I've never herd if they did...ARGHHH! Pun alert!As above poster indicated, reindeer (and caribou, deer, wapiti, etc) live in herds.
Herds, i think, im not sure. But im am pretty sure im right. :)
Laplanders use skis and follow their reindeer herds
A group of caribou is called a herd. Reindeer are also grouped in herds.
That describes "nomads". There are many types of nomads - the Sami people of northern Europe are one. They follow migrating reindeer herds.
Nomads in Finland who follow reindeer herds Answer this question…
Caribou. Reindeer are what North Americans typically refer to as the the smaller, more domesticated subspecies of the caribou raised in herds in the Hinterlands of Finland, Sweden and Norway, with a few small herds raised in the non-Arctic areas (well south of the tundra and the Arctic Circle) of Canada and the US.
yukon canada
On the bottom of reindeer legs. :)
yeah but a hunter will be lucky if they even find a reindeer
Reindeer, both wild and domestic are found across much of northern Russia. Major domestic herds (listed from west to east) include: - Taimyr - Lena-Olenek - Yana-Indigirka - Sudrunskaya - Chukotka Smaller herds are found on the Kola peninsula, the island Novaya Zemlya, and the Kamchatka peninsula. Wild reindeer generally live in Russia's boreal forest, but also overlap with domestic herds that reside on the tundra. Reindeer do not live as far south as major cities such as Moscow. Generally, they live in undisturbed forest. In eastern Russia, they live almost as far south as the Russia-Mongolia border. They live all the way to the edge of the Arctic Ocean. During the last ice age, the ancestors of reindeer crossed the Bering land bridge and evolved into North American caribou.
There are several places to go online and find a variety of pictures of reindeer. You may also check in your local library for books containing pictures of reindeer.