The
World Wife-Carrying Championship, now in its 23rd year, draws
thousands of visitors to the town of 4,200 and has gained
followers across the world.
There are official qualifying competitions in countries
including the United States, United Kingdom, Sweden and Estonia.
On Saturday, 53 couples from 13 countries joined the
competition, organizers said.
The idea of wife-carrying as a sport was inspired by the 19th
century legend of Ronkainen the Robber, who tested aspiring
members of his gang by forcing them to carry sacks of grain or
live pigs over a similar course.
The championship is also said to stem from an even earlier
practice of wife-stealing - leading many present-day contestants
to compete with someone else's wife.
On Saturday, Lithuanian parents of two Vytautas Kirkliauskas and
Neringa Kirkliauskiene won the race which involved running,
wading through a slippery pool and getting through an obstacle
course. The two defeated six times world champion Taisto
Miettinen, a Finn.
"It's my wife," Kirkliauskas shouted happily after the race,
"She's the best."
The couple first competed in Sonkajarvi in 2005.
Finland, which straddles the Arctic Circle and goes through
long, dark winters, is no stranger to strange sports. It has
also given the world the world boot throwing, air guitar and
mobile phone throwing competitions, to name just a few.
"I think because we have only three months of light we need to
come up with nice stuff to do during the summertime, and we want
to show everyone we have a great sense of humor," said
Sanna-Mari Nuutinen, a volunteer at Saturday's event.
(Reporting by Attila Cser and Luiza Ilie; Editing by Hugh
Lawson)
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