Carl Linnaeus, The Lapland Journey, translated by Peter Graves (Edinburgh: Lockharton Press, 1995), p. 82.

Lycksele Lappmark, 05/06/1732, ¶378:

I was amazed that the Lapps here, given that they have immediate access to forests, do not build themselves 16 to 20 small houses in which it is possible to walk upright. They replied: “In summer we are in one place and in winter in another perhaps 130 miles away where we can get moss for our reindeer”. I asked why they do not collect reindeer moss during the summer so that they can give it to the animals as fodder during the winter. They said that was impossible since in the summer they dwell where there are fish but in winter move far away to where the reindeer moss grows.