50 Things That Prove Canada Is a Unique Country (BRITISH REACTION)

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Mert Can

Mert Can

Жыл бұрын

British Reaction To 50 Things That Prove Canada Is a Unique Country
This is my reaction to 50 Things That Prove Canada Is a Unique Country
#canada #culture #reaction
Original Video - • 50 Things That Prove C...
These was some really amazing unique things about Canada. What is the most surprising for you?
Subtitles are available in French (and English)

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@peterscott3276
@peterscott3276 Жыл бұрын
When we say sorry it's not really an apology. It's acknowledging the other person's inconvenience
@amouramarie
@amouramarie Жыл бұрын
Yeah! It's a difficult thing to describe... It's like it can be used almost as an expression of gratitude. Acknowledging someone has made an effort for your benefit.
@lloydbylsma28
@lloydbylsma28 Жыл бұрын
There also laws in canada stopping people from using it against you. Because we use it so much.
@DarrylSmith1968
@DarrylSmith1968 Жыл бұрын
Yes I feel this way, I'm sorry it puts you off but I'm not sorry I'm doing it. I don't mean you any discomfort or bad feelings but I feel I have to do it. Sorry.
@oo-tabarnak4616
@oo-tabarnak4616 Жыл бұрын
Its the polite way lol
@mikeallen1763
@mikeallen1763 Жыл бұрын
yeah we sorry a lot , someone bumped into me recreantly they we not watching where they were walking . We both said sorry at the same time . While I was walking away I was like why did I say I was sorry 🙃
@Ryanjzammit
@Ryanjzammit Жыл бұрын
Fun fact - Canadians don’t describe distance so much in kms or miles as we do by time… if I want to drive from my home in Winnipeg to my brothers home in Edmonton, Alberta, I would say it’s a 12 hour drive, vs 1300 kms or 850 miles… 100 kms is an hour. You’ll hear it a lot as Canada is so big to travel across…
@MidnightSummer824
@MidnightSummer824 Жыл бұрын
I've never described a big ride over 30 minutes to 1 hour in km- heck I don't even check them most of the time- I just call it "5 minutes away" most of the time
@grandgab
@grandgab 8 ай бұрын
@@MidnightSummer824 Never realize, but it's true that we do this. Gage distante by time travel.
@FoxenASMR
@FoxenASMR 7 ай бұрын
I remember European friends being confused when I’d say a three hour drive wasn’t too long. I guess when you’ve driven over 8 hours to spend two nights in a place the relativity stays with you haha
@jkanary
@jkanary Жыл бұрын
I think "sparsely populated" would be more accurate than "uninhabited" for Northern Canada. Sounds like another video idea!
@WhiteCavendish
@WhiteCavendish Жыл бұрын
I think the infographic is not intended to actually represent the distribution of the population, rather just showing the "10%". There are huge swaths of Canada that are essentially uninhabited.
@alanj9978
@alanj9978 Жыл бұрын
The territories are essentially uninhabited. 45,000 people in a territory 4 times the size of Italy, and half of those live in one city.
@YukonWilleh
@YukonWilleh Жыл бұрын
checks where I live, yeah sparse is good
@MidnightSummer824
@MidnightSummer824 Жыл бұрын
Actually 50% or so of the population lives in the "Windsor-Quebec Coridor" (Which is actually the dip into the US, basically, half Canadians live south of the Canada-US border)
@realsies9387
@realsies9387 Жыл бұрын
I was born and have lived my entire life in Canada. I am Native so my family goes back many generations living here. Even though its obviously not perfect I still wouldn't want to live any where else in the world.
@poltallach
@poltallach Жыл бұрын
I'm terribly sorry for everything your people have gone through. You are incredibly special to want to live here after all that went before. Sending love and respect!!
@CayleeG
@CayleeG Жыл бұрын
I think that most of the people who complain the loudest don't have a clue what it's like beyond our borders. They are insular and can't seem to see the bigger picture. Faulty wiring? Sorry. 🫣
@cameronpickard7456
@cameronpickard7456 Жыл бұрын
bye
@fantasticmio
@fantasticmio Жыл бұрын
The Canadian "sorry" has many reasons. "I regret doing that to you", "I'm sad that is happening to you" "I should have been paying more attention" "Can I just sneak by here", "hey, get out of my way", etc...
@victoriadavislg
@victoriadavislg Жыл бұрын
So true I’ve said it to inanimate objects 😂
@shaytutty1989
@shaytutty1989 Жыл бұрын
Also "could you say that again?"
@twiztedsynz
@twiztedsynz Жыл бұрын
@@victoriadavislg That's how you know you're a True Canadian - you apologize to the things that don't breathe for doing something to them.
@gregmunro1137
@gregmunro1137 Жыл бұрын
It’s written right in our laws, that ‘sorry’, is not an admission of guilt
@loraneilson1698
@loraneilson1698 Жыл бұрын
And also when someone is talking and you missed what they said. So we say I'm sorry what did u just say, or sorry man, what was that. I love being Canadian. I once apologised to pillar for running into it. I was reading and walking. My sister laughed so hard she was crying. 🔴⚪️🔴⚪️🔴⚪️🇨🇦
@halichamney5337
@halichamney5337 Жыл бұрын
Another interesting tidbit, Canada and Denmark were in a 50 year war called the “ whiskey war”that went on from 1978 to 2022 over Hans island. Both countries laid stake to the island and by doing so would lay claim by putting in their flag and a bottle of liquor ( whiskey for Canada and schnapps for Denmark ). The other country would take the alcohol and put in their flag removing the other country’s flag. In 2022 , the 2 countries ended the war and split the island in half. Canada now officially shares a border with Denmark! 😂
@denisegreene8441
@denisegreene8441 Жыл бұрын
I love this
@gerble36
@gerble36 Жыл бұрын
The friendliest war ever fought!
@extremelycareless2541
@extremelycareless2541 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely correct. Anything off the top shelf Hailey.
@trentt4618
@trentt4618 Жыл бұрын
I read another interesting timbit lol 😅
@johnross5889
@johnross5889 10 ай бұрын
All wars and land claims should be settled like this.. Good on the Danes and Canucks.
@texadian3392
@texadian3392 Жыл бұрын
If you write a letter to Santa and address it to "Santa > North Pole > H0H 0H0 > Canada," employees and volunteers with Canada Post will respond as "Santa." I kid you not.
@jimdwyer8607
@jimdwyer8607 Жыл бұрын
Can confirm. Even did it as a kid, and got my letter!
@daveleeroy
@daveleeroy Жыл бұрын
No pun intended
@TagusMan
@TagusMan Жыл бұрын
Fun fact. The day my 5 year old daughter became a Canadian citizen, she walked up and down the streetcar in Toronto saying sorry to everyone on the trolley. That was the most Canadian thing I have ever seen and she did it without any prompting from me. Proof that being Canadian is having to say you're sorry. 🇨🇦
@maggieyanor5082
@maggieyanor5082 Жыл бұрын
That is so funny! I laughed out loud. Thanks for that.
@peterdavies9166
@peterdavies9166 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Wales but emigrated to Canada in 1983. I landed in Vancouver but moved to Alberta a couple of years later for better job opportunities. I then spent 10 years working overseas (Asia) for a US based company but was hugely happy to return to Canada in 2010 when I was offered an opportunity near Toronto, Ontario. In August 2022, my wife and I relocated back to Alberta and we drove the Trans Canada No 1 Highway from Toronto to Calgary. Wow, what an experience! Just getting out of the Province of Ontario takes a couple of days. Then, the drive along the north shore of Lake Superior is spectacular! Even the drive through the prairies was a lot more interesting than I was expecting. It's a drive that every Canadian should take at some point to pick up an appreciation for how great and beautiful our country is.
@TheGeogirl
@TheGeogirl Жыл бұрын
Your’s is the only recollection that makes me reminiscent
@bhministry
@bhministry Жыл бұрын
Hope you got to drive the number 1 in BC as well, the most beautiful part in my humble opinion
@peterdavies9166
@peterdavies9166 Жыл бұрын
@@bhministry, too many times. My wife still had family on Vancouver Island and we would drive out from Calgary for Christmas and summer holidays most years.
@danielleduplantis9449
@danielleduplantis9449 Жыл бұрын
I'm Canadian and I love my country
@jessica19141
@jessica19141 Жыл бұрын
Once a great country,as Canadian born in the sixties I have witnessed a great decline,mainly influenced by government
@bobbo11357
@bobbo11357 7 ай бұрын
I’m a U.S. citizen but I love Canada too.
@meco4068
@meco4068 Жыл бұрын
We say sorry when we accidently walk into a pole 😆
@LLearners
@LLearners Жыл бұрын
Yep, walk into a desk? Oh, sorry!
@devchepil7305
@devchepil7305 Жыл бұрын
Been there done that repeatedly.
@maggieyanor5082
@maggieyanor5082 Жыл бұрын
So true. That was a laugh too!
@commenter5901
@commenter5901 Жыл бұрын
The National Hockey League (NHL) has 32 teams and only 7 of them are Canadian... but almost half of all NHL players are Canadian. We don't really play much lacrosse, but it's the national sport because it was an indigenous sport that was here before British settlers came. We play it in school and there are pro teams, but you don't really hear much about it.
@AL-fl4jk
@AL-fl4jk Жыл бұрын
I beg to differ! Toronto Rock games are more wild than any NHL game I’ve been to
@MrBOOM546
@MrBOOM546 Жыл бұрын
Saying we don't play much lacrosse is pretty incorrect, Canada essentially has its own national league (the NLL) with numerous American teams but Canadians dominate the league with it being 80% Canadian players. The US has its own outdoor league (the PLL) but it also has a very large Canadian player base. Lacrosse is huge in BC, Alberta, and Ontario; and growing rapidly in Sask, Manitoba and a couple other provinces :)
@rk74194
@rk74194 Жыл бұрын
We have 2 national sports! Hockey and LaCrosse are both official sports!
@notfromChad
@notfromChad Жыл бұрын
@@MrBOOM546 but who actually watches? Among the people who love sports where I live I've never heard lacrosse come out any of their mouths, we learned about it being an indigenous sport and played it for like a week or two in phys ed, even on TSN you can't look at the sports tabs on lacrosse lol
@notfromChad
@notfromChad Жыл бұрын
@@AL-fl4jk I don't even think there's a stadium for lacrosse in Edmonton (closest city to me), let alone would there ever be one that would get more wild than an NHL game, especially something like the battle of Alberta or something, if I'm not wrong there have been riots over hockey games in Edmonton at least
@jo-annelebel9819
@jo-annelebel9819 Жыл бұрын
If you noticed on "the happiness list " all the countries above Canada were northern cold countries
@markdog3355
@markdog3355 Жыл бұрын
The Pincher Creek temperature change was due to a Chinook, where air heats up and loses its moisture as it travels from the Pacific ocean, across the Rocky mountains. It's a natural occurrence that happens most commonly in Alberta. It's the primary reason it's so windy in Pincher Creek.
@carolhayward7369
@carolhayward7369 Жыл бұрын
I was surprised that this video didn't mention that the Bay of Fundy, between my province of New Brunswick and the province of Nova Scotia, has the highest tides in the world, averaging 47.5 feet and having reached 53.6 feet on at least 1 occasion.
@twiztedsynz
@twiztedsynz Жыл бұрын
And the tidal bore in Moncton which now can be surfed from the mouth where the water enters up until past Mocton, IIRC...
@gregmunro1137
@gregmunro1137 Жыл бұрын
Highest tides, and the lowest gravity of any place in the world
@jameslatimer3600
@jameslatimer3600 Жыл бұрын
I watched a seal swimming, both ways, against the 'reversible current' (or is Falls) at St John's River Amazing place.
@jameslatimer3600
@jameslatimer3600 Жыл бұрын
@@miladysteevesYes, that is confusing.But I know it's St. John, NB. I wasn't sure about the river name. Thinking it was connect to St. John is why I used the possessive John's. Been there, stayed there and went through there a number of times. My older brother lived in PEI. I've known about the tide since high school - 78 years ago.
@TheGeogirl
@TheGeogirl Жыл бұрын
You tell it sister
@erineross1671
@erineross1671 Жыл бұрын
HAPPINESS in Canada comes from a sense of beauty, space, nature, friendliness, diversity, welcoming, safety, community. High quality of life!🎉❤🇨🇦
@philpaine3068
@philpaine3068 Жыл бұрын
Most of the "British" influence in Canada was Scottish influence. Scotland had about a dozen times more cultural influence on Canada than England ever had.
@ThePrairielad
@ThePrairielad Жыл бұрын
Especially in the Maritime provinces. My Paternal Grandfather (Born in PEI) was 50% Scottish 50% Irish , whose ancestors came over in the early 1800's. I carry a good old Scottish Clan last name.. I do have English ancestry as well though through my maternal grandmother (Ontario region) Here in Saskatchewan, I would say people are more of an Eastern European ancestry due to the encouraged immigration/settlement time frame (Late 1800's early 1900's). My paternal Grandmother was from Romania.
@roywarriner8441
@roywarriner8441 Жыл бұрын
No.
@jameslatimer3600
@jameslatimer3600 Жыл бұрын
South-western Ontario has any number of towns bearing Scottish names. We even have a Scotland, Ontario and Tobermory at the northern tip of the Bruce Peninsula. New Edinburgh is part of Ottawa. So, yes, The Scottish influence is very strong.
@philpaine3068
@philpaine3068 Жыл бұрын
@@jameslatimer3600 There were large settlements of Highlanders in Glengarry County in Eastern Ontario, and in Lambton County in South-western Ontario. Lowlanders settled more in the cities. The 19th Century ruling class of Toronto was overwhelmingly Scottish, as a glance at the tombs in any old cemetery will show. In the far north of Ontario, many Cree and Ojibway bear Scottish names and "old time Cree fiddling" music and dance are identical to Highland, Hebridean and Orkney styles. I recently found a newspaper photo of the opening of the Bloor-Danforth subway line in 1966 --- and the ribbon-cutters were surrounded by kilt-wearing men and bagpipers, so Toronto Scottishness was still going strong even as late as the Beatles era.
@margaretjames6494
@margaretjames6494 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely. I posted earlier about the Scottish influence in Canada - there are a lot of Alexanders and Mackenzies in our history!
@ralphvelthuis2359
@ralphvelthuis2359 Жыл бұрын
The big temperature change is due to a chinook. Basically, a warm wind rolling off of the Rocky Mountains entering Alberta. We get them several times a winter and they can raise temperatures from a deep freeze to above freezing for anywhere from a day to several weeks. This winter we actually went from extreme cold to one rolling through Christmas day. On December 27th, we actually woke up to rain instead of snow. One side effect of the chinook winds is migraines. Southern Alberta experiences some of the highest migraine episodes in Canada because of them. Ottawa isn't the 2nd largest city in Canada. It's the 2nd largest in Ontario. It's probably about 6th largest. Vancouver, Montreal, Calgary, and Edmonton are all larger. The loonie was basically named such because it has a picture of a loon on the front. When the $2 coin came out it was named a toonie- 2 loonies. Another name that was in the running was doubloon- double loonies. The Mclobster is only an east coast thing. We don't have it on the prairies. Wood Buffalo National Park, located mainly in Alberta, with a small bit in the Northwest Territories, also contains the worlds largest beaver dam. A multigenerational dam, its currently at 850 meters long and still growing. To put in perspective for a Brit, the park is about twice the size of Wales. Its the 2nd largest national park in the world, surpassed only by one in Greenland. Montreal is no longer the 2nd largest French speaking city. 2 cities in Africa have surpassed it.
@cmlemmus494
@cmlemmus494 Жыл бұрын
And for reference, a similar phenomenon elsewhere in the world is called Foehn winds (from the German: Föhn).
@stephenolan5539
@stephenolan5539 Жыл бұрын
The dollar coin was originally going to have a Voyeur but the dies disappeared for over a week between Ottawa and Winnipeg so they had to go with the second choice.
@cmlemmus494
@cmlemmus494 Жыл бұрын
@@stephenolan5539 I think you mean Voyageur. A voyeur is something else entirely.
@stephenolan5539
@stephenolan5539 Жыл бұрын
@@cmlemmus494 A guy on a canoe. What would we call the coin if they hadn't lost track of the dies.
@cmlemmus494
@cmlemmus494 Жыл бұрын
@@stephenolan5539 I think I prefer a Canoodle, although that does sound like some sort of dog. ;)
@thefogfriendlyoldguy1627
@thefogfriendlyoldguy1627 Жыл бұрын
I've heard that if you get lost in the woods in England, you only need to walk in one direction long enough and you'll find 'civilization'. As a Canadian, I know that, if you get lost in the woods, you're pretty much done for.
@jaquigreenlees
@jaquigreenlees Жыл бұрын
ha, walk down hill until you find running water then go down stream, you will have food and water until you find signs of human habitation. Even on the prairies, there is a slope to the land, as slight as it is, so the above works all across Canada.
@nottheoneyourelookingfor0504
@nottheoneyourelookingfor0504 Жыл бұрын
I was a boy scout as a youth. We were taught bushcraft and survival skills. Because our country is so sparsely populated and so covered in forest, it is incredibly useful to have that kind of knowledge for when we go hiking/camping out in the woods. Which is something we Canucks love doing.
@devchepil7305
@devchepil7305 Жыл бұрын
We were taught bushcraft in elementary school. We also took a course and test called survival swimming.
@nicelliott1175
@nicelliott1175 Жыл бұрын
What part of Canada are you from? We were taught wilderness survival skills in elementary school (Calgary, AB, an hour's drive from the Rockies), on school outdoors trips, at summer camps, and in options classes in Jr. High. Lots of other activities, too. Basics like how to best use a garbage bag for protection from the elements, avoid stopping under trees in the winter, how to purify water and what to avoid, using the powder from the bark of aspen poplars as sunscreen, tying shiny/reflective items to branches to aid search and rescue rather than just hanging them to keep birds from stealing them, the importance of checking bear warnings and how to use bear spray, evaluating avalanche risk... the list goes on. Most importantly, ensure that someone knows where you are going, your planned route, and how long you expect to be out so that they can alert the appropriate authorities and provide as much information as possible if you don't return. You are more likely to end up in trouble on a ski slope than out hiking, although the majority of wilderness fatalities in my area occur due to avalanches in the backcountry.
@jaquigreenlees
@jaquigreenlees Жыл бұрын
@@nicelliott1175 They didn't have that in schools when I was still in school, at least not in the lower mainland of BC. The only places where you could learn them were Scout/ Guides or the Cadets. In this area it's falls down into valleys, rivers that cause the most injuries and fatalities from hikers not paying attention to basic safety and staying away from the cliff edges.
@dialee5016
@dialee5016 Жыл бұрын
Saying sorry a lot is not a stereotype, I think most of us Canadians have even caught ourselves apologizing to inanimate objects such as chairs or doorways that we have bumped into. We are in general a polite and kind people however it's easy enough to find the jerks here too. Churchill Manitoba does have a polar bear jail. Nuisance polar bears are trapped and detained there until they can be relocated. Temperature extremes are just part of Canadian life in most parts of the country.
@pamelaknox7487
@pamelaknox7487 Жыл бұрын
That is hilarious - inanimate objects - of course I've done it! There ARE jerks here, for sure, but I'd say the ratio is pretty tiny.
@eyetrollin710
@eyetrollin710 Жыл бұрын
I have apologized so many inanimate objects it's not even funny,, I think there's nothing more Canadian then apologizing to the door jamb or the table you just stubbed your foot on
@sirdavidoftor3413
@sirdavidoftor3413 Жыл бұрын
I think you may know of A.A. Milne ‘ Winnie the Pooh! That has a strong Canadian connection. Harry Colebourn, was a veterinarian living in Winnipeg. He got on a train to Montreal, to enlist in the army during WW1. On a stop in White River, Ontario, he bought a bear cub for 20.00. He named HER Winnipeg Bear, after his hometown. The bear became a mascot for Harry’s troop the 2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade. The brigade got orders to go to England, and Winnie was allowed to go with them. Once in England, they were ordered to France, but Winnie was not allowed to go, so the London Zoo “ borrowed “ Winnie. The loan, would become permanent. It was there that A.A. Milnes’s son, Christopher Robin, would fall in love with it, and inspired, wrote the classic Winnie the Pooh. You could do a video on Vimy Ridge, and also Canada role in the Whiskey war with Denmark, which was sadly, finally ended in 2022! Stay safe, stay sane, stay strong Ukraine 🇺🇦
@amouramarie
@amouramarie Жыл бұрын
/raises a glass in tribute to the end of the Whiskey War.
@JesusFriedChrist
@JesusFriedChrist Жыл бұрын
7:03 Here’s your explanation. Pincher Creek, ALBERTA (they failed to mention the province) is in an area on the leeward (rain shadow) side of the Rocky Mountains, which experiences a weather phenomenon called a Chinook (pronounced SH not Ch), which-when atmospheric conditions are right-causes the air to heat up. I live in Calgary and we get chinooks all the time. You can tell by the chinook arch in the sky: a line of clouds that forms just past the Rockies. I’ve seen crazy temperature swings before. I’ve seen it be -15° during the day and then a chinook came in that evening and at midnight it was 10° out. I’ve also seen a nice, beautiful 22° day turn into -3° and a snowstorm in the span of about 5-10 minutes. I’ve seen roasting hot 15° days in the middle of winter, and I’ve also seen snow in every single month of the year. On the other hand I’ve also seen -40° and -55° in central and northern Alberta, and I’ve seen 37° here and 46° in southeastern BC. We live in a land of extremes, and thankfully sometimes the extremes cancel each other out and make it mild.
@chougrand8913
@chougrand8913 Жыл бұрын
Lacrosse is the national sport of Canada as the first nations were the first to play it i think
@fantasticmio
@fantasticmio Жыл бұрын
We took the Trans-Canada Highway when we moved from Ontario to Alberta. We left southern Ontario near the end of September, and northern Ontario was *beautiful*. All the fall colours! Manitoba was chock full of trees, in Saskatchewan you could see for kilometers, and as we got further into Alberta, the Rocky Mountains appeared on the horizon. It was unforgettable!
@miniciominiciominicio
@miniciominiciominicio Жыл бұрын
I hope you’ve had the opportunity since to drive from Alberta to Vancouver!! I’m from Calgary and have made the trip over a dozen times in my life, half of it underage with my family to visit family in Vancouver. It is THE most gorgeous road trip (at least, in my small world) during Spring/Summer/Fall. Coming from the Foothills you drive through and up over the Rocky Mountains and then down into BC where you get closer and closer to sea level. All along the way you have the yellowish green colour of Alberta grass and dark green evergreen trees and then it slowly lightens into the beautiful bright green tones of BC as you get closer to the coast. I will say it’s a bit depressing going the other way hahaha but hey, it’s home!
@jameslatimer3600
@jameslatimer3600 Жыл бұрын
When we first drove to the west coast and saw that dark line across the horizon getting bigger as we drove we thought it was an approaching storm. Awesome beyond belief.
@MormorMb
@MormorMb Жыл бұрын
I have gone coast to coast by train. We live in the most beautiful country in the world!
@leowakefield5942
@leowakefield5942 Жыл бұрын
as someone from Saskatchewan its always so interesting to see how people react to the landscape here. I remember when I was a kid I thought it was the most boring thing in the world to take the three hour drive up to our cabin and didn't really start to appreciate it's beauty until much later. I'll never forget taking the bus to Cypress Hills with a group of exchange students from Ontario and seeing how excited they got by how far they could see
@jwyllor
@jwyllor Жыл бұрын
Your face and reaction to "polar bear jail" made me abruptly laugh out loud. I am so glad I had finished my dinner or I may have made quite the mess. LOL A Canadian in Alberta here.
@russlemarr398
@russlemarr398 Жыл бұрын
I live in Ottawa. I've lived all over Ontario but Ottawa is my absolute favorite. It's the hardest city for weather -45 wind chill winter, +47 humidex in the summer , but it's more like a big town than a city. There's consistently something happening. You don't hafta travel far to get out of town, there's lots of museums, parks, trails. We have all the sports teams. Not Major league except for our NHL Ottawa Senators. (GO SENS GO). I Really love living in Ottawa. Plus I may be a lil bias being Algonquin. Haha
@upyourglass
@upyourglass Жыл бұрын
The drastic weather changes within one day is a unique and very rare occurrence in Canada. It can only happen during the first 12 months of the year And usually on a day that ends with Y Here in Saskatchewan, we call it Thursday 👵🏻🇨🇦
@Stewart682
@Stewart682 Жыл бұрын
"Vegan" is an old native word for "bad hunter"!
@paulsalivar2053
@paulsalivar2053 Жыл бұрын
A little surprised that the video did not include that the province of Alberta is rat-free.
@gerble36
@gerble36 Жыл бұрын
Claim to be, but in reality it isn't true haha. They try to, will react harshly to any rat sightings. But you're not going to see every rat that lives here.
@briz1965
@briz1965 Жыл бұрын
I don't think so, seen in Calgary mate
@darthcanadian
@darthcanadian Жыл бұрын
It got to nearly-50C in winnipeg (where i live) this winter And yes, the sorry thing is NOT a stereotype, we are well known for being polite and take pride in it. One of my favourite jokes is “your not canadian till you apologize for saying sorry too much” Me and my family when moving, drove 2,300KM on the trans canada highway, going from the rockey mountains (absolutely GORGEOUS), to the plains of Manitoba, it was a long but beautiful road trip And yes, the Canadian national teams often dominate hockey, probably because we have free outdoor ice rinks across alot of the country that people grow up on
@chougrand8913
@chougrand8913 Жыл бұрын
Bruh, I went from Québec to the rockys and forgot to past by Winnipeg
@gamexsimmonds3581
@gamexsimmonds3581 Жыл бұрын
People also get being polite and using your manners mixed up. They aren't also the same thing.
@commenter5901
@commenter5901 Жыл бұрын
@@gamexsimmonds3581 I think being polite is the same as using manners, but it's not the same as being "nice"
@commenter5901
@commenter5901 Жыл бұрын
We got nearly +50C in BC (where I live) a couple summers ago. So that's an almost 100 degree difference (it officially clocked in at 49.6 degrees... in the shade)
@CorwinAlexander
@CorwinAlexander Жыл бұрын
Not Canadian until you've apologized to an inanimate object you've bumped into.
@jimschlatman215
@jimschlatman215 Жыл бұрын
As for your question about hockey, yes in any Olympics or World Championships Canada is expected to win gold and it's a big surprise when we don't. US, Russia and Sweden are also very good at hockey.
@TheCanadiangirl4
@TheCanadiangirl4 Жыл бұрын
And Finland.
@jimschlatman215
@jimschlatman215 Жыл бұрын
@@TheCanadiangirl4 Yes your right Finland too!
@giorgiopolloni7936
@giorgiopolloni7936 Жыл бұрын
I’m also a military history buff, and I would recommend watch a video on Léo Major, a one man Canadian army in World War Two, especially in the Netherlands campaign.
@samhelfrich2901
@samhelfrich2901 Жыл бұрын
As a Canadian, living in Thunder Bay, Ontario, I can tell you that since we started recording our weather, Thunder Bay has had snow, every month of the year, at one point or another. It rarely happens in summer, but it HAS happened. :P
@pamelaknox7487
@pamelaknox7487 Жыл бұрын
Same here in Calgary. It snowed in July one year!
@Illyrian5
@Illyrian5 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Thunder Bay and now live in BC. The kids here don't believe me that I would have to choose my Halloween costume based on what would fit over my snowsuit.
@TeamonD
@TeamonD Жыл бұрын
@@Illyrian5 Same in Montreal!
@ralphvelthuis2359
@ralphvelthuis2359 Жыл бұрын
@@pamelaknox7487 as a fellow Albertan, i concur. I remember snow on Canada day once, and also 2 days of snow in the middle of August.
@CCAmes-je9lt
@CCAmes-je9lt 2 ай бұрын
I’m living in Thunder Bay (originally from Winnipeg) we didn’t have snow on Halloween, Christmas, or Easter this year.
@giorgiopolloni7936
@giorgiopolloni7936 Жыл бұрын
If you are at all interested in sports, the 2010 winter Olympic Games in Vancouver rank as the greatest sporting achievement in Canadian history. Up until then, Canada had hosted the Olympic Games twice before, the summer games in Montréal in 1976 and the winter ones in Calgary in 1988. Unlike most host nations who win more gold medals than usual on home soil, in both those games Canadians won no gold medals at all, which kept the IOC from awarding the games to Canada for a long time. In the meantime, successive Canadian governments put more emphasis on helping athletes with the result that in Vancouver Canadians won 14 gold medals, a record that still stands for most gold medals by a home country at the winter Olympic Games. There’s a great video that shows all 14 golds that I think you would get a great reaction from. As well, I recommend watching two videos on Canadian reactions to winning the men’s Olympic ice hockey gold in Vancouver on the last day of the games in overtime against the USA. I’m totally impressed by your interest in things Canadian, and keep watching the government heritage minutes for great information on all things Canadian. I’m from Vancouver and although I wasn’t in attendance at that final game, I was with the crowds in the streets for hours afterwards. What a fantastic party!🇨🇦🍁🏒
@amouramarie
@amouramarie Жыл бұрын
I was on the street outside during the final game, too! It was hard to see what was happening on the huge screens, but people would yell bits of info across the crowd, and it was so tense during overtime! Then when they won, it was so crazy and happy. Though, there were a few minutes there where the crush of the packed crowd was genuinely frightening. Thankfully it didn't turn bad.
@pamelaknox7487
@pamelaknox7487 Жыл бұрын
I was there then, too :) I'm a Vancouverite relocated to Calgary and was so happy to go back for a course during the Olympics. Great atmosphere in the streets, loved seeing all the foreign teams having a blast downtown - it was a memory I'll have forever.
@terrialzetta8396
@terrialzetta8396 Жыл бұрын
This video talks of the largest mall in the US being owned by Canadians. The first mall they built is actually the largest in North America & it is in my home city of Edmonton Alberta, it is West Edmonton Mall. There is a water park, NHL size ice rink, amusement park, a full size replica of the Santa Maria, a hotel & many other things to see & do other than clothes shop…..it’s worth a look.
@loraneilson1698
@loraneilson1698 Жыл бұрын
My brother was at west ed mall when the roller coster derailed. He had nightmares for days. Bad bad day for many.
@aw6692
@aw6692 Жыл бұрын
Love WEM
@jameslatimer3600
@jameslatimer3600 Жыл бұрын
" West Edmonton Mall" is a fantastic place. I thought the waterfront inside the mall was and likely still is unique.
@justinriehl4183
@justinriehl4183 Жыл бұрын
The world water park in West Edmonton Mall is weird, middle of winter, -30c outside go into the mall and see a huge water park with about a dozen slides and it looks like you were transported to a beach in California. I also loved the coaster at galaxy land there as well. Too bad is is now shut down and slated to be disassembled.
@JBond-zf4dj
@JBond-zf4dj Жыл бұрын
I'm starting to think how we say 'aboot' came from our Scottish influence 😂 You'd love Nova Scotia (New Scotland, as I'm sure you already know). It's got a little of everything, except the Rockies. Some of us say 'eh'. I use it quite a bit...it can be used to ask a question, make a comment, or just to throw into the end of a sentence. Wait until you learn about Newfoundland....they have their own dictionary.
@22Energies
@22Energies Жыл бұрын
I think aboot is more an East Coast thing. I never hear it in the Western provinces. Just like Canadian bacon, until I went out for breakfast in Ontario, I had no idea that Canadian bacon was ham. I just thought it was pork belly bacon. 😂
@jaymaryfred
@jaymaryfred Жыл бұрын
@@22Energies def not an east coast thing, I'm from Prince Edward Island and have never heard people talk like that, nor in fact anywhere I've been across the country (unless in a joking way) the closest I've heard was in Alberta where some seem to pronounce "ou" words like "ow" The only accent I've ever heard this was actually Scottish. We def do say "Eh" and "bud/buddy" here though and we use the "F" word excessively but always say we're sorry lol
@22Energies
@22Energies Жыл бұрын
@@jaymaryfred I'm in Alberta and lived in BC as well. Not sure where that is from. 💕
@jaymaryfred
@jaymaryfred Жыл бұрын
@@22Energies who the F knows eh bud? lol
@justinriehl4183
@justinriehl4183 Жыл бұрын
I kept thinking about how close the Scottish accent is to a Newfie accent.
@billnye4213
@billnye4213 Жыл бұрын
It's the people that make me happy in Canada. They are generally very nice and willing to help each other out.
@pamelaknox7487
@pamelaknox7487 Жыл бұрын
That's true. Witness any huge snowfall and everyone is helping dig each other out. My son regularly shovels the walkways of his nonagenarian neighbours and he's not unusual.
@foofoothegreat
@foofoothegreat Жыл бұрын
In terms of the "rude people" there are lots. Now, most are not. If you live in a cold place or otherwise dangerous place, the only way to survive is to rely on others. I think this is why we are the way we are.
@tenuousfuzzball7594
@tenuousfuzzball7594 Жыл бұрын
Canada has dominated international hockey the past 100 years or so. 52 world championship medals (27 golds), 20 world junior golds (U20), 22 Olympic medals (including 13 golds), 23 u18 world golds, and the past three best on best tournaments, and thats just the men, the women have arguably been even more dominant. Not to mention the best player in the world right now with Connor McDavid and the best prospect with Connor Bedard (maybe the next Mcdavid?). You should check out some world junior highlights if your interested in good young international hockey, the tournament recently ended. If there was a mens best vs best tournament right now, Canada would be the favorite followed by the US and Russia.
@TheDylls
@TheDylls Жыл бұрын
Too true!! And I don't know the stats for EITHER, but, like you said, I feel like our women's teams have a bit of an edge on "overall victory"!!
@TheDragonSparkle
@TheDragonSparkle Жыл бұрын
also check out how many of our Canadian boys playing hockey are actually playing at the top level for other countries, cities, etc. They come back and play for our Olympic team and world team, but there are so many playing for other leagues around the world.
@rk74194
@rk74194 Жыл бұрын
Finland is ranked higher than the US and Russia!
@tenuousfuzzball7594
@tenuousfuzzball7594 Жыл бұрын
@@rk74194 The iihf world rankings mean nothing. Finland has never won a mens best on best tournament, and no the world championships are not best on best as the NHL playoffs are still going on. Finland would probably be the fifth favorite after Canada, USA, Russia and Sweden. They have a good roster but lack depth, and no standout star player.
@rk74194
@rk74194 Жыл бұрын
@@tenuousfuzzball7594 Finland has won 5 World Junior best on best tournaments! Tied with the US! Russia is banned, their not ranked anywhere! I know how the World Championships work, thanks!
@kathysmith6413
@kathysmith6413 Жыл бұрын
in 1976 my eldest son, who was 12 at the time and i hitchhiked from Vancouver, B C tp Halifax Nova Scotia. it was a wonderful trip.
@cheryla7480
@cheryla7480 Жыл бұрын
Polar Bear jail is a real thing. I live in Winnipeg, Manitoba and the polar bear capital of the world is Churchill, Manitoba a little over 900 miles north of me. “ naughty “ bears are caught in bear traps . These traps are big “ canister like “ containers. They bait them with raw meat. The bear climbs in the canister and it closes behind him. They are then taken to a large facility, that has 28 individual cells ( bear jail ) They are tranquilized, given a full medical check, and any needed shots, fitted with a tracking collar. Then they are helicoptered miles out onto Arctic ice and released.. Naughty bears are the ones who won’t stop coming into town, scavenging for food and creating a danger for the humans there. The snakes of Narcisse are also in my province. They are harmless garter snakes and it is a fact that this is the largest gathering of snakes in the world. Scientists from all over come to study them. In the winter ( which can be in excess of -30C ) they go deep into the earth, below the frost line and hibernated. In Spring they come out by the thousands to mate and enjoy life in the sun again.
@MormorMb
@MormorMb Жыл бұрын
The snakes are kind of like the rest of us Manitobans lol
@rottenanimal619
@rottenanimal619 Жыл бұрын
@@MormorMb I was Manitoba several times and the people are friendly. I grew up in down town Toronto and the people are pushy and rude.
@jaquigreenlees
@jaquigreenlees Жыл бұрын
Sorry about your place of residence, Winterpeg's reputation for the cold spreads everywhere.
@northerngryphon6933
@northerngryphon6933 Жыл бұрын
There is some confusing information in this video. 07:50 Canada has 2 national sports: Hockey for the winter and Lacrosse for the summer. Hockey had been the unofficial national sport for decades until the Parliament passed the "National Sports of Canada Act" in 1994, which proclaimed that both Hockey and Lacrosse were the national sports. This came as a surprise to many Canadians, as hockey is much more popular, although Lacrosse has been around much longer. 11:10 Ottawa is not Canada's 2nd largest city. By population size, Ottawa is Canada's 4th largest municipality. However, the Ottawa-Gatineau metropolitan area is the is the 6th largest urban region in the country, after Toronto, Montréal, Vancouver, Calgary, and Edmonton. 16:44 The rodents shown here are not beavers, but nutrias, which are from South America, not Canada. 21:52 The McLobster was only available for a short period in 1991. It was released again in 2016 for a limited time to celebrate the 25th anniversary of its original release. Don't look for it, you won't find it anywhere. 25:08 There are rude people in every country, and that includes Canada.
@wysetech2000
@wysetech2000 Жыл бұрын
Somehow I think you're one of them.
@northerngryphon6933
@northerngryphon6933 Жыл бұрын
@@wysetech2000 Guilty!
@therabbitcanada
@therabbitcanada Жыл бұрын
A bit more about Canada and weather extremes. When I was on exercise with the army at CFB Wainwright, in JUNE, some buddies and I took a 3 day trip to Edmonton. It snowed. In June. Cold Lake, Alberta - reason it's called Cold Lake to me is that on Canada Day (July 1st) the dang lake was STILL FROZEN lol. Around 1992 we had to cancel a winter warfare exercise in late January - it was too warm and the snow melted.
@JayM409
@JayM409 Жыл бұрын
When I was on RV-83 (May-Jun), it wasn't unusual to find wash water you left out a frozen block in the morning. It could hail so hard you had to put your helmet on, followed by a heat wave. Wearing the NBCW suit was really fun during the latter.
@therabbitcanada
@therabbitcanada Жыл бұрын
@@JayM409 I was on RV-87. We had a bunch of weird weather. At times warm as heck, others well snow lol. And the caterpillars... ugh. Still, better than CFB Gagetown - it's either dry AF or wet AF, no in between. One ex no one, I say again, no one, had dry socks or boots for weeks.
@Ryanjzammit
@Ryanjzammit Жыл бұрын
Hahaha I trained at wainwright. Snow in august as we did are PT at 530 Am and a tornado touched down later that same day….
@randallcaldwell4611
@randallcaldwell4611 Жыл бұрын
I have travelled the Trans Canada highway 3 times! It is the most beautiful drive you will ever have!😀🇨🇦
@sandihunter1260
@sandihunter1260 Жыл бұрын
I live in Ottawa and we have influence from both the British and French. It is just 1 million population and it's so lovely in the summer but it can get very cold and snowy in the winter with temperatures going down to -30C or greater.
@jameslatimer3600
@jameslatimer3600 Жыл бұрын
Skating on the Rideau Canal in winter is pretty good too.
@adrianmcgrath1984
@adrianmcgrath1984 Жыл бұрын
Part of the remoteness of the North is because there are no roads and places where no vehicle can get through, some places have roads in the winter only, when lakes are frozen and can be driven on. If you are into aviation, Canadas North has been the driving force behind some remarkable aviation. The Beaver plane was designed purely for the Canadian wilderness, and still serves many remote areas, as well as being the backbone of some airline companies. Along with the Beaver, there are the Otter and the Twin Otter. Although dating back to the fifties, these planes are in daily use, landing on floats, wheels and skis. At least a couple of times there have been emergencies at the South Pole in the middle of winter. With international teams based down there, all airforces were asked if they could do a rescue - traditionally the teams left there over winter are on their own. No countries airforce would undertake the mission, regarding it as impossible. Then a bunch of Canadian bush pilots stepped up and said they’d give it a go. The mission was pretty insane and you can see why everyone else said it was impossible, but they pulled it off and have repeated it at least once.
@adrianmcgrath1984
@adrianmcgrath1984 Жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/fnO2d4eXnb6Ln7s
@adrianmcgrath1984
@adrianmcgrath1984 Жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/bqC6eGebrcp4odk
@reinmanyyc7626
@reinmanyyc7626 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: Twin Otters and Super Otters (turbine) are also very popular as skydiving aircraft...
@adrianmcgrath1984
@adrianmcgrath1984 Жыл бұрын
That would make sense, especially since they are built with cargo in mind - even the Beaver was designed with the requirement that a full size fuel barrel will fit through the door. Another testament to their adaptability is that my “local airline” - Harbour Air are working to convert their fleet to electric powered within the next few years, they’ve had a Beaver converted for a few years now. They were designed with one engine in mind, that was changed before they went into production. They were built with a radial engine, many were already converted to a turbo prop, and now will likely be the first to have an electric fleet
@denisegreene8441
@denisegreene8441 Жыл бұрын
Harbour Air is , I believe, the only airline that operates from downtown of a major city. It is litterly in the business district of Vancouvers Coal Harbour. Hence the name.. Harbour Air. You can walk out of a business office tower and be on your plane on the waters edge within a 10 min walk.
@TheDylls
@TheDylls Жыл бұрын
1:41 The scene from How I Met Your Mother, when Robin and Marshall go to the Canadian Bar in NY City is SPOT ON! (Other than the "fear of the dark", which I never understood?) "Ok, YOU bumped into HIM, HE apologized, and then offered you a donut On The Hoose?" "It's like home!"
@klondikechris
@klondikechris Жыл бұрын
Climate change is big in Canada, especially in the far north, where the Permafrost is melting, and buildings sink into it - including my own house. The are built on blocks above the ground, but still need shoring up every few years. I have seen the icebergs floating offshore in Newfoundland (new-fun-LAND), and they are amazing. They carve "bergie bits" off of them which are good in drinks, as they are slower to melt. If you like snakes, you can head for that place in Manitoba. If not, head north - there are none in the Yukon! There was a Scottish comedian who visited Canada who talked about the size. He pointed out that you can drive for two full days, and look at a map, and you haven't moved! Depending on the scale of the map, that can literally be true.
@maggieyanor5082
@maggieyanor5082 Жыл бұрын
I like the Scottish comedian comment. I remember that exact feeling so many times. Only a centimetre on the map but I saw the names of 4 towns go by.
@nikkifriesen4802
@nikkifriesen4802 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been going through your videos and it’s awesome to see your reactions and learning about Canada! I live about 20 minutes from Pincher Creek and the temperature changes are always quite drastic year round. I wasn’t around when the historic temperature change happened, but it’s quite regularly changing because of the high winds we get (have reached 100-120km/hour). We call it the Chinook winds!
@twiztedsynz
@twiztedsynz Жыл бұрын
Before George Stanley came up with the Canadian Flag, it was the Union Jack. My little town in New Brunswick - Sackville - was the home of George Stanley and after he passed, the down had a sculpture made of him and put downtown, sitting on a bench. It's an attraction for sure, but it's funny that there are people who will leave scarves or hats on him in winter, and when Covid hit, even HE wore a mask. As for Climate change; my area is a little microdome of weather that can change in relatively short periods of time, or short distances. When I was a kid, our winters had snow in amounts and drifts you could make snow tunnels and igloos from December right up until end of March or so. Now we're lucky to get that much snow period. We might get half the amount now but nowhere near as packed. And it's not as cold, either, or the days it is, it can get really cold. The big change is summer though. The max temp we used to get when I was young was 25 or so, with maybe a few days here and there in August getting up to 30+ degrees. Now? We hit mid 30's and are bordering 40's sometime. Tornadoes were also rare, but lately I've seen more watches and warnings for them in parts of the province.
@MAB_Canada
@MAB_Canada Жыл бұрын
I lived in Ottawa for 25 years. Beautiful city with lots of parks. However, the weather can be brutal…down to -40C in the winter and up to +40C in the summer. Used to love skating on the longest skating rink in the world…aka the Rideau Canal. For a couple of years I was able to skate to work.
@maggieyanor5082
@maggieyanor5082 Жыл бұрын
That's cool. I always wondered how far you could safely skate.
@johngillespie4838
@johngillespie4838 Жыл бұрын
I'm a Canadian and very proud of our kind, generous and welcoming nature. In Ottawa (where I'm from) when the boat people from Vietnam needed a hand our Mayor IMMEDIATELY mobilized church groups and the entire city to welcome 4,000 of them and I can give you dozens of examples, ie. we went short of medical supplies shortly after the pandemic hit because we shipped tons of it to China when they had the most pressing need.
@keithforgie8717
@keithforgie8717 Жыл бұрын
I am first nations , my wife fire 35 years was British funny in Scotland I had such a time omg real Scots and natives so much the same , even to the feathers , clans or families, fun time
@maggieyanor5082
@maggieyanor5082 Жыл бұрын
The Scots are similar, wow, that's very interesting.
@DavidQuaile
@DavidQuaile Жыл бұрын
In 2010, I travelled the Trans-Canada from the Pacific (Victoria on Vancouver Island) to the Atlantic (Cape Spear, just outside St. John's, Newfoundland) four times. Beauty. Yes!
@kevinkarbonik2928
@kevinkarbonik2928 Жыл бұрын
I live in Calgary, Alberta, and we have gone from -20C to + 20 C in a day.
@wildflowerwonderer9426
@wildflowerwonderer9426 Жыл бұрын
Ottawa is such an interesting city. It's where we have the majority of our museums and art galleries. I visited the Canadian War Museum and the Canadian Aviation Museum this past February and learned so much. The Gothic revival architecture of the Parliament and other government buildings is a pleasant reminder of the city's history.
@patriciasmith9712
@patriciasmith9712 Жыл бұрын
I am a born Canadian, lived in Ottawa for 30 years and am always impressed by this city. It is the 'stereotype' for tourists, with nature and tech and friendliness and big multiculturalism. We embrace everyone and take care of our city with beautiful flowers and festivals and cleanliness. A great family city (which is why the party people like Toronto a bit more) we are a secure environment and roll up our sidewalks at bedtime hahaha 🤣
@ronniwright8315
@ronniwright8315 3 ай бұрын
The military museum was a special visit
@cosmickid1794
@cosmickid1794 Жыл бұрын
To clarify, the Federal Government passed a resolution that officially names hockey as the country's official "winter" sport, while Lacross will be the country's official summer sport.
@sdfilyer
@sdfilyer Жыл бұрын
I have driven coast to coast. Took 2 months because we took our time - stunned by the beauty and people of our home
@CayleeG
@CayleeG Жыл бұрын
I've travelled across the country a number of times (my dad was military). Done it by car, plane, and train. 😊
@Rollaplus
@Rollaplus Жыл бұрын
The Bathtub Boat Races are great fun! I'm born and raised in the city of Nanaimo where they take place and its an annual event every year that is near and dear to many of the Nanaimo locals hearts! I have a few friends who have competed in it, I go watch most years from the beach where theres always a wealth of food trucks and stands, as well as live music and beer gardens!
@maggieyanor5082
@maggieyanor5082 Жыл бұрын
I enjoyed hearing more about the bathtub races. My brother lives there, I'm not sure if he told me. Anyway thank you for that.
@Stewart682
@Stewart682 Жыл бұрын
Iceberg Alley is where the Titanic sank.
@halolover549
@halolover549 Жыл бұрын
Some things to add to the list: 1 - Santa Claus not only has Canadian citizenship, but his own postal code too - H0H 0H0 2 - In the end of June 2021 over 20 places in British Columbia and Alberta (the province next to it) broke the all time temperature record for hottest temperature ever recorded in those towns. The oldest record to be broken was set in 1898. 3 - On June 27th 2021 Lytton, British Columbia broke the all time Canadian record for hottest day ever recorded at 46.6 °C (115.9 °F)[. The previous record was 45.0 °C (113.0 °F) in Yellow Grass, Saskatchewan July 5th 1937. Lytton then set the record again on June 28th at 47.9 °C (118.2 °F) and again on June 29th at a whopping 49.6 °C (121.3 °F). On June 29th 2021 several British Columbia towns broke/tied the old record of 45.0 °C (113.0 °F): Osoyoos, British Columbia 45.0 °C (113.0 °F) tied the record while Kelowna, British Columbia 45.2 °C (113.4 °F)[, Lillooet, British Columbia 46.8 °C (116.2 °F), Kamloops, British Columbia 47.3 °C (117.1 °F), and Ashcroft, British Columbia 48.1 °C (118.6 °F) broke it. 4 - Even the far north was no exception to the heat as Nahanni Butte in the Northwest Territories, one of the three most northern parts of Canada, broke a record at 38.1°C (100.6 °F). 5 - Every year Canada receives a thank you gift from the Dutch for our efforts in liberating their country during World War 2. This comes in the form of approximately 20 000 tulips to be planted in 2 different locations in Ottawa: Queen Juliana Gift Bed in Commissioners Park and the Ottawa Hospital, Civic Campus where the Dutch Princess Margriet was born in 1943. This has been an annual tradition since 1945, that's over 75 years of tulips with the largest amount received in 1945 to the tune of 100 000. Usually takes place in the middle of the month of May.
@jessica19141
@jessica19141 Жыл бұрын
Three Newfoundlanders were building a houseboat,two drowned trying to dig the basement 😂
@joer8854
@joer8854 Жыл бұрын
When you apologise you are taking the onus off the other person and it tends to calm them down. The truth is that it doesn't really matter who is at fault for what because that doesn't give you a solution. I made a mistake at work once and my boss said, "doesn't matter don't worry about it." and it was a pretty big screw up. I asked him later why he didn't care that it was my fault and he said, "Does knowing who messed up fix it? Is the situation going to be fixed by deciding it's your fault? Fault is a distraction from finding a resolution and dealing with the problem. It's important for you to know you messed up so you can learn from it. Everyone else knowing you screwed up does nothing for anyone. I'm glad you recognized it, and I know you won't make that mistake again. Aside from that I don't care."
@kyle-ld2gh
@kyle-ld2gh Жыл бұрын
Better then being an apprentice lol. Motto of any JM is "I didn't say it was your fault, I said I was going to blame you."
@maggieyanor5082
@maggieyanor5082 Жыл бұрын
Great boss!
@rickncam3
@rickncam3 Жыл бұрын
St. Paul Alberta's Martian landing pad was designed to go off with a loud siren should a UFO choose to land there. Unfortunately, I heard, they had to disconnect the siren after awhile because it mysteriously kept going off at all times of the night. Residents complained and the siren was silenced. At least this way the Martians could come and go without such hoopla.
@matthewarsenault463
@matthewarsenault463 Жыл бұрын
I feel often Canadians say sorry is more not saying they are at fault but they're sorry the incident happened at all
@nottheoneyourelookingfor0504
@nottheoneyourelookingfor0504 Жыл бұрын
Not only are we in Ottawa a cold capital, we’re used to drastic temperature changes. We go from -20/30 degrees Celsius in the winter (sometimes as low as -50) to 30 plus degrees. Some days can go from below zero to the mid to high 20s.
@glennstewart5397
@glennstewart5397 Жыл бұрын
I travelled back and forth across Canada from 1971 to 1981. First time I dipped in a bottle in the Atlantic and poured it in the Pacific and did the same from west to east.
@JHMJ6
@JHMJ6 Жыл бұрын
I haven't driven the full length in one trip but I did do 90% of the Trans Canada last summer (from Calgary to St. John's). It took me 6 days and 5 nights. It's a very interesting drive as the landscape changes around you, the local driving laws and culture change as you pass from each Province. It was a fun experience overall. Even a lot of Canadian's don't know this but the Trans-canada highway actually splits into two segments at two different points, so you can't actually cover the whole thing in one trip. The section from Ontario and Quebec has both a north route and a south route. The section from Alberta and British Columbia also splits into north and south routes. The sudden weather change in Pincher Creek was due to the Chinook winds in southern Alberta/BC. These winds come in multiple times over the winter, they are powerful warm winds that cause a very sudden break in winter weather. In the affected areas it is common for temperatures to change 20+ degrees in a few hours. -10 to +10 over a 6 hour period is pretty typical. Lacrosse isn't the main sport of Canada. It is the Official Sport, an honorary title. Hockey is the sport of Canada by far. Lacrosse was invented here by Indigenous people's prior to the arrival of the settlers. For this reason it is honored as the national sport, essentially as a sign of respect to indigenous culture. However, it really isn't very popular. There is a professional league (NLL) but the players are very poorly paid, maxing out around $30,000 USD, the league just doesn't bring in the money like the big 4 sports do. By comparison NHL players have an average salary of $3.5 Million USD and a minimum of $750,000 USD. The Canadian National Hockey team is generally considered the best. The US, Russia and Finland come close but Canada is generally considered the king. Canadians make up 43% of all NHL players despite the US having nearly 10x as many people.
@jarsenaultj
@jarsenaultj Жыл бұрын
Re Trans Canada: A third place it splits is in the Maritimes. From the west: near Moncton, NB you can either go south to Nova Scotia or east to Prince Edward Island. They join back up in Westville, NS.
@JHMJ6
@JHMJ6 Жыл бұрын
@@jarsenaultj whoops I drove through there last summer and didn't notice that somehow.
@heatherens4836
@heatherens4836 Жыл бұрын
It splits in Manitoba heading North through Saskatoon to Edmonton.
@stevetassie
@stevetassie Жыл бұрын
We’re so big that we have many different dialects and regional slang, so “eh?” is used heavily in some parts of the country and less in others. Similarly, the Canadian “aboot” pronunciation is regional too, being more common in rural areas. Most people I know pronounce the word about more like they are saying “aboat.” There are PLENTY of rude Canadians! There are lots of a-holes in the country. The cultural stereotype is one of politeness, and on a national scale we might be more polite, but I live in Toronto, and people can be pretty rude here. But if we find out you’re a visitor, we will usually crank up the politeness.
@nicelliott1175
@nicelliott1175 Жыл бұрын
The "aboat" thing is quite prominent in southern Ontario, where vowels are wider than in most other places. In Calgary, vowels are taller, so "about" is pronounced as expected. It gradually changes as you go across the Prairies, enough that there is a noticeable difference by the time you get to Winnipeg. Nothing like Toronto, but certainly a different accent. I will say that Toronto is one of the most unwelcoming cities I have visited, second only to Paris, France. I could go on for ages about how the cultural norms throughout the county are directly related to historical settlement patterns, but I won't.
@PaulMartin-qu5up
@PaulMartin-qu5up Жыл бұрын
The hands down best part of living in Canada is Canadians. Such a chill lot.
@AnnoyedTrucker
@AnnoyedTrucker Жыл бұрын
I'm born and raised in western canada...i convinced people in Maine US that i ride a polar bear to work, we don't have a shoulder on the side of our roads, it's a polar bear lane.
@kyleellis1825
@kyleellis1825 Жыл бұрын
I live in Kelowna, home to the Ogopogo. It's a native canadian legend and the locals would sacrifice an animal so the sea serpent didn't kill them. A chief ignored the tradition and his entire family was killed. We have a few statues of it around town and half the kids I went to school with claimed to have seen it. Heck, I claimed it brushed against my leg for years.
@SamIamIam
@SamIamIam Жыл бұрын
I live in Kelowna and love it! I am also waiting to see Ogopogo myself!
@kyleellis1825
@kyleellis1825 Жыл бұрын
​@@SamIamIam It supposedly lives in the tunnel system under half of Kelowna. Dusk in the most common time for sightings.
@maggieyanor5082
@maggieyanor5082 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for that interesting tidbit.
@resurrectionevil6581
@resurrectionevil6581 Жыл бұрын
i'm kind of shocked they didn't mention Manitoulin Island. Its the largest freshwater Island in the world if I remember correctly at 2,766 square KM. I go hunting there every year. and yes, we do in fact say sorry and eh a lot (at least, my family does lol) also, if you're interested in the geography of Canada and such, BC is an interesting place. Vancouver is a temperate rainforest, Okanagan valley is sort of like a desert (if not so), my brother has found cactuses on his hikes there, and it has massive rocky mountain ranges. it has a variety of different terrains that's for sure.
@SnowxXxAngel
@SnowxXxAngel Жыл бұрын
As a British Columbian, I agree. BC is an amazing and beautiful location!
@denisegreene8441
@denisegreene8441 Жыл бұрын
And don't forget the rattlesnakes on rattlesnake point. They used to release hogs out to "milk" them and then go catch the snakes.
@guessundheit6494
@guessundheit6494 Жыл бұрын
2:30 - Canada used to have 10% compared to yankland, back in the 1980s. 5:30 - It looked like Australia/New Zealand, but with a red field and a sprig of three yellow maple leaves. 7:20 - That change of +41C is unusual, but +20C temperature changes are normal annual events. Read up on chinook winds, hot Pacific ocean air coming over the Rocky Mountains. 14:05 - Forget the number, focus on the size. Lake Superior is so large (over 80,000sq km) that it has waves up to nine metres, normally sees only on the ocean. Great Slave Lake is used as a winter road to halve the distance to Yellowknife. 14:40 - Whoever recorded that has never been to BC. Okanagan has the same vowels as Yokohama. Yes, Ogopogo (Ogie) is a tourist thing, a copycat of Nessie. It's good clean fun and nobody takes it seriously. 17:35 - The polar bear (and grizzly, same species) is the largest land predator in the world, larger than tigers. They see humans as food, not a threat. Unfortunately, we ARE the threat, warming the sea ice which is starving the bears. 19:40 - The second biggest mall is in Edmonton. 22:20 - Rotten Rons made one of the biggest commercial mistakes in history in Canada. Back in the 1960s, Ray Kroc dimwittedly sold the rights to Rotten Ron franchising for $25,000. For the whole country. 22:30 - Narcisse is pronounced "nahr-cease".
@SharonFromNB
@SharonFromNB Жыл бұрын
I'm in New Brunswick. 85% forest? I'm not surprised. I'm in the city of Saint John and the deer and wildlife are constantly walking through our yard. It's great! The government was going to originally call the toonie the "double loon" but decided not to because Maritimers would've called them doubloons. 😂 Cheese curds are not the same as shredded cheese. The cheese in a properly made poutine should be squeaky. Great episode! Thanks! ❤
@aprilbeaulieu204
@aprilbeaulieu204 Жыл бұрын
I once apologized to a light pole I walked into... Born and raised Canadian
@SilvanaDil
@SilvanaDil Жыл бұрын
Santa's modern look of red and white colors was mostly due to Coca-Cola ads back in the day.
@mightymousei7022
@mightymousei7022 Жыл бұрын
Drove across from ocean to ocean several times. Must haves; No. 1 mechanically sound vehicle No. 2 best tires you can afford No. 3 excellent paper maps in case Hwy1 is closed (don’t trust google earth) No. 4 food, water, first aide kit, blankets and bear spray.
@TheJosephoenix
@TheJosephoenix Жыл бұрын
The 4-6 mths of winter give ppl a lot of time to cool down and relax, and prepare to enjoy the summer. The differences in seasons are, imo, what allows us to be "happy".
@epiphanyjayne
@epiphanyjayne Жыл бұрын
I used to be proud to live in Canada but lately things have changed alot😢 I used to be happy but the last few years have been really sad to see the state of our politics. I'm sure that's the case around the world though. I hope we can turn our politics and economy around and bring back a sense of pride in our country again.
@ryanwilson_canada
@ryanwilson_canada Жыл бұрын
The drive is beautiful, albeit a bit boring if you live here. Oh look, a forest, oh look, a moose (which you never want to encounter on a highway, they're huge, and depending on what you drive, can easily kill you if you hit them). As far as the eh, and sorry, both absolutely true. Ive apologized to tables and chairs ive bumped into just out of sheer habit. Haha
@22Energies
@22Energies Жыл бұрын
I just think being kind is common, sure we have road rage, but I've heard Canadians getting coffee in Washington DC and saying thank you to the employee. Then the employee asking if they are Canadian because they were so nice. I've heard other stories including my Uncle in Florida being told he didn't have to take the last seat on a rollercoaster, because he'd have to sit by a person of colour. My Uncle was stunned he was even asked that and went and sat down.
@MidnightSummer824
@MidnightSummer824 Жыл бұрын
For your question about fact #9: In Canada (Especially near the Rockies), there are such things as Chinooks, really warm winds that travel from the Gulf of Mexico (I think), and they warm up the air, it's not uncommon that where I live in Calgary that during the winter months the weather is -30 degrees Celsius, and it just jumps up to 10 degrees Celsius for a week before jumping back down again. I'm not surprised to hear about that jump, since Pincher Creek is so close to the Rocky Mountains. For the Winter Olympics: Canada is leading in Ice Hockey, freestyle skiing and curling, though it has the 4th highest medal count at 226 and is 5th on the leaderboard because of the gold medal count.
@slothfratelli5546
@slothfratelli5546 Жыл бұрын
So much incorrect mispronounced cities and lake It's pronounced OAK-A-NOGGIN lake
@johnlittle3430
@johnlittle3430 Жыл бұрын
A better question is "How do the U.S., Russia and the Scandinavian countries combined stack up against Canada in hockey?" And the answer is "Not bad, I guess."
@danglensniper3672
@danglensniper3672 Жыл бұрын
As a Canadian I can say that although the northern parts of the country and less populated, people do still live up there. Lots of small towns that are only accessible by sea plane. I live about 6 hours from the us boarder in central Canada and this year we went from +40 in the summer to -45 in the winter
@davidedwards3838
@davidedwards3838 Жыл бұрын
la cross is our national summer sport. hockey is our national winter sport
@tanyasullivan8128
@tanyasullivan8128 Жыл бұрын
I have driven across Canada numerous times during different times of the year and the fall is the prettiest time to drive the TCH. The different colours of all tree species is stunning.
@MrMelichor
@MrMelichor Жыл бұрын
Pincher Creek, like most of Alberta, experiences a fairly unique winter weather phenomenon called chinooks. They are when warm, wet air from the west coast comes and drops its moisture in the Rocky Mountains and then becomes a warm, dry wind. It can raise the temperature drastically for a week or so at a time. Saskatchewan and Manitoba experience them to a lesser degree as well.
@blairarthur302
@blairarthur302 Жыл бұрын
With 22 medals, including 13 gold, Canada is the most successful country in Olympic ice hockey
@patriciasmith9712
@patriciasmith9712 Жыл бұрын
The History channel has a years long running show that features the many cultures across the globe that have secreted treasure and artefacts on a tiny little island in Nova Scotia. You must watch it, try and find some early shows - so you get a good history of what these 'searchers' have uncovered. Spanish marks of 8, gold and silver, artifacts from soldiers as far back as the 1100's ..... all found on this tiny little island. The Knights Templar have a strong footprint that connects to island to Castle Rosslyn in Scotland.... it is mind blowing. Maps from antiquity describing the voyage and location are astounding. OAK ISLAND is the name of the series, and you will love it.
@jasonarthurs3885
@jasonarthurs3885 Жыл бұрын
I've travelled the TransCanada from Ottawa to Victoria. Yes, there is a short distance covered by ferry that is considered part of the highway. Looking forward to driving the eastern leg sometime in the future.
@fayefrank2684
@fayefrank2684 Жыл бұрын
Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories have really cold temperatures in the winter but summer might be short but can be really hot we were there in August and it was 32 C and the northern light are beautiful there.
@msgypsyqueen
@msgypsyqueen Жыл бұрын
I live in Ottawa. There’s no huge hustle and bustle like other metropolitan cities. It is very laid-back, very calm, yet very exciting with lots of Festivals and family cultural events. We have the Ottawa Bluesfest, which is a massive ‘concert in the park’, with many popular bands/artists playing over the course of 10 days. These concerts are held at LeBreton Flats (24 hectares of land), located in the downtown area. Ottawa is absolutely a beautiful, beautiful City!
@lindakeays2864
@lindakeays2864 Жыл бұрын
I grew up on Airforce bases across Canada. So we drove across the country several times. six time zones. Took us six days.
@angelinashankle75
@angelinashankle75 Жыл бұрын
Love the connection of the between Canada and Santa and red and white, I cant believe I never thought of that!!!
@SuperHonshu
@SuperHonshu Жыл бұрын
The inhabited area of Canada is full of Natural Resources and the Canadian Shield which is a gold mine of minerals. In addition another quick fact, Pacific Mall located in Markham,ON is considered the largest Asian Mall outside of Asia.
@arterickson9809
@arterickson9809 Жыл бұрын
The temp change is from a Chinook, a warm wind coming over the mountains. I’ve experienced a change of ten degrees myself in a matter of minutes.
@ArtisticWeeb
@ArtisticWeeb Жыл бұрын
I do indeed enjoy Canadian life, the outdoors the skiing, the wildlife (animals), the food, and my heritage
@liveandwrite
@liveandwrite 2 ай бұрын
The Pincher Creek weather change would be due to a Chinook. It's a particular warm wind pattern that comes down off the Western side of the Rocky Mountains. It can drastically increase the temperature in a very short period of time.
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