Siggjo, which is the highest mountain on Bømlo, appears here in the winter suit.
Also, notice how the trees appear in the cold weather.
As a curiosity, I can inform that in the Stone Age about 6000 years ago, the hunting people who lived in this area in Sunnhordland found a rock called rhyolite near the top of Siggjo. At stone-age places, archaeologists had found arrow tips of rhyolite among tools of flint stone and axes of greenstone from Hespriholmen.
For a long time, archaeologists had wondered where this particular rock was found by the Stone Age people. After a long time, an archaeologist like Alsaker managed to find this rock on the top of Siggjo.
Rhyolite is about as hard as the flintstone and is ideal for use as a tip on the arrows. The arrows with rhyolite tip used the Stone Age people to hunt for reindeer. Rhyolite was also suitable for making small sharp knife-like scrapers. These used Stone age people to scrape away meat from the skin. When the skin was finished, it could be used as clothes.