estonia
tallinn very tourist friendly, has historic parts, has residential neighborhoods that became branded as the hipster/start up areas, has post soviet economic boom areas
if you want to be bald and bankrupt but not too edgy you can go to the small bumfuck towns see some abandoned soviet murals
every european country is cold in winter, if you care about any of them
maybe go to a mountain region the further south so it is cold but days are not as short as up norf
the alps in the autumn - nice and chilly but the snow hasn't come yet
winter time is great but you will have the ski crowds
northern europe, uk, lowlands, scandanavia in the summer time can have heatwaves but generally many of those places struggle to sustain above 20C
You don't really like the cold. You like the cold when you're walking in streets that have been cleared of snow, not 1m like in the forest. You like the cold when you still have the warmth of the heating of your house still in your hands and to which you return to every night.
I think it's important to make this distinction between enjoying real natural cold in the elements every day as opposed to the average person who says they like the cold.
Believe me you would fucking despise the cold if you had to endure the things I have.
greenland
Uruguay (not super cold but I think you will be able to avoid a significant amount of heat) it's a little expensive though
Trying to avoid countries that suck/pozzed/highly regulated (which are most colder countries right now)
Japan (Hokkaido)
Northern Bhutan
Iceland (unironically)
Faroe Islands
Northern Ireland
Southern Chile
Switzerland
Northern Italy
Denmark
South Korea
>Uruguay
>New Zealand and Argentina
That's temperate at it's worst
>greenland
Would get boring VERY quickly, along with any other Inuit or Thule lands
See you greentexted Uruguay but nothing below it. What did you mean by that lol? No troll just whoosh on my part
Iceland
New Zealand and Argentina while it's summer in the northern hemisphere
What exactly is winter like in NZ/Aus?
nz is very different from aus
hungary
estonia
tallinn very tourist friendly, has historic parts, has residential neighborhoods that became branded as the hipster/start up areas, has post soviet economic boom areas
if you want to be bald and bankrupt but not too edgy you can go to the small bumfuck towns see some abandoned soviet murals
every european country is cold in winter, if you care about any of them
maybe go to a mountain region the further south so it is cold but days are not as short as up norf
the alps in the autumn - nice and chilly but the snow hasn't come yet
winter time is great but you will have the ski crowds
northern europe, uk, lowlands, scandanavia in the summer time can have heatwaves but generally many of those places struggle to sustain above 20C
Cross the equator during your summer
Why
You don't really like the cold. You like the cold when you're walking in streets that have been cleared of snow, not 1m like in the forest. You like the cold when you still have the warmth of the heating of your house still in your hands and to which you return to every night.
I think it's important to make this distinction between enjoying real natural cold in the elements every day as opposed to the average person who says they like the cold.
Believe me you would fucking despise the cold if you had to endure the things I have.
i like 1m deep snow in the forest... for about 1hour then a nice cozy place to warm up and relax
i like skiing on the mountain, but also the mountain refuge with a fireplace
mongolia