Hallo Montana, schön dich zu sehen und zu hören. Es freut mich, dass ihr beiden eine gute Zeit in Deutschland hattet. Dein Freund hatte sicherlich einen guten Guide. 😀 Tschüss
I am from Germany but in CA for some 30 years, your videos always bring back forgotten memories about all kinds of things! I'm glad those things still exist. And that most delicious piece of meat on the planet with an x? That's a Haxn and it's one of the best things on the planet, should be on the Bavarian flag ;-)
Schön, Dich mal wieder zu sehen, Montana! Flüge sind selbst jetzt brutal teuer (mein Bruder kommt in ein paar Wochen). Hauptsache, Du kommst im Studium gut voran. Gruß aus Tangstedt!
Always funny when Non-Germans call pizza or toast "bread". For a German this isn't bread. Even 90 percent of the stuff in bakeries (like Brezel, Brötchen, Nussschnecke) isn't bread. Bread is really just this big piece that you have to cut first.
So isses :-) Supermarktbrot ist zwar schon mal besser als das üble Matschbrot, wie man es in den USA oder auch z.B. in Holland bekommt, aber immer noch "schlechtes" Brot, vor allem auf dem Land. Brot kauft man am besten beim Bäcker oder man backt es, weil leider auch bei uns die klassischen Bäcker nach und nach wegsterben, selbst. Mein "busy people bread" dauert vom ersten Mehl in die Schüssel bis raus aus dem Backofen eine Stunde 🙂
Hi Montana, you are talking about how organized German public transport is in comparison to other countries you visited. I think viewers from Germany (like myself) would be interested if you would find some time to make a little video and show us virtually around how public transport works in your area and how it differs from your experience abroad
You can find a lot of those and you will not be disappointed. Even in big cities the public transport network has huge holes. I recently read one of the trains had 24 hours delay. There is a reason behind, why US-citizens use their car.
Please let me give you an example. Back in 2019 I visited Boston and tought it would be good to use puplic transport to come from the Airport to the hotel. I had to leave at the bus stop "Ipswich @ Boylston Str". After some time, the stop was announced suddenly, I was a bit surrprised and hasted out of the bus. I knew that at this stop should be a gas station, but there was no, instead there was a church. I checked it 2-3 times while it was raining, to understand what went wrong. After some research and time I finally got it: on this bus line there are 2 stops having the identical name (spelling and naming order), but there are on different location (by feet they were like 10 min away)... never ever had someting similar in Germany nor somewhere else. That day I understood, why Americans use their cars.
@@quentinmunich9819 Food is always a matter of taste. From German TV, I learnt that people in Texas enjoy to eat fried rattle snakes. I guess I will never eat this.
this was fun and entertaining, thanks btw no idea what "wir suchen dich" means in a dirty way lol greetings from a German exchange student, who stayed in lousiana for one year
The drinking under 21 is funny... until you realize many exchange students have a mixture of having no idea what they can stomach, feel the need to drink as much a possible and german beer not being "light".
Wenn du das nächste mal nach Deutschland kommst musst du Schwäbische oder Badische Küche probieren in Baden Württemberg! Spätzle oder Maultaschen würde ich dir empfehlen! Ein muss für einen Ausländer! Mach weiter mit deinen VIdeos Montana danke dir!
Essen in Deutschland ist schon ziemlich speziell, obwohl das Land im Vergleich zu den USA so klein ist. 1871 bestand Deutschland aus 25 verschiedenen Fürstentümern mit stark unterschiedlichen Dialekten und erheblichen regionalen Unterschieden. So gibt es auch auf unserer kleinen Fläche eine sehr große Vielfalt an unterschiedlichen regionalen Küchen. Die ewige Verkürzung von Deutschland = Bayern ist für mich eher genau umgekehrt. Bayern hat für mich mit "typisch Deutschsein" ziemlich wenig zu tun, sowohl was Sprache, Brauchtum und Küche angeht. G Am Rande: das gilt übrigens auch für die zumindest bei amerikanischen productionmusic-libraries ziemlich verengte Wahrnehmung, wie deutsche Volksmusik klingt. Die klingt nämlich im Allgemeinen ebenfalls nicht so, wie in einem bayrischen Bierzelt...
Was können wir Bayern dafür, daß wir amerikanische Besatzungszone sind und diese ungebildeten Amis nicht fähig sind zu differenzieren, obwohl sie auch in Hessen sind. Für mich ist Köln z. B. fremder als Wien. In Wien hat mir noch nie jemand auf englisch geantwortet, wenn ich was gefragt habe. Es gibt kein typisch deutsch. Deutsch ist die Vielfalt. Die Vielfalt der Dialekte, des Brauchtums und der Küche. Jeder Stamm und die Unterstämme bilden nur einen Teil des Deutschsein ab. Für Italien gilt dasselbe. Für einen Mailänder ist südlich von Rom schon Afrika.
I love how bread must have been a topic of conversation in Germany so much that you even transferred some German errors into your English. "We bought a bread." is such a typical thing a German would say, not knowing that bread, in English, is an uncountable substance noun like air or water. So, "We bought some bread/some pieces of bread" would be correct English.
Yes getting something from the supermarkt is pretty convinient, but even a bakery or a butcher is not that expensive. At my go to bakery near my university a sandwich, a cup of coffee and a small sweet where 5€ pre covid. Might be a bit more now but not much for sure. Your friend definetly had Schweinshaxe mit Sauerkraut. It's a big leg with sour cabbage and while i love it i can understand that it tastes odd the first time. It has a strong natural meat taste, a lot of salt and not sweet at all. ^^ funny that you like german public transport. It's quite a meme how bad the timing of the Deutsche Bahn is compared to german standards and expectations. And german companies make a fortune building the most advanced train systems in the world, the stuff on our rails seems like from a past centuary in comparison. I'm glad you liked germany. You should definetly visit other areas as well. Leipzig, Chemnitz, Dresden do have a destinct east-german vibe. The south, middle and north especially at the coast of "west"germany can be quite different.
Nice and informative as always 😊 The north of Germany is even more different from south and east. If you travel back to Germany next year, you should try the northern region 😊 Are you now back in the USA? Or do you still in spain? And does your community understood it right, that you are a single now?
First, ich love your Videos. Second, 3:28 Schweishaxe Third, 5:20 You know that it is legal to drink beer with 16. And with Our Patents at 14. I know. Thats an typical german comment. 😂
doch, wenn man bedenkt, dass (viele) amis meinen, dass man "ch" als "ck" ausspricht, dann schon... :D gute Werbeagentur hätte das wahrscheinlich bedacht
I love your videos, but after all those years, being and living in Germany a couple of times, you're still come across at the typical American girl. Nothing wrong about it, but I grew up in both cultures, German and American, and it fascinates me how oblivious and "oberflächlich" most Americans are.
Ich finde es nicht gut dass Du unsere Supermärkte auf die Idee bringst die Preise zu erhöhen z.B. von 58 oder 75 ct auf 5 Euro für ein kaltes Kaffeegetränk! … .. . ;-)
Couples break up for so many different reasons. What makes you assume it's that particular one? I'd also say that this is a private matter between Montana and her ex.
super market bread? the worst there is. there are sooo many bakeries where you get much better bread. and fresher. did you get Haxe? h > k. come on! they are looking for you, not for a certain body part.
No normal German buys bread, eggs or even meat in the supermarket! What are bakeries, butchers and farmers for? Well. Maybe city people, they do that, but they're city people, they do other weird things.😂
Hallo Montana, schön dich zu sehen und zu hören. Es freut mich, dass ihr beiden eine gute Zeit in Deutschland hattet. Dein Freund hatte sicherlich einen guten Guide. 😀 Tschüss
I am from Germany but in CA for some 30 years, your videos always bring back forgotten memories about all kinds of things! I'm glad those things still exist. And that most delicious piece of meat on the planet with an x? That's a Haxn and it's one of the best things on the planet, should be on the Bavarian flag ;-)
you keep getting more adorable.💎
Schön, Dich mal wieder zu sehen, Montana! Flüge sind selbst jetzt brutal teuer (mein Bruder kommt in ein paar Wochen).
Hauptsache, Du kommst im Studium gut voran.
Gruß aus Tangstedt!
Good to see you back, Montana! Hope all is well!
Always funny when Non-Germans call pizza or toast "bread". For a German this isn't bread. Even 90 percent of the stuff in bakeries (like Brezel, Brötchen, Nussschnecke) isn't bread. Bread is really just this big piece that you have to cut first.
Good to hear from you 🙂 take care 😊
❤yes good luck thank you🎉
you had me with "EX-BF'S..." 👍🏼
Getting bread at the supermarket is blasphemous to me as a German. 😂
Genau. Ein richtiges Brot kauft man beim ansässigen Bäcker!
So isses :-) Supermarktbrot ist zwar schon mal besser als das üble Matschbrot, wie man es in den USA oder auch z.B. in Holland bekommt, aber immer noch "schlechtes" Brot, vor allem auf dem Land. Brot kauft man am besten beim Bäcker oder man backt es, weil leider auch bei uns die klassischen Bäcker nach und nach wegsterben, selbst. Mein "busy people bread" dauert vom ersten Mehl in die Schüssel bis raus aus dem Backofen eine Stunde 🙂
Wie sie schon sagte, sie hatte nicht richtig viel Geld für diese Reise. Wer hat das nicht gemacht als junger Mensch mit wenig Geld!
Yeh you sound like a snobby german, millions of Germans get their bread at Aldi and Lidl.
@@quentinmunich9819 Das machen auch alte Menschen mit wenig Geld.
She is back \o/
Hi Montana, you are talking about how organized German public transport is in comparison to other countries you visited. I think viewers from Germany (like myself) would be interested if you would find some time to make a little video and show us virtually around how public transport works in your area and how it differs from your experience abroad
You can find a lot of those and you will not be disappointed. Even in big cities the public transport network has huge holes. I recently read one of the trains had 24 hours delay. There is a reason behind, why US-citizens use their car.
Please let me give you an example. Back in 2019 I visited Boston and tought it would be good to use puplic transport to come from the Airport to the hotel. I had to leave at the bus stop "Ipswich @ Boylston Str". After some time, the stop was announced suddenly, I was a bit surrprised and hasted out of the bus. I knew that at this stop should be a gas station, but there was no, instead there was a church. I checked it 2-3 times while it was raining, to understand what went wrong. After some research and time I finally got it: on this bus line there are 2 stops having the identical name (spelling and naming order), but there are on different location (by feet they were like 10 min away)... never ever had someting similar in Germany nor somewhere else.
That day I understood, why Americans use their cars.
Jungs, die Hoffung besteht
Hoffnung ballert
Ehre alla
Looking forward for more videos!!!
Moin Montana. Nice to hear again from u! 🙂🙃🙂
03:25 Most probably Schweinshaxe or Kalbshaxe. Very tasty, but not very healthy.
For sure it was a Haxe and I can imagine they didn't like it.
@@quentinmunich9819 Food is always a matter of taste. From German TV, I learnt that people in Texas enjoy to eat fried rattle snakes. I guess I will never eat this.
yes! it was definitely haxe
Nice update( found you from your Feli joint venture) have fun for the summer.
thank you!
Aldi and Edeka are my favourite Grocery Stores in Germany 🇩🇪
❤good luck montana good well thank bey
this was fun and entertaining, thanks
btw no idea what "wir suchen dich" means in a dirty way lol
greetings from a German exchange student, who stayed in lousiana for one year
I believe it sounds like 'we suck dick' for an English speaker
The drinking under 21 is funny... until you realize many exchange students have a mixture of having no idea what they can stomach, feel the need to drink as much a possible and german beer not being "light".
"Kinder"portion? You are getting more and more Germanized Montana! hehe
Wenn du das nächste mal nach Deutschland kommst musst du Schwäbische oder Badische Küche probieren in Baden Württemberg! Spätzle oder Maultaschen würde ich dir empfehlen! Ein muss für einen Ausländer! Mach weiter mit deinen VIdeos Montana danke dir!
ooh danke!!
❤see you tomorrow god willing thuss
Essen in Deutschland ist schon ziemlich speziell, obwohl das Land im Vergleich zu den USA so klein ist. 1871 bestand Deutschland aus 25 verschiedenen Fürstentümern mit stark unterschiedlichen Dialekten und erheblichen regionalen Unterschieden. So gibt es auch auf unserer kleinen Fläche eine sehr große Vielfalt an unterschiedlichen regionalen Küchen.
Die ewige Verkürzung von Deutschland = Bayern ist für mich eher genau umgekehrt. Bayern hat für mich mit "typisch Deutschsein" ziemlich wenig zu tun, sowohl was Sprache, Brauchtum und Küche angeht. G
Am Rande: das gilt übrigens auch für die zumindest bei amerikanischen productionmusic-libraries ziemlich verengte Wahrnehmung, wie deutsche Volksmusik klingt. Die klingt nämlich im Allgemeinen ebenfalls nicht so, wie in einem bayrischen Bierzelt...
Was können wir Bayern dafür, daß wir amerikanische Besatzungszone sind und diese ungebildeten Amis nicht fähig sind zu differenzieren, obwohl sie auch in Hessen sind. Für mich ist Köln z. B. fremder als Wien. In Wien hat mir noch nie jemand auf englisch geantwortet, wenn ich was gefragt habe. Es gibt kein typisch deutsch. Deutsch ist die Vielfalt. Die Vielfalt der Dialekte, des Brauchtums und der Küche. Jeder Stamm und die Unterstämme bilden nur einen Teil des Deutschsein ab. Für Italien gilt dasselbe. Für einen Mailänder ist südlich von Rom schon Afrika.
No more UA-cam? I visited UVA campus for the first time today and thought of you as you are/were an undergrad there. Pretty college town!
I know I haven't posted in so long! I definitely need to. I'm still studying at UVA so glad you liked Charlottesville!
Thank you, Montana!
It's just an innocent German "ch" leading Americans' thoughts astray😂.
The traditional meal was probably a Haxe or Schweinshaxe, the leg of a pig.
3:30 Haxen
I love how bread must have been a topic of conversation in Germany so much that you even transferred some German errors into your English. "We bought a bread." is such a typical thing a German would say, not knowing that bread, in English, is an uncountable substance noun like air or water. So, "We bought some bread/some pieces of bread" would be correct English.
+1 for Passau, great destination
München > Passau
_"Something with an X…"_ AKA (Schweins)Haxe.
Yes getting something from the supermarkt is pretty convinient, but even a bakery or a butcher is not that expensive. At my go to bakery near my university a sandwich, a cup of coffee and a small sweet where 5€ pre covid. Might be a bit more now but not much for sure.
Your friend definetly had Schweinshaxe mit Sauerkraut. It's a big leg with sour cabbage and while i love it i can understand that it tastes odd the first time. It has a strong natural meat taste, a lot of salt and not sweet at all.
^^ funny that you like german public transport. It's quite a meme how bad the timing of the Deutsche Bahn is compared to german standards and expectations. And german companies make a fortune building the most advanced train systems in the world, the stuff on our rails seems like from a past centuary in comparison.
I'm glad you liked germany. You should definetly visit other areas as well. Leipzig, Chemnitz, Dresden do have a destinct east-german vibe. The south, middle and north especially at the coast of "west"germany can be quite different.
Ich bin zu naiv, um zu verstehen, was an den Plakaten doppeldeutig ist. Kann mich jemand aufklären?
"dick" (Schwanz) anstelle von "dich" …
suchen - sucken
@@MaxCouto you good?
omg i just made a video about my reverse culture shocks!! i cant wait to go back to germany for my spring semester ahh ❤️
the word you were looking for is: Haxe^^
Or Schweinshaxen, the longer Version of this word. It is more a Bavarian word than a German 👍
Nice and informative as always 😊 The north of Germany is even more different from south and east. If you travel back to Germany next year, you should try the northern region 😊
Are you now back in the USA?
Or do you still in spain?
And does your community understood it right, that you are a single now?
Love to see your video lots of love from heaven earth nepal
First, ich love your Videos.
Second, 3:28 Schweishaxe
Third, 5:20 You know that it is legal to drink beer with 16. And with Our Patents at 14.
I know. Thats an typical german comment. 😂
Second: maybe Schweinshaxe ? Third: maybe with your parents? Have a nice day, and keep fresh!
Have you been to the Oktoberfest in Richmond VA and if so, what are your thoughts on it?
I miss your videos
thank you! I'm sorry I haven't posted in so long it's been a crazy year, but I'm hoping to do an update video soon :)
hello Montana. Ur looking very pretty!! Have a nice time!
Hey Montana. Will you produce new videos? I would be interested in some stuff about DC or Shenandoah NP.
I can definitely do a video about DC, do you like the videos in English or in German?
@@MontanaShowalter I am fine with both languages. So alternating is quite good. Greetings from Bad LA
I don't get it. There's nothing raunchy or ambiguous about the poster at all.
Für Amerikaner die kein Deutsch können ließt sich das "ch" wie ein "ck"
doch, wenn man bedenkt, dass (viele) amis meinen, dass man "ch" als "ck" ausspricht, dann schon... :D gute Werbeagentur hätte das wahrscheinlich bedacht
@@bene4577 richtig, die kugeln sich immer ab über die Schokoküsse mit Namen: Dickmann
I love you
Haxe! ;D
Which area will u vistit
Meinst du die Hax‘n?
I love your videos, but after all those years, being and living in Germany a couple of times, you're still come across at the typical American girl. Nothing wrong about it, but I grew up in both cultures, German and American, and it fascinates me how oblivious and "oberflächlich" most Americans are.
"Wir sucken dich" likely...hmm, everyone reads what he wants to read, right ? 🙃
What are your thoughts on German men shaving their underarms on a regular basis?
You look beautiful 😍
Ich finde es nicht gut
dass Du unsere Supermärkte
auf die Idee bringst
die Preise zu erhöhen
z.B. von 58 oder 75 ct
auf 5 Euro für ein kaltes
Kaffeegetränk!
…
..
.
;-)
"Bavarian food was not his favourite" -- well I'm glad you got rid of him, you don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
I think you were thinking about „Schweins-Haxe“(?) (maybe?)
yes! that’s it
I'm from Germany and I agree, Schweinshaxe looks really delicious but the taste is weird. I don't like it.
I must be grilled and coated in hot bbq sauce.
@@wncjan Doesn't really make it better.
@@wizardm Makes it great. Eaten quite a lot of grilled schweinhaxe in the Baden-Würtenberg area. And also a Belgian version in Brussels.
Bavarian food was not his favorite? Thank god he is your ex now 😂😂😂
I'm pretty sure she liked the Kaiserschmarrn. Okay this is Austrian food, but this is also widespread in Bavaria.
hahah this made me laugh!
Ex? What happened? Did you cheat?
wtf? 😂 Ever heard of something called boundaries or privacy?
Couples break up for so many different reasons. What makes you assume it's that particular one? I'd also say that this is a private matter between Montana and her ex.
Did you cheat? lol, let there be the gossips spread.
He was a skater boy.
She said, "See you later, boy".
He wasn't good enough for her. 🤷
super market bread? the worst there is. there are sooo many bakeries where you get much better bread. and fresher.
did you get Haxe?
h > k. come on! they are looking for you, not for a certain body part.
what cultural background did the ex have?
is he 'murican?
I think the Bavarian food was "Haxe" (schön, dich zu sehen!)
yes! it was
@@MontanaShowalter no wonder he is the ex now :) he couldn't even handle a schweinshaxe, how embarrassing ;)
Wunderbar!
the announcements on the trains are often in German, English and French
French?`In which region are you using trains?
@@quentinmunich9819 some are indeed in french, especially in the south-west, like close to the french border, you know?
@@bene4577yes. Still. Usually they are in german and englisch.
No normal German buys bread, eggs or even meat in the supermarket! What are bakeries, butchers and farmers for? Well. Maybe city people, they do that, but they're city people, they do other weird things.😂
Yes, the butchers and farmers in Leipzig! lol
@@quentinmunich9819Kommentare lesen und Kommentare verstehen scheinen bei Dir offensichtlich zwei unterschiedliche Paar Schuhe zu sein.😁
@@riker1701D Und was hast du jetzt nicht verstanden?