These are quirky differences but that doesn’t make one way right or wrong! If you want to be a respectful traveler, be sure to check out this next video, where I discuss mistakes and cultural faux pas Americans should avoid in Europe: kzbin.info/www/bejne/jJuXg3eVZs57ars
@evaeori59687 ай бұрын
As a Dutch person I was kind of surprised that these things were the other way around when I visited the USA. "Why doesn't this window open?", "Why do I have to hide my body on the beach?", "Why does a store need to be open 24/7?", "Why isn't there any decent public transport in this city?" etc.
@midei7 ай бұрын
Exactly! That was really shocking to me. And very inconvenient, specially the lack of public transportation.
@tonys16367 ай бұрын
Why can people see me when sitting on the toilet with the door shut. Those gaps serve no obvious purpose.
@atconnys87867 ай бұрын
@@tonys1636 Yeah, why they even bother to hang doors between the gaps, is a riddle to me
@Missydee-727 ай бұрын
Why did three drivers stop to check we were ok when we decided to walk the short distance to the supermarket?
@cree8vision7 ай бұрын
Yeah, it's a shame public transport isn't more developed in N. America but it must have to do with the worship of the car.
@TukikoTroy7 ай бұрын
Here's an essential tip for Americans visiting Europe. Don't expect it to be like the US. In fact, don't even expect every country in Europe to be the same.
@AnnabelleJARankin7 ай бұрын
You won't find Europeans doing 'shock' videos about America - we don't care enough about differences to be shocked.
@berndhofmann7527 ай бұрын
It's good that Americans remark cultural differences. I'm a German management consultant travelling all over the 🌎 and there are a lot of differences. I lived in Africa, Asia and in Europe. Just adapt to the variety in the world. You will have a lot of fun! ❤❤❤❤
@nixcails7 ай бұрын
Americans can't adapt that's the trouble. They don't even understand English (written or spoken) when they come to English speaking countries like GB, Ireland and the smaller islands. As you know Germany isn't all the same. Saarland, Holstein and Bayern are individual in their own way.
@unconventionalideas56837 ай бұрын
@@nixcails In America we have said for many decades "(w)hen in Rome, do as the Romans do." The problem is that the people who could afford to leave were not traditionally mainstream. People talk about how they see only older Americans in Europe, or at least people from various European Countries say that. Younger Americans are actually more likely to travel to Europe, but they are so much better at adapting that nobody really seems to notice them for the most part.
@nixcails7 ай бұрын
@@unconventionalideas5683 not from my experience they are just loud mouth spoilt Jewish kids usually
@ganymeade51516 ай бұрын
@@nixcails There are different dialects in many countries. Therefore, leaning one dialect of German or other languages like Chinese won't be understood in many provinces.
@ingemarsjoo45422 ай бұрын
@@ganymeade5151 I thought I had forgotten all my german language knowledges until I met an older couple on the train. I understood them perectly well. I was baffled, and I told them so. The old man explained: "You see, me and my wife are from Hannover, and it is the only place in Germany where "correct german" is spoken. In all other places there are dialects, sometimes almost impossible to understand. I guess you learned "correct german" when you were young, back in school. You never learned austrian accent, for instance. Or saxonian".
@kkemp2217 ай бұрын
Europe is not A country but consists of many different ones with their own language and habits
@thany37 ай бұрын
Same as the USA in many aspects.
@AlistairKiwi7 ай бұрын
Not only totally different countries, but also distinctly different regions within the country, each with their own accents, food, traditions, history, & politics.
@baramuth717 ай бұрын
@@thany3 Not really, the USA is a country with one language and that is English, there are also hardly any major differences when it comes to food. You have that in Europe, many countries with different languages, their own culture, food and landscapes. But that is very different from the USA.
@robertarisz84647 ай бұрын
@@baramuth71 Have you checked the globe to see the size of the USA? There is a huge variety of landscapes. Dialects, cuisine and culture also differs - not as much as in Europe but it is clearly noticeable when you get around a bit.
@baramuth717 ай бұрын
@@robertarisz8464 Well Europe is a bit bigger than the USA (I don't mean the EU) but the whole of Europe. In the USA you only hear English, but you also hear French, Danish and the other Nordic languages, all the Slavic languages, Italian, Turkish, Greek, Spanish (ok through Mexico, and only a certain part) but the linguistic diversity of cultures is much greater in Europe. In Europe there is food, and the USA doesn't even have an idea of that.
@triquepersonalwork63697 ай бұрын
I am an American that has been living in Europe since early 2019, and I can say without a doubt that the lifestyle is better here than in the USA. Here, prople work to live, and in the USA, they work to live which is by far the biggest difference. There is a great work/life balance that is deeply imbedded within European consciousness
@to.ha.81537 ай бұрын
did you maybe want to say that in the US, people "live to work"? Or the other way around?
@michaelmelamed91037 ай бұрын
That’s right you are repeating yourself. By the way, it’s best not to generalize about either the Europeans or the Americans. I’ve lived in Europe for 30 years and in the USA for 47 years. Would not have it any other way. I’ve lived my life-American dream. Never looked back but visited different countries a few times
@brythonicman32677 ай бұрын
@@triquepersonalwork6369 So in both Europe and America people work to live? Is that what you mean? 🤔 or is the difference between people and prople?
@GuyWets-zy5yt7 ай бұрын
I agree, I tried to stay in USA but after 7 travels in the country, I decided to stay here and I m glad of it
@TheDanishMaleNurse7 ай бұрын
As a European, I'm often surprised by Americans and how they don't expect things to be different in Europe. That's the joy of traveling, in my opinion, to see how different things are. 🌍✈️ #CultureShock #TravelGram
@wanneske19697 ай бұрын
They think Usa is the best and the rest of the world follows their example. Most Americans are not educated, don't know a lot about history or geography.
@enjoystraveling7 ай бұрын
I’m an American and I’m glad things are different in other places
@bearcubdaycare7 ай бұрын
Actually, as an American, I was surprised to find parts of Scandinavia more familiar than parts of America, traveling in my youth several decades ago.
@choro3d1917 ай бұрын
another thing about Americans abroad: if you ask them where they are from, they name not the country but the state... Dear Americans, you are from USA. Not everyone in the World is supposed to know what means LA or Utah. 😅
@nixcails7 ай бұрын
Americans have no concept of other languages or things that aren't fast food, Strip malls or done in your car. Miami, Los Angeles and Detroit are basically the same city
@FMA-e2o7 ай бұрын
Hello, I'm french and I have a tip for you when you asked for water in restaurant. Don't asked for a bottle of water, but for a water pitcher ("carafe d'eau " in french). It's free.
@Sturmisch7 ай бұрын
In Belgium, they pretend they don't have carafes d'eau...
@barrysteven59647 ай бұрын
In the UK as for tap water. It's nearly always free.
@nigelsheppard6257 ай бұрын
@@barrysteven5964It should ALWAYS be free in Pubs, restaurants and cafés. There is an ancient law in English Common Law regarding never refusing water in such places.
@ushiefreebird74707 ай бұрын
I just wanted to say the same. Or a glass of water. I think in France it is law to give free water if people ask for it. If you just order water, they ask sparkling or still, which automatically is bottled water. That's the trick.
@choro3d1917 ай бұрын
@@nigelsheppard625What a beautiful ancient (I would even say imperial) custom! It reminded me of a law in the empire of Genghis Khan: death for refusing to help a traveler...
@JonasReichert19927 ай бұрын
I find it intriguing that Sunday isn’t off at the US since you guys often are so much more religious.
@KMarik7 ай бұрын
Pretend religious.
@Tootsie8067 ай бұрын
The U.S. is a very diverse country. Not everyone is Christian or even religious. Should people who don’t observe Sunday as the Sabbath be required to close?
@JonasReichert19927 ай бұрын
@@Tootsie806 they are because at one point the Government was Religious enough to make it a law. There are few exceptions.
@Tootsie8067 ай бұрын
@@JonasReichert1992 Some states may restrict certain types of sales, but no state forces all businesses to close. We have become so secular, there are businesses open on Christmas and Easter.
@JonasReichert19927 ай бұрын
@@Tootsie806 Christmas usually everything is open- just closes a little early. The two days after that are closed. For easter it’s different in each Bundesland
@nordishbynature2687 ай бұрын
I'm german and I am shocked by the fact that so many us americans are shocked that shops are closed on sundays. I thought christianity is a big thing in the US and isn't it written somewhere in the bible "... and on the seventh day he rested..." or something like that? That's the reason why shops are closed on holy sunday. Well over the centuries it weakened a bit... I am not very religious, but calming down a day per week is a good thing for families and the society. 😉
@henrischutte19687 ай бұрын
In the US there is one thing that trumps everything, even religion: the almighty dollar!
@bearcubdaycare7 ай бұрын
Growing up in Massachusetts decades ago, most shops were closed on Sundays. A few shops were open for buying a newspaper, but most of the store would be cordoned off. The "Blue Laws" that restricted shops on Sunday, changed due to competition from ships in neighboring New Hampshire, originally just for stores within several miles of the border, and just for several weeks before Christmas, but eventually the whole state, the whole year.
@adamp63207 ай бұрын
The thing is, women work now they aren't home Monday to Friday to go shopping, so that leaves Saturday and Sunday to go shop. IF you close stores on Sunday that leaves..Saturday only. Sunday shopping makes sense.
@nordishbynature2687 ай бұрын
@@adamp6320 Not true. If you work 9 to 5 and shops are open til 10 p.m. Why is there time to shop only at sundays? How long are you shopping groceries???
@jokervienna64337 ай бұрын
I completely agree, but as a Swede now living in Vienna, it took me some years to get used to (in Sweden, the grocery shops are open on Sundays, albeit shorter). Now I plan my shopping and take a break on Sundays. Meet some friends, go for a walk, lay on the sofa reading a book or something else non-demanding. I get a break and the workers in the grocery stores get a break too - THEY truly deserve it! 😘
@Ilske7 ай бұрын
In the netherlands it isn't even alowed to wear swimwear in a spa or sauna. There is a special bathingsuite day, but on the other days, you have to go naked. A barhrobe or towel is alowed btw
@svennoren90477 ай бұрын
And the towel is for sitting on, not _wearing._
@userxyz647 ай бұрын
@@svennoren9047I wouldn't go!
@queen4520107 ай бұрын
Eww
@noname4u2see7 ай бұрын
@@userxyz64then dont go, nobody likes prudes
@Ilske7 ай бұрын
@@queen452010 why? Everybody has a naked body. Nothing eww about it.
@petermarshall77757 ай бұрын
Monday is a universal day off for museums
@12freddyscoming4you7 ай бұрын
Another one is that in Europe prices include taxes and tipping is optional. Tips are not a part of basic salary and it’s optional to give tips for good service.
@olenickel60137 ай бұрын
Do be aware, in many places not giving a tip is still akin to saying "your service sucked" however.
@12freddyscoming4you7 ай бұрын
@@olenickel6013 true but thankfully not mandatory 😊 Why should you tip for crappy service 🧐
@iallso17 ай бұрын
@@12freddyscoming4youthe service is often OK, but usually the food is average. I resent leaving a tip when I have received a meal that had I been served it in Europe I would have sent back.
@brythonicman32677 ай бұрын
I've been to many countries in Europe, Africa, Australia and America and I think the US is the only country I've been to where tipping is so prolific! It's just not a big deal anywhere else!
@12freddyscoming4you7 ай бұрын
@@brythonicman3267 perhaps it’s also the corporate system in the US. The companies want to make as much profit as possible without spending to much on staff. Easy way is to add service charge/mandatory tip to bills and make the customer pay extra towards staff salary. How is this then still a tip? It’s just a contribution to salaries so companies don’t have to pay a decent wage.
@rvallenduuk7 ай бұрын
You ask for water, you pay for water, no big deal. What's sneakier is the little bread basket they sometimes put on your table, or some olives, mostly in southern Europe. If you don't touch it, they take it away again. If you do, you pay for it. Oh, and dear Americans, do yourself a favour: forget about Starbucks while you're in Europe. Coffee is better pretty much everywhere else. They may not have all the crazy flavoured syrups to add, or the silly names, but if you like coffee, no Starbucks.
@adrianbriggs70287 ай бұрын
Starbucks is quite possibly the worst coffee in the world.. now italy... there is coffee..
@tytn99787 ай бұрын
Why would anyone go to Starbucks in Europe when there are so many wonderful coffee houses! I recall being in Utrecht and having the most delicious coffee ever; and the coffee in Venice was delightful as well!
@tapestry64557 ай бұрын
I like Scooters ;-)
@stevecarter88107 ай бұрын
Think of Starbucks as coffee themed milkshakes and all is in balance
@queen4520107 ай бұрын
Starbucks is disgusting and I would go for a real cup of coffee without all the s-it they put on everything here in the States.
@petragrevstad27147 ай бұрын
I loved this 💜. It’s always interesting to hear the experience of people from different parts of the world visiting other countries and regions. Things that are everyday life for me, potentially surprise or sometimes frustrating someone not used to it. Thank you for sharing 🙏🏻🌸! Much love from Sweden 🇸🇪 .
@martin10427 ай бұрын
Also, be prepared for huge differences between European countries. In Germany many restaurants are open almost all day, and you could easily have an early dinner at 5 pm. In Spain many restaurants are open maybe 12 to 3 pm, then they close and only reopen around 8 pm.
@jfrancobelge7 ай бұрын
Dinner time varies a lot according to the country you're at, from late afternoon to late evening. Generally the more you go south the later people dine. In France, which is kind of "in between" northern and southern Europe (culturally and geographically) most restaurants open for dinner at 07:00 PM.
@ganymeade51516 ай бұрын
In France many places are closed after 2 pm and reopen in the early evening. So, if you want lunch, get it before 2 pm.
@annepoitrineau56507 ай бұрын
Most Germanic people have no issue with nudity. In France, topless is ok. IN these countries, people are also more accepting and less critical of bodyshapes in general. as you said. Nude and sex are not the same.
@michelrail7 ай бұрын
Big tip: Do not arrive on a Sunday. Some smaller family ran hotel may be closed. Yes, the hotel is closed. This means, if you are not a guest, you may have to wait until 17:00 to check in. Only if you have a door key can you open the door. So when you left home the night before and didn't sleep on the airplane, 17:00 is a long time to wait to check in. There should be some restaurants open. Between the restaurants, they overlap their days off. Yes, days off. They are entitled to have 2 days off in a row. It's not so bad when you come prepared. They usually publish their schedule on their website. You will find good food pretty much in every restaurant. Stay away from steak and fries or hamburger. You're in Europe now. Embrace local cuisine. Ask the waiter what they would eat. Ask the pretty lady at the souvenir shop where she would like her boyfriend to take her for lunch or for dinner. I have discovered great restaurants at affordable price this way. The locals know.
@awaytogether7 ай бұрын
Amazing point about the family run hotels and arrival times - we encountered this last year. Agree wholeheartedly about the menu - although I'll say, I see fries on the menu at more places in Europe than I do in the USA. Most don't do Mayo with our fries here and I've got to say, we're doing it wrong haha.
@gizmo92907 ай бұрын
I think you should just check you check-in time when you book the room. Or even before. I do, especially when I have a late flight, to be sure I CAN check-in when I get there. I always choose places where I know I have enough time to get before check-in time is over.
@SeverityOne7 ай бұрын
To be fair, we Europeans did invent fries (or chips in British English). 🙂
@davidowen23967 ай бұрын
In the UK, restaurants are legally obliged to provide free tap water if a customer requests it. Some places will not be upfront about this but will usually be agreeable if a request for this is made.
@maslina45677 ай бұрын
Spot on! My husband and I are Canadians who live in Croatia 75% of the time (and travel within Europe) and find so, so many quirky cultural differences which sometimes make us giggle like inverted light switches and pull chains on toilets, other times not so much (smoking). Differences can be hard to get accustomed to (nudity). But differences are also what makes the world fascinating and enlightening! Having an open mind is crucial, yet one needn't compromise beliefs or standards, either. Travel is the best form of education there is. Thank you!
@awaytogether7 ай бұрын
Amen!!!
@CommonSense9eleven7 ай бұрын
it isn't cultural difference. it is culture vs no idea what culture is
@berndhofmann7527 ай бұрын
Beautiful! Greetings from 🇩🇪
@gizmo92907 ай бұрын
So you say that if smoking is bothering me as hell I should move to Canada or USA? I really should think about that...
@maslina45677 ай бұрын
@@gizmo9290 In spite of smoking prevalence, my preference is living in Croatia over Canada for a multitude of reasons, a very long list.
@marcelw68277 ай бұрын
American tap water is chlorinated. Even the icecube taste awful. Then I rather pay for water.
@unconventionalideas56837 ай бұрын
Many Americans just buy a charcoal filter, because it is seen as less financially/environmentally wasteful than bottled water. It comes out the same because it is the same process. Also, a lot of American Tap Water is no longer chlorinated. Each local system is different as to whether it is chlorinated or not. Buy a charcoal filter system and some kind of reusable cup/bottle and you will be fine. A lot of people will think you're crazy to ask for bottled water, and in many restaurants they may not even _have_ bottled water (don't use your bottled water or water filter there; it's considered very rude).
@barlow29767 ай бұрын
Worse than that a lot of American water is just not drinkable, the groundwater having been contaminated.What a shit country.
@johng40937 ай бұрын
@@barlow2976 Not true. Other than 1 or 2 places most people will never visit, public water is safe and has to be tested meet strict national standards. In ground water you are more likely to taste the natural minerals than reservoir water, but it's not least bit dangerous. And you never have to boil water to make it safe as you do in some foreign countries, so ice is also safe.
@arunphillips69777 ай бұрын
@@barlow2976 The USA is the best country on the planet, no backward feuding EU or UK, or anywhere else nation comes close!
@leonidakhoury99077 ай бұрын
@@barlow2976you speak what you don’t know pure you
@AquinoFamily994 ай бұрын
Really helpful video and being better prepared makes it more exciting to visit Europe.
@aidaovasapyan99517 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot for really great info,it’s helpful,🌎🌎🌎
@Patrick-yu1hu7 ай бұрын
Hope my comment comes across as intended -- positive and not condescending. I'm much older than Nik and Allie -- I'll turn 69 in a few months, and have been travelling to Europe regularly since 1976. I've made 100+ trips, and lived/worked in 4 German cities, 1987-1999, married a German woman, son born Berlin, etc. I can vouch for all the points so accurately raised in this video. Regarding the sauna experience, I frequented saunas in Hamburg and Berlin. It's simply not allowed to have anything on when in the sauna itself, and you need a large towel to lay on, as it's not allowed for your body to touch the wooden parts of the sauna while inside. Sex has absolutely nothing to do with the experience, including the often available nude swimming in the adjoining pools. Regarding smoking, it may seem to younger US people that there is still a lot of smoking in Europe, but it is dramatically less than in the 1970s and 1980s. One thing not mentioned is Europeans bringing dogs into restaurants. That's particularly common in Germany. Unlike in the USA, the process to acquire and train a dog is heavily regulated, with all dog owners going through an intensive training program with their dogs, so the dogs are well behaved in public.
@vic95437 ай бұрын
In Germany, the rules regarding dogs vary, depending on the state (Bundesland) you live in. In Bavaria, for example, except from potentionally dangerous dogs, there are no regulations at all. And in Northrhine-Westphalia there are only regulations for large/ heavy and (potentially) dangerous dogs. Regarding large dogs, there' only a theoretical test without the dogs being involved. So, "all dog owners going through an intensive training program with their dogs" may be true for some places, but not for Germany in general.
@tovep95737 ай бұрын
Yes, If you don't want to be nude in the sauna just stay wrapped in your towel. Bringing swimsuits into the sauna is unhygienic.
@Patrick-yu1hu7 ай бұрын
@@tovep9573 Being wrapped in the towel in the actual sauna is never done in Europe. You're naked, period, laying on a towel, with your body fully visible (but no one stares at you).
@tovep95737 ай бұрын
@@Patrick-yu1hu It is quite common in Sweden where I live. Some people are less comfortable with nudity. But you might have another experience from wherever you live in Europe.
@lynnebattaglia-triggs10427 ай бұрын
In the US, I never wore anything in the women’s sauna or steam room, and the other women always looked shocked. Please get over it.
@squirrelwood80087 ай бұрын
The charge for using the toilet is used to keep them clean and well maintained. Also, paying for water is not paying for the actual water but for the service of having it brought to you and the cleaning of the glass(es).
@HenryLoenwind7 ай бұрын
Also, in most parts of Europe, restaurants earn all their profits from drinks and food is just an incentive to get customers, so it's served at or near cost. Which has the nice side effect that restaurants will not chase you out the moment you put down your fork.
@robinharwood50447 ай бұрын
Cheaper than US tipping.
@HeatherTravels7 ай бұрын
Excellent list! All of these things can really surprise Americans, and even for those of us who have lived there in the past, it's good to be reminded.
@jfrancobelge7 ай бұрын
"Let's say Belgium, they may only need AC like a few weeks a year"... you mean, "like a few days a year"? 😉😁
@ringrun98727 ай бұрын
Like we say in Hamburg -> lets hope for a great warm and sunny summer and that i may fall on a weekend
@ritasonck7 ай бұрын
@@ringrun9872😂
@ganymeade51516 ай бұрын
The Belgians were stand offish from our experience. Only America tourists helped us.
@dontsaycant24487 ай бұрын
The first time I encountered those windows was in a hotel in Florence. I nearly shit myself because I thought we broke the window at this nice hotel. Then after a deep breath and a minute I realized how amazing to was to be able to open them in varying ways. After that trip I swore I would have windows like those in my home one day.
@chrysalis41267 ай бұрын
Stairs are one of the reasons Europeans are less fat than Americans. In the UK If you order a jug of water you will get tap water and its free.
@lisalu9107 ай бұрын
Stairs and cigs. Let's just be real here. Europeans smoke a lot more than Americans do.
@didier750127 ай бұрын
Europe is so diverse that any European is surprised when abroad. For instance, a French person is often surprised to have no choice but to pay for water and bread. In all countries in Europe, we have very different ways of life, and in each country, people do not have the same habits. I am living in a place in France where all toilets are clean and free, and where we do not have any public transportation. What a shock Paris was!
@avitalsheva7 ай бұрын
Kind of... but Europe is very similar within EU if we compare to US or Japan or China
@HelenaMikas7 ай бұрын
Well said ..I've lived years in Germany and been all over Europe .The diversity is delight fun and oh so delicious .Europe is a wonderful patchwork quilt .. food / languages / culture / oh yes and very civilised .
@ganymeade51516 ай бұрын
Absolutely. In some places in Europe, you need a car or motor bike.
@HaraldSeiwert7 ай бұрын
Indeed a huge cultural shock for US Americans - less elevators, more bikes and walking, less junk food = less obesitas :-D
@PatNeedhamUSA7 ай бұрын
4:58 "and their windows tend to be a little bit different" - i was in Vienna Austria a couple weeks ago and the AirBnB i stayed at had those exact same kind of windows. They are awesome!
@CCB2497 ай бұрын
We have those windows in our condo in Seattle! Love them. Tilt and turn windows. Many countries in Europe are not allowed to build a house an install American made windows because they are such poor quality.
@gizmo92907 ай бұрын
Unfortunately this kind of windows is not common all over Europe. I live in the Netherlands and here most windows just open one way... and it's usually opening out, not in. Cleaning windows upstairs from outside requires a long ladder or some specialistic cleaning stuff. And installing a moskito net... Yeah, I really don't like the windows.
@adrianbriggs70287 ай бұрын
@gizmo9290 they are very common in NL, just not on much older properties that may have very tight building regulations in them.my House has them...
@DON6667 ай бұрын
Here in Germany, that's just standard. There are (older) homes where you can only open the windows fully, but that's pretty rare.
@Orwellian-Purple-Grapes-19847 ай бұрын
@@gizmo9290Depends on where you live in the Netherlands. My parents' house has those fancy windows because it was renovated relatively recently. My apartment does not have those fancy windows, it only has one way opening out.
@sebastianbirch21877 ай бұрын
As a European living in the US , and traveling a lot around both continents, I have to say that is pretty good list, really essential things to know for the beginner travel. Nice video.
@gregblair51397 ай бұрын
Another thing is different shape electric sockets (your plugs won't fit), and different voltage and frequency (some appliances would burn out or cause a fire if you could plug them in). Fortunately, you should be able to safely use most appliances that you would travel with, such as phone, laptop, electric shaver, electric toothbrush, or CPAP machine. You will, however, need an adapter for the different shaped electric sockets (and there are multiple standards throughout Europe).
@natasamladenovic17657 ай бұрын
In Croatia/ Adriatic coast where i am from everyone has an AC at home. Schools, shops, institutiins...too. although, traditional houses have wooden shutters on windows and that helps a lot. You let the cool air in the house in the morning and close the windows and the shutters. You can keep the house cool that way pretty long even if you do not have an A C. We also have vine pergolas to sit under, or park your car under...one can live comfortably the old way too. Our elders knew how to live in that climate.
@rogernichols11247 ай бұрын
As a UK citizen who has been to most European countries, your observations are, by and large, accurate. Maybe you noticed in Germany that cash is preferred to credit cards, shoos are mostly closed on Sundays and there's no speed limit on the Autobahn (freeway). In Spain, shops regularly close most afternoons and reopen early evening - which can make sightseeing difficult. Tipping / leaving a gratuity is a variable practice throughout Europe. Sometimes, a gratuity is automatically added to the bill but frequently, you leave a tip for good or exceptional service - usually 10% of the total. Only tip if the service has been above the ordinary. In most European countries, queueing (standing on line) isn't a built-in national habit, unlike in Britain or the US. Sometimes, it's best to manôuvre yourself into the most advantageous spot, eg waiting for a bus or going into a museum. No-one will take offence because they're all doing the same as you! On entering a shop in France, it's customary to offer a greeting ( eg Bonjour/Bonsoir, monsieur/madame) even if no-one's listening. Above all, don't assume everyone speaks English and, anyway, it's only good manners to make an effort to learn some basic phrases in the language of the country you're visiting; it goes s long way and your hosts will be flattered and charmed.😊
@ganymeade51516 ай бұрын
Some people are kind and would rather speak English than watch you struggle and butcher their language. LOL.
@MartinBeerbom7 ай бұрын
Even as a German, the lack of street signs in some German cities annoy me. In once drove through Frankfurt/Main, and got thoroughly lost and frustrated because of it.
@dzonikg7 ай бұрын
In my country before GPS thing there was streetname sign on every corner usually on wall off building and every house had big visible number .But since GPS thing no one puts it any more and actually people removed it so with out smartphone you have 0 idea which street you are
@ganymeade51516 ай бұрын
It is that way also on some highways. The sign to exit was after the exit requiring having to turn around.
@robertsnary4727 ай бұрын
When I was in Cologne Dec 06 I had an American ask me if I could help him find his way back to his hotel ( I am from UK) he saw a sign saying “ Einebahn Strasse” and thought it was street sign and was confused ad he saw lots of “Einebahn Strasse”. It means one was street!! I nearly got caught out in Ecuador when I saw a street name Doble Via ( 2 way street. For the record I did help him find his hotel, it was same one I was staying in.
@winterlinde53957 ай бұрын
Einbahnstraße 😊
@travelvideos7 ай бұрын
Floor numbering is mixed in Europe. Some countries use the American style, while others use the British style. Elevators can be especially confusing, as pressing '0' usually takes you to the basement. You press '0' expecting to go to the reception, but when the door opens, you find yourself in a dark room with lots of piping, as it's the basement. Therefore, hotels often label the elevator buttons with 'reception' because too many people end up in the basement.
@LeolaGlamour7 ай бұрын
As an American I have always thought 0 was a basement? Usually reception is floor 2 sometimes 3.
@The_Red_Squirrel7 ай бұрын
Usually basement floors are -1, -2, etc., ground floors are either G or 0, and upper floors are 1, 2, etc. Also, newer buildings with 4 or more floors above ground level will have a lift. The example given in the video of a narrow, steep and winding stairs only applies in older buildings (100 years and older) and may not always be the case. The example shown is quite extreme and very much the exception.
@berndf07 ай бұрын
Like where? In the 65 years I've been living in different European countries and visited many more, I've come across maybe a few handful of office buildings or hotels that for some strange reason chose American floor numbering but that's it. Everywhere else "first floor" means "the floor above ground floor".
@jerry23577 ай бұрын
The floor numbering is spelt out in German: "erste Obergeschoss" = "first higher floor". The numbering comes from the fact that, historically, a floor was something that you actually had to build from wood, whereas when you entered a building you were actually standing on levelled and beaten earth. So the first floor was the floor immediately higher than the ground. (If you go into older houses you might still find one that has a beaten earth floor under the floor covering, a friend of my granny lived in such a house in the 1970s.)
@finncarlbomholtsrensen11887 ай бұрын
@@The_Red_Squirrel Most European towns hardly have houses in the center below a 100 years!
@cindym.16187 ай бұрын
We're considering some motor coach tours of Europe. In reading reviews, many (older) Americans are appalled at the lack of air conditioning in some of the hotels. If you want all the American amenities, stay in America.
@barbaramuller50497 ай бұрын
Or just don't come in summer 😊
@tytn99787 ай бұрын
I recall being appalled by an American couple on a bus trip in the Netherlands who complained for the entire journey about how Holland did not do things the American way. As a Canadian, i thought THAT was what made my trip to Holland great! In Vienna, I had the misfortune of being on a City Bus tour where the "guide" spoke in a Texas dialect, just to amuse American tourists. I found it appalling and got off at the first site, and did the rest of my sight-seeing on my own!
@SeverityOne7 ай бұрын
Thing is, though, that Europe is heating up, like the rest of the world. I grew up in the Netherlands, and when I emigrated at the end of 2000, to be with my girlfriend (now wife), basically nobody had air conditioning in the Netherlands. Fast forward 20+ years, and the thermometer actually exceeded 40 degrees Celsius in the Netherlands. In Fahrenheit, that's 104. For a country in the northern part of Western Europe, on the North Sea coast, that temperature is absurd. OK, so this happened once, and summer this year has been pretty dismal. But we've been there, with the temperature over 30 C (86 F) and in a restaurant, they didn't even put a fan. Or a hotel, where they switched off the airco at night. Here in southern Europe, you need air conditioning in summer. It's unbearably hot otherwise. Just don't expect the air to be so cold that penguins would feel uncomfortable; from what I gather, aircos in the USA tend to be colder than in Europe. And don't leave on your air conditioner when you're away: energy costs can be quite steep, and it's unfair on your hosts if you're in a small, family-run place. But if you book a proper hotel in Western Europe, I'd be highly surprised if it came without air conditioning.
@barlow29767 ай бұрын
Yes, please stay in America.
@maslina45677 ай бұрын
Another thing which I'd only read about but hadn't encountered was the squat toilet which I've since seen at least 20 times in Europe. Some are in better...er...condition than others. Travelers must remember they are guests in said country and things are understandably different. Leave expectations at home and learn to adapt to and...gasp...appreciate the differences. Immerse yourself in adventure rather than wish for what may not exist. Attitude and outlook can make or break travel.
@ringrun98727 ай бұрын
😅 these types are really rare nowadays. U guys are lucky, i now in my fortys, remember being a child and going by car from germany to mediterranian sea in france or spain and havin those holes in the floor with 2 footspots as a toilet at the french motorway restareas
@maslina45677 ай бұрын
@ringrun9872 They are rare but I still do see them, the very kind you describe. I give them a miss!
@ringrun98727 ай бұрын
@@maslina4567 we dont have the muscles anymore to get that going and dont fall over and crap ourself
@BureauKat7 ай бұрын
In France be aware of ´la grève which I am convinced is the national pastime. La grève means strike which can mean a partial shutdown of the metro for a few hours to no electricity.
@ganymeade51516 ай бұрын
My husband prefers to stay at hotels near the airport. We use the Hop n Ride that is great for city tours. We take trams or trains to places outside the city. We do train day trips so we only need a backpack. If we have more time, we rent a car to drive to the countryside. A car is essential for travelling to places off the tourist tracks in cities, and to many villages throughout Europe. A train is great for seeing a lot of awesome scenery within a day.
@bazoo5137 ай бұрын
8:45 - In Croatia restaurants and cafes must, by law, serve free tap water if requested. But restaurants will typically "assume" that you meant bottled water if you only said "water"; cafes will typically bring you a glass of tap water with any order (especially coffee) with _maybe_ one ice cube; so, be sure to ask for "lots of ice". And yes, no free refills, even in places like McDonald's.
@barrysteven59647 ай бұрын
The first bit reminded me of something that might not be obvious to Americans. If you are trying to find a location in the UK use the postcode. This is our equivalent of the zip code but it is much more precise. It will take you to the street and probably the right part of the street. All you need apart from the post code is the building number. So just put the post code into googlemaps or whatever you are using and it will come up with the street you need. You'll find all post codes at the very end of an address. Even Buckingham Palace has a post code. SW1A 1AA
@gizmo92907 ай бұрын
The Netherlands have similar system, if you know the postcode and the house number, you can find your full address. It's very important to know your postcode here, some Dutch Internet shops don't even ask you about your street name, but about the postcode and house and flat number only.
@meikahidenori7 ай бұрын
As An Australian I thought this was standard practice 😅 it's the same deal here!
@adiuntesserande68937 ай бұрын
@@meikahidenori Nope. In the US, ZIP codes (US postal codes) could cover a territory as large as an entire city of over 100,000 people.
@user-mrfrog7 ай бұрын
What I am realizing is how Montréal is really a mix of European ways and North American! For example, some buildings go by "rez de chaussée" (ground floor), first floor, second floor... like in Europe, while other buildings behave like they do in the States! Vive la différence !
@felcofb47507 ай бұрын
Happy to see you've been in Milano. In Italia smoking is very restricted quite like in the USA, so it is a pleasure to sit at a restaurant and eat good food without smelling sigarettes in the air
@joyhuebert12197 ай бұрын
Nudity on beaches is gaining ground in Victoria, BC where year round swimming in the ocean is popular and there are no change rooms, as you say, it’s mostly us seniors who are totally okay with public changing
@Motherhubbard1707 ай бұрын
no thank you
@adiuntesserande68937 ай бұрын
Where have you seen this? I live by Cadboro Bay, and I can't say as I've ever seen any nudity there!
@joyhuebert12197 ай бұрын
@@adiuntesserande6893 prospect lake, sometimes Banfield park
@McGhinch7 ай бұрын
There is an information missing: Yes, we most often pay for public toilets. But, in most installations you will receive a voucher that can be redeemed in shops and restaurants of that installation -- or where else the operator is present. Your video shows a Sanifair installations. These vouchers are valid for a year and can be redeemed in everywhere when Sanifair operates the restrooms.
@coffeecigarettes94227 ай бұрын
Yeah, that's true. However the items you can purchase (at gas stations for example) are heavily overprized so in fact this voucher is just good for you if you really really need a can of soda or an awful tasting coffee regardless the crazy price tag.
@wanneske19697 ай бұрын
I don't mind paying 1 or 2 € for the 'toilet lady' if it means the toilets are clean.
@choro3d1917 ай бұрын
I was also surprised by such narrow and steep stairs in Netherlands. One day, my wife and I spent several hours moving a couch through such a stairwell. We were literally screwing the couch in, and it moved slowly like a cork in a bottle neck.
@tytn99787 ай бұрын
My significant memory of Amsterdam is watching a grand piano being hoisted to the top floor with the use of the chains anchored on a "hook"at the top of the building, and then being taken into the building through the topmost window into the room. With the narrow, winding interior stairs there was no other way to get it up to that floor!
@SeverityOne7 ай бұрын
Most non-Dutch complain about this. As a Dutchman myself, I don't really see the problem. But once, in a restaurant in Amsterdam near the Dam Square, there were stairs so steep that they were more like a ladder. And because it's a listed building, they're not allowed to change them.
@deborahmaddry36157 ай бұрын
Your baby is precious! We lived in Germany 4 years. This video brings back memorie of our travels. Your videos are great!
@snakefollower7 ай бұрын
I live in the UK and we all have the 2 button flush. Recently stayed Air BnB in Spain but the air con didn't work at all but it was a bit out of season and not particularly hot. I was under the impression maybe it hadn't worked for some time.
@BabzV4 ай бұрын
I was a server for many years in the Netherlands and the reason we rather not give free tapwater is that we have to use a glass, use extra space on our serving tray, having to wash the glass after use etc etc all for free whilst it does cost the proprietar time which equals money. If a table of 6 all want free water it takes a lot extra work for zero payment. If a person needs to take their medicine then of course they get a glass of water.
@labtechsuperstar5 ай бұрын
I just got back from a trip to Greece. Stores are closed on Sundays (maybe a few in the tourist areas are open, but in general not). And on Monday, they close early. Also, they subscribe to the 'siesta' so stores will be closed between say 12pm and 3 pm, and then re-open for a few hours in the evening. The "siesta" is also common in Italy, Portugal and Spain. Bottled water is de rigueur in Greece and is cheap. Like for the 500mL it's only 0.50 Euro cents.
@sunkisses747 ай бұрын
Here in Germany you are probably considered a creep if you go to the sauna in an bathing suit and anyone else is naked.... As you mentioned, nudity doens´t necessarily equal se*uality for us.
@CommonSense9eleven7 ай бұрын
don't use airbnb, use hotels
@Terra_Incognita2017 ай бұрын
I would‘t say that in general
@ZForce54967 ай бұрын
Agreed. Airbnb drives up the cost of housing and ruin the local economy.
@wrldtrvlr4vr7 ай бұрын
Why
@gizmo92907 ай бұрын
@@wrldtrvlr4vr Because airbnbs make appartments much more expensive for locals. If you care about locals, you don't use airbnb if there is another possibility.
@tonys16367 ай бұрын
@@panuntukan That's just a normal old fashioned b&b with the owners living there and providing breakfast not a house divided into apartments and the owner living elsewhere.
@gwirgalon37587 ай бұрын
Thanks for the Holafly info...Didn't know of it.
@shelleybergen12327 ай бұрын
I'm so glad I spend months doing research to all the places we plan to visit. Doing no research could seriously ruin your trip. Also read other travelers reviews of things like hotels, tours and restaurants. Love your videos!!
@enjoystraveling7 ай бұрын
If you get desperate for groceries or something to eat and it’s a Sunday just go to the main train station and there’s usually something open there both a small grocery some of them might be quite big and one or more. Restaurants are open there even if it’s just fast food, unless it’s a very small village
@MrTuxracer7 ай бұрын
The only thing I really wish to be the same as in the US, is less smoking. A hint: There are hotels, which usually have elevators, you don't have to book an Airbnb.
@johansilwouden34037 ай бұрын
I instantly knew that the Airbnb with the narrow stairs is located in the Netherlands! Around the 4 minute mark you can see a blue envelope. This blue envelope has caused many heartattacks amongst my fellow Dutchmen. It is the famous blue envelope from the "Belastingdienst", or the Dutch National TAX agency....😂😅 Also, free roilets are by many people regarded as COMMUNISM!!! People generally do no want to pay for others using the restroom free if charge, according ti a survey held by the Dutch rail operator NS.
@babsdaughter586 ай бұрын
We’ve just spent nearly a month in Europe and the duvets in summer without ac, even in 5 star hotels has been the most shocking…and frustrating. We finally learned to ask for either a summer weight duvet or simply remove the duvet and use just the duvet cover.
@denniswlandry7 ай бұрын
In many European cities where supermarkets are closed on Sunday, the supermarket in the main train station will be open and usually very crowded.
@josephforest76057 ай бұрын
I am from Canada the drinking age in Canada is 19 years of age . I was in Amsterdam in a coin laundry , there was a young man washing his clothes , he told me he was 19 and visiting from California .I walked over to the vending machine in the coin laundry and I asked him if he wanted a beer out of the vending machine . He went wild with beer in a machine , he was amazed and I thought it was amusing .
@johng40937 ай бұрын
We typically have to check ID for age (or look obviously much older than minimum age) in US before selling, even at a supermarket self-checkout you cannot buy alcohol since there may be nobody to verify age.
@Stopnaziruzzia7 ай бұрын
Good points. I grew up in Sweden and have lived in a few western european countries before ending up in the US. Many things here are true. But nudity in parks. Only in Germany really. And the smoking thing? Swedes smoke very little. One thing that is VERY different is the availability of alcohol. In most european countries you can buy beer when you are like 16 years old. You can even buy alcohol in subway station kiosks. But europeans have can't buy guns. Here in the States guns are ok and beer is not. I have never heard of school kids being murdered by someone attacking the school with beer bottles. Oh, and most things are open in Sweden on Sundays. In Denmark, Germany and Austria it is way different. One super important thing for americans to read up on is tipping. In Europe they don't expect tips. Sure, in some places it is appreciated, but NEVER to the extent or sums that you pay here. Servers earn living wages. Prices over there are also always including tax. BUT, the european windows are indeed much better than the ones we have here in the States and that you can almost never open as they are stuck.
@robinharwood50447 ай бұрын
But in Sweden you have to buy alcohol from the Systembolaget. Yes, you can buy mellanöl in other places, but that hardly counts as alcohol. (It hardly counts as anything, actually.)
@Stopnaziruzzia7 ай бұрын
@@robinharwood5044 I left Sweden young. That is why I said most european countries, DE, FR, BE, NL. Super easy. With Germany even having subway stop kiosks selling beer, wine and hard liquor very cheap. But, the average attitude of swedes is that if a young man has too much beer, it is less of a concern than if he has a gun. I am still pretty sure that this sentiment is still valid in Sweden as well. Here in the States, alcohol is the real problem. Guns not so much. There are states here with alcohol sale monopoly as well, like Systembolaget. But no state has a monopoly on the sales of guns and ammunition.
@lionessm2357 ай бұрын
When we used to live in the lower Keys, some coworkers decided to go to Key West one day to a place called “Naked Lunch”. I declined their invitation, stating, “The people you want to SEE naked are not necessarily the people who want to BE naked”. I found out later they were so horrified they nearly sprinted out the door to a restaurant down the street. The next day the first thing I heard was, “How did you know!?!?” 😂
@Bgmutza7 ай бұрын
I would also add that it’s not uncommon to show up at a shop or restaurant and find a note on the door that they’re closed for a few days or a week because they are on holiday. My experience has been that these are often not on their social media or websites, so you don’t find out until you walk up. Be prepared with backups just in case!
@laylayalda94657 ай бұрын
Same here! I love how they honor Sunday. I wish it was the same here in the U.S
@enjoystraveling7 ай бұрын
Yes, even if you aren’t religious, it still is important for the workers to have a rest day And mind the rest of us to take a rest day of relaxation
@marcgp69277 ай бұрын
It has long lose any religious significance, everything closes on Sunday (and most business also close on Saturdays) to share common rest days that families and friends can enjoy togeather. Remember that Europe is about work balance and quality of life.
@jhonyermo7 ай бұрын
Why? Saturday is the goGDam sabbath. Check your Buy-Bull
@adiuntesserande68937 ай бұрын
I am *SO* glad it isn't. I don't follow your religion; I see no reason why I should be forced to do so as a business owner.
@PhilipLanderloos7 ай бұрын
Looking at the state of the Air B&B you booked, it seems you have booked the cheapest one you could find.
@tytn99787 ай бұрын
In Venice, the motorboat taxis definitely were ideal, especially since one can purchase a long-term (1 day/3 days/full week) card, and you can get on and off at any of the stops!
@krh0077 ай бұрын
Chiming in from Aussie and my wife & i just got back recently from 5 weeks in Europe and we had a blast. Part of that was on a river cruise down the Rhine/Danube from Amsterdam but the best part was our 1st class Europass on the trains where we train hopped everywhere & stayed in hotels etc. The Eurotrains are awesome & they are fast and so smooth & comfy. My wife is a smoker & i like to smoke when having a beer (casual smoker) so we fitted in very well with the locals where smoking is very common & accepted as the norm & part of the way of life. We will be back there again in a few years and this time will be using the rail system exclusively. We hired a car in the UK down in Kent region & it is too risky as roads are very narrow & packed much like all of Europe). The river cruise was more for the oldies (average age group 75-95) and too regimented and very expensive compared to doing your own thing. We were on an APT Travelmarvel (named Capella) boat which was very modern (built 2yrs ago) and we noticed the Americans were all on those Viking Boats which were older & not as well designed. Ours had the bigger rooms with the French balcony window that was electrically operated to become your balcony making the room bigger instead of those stupid skinny balconies on the Viking boats which were full of just American passengers only which is a dumb idea as when travelling you want a mix of people from different countries to mingle with. I did notice Amercians in general (especially in groups) were very loud and certainly lacked manners for sure when amongst the locals & other tourists. I suppose many are not used to travelling outside USA and Europe is perhaps a new thing for them but my best advice is the blend in and be courteous & accept their culture is different to that of US and you are the guest so just chill (we experienced some very brash US travellers when out & about)
@finncarlbomholtsrensen11887 ай бұрын
You may hear Amerivcans from far away, as they seemingly are intend on making everybody avare, that US Citizens are around!! In the Danish walking street system in Center of main town, you are never in doubt if an American Group are around, from the level of their (load)speaking! But today, rich Russians also are intend on making themselve unpopular at any place they are visiting!!!
@Just_another_Euro_dude7 ай бұрын
Smoking is NOT looked like a positive thing or "accepted way of life" in Europe. That's why the percentages of smokers in Europe have declined in a big way since the let's say 60s or 70s. There's gazzillion of places in Europe where the smoking is flat out banned, the smoking commercials have been banned for literally decades. There's photos of lungs and throats ruined by cancer on every pack of cigaretts you buy in Europe. And don't pretend that an addiction you have is not disgusting. Cause it IS. It's very VERY disgusting. One of the worst.
@tytn99787 ай бұрын
Eurail passes definitely worked for me on my trips to Germany and adjacent countries! I did run into an issue travelling from Frankfurt to West Berlin, back when Germany was divided, and East Germany did not participate in the Eurail card, so I had to pay a hefty fee at the border, and thus learned my lesson and bought a ticket from Berlin back to the border, where my Eurail pass kicked in once again. But with the reconnecting of East & West, that is no longer an issue.
@SeverityOne7 ай бұрын
Smoking is anything but accepted or a way of life. Lots of people do it, but don't pretend that you can smoke anywhere you like.
@Just_another_Euro_dude7 ай бұрын
@@krh007 Smoking is accepted? 😂😂😂😂😂😂 Now i am seriously starting to doubt you ever been in Europe.
@wanneske19697 ай бұрын
Europe is not a country but a continent with lots of different countries with different habits. I've never been to Italy but I can tell you smoking in Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany is discouraged a lot since a long time. In Germany you might find pubs where you can smoke inside, but they are very rare. In Belgium, if you smoke outside on a 'terrace' of a pub or restaurant, you might get on some peoples nerves although it's allowed.
@ivettemartinez-sx9hq7 ай бұрын
We have traveled to many, many places in Europe and while we LOVED France, I will say, be prepared for people smoking EVERYWHERE, the worst part being when your having breakfast, lunch or dinner, is the cigarette smoke practically in your face, for me cigarette smoke gives me a headache and even if you were not seated next to a smoker, the wind would blow it towards your face.
@wanneske19697 ай бұрын
@@ivettemartinez-sx9hq I've never been in Spain or Italy, but I guess in the mediteranean countries it's still allowed, contrary to the northern parts of Europe ?
@enricofromm49947 ай бұрын
In Italia si può fumare solo all'esterno (aria aperta). Mai nei bar, ristoranti, supermarket, negozi, centri commerciali, musei, cinema, ecc. E questo da molti anni. Quanto al fatto che l'Europa non è uno stato ma un continente con molti stati e culture, agli americani lo puoi ripetere per migliaia di volte ma non lo riusciranno a comprendere mai.
@gizmo92907 ай бұрын
@@wanneske1969 It's not, if the country is part of EU. But in countries that are not and don't have some special agreements with EU, like Island, Lichtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland, you can still smoke in restaurants and other similar places.
@SeverityOne7 ай бұрын
@@wanneske1969 In fact, the Netherlands was one of the last countries to ban smoking in bars and restaurants, when it had been banned for ages in Italy. It's very simple: nowhere in the European Union are you allowed to smoke indoors in bars, restaurants or clubs. Many, if not most, hotels are smoke-free, too. You can still smoke outside on a terrace, but my perception is that this is becoming less accepted as well.
@Xalinai7 ай бұрын
In Germany, some cafés and restaurants that are open over the weekend close on monday and even tuesdays.
@Equilibrium297 ай бұрын
I used to live in Hamburg Germany. I know about nudist parks. The entire family is nude and sunbathe at the lake in the park. The only people who gawked were the tourists (and ME, when I just moved there!!! Hahaha)
@annadawson53257 ай бұрын
It’s a good bet you would be asked to cover up in Canada( unless it is a designated nude beach/ pool), and by law you have to wear proper swimming attire in any public pool ( inside or outside). If you refuse where it is not a designated nude beach/ pool, you might find yourself at least talking to the police about it. There is no telling someone else to “get over it” if someone tries to go nude in a public pool/ beach.
@Equilibrium297 ай бұрын
@annadawson5325 This was a designated area, even within that park. Also, there are lots of public indoor pools in Germany. They just passed a law recently that women can be topless at the tanning area.
@abushfield717 ай бұрын
When booking a hotel room in Europe the difference in having an actual AC and not is if the hotel says their AC is climate controlled or not. Climate controlled = No thermostat in the room. Air conditioning = yes. Most hotels will also provide you with a standing fan when requested at climate controlled ones.
@The_Red_Squirrel7 ай бұрын
Obviously, the existence or otherwise of air conditioning depends on where you are travelling in Europe. It is not common in Ireland or the United Kingdom where the climate is temperate. Southern Europe is different where air conditioning in summer is needed but don't expect it everywhere as air conditioning was not common in houses up until about 30 years ago.
@akyhne7 ай бұрын
That's weird, because in cars, it's the other way around. And yeah, most cars in Europe have A/C. A/C in a European car is just a dummy slider and can only heat. It has no temperature sensor. Climate control, on the other hand, can set a defined temperature for each seat, and both heats and cools, depending on demand. It's basically a precise HVAC system.
@adiuntesserande68937 ай бұрын
In the US, climate controlled means that it *has* A/C.
@veeahr16727 ай бұрын
My train was cancelled five minutes before leaving (thanks Deutsche Bahn). That means I arrived in my hotel at 8 p.m. (four hours later than expected). Turns out the hotel closes at 6 on Sundays and the front desk guy was mad I was late!! They sent me a message to the hotel app, but I had no internet so I had no idea they would leave the key in a locker box by the door. I was lucky to still find him otherwise I'd have spent the night on the street.
@gizmo92907 ай бұрын
The truth about traveling is you should have an Internet access abroad. You should take care of it even before you start your travel. When I don't have it (in Japan mostly, because I teavel enough through Europe to use international plan for my phone all the time, but it does not work in most of Asian countries), I try to find the nearest chain restaurant like McDonalds, Burger King or Starbucks, where free WiFi is very common. But it's you who should care abou being on time - when you book your hotel, you should check the time range of check-in, and keep it in mind. I'm not suprised that the front desk guy was angry, I'm shocked that he was still there.
@veeahr16727 ай бұрын
@@gizmo9290 That was my first day in Germany. Good luck trying to find an open store on Sunday evening. After he finally calmed down he told me he was still waiting for other people who hadn't arrived. We eventually learned that day the whole train system collapsed and it was chaos. Still, I'm shocked there's hotels with no front desk people 24/7
@gizmo92907 ай бұрын
@@veeahr1672 Not an open store, but an open chain restaurant. Usually there is some at the main train station or in the city center. If it's a big city at least. Well, we learn all the time - now you know that not all hotels' front desk is open all day long. It's good experience, especially that you were lucky that first time, you didn't have to sleep outside.
@SeverityOne7 ай бұрын
Let's see: 1) Your train was cancelled. 2) You didn't have internet access. The mistake you made is that you travelled to Germany. 😃 Seriously, though, I don't know what it is with Germans and their infrastructure, but it is really far less efficient or available than in pretty much any of their neighbouring countries. The Dutch have the busiest rail network in Europe, and manage 95% punctuality (where 'punctuality' is defined as 'no more than five minutes late'). The Swiss have a whopping 98% punctuality. The Germans... er... let's just say it's less than that. Black spots in their mobile network is another problem. Most of Europe is covered by 4G or 5G, but Germany has many areas with reception that is patchy at best. You're calling somebody who's on the move, and the connection just goes. Finally, it's impossible to drive for more than a certain distance over the Autobahn without running into a 'Baustelle', where they are working on the road. No other country in Europe has so many spots where they're doing road maintenance. Not in neighbouring Netherlands, which has the best roads in Europe. Many non-Europeans think of Germany as very efficient, but this is not the case. They pride themselves on 'Gründlichkeit', which translates to thoroughness. And I'll give them that. But if you want efficiency, look to their neighbours.
@Miss_AnitaB7 ай бұрын
My son,husband and myself will be in Turkey in August and in Batumi,Georgia in September. Could someone tell me what rules to follow and what is the norm there too? How safe are either local in comparison to the States? Thank you for answering my question.
@ganymeade51516 ай бұрын
In England, there are a lot of pubs where people go to drink beer. There is a lot of smoking in France and Eastern Europe. There is a lot of wine drinking in France. In France, Germany, Sweden, Iceland, Italy, Czech countries there is nude bathing and nude sun bathing, sometimes on lunch hours, and not confined to beaches. In Sweden, there is nude hiking and bathing. Nudity is acceptable and not a big deal in many places in Western Europe.
@life.with.sabine5 ай бұрын
Regarding smoking. In the Netherlands we are actively trying to get a generation that grows up without smoking.
@thany37 ай бұрын
As a European, it surprises me in return, that these things might be surpirsing to Americans.
@isaacredondela48867 ай бұрын
nudism is healthy and should be natural everywhere!
@BoggWeasel7 ай бұрын
As a Brit who has lived here in the USA for over 30 years, I'm still non plussed and astonished at how childishly prudish the attitude is regarding sexuality and the naked body. On TV there are various shows with graphic depictions of body parts being blown apart, shot to death, hacked to bits, stabbed and generally mangled with accompanied gore in some violent act or another. That's entertainment. but show a pair of breasts? OMG!!!! The outrage, how dare they? Morally bankrupt, blah blah blah. It's odd....
@eleveneleven5727 ай бұрын
And they have cornered the world market in porn of the worst kind.
@BoggWeasel7 ай бұрын
@@eleveneleven572 Maybe the ease of access to it, but as far as cornering the market, don't think so. Seems every country has it's own home grown porn industry, each with it's own stars and major players, Japan and Germany are major players that even have "Meet the stars and producers", conventions. Porn is also an entirely different platform of basic human sexuality without the nuances of romance, feelings or loving empathy.
@user123-x2r7 ай бұрын
In New Zealand some shops are open 24 hours - the dual toilet flush is very common as is it used to conserve water There is no smoking in any building Must admit our water is generally free and very clean
@meindepp19387 ай бұрын
The waiters salaries are include in the price this is why you have to pay for water
@UncleHo54 ай бұрын
The toilet you showed at the beginning is not used anymore for years. They were designed to work with high positioned water basin. Since nowadays we have basins located at the back on the toilet seat, there is another design. So is not really exact what to said. Maybe in the old houses there is chance to find such a seat. Personally my toilets at home are with the water basins are hidden behind the wall.
@ganymeade51516 ай бұрын
Smart advice. More affordable than major international carriers.
@dzonikg7 ай бұрын
We have nude beach in middle off the city like last 60 year witch is like half km long and walking and bicycle path run just next to it ,there are naked people just 1 meter from you waking or biking.Before like 15 years and more it was like crazy becase there were multiply cafes,familtyes would sit there and naked people would just walk around and sit in same caffes and no one gived a f. Was witness so many weird situation when just next to me high school girls recognise their professor from school naked and they were chating with him about school while he was totaly naked . In last 10-15 year they removed that cafes and put on some parts fence so now is more "family friendly" but also now are much older people practicing it then before
@Humpelstilzchen7 ай бұрын
The poop shelf isn't very common anymore. Our last one we had was till 2000 maybe 😅
@fanvonvielem7737 ай бұрын
I'm surprised by so many outer-continentals mentioning them as well. I'm German, have grown up here and can't remember a single toilet I've sat on over the last decade that fits that describtion. They're definitely not normal... Where do they find these? lol
@micheleedwin40047 ай бұрын
I disagree with you. Just back from Vienna where the biggest hospital had loads of toilets with shelves. My husband was in there for 9 days. Good if they need samples.
@juliebrooke60997 ай бұрын
You can sometimes find them in UK hospital wards where they are treating a lot of patients with bowel conditions-useful for keeping an eye on how recovery is going.
@fred61327 ай бұрын
Excellent episode….oh, there is so much to learn!
@vidright7 ай бұрын
Nudity? Calm down. Not all nations are as prudish as the US.
@Polecat1017 ай бұрын
England /UK or whatever the heck it's called 💀
@framegote51527 ай бұрын
@@Polecat101 Even here you can be a bit more thoughtful of what you write! Educate yourself before you splash out something.
@Polecat1017 ай бұрын
@@framegote5152 got it Pops but ZI am ( 74 )
@tomaseire7 ай бұрын
Prudish? Yeah, we are not all Anglo-Saxons!
@ganymeade51516 ай бұрын
Unlike America, not all places equate nudity with impropriety, shame, or sex. The Puritan Ethic is still strong in America.
@Orwellian-Purple-Grapes-19847 ай бұрын
Those straight up handrails and no elevator buildings are usually the older ones. Historically people were much more fit, so they had no problems at all climbing those stairs even with a suitcase full of travel ware in hand.
@robinbrook56246 ай бұрын
I remember my first night in Europe (2004). I was in Amsterdam and the TV commercials for phone sex were very graphic to say the least! It didn't take on that trip to figure out we (Americans) are very Victorian in comparison to our counter parts on the other side of the pond.
@tapestry64557 ай бұрын
I have a toilet with 2 buttons not unusual. I remember attendants in department stores. Things are just different certainly not shocking!
@jorgedelpino78567 ай бұрын
If you have to pay for the flush water, why not to use the minimum amount?
@BirgitMöller-Hoffmann7 ай бұрын
Wo finden unsere gerngesehenen Gäste aus aller Welt nur immer die Flachspüler-Toiletten? Ich glaube, ich habe seit 30 Jahren keine mehr gesehen 😂
@eleveneleven5727 ай бұрын
Nudity ! Some years ago I was skiing in Kitzbühel, Austria. After one days skiing I decided upon a sauna in the hotel leisure suite. I stripped off and put my Speedos on. I showered and stepped in the sauna and it was full of naked men and women. I felt awkward but decided on a British stiff upper lip so when I went for a cool shower I took my Speedos off. I then found myself in a communal shower with two naked, and gorgeous, blond women. No one batted an eyelid. I returned to the sauna naked and settled in. 👍 Next day I finished skiing early and wanted another sauna. I went into the locker room, stripped naked and walked into the main area towards the sauna. It was full of Americans. There was a kind of mass panic as they grabbed their towels and ran out of the place Result ! 😂
@DrVVVinK6 ай бұрын
I would have told someone who worked at the hotel that they had suits on. They then would have been told to remove them or leave. Many saunas have signs that read "textile free", but many Americans don't know what textiles are.
@AbigailGerlach-zt1sh7 ай бұрын
European windows? No screens! Sleep with every insect that flies by your window! A lot of European cities often have early closing one day a week. Are we obese because we all quit smoking? Our shock about nudity is because the USA is a puritan country. Hold your purse in front of your body which blocks the view!
@tytn99787 ай бұрын
Oh, the older women in the toilets ... that shocked me when I was a teenager on my first "visit" to Germany! It really is challenging to do what you went in there to do knowing that you are being watched!
@jhonyermo7 ай бұрын
Horse hocky. Those professional women have much more to do that look goofy little you.
@robertarisz84647 ай бұрын
Good video - pretty much captured all the big points. Glad there are plenty of small freak factors - would not want to take the fun out of travelling.
@TiaraAyim27 ай бұрын
In Poland cigarettes in public closed spaces are banned. There are some rooms for smokers. And no nudity here. I'm glad for both😄
@loraontheroad7 ай бұрын
About the nudity…might be “allowed”/tolerated in Germany on public places, doesn’t make it allowed in places like South-Eastern and Eastern Europe (.not counting being topless in this). 1st floor is the same as in the USA in South-Eastern Europe, while in Northern and Western Europe it is as you mentioned in your video.