View from Skierffe Mountain over the Rapadalen river delta, Sarek National Park, Laponia, Lapland, Sweden
© Robert Haasmann/Getty Image
Sarek National Park, Laponia, Lapland, Sweden
If nature had a 'do not disturb' sign, it would hang over Sarek National Park, often called 'the last European wilderness.' This remote corner of Swedish Lapland reminds us what the planet looks like when humans take a step back—and let the wild take the lead.
Established in 1909, Sarek is one of the continent's oldest national parks and remains untouched by modern infrastructure. There are no marked trails, no cosy cafés and definitely no shortcuts. Instead, it offers over 200 peaks, nearly 100 glaciers and valleys shaped by ice and time. It is part of the Laponian Area, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and home to the Indigenous Sámi people, whose reindeer herding traditions still thrive across these lands.
Wildlife here plays it cool—moose, lynx and wolverines keep things low-key. Even the rivers refuse to stay still, carving their own paths through the landscape. Sarek makes a strong case for inaction. Sometimes, protecting the planet means resisting the urge to tame it.
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