A Sami man holds a reindeer by the halter on a snow-covered tundra while a woman kneels to milk it — the herd grazing behind them, the low Arctic hills on the horizon. The caption calls it simply "An Arctic Dairy," a wry nod familiar to Edwardian postcard buyers: reindeer milk, richer than cow's milk, was a staple of Sami subsistence life across Lapland and remained in practice well into the 20th century before being largely abandoned as commercial herding replaced it. The Sami — the indigenous people of Scandinavia — had herded reindeer for centuries, migrating seasonally across Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia. This hand-colored card was mailed from Boston in August 1910, with a dense message from a traveler named Hally to her sister Alta in Vinal Haven, Maine, describing a boat trip where someone was seasick but "warm and all right."
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