I grew up on a steady diet of fairy- and folktales. Not just the stories that inspire watered-down Disney movies, but the darker and more fantastic tales, devoid of logic or unimaginative ties to reality. Women who spend years stitching nettles into coats to transform swans into men. Woodcutters meeting lucky spirits in the stream that runs through the forest. In particular, the Grimm brothers collected a lot of these stories from different villages and towns, where they were passed down through the generations from villagers living surrounded by the forests. The beauty, mystery, hope and danger that the forest presents throughout these stories is something the villagers drew inspiration from for their stories. I have always been captivated by the forest.
As I've always lived in the suburbs, I became nostalgic for something that didn't really exist in my concrete jungle. I have seen and loved forests all over the world, from the sun-drenched pines of Northern California to the ancient, gnarled, multicolored trees of Japan to the tall, nameless trees of Bangladesh, that at once shade beneath a magnificent rainy sun and seem to hide something.
Sweden's moss-covered giants are no exception. I have gone mushroom picking twice now, the first time guided by a mycologist and the second time only with a friend who loves the forest as much as I do, and each time the forest was perfection.
The road to Torup, in Malmo.
The first mushroom of the day...appears poisonous, though attractive.
Lucky ladybird! Hardy prefers to create his own luck, though.
Life abounds: spiders, ticks, mosquitoes, frogs, and deer were just a sampling of the friends we encountered.
Hardy told me in Austria, the folktales take a snail's height on the base of a tree to be an indicator of how high the snow will fall in the upcoming winter. However, this next Swedish winter is supposed to be a cold one, so we both agreed the snail had some climbing to do.
Stepping on puffballs to see the smoke-like spores waft out! It's addictive, like hookah for your feet. They're called roksvamp in Swedish: literally, "smoke mushroom".
The moss, and the sweet, mellow light filtering in through the endless trees.
Another world exists if you just look down. They are like little tree spirits.
We'll certainly be coming back.