Sweden isn’t only an urban country of towns and cities, it also has an amazing countryside and wildlife. Wild animals that roam the Swedish countryside include wolves, brown bears, lynx, deer, wolverines, reindeer and moose.
Every year, a wonderful wildlife event happens. Called ‘the great moose migration’, the Swedish moose walk the same path to get to their summer grazing pastures.
If you are interested, you can watch this event unfold as it happens. Part of the concept known as slow TV, the Swedish National TV is currently broadcasting the migration around the clock. It is slow, it is snowy and it is spectacular at times.
To see the broadcast go to: https://www.svtplay.se/den-stora-algvandringen
Please note: the moose is the national animal of Sweden. Called ‘älg’ in Swedish, there is frequent debate about whether it is translated as moose or elk. The answer is that it is both! It is called ‘moose’ in American English and ‘elk’ in British English. In North America, there is an animal called an elk, but it is a different animal, known also as a wapiti. The North American elk looks like this, and is a kind of deer:
The North American moose/ European elk/ Swedish ‘älg’ looks like this:

The ‘älg’ has the same Latin name as the British elk, and the North American moose (alces).
Whether moose or elk, it surely is impressive.
Sorry Neil, you got this one dead wrong. Your North American picture is of an elk/ caribou. North American MOOSE look just like Swedish moose, only maybe a little bigger. Your confusion comes from Elg, and translating that to Elk and equating it to moose. So yes, your picture if of an Elk. NOT a N.A. moose. Sloppy! It is you Swedes who conflate the two. Here in Canada we know they are two different animals.