junior), later refined by Lt Col J J Sexby (who also designed Battersea and parts of Southwark Parks). It was opened in 1890 by Lord Rosebery. In 2004–6, the park was restored to its original Victorian layout, following a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund.
    dulwich_snow10-21-01-2013_1.jpg
  • A woman stands with her ice-skating boots at Jyvasjarvi lake, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Jyvaskyla is the capital of Central Finland and the largest city in the Finnish Lakeland, an area of more than 188,000 lakes. During the Winter, the city is transformed and the lakes which surround it become a temporary urban park with a specially constructed ice skating.
    A_7553_1.jpg
  • A man holds a bag of small fish he has caught whilst ice fishing on Lake Paijanne, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Jyvaskyla is the capital of Central Finland and the largest city in the Finnish Lakeland, an area of more than 188,000 lakes. During the Winter, the city is transformed and the lakes which surround it become a temporary urban park with a specially constructed ice skating and other paths carved out by ski-ers, dog walkers and pedestrians. Ice fishing and ice swimming are also popular sports.
    09-05_1.jpg
  • A man wearing a woollen hat relaxes in a hole in the ice after taking a sauna in the small lake Vuorilampi, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland.
    A 3695_1.jpg
  • A young child looks out of the window of Jatkankamppa sauna in the grounds of the Spa Hotel Rauhalahti in Kuopio, Central Finland. It is the world’s biggest smoke sauna and is situated in the grounds of the Jätkänkämppä Lumberjack Lodge. Up to 70 persons at a time can enjoy its gentle heat.
    A_7732rt_1.jpg
  • Four men relax in a heated swimming pool during the Winter at Spa Hotel Rauhalahti, Kuopio, Central Finland.
    A_7679_1.jpg
  • Snowy Winter landscape of the forest and frozen lake of Immeljarvi near Levi in Finnish Lapland on 14th February 2018.
    DSCF4734cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a naked man sitting outside Vuorilammen sauna before ice swimming at the small lake of Vuorilampi, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Ice swimming takes place in a body of water with a frozen crust of ice, which requires a hole cutting in it.  In Finland, the ice swimming tradition has generally been connected with the sauna tradition and it is not seen as an ascetic or religious ritual, but as a way to cool off rapidly after staying in the sauna and as a stress relief.
    11-15_1.jpg
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