I guess it just depends on the store, I remember the last time I went to Walmart there was a ton of Judas Priest stuff, I'll have to have a look around in there to see if I can find anything.
Further north in Norway, roads have been closed due to a combination of heavy wind and snowfall. The southeast, where I live, is generally the most shielded part of the country when it comes to weather.
Estonia has pretty much the same climate everywhere, so tiny. The islands in the West are a few degrees warmer usually in the winter and the South-East colder but almost the same.
Our Geography teacher has told us that the average temperature in January is about -6 degrees in Tallinn (where I live). We have quite moody winters though, -15...-20 isn't too rare either.
The coldest we've ever had was -43 but that happened aeons ago.
So a more inland-like climate then. In Norway the difference between the coastal areas and the rest is pretty big. The inland regions often have colder winters than what you mention here, but along the west coast it rarely drops far below -10. For example, Bergen - the biggest city on the west coast - has a minimum temperature record of -15. The record for southern Norway (south of Trondheim) is -47.
Right now I'm watching biathlon from Östersund, Sweden. It seems the wind is even worse there. I'm not jealous of those poor guys who are to ski and shoot in that wind ...
PS: After 25 minutes, they have called the competition off. The wind was simply too strong.
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