People just walk onto public transportation, you don't stop by the driver to buy a ticket. There is no check at the door, you are expected to have your ticket in order. This is a random check.
@BizzyX788 ай бұрын
----- @trulybtd5396 ----- - I guess that depends on which bus you travel by. I've never used any app when riding on the Express bus, must be some kind of local bus thing. It's been a while since I travel by bus locally. And for trains or trams, there's the ticket dispenser where you buy tickets before boarding. -----
@siljeuglenes97898 ай бұрын
This depends on where you are, in the cities this is defenitly true, but in rural areas the bus driver will check your ticket.
@ditchcomfort8 ай бұрын
I always use or used to use an app for our public transportation. It’s so easy, and actually cheaper too.
@KjetilBalstad8 ай бұрын
@@BizzyX78 It depends on which company operates the busses. In the larger cities you typically buy tickets digitally, and often you can just swap between subways and busses as you like with this ticket. I live a little outside the city, but while you can pay with money on the bus, most people uses an app on the phone. These apps also works like GPS navigation as well, so you just plot in where you want to go and when you want to arrive, and it will tell you when you have to leave your home, how far you have to go to the bus stop, when the bus arrives, where and when you have to swap busses or transfer to the subway or what ever, or when you arrive at your destination.
@randihelenehansen41698 ай бұрын
I bay ticket online. We can bebvontrolled by a guard. I then can show that I have receipt for the Ticket on my mobil
@the_oslovian8 ай бұрын
Norway in July is heaven on earth. That's what gets us through the winter.
@DivineFalcon8 ай бұрын
The day of summer is the best.
@rhyacinthlevrini6577Ай бұрын
I was in Tromsø, Norway (which is 200 miles North of the Arctic Circle) in July/August 2023 when the Midnight Sun is up for 24 hours! The average temperature was low to mid 80sF, even at Midnight! Everything from sea level to approximately 300 ft above sea level is lush and green and a profusion of flowers.
@jarls58908 ай бұрын
The smaller ploughs are used for smaller roads. Also - they can plough the sidewalks. Larger ploughs are used for the larger ploughs. We have them in all sizes - including the largest in the world used for the Oslo airport.
@5Gburn8 ай бұрын
6:08 Tyler they DO give you a special certificate if you swim in the Arctic Ocean without an insulated suit. It's called a "d e a t h certificate." 😂
@camillalukkari7218 ай бұрын
Woopsi😅
@liselotte32818 ай бұрын
No, it's called citizenship 😂
@pathian07Ай бұрын
11:09 Yes, driving for multiple hours, and walking long distances for eating a sandwich on top of the mountain is accurate. I have done that multiple times, but obviously I can't forget to eat the Kvik Lunsj.
@LEV-r1qАй бұрын
POV hytte tur
@ApolloDeLaCruzieАй бұрын
As a norwegian, me and my family usually go hiking once a week. Usually we go to the mountains, and when we get to the top we usually eat "kvikklunsj" (which is like kitkats, but better) and drink cocoa. Then we just go home. sorry if my grammar and spelling is bad!!
@trulybtd53968 ай бұрын
Landslides most commonly happen where there is a layer of clay under the soil, and if the clay gets too wet and/or agitated it liquefies to a level where it starts sliding, everything on top of it starting to move, and from there it cascades.
@Luredreier8 ай бұрын
That's a quick clay slide in my book, not a landslide. With landslide I'm thinking oversaturated Earth.
@Kjottkakerihvitsaus8 ай бұрын
Im pretty sure that first landslide isn't in Norway based on the houses.
@zarahandrahilde95548 ай бұрын
a major contributor lately being climate changes. Landslides are more likely now than in the past.
@SpacesOnAChessBoard7 ай бұрын
This just reminds me of the mountain in Geiranger that will destroy the whole city. We even made a whole movie about that called “Bølgen” and its very good for Norwegian film making standards
@brevika892 ай бұрын
@@Kjottkakerihvitsaus agree
@PhilipSebastianLandeNord8 ай бұрын
11:20, ticket inspection is indeed common and if you don't pay the 2 dollar ticket even for a 2 minute ride and one of those guys comes up, you'll get a fine for more than 100 dollars. They also stereotypically pops up out of nowhere and starts scanning tickets as you saw at the start of it hahah.
@ditchcomfort8 ай бұрын
Yes those fines are some wild shit 😂 Although we don’t have a lot of them anymore more where I travel in particular, so that’s awesome.
@lessthanevil8 ай бұрын
I took public transport nearly every day for three years while living in Bergen, most often a bus, but sometimes Bybanen and I think I saw a ticket inspector once (On Bybanen of course). I probably spent 1500 dollars on tickets, so it would be cheaper if I just got caught that one time the inspector was onboard.
@yngve66402 ай бұрын
The Norway in July video is up mid to north. When balancing at the end, it's night time and you can see how beautiful the sky and light is.
@Luredreier8 ай бұрын
1:29 Because that's not a road, but a pedestrian walkway, so you need something small for them.
@oxyaction8 ай бұрын
It's special to hear an us citizen say "this never happens in the US", when as a foreigner I have seen landslides in USA many times on the news. San Bernadino, Lake Tahoe, Utah, Wyoming, etc. Ppl attach ploughs to their ATV's in the US too. The ticket inspection is just every so often to keep ppl on the alert that they need to buy a ticket.
@LoisReynolds-s2vАй бұрын
You got to understand Tyler Does NOT Leave His Little Room So he Does’nt know Anybetter Ha!!
@denisspratt9268 ай бұрын
The first one with the snowplow ATV is for getting the snow away from the sidewalk.
@ritzz18 ай бұрын
@tyler
@snorrirasch91936 ай бұрын
Kommer du fra Norge
@denisspratt9266 ай бұрын
@@snorrirasch9193 ja
@SnorreSivertsen-ju5of3 ай бұрын
In the sandwich one you mostly don't have to drive that far at the most an hour unless you want to go on a specific mountain. And you can bump up the 4 miles to like 6
@Llewkcor8 ай бұрын
19:09 Those sharp mountains are typical of Lofoten in northern Norway. This exacy picture is taken on a tiny island called Lille Toppøya, exactly at this location: 67.942873, 13.119552
@jannemarie7 ай бұрын
During the ice age, this area of the world was covered in ice - and a lot of Norway was also sitting much lower than today, way under sea level. When the ice melted and the land literally rose higher, a lot of marine clay was left behind. Marine clay is stable, because the salt binds the clay. But over time, this salt eroded away naturally, so the clay masses changed into something very unstable called quick clay. There's a lot of this kind of clay left behind all over Norway (and other areas of Scandinavia). It stays somewhat stable as long as it's not disturbed, but if an area with a lot of quick clay gets overloaded by buildings, machines or land masses, is disturbed by vibrations of i.e. human activity or even if a lot of rainfall or wet snow comes at once, it can collapse the structure of the clay like a house of cards and it transforms into almost liquid state. In Norwegian history, there's been quite a few large and catastrophic landslides because of quick clay, so in order to build something in Norway in modern times, there's a lot of strict rules about geological surveys and investigations that one has to adhere to, as well as securing unstable masses. But even today, it doesn't always prevent things like this from happening. In 2020 there was a large quick-clay induced landslide in a residential neighborhood called Gjerdrum, a little northeast of Oslo. It happened in the middle of the night on December 30th, a point of time where a lot of people were at home for Christmas/New Years and asleep in their beds, so it ended in an enormous tragedy.
@Dicorn228 ай бұрын
People walk on and off pucblic transportation freely, it's the trust system we have. But they do random ticked inspection sometimes, this is what's shown in the video.
@pathian07Ай бұрын
12:31 Yes, ticket inspection is really normal. You often buy your ticket online, and on the train there is no way to show that you have actually purchased the ticket. So we have ticket inspectors, on every collective transportaition. They only come every now and then though, not every ride. We know there might be a chance of ticket inspection, so we know we have to buy a ticket.
@beritmagdalenajohannekuly29804 ай бұрын
I love June and July , we have incredible beautiful nature, and it is healing , your stress levels go down because of the beautiful peaceful surroundings.
@chrisreinert99818 ай бұрын
I think the point of the waterfall/instagram sequence is that the "instagram" photo is the same as what you see when you are there. Those sleds with steering wheels are called "rattkjelke" (steering wheel sled). We had them when I was a kid in Norway and used the to sled down a viking grave situated in the king's farm Skaugum.
@ahkkariq74068 ай бұрын
When I was a kid in the 70's some of the kids had real "steering wheel sleds" with steel runners. They went like a bullet on icy roads, and poor him who got in the way and was cut up by the runners. They went out of production, and these came in their place. When they arrived they were called "rattakebrett"/steering wheel toboggans.
@X_ch4ng38 ай бұрын
Pretty sure the first landslide is not from Norway, but the second with the houses floating away is.
@liselotte32818 ай бұрын
You are right. The first one is most likely from Italy. The second one is from Alta in northern Norway
@Henoik8 ай бұрын
The smaller snow plows are often used in neighborhood streets (or, like here, on the pavement), as they can be narrower and more difficult for a big snow plow to navigate in
@TomKirkemo-l5c5 ай бұрын
Much of Norway have this clay layer, enough rain an some vibration (from some kind of machine or something) and the clay turns into what we call "kvikkleire". And yes, it turbs into a "liquid".
@belinajewel8 ай бұрын
All the months all year are my most favorite, winter storms, dark and early nights makes the springtime so welcome, summer, bathing in lakes, rivers and oceans, long beach walks and how summer shifts into a moody autumn with falling leaves, the anticipation during the long winter. The rapid shifts between seasons and our unpredictable weather, it’s lovely❤
@andrethesergal19778 ай бұрын
1:00 two ATVs plowing the sidewalk, because a normal snowplow would be too big to fit in some spots, and could possibly hurt someone already using the sidewalk
@Mother_nature198 ай бұрын
17:45 the joke is that you expect to be alone in those pictures and videos, but in reality, there are tons of people on the ferry
@jeschinstad8 ай бұрын
Floating in a nautic survival suit is an amazing experience. First time I've heard of it being a tourist attraction though, but that's a smart idea.
@Henoik8 ай бұрын
As for the ticket inspections: Unlike in the US, where you have the ticket inspection pre-boarding the public transportation (either a guy/the bus driver checking your ticket, or turnstiles), in Norway you are free to just walk on the bus or train without any checkpoints. The public transport companies have plain-clothes people walking around to check if people have actually paid for their ticket on like 20% of the bus rides...
@arnehusby14208 ай бұрын
My son and his wife are ice bathers. They saw holes in the ice on the coldest days in winter. Sit for a while in a Sauna until they get really warm. Then they jump into the icy sea, swim a bit and go back to the Sauna. They did this in a bathing suit in January! Crazy, but they say it's healthy.
@EnfoplaysАй бұрын
8:49 those are called akebrett or rattkjelke
@zaph1rax8 ай бұрын
Ticket inspection is just to make sure nobody cheated at the automated systems. They don't check everyone at all times.
@NeroNORirl8 ай бұрын
Landslides happen due to soft and wet clay under the soil and steep terrain. It's very dangures, everything in it's path will be shredded. We also got rockslides, often where the mountains are vertical and softer than other areas. We even got a few towns that are expected to perish due to tsunami waves from rock slides that have not happen yet.
@Sinbway2 ай бұрын
On the train ride you get to see a famous waterfall with oprah and a woman singing and I think you can either walk, bicycle or drive down a road or take a really long zip line and then walk to a train and on the way to the train you can meet goats and some of them followed us pretty far and there was one standing in side of a cave in the dark like a statue so that was creepy but the train takes you to the other train and that’s the one
@EleonoreWang5 ай бұрын
We have an App to buy tickets and we do have ticket inspections and if you get caught without ticket - you have to pay a fine of about 100 USD.
@HarlsFavFan1Ай бұрын
1:25 we do have huge tracktors like this😊
@espekelu34608 ай бұрын
The first film is two on ATVs removing snow from pavements. Film two is NOT in Norway, but in Switzerland. The third film is from central Norway three years ago. Typically loans who want to learn Norwegian (hehehee) Then you see Norwegians testing survival suits. You mention here that you should have received an award if you swam without a suit, and you can do that in Svalbard. Then you become a lifetime member of the Polarbear club. Can tell you that the cabin with a hot tub costs a small fortune to live in. You will find sled hills in several places in Norway in winter, and no, there are no wheels on these, but skis underneath of course. Oh yes, it probably happens that Norwegians actually drive for a few hours and then go up to a mountain top to eat. And yes, ticket inspectors sometimes appear on either the subway or the Trikken in Oslo. And if you don't have a ticket, it can cost you 150 dollars in fines. And the next shows a Norwegian fishing boat in big waves. And these are real photos. Oh yeah, we actually have Northern Europe's most beautiful railway in Western Norway. And Tayler, you have to check what AM-Track has in terms of grids in the USA. Also the craziest thing you can do in Norway, get into an inflatable boat and sail down a mountainside, without steering, it's only the edges of the track that keep you where you need to be. So the typical boat trip in one of the beautiful fjords we have .July is the month Norway is at its most beautiful, many say, but winter in Norway is also beautiful, but then it is cold, and it can get really cold, but everyone is welcome at any time of the year!
@Aremeriel8 ай бұрын
The third film, the second land slide (actually a quick clay slide), is from Alta June 2020.
@rusynlig18 ай бұрын
When the clay under the soil is exposed to a lot of rain over a short period of time, the natural salt in the clay can be washed out, which can lead to water-like quick clay, much like quicksand. The result - landslide!! This rarely happened in the past, but in recent years this has become more common...
@Yngve-v3x8 ай бұрын
I you're planing a trip to norway, come in the midle of may. Spring is the best time, and you get to be her for the 17 of may
@John_19208 ай бұрын
12:30 This is rare, but normal. This is done randomly by security personnel to make sure all the passengers have paid for their fare. They go around scanning all the bus passes or tickets, and handing out fines to anyone that don't have a bus pass or valid ticket.
@pegasus2105638 ай бұрын
At 5:00 they are using Norwegian developed survival suits in the ice water, this is now a normal thing to have on board boats in Norway, just as it is normal in most counties to were a life west when going to sea. With this suit, you can easaly survive and keep relative warm for up to 4-5 hours in the cold winter waters of norway.
@ingvild71497 күн бұрын
The landslide with the houses happened close to my city, even closer to our cabin in 2020. It’s quick clay
@tordlindgren21238 ай бұрын
You got deposits of clay many places in norway. Basically the scandinavian peninsula got pressed down by the ice front of the ice age, allowing sea water and sediments in the water to settle where there is now land. when heavy rain comes it softens the clay, and if there's enough weight you got a landslide. It can also happen if there's enough rain and not enough roots from vegetation that holds the dirt in a hill. You also got rock-slides, which usually happens in spring. More or less water gets into cracks, then freeze and expand. When the ice starts melting the rock don't always got enough stuff holding it up. Also the sandwich on top a mountain thing is very much real. You've probably walked for 8 hours and is now sitting there with the view, preparing to turn around and walk back down.
@NetherNavigators_Fun8 ай бұрын
3:26 A landslide is a mass movement of material, such as rock, earth or debris, down a slope. They can happen suddenly or more slowly over long periods of time. When the force of gravity acting on a slope exceeds the resisting forces of a slope, the slope will fail and a landslide occurs.
@John_19208 ай бұрын
03:26 I'm not a professional, so the following may be wrong. That being said, I think I remember having heard reports about this sort of thing happening because of bad planning when choosing a location for building several houses or buildings, in that they either didn't put in money for land analyzing prior to building to make sure that the land they plan to build on - as well as the immediate surrounding land - is stable and won't become unstable somewhere down the line. A lot of places in Norway - especially mountainous regions, - are prone to heavy rains that wreak havoc on the surrounding ground, making dirt into mud, if not even creating a swamp area, several times a year. Other factors that need to be taken into consideration is whether there are rivers or streams or any other areas with running water, as some of these may have periods of overflowing. Then there's the trees and mountains themselves, how old are the trees, how fast does the wind blow and how often, is the ground slowly becoming unable to hold their weight, has the area a history of land/rockfalls, how often. Going back to the river portion, if there is a river, you also have to find out if there is a chance that a new channel may be created naturally, as a new channel could end up going right into the building area. There's also the chance that the land had been analyzed and deemed rightfully safe for building on, only for that area to much later end up experiencing an unnatural long and heavy duration of rain, which could then cause the land to become unstable whereas before it was safe and stable.
@yngve66402 ай бұрын
The landslides in Norway is because of clay layer areas under the top soil layer becomes liquidised from pressure, much rain, movement or earthshakes, machines making vibrations etc. This can happen in steep places, and almost flat areas. The clay is from the last iceage, where the land has raised up to 200 meters from loosing the weight of the ice, and because of this is the clay slowly loosing salt and mineral contents to where it can become unstable. We call it "kvikk leire" (quick clay)
@SpacesOnAChessBoard7 ай бұрын
11:00 -Be Norwegian -Go on long hike up local big mountain -get on top of mountain -Look at view while eating kviklunsj (Norwegian KitKat(So much better than freedom chocolate))
@jeschinstad8 ай бұрын
I think the joke in the Instagram clip is that social media exaggerates all beauty, except Norway, which is exactly as beautiful as it looks in photos.
@johankaewberg816217 күн бұрын
Land slide: Steep incline. Soil. meltwater. Happens quite often. And yes, houses can be swept away
@NetherNavigators_Fun8 ай бұрын
7:28 Bardu Huskylodge is a beatiful lodge in norway
@microwar8 ай бұрын
Last video i get the feeling it's in the middel of the night, but not as far north as i'm living. Also my birthday is 8 og july, so kinda my favorite month. Here in Bodø we have 3 months of 24/7 sunlight now.
@AlexWalker_Ghost8 ай бұрын
10:54 i walk 7 hours just to sit and look out the fjords and eat a meal and drink :D watching Raindears and Moose's Walk around and all kinds of birds and eagles, its nice :) just dont do it during summer time, when you runn out of drink and no clear water nearby, or food haha, always bring a snack or two and loads of drinks during summer :)
@FrankShortt8 ай бұрын
We only have tickets on an app They dont normally come around, just spot checks now and then
@kristianlarsen35438 ай бұрын
"You cannot convince me that Norway is not a Fairytale country." ..... Where do the stories come from, I wonder..!
@norwegiangadgetman8 ай бұрын
That's a clay landslide. The clay is old, sandy sea bottom that has turned into clay, and as it loses salt ions, it can become unstable. This can happen up to an altitude of 200 meters over sea level here in Norway because that's how much the country rose after the last ice age. This can happen in any country that was covered by that ice. In a few centuries all the salt will have been leached out and the clay should be stable. The suits they use to float is survival suits used on commercial fishing boats. Yes, but we don't hike 4miles, not US miles, at least. If it doesn't take 2 Hours to get up the mountain, why bother? In some areas you have to scan when entering. In other areas they don't have time to do that, so have periodic inspections. The North Sea is one of the most dangerous areas in the world, and for good reason. Flåmbanen is something you REALLY need to experience. Trust me. That train is really only for tourist use. Sledding on a raft isn't all that insane.
@paulgudedeberitz23357 ай бұрын
The random ticket control on public transport is a normal thing. You normally buy your ride with an app on your phone. If you don't have a valid ticket you get a small fine. You need to come to see the mountains and fjords in high summer June and July. Rainbows are quite common in summer, and aurora borealis / northern lights are awesome during the winter and spring. We do have good outdoors activities, and near where I live in Oslo you can sled down the hill on the 1952 Olympic bobsleigh track and take and take the subway back up again. Great fun in the wintertime! Sidewalks, small roads and bike lanes are usually plowed with tractors, but I guess ATVs can be used too. Main roads are cleared using big trucks.
@mortenvinje18172 ай бұрын
Yes, the food culture is very much alive here, along with hiking and enjoying the wild. Plentiful here - all of it😊
@anushkasekkingstad1300Ай бұрын
Smaller ploughs are ideal for clearing pavements of snow, where large trucks would cause damage.
@fredmidtgaard54878 ай бұрын
The landslide may occur where there are different types of sediments, particularly if one layer is marine containing salt. Then the soil slides easily. I have never done most of the activities you show. But cross-country skiing is nice. July is the common holiday month. The best thing you can do in the summer is walk from cabin to cabin in the mountains. The cabins are some 20km apart, perfect for one day's easy walking in the high mountains. You need to be a member of the Tourist Organization to use the cabins. It is cheap.
@NetherNavigators_Fun8 ай бұрын
1:22 we do have bigger snow trucks they do it becuse the probely just want to and its fun
@kilipaki87oritahiti8 ай бұрын
The 1st land slide video isn’t from Norway, right, as I’m sure those are not Norwegian style houses, yet the 2nd one clearly is as not only do I recognize the video, but also the area and type/style of houses. And yes landslides is a real problem which can be triggered by a lot of things, but especially due to Norway being mountainous. These past few years mudslides due to quick sand/quick clay has done a lot of damage and killed a lot of people. One of the most famous slide accidents happened in my neighboring hometown, Gjerdrum during Xmas.
@irishflink73248 ай бұрын
You do it without a protection you get a headstone
@metteschreinerberge3416Ай бұрын
Some Norwegians are ice bathers. I used to do that for many, many years. I was swimming in the ice cold water, in my bikini, among the ice floes. One cannot be in the water for long. If it feels warm, you have to go out of the water immediately. BUT: When up from the water, when rubbing your body with a towel, well, then you feel more relaxed and warm as you ever can be. You can stand naked in a blizzard and it does not feel cold at all. I miss it !
@beritmagdalenajohannekuly29804 ай бұрын
Yes we have a lot of snow, yes it is normal to have these small sledges, it is reaaaally funny to ride fast downhill 😊
@ngaourapahoe8 ай бұрын
Ticket inspection is performed everywhere in Europe
@charlottenordset3180Күн бұрын
You should check out the Viking Sky Incident, happened right where I live😮
@Rallarberg8 ай бұрын
That first landslide one doesn't sit right with me, looks more souther European than Norwegian, and may or may not have been doctored. For the ticket inspector: For the most part, no one checks your ticket (single or periodical, bought on an app) when you board the bus/train/tram/whatevs. Instead, the transport companies hires security guards to some times have inspections like this, and if you don't have a valid ticket, you are fined quite heavily. Pretty typical throughout Europe.
@adipy89128 ай бұрын
12:38 "please let me know" What's the point? He doesn't read comments anyway!
@painthunder_athome8 ай бұрын
The small snowplows are used to plow sidewalks. The ticket inspecting isn’t something that is done all the time. The inspection is random and only once in a while.
@TheVikingdown8 ай бұрын
Big hello from Norway
@ditchcomfort8 ай бұрын
June, July and August 👌🏻 In my opinion. Although I like winter too.
@ragnarkisten8 ай бұрын
When it refers to landslides in Norway, it really does not look like Norway. Where in Norway is it?
@liselotte32818 ай бұрын
The first one is not from Norway. The second is from Alta, Finnmark in 2020.
@dalitrh7 ай бұрын
12.10 Make sure you have a ticket when travelling in Trondheim! The option can be very expensive! And here they block the whole bus, so no one can get off the bus without showing the ticket!
@Drademdar8 ай бұрын
ATVs with snowplows are not unusual in Norway. They are usually used where a larger vehicle (Tractor/Wheel Loader/Truck) is impractical due to narrow width or too many obstacles. Ticket inspectors are a thing in Norway, although I don't see them particularly often in my part of the country. I can only remember having seen them once, which was earlier this year on a rural route I use frequently. There were three of them, two of whom were apprentices together with an instructor. However, I do not understand the need for inspectors on this route, as you cannot take a seat without the driver approving your ticket first. The chance of being able to sneak here is extremely minimal.
@TheCrazyker8 ай бұрын
So for the atv with snow plow outside the big city's so in smaller cities they pay people who has the equipment for it to move away the snow some use tractors some uses other equipment like atv and cars etc to help keep the road and walkways snow free
@TheCrazyker8 ай бұрын
The landslides are usually caused by clay areas that get to wet and split up making it slide and drag the rest of soil and what's on it away a dangerous and sad thing when It acures
@TheCrazyker8 ай бұрын
Technically the hiking trip is the whole prize but after 9 hrs you do need food so yeah some can maybe belive we like to take the hike to enjoy the meal😂
@TheCrazyker8 ай бұрын
Before trains we used the rivers as transportation for logs and the when trains became a thing we built the tracks to connect the routs for the logs directly to the shores so when the logs and wood materials can ship straight out to the other countries that don't have as much forests Norway was big in the shipment of wood and other materials before oil became the new income
@bjrgringmo189917 күн бұрын
U do get a special certificate for doing the artic bathing without a suit. Its called a death certificate 😂
@84com838 ай бұрын
6:41 You said it looks silly; I say it´s (probably) not cold on the inside and (evidently) red on the outside!
@janfrodeengh59048 ай бұрын
Norway has 1300 registered dialects and each one of these have about 1800 versions of verb and noun conjugation. Some are barely indistinguishable from each other. Some could qualify as a separate language compared to other dialects.
@ErikfromNorway12 күн бұрын
Nowadays you can but your tickets on your smartphone and then just show it to the inspectors !!😊
@robingrtta51028 ай бұрын
Do more tiktoks😁 im suprised the rainfall/ floods in oslo didnt turn up
@kjetiltrondsen82428 ай бұрын
USA have hurricanes, Norway has landslides. Shit happens everywhere, just not the same shit. Norway's mountains is the reason for the landslides, but the mountains also stops hurricanes from making damaged.
@steinarhaugen76178 ай бұрын
The United States has landslides too. Quite often actually. Not long ago, there was a large landslide in California.
@MagdaLena7Ай бұрын
July has some warm days full of biting flies and mosquitos rest is rain. Since there is only some nice days then is better to visit that country for holidays than to live there. I plan to move with my norwegian family to polish mountains.
@norkannen7 ай бұрын
Survival suit for fishermen and workers on oil rigs when needed. The ice water suits.
@sharaith77668 ай бұрын
Smaller ploughs are used alot around here I see in the winter, when ploughing bicycle/walkways and sidewalks, which we have all around town. A very foreign concept for Americans fer sure, where pedestrians and cyclist barely exist😂
@tanteballe4 ай бұрын
I am 70 years old and used public transportation all my life. Never ever been in a single ticket control! So this is very random, dear 🥰
@zx90053 ай бұрын
Landslides can happen when there is an area with much or thick layer that is like clay. When comes much water either from rain or melting snow either the clay slide on water or top layer is sliding on the clay. There is area where the clay mass slide some years back. Many people lost their homes. Never understand why they even build houses there. My Grandfather said that no good ground build houses. Sooner or later will end in tragedy he said. He was right
@cecilierooos3 ай бұрын
The small snow plows is for the sidewalks👍
@John_19208 ай бұрын
04:46 This is only ever necessary - and even then, probably not really - if you plan to be a Norwegian Language Professor or Researcher of some kind. Anyone can make do perfectly well basically just speaking Bokmål in Norway, in fact, some dialects are so close to being perfect Bokmål that they might as well be Bokmål.
@johankaewberg816217 күн бұрын
Ice bath: the floater suit is for tourists. The rest of us, especially Finns do it nude.
@5Gburn8 ай бұрын
12:53 POV: Star Trek when the inertial dampers go offline.
@nettnett638 ай бұрын
and - Norway in july - - filmed at midnight
@cecilierooos3 ай бұрын
The hiking is actually true. But usually bring waffles and Kvikk lunjs chocolate 👍
@FrankShortt8 ай бұрын
Reality vs insta - everyone filming are freezing 😂
@ebbhead208 ай бұрын
You also ping your plastic card at rhe beginning of a journey and at the end. Him coming around has nothing to do with that. Hes not there to see if you use it as intended, he's there to see if you even got one and that its valid.. but now they're throwing everything on the phone so goodbye to all the travel cards finally. One place for many different payments is what ive been on about for years.. And i dont know how much of the world uses it, but its common enough i think.
@viseneri28 күн бұрын
If you do this without the suit you certainly get a spesial certificate, - a death certificate!!!
@elinkjlseth43478 ай бұрын
What is the reason for your obsession with Norway? Just curious, and I like your videos. Do you have a connection to Norway? Greetings from Oslo Rock City🇳🇴🇺🇸
@84com838 ай бұрын
7.05 "The coolest bathtub"? - I assume it is hot enough!
@KjetilBalstad8 ай бұрын
It depends on which company operates the busses, but n the larger cities you typically buy tickets digitally, and often you can just swap between subways and busses as you like with this ticket. I live a little outside the city, but while you can pay with money on the bus, most people uses an app on the phone. These apps also works like GPS navigation as well, so you just plot in where you want to go and when you want to arrive, and it will tell you when you have to leave your home, how far you have to go to the bus stop, when the bus arrives, where and when you have to swap busses or transfer to the subway or what ever, or when you arrive at your destination. On the larger city busses you often can't even access the driver, and there are no where to buy tickets or scan anything, same whit the subway. You just walk onto the transportation you want to use you are expected to have a ticket ready and show this at random inspections.
@mathias82368 ай бұрын
you are def famous in norway now bro
@mikaelmilo8 ай бұрын
Tha ATV was plowing the sidewalk 😉
@leoalextk8 ай бұрын
the first video, We do have huge snowplow, i think that these guys are doing it cause they can and want to be nice to the community
@cecilieklaunes36268 ай бұрын
Favourite month for me is May, June, July, August, September, December