{
    "version": "https://jsonfeed.org/version/1",
    "user_comment": "This feed allows you to read the posts from this site in any feed reader that supports the JSON Feed format. To add this feed to your reader, copy the following URL -- https://www.seebtm.com/en/tag/snowflakes/feed/json/ -- and add it your reader.",
    "home_page_url": "https://www.seebtm.com/en/tag/snowflakes/",
    "feed_url": "https://www.seebtm.com/en/tag/snowflakes/feed/json/",
    "title": "SEE Business travel &amp; meetings magazine",
    "description": "Magazin za oblast poslovnih putovanja i kongresnog turizma Jugoisto\u010dne Evrope",
    "items": [
        {
            "id": "https://www.seebtm.com/en/about-snowflakes-and-snow/",
            "url": "https://www.seebtm.com/en/about-snowflakes-and-snow/",
            "title": "About Snowflakes and Snow\u2026",
            "content_html": "<h1>The biggest snowflake ever seen, which still holds the top spot in the Guinness World Records book, fell in Montana in 1887 and had 38 cm in diameter!</h1>\n<p>Too much snow can cause a disorder called echolalia, which is completely meaningless repetition of words that the affected person is convinced to have heard. The whitest place in the world is Valdez, Alaska. Every year it averages 828 cm of snowfall. Besides Earth, Mars and Venus also have snowfalls.</p>\n<p>The post <a rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https://www.seebtm.com/en/about-snowflakes-and-snow/\">About Snowflakes and Snow&#8230;</a> appeared first on <a rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https://www.seebtm.com/en\">SEE Business travel &amp; meetings magazine</a>.</p>\n",
            "content_text": "The biggest snowflake ever seen, which still holds the top spot in the Guinness World Records book, fell in Montana in 1887 and had 38 cm in diameter!\nToo much snow can cause a disorder called echolalia, which is completely meaningless repetition of words that the affected person is convinced to have heard. The whitest place in the world is Valdez, Alaska. Every year it averages 828 cm of snowfall. Besides Earth, Mars and Venus also have snowfalls.\nThe post About Snowflakes and Snow&#8230; appeared first on SEE Business travel &amp; meetings magazine.",
            "date_published": "2018-06-11T12:52:26+02:00",
            "date_modified": "2018-06-11T12:52:26+02:00",
            "author": {
                "name": "Milica Novak",
                "url": "https://www.seebtm.com/en/author/milicanovak/",
                "avatar": "https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/Milica-Novak.jpg"
            },
            "image": "https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/sneg-i-pahulje-seebtm.jpg",
            "tags": [
                "Alaska",
                "Guinness record",
                "snow",
                "snowflakes",
                "OMG... Really?!"
            ]
        }
    ]
}