On the tour we are following, two German families with children and a younger couple from Germany are participating.

The four-hour tour goes a long way out on the bog paths with ridges before the snowshoes go on to walk next to the wooden structure that is on the bog.

- We have snowshoes partly to protect the bog, and partly to not sink and get wet, says Sofia Slavik.

Almost 40 years as a national park

During the tour, visitors are guided around and get to see both animals and plants that are typical of Swedish moss land.

- Store bog is an interesting area where nature differs a lot from the rest of Småland, says Giergos Kobila, a German tourist who is hiking in Småland this summer.

Store bog, which became a national park in the 1980s, is one of 30 Swedish national parks.

In the clip above, Sofia Slavik tells more about the snowshoe rides on Store bog.