Given the berries and the leaves, I am tempted to say lingonberries. Where did you see them?
Dingus_Suckimus on
Assponcho (literal translation, in Finnish it’s Puolukka & to the Finns who don’t know what Lukka is, it’s basically a poncho of the Sami people).
They are edible and very nutritious. Very sour but very tasty. They don’t need preservatives to be stored, it’s enough that you just smash ‘em and keep in airtight jars.
In English they call it lingonberry but everyone knows its assponcho.
There’s also a Finnish saying about these;
_It rotates like an assponcho in vagina_, which means someone is indecisive, fidgety or just generally zooming around without knowing where they’re trying to go.
Impossible-Ship5585 on
Really good as special porridge or pinaattilettu.
They arw edible
iamnotyourspiderman on
The old mythical saying “Spins like a lingonberry in the vagina” immediately came to mind
6 commenti
Lingonberries, puolukka in Finnish.
Given the berries and the leaves, I am tempted to say lingonberries. Where did you see them?
Assponcho (literal translation, in Finnish it’s Puolukka & to the Finns who don’t know what Lukka is, it’s basically a poncho of the Sami people).
They are edible and very nutritious. Very sour but very tasty. They don’t need preservatives to be stored, it’s enough that you just smash ‘em and keep in airtight jars.
In English they call it lingonberry but everyone knows its assponcho.
There’s also a Finnish saying about these;
_It rotates like an assponcho in vagina_, which means someone is indecisive, fidgety or just generally zooming around without knowing where they’re trying to go.
Really good as special porridge or pinaattilettu.
They arw edible
The old mythical saying “Spins like a lingonberry in the vagina” immediately came to mind
My wife:
