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GÄVLE GOAT

Gävle’s Christmas goat begins battle against the arsonists

The Christmas goat in the Swedish city of Gävle was officially inaugurated on Sunday, beginning the authorities' annual struggle to prevent it being burned down.

Gävle's Christmas goat begins battle against the arsonists
The Gävlebocken Christmas goat shortly before being inaugurated on December 3rd. Photo: Mats Åstrand/TT

The goat,called Gävlebocken, is famed around the world for the annual battle between anonymous arsonists who try to burn it down and the city authorities, who try to keep it intact until after Christmas.

Over its 57-year-history, the arsonists have the advantage, with the goat burning down slightly more often than it has stayed intact.

READ ALSO: The weirdest attacks on Gävle’s straw yule goat

After 2016, when it was burned down within hours of being inaugurated, however it remained intact until 2020, coming close to beating its four-year survival record.

It burned down again just before Christmas in 2021, however, with a man with soot on his hands arrested near the scene of the crime. In 2022, it beat the arsonists for the 19th time

Problems with this autumn’s harvest have meant that the straw of which the goat is built is both shorter and have a different colour, giving the goat a shaggier, more haystack-like appearance this year.

“This is because of the harvest,” Anna-Karin Niemann, communications chief at Gävle municipality, told public broadcaster SVT.

“First we had a very warm early summer, and then it rained like crazy, and so that’s been a big challenge. But we have extremely skilled and practiced goat-builders, so they’ve done it brilliantly.”

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PHOTO OF THE WEEK

Reader photos of the week: Celebrating the arrival of spring in Sweden

Every week, The Local invites readers to submit their pictures to our photo competition, to bring our audience together from all parts of Sweden.

Reader photos of the week: Celebrating the arrival of spring in Sweden

This week’s winner, featured above, is Aimee Clark. She told The Local she and her family hung out with lambs at Gunnes gård in Upplands Väsby. She says it’s a “free to enter Viking farm where they have free range sheep”.

We got so many good pictures this week of readers celebrating Walpurgis Day – when Swedes light bonfires to welcome the start of spring – so we included a few more honourable mentions below.

Angie De Quaye sent in this picture of a Walpurgis bonfire in Malmö. Photo: Angie de Quaye

Quirin van Os snapped this picture of the Walpurgis bonfire in Sörby, Lakene. Photo: Quirin van Os

Kira Abeln sent in this lovely picture of a Walpurgis bonfire on the seaside in Råå. Photo: Kira Abeln

Mylinda Campbell Jonasson, based in Helsingborg, writes that she always takes off her shoes the first time of the year this day. Photo: Mylinda Campbell Jonasson

You can submit your entries via email at [email protected] with the subject “Photo of the week”, or by submitting your photo to X using the hashtag #TheLocalSwedenPOTW – or look out for our Facebook post every Monday on The Local Sweden where you can submit your photo. Please tell us your name so we can credit you as the photographer, and tell us a little bit about the photo and where it was taken.

By submitting a photo, you’re giving us permission to republish it on The Local’s website, our social media and newsletters.

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