How long are these Finnish buses?

by Rolifant

28 comments
  1. Damn, they really dont like interactions, sound perfect for me, would there not be so much snow and darkness.

  2. It’s for safety, as we know once you see your reflection in there eye’s it’s time for a snow fight.

    ![gif](giphy|dBN5z4rXiPdmqiCfb1)

  3. That’s the worst part, actually. When the buss comes, you have to actually get close to other people to form a line.

  4. What happens if it starts raining? Would they rather stand outside or can it hope to win against the nordic love for personal space?

  5. This is why they have all the saunas and vodka.

    It’s the only way to get two Finns close enough together to make more Finns.

  6. Meanwhile in Madrid, Spain:

    9 people voluntarily crammed into a single bus shelter in summer cus of the sun

    Source: I used to live there

  7. British people didn’t even stand this far apart during the first wave of covid.

  8. We’re witnessing such a pretty sauna in its natural environment

  9. Fun fact. When I was a naive 20 something year old I worked for a finnish company and they sent me there. I was unaware of this rule so as a typical obnoxious Mediterranean, I just went between them. I kept wondering why I kept getting dirty looks.

  10. To answer your question, the standard buses HSL used when I lived there were longer than what we use here in Portugal. And yes, if there is no seat free without someone next to it, you stand.

  11. Social distancing was difficult during COVID because it actually forced us to stand closer to each other and remote meetings/lectures ment staying home wasn’t an excuse to not see people.

    Some people didn’t realise there was a pandemic until 2023.

  12. Their personal space has personal space. It cannot be close to another personal space.

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