You've played "Pick a Lane and Go," but only the real Canadian's have played "Am I still on the road?" 😂
@RaggedAssRobin7 ай бұрын
You're a really real Canadian when you play 'Am I still on the road?' While being chased by a bull moose. Or you call into work because a dead moose is blocking the end of your driveway. Bonus points if you live in Moose Jaw or Moose Factory.
@Capybara-j4f7 ай бұрын
For real😂
@LosCadaver7 ай бұрын
I lost that game once. wondering why there were cars to my right going highway speed, I apparently drove onto a river and didn't notice
@JodianGaming7 ай бұрын
Hahaha... I totally remember one night when my dad was rushed to a hospital 3 hours away. The highways were closed but we hopped in the Mazda anyway. Took us 5 hours to drive it, couldn't see the road 90% of the time. Only way you could tell you were still on the road is the very short (like less than a foot tall) bank that followed the edge of the road.
@tammyfrancis78567 ай бұрын
Exactly! Is this still even the road?
@jamespolnick7 ай бұрын
Driving during a snowstorm at night is visually very much like hitting warp drive in star wars or star trek.
@janmartin89747 ай бұрын
LOL - this is SOOOOOO true - I used to think it was like being inside one of those kalidoscopes!
@christinamann36407 ай бұрын
I’ve seen the meme that compares driving in a snowstorm and flying the Millennium Falcon
@elinebrock56607 ай бұрын
I always think of that, too.
@toybarons7 ай бұрын
Yup especially when the snow is the big fluffy kind.
@christhomson56697 ай бұрын
Totally!
@Krobiiiiiii35 ай бұрын
That first clip is actually a very well cleared road in the winter time. Chefs kiss
@designedmindАй бұрын
True. Good driving.
@nathaliedumont6256Ай бұрын
I agree and im in the south lol
@tashaleblanc588Ай бұрын
I agree! Just follow the tire trails!
@sassafrass24129 күн бұрын
Especially for a highway!! 😅
@in-self-sabotage-mode29 күн бұрын
Literally lol looks like a regular morning commute in the winter
@jenniferbell54825 ай бұрын
Heard a joke years ago. In Georgia there was a sprinkling of snow and the highways were jammed with accidents. The reporter was standing at the side of the road reporting it and one car whizzed by. The reporter says “There foes the Canadian”.
@BPMze2041Ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 That's fucking awesome Yep that's just an average Tuesday for us
@barb_eh29 күн бұрын
Nice 🎉
@kbchef92057 ай бұрын
The first picture is normal winter driving weather. I’ve driven in worse.
@charlesmclaughlin35787 ай бұрын
Most of us have
@kbchef92057 ай бұрын
@@joeyjojojrshabbadoo normal winter time
@dcrot91097 ай бұрын
have driven in way worse than that LOL.
@bknight1997 ай бұрын
Looks like a light drive to me - way worse during a snowstorm with barely any visibility where you rely on the hazards lights of the guy in front of you to judge how close/if youre still on the road. Snowplow trucks are a gift from the heavens at that moment.
@angelinesnow11047 ай бұрын
We also play follow the leader 😂
@jessiehogue.7 ай бұрын
In Canada, most of the year, you drive where you're supposed to. In Canada, in Winter... you drive where you can.
@death13a7 ай бұрын
In winter road in Canada. You are in pack mentality. You adopt follow the leaders car unless you got car capable of being the leader! 😊
@AwesomeJohn1176 ай бұрын
In Canada, most of the year, it is winter.
@brandonbeck13136 ай бұрын
@AwesomeJohn117 only 3 months where I am now maybe 4. Used to be right from October to May minimum when I was a kid. Things are changing. Maybe when I'm old I ll be able to plant palm trees lol.
@jessiehogue.6 ай бұрын
@@brandonbeck1313 Especially the last 4 winters. I've never been bothered by the amount of snow so little than the last few years, and it used to be a pet peeve of mine.
@gmkbelanger5 ай бұрын
That was a Wood Buffalo by the roadside ( as opposed to a Plains Buffalo). It's on the Manitoba Provincial flag. In other parts of the country you might see a moose or a caribou instead. Musk oxen (actually a type of huge goat) live further north, where there are mostly fly-in only communities, so less chance of seeing one of them beside a road (less chance of seeing a road). 😊
@Synderai7 ай бұрын
Canada Hockey woman’s team won Olympic gold over the USA and that was our team leader. USA disrespected our flag.
@c.a.greene83957 ай бұрын
My cousin Jimmy Midgley was one of the coaches
@jadzia9117 ай бұрын
I checked several news articles about that; they all say it was debunked. The US team did not disrespect the canadian flag, apparently...
@Synderai7 ай бұрын
@@jadzia911 Good to know! Usually we have a great relationship with the USA!
@cericj997 ай бұрын
We won a lot of games during the Winter Olympics against the US...
@eph2vv89only1way7 ай бұрын
No they didn't. The coach later admitted he lied to motivate the team
@mousenoyb39102 ай бұрын
Canadian Military: if you're French or English, doesn't matter. On enlistment, you say what your mother tongue is (or language you're most comfortable in) and you're stuck in a unit of that language, BUT you MUST learn the other language to get promoted. Also, the Canadian military doesn't break you down by shouting at you. We use Basic Training to do that. We don't mentally break you down to rebuild you into a soldier. We physically break you down first to make you mentally compliant, then build you back up into a soldier. Wet cold is 100% worse than dry cold, but dry cold is more likely to kill you in a horrible way compared to wet cold. Less likely to feel a dry cold until it's too late. It's pronounced T'ronto. Just like it's pronounced pou-tsin Burnaby is in BC and is quaint yet developed. A really nice place to live. Vancouver and Victoria are big and busy, a West Coast Toronto. Ottawa is the political seat of Canada. Toronto is the business/economical seat of Canada. Those plaid shirts are made of cotton with wool lining and, in winter, are the best thing in the Universe to wear. Don't at us with fashion, will at you with function. Hayley Wickenheiser is a hockey goddess! For 7 months out the year, snow is a thing in Canada. Adapt or die. If you can see pavement of any kind, you're fine.
@rinny420Ай бұрын
lmaooo naw this is facts word for word
@MericaKennedy-p8gАй бұрын
Correction, do not have to learn the official language. I have a family in the military, they remain unilingual
@ellieturner6593Ай бұрын
It's pronounced Torono
@mousenoyb3910Ай бұрын
@@ellieturner6593 At most it's a d or a t, not another n.
@mousenoyb3910Ай бұрын
@@MericaKennedy-p8g And bet they haven't gone as far as they could in their career since they couldn't be deployed to anywhere they speak French (I'm assuming they don't speak French). Bilingualism in the CAF gets you promoted every 4-6 years with postings/deployments everywhere.
@WireSlinger7 ай бұрын
"Pick a lane and go" is level 1, "who's lane is it anyway?" Level 2, "Where's the rumble strip?" (And which part of the road does it belong to) Level 3. Boss level: Am I still on the road?
@Fortheloveofoutside6 ай бұрын
Don't forget the bonus round: why is there a cow?
@baowolf00116 ай бұрын
@@Fortheloveofoutside I was literally just going to comment that 😂
@theosbabe70726 ай бұрын
Super boss level out in the smaller townships, is I sure hope someone coming the other way isn't using my lane.
@SirHoffinator1016 ай бұрын
Boss Level 3- Snowplows have been recalled due to no visibility. Good luck! Oh that? It’s just a white blanket I’ve strewn across my windshield to practice.
@Jayplay34466 ай бұрын
So true
@allyouneed717 ай бұрын
those plaid shirts are actualy warm, comfortable, durable and relatively inexpensive , I have mine
@ArcanePhenomenon7 ай бұрын
Gals wear them too - lol
@selynar48897 ай бұрын
$20 thick plaid work jacket. GT special.
@CoffieBunnie7 ай бұрын
Flannel is the best! I have several versions of plaid in different weights! 😂
@therealsaintlucifer7777 ай бұрын
@@CoffieBunniesame hahah😂
@Sc-dd6hb7 ай бұрын
They’re called “Newfie tuxedos” 😀
@mmcphee40787 ай бұрын
Honestly ...that winter road clip...that's a REALLY good winter day to be honest!
@Quandale59716 ай бұрын
I know right
@Travelersun5 ай бұрын
I agree you can still some bits of the road and it was not snowing
@debbie5415 ай бұрын
@@Travelersun-- that is actually not bad at all that winter road pic, have driven on way worse than that , many times
@samanthasavage90135 ай бұрын
The Canadian flag sound bite, that’s Hayley Wickenheiser she was the captain of our women’s hockey hockey team for a many years. She was great, a true icon. She holds six silver medals at the world championships, 7 golds, and has competed at 5 Olympic Games and medaled at all of them (1 silver, 4 gold).
@TheCanadiangirl44 ай бұрын
She became a doctor and worked in a hospital through the pandemic. I have so much respect for her.
@samanthasavage90134 ай бұрын
@@TheCanadiangirl4 I mean if that’s the bar for respect lol. I finished nursing school in May of 2020 😂. But for real she’s great and deserves every bit of respect
@donjohnson86963 ай бұрын
Now she is a Doctor! Very educated hockey player. 👏👏👏
@lisaprestidge483717 күн бұрын
And she is now a doctor 😊
@gomezfriesen7 ай бұрын
The first video is pretty good driving conditions. I mean, you can see the cars all around, and parts of the road underneath the snow. It gets really fun when you don't know where the road ends and the ditches begin.
@sharis90957 ай бұрын
That's what I thought. You could see enough road to know you were on it and the visibility was good. It's when it's dark and the snowflakes coming at your car are illuminated in the headlights so they look like a video game and you can't see the road at all you have to worry.
@phillipross76617 ай бұрын
I know that experience. Driving on the QEW with 3 lanes in each direction you cannot see the road. There are only 2 lanes and everyone following the track from the car in front of you.
@majbrat7 ай бұрын
True - I have driven in much worse lol
@runsolo74187 ай бұрын
The joys of driving by braille. i.e: the rumble strips on the breakdown lane.
@flynn48387 ай бұрын
That's when you get good at 'gauge by snowbank'
@majorphysics36697 ай бұрын
It's crazy when he says "pick an imaginary lane". If you're the first person down the road, YOU are making the lane for everyone else before the plows go down.
@bluj59177 ай бұрын
Nope it snows so intensely there’s no making a lane lol imagine not many people on the road while the snow is coming down faster the. Your wipers can keep up lol you have to literally make your own lane. You can’t see a vehicle in front of you much less tire tracks. I got caught in one storm usually I’d a 2 hour drive it took me 6.
@majorphysics36697 ай бұрын
@@bluj5917 obviously I'm talking about when it's a fresh snow but not currently snowing....... Overnight snowstorm and being the first one down my road at 5am. You make the tracks.
@sarahmitchell8217 ай бұрын
Ploughs
@majorphysics36697 ай бұрын
@@sarahmitchell821 Plow is the preferred spelling in North America, both Canada and the USA.
@sarahmitchell8217 ай бұрын
@@majorphysics3669 That's the first thing (American company) Google says so that must be true
@RobertTaylor-sd3zy7 ай бұрын
"It's cute and cuddly" 🤣 Tyler nooo it basically just a winter Bobcat, every canada is amazed he's holding 1 not being ripped apart.
@allister.trudel7 ай бұрын
well this one is a tiny baby, lynx kitten can be hand reared if found in the wild alone early enough
@candaistopor11147 ай бұрын
Yeah bobcats are not to be F*ed with..
@thebouffards16916 ай бұрын
Danger floof and murder mittens 😅
@Fortheloveofoutside6 ай бұрын
If I ever find one in the wild. Im keeping it. It can just keep my hand
@Snookscat6 ай бұрын
I wonder if this lynx was filmed at a zoo or sanctuary. They’re usually pretty solitary and avoid people. They don’t generally attack like a cougar/mountain lion might, but they’re still wild animals so I don’t know how he’s cuddling it, if it’s in the wild.
@SlnaocweАй бұрын
Nevermind the "pick a lane." That's child's play. The scary part is during the night when it's snowing and a transport passes. You have no idea where you are for a few seconds. You just hold on and hope that you're still in your lane once you've exited the blinding blizzard that the transport created for you.
@bakemono835 күн бұрын
I remember 2 years ago driving at night at 70km/h on the highway in a snowstorm a few days before Christmas... everyone who passed us we saw in the ditch not long after. When we were almost home we got stopped by the cops at a village because there were too many cars stuck in snow ahead of us and the snow removal team couldn't get to work until the towing got there.
@tessietesoro7407Күн бұрын
I remembered that day when driving on the highway, snowing like crazy, a huge truck behind me , honking like crazy. So I stopped , and right in front of me is a little ravine I couldn't see. This was the reason the driver was honking. Thank God for him to save me from disaster
@stephenpublicover88187 ай бұрын
In Canada. we got rid of the penny because it cost 1.6 cents to make 1 penny!
@CrazyLittleMonster19947 ай бұрын
Rofl I remember that 😂 People lost their shit over that.
@kontiuka7 ай бұрын
"we have a sentimental attachment to our pennies". no pun intended.
@redraine23537 ай бұрын
We didn't get rid of it because of the cost. For 1.6 cents it's in circulation and reusable for 30 years. We got rid of it because it became pointless. There was no longer anything to use it for. With inflation and the depreciation of our money even penny candies are now 5-10 cents.
@damonx61097 ай бұрын
Most countries have gotten rid of pennies... John Oliver did a whole segment on it. The US keeps the penny because the cobalt industry lobbies the government to keep it that way.
@HenshinFanatic7 ай бұрын
@@kontiuka Well it makes sense, when you get down to brass tacks.
@pantagruelcat7 ай бұрын
"Follow the tail lights of the car in front," said my mother to my brother. And he did - followed them right into the ditch, and we had to stay in the village hotel nearby.
@JoeShmoe-ok9tk5 ай бұрын
Well I mean, he's good at following instructions...
@janbodlund26603 ай бұрын
I did that and ended up behind him in his driveway😅😂
@VanessaHiebert3 ай бұрын
I’m a Canadian truck driver. The only time I ever did that, I almost followed the guy into the ditch. Turned out it was a snow plow, just outside of Chicago… dumb ass.
@buddyguy4723Ай бұрын
I've lived in Alberta my whole life. Bad driver lol
@150booyadragonАй бұрын
Sometimes you need to do the Sheep strategy. Sometimes it doesn't work out. But think of it this way They guided you into a ditch And not a cliff!
@johntarnowski90867 ай бұрын
That women hockey player is Haley Wickinheiser. She's the greatest female hockey player ever. Four gold medals to her name
@dellahicks72317 ай бұрын
And from my province of Saskatchewan. My Aunt knows her, lives in Shaunavon, Hayley's hometown.
@yanquir7 ай бұрын
Marie phillip poulin getting some vote too now tho
@personincognito39897 ай бұрын
@@yanquirGood to know. Thanks I will google
@pattyslater5147 ай бұрын
And she is A GAWD DAMN CANADIAN LEGEND!!!
@scottmccutcheon26687 ай бұрын
☝️
@MaidToMyCats5 ай бұрын
Difference between wet cold and dry cold - wet cold climates are technically warmer but are impossible to dress for because the dampness goes through your clothes (no matter how many layers you wear), so you freeze. Dry cold is technically colder, but dry cold can be dressed for and be relatively warm. Except your face, hands, toes, etc freeze. It can also hurt to breathe in dry cold air.
@GordieGii7 ай бұрын
I was kind of impressed that you knew Terry Fox. Respect.
@ScarletStarAudios7 ай бұрын
We watched a whole documentary on him like a year ago
@candaistopor11147 ай бұрын
His name has made it to Scotland and England as well
@Aplau6 ай бұрын
he actually watched the whole documentary about him
@allanwhite57477 ай бұрын
I am a retired Canadian soldier who had served for 23 years, and that was the way I, and the members of my unit were treated. Even if you were called to see the Commanding Officer (CO), you were spoken to in a calm and corrective manner. That is why I served for 23 years, and I'd do it all over again if I could.
@ryans4137 ай бұрын
Instead of screaming at you they will talk to you in a firm voice. Some may see it as being soft but I don’t think it is.
@lokimonsterAq3d7 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service ❤ @@ryans413
@stevenweaver33867 ай бұрын
As a 22 year veteran, I can attest that facing an NCO's steely glare, and a level, controlled, firm voice is one of the most frightening experiences one can experience.
@heatheryoung367 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service to all us Canadians! We do appreciate our military servicemen and women. Again, thank you.
@allanwhite57477 ай бұрын
I thank you very much for the support, I wear my retirement pin on my hat, and sometimes when I go to places like Walmart even though I have been retired since 2009, they still say "thank you for your service ". It always makes me smile.
@caralynne28097 ай бұрын
Hayley Wickenheiser aka Wick, is one of the greatest hockey players in the history of the game. She played on Team Canada for 23 years Starting at the age of 15. She played for a Swedish men's team for several seasons and now works as Assistant GM for The Maple Laughs (sorry habit, the Maple Leafs). Not only is she a hockey phenom, she and her husband started a family while she completed her studies to become a physician! She has 6 Olympics behind her as an athlete. She won 4 gold and one silver medal in women's hockey and participated in the Summer Games in Softball. She has been inducted into several sports halls of fame AND holds the Order of Canada. In one word, Hayley and her talent and achievements leave others AWESTRUCK
@scottbreon94487 ай бұрын
Growing up, we used to call them the Toronto Make Me Laughs. LOL
@Deere2154D7 ай бұрын
Maybe one of the best female players. Probably ranked in the hundreds if you included men. Figures she works for the leafs
@kellyevans32542 ай бұрын
On big American highways you have reflectors bolted to the ground to make the lanes more visible at night. If you tried that in Canada the plow or grader would rip them all up during the first winter. Also never trust the other Canadian on the road in winter, not all of us know what we are supposed to be doing.
@shelleyg183626 күн бұрын
esp those who are not born and raised in canada.
@jennywheeler38437 ай бұрын
When my sister was working in Boston, one of her patients' family members did the "oh Canadian? I have family in Canada". Of course my sister does the usual "it's a big place" speech. Turns out his Canadian family member married our aunt.
@LetItBeSummer-17 ай бұрын
😳 😆
@damonx61097 ай бұрын
The sad part about this is that Tyler has been doing these videos for over two years... He has "learned" repeatedly that Canada is the second largest country on Earth. Yet he still thinks that the entire country has the same weather and climate.
@barbmcbride26537 ай бұрын
@@damonx6109…and the same accent…😂
@LochAndLoad957 ай бұрын
@damonx6109 he's doing it deliberately so more people will comment to correct him. I'm sure he remembers most of the stuff he learns. Lots of channels do this, as annoying as it is
@kittylove-7776 ай бұрын
Linx are wild and that one had to be injured or raised with humans.
@BixxPlays7 ай бұрын
as a Canadian i can confirm price gets rounded up or down if you pay with cash. its normal amount if you pay with card.
@RandysRides6 ай бұрын
...pennies. 98 cents is a buck...97 cents is 95.
@jenniferrollin57777 ай бұрын
Dry cold is when you're cold just to the skin, while wet cold seeps deep into your bones and stays there until you're thawed by sipping a hot drink.
@bubba8427 ай бұрын
North Dakota and Montana literally have this same type of cold with zero humidity. It's not like no American doesn't know what this means.
@Dopinders_Taxi7 ай бұрын
@@bubba842north Dakota must be a state that's closer to us lol
@susieq98017 ай бұрын
@@bubba842 - True. It must be annoying for Americans to hear when stuff like that is said, just as Canadians get annoyed when everything is compared to the US. We do share a continent after all.
@andynieuwenhuis78337 ай бұрын
Having a Wet Cold, is Living in Southwestern Ontario, we are surrounded by MOST of the Great Lakes. Yes, it's a damp cold that goes down to the bones, especially when it gets to -- 15 to--20 C
@andynieuwenhuis78337 ай бұрын
@@Dopinders_Taxi Yes, North Dakota is just below the Province of Manitoba. You'd get some good Cold Artic wind chill.
@breezybre26702 ай бұрын
We do have moose walking through our yards. We do also bison/ Buffalo in some of our national parks, similar to Yellowstone.
@tammykobliuk9816Ай бұрын
Alberta and NWT have wild woodland bison - definitely don't want to hit one of those when driving on the highway! More solid than a moose (and meaner) although less likely to come through the windshield
@LeeBaril-we8po7 ай бұрын
That linx was a ɓaby
@dawnelder90467 ай бұрын
A full size on can bring down a dear. When out walking saw the paw prints of a lynx stocking a deer.
@peterwolf41577 ай бұрын
Just try to pet an adult lynx in the wild, it would be a good video, though. I have had a few in my backyard over the years, and they are not sociable or tame.
@kikoizme7 ай бұрын
@dawnelder9046 you don't mess with those murder mittens
@GabriaMunro7 ай бұрын
@@peterwolf4157 Sssssssssssshhhhhhhh, let him go make friends with them! Of course, a video needs to be taken for reasons....
@StaceyMiller-u5w7 ай бұрын
Lynx are wild animals of the feline variety. This was a small kitten. An adults paws are at least as big as your hands with lovely sharp claws. Don't mess with them.
@ChainmailMelanie7 ай бұрын
CAnadian here: We can't see lanes at all in winter, we just follow the tire tracks of whoever came before. It's like being a train, but the tracks aren't really holding you in place. BUT you have to be extra careful because those tracks are where most of the ice forms~!
@TheFarmerfitz2 ай бұрын
Also, just to add, one has to beware not to follow those tracks into the ditch. lol
@larryfreeman7979Ай бұрын
not to mention, roads are only hard to see during a snow storm or high winds. It is NOT an everyday occurrence.
@SenBleuennАй бұрын
It’s like this for real esp northern BC
@dawnelder90467 ай бұрын
Normal winter driving. You can still see the other vehicles ahead of you, so you are still fine.
@Rabidpygmy5 ай бұрын
That was a young Lynx. They are white black and grey, during some seasons, and are spotted with gold or tan fur during the summer. They have very wide feet long legs and a smallish body. They can leap over 14ft. They go after smaller animals rabbit marmots, prairie dogs, beaver and birds, etc Lynx roam the wild, many in western Canada, but they roam up along the edge of arctic tundra.
@commutersunited8846Ай бұрын
Closest cat relative to it the Bobcat.
@foxypetal27 күн бұрын
I live in Northern Ontario and we have them here. Cougars have been spotted on trail cams all over around here in the last 5 - 6 yrs.
@DB-wk9jv7 ай бұрын
A WARNING IF you plan on "masquerading" as a Canadian IN Europe DO NOT DO IT!!!. I have heard that a few, Americans did this and they were severely hurt! They (Europeans) did NOT like to find out that they were being lied too. Just be yourself!
@FJYoko-nl7yq6 ай бұрын
It's typically pointless too. I've heard Europeans explain how they can spot an American tourist easily, and majority of the list were things I've never seen a Canadian do. So they could probably see right through it before the American even revealed themselves
@fedodosto31623 ай бұрын
Plus if you wear your American flag and act nicely and politely you might change the image Europeans have of Americans.
@ellieturner6593Ай бұрын
They can tell the difference by the phrases we us vs American use. Ie grade 11 vs 11th grade
@RoosterSauce697 ай бұрын
I love that you've become so knowledgeable that you instantly recognized Terry Fox!
@nyxhemera66817 ай бұрын
That made me so happy too!
@STB_6666 ай бұрын
Same! 😊
@karenneill91097 ай бұрын
No, you can’t usually hold a Lynx in your arms. They’re wild animals. They don’t make suitable pets- they need a great deal of room to roam, and become very unhappy (and destructive) indoors. I assume that this is a rescued cat, cared for in a special facility for wildlife rehab.
@terramarini6880Ай бұрын
This one was young yet too, they are larger than one thinks when fully grown. Unlike Bobcats they are very shy and you are unlikely to even see them in the wild, never mind have a cuddle. Bobcats get curious and have been known to get quite close but then they get spicy about it, so don't be fooled by the fluff.
@____dragonsАй бұрын
1:07 we also play am I on the road
@CytherXАй бұрын
Lol also is there a island barrier in the parking lot or is it just snow?
@renrius2416 күн бұрын
ah its also my favourite game of "why is that guy taking up 2 lanes" 😂😂 and my favourite and popular one, is this a parking area or the road. 😂 (we Canadians forget if we still parkin in the right place or if were takin up 2 parking spaces.)
@lioneldelorme74817 ай бұрын
For a friend of mine who lives in Kentucky, roads like that would be the worst thing that could ever happen, a state of emergency, the closing of roads and highways. For me, that's just Tuesday.
@ThePatente7 ай бұрын
Exactly. But I'm pretty sure Vermont, Maine, New Hampshire etc... have those exact condition, probably worst in the New Hampshire White Mountains.
@doeeyes27 ай бұрын
Honestly it would be the same in Toronto. Whenever we get a few centimetres of snow it seems everyone freaks out these days, schools are closed, businesses close early its wild. It wasnt always like this... i remember lots of snow growing up in Toronto. Last winter we got like two snow falls.
@Pattio477 ай бұрын
We were driving to Florida (from Ontario) one December. We stopped overnight in Atlanta. In the morning the highway was a sheet of ice. We were the only car on the road for 100 miles.
@NotoriousNewts16 ай бұрын
That sounds hilarious 😂. I have driven so many times in snow storms, up & down steep & winding roads. They would be panic stricken.😂😂
@markastoforoff78387 ай бұрын
I remember the Hayley Wickenheiser moment when she said about the flag on the floor, it was after Canada beat the US in the 2002 Olympics. We won both the Men's and Women's Gold in hockey that year, and both times we faced the US for the gold on US soil. We were insulted as a country by that incident but proud of our teams. The Canadian Men's team won gold in the Olympics for hockey for the first time in 50 years.
@darcymartin76087 ай бұрын
The Referee in the Women's Game was from the U.S. and was blatantly calling false penalties against us (the Canadians). She never reffed an International game again. 2002 was the year of the Lucky Loonie when the Yanks called on a Canadian to make their ice. He put a loonie and a quarter or dime under centre ice - we won both games.
@brendamiller57857 ай бұрын
The men's coach instructed his players to, "Get out there and play like girls!" True Story
@c.a.greene83957 ай бұрын
@@brendamiller5785my cousin Jimmy Midgley was a couch for women's hockey, men's hockey and juniors...he still coaches today...
@majbrat7 ай бұрын
They were glorious moments when both teams won. I remember I was at work when the second on took it and our whole office was cheering. 😊
@evanhammond73057 ай бұрын
I believe the men's team went undeafted that year. Mario lemeuix was the captain.
@katherinecote-trotter33006 ай бұрын
Sooo hey! Canadian here 👋🏻 for the accent thing, it is true that some Canadians pronounce certain words pretty stereotypically, but it’s a big country guys, we have different accents in different parts of Canada just like the states have different accents in different states
@DianeSt-Pierre-f1y25 күн бұрын
Quebec City accent and Montreal accent different
@teemanx3578Ай бұрын
I like this guy. Trying to understand Canadians and bringing understandable. It's about respect.
@canuck56147 ай бұрын
A Canadian Lynx is a bigger cousin to the Bobcat. This one looked like a young one.
@damonx61097 ай бұрын
He doesn't know what a bobcat is either... You could show this guy a cow and he would be like "Wow!! We don't have anything like this in America!!"
@scottbreon94487 ай бұрын
@@damonx6109 Thing is Bobcats (aka Mountain lions) have a huge population in the US, especially in places like Colorado and the southern states.
@As-friendly-as-I-get6 ай бұрын
@scottbreon9448 bobcats and mountain lions are different animals. Mountain lions are also called cougars or pumas. They are larger, are a sandy color and have a long tail. Bob cats are smaller, are colored more gray and brown and have a short, or "bobbed" tail hense the common name "bobcat".
@larryfreeman7979Ай бұрын
@@scottbreon9448 Bobcats are not Mountain Lions, not even close. Look it up.
@oliesmumashepherd61307 ай бұрын
Things are rarely cancelled in Canada due to the weather.
@smh46837 ай бұрын
Yeah! I remember once we had a snow day in MTL, meanwhile Burlington VT. practically had to call out their national guard because they were snowed in, lol.
@GarysPauny7 ай бұрын
I grew up in Saskatchewan and NEVER once missed a school day because of weather. And we weren't bussed back then.
@redrose-wb4bw7 ай бұрын
I worked in Calgary at a school. The city NEVER cancelled school. They do for rural schools.
@Kanime187 ай бұрын
In high school the only "snow day" I got was when the heating in the school was out. But because I didn't know the school was closed, I still walked in thigh high snow. Then had to turn around and walk back home 😂 I live in Southern Ontario close to a US border 😂
@livingcreatively17 ай бұрын
I don't know anymore, people are getting soft. I live in Southeastern Ontario and everything seems to get canceled especially school now. When I was a child I only remember 1 snow day and that was because it was too deep to walk.
@MrxTonixx7 ай бұрын
ADVISEMENT: Do NOT Attempt to hold a wild Lynx xD
@marie-louiseroy75195 ай бұрын
We do what we fucking want? But yeah okay thanks for the advice probably gonna do it anyways. -A canadian.
@MrxTonixx5 ай бұрын
@@marie-louiseroy7519 - A Canadian too
@truet64005 ай бұрын
@@marie-louiseroy7519good it's best to get rid of the weakest of the herd as quickly as possible. Enjoy your two second petting session.
@sheeralim80204 ай бұрын
American from Maine here--that first TikTok is just another day from November to May in Maine. Yeah, we dress in flannel, too.
@Its419games7 ай бұрын
1) Yes, "pick an imaginary lane" is very much a Canadian pastime in the winter. 2) Yeah, the red plaid thing is a stereotype for a reason. 3) Hayley Wickenheiser is a Canadian legend. 😈And, yeah, the American team got a lot of flack for that unsportsmanlike bull. 4) Canadian lynx. Beautiful kitties! Often mistaken for bobcats, though they are closely related. 5) I remember bagged milk from my childhood, but it's mostly relegated to Eastern Canada, now. 6) "Lever" has multiple meanings in Canada, depending on regional dialect and context, but with the same pronunciation. Examples: "Pull the lever, will ya?" "We can lever this under the car." "Oh, Jesus, Mick! She's cheated on you 8 times! Just lever!" 😇 7) I've actually encountered the "Do you know (insert name here)?", but from an Australian, and he was corrected by an American. 😂 8) The main reason we got rid of pennies is that it cost the Canadian Mint $0.02 for every penny made. When they finally did get rid of it, I know a lot of people (myself included) whose opinion was _"FINALLY!"_ 9) Oh, yeah! Check out that beautiful beast! From a distance. Catch one in a bad mood and they will fuck you up! And, depending on where you are, yeah, that's pretty normal. More common are moose. 10) In fairness, most Canadians don't think about Ottawa much at all. 😉 11) Vancouver Island is beautiful, definitely. But, as a BC Boy™ born and raised, I'm kind of biased in that regard. At least I'm willing to admit it. 12) I agree with everything she said. Especially the part about saying you visited Vancouver once and describing Burnaby. 😂😂😂 And having grown up on the Fraser Valley and now living pretty much dead center of BC, wet cold is definitely worse. 13) I don't know how exaggerated the US military thing is these days, but, from numerous friends in the Canadian Armed Forces, that's a fairly common situation. Don't normally do comments this long, but I like your Canadian videos and I was in a bit of a mood tonight. 😇
@JBlouinMusic7 ай бұрын
As a fellow fraser valley canadian: thanks for saying it so i don't gotta
@Its419games7 ай бұрын
@@JBlouinMusicWhat pay of the Valley, if you don't mind my asking.
@aerr95827 ай бұрын
Dry cold is more dangerous, but wet cold definitely feels worse.
@MormorMb12 күн бұрын
@@aerr9582I agree. Grew up in Northern Manitoba (dry cold). Now live in Southern Manitoba (wet cold). Prefer the dry cold. You just have to know how to bundle up properly.
@Metaljacket4207 ай бұрын
Not seeing the lane lines is the easy part, not seeing more than 20 feet ahead in a blizzard is the hard part. Does look cool though, driving a dark highway in heavy snow at night looks like you're traveling at warp speed.
@Jet-ij9zc7 ай бұрын
And not seeing where the road ends and the ditch starts is the scary part
@SilverSidedSquirrel7 ай бұрын
"Am I on the Road?" is our 3rd national sport
@kittacattaplayz5 ай бұрын
The wet vs dry cold is based off the humidity, if you didn't know...
@marygrant87157 ай бұрын
Can we settle this once and for all? Maybe Newfoundlanders say "aboot" but no one else in Canada does!
@blooperdooper93667 ай бұрын
Newfoundlanders don't say aboot.
@tamibenz66267 ай бұрын
Thank you 🙏🏻
@tinagleason71117 ай бұрын
Newfoundland don't say aboot, that's more of a prairies thing
@DuchessOfQuilt7 ай бұрын
@@tinagleason7111 Prairie girl here - we don’t say aboot here either!
@sheilakaiser27267 ай бұрын
Nova Scotian here,we don’t say aboot but pronounce it aboat!
@lynnmcrae66597 ай бұрын
Oh that is just a little snow. Often you cannot see the road at all.
@bronwynenns50387 ай бұрын
I agree
@darcymartin76087 ай бұрын
That is Dr. Hayley Wickenheiser (the greatest female hockey player) at the 2002 Winter Olympics.
@gopherlyn7 ай бұрын
When I saw the clip, I thought it was from the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, but your probably right. It was quite a while ago.
@codyssmith737 ай бұрын
@@gopherlyn Definitely '02 after Canada got only a silver at Nagano.
@ItApproaches7 ай бұрын
A female doctor hockey player? Been a Canadian my whole life of nearly 34 years and never heard of her.
@brendamiller57857 ай бұрын
Maybe Google her name...her accomplishments are too many to list here ..
@mikegravel53107 ай бұрын
The best player is Marie Philippe poulin
@dyllanphillips71842 ай бұрын
For the Toronto part when we say Toronto it sounds like Torono
@eileensakal987Ай бұрын
Naw…I pronounce the final t.
@bladelaw42007 ай бұрын
About the pronouncing Toronto as “Toronto”. People from Toronto pronounce it as “Torono” the second T is effectively silent
@Dopinders_Taxi7 ай бұрын
I also hear a lot of people between Kingston and belleville pronounce it toronta 😂
I think the pronunciation clip was from Ontario (the capital of Canada), in Alta and BC we don't talk that way.
@fayewhite75417 ай бұрын
@@brendamiller5785Not from the Atlantic provinces either.
@susanrobertson9847 ай бұрын
Tranna
@Bunnykisses10007 ай бұрын
Wet cold is effing cold..i grew up in Manitoba and moved to Vancouver Island in my 40’s. The wet cold at minus 10 feels like a inland minus 20.
@marikroyals71117 ай бұрын
Vancouver Island is warm compared to Nova Scotia. Spent some time in Alberta and -10 in here in Nova Scotia was more like -30 in dry cold Alberta.
@HenshinFanatic7 ай бұрын
The choices are "bone-freezing cold" and "chaffing-everything cold".
@Ko_Qc7 ай бұрын
true xD and i feel the same for hot days, 30-40 celsius with humidity feels like hell ive heard people from desert countries say thats nothing we have 50s sometimes then they say its terrible on a canadian hot summer day when they live it😆
@Bunnykisses10007 ай бұрын
@@marikroyals7111 mostly mild winters and cool (27c ish) summers yes.
@jenniferdorning7147 ай бұрын
That young woman with 10 ways to piss off a Canadian is 1000% accurate on every single one!😂
@fedodosto31623 ай бұрын
Yes but if you really, really, want to piss Canadians off tell us we are like Americans. By the way it's not poutine or poutin it's poutsine with a hint of an s after the t
@hayleyz17032 ай бұрын
@@fedodosto3162👆🏻👆🏻👆🏻
@wepntech16 күн бұрын
@@fedodosto3162 many of us wish we where Americans though too. plenty moving to the states and renouncing the Canadian citizenship.
@jenniferlehman3263 ай бұрын
It's the same in bootcamp in the Canadian Military. My father experienced it in 1962 He served for 22 1/2 years during the Cold War. He's my hero. Best Regards from a Retired Paramedic in Ontario, Canada, Jenn 💖 🇨🇦
@shastanik7 ай бұрын
As an American ex-pat living here for 49 years, I appreciate your taking the time to learn about your good neighbours to the north that don't cause your country any trouble.
@0neMoreQuest4 ай бұрын
And as a Canadian, I absolutely love when Americans learn more about us :) We've been allies for so long that it's definitely surprising sometimes how little people know about how we became so closely knit as nations haha
@stephenpublicover88187 ай бұрын
Hey Tyler, in the winter, drive in the tire tracks of other cars! (during snow storm)! LOL>
@ghostyuki-kfpinquisitor10387 ай бұрын
The tire tracks are effectively the lanes in winter. Is "fun" driving early enough that you're the ones making those tracks.
@ItApproaches7 ай бұрын
Till you find that you followed the path the leads to a crashed car in the ditch then you join them.
@Snoodles2947 ай бұрын
@@ItApproaches my thoughts exactly
@youtubasoarus7 ай бұрын
Don't rely on that. That's the find the black ice game.
@timcarder21707 ай бұрын
Lol I always chuckle and shake my head when you say stuff about winter wouldn't happen in the u.s. 😄 You always forget that *'most'* of the *northern* states get the exact same winter conditions 😆
@breezybre26702 ай бұрын
That is good winter driving conditons. Very clear.
@leslieharnish46457 ай бұрын
My Nova Scotian daughter was mocked by her Boston accent classmates in Massachusetts for her pronunciations of bagel and about lol. The people who say 'pak the cah" for "park the car" told her that about is not pronounced the same as the oat in oatmeal and outside does not have the same sound as oatmeal. It gave her quite a chuckle.
@STB_6666 ай бұрын
I find it funny how Americans hear 'aboot' because if you ask a Canadian to say the two words back to back, there is a distinct difference. But if you hear a southern 'abayout', it suddenly makes sense how it hits their ear.
@jenhunnie58985 ай бұрын
Honestly as a Canadian I've never seen bagged milk
@sweetmissirish5 ай бұрын
@jenhunnie5898 It's in certain provinces like Ontario
@melsoft1217 ай бұрын
My husband and I call fresh snow driving “whose lane is it anyway?” Hahaha
@dustinhertel53887 ай бұрын
Thats how we all say "about." Ive never heard "aboot" unless it was being done delibetately and ironically.
@wesleysept653622 күн бұрын
Canadians drive better in the snow, than other countries do with no snow. Super awesome videos Tyler, I've been bingeing for the last couple days, and been having a good time. You have a great night. With love, and respect. Wes Sept
@Lakeshore147 ай бұрын
As someone with very arthritic hands, I hope they never do away with bagged milk. Trying to open carton milk is extremely difficult and bagged milk is simple for people like me. 👍
@RatKindler7 ай бұрын
I switched to cartons since I don't drink as much milk now but I do miss the bags. So much easier to use overall. I remember the jugs from when I was a kid and even then I didn't like them. Very heavy and always had a rotten milk smell around the top.
@condortheboss7 ай бұрын
Bagged dairy is mostly a thing in eastern canada
@dawnelder90467 ай бұрын
Get grains and seed oils out of your diet.
@richardc87957 ай бұрын
@@condortheboss I’m in Ontario. Full on bagged milk here. 👍🏼
@Yosemitesamspistols7 ай бұрын
I have not seen it in years! From BC. I thought it was extinct.
@pattaccone7 ай бұрын
That’s just a nice winter drive where I grew up 😂😂. At that point the lanes are the tire marks and they’re usually nowhere near the actual lane
@BrendaBeaulieu-dv9fu7 ай бұрын
The red plaid is not just for men, I love mine
@racheltrivett9807 ай бұрын
Me too!
@flynn48387 ай бұрын
Red plaid,blue jeans and high heels!
@IzReal-ot2ll7 ай бұрын
I've got a few in a variety of colours. My first one was red, but I've got a blue one and a green one. They are so warm and comfy.
@annekoenig491521 күн бұрын
🇨🇦MILK IN A BAG🇨🇦 Was Started Back in the Day because ENOUGH people, mainly in the Eastern 1/2 of Canada, were opting to use the plastic milk jugs to haul fuel.... Then those same plastic jugs would get recycled.... Causing various kinds of contamination... So they started putting milk into bags. {{{Gma🌹Hugs}}}
@416TreasureHunters7 ай бұрын
Y'all walked on our flag on the way out of the locker room, and we kicked your ass.
@ralphvelthuis23597 ай бұрын
That was debunked. The coach admitted to saying that to pump up the team.
@sandlot901307 ай бұрын
It really happened
@julielatour92957 ай бұрын
I'm from Quebec and I'm impressed with how you pronounced poutine you said it better than most Canadians
@XXhouchXX3 ай бұрын
an Anglophone from Quebec I pronounce it Putin when I am feeling saucy
@julielatour92953 ай бұрын
@@XXhouchXX hahaha love this!!!
@shirleydesrochers33196 ай бұрын
I had a great chuckle at Tyler’s reaction to the snowy roads. I lived in Colorado Springs for 3 yrs with the Canadian military. In the winter time all 3 years my family and I wore sneakers, that’s how much snow didn’t exist. One day we were driving on the highway on a snowy day and almost crashed into metal bars the crossed over in the middle of the highway. We were not expecting that. My hubby and I looked at each other and cracked up laughing. We laughed so hard I almost peed my pants. They actually closed off highways for some flurries. We could see the lines on the highway. Gotta love it!
@katsnboots470925 күн бұрын
Bagged milk also isn't normally used in Canada. I can not find ot in the grocery stores. Only when i worked at a summer camp, buying them in huge bulk packs
@christinaparent123 күн бұрын
More common in the East than the West
@MsK1578119 күн бұрын
Bagged milk is the majority of the milk sold in stores, everywhere I've been across Ontario 🤷♀️
@XopheAdethri7 ай бұрын
2:51 Those jackets are fairly light and *CRAZY* warm. Most Canadians love 'em.
@emmyo66787 ай бұрын
Most Canadians do not wear lumber jackets.
@XopheAdethri7 ай бұрын
@@emmyo6678 I don't wear them, but 90% of people I know wear and swear by them.
@DarrylSmith19687 ай бұрын
@@emmyo6678 Lumber jackets maybe not , but red plaid shirts , Fn right we do
@Slenderlover137 ай бұрын
@@emmyo6678 Go to Northern Ontario, we call those plaid bad boys "dinner jackets" up there, lol
@MavenCree7 ай бұрын
THERE IS NO CANADA ACCENT. Our country is the second largest by landmass on the planet. Do you really think there is ONE accent for a country this wide? I live in Hamilton's outskirts. I sound nothing like someone from Toronto, which is just across the lake from us. SOOOO many accents.
@AM-qp2wx7 ай бұрын
THANK YOU FOR SAYING THAT! I hope Tyler reads your comment, because Canada has many differences in pronunciation from west coast to east coast, just like the USA has differences, & don't even try to pronounce some words from Newfoundland!
@chilledclarity23027 ай бұрын
Arguably. There is a Canadian accent just like there’s an English accent. Not all English people have the same accent, people from Dublin will sound a bit different from somebody is Britain. There are sub categories of accents. A big country just means many more sub categories of a Canadian accent.
@mauimugsy46697 ай бұрын
Dublin is in Ireland not Britain! Not even remotely the same accent.
@rhealgagnon14607 ай бұрын
That's because you can't senc your own accent 😂
@GOGOSLIFE7 ай бұрын
I live in rural Stoney Creek. There are many more accents in America, than Canada.
@Clever010107 ай бұрын
A baby Canadian linx has the paws of a full grown black bear.
@emmyo66787 ай бұрын
Lynx.
@CrazyLittleMonster19947 ай бұрын
Aren’t they super cute! ❤
@Ko_Qc7 ай бұрын
arent they also the biggest of the lynx family? these guys are made though to survive our winters, also super stealthy we never see them, some of them can take down adult deers
@ShortyKatАй бұрын
I really love your videos. This Canadian learning about USA.
@justin79097 ай бұрын
As someone whos born and raised on vancouver island, we truely do live in paradise
@racheltrivett9807 ай бұрын
Yes...but don't tell anyone!!
@Dragonmist17 ай бұрын
I love our Island❤ cheers Victoria❤
@TomHuston437 ай бұрын
...but have you been to Europe, USA, Asia or elsewhere?
@marikroyals71117 ай бұрын
Lived there for 8 months as a kid and we had winter snow for a week due to a cold front turning the rain to snow (I'm Nova Scotian). After that week back to rain, I remember everyone being surprised and excited about the snow, but to me it was normal.
@JudgementN8T7 ай бұрын
@@TomHuston43well yeah, there’s something called vacations
@gopherlyn7 ай бұрын
I was born on Vancouver Island. My father worked for a Logging Company and graded logging roads or in the winter plowed them. He wore a red plaid shirt to work, we just called it his work shirt. In Northern BC or the prairies you have dry cold, which does not feel as cold, but here in lower part of BC we have the wet cold, which makes it feels a lot colder.
@shandel4997 ай бұрын
It rains up here in Northern BC now. We indeed get a bit of both. Mind you last "winter" never came. We kept waiting for Cariboo weather and it was Spring like most of the time. The HWY 97 is a death trap. Always fatalities
@nickstewart29817 ай бұрын
The game isn't "pick a lane and go" the game is called "whos lane is it anyways" from the show Whos line is it anyways
@lioneldelorme74817 ай бұрын
I like the game "Is there a road?"
@Slenderlover137 ай бұрын
@@lioneldelorme7481 That game is usually reserved for the nutjobs that drive like maniacs at night, during a blizzard. Though it's also fun to play in the daylight after a fresh snowfall when the plows are all still stuck in the Toronto traffic of the 401, lol
@alexanderalexander7404Ай бұрын
Red plaid shirts are popular in rural Canada because our ancestors wore them, and they are sexy and warm. (smile) I own 3 like this and love each of them.
@mattjordane19017 ай бұрын
The pick a lane and just go with it is a top notch game ! 10/10 recommend in winter
@Salicat997 ай бұрын
Yeah, I like the game, "Am I on the road?"
@mattjordane19017 ай бұрын
@@Salicat99 exactly but then you say to yourself ”the grass is frozen I’ll be fine“😂😂😅
@Salicat997 ай бұрын
@@mattjordane1901 What is a bit of ice to Canadians?
@mattjordane19017 ай бұрын
@@Salicat99 it’s just as easy as putting ice in your cup of water
@MavenCree7 ай бұрын
Alberta is the Texas of Canada.
@RandysRides6 ай бұрын
And BC is the California. hahaha !!
@fedodosto31626 ай бұрын
No!!!!! No gun crasies in Alberta. Nicer people in Alberta.
@chrick30367 ай бұрын
Sometimes the winter driving game isn't so much 'pick an imaginary lane', as it is 'are we on the road?' Thank the lord for rumble strips along the edges. 😂
@stuartcookson65422 ай бұрын
In Canada shut the light's off and go with the flow nice and easy
@lifemage17 ай бұрын
most americans also have not heard of the war of 1812, where we conquered the whitehouse then left after the USA tried to invade.
@michaeltutty15407 ай бұрын
We captured the Brick House. The burned out shell was painted white to hide the soot. That was after Dolly Madison went running down Pennsylvania Avenue in her night clothes.
@lauriepenner3507 ай бұрын
I live in a pretty big city and we have a national park just 30 minutes from town where you are 100% guaranteed to see bison/buffalo. If you don't see any from the highway, the park has a loop of road where you can drive among the wild bison like an African safari park. DO NOT get out of your car.
@OctaviaSimpson-f3o6 ай бұрын
Calgary? Lol
@lauriepenner3506 ай бұрын
@@OctaviaSimpson-f3o Edmonton actually! Elk Island Park is right outside the city and well worth a visit. Though it wouldn't surprise me if there was something similar in the Calgary area.
@OctaviaSimpson-f3o5 ай бұрын
Hey now! We're neighbors then because I'm also in Edmonton. I didn't realize Elk Island was a national park. I thought it was provincial. I'll have to check it out next time I head out that way heading to Elk Point or Vegreville
@OctaviaSimpson-f3o5 ай бұрын
@@lauriepenner350 I personally have never experienced anything with the bison but one time I was heading through Jasper and right where you turn off the highway to go into the town there was this big ass moose; like this guy was massive, just sitting there chilling in the middle of the road. Needless to say, I sat there and patiently waited for him to finish going about his moose business
@lauriepenner3505 ай бұрын
@@OctaviaSimpson-f3o Good choice. You do not f around with a moose and his moose business.
@Loralie5717 ай бұрын
Wet cold / dry cold refers to humidity and yes there is a difference. 'Wet cold' is much colder and more difficult to dress for.
@christinamann36407 ай бұрын
My current theory is wear a windbreaker for dry cold, and pure wool for wet cold
@ChristinaClarke-c7w4 ай бұрын
Canadian lynx is a beautiful cat, a bobcat. Its paws are huge!
@bradpriebe92187 ай бұрын
Many times I've been on the road before the snowplows have been out, and then the game becomes "am I still on the road?". Those rumble strips on both sides come in very handy at times like that👍 The hockey clip was from the Olympics in Salt Lake City I think. A lynx is similar to a bobcat. And Mittens there is a 35-odd pound fluffy ball off death that could slash you to ribbons. They are not cuddly and DO NOT EVER try that in the wild.
@DuchessOfQuilt7 ай бұрын
Yes! The rumble strips have kept me on the road many times in a blizzard.
@brenthenderson39837 ай бұрын
That ''buffalo'' was actually a bison...
@JanineFoster-m9n2 ай бұрын
OMG here we go again!! Classic case of “fuck around & find out” as is the same with our military
@wesleysept65366 ай бұрын
I don't drive anymore, but Canadians drive in snow as well as any other country with no snow! It's a talent that is bred into you naturally. No road conditions ever stop us! Thank you for all your efforts in creating these videos. With love, and respect. Wes Sept
@metalvibrations4 ай бұрын
Unless you're from Vancouver
@Ponchoooooos7 ай бұрын
If you don’t hear the Canadian accent, you’re turning Canadian
@tCoL_corp7 ай бұрын
*A S S I M I L A T E T H E O U T S I D E R S*
@kbchef92057 ай бұрын
@@tCoL_corp 🤣🤣
@brendamiller57857 ай бұрын
or you're in western Canada
@sylvainricard81487 ай бұрын
Sérieux je vois pas de différence!
@Ko_Qc7 ай бұрын
as a french canadian the american accent in this clip sounds more we talk here anyway im sure there are so many different accents in both countries
@Twitch_Moderator7 ай бұрын
*As a Canadian trucker of many decades, these are 100% accurate clips. The create your own lane thing is one of the worst issues. People end up in the ditch often. And, NO!! Canadians are NOT good or skilled drivers. There is a ton of ignorance and false confidence that plagues Canadian drivers.*
@ladygray60817 ай бұрын
He needs to watch canadas worst driver
@Annie-i5e2e6 ай бұрын
@@ladygray6081 I stopped watching when they did a Quebec version of the show. Too close to home. I might cross one of them lol
@amandawilkinsontarot70966 ай бұрын
I drive slow so that I arrive alive.
@BluePhoenix19733 ай бұрын
The paws on the Lynx are huge, you do not want one swatting you...They are for helping them walk on snow....
@turkeybaster62477 ай бұрын
Tyler I give you credit for taking the time to learn about our country, good on ya!
@patmcgillivray19266 ай бұрын
For winter driving I have been taught to "stay between the telephone poles & to the right of any lights coming towards you."
@lesliemccormick65277 ай бұрын
"Pick A Lane And Go!" is not just during the snow in Winter. Where I live it pours rain a lot and at night the painted lines all but disappear in some places because no one got the "Hey! They make paint that glows!" nemo.
@przemekkozlowski78357 ай бұрын
From time to time I might have to stay late at work and leave once it gets dark. If there is a light drizzle, the road markings become invisible to me. All the light from headlights and streetlamps reflects off the water and makes it very hard to see the painted lines or even makes me see them where they aren't.
@lesliemccormick65277 ай бұрын
@@przemekkozlowski7835 So, I live in BC, most of my life, except for a few yrs I lived in Ontario (T.O.) in my 20s. Not everywhere, but in a lot of places there I noticed the painted lines on the roads GLOWED very brightly in the dark, even in the rain or snow, unless it was a really good snow dumping. If THEY had that paint......in the NiNeTiEs...🤷 I just don't get why they can shoot crap into outer space but not make road markings visible in all possible conditions across Canada. In some countries the roads are heated so the snow melts off of them straight away. I'd chip in a toonie or two to make that a reality here.😁
@parentrap7 ай бұрын
Ya hate the glare ..I always wondered why they don't use the better reflective paint you can see for miles!!
@Mike.daFonz7 ай бұрын
@@parentrap I don't know how true it is but the reason I was told we don't have proper reflective paint here in BC was due to environmental concerns. I just remember thinking "of course that's the reason. F-ing idiots"
@lesliemccormick65277 ай бұрын
@@parentrap Exactly!!
@meloup34332 ай бұрын
No it is not an overstatement... my besty and me have the same plad winter coat with just the hood in different color (mine is gray and his black)
@Randomstuff935516 ай бұрын
1:09 that is what the roads look like when they look clear
@shanowskidel373223 күн бұрын
I was thinking about that as I was looking at pics of the 140 cm of snow that fell in Muskoka, gravenhurst, ON 2 weeks ago. The highways were closed. This road is after a normal 1 cm sprinkle.