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ANIMALS

Did Swedish authorities just make it legal to own a unicorn?

No, but Jönköping county governor’s reply to an eight-year-old girl’s Christmas wish list is warming the hearts of a nation, after she issued her with a permit for the mythical creature.

Did Swedish authorities just make it legal to own a unicorn?
This is not the unicorn mentioned in this story. Photo: Karolina Grabowska via Pexels

“Hej! My name is Elsie and I am 8 years old and live on a farm,” the girl’s letter reads, sent to the county administrative board in Jönköping, southern Sweden, a few weeks before the holidays.

“I want a unicorn but my mum and dad say that I need to ask you for permission. Please can I have permission to have a unicorn at home if we find some or if I get some for Christmas? Please answer quickly!”

Elsie’s letter to Jönköping county governor. Photo: supplied

A few days later, Elsie received a signed letter from Helena Jonsson, Jönköping county governor, informing her that her permit had been granted.

“We approve your permit for unicorn ownership on one condition, that you look after it/them well,” Jonsson wrote, before adding that she’d like Elsie to send her a picture if she finds a unicorn or gets one for Christmas.

Her letter quickly went viral in Sweden after Elsie’s mother Viktoria shared it in an open Facebook group.

“She thinks it’s great and now has high hopes for a magic Christmas present under the tree!” Viktoria told The Local.

When The Local spoke to county governor Helena Jonsson, she wasn’t able to confirm whether the permit was legally binding.

“There’s no legislation concerning unicorns,” she laughed, “so it’s unlikely.”

Unfortunately, this doesn’t necessarily mean that everyone in Jönköping is now allowed to keep pet unicorns, either.

“Well, she was allowed one on the condition that she looks after it properly, and then I also told her that if she finds one or has any proof that they exist, then I’d like her to send us a picture. So I guess it depends on the type of unicorn you mean.”

The letter from county governor Helena Jonsson to eight-year-old Elsie. Photo: supplied

Jonsson said that media interest in the story had been “astonishing”.

“It’s been a surprise and a bit of a shock how much interest there has been in this application,” she said.

“It’s a story about a girl who is determined, who just before Christmas wants to make sure there are no issues with her Christmas wish list and who wants to make sure she gets a quick response.”

“It goes straight to the heart, and it’s really, really cute,” Jonsson added, adding that she has a grandchild that also enjoys dressing up as a unicorn.

The letter was originally sent to Jönköping local government office. Workers were originally not sure of how they should respond, so they sent the unusual request on to the county governor.

“We don’t have any kind of process or legislation in place for unicorn permits,” Jonsson said.

When asked whether the county had ever received similar requests, Jonsson, who has been county governor since 2018, said this was the first one she’d come across.

“What kind of excuse can I come up with now?” Elsie’s mother wrote in her Facebook post. “And what kind of stable does it need?”

Elsie’s not the first child ever to be granted a permit to keep unicorns, though.

In 2022, a young girl in California named Madeline was given permission by the LA County Department of Animal Care and Control to keep a pet unicorn, as long as she promised to look after it, by giving it “regular access to sunlight, moonbeams and rainbows”, feeding it watermelon at least once a week, and promising to polish its horn at least once a month with a soft cloth.

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ANIMALS

How real-time footage of elk became a Swedish TV hit

Using dozens of cameras set up throughout Sweden's massive forests, weeks-long live broadcasts of elk and other wild animals, or just as often not much at all, have captured Swedish audiences' hearts.

How real-time footage of elk became a Swedish TV hit

As three elks timidly approach a lake on screen, comments next to the live feed flood in. “Go on!”, “Jump in!”, “They’re beautiful!” people write before the elk eventually turn back and move away.

It’s a typical scene from the programme “Den Stora Älgvandringen” (“The Great Elk Migration”), another example of so-called “slow TV”, where things are just left to happen at their own pace and are an antidote to the stress of everyday life.

The genre was originally initiated in 2009 in Norway with the broadcast of a seven-hour recording from a camera attached to a train travelling through the snowy countryside.

Aired for a few weeks each spring by public broadcaster SVT on TV and online, “Den Stora Älgvandringen” attracts a large community that watches and comments on the animals’ every move.

“Moose (elks) are called the kings of the forest,” Ingvar Persson, a regular viewer, told AFP.  There are over 300,000 of them in Sweden.

Popular

“They are a very special symbol for Swedish people,” the 61-year-old added. A hunter in his spare time, Persson said he enjoys the slow and natural pace of the show.

“It’s kind of relaxing and also fascinating… Most of the time you spend in a forest there won’t be that much happening. It’s basically wind blowing and you are waiting for something hopefully showing up. You might think that a day spent waiting would be a day lost but it’s not,” Persson said.

Launched five years ago, the production has been a major success in the Scandinavian country, with viewers logging a combined 12 million hours in 2022. The latest broadcasts started on April 23 and 2023 looks to be a record year.

“I had no idea it would be this popular,” producer Johan Erhag said. “On all the social media, everything is very stressed. There’s a lot of music in programmes. There’s a lot of speaking. And this is the totally opposite way.” 

Not like Disney

“We can’t decide what happens… We don’t want to do a Disney programme where everything is perfect. I mean, this is nature, anything can happen. And we really want to show what it is like,” he added.

The video feed is monitored in real time from a control room lined with screens. Teams work shifts day and night to offer alternating viewpoints from 30 cameras — some of which can be controlled remotely — scattered around the Kullberg region in the centre of the country.

In the spring, the region is known to be a popular route for large mammals heading to new pastures.

“Even if it’s not a motion forward, there are still many things to look at and it still communicates this feeling of nature,” Anders Lindberg, a columnist for Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet, told AFP. “It’s a form of meditation, which I think for many people is something that they need in their lives, and something they lack for example in big cities like Stockholm.”

“It’s TV, it’s show business and it’s quite good show business,” he said. “I think this could be exported to other countries also. The whole concept of sitting and watching nothing happening for hours and hours could be quite healthy for more people than us”.

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