As we approach November, one of the most dreaded months of the year in Sweden, you may be wondering how you're going to get through it. We asked The Local's readers how they cope with the cold and darkness. Here are their answers.
With autumn making its way to Sweden, it's time to get a cozy jumper, a cup of hot cocoa and start mysa-ing. It's also time to freshen up your Swedish autumn vocabulary.
It will soon be time for people in Sweden to pack away their summer clothes and start preparing for cooler weather and shorter days. Autumn is already here, at least in the northern mountain regions.
Candles and cosy knits at the ready – autumn is here! Unfortunately, along with the changing season comes an array of seasonal illnesses that may afflict you and your family.
Autumn is near and as it gets colder and colder, nobody really wants to spend a lot of time outside. But after some time, all the conventional museums might get boring. Here's our pick of some more... unusual ones.
It's time to stock up on warm jumpers, Vitamin D tablets and flu medicine, with autumn having arrived in more than half of the country following a weekend of stormy weather.
After an exceptionally long and warm summer, it will soon be time to pack away the picnic blanket in parts of northern Sweden, where autumn has already arrived, according to meteorologists.
<a href="https://swedenshaped.wordpress.com/">Madeleine Hyde</a>, a philosophy researcher and English teacher based in Stockholm, reflects on her first year as a Brit in Sweden.
Check out our list of inspiration for a weekend away this autumn. Summer is more or less behind us, so it must be time to start thinking of where to go next – and the answer need not be far away at all.
Dark winter days are just around the corner. Which means it's time to embrace autumn in Sweden – while it lasts. From cosy candles to cinnamon buns, here's The Local's guide to enjoying the year's most colourful season.
After what seemed like a miserably cold and damp summer, it looks like Sweden is about to get a last chance to enjoy some sunshine before the winter season moves in.
Sweden is right now experiencing three seasons in one day, with summer, autumn and winter happening simultaneously in different parts of the country, weather forecaster SMHI has said.
Autumn may be looming ominously near but in Sweden you wouldn't know it. The country's cities have chalked up record temperatures for September, according to national weather institute SMHI.
Just when foreigners in Sweden had managed – with difficulty – to come to terms with the fact that summer had come and gone, it turns out that it is this week set to make a comeback.