ÅNGERMANLAND. 6l 



met with, called the Harr, (Salmo Thymal- 

 lus, or Grayling,) which in appearance very 

 much resembles a Salmon. (See Fauna 

 Suecica, ed, 2. 125.) 



The coverlets of the beds at this place 

 are made of hare-skins. 



Mai/ 22. 



The cows in this neighbourhood have no 

 horns, so that the owners can neither by 

 the rings on the horn ascertain how many 

 calves the cow has had, nor, as is usual 

 with respect to goats, determine the age 

 of the animal every year by the new horns. 

 A few of them indeed bore horns of a 

 finger's length only, and those bent down, 

 immediately from their origin, so close to 

 the hide, that they were hardly visible 

 above the hair. 



Apple trees grow between Veda and 

 Hornoen. but none are to be seen further 

 north. No kind of Willow is to be met 

 with, as I was informed, throughout An- 



