American Reacts to UNEXPECTED Things About the UK

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  • Опубліковано 13 бер 2023
  • As an American there are endless things about the UK that I don't understand or know about, but that is exactly why I am very excited today to learn about these unexpected things about the United Kingdom. If you enjoyed the video feel free to leave a comment, like, or subscribe for more!

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,1 тис.

  • @trevordance5181
    @trevordance5181 Рік тому +1011

    As a retired postman I can tell you that virtually everyone is entitled to have their mail delivered to a letter box in their house even in remote areas. Delivery routes are worked out to allow for the time and effort it takes the postman/woman to do this. Having your mail delivered through your front door is a lot more secure and helps guard against mail theft, identity fraud, and nosy neighbours wanting to see what sort of mail you receive.

    • @adamcashin4021
      @adamcashin4021 Рік тому +49

      Near where I used to live there's a village that has no street names. Every house is either a Number or Name; but the numbers don't run consecutively, the order appears random (might be the order they were built), which would explain why some numbers don't exist. Always wondered how the postman dealt with this

    • @MrGreendew2
      @MrGreendew2 Рік тому +28

      The only issue I would say is dogs 😂😂 amount of near heart attacks I've had when a dog is on the other side of the letterbox

    • @trevordance5181
      @trevordance5181 Рік тому +43

      @@MrGreendew2 I was a postman for 35 years and never once was bitten by a dog. I did a mixture of town and rural deliveries too over the years. I must have had an angel looking after me!

    • @clivenewman4810
      @clivenewman4810 Рік тому +19

      As a postman of 36 years,I have lost count of number of times I have been bitten by a dog.My worst attack left me requiring 27 stitches.

    • @oddpoppetesq.3467
      @oddpoppetesq.3467 Рік тому +21

      ​@@adamcashin4021 the postman would get used to the quickest sequence/route the houses are in and the guys in the depot will put the mail in a certain order, or he might do it himself. At least that's the most logical way to do it than zipping back and forth like a yoyo

  • @no-oneinparticular7264
    @no-oneinparticular7264 Рік тому +380

    A letterbox also prevents mail theft . Most things in Britain correspond to safety and /or hygiene.

    • @jamesdignanmusic2765
      @jamesdignanmusic2765 Рік тому +39

      And - unlike the crazy system they have in the US - large parcels won't just be dumped on the porch.

    • @smartchip
      @smartchip Рік тому +19

      @@jamesdignanmusic2765 yeah, I have heard of porch pirates, the videos are hilarious,

    • @cyberash3000
      @cyberash3000 Рік тому +20

      @@jamesdignanmusic2765 they still do that here in the uk the other day I opened my door to find my washing up bowl I'd ordered just sat there on my doorstep

    • @DoomsdayR3sistance
      @DoomsdayR3sistance Рік тому +12

      @@jamesdignanmusic2765 That still happens in the UK, many delivery drivers don't care, even if something requires signature, they will just dump it by the front door, in plain sight. I once went to go get a coffee at a local cafe and found as I opened the front door to leave, the £2,500 Graphics Card I had ordered a few days before just dumped by the front door, they didn't even knock either. Admittedly, it came sooner than I had ordered it, I wasn't expecting it to turn up until a few days after that.

    • @Nikki-yn7yv
      @Nikki-yn7yv Рік тому +31

      Royal Mail don’t leave parcels on the doorstep they re deliver or you have to pick it up from your local post office but Amazon don’t care they leave it anywhere

  • @rachaelchambers3310
    @rachaelchambers3310 Рік тому +186

    My dad just retired as a postman, and the community he delivered, for over 10 years, threw him a retirement party as he was seen as an important person there ❤

    • @claudiaphillips7063
      @claudiaphillips7063 Рік тому +1

      The post person is always important. We were quite upset when our post lady retired.

    • @Lightbringer04
      @Lightbringer04 10 місяців тому

      A good postman is worth there weight in gold 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿👌

  • @helenlyman1422
    @helenlyman1422 Рік тому +9

    Hi, Brit here. Got a bit more insight into a few bits for you;
    Letterboxes - reduces theft/fraud etc, but also our front gardens (yards) aren't as large as American ones, so there's not as far for the postie (mail person) to walk, some roads it's illegal to stop on (so pausing to put letters in a mailbox isn't an option), and our roads are a lot narrower than yours (so going round a slow moving/paused mail van isn't an option). The postie will find somewhere suitable to park, get out, and get some exercise
    Electric switches - I get that it's odd if you're not used to it, but if you switch off a device at the socket (rather than putting it on standby) it reduces the electrical consumption, it's also a safety feature (children get their fingers in everything)
    Washing up bowls - a lot of British kitchens are too small for more than one sink, so if the sink is full of dirty dishes and you need to wash some produce it makes it quicker and easier to access the sink (lift the whole bowl out), additionally, waste disposal in sinks is almost unheard of here, so a bowl catches any debris to be disposed of properly
    House names - when writing the address it would look like this;
    House Name
    Road Name
    Village/Town
    County (our equivalent of state)
    Post Code (our equivalent of zip code)
    Hope that's helped you understand the hows and whys a bit better

  • @mandywarren8566
    @mandywarren8566 Рік тому +101

    Our postman’s name is Robert and when he has something that won’t go through the letterbox, he’ll ring on the door and we have a lovely chat. I know about his family and that he has a knee problem. He greets the animals and is a lovely chap.

  • @steveknight878
    @steveknight878 Рік тому +141

    A plastic bowl in the sink is useful. It means that you can pour the contents of any dishes/cups/mugs down the sink (between the bowl and the sink), and rinse the plates off again straight into the sink. Also you use less water. And you get fewer breakages of glasses and china, because the bowl is plastic and so softer than the sink itself.

    • @georgehaytack6916
      @georgehaytack6916 Рік тому +11

      it is very useful!
      if you have one of the extremely common "contractor" stainless steek sinks is all to easy for it to be damaged or even pierced when doing cutlery directly in the sink. The plastic bowl prevent the stainless steel sink being damaged. It also significantly helps keep the washing up water hotter for longer.
      If you have a very expensive ceramic "butler sink" the last thing you want is to damage the glaze on it. Neither do you want your crockery clanking about in it - ceramic on ceramic. Again using a plastic bowel in the sink mitigates this.
      Finally - it gets rid of all issues with missing/badly fitting plugs which allow the water to drain away when you don't want it to.
      Think of it as a semi disposably plastic "liner".

    • @unisophia
      @unisophia Рік тому +3

      and you can bring the bowl to the table, collect the dishes and bring it to the sink safely, I presume… instead of taking them by hand.

    • @kayhoward8723
      @kayhoward8723 Рік тому +5

      It's to protect your delicate China and glassware as sinks are earthenware or stainless steel, so dishes and glassware can be chipped or cracked

    • @liamburns8554
      @liamburns8554 Рік тому +6

      As a british person I must say by he plastic bowl has always irritated/confused me! It is a terrible uk custom!

    • @mrsmunchin
      @mrsmunchin Рік тому

      I’ve never used a washing up bowl. Most people I know don’t use them.

  • @kippercsg
    @kippercsg 11 місяців тому +3

    Traditionally, British kitchen sinks only had one basin, not the extra middle one. And we wash up by filling the sink with hot water, rather than constantly running the tap.
    The bowl is so you can still pour liquids from dirty cups down the drain, rather than dumping it into your clean hot water. (These days most kitchens do have the "middle sink", but we kept the bowl out of habit)
    We also don't have garbage disposals in our sinks, so the bowl makes it easier to discard of any food waste that would otherwise block the drain.

  • @Arbalest_487
    @Arbalest_487 Рік тому +31

    Hi Tyler! I'm an American whose family has always used what we call a dish pan in our kitchen sinks. It's made of a Tupperware like plastic. The advantages are that you use less water (while soaking), the water stays warm longer and your dishes don't damage the sink. We also now put a soft plastic raised mat with drainage holes at the bottom of the sink for collecting the dishes we are ready to rinse off.

    • @TimpBizkit
      @TimpBizkit 11 місяців тому +1

      I just use them so I can rinse off down the side without tipping the water away or diluting it with cold. Also good for the plates that have lots of gravy on so the water doesn't get filled with gravy quickly. Of course if you have a fancy double sink with a mini sink for rinsing there is less need of one, but they are still useful.

    • @bloozee
      @bloozee 11 місяців тому

      My grandparents sink was made of a kind of concrete.

  • @shmuelparzal
    @shmuelparzal Рік тому +205

    The on/off switch on the socket is there as a compulsory safety feature. Tom Scott has made a very informative video on his channel about the safety features of British plugs and sockets, and why we have them

    • @gillcawthorn7572
      @gillcawthorn7572 Рік тому +2

      The plug can be left in the socket ,turned off or not .
      It`s not necessary to switch off .

    • @ASavageEye
      @ASavageEye Рік тому +5

      @@gillcawthorn7572 True but its still safer to switch it off for a number of reasons. One being child safety if they start messing with it and pull it out while the current if flowing and electrocute themselves. Sure it would only be a tiny shock but for a child thats still a lot of pain. The second is power surges. If the switch is off and there is a surge your appliance is safe but if you leave the switch on it could blow. I know that one from experience when my laptop was fried because I left it plugged in with the switch on. An expensive lesson to learn.

    • @swordablaze9259
      @swordablaze9259 Рік тому +3

      Tom covers so many interesting and random things - love his channel!

    • @mikestrohm3271
      @mikestrohm3271 Рік тому +9

      @@ASavageEye Actually that should not happen, if you look at the positive and negative terminals on the plug they are black close to the plug and then become brass metallic. This means that if you partially pull the plug out then you cannot electrocute yourself as the black parts are insulation. In fact the length of the insulated part is designed so that the pin is not contacting any power source when the plug is pulled out beyond the black insulated part of the pin. this is also why the earth pin is so much longer that the +ve and -ve pins.

    • @ASavageEye
      @ASavageEye Рік тому

      @mikestrohm3271 I'm.not sure why you are saying any of that, it has no bearing on anything I said

  • @cpmahon
    @cpmahon Рік тому +196

    When I was a paperboy we put the newspapers through the letterbox as well. I was jealous when I saw American kids just throwing the paper at the house. You also learnt that if you wanted decent tips at Christmas, you pushed the paper all the way through and definitely closed the gate!!!

    • @grahvis
      @grahvis Рік тому +13

      I remember way back, one woman had a rather aggressive dog. As soon as the paper entered the letterbox, it would be yanked through by the dog.

    • @LouLou10000
      @LouLou10000 Рік тому +4

      Yeah, lucky householders getting soggy wet newspapers if you don't have an extensive house with a porch or the throw misses the target lol

    • @MrBulky992
      @MrBulky992 Рік тому +13

      Some householders with excitable dogs find that their pet has ripped up their letters and newspapers!
      Some letterboxes have a cage inside to catch letters and prevent them falling on the floor and to protect them from naughty dogs.
      Parcels which will fit through the letterbox are also delivered that way.

    • @smartchip
      @smartchip Рік тому +2

      Your a good lad,

    • @tonys1636
      @tonys1636 Рік тому +5

      Used to hate at times delivering the papers to houses that had 3 or 4 daily papers plus various magazines such as Country Life or Tatler as often wouldn't fit through and one had to ring the bell and wait for someone to open the door. (often a Maid). Hated Monthly publication day as the bag was three times as heavy. Only had 30 houses on the round but was over 7 miles long going out of the village and had 3 farms on it. The cycle ride kept me fit plus the 9 mile ride to school after.

  • @melanielloyd812
    @melanielloyd812 Рік тому +6

    Our posties also provide are an invaluable service in the UK especially outside big cities where they are part of the community, know people and keep an eye on any vulnerable people. Not all posties go above and beyond their letter posting duties but many do and are valued for it. I always give my postie a Christmas bonus for delivering my letters safely all year and keeping an eye on me as he knows i'm disabled and goes out of his way to be helpful. For instance, if a delivery is left outside he will put it into a safe box for me, knock the door and let me know..

  • @jasonsmart3482
    @jasonsmart3482 Рік тому +199

    What is nice about our posties is that they are part of the community especially in smaller towns and village. Most people who are home all day know the postie and it feels so much more of a personal service than it did when i lived in the USA.

    • @kdog4587
      @kdog4587 Рік тому +9

      Our postie dresses up as Santa around Christmas for the kids and we always talk when he shows up, I completely agree :). My grandad was a postman for 50yrs and was very much a part of the community fabric :)

    • @hatjodelka
      @hatjodelka Рік тому +17

      This! It's very often posties who notice something amiss, for example elderly people not greeting them etc. For many isolated older people their posties are regular human contact. I don't live in a rural area, I'm in inner London but I always have had a great relationship with my posties over the decades. They also know they can always use my loo if they're caught short. They provide a great public service.

    • @pixelpawzgaming
      @pixelpawzgaming Рік тому +2

      Yush exactly and as a uk local myself. I rather have the posties knock on my door to deliver parcels plus my dog (english bull terrier) Symphony enjoys the head pets from the regular posties as they know he’s postie friendly ☕️

    • @victoriamyatt1709
      @victoriamyatt1709 Рік тому +4

      Its also nice to get the postie a pressie or a tipple (alcoholic drink) for Christmas.

    • @boneythelynx8884
      @boneythelynx8884 Рік тому +2

      Yes and have time for everyone, sharing a chat with old people or return a lost dog. Posties are superheroes

  • @OneTrueScotsman
    @OneTrueScotsman Рік тому +114

    In the UK, our front yards/gardens don't tend to be that large. Some of us have pretty big back yard/gardens. Lots of no front garden at all. So it's no hassle for our posties to post letters. I used to be a postie myself. So this is something I can speak from experience on.

    • @MrNeocortex
      @MrNeocortex Рік тому +11

      We also have a lot of old terraced houses without front gardens. The front door opens directly onto the pavement.

    • @lindyashford7744
      @lindyashford7744 Рік тому +2

      As a Brit is was very funny to me that some Americans had Alaska as a dream destination, it seemed so unadventurous, because isn’t Canada almost the same but without American features! No one at all seemed to be interested in anything about Europe that was not English speaking, England Ireland, but the very religious would include Rome… and no one wanted to travel in Africa .Asia etc….

    • @miaschu8175
      @miaschu8175 Рік тому +1

      Fellow Brit here - Alaska is in America, not Canada. But, with the US being so huge, it might as well be a different country in terms of climate and geography when compared to more southerly states.

  • @FreeThinkingTruther
    @FreeThinkingTruther Рік тому +11

    I think the main reason for us having a letterbox over a mailbox is the fact that most of our houses don't sit on huge pieces of land, if the post man had to walk 500yards up and then back down a driveway, I think post boxes would be more common, you usually only see them on gated properties where access isn't available.

  • @denisemackay1411
    @denisemackay1411 Рік тому +13

    Our postie is called Pauline, she will often stop for a chat when she delivers post. Also she will open our front door and drop stuff inside. She knows everyone in our village. It’s a good way to check on older people who are on their own.

  • @kevb044
    @kevb044 Рік тому +151

    For me, the reason I use a washing up bowl is because they're made of plastic, which always feels more forgiving than say a metal sink when putting in glass items to wash

    • @judithrowe8065
      @judithrowe8065 Рік тому +26

      Yes. It also means that metal utensils don't scratch the sink, and if a glass breaks, it's easier & safer to dispose of the pieces without touching them. And it uses less water- metered here in the UK.

    • @Bowleskov
      @Bowleskov Рік тому +26

      I use mine because I can still rinse or drain down the side of the bowl as needed without needing to either pollute my cleaning water or drain the sink midway. Obviously in America they tend to have Bigger kitchens so can fit a double sink for that purpose.

    • @rpmillam
      @rpmillam Рік тому +15

      It was used to reduce the water used as the old sinks held 2+ gallons of water.

    • @Whiteshirtloosetie
      @Whiteshirtloosetie Рік тому +5

      Plus along with reasons other people mention with a bowl all the stuff you are washing off sinks to the bottom of the bowl and not the sink. So not messing around unblocking the plughole. Lift the bowl out and despose of with ease. Plus it saves on fuel bills.

    • @adamcashin4021
      @adamcashin4021 Рік тому +5

      I don't use one anymore as I have a dishwasher now; so washing in the sink is limited to one or two items I desperately needed. But when I did wash everything by hand I found the bowl useful as you could leave dishes in their to soak and then remove the bowl to use the sink if you needed it. Also the bowl was a little taller than the sink overflow so taller bulky items could be totally immersed in water

  • @jaccilowe3842
    @jaccilowe3842 Рік тому +146

    The kitchens in the UK don't always have room for a double sink and the bowl enables you to lift it out if necessary with the washing up in it, so someone else can get to the water and the sink. Also it is quieter and safer for glassware (a lot of old houses only had stone sinks) Maybe it's a throwback that we still use a bowl!

    • @jonathanwetherell3609
      @jonathanwetherell3609 Рік тому +20

      Also it saves on water.

    • @HeatherMyfanwyTylerGreey
      @HeatherMyfanwyTylerGreey Рік тому +16

      Some detergent scratches and dulls stainless steel sinks as well as other reasons I have read. It also reduces chipping of china,

    • @SGABlencathra
      @SGABlencathra Рік тому +10

      Yes indeed. I have a ceramic sink and using a plastic washing up bowl definitely saves my glasses and plates etc from chipping.

    • @Lily_The_Pink972
      @Lily_The_Pink972 Рік тому +9

      And we wash up differently. We fill the bowl with hot soapy water, start off with glassware and move onto dirtier items. We don't wash under a running tap.

    • @unicornicefoxxi7111
      @unicornicefoxxi7111 Рік тому +2

      my grandma used to use a bowl in the sink i remember sitting on the floor as a young kid and doing the washing up then she would take the bowl after i was done take it to the sink poor out water and then rinse of the suds and then she would dry them and i would help her than put the dishes and stuff away .. but my mum was like pffff screw a bowl i have the sink why do i need a bowl and we never had a bowl in the sink .. and when i moved out and into my place i never have had a bowl in my sink and besides that dishwashers are more common by the time i was setting up my home so ive always used a dishwasher only thing my kitchen sink is used for is rinsing the dishes b4 they go into dishwasher or for handwashing clothes or for filling up a bucket to do the mopping . ( but i do own a washing up bowl its just never used for that its used for things like cleaning skirting boards or for dipping my bike inner-tube in to see where the puncture is or for a nice place to soak my feet in after a long day on my feet or other such like uses or when i was very ill the bowl would be used to be sick in or it was used as a portable sink when i had my motorbike accident and was paralysed so nurses/partner could wash me)

  • @oktrevor2010
    @oktrevor2010 Рік тому +4

    Letter boxes are secure, postmen are brilliant, switches isolate electrical items when not in use and reduce fires, travel broadens the mind, Nuff said.

  • @kerrydoutch5104
    @kerrydoutch5104 Рік тому +3

    Aussie here. The switch on the electric power outlets is for safety because UK and Australia voltage is 230v vs 120v in the US. We have them here too.

  • @ChrisGBusby
    @ChrisGBusby Рік тому +55

    Washing up bowls are great shock absorbers. They also mean you can put things in to soak, lift the bowl out onto the side then still have the sink usable.

  • @mandolinic
    @mandolinic Рік тому +150

    The washing up bowl saves a *lot* of hot water, and our energy is really expensive here. Filling up the bowl uses maybe 1/2 of the water to fill up the sink to the same level. Also, when you realise that you haven't emptied the dregs of a cupsof tea or coffee from a cup, you can just pour them into the sink beside the bowl, keeping your washing water cleaner. The bowl usually keeps itself clean, but now and again you might need to rinse it off.

    • @sarahhiggins1515
      @sarahhiggins1515 Рік тому +3

      As a Brit who has never had a washing up bowl, you just don’t fill up the sink to the level you would fill up a bowl - its the same amount of water. It doesn’t need to be a high level because you use a cloth that gets water all over the item. We also have a much smaller sink attatched to it that we use for quick emptyings or rinsing. I also saw someone say how the plastic is safer for glass items than a metal sink but you just don’t let the glass touch the sides - it doesn’t need to.

    • @mandolinic
      @mandolinic Рік тому +4

      @@sarahhiggins1515 Clearly, your mileage may vary 🤔

    • @AlSnoopsReid
      @AlSnoopsReid Рік тому +17

      @@sarahhiggins1515 Unfortunately, we're not all as perfect as you Sarah. Us normal souls can sometimes misjudge distance when cleaning our glassware, hence the safety aspect of using a plastic bowl. Plus,of course, those of us who live in older houses, or have smaller kitchens, don't have the luxury of a double sink layout.

    • @sarahhiggins1515
      @sarahhiggins1515 Рік тому

      @@AlSnoopsReid it's not that hard.. you just carefully submerge it in the water then lift it out and do the rest of the cleaning with the cloth. It doesn't have to be held under water whilst cleaning. As for the double sink I understand some people don't have them but they really don't take up much more room. We had a tiny kitchen when I was younger that having 2 people in there felt like a squeeze but still had a double sink. The main sink was perhaps a bit smaller than the average single sink

    • @fayesouthall6604
      @fayesouthall6604 Рік тому +4

      It’s saves wasting water.

  • @louiseglasgow
    @louiseglasgow Рік тому +16

    Our postcodes (like zip codes) are much more specific than USA and mainland Europe ones. They narrow the space down to a small number of houses. So it's easy enough for a post person to find the house within that. In the past before postcodes, the postmen just needed to learn the route. Also, house names with no number are in rural areas and so it's not a city name but a village name or similar, so it's a small-ish area that is covered.

    • @jirokoshibailey2052
      @jirokoshibailey2052 4 місяці тому

      Whilst true, area (like la1 to la13) are regional (la = Lancashire, s1-19 = Sheffield etc) and living in a tower block the last part of the post code is the same for the entire block

  • @barrycarey7521
    @barrycarey7521 Рік тому +28

    The kitchen bowl, has multiple uses, it is used for food preparation when scraping the skin off vegetables, so when you’ve prepared everything it can be dumped into the food recycling bin, obviously is is smaller than the sink so uses less water to half fill it but what people have neglected to mention is that is made of plastic which is a thermal insulator so actually keeps the water hotter for longer instead of the ceramic or metal sinks that dissipate the heat quickly. Because of the fuel cost to heat the water and the fact many people are on water meter many use a bowl to save money on the washing up. The bowl can also be used as a bucket away from the sink to was your windows, wash your shoes of after football . When the freezer has been blocked up with ice a bowl of hot water was regularly used to defrost it quicker. Some also use it like a bucket to soak clothes in overnight to remove stains . So it has multiple uses .

    • @mariemitchell3680
      @mariemitchell3680 Рік тому +2

      Several times, our's has been used for making wallpaper paste

    • @joosyjulie
      @joosyjulie Рік тому +1

      Washing your hair in the sink. Clean out the bowl, then fill it with hot water. Place the filled bowl on the drainer side. Hang hour head over the sink, use a jug to scoop clean water from the bowl to wet your hair. Add shampoo, lather then using the jug scoop out CLEAN water to rinse.

    • @iandeare1
      @iandeare1 Рік тому +1

      A major reason is to prevent chips, and breakages, to crockery from the old, heavy stoneware, Belfast sinks

    • @blondebrandy
      @blondebrandy 11 місяців тому

      I use the dish washing water to pour on my plants. I have 2 sinks the other sink has a bowl for rinsesing the dishes used for anything, including plants. I try never to waste anything.

    • @iandeare1
      @iandeare1 11 місяців тому

      @blondebrandy : soap isn't neccesarily bad, it depends on the soap. It was a commonly used insecticide for aphids etc.
      Generally speaking on systems that recycle, plants seem to thrive on grey water, as it's called, presumably nutrients, and trace elements, in the left over bits of food etc.

  • @annettemoore7264
    @annettemoore7264 Рік тому +10

    I'm a Brit, years ago my friends parents emigrated to Australia, she didn't want to go so they bought her a beautiful little 19th century cottage covered in ivy and roses a called it Pooh Corner. ❤

  • @tonystroud6652
    @tonystroud6652 Рік тому +103

    House names work in the UK because we have post codes, usually a combination of numbers and letters like ABC 8XY. This identifies the town/village and narrows it down to a couple of streets.
    A letter with just a house name and a postcode will be easily delivered. There is no need for anything else, like a city or county.

    • @geoffpriestley7310
      @geoffpriestley7310 Рік тому +5

      You want try a post code in North Yorkshire I use to repair Central heating and it didn't work but what 3 words is magic for finding out ot the way farms

    • @samanthagibson5791
      @samanthagibson5791 Рік тому +4

      It's normally one or two letters that link to the area or a large town in the area, then one or two numbers referencing a smaller town or section of a town then a gap before a one number two letter combination which is specific to a street or part of a street, depending on lenght.

    • @texbankuk
      @texbankuk Рік тому +1

      I've lived in rural Ireland before postal codes were invented only big cities like Dublin had basic postal district codes like D6 plus the district name town or village
      Outside of Dublin the Post would be addressed to the county/village or town then in our location it would be the hill name and person lots of permutations but generally you had to pick up your mail from the post office in the Main street rarely got any delivery direct to our property as it sat on the top of a half mile unmade lane! With no signage.. All the family had to wear Wellington boots almost year round to get up that route and we had a busy dairy farm next door hence also having cattle on the lane also with their mess.

    • @DrewGJackson
      @DrewGJackson Рік тому +4

      Just this last week I received post that had just my name and postcode on the envelope and it was delivered to my address. Either there’s only one person on my street with my name or it’s proof that I receive a lot of mail. 😂

    • @xhogun8578
      @xhogun8578 Рік тому +5

      Post codes are rubbish in rural areas. My house just has a name and the post code takes people 1/4 mile away. Always have to provide additional information for parcel deliveries. A friend's postcode takes people to a different valley with no direct connecting road.
      Post is okay as the local postie will know each house and who lives there.

  • @Richiecandylover
    @Richiecandylover Рік тому +66

    In my area with Amazon Prime I can often get my orders the same day, and they also deliver groceries the same day. Postmen have always walked, they often drive to an area and deliver by foot to all houses, no matter the weather

    • @caroledwards3465
      @caroledwards3465 Рік тому +11

      Yes and they normally wear shorts even in winter lol

    • @Richiecandylover
      @Richiecandylover Рік тому +3

      @@caroledwards3465 Yes they always wear shorts, but saw that you have to run just to hit their targets and often they don't eat or eat while driving just to hit targets

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 Рік тому +1

      When I lived in the deep countryside, they drove a post bus.

    • @B-A-L
      @B-A-L Рік тому +3

      I often get items from Amazon Japan via DHL faster than items from Ebay UK via Royal Snail! The slowest deliveries from Japan i have had have all been handled by Royal Snail or Parcel Farce!

    • @AJ-hi9fd
      @AJ-hi9fd Рік тому

      Even if Amazon delivered immediately I would buy anything from them.

  • @mattymaddog67
    @mattymaddog67 Рік тому +37

    I have worked as a postman/manager for 35 years . House names are pretty common in the uk and you would need extra training to do a rural delivery were a lot of old houses had names rather than numbers . But after doing a delivery round for 8 -12 months I knew every customers name and would know what they worked and where to leave parcels so they were secure etc. They would give me tips at Christmas and offer alcoholic drinks (got drunk on my first Christmas delivery) I would check on the elderly customers and once found a confused old guy in a ditch early morning . Took him home and rang his family. The sorting machines could identify a person through IA learning so a mr b brown with a certain postcode let’s say Newcastle would get his mail , as the system had previous letters to B Brown at 15 Sunderland way Newcastle NE2 4BA so with very little information the system could determine where B Brown lived. Back in the eighties when I joined it was purely down to posties like me thinking I know a B Brown lives at such and such address .

    • @Joanna-il2ur
      @Joanna-il2ur Рік тому +1

      My husband and I lived in a house in an Oxfordshire village called Jessamine Cottage for a couple of years. We perpetually got mail for a man who lived in Jessamine Cottage in a different village over thirty miles away. I asked the postie and he told me they only look at the first line. I found the other house, sent the mail on to the guy there and asked me if he ever got our mail. He thanked me, but said he’d never had ours wrongly delivered.

  • @hanskneesun123
    @hanskneesun123 Рік тому +7

    There's a story from the 1980's about a letter being sent to Britain from Australia with no address, just a name and a hand drawn outline of the British isles with an X in the rough location of where they wanted the letter delivered, a postal worker recognised the name and it was hand delivered to the correct address with no issues.

  • @Tarantio1983
    @Tarantio1983 Рік тому +44

    On point 1, our railway system is so much more than "The Tube".
    Like most towns are connected to other towns by a train line and the trains are fairly frequent.
    One summer, I had 4 weeks of holiday and TOIL to be taken ... So work forced me to go on holiday, thus I travelled England to visit friends.
    I have travelled from Hastings (East Sussex) to Exeter (Devon) {far south east to far south west of England}, it took 6 hours.
    Then from Exeter (Devon) to Ashington (Northumbria), it took only 6 & ½ hours.
    Then from Ashington (Northumbria) to London, it only took 5 hours.
    Then from London back to Hastings, it only took 2 hours.
    Then in Exeter I travelled everywhere by bus and paid only a tenner for a 1 week ticket that let me travel the entirety of Southern Devon I was there, the same went on in Ashington for all of Northumbria!
    And in London I just stuck about £25 on an Oyster Card and paid about a fiver for travel each day!
    Because I booked the train tickets from Hastings to Exeter, Exeter to Newcastle, Newcastle to London, and London to Hastings in advance with a Network Rail Card I paid only £180 for all the tickets.
    I even got boosted to first class on the trains to and from Newcastle because there was a special travel deal on sale to visit the city!

    • @lindyashford7744
      @lindyashford7744 Рік тому +2

      0H, I forgot, in Britain we do not think taxis and cycles are public transportation…. There are some cycle schemes but they are not that great, and are run within individual cities, by private companies.

    • @wereleopard58yepihavetwo2
      @wereleopard58yepihavetwo2 Рік тому

      I live in Hampshire, my mum is from Inverness. We justhas to change in London. It was about 13hrs in a sleeper.

    • @claire6795
      @claire6795 Рік тому

      Devon was cut off in Beechings cuts to the railway line - north Devon suffered terribly, the older friends here remember dropping off goods, grown flòwers, farm produce to the local train station to send it to LONDON. Even tourists have had to rely on car use. Sad.

    • @yodaami
      @yodaami Рік тому +1

      The uk used to be so much better connected in the 1960s. The beeching report and subsequent destruction of lots of rural railways have messed up the village connections. There are 2 stations within walking distance of my home that are derelict. Now have to catch a bus ( and it is 2 hourly) to the nearest station.

    • @susanwinn4478
      @susanwinn4478 Рік тому

      The Metro is what the subway is called in Newcastle

  • @tonys1636
    @tonys1636 Рік тому +42

    Using a washing up bowl is a hangover from the days of having a Belfast sink ( 2ft x 3ft x 10" ceramic/stoneware sink) in the kitchen. Before most of us had a dishwasher or fitted kitchen. That sink was often used to bathe the Baby as well.

    • @kirstygunn9149
      @kirstygunn9149 Рік тому +4

      My first bath as a baby was in a bright orange washing up bowl, because I was so small ( I was under 5 lbs full term) and my mum didn't want me to slip or catch my head on the taps in the kitchen sink. there are photos of me in this little bowl my mum thinks I look cute,I think I looked like a hairless cat ,or a plucked chicken.

    • @SMNC-mf4fb
      @SMNC-mf4fb Рік тому +1

      We call a washing up bowl ‘the basin’ in Northern Ireland or Atleast we do In Belfast.

    • @kp7032
      @kp7032 Рік тому +3

      I still have the ceramic sink I removed from our 1930s flat; it makes for a great flower container

    • @SMNC-mf4fb
      @SMNC-mf4fb Рік тому +1

      @@kp7032 you can buy them in most salavage sites here in Belfast and a lot of people use them as planters. My Nan only has a balcony for her apt so she has one for her flowers. (:

    • @cazyaz523
      @cazyaz523 Рік тому +1

      We have a double Belfast sink and a dishwasher. They are popular but can stain/break so you want to use a bowl to wash up in if you can’t use the dishwasher.

  • @Lily-ey9tn
    @Lily-ey9tn Рік тому +11

    I used to live in one of the UK National Parks (very rural). The house was named 'Low Green Cottage' and was so rural it didn't have a street. You would just write the house name, village name and the Post Code. It's fairly common - I wouldn't have even thought anyone would see it as unusual

  • @miaschu8175
    @miaschu8175 Рік тому +11

    For me, using a washing up bowl is more economical and practical. Those of us with bog-standard sinks can find them a bit big to fill with hot water so that they're deep enough to soak pots and pans.
    Also, if you want to run the cold tap for a drink, or you need to pour away cold tea down the sink before washing the mug, you can because there's a bowl, so it doesn't need to go into the hot, soapy water.
    Lastly, sinks in the UK don't have the scary waste disposal thing that you see in US shows (I don't know if they're really ubiquitous there). So, instead of just taking out the plug, you would put the plug strainer over the plughole before pouring out the used water from the washing up bowl. If any food bits were scrubbed off of plates or saucepans, they wouldn't then go down the drain.
    The picture used in the video is not especially typical of the size of sinks in the UK; it was pretty small - perhaps because it was a double sink. If I had a sink like that, I wouldn't bother with a washing up bowl, but I would put a tea towel or similar on the bottom, as glasses are more liable to break in hard sinks

  • @0utcastAussie
    @0utcastAussie Рік тому +36

    Re: The washing up bowl
    It's a throwback that's remained relevant today. (Kitchen) Sinks used to be quite large and took a lot of hot water to fill to be useful. That hot water had to be boiled and then carried to the sink so the bowl made perfect sense.
    It also helps protect the crockery from chips as the sink used to be made out of a marble style substance.

    • @Battyuk66
      @Battyuk66 Рік тому

      Made me smile the bit about protects the dishes or mugs etc from getting chips, not in my house with my husband lol.. 😂
      We have gone through so many dinner sets because he is heavy handed and chips they regularly..

    • @ChrisSmith-xh9wb
      @ChrisSmith-xh9wb Рік тому +1

      THe sinks were larger in the past as they were used for washing laundry, but using them for a few dishes and cutlery without a bowl would have been uneconomic. The habit of using a bowl stuck after large sinks were replaced with washing machines.

  • @rachealbrown2166
    @rachealbrown2166 Рік тому +37

    Popular places for many Brits to holiday are really anywhere on the Mediterranean Sea including Turkey, Egypt and Tunisia. Many of us also take short breaks in a huge range of European cities - Prague, Vienna, Amsterdam, Barcelona, Venice, Istanbul, Copenhagen to name a few. We also get much more paid holidays so plenty of time to travel.

  • @Jkk55
    @Jkk55 Рік тому +12

    The plug outlet switch is for safety keeping little fingers from harm. The washing up bowl is a must in my house the cutlery would scratch the sink also you can use the bowl whilst poring liquids down the sink. Thank you for your videos I learnt a lot about America from you ❤

  • @yourrightimsooosorry884
    @yourrightimsooosorry884 Рік тому +3

    The washing-up bowl is to soak items while the sink is free to wash other things

  • @MrBulky992
    @MrBulky992 Рік тому +27

    Another reason to use a plastic washing-up bowl, apart from protecting delicate crockery from impact with the harder surface of a metal or porcelain sink, is the fact that many homes in the UK only have or had a single sink in the kitchen. Last century, this was often made of very hard porcelain. When the plug is inserted in the sink to hold the hot soapy water to wash the dishes, the waste pipe is no longer accessible so the contents of, for example, half-drunk cups of coffee cannot be disposed of. With a washing-up bowl, the water pipe in the sink is still open and available for that purpose and liquid waste can be poured into the gap between the bowl and the sink so that cups etc can then be washed.
    In the USA when you are finished with a regularly used electrical appliance, you have to unplug it to isolate it fully from the supply. In the UK, you can leave it plugged in but switched off, ready for the next use. You simply switch it on instead of plugging it in. In such cases, there is nothing extra to remember. Most chargers have light indicators in any case to show that they are charging: I would always check those at the start of charging no matter which country I was in.

  • @tightropewalkergirl6485
    @tightropewalkergirl6485 Рік тому +47

    The British are pretty well travelled, we all know loads of people that have been to Australia etc - I guess it’s because we’re a traditional ‘sea faring’ nation

    • @avaggdu1
      @avaggdu1 Рік тому +4

      It helps that a lot of Brits have relatives overseas and English is a commonly used language, not so much because we're "sea-faring" but because we're colonists.

    • @stewedfishproductions7959
      @stewedfishproductions7959 Рік тому +4

      Only about 42% of Americans have a an actual passport and (unlike the UK), they are not guaranteed almost a month of 'paid holidays'... In fact they are lucky to get two weeks off and usually unpaid.

    • @lizcollinson2692
      @lizcollinson2692 Рік тому +1

      And maybe a bit conquering.

    • @avaggdu1
      @avaggdu1 Рік тому +5

      @@lizcollinson2692 Conquering tends to go hand-in-glove with colonisation - people tend to object to you squatting on their land otherwise.

    • @lucyj8204
      @lucyj8204 Рік тому +1

      Also we get longer paid holiday - you can take two weeks at a time so longhaul feels worthwhile.

  • @leeriches8841
    @leeriches8841 11 місяців тому +5

    I was baffled at your reaction to Brits going on holiday to Thailand! It's incredibly common. My mother goes every year and has done since 2006, sometimes takes my little sister! They often go on two holidays a year, Thailand and usually Dubai or New York. This simple fact has made me appreciate our little islands location a lot more.

  • @nicholasr82
    @nicholasr82 Рік тому +2

    The socket thing is much safer in the uk than in an always on American type. Kids at a young age won’t get electrocuted if they stick something into the uk socket for
    1. that it can be switched off and
    2. nothing can be pushed into the power connectors (bottom two holes in the socket) if the top one is not inserted at the same time.
    There is a safety flap on the bottom two that remains closed if the top section is not engaged.
    The bowl for washing dishes stops the dishes hitting the hard sides of a sink and prevents breaking, it also keeps water hotter for longer, it uses less water to fill and it protects the sink as they are not cheap in the uk. It’s also much quicker to fill a bowl than a big sink.

  • @Spiklething
    @Spiklething Рік тому +21

    I think the reason for the washing up bowl is because many homes in the past only had one kitchen sink. If you filled the kitchen sink up with hot water to wash the dishes, and then find a mug or a cup that is half full of left over tea or coffee, where are you going to pour it away if the sink is full of water? The toilet? If you are using a washing up bowl you can pour the left over drink into the gap between the bowl and the sink. Nowadays many homes have two sinks in the kitchen.

    • @bookwyrmroo5704
      @bookwyrmroo5704 Рік тому +1

      In my experience, many homes now only have one kitchen sink, and most don’t have a utility room.
      I imagine it varies a bit by region and if you live in an area with lots of new builds.

  • @jamesdignanmusic2765
    @jamesdignanmusic2765 Рік тому +29

    Public transport (not "transportation") is pretty good in the UK. It's not known for being punctual - buses and trains will often be a few minutes late - but other than that it's good. For a Brit going to the Canary Islands is like an American going to Cancun or the Bahamas. With house names, most of them also have numbers, but quite a few houses in small towns or villages will have a name. "J. Smith, Tudor Gables, Church Lane, Newtown".

  • @richardwaddington2038
    @richardwaddington2038 Рік тому +7

    The washing up bowl (which isnt a bowl its made to fit in a normal rectangular sink) AFAIA , came about as most families in the UK got an expensive bone china or porcelain tea service as wedding presents . These were very expensive and very delicate so to prevent chipping on the hard kitchen sink services you washed them in a plastic bowl within the sink .

  • @potterlover96
    @potterlover96 Рік тому +3

    I've lived in the UK since birth and I still sometimes forget to turn on the outlet and then get confused why something isn't charging 😂 also yes you can drive the entire length of the Britain in less than a day (one estimate back in 2011 was that it would take just short of 16 hours) so Amazon can get places quickly

  • @torreyskidd
    @torreyskidd Рік тому +96

    can confirm! im a 23 year old Brit and have been to the Canary Islands 4 times 😊 ive also been to Spain, Greece, Turkey, France and Canada! its not uncommon for Brits to leave the country for vacation

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Рік тому

      Don't go to Morocco unless you are in a large group and do not want to be followed by 20 young boys,wanting your money and 20 older Men trying to sell you something that you neither want nor need:)

    • @robward367
      @robward367 Рік тому +5

      Except the UK Brexity folk of course! #humour

    • @AJ-hi9fd
      @AJ-hi9fd Рік тому +15

      @@robward367bugger off, I love Europe but I don’t want to be controlled by the EU unelected commission.

    • @unicornicefoxxi7111
      @unicornicefoxxi7111 Рік тому +6

      except us brits dont call it vacation we call it a holiday :-) hehe
      and i have also traveled most of the world only 4 places left in the world ive not been to and want to go to thats vancouver/canada , america , australia and singapore .. otherwise i have literally been to every other country in the world

    • @torreyskidd
      @torreyskidd Рік тому +1

      @@unicornicefoxxi7111 i know but holiday to americans is like Christmas/Easter so wanted to make sure he understood my comment properly :)

  • @DruncanUK
    @DruncanUK Рік тому +31

    Hahaha - The "Tube" or London Underground only covers London, not the whole of the UK. Britain has an extensive rail system the covers most of the country, it is also clean, reliable (mostly) and comfortable. But it is not part of the underground! I loved how you said "Ah - I understand now!" yet still had it upside down. 😂

    • @personalcheeses8073
      @personalcheeses8073 Рік тому

      And incredibly expensive

    • @DruncanUK
      @DruncanUK Рік тому

      @@personalcheeses8073 compared to what?

    • @avaggdu1
      @avaggdu1 Рік тому +2

      Some of us crazy folk even have trams that are a huge step away from the archaic view of them and make trains look like cattle trucks. They're far more reliable, regular, comfortable, cheap, safe (inasmuch as any public transport is 'safe'), convenient, modern and quiet. The only downside is their range of coverage.
      I'm not sure that taxis (they're private cars for hire) and bicycles (with the possible exception of rental bikes) count as public transport.

    • @stevehaddon151
      @stevehaddon151 Рік тому

      ​@@DruncanUK flying!

    • @cayde7207
      @cayde7207 Рік тому

      @@personalcheeses8073 Expensive how ? I can travel from one side of London to the other for a price cheaper than a bag of chips 😂
      When visiting Manchester to see family they have the Tram which is even cheaper than travel in London and acts like a bus and train combined…
      Even without an Oyster Card it’s still relatively cheap… so I’m not sure where you’ve gone to find it so expensive unless you’re using the National Rail which can be expensive unless you look correctly, for example I travel via Avantiwest West Coast for around £25 two way ticket from London to Manchester open ticket… you just have to find the deals and go at the correct times, booking ahead also helps.

  • @Xenotric
    @Xenotric 11 місяців тому +1

    washing up bowls helps save water costs by basically shrinking the sink size. It also has utilities outside of washing up, often used as a sick bucket when people are ill, taking water out for washing windows/vehicles etc. Its just a utility thing in general.

  • @isoldedoyle3483
    @isoldedoyle3483 Рік тому +2

    I’ve never heard it called a washing up bowl but rather a washing up basin. As it is plastic it saves on breakages in the sink and would have been used a lot years ago when people could not afford to replace chipped or cracked crockery.

  • @DoktorAvalanche
    @DoktorAvalanche Рік тому +25

    Hi Tyler, regarding the house names and postage, there are also examples of Royal Mail managing to deliver letters with little more than a description 😂
    For example a letter being delivered to the correct person below:
    "The sender had simply addressed it to Katrina Davis [sic], noting that she lived in a shed “near a village 21 miles from Land’s End, as featured on BBC2 Simon Reeve Cornwall programme”."
    There are several examples of this and whilst I don't recommend posting like this (Royal Mail staff have enough to do as is), it's something I do find amusing :)

    • @rachelhenderson2688
      @rachelhenderson2688 Рік тому +2

      Royal Mail staff are used to it. Also, we had books of all the streets in a town or village. Somebody would know.

  • @Nikki-yn7yv
    @Nikki-yn7yv Рік тому +31

    Yep I’ve I’m British and live in the UK but have lived in the US as my husband is American and I could never understand down the drive mailboxes , anyone could just steal your post and or parcels seems crazy to me , our post people do a lot of walking probably a much healthier job here than in the States where u al seem to drive whatever you do and wherever you go

    • @truxton1000
      @truxton1000 Рік тому

      I lived in Norway for 37 years before moving to UK for over 20 years now. In Norway they have the same letterbox system as US, but they are placed in a natural location together maybe 10-20 of them so it's very quick for the postman to deliver, probably takes 10% of the time compared to UK as no need to walk and walk to all the houses, so it saves a lot of money money. And they do not deliver large parcels to that does not fit in the letter box, you get a note and need to collect at the post office, efficient and avoids deliveries to houses that no one is at home anyway. I have never heard that theft from letterboxes was ever a problem i Norway. And anyway in the UK parcels are left in front of doors ALL the time, I see it daily. But not a big problem with theft in the UK either, from these parcels left for everyone to see. But yes, I get it UK is VERY conservative and they would NEVER change any system regardless if other countries have much better systems.

    • @jamiemoss3633
      @jamiemoss3633 Рік тому

      It's a federal crime to steal mail in the U.S.

    • @truxton1000
      @truxton1000 Рік тому

      @@jamiemoss3633 So what, still people will do it. Anyway I don’t think the penalty should be any less if it was not a “federal crime” as stealing from a person is at least as bad. Maybe USA think it’s more serious if it’s “federal”??

  • @flamingteapot9464
    @flamingteapot9464 Рік тому +4

    As someone with mobility problems I really appreciate letter boxes.being able to deal with my post without having to go outside in my wheelchair in all weather is great.

  • @simonebryant4662
    @simonebryant4662 Рік тому +2

    I think the washing up bowl stems from historically British sinks just being a single sink, without a second or half sink. Therefore, a bowl enables you to tip liquid waste away without having to tip it into your washing up water.

  • @shmuelparzal
    @shmuelparzal Рік тому +18

    Without a washing-up basin, there's always the inconvenience that you might accidentally unplug the sink, which I have done countless number of times whenever I did not have a basin. Having a basin in the sink means that you can have all kinds of things moving around in the basin, and you don't have to worry about accidentally unplugging the sink

    • @miaschu8175
      @miaschu8175 Рік тому +4

      I thought that was just me! I don't care how ugly they are - a washing up bowl is a must!

  • @carolh4119
    @carolh4119 Рік тому +9

    I've visited USA, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka, Dubai, France, Netherlands, Italy, Greece, Belgium, France, Spain, Portugal, Cyprus, Gibraltar, Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt, Wales, Scotland, Ireland - several of these counties more than once. UK is truly a hub for travelling.

  • @devinecaesar
    @devinecaesar Рік тому +2

    As well as the size of our sinks, another reason we use washing up basins / bowls / buckets whatever you want to call them is because the vast majority of UK households do not have a garbage disposal unit under the sink, they are extremely rare and a very American thing; using a bowl stops the sink from getting clogged. You wash the dishes in the bowl, drain off the excess water, any solid residue is then dumped in the bin. British plumbing does not react well to solids, our waste water pipes are quite narrow gauge beyond the ones used for sewage which are wider. You can just plug the sink and use the sink itself without a bowl but then it's harder to scoop out any residue, it's easier just to lift a bowl out, take it to the bin and tip it.

  • @jackguntrip969
    @jackguntrip969 Рік тому +1

    What most Americans don’t seem to remember is that the Uk is a lot older than America. US is about 250 years old whereas the Uk has history dating to ,like, the year 200 and such. Houses with names are usually far older. Take The Burrow from the Harry Potter series, it’s along those line. Letterboxes are more convenient, if something is too big for it, the post person would just knock on the door or leave it there(sometimes both). It’s not really inconvenient for them either. The Royal Mail at least walks in predetermined areas that would cover maybe 50 houses, bigger companies like DHL or DPD (even UPS and USPS at times) will use a van then; those tend to be the bigger items that need someone to collect them and provide a signature if the sellers require it. Thirdly, plugs. They have on off switches for convenience more than anything, some items cannot be left powered on or on charge; having the ability to simply cut the power to that item means you don’t need to unplug the item until you need it and you can also leave the plug in the socket,the lack of power to it means there’s no chance of fires. Furthermore, the designs of the plugs are much better. The Uk runs on around 240V as opposed to the US 120V meaning the fire chances are higher, showing the need for the switches. The sockets have three holes; two are the actual power pins like the US ones. The third is a safety “flap”. With the plug having three pins; the longer top one can push the “flap” out of the way and unblock the lower two holes allowing power to flow should the power be turned on at the switch. If you didn’t have this third piñon your plug, you would not be able to plug anything in. If you’ve ever heard of someone jumping something metal in a plug, this prevents this.
    I hope this helps a few people understand a few of the things mentioned in the video.

  • @ianm42yt
    @ianm42yt Рік тому +31

    You should know about the Canary Islands, because if one of the volcanoes has a major eruption, half an island could slip into the sea, and the resulting tsunami would wipe out New York a few hours later.

    • @gillcawthorn7572
      @gillcawthorn7572 Рік тому +2

      Providing he knows where New York is 😅

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Рік тому +1

      @@gillcawthorn7572 Is it near New Amsterdam?

    • @gillcawthorn7572
      @gillcawthorn7572 Рік тому

      @@Isleofskye Somewhere round there. If it`s known that it isn`t in the Netherlands ,it`s a bonus.😄

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Рік тому

      @@gillcawthorn7572 New Amsterdam being,Gill? 😀

    • @gillcawthorn7572
      @gillcawthorn7572 Рік тому +1

      @@Isleofskye Oh dear ,why did you mention it if you don`t know where or it is?

  • @Aloh-od3ef
    @Aloh-od3ef Рік тому +35

    Most sinks in the UK are made from stainless steel.
    A washing bowl/ bucket is used to protect your sink from being scratched from the metal knifes and forks 😉

    • @ianstratford1914
      @ianstratford1914 Рік тому

      And the bowl can be lifted out to refill the kettle.

    • @sarahhiggins1515
      @sarahhiggins1515 Рік тому +1

      But you don’t need to put those items into the sink. They don’t ever have to touch the sides. You hold the item and use a cloth to clean it with the water.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Рік тому

      @@sarahhiggins1515 I regret to inform you Sarah that any possible long-term relationship between ourselves is never going to happen, if you don't allow the rice or other items that were cooked in the saucepan to be filled with hot water and fairy liquid to soak, for later final cleansing.
      At least neither of us , use a bowl so there may be a chink of light ahead of us:)

    • @sarahhiggins1515
      @sarahhiggins1515 Рік тому

      @@Isleofskye Don't worry I leave things to soak just not in the sink 🙃

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Рік тому

      @@sarahhiggins1515 That's more promising Sarah. The only thing that can ruin our future is if you like Soaps, Talent Shows, Ballet, Opera, ITV, Circuses, Funfairs or live outside The M25, Cats, Shopping, or Chatting on The Phone for more than 3 minutes.
      Anyone one of the aforementioned HAS to be a Yellow Card and 2 or more and, sadly, for me, it's Doom and Gloom and , wistfully, imagining what might have been...

  • @tanyabarker4406
    @tanyabarker4406 Рік тому +3

    Letter box is the name for it in Australia and New Zealand as well but they are at the gate of the property not in the door of the house. Mainly because in the UK houses are most often built very close to the foot path, “ side walk” to you. Houses have names but also numbers, not names exclusively.

    • @AstoranSolaire
      @AstoranSolaire 4 місяці тому

      UK houses most definitely can have exclusively a name. There isn't a single house in my village that has a number.

  • @allandavis8201
    @allandavis8201 Рік тому +1

    I don’t know about other towns in the United Kingdom I have to agree that our public transport system is excellent. The reasons for having a switch on plug sockets (power outlets) is that a) you can switch it off when not actually in use and save on electricity charges and b) you can turn it off so that the risk of an appliance shorting out and causing a fire is greatly reduced, and it can extend the life of an appliance because it is not drawing power to it, even things like television sets with a standby mode draw current, and again that helps to reduce the risk of an electrical fire.
    A washing up bowl is useful in many ways, but primarily it reduces the amount of water used to do your washing up, the amount of water you use is reduced so in turn that reduces the amount you pay to the water company.

  • @iallso1
    @iallso1 Рік тому +16

    Before moving to NZ I had visited the usual European destinations France, Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, Greece, and the Canary Islands. I had also visited Canada, the US 3 times and Cuba twice. Turkey, Singapore and Hong Kong in Asia, Egypt in Africa, and Australia and New Zealand. Since moving to NZ we have added Italy and Japan along with a further 6 trips to Australia. We still have plans to visit other Pacific Island nations and Hawaii before we get too old to enjoy the experience.
    It is important to experience other cultures, you grow from these experiences, become more tolerant of other people and the way they do things.

  • @musingartisan
    @musingartisan Рік тому +15

    As an ex newspaper delivery guy, in rural areas we have mail boxes. But in "urban/sub urban" areas 90% of our front doors open straight onto the "sidewalk", so there is no walking up and down drive ways etc. Posties can just walk up and down the street will just walk down the sidewalk easily putting your mail through the door.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG Рік тому +5

      As a former Postie who covered urban and rural deliveries, many rural homes still had a letterbox, only a few had a mailbox as they didn't think they were secure.

  • @DanielBotes
    @DanielBotes 11 місяців тому +2

    With the Amazon thing, I ordered something in the morning, and it arrived the same day.
    Also: I just got into your channel (as a Brit), and I love it - you have a great voice, great delivery, and I'm learning things about America at the same time! 10/10, great channel

  • @WeeMac538
    @WeeMac538 Рік тому +1

    The reason for putting a plastic basin ( can't remember what the girl called it) in sinks to clean dishes is to stop the dishes and cups etc. from becoming cracked or broken. Most British sinks were made from porcelaine. Dishes could also scratch the sink surface and make them look unsightly.

  • @pattyx984
    @pattyx984 Рік тому +9

    Previous amazon worker here, we have same day amazon prime delivery here.
    If you live in or near any of the major cities there will always be a huge amazon fulfilment centre within a few hours drive of you. (Easier to accomplish than in the US, as it only takes 12 hours ish to drive the entire length of the country)
    So, if you order before a certain time of day and your item is in stock at a close by warehouse, it will be delivered that same evening, usually around 9-10pm.

  • @GPA_Karting
    @GPA_Karting Рік тому +4

    6:00 thats part of the problem, what's wrong with a bit of walking? Houses here are mostly terraced and semi detached, houses aren't spread apart and postmen only cover specific areas daily, they have "routes" , they either walk the routes if its a built up area with lots of housing or they drive in rural places then post through doors.
    I don't understand your "convenience for the postman" thing.. its literally there job 🤦‍♂️🤣

  • @Carl_Raybould
    @Carl_Raybould Рік тому +2

    Hi. I'm a brit and washing up bowls are quite common but normally in a house with two sinks, which is also quite common. The house name normally has the street name and post code so it's not confused with other houses of the same name. Buses are normally good and there are special buses called park and ride in busy towns so you can park your car on the outside of town and take the bus into the centre for visitors who live out of town. Different holiday destinations are quite common in uk as we love to travel and learn different parts of the world. Thanks for the video

  • @magzb2642
    @magzb2642 Рік тому +2

    Bless the postmen/women and we've always had honest ones.❤

  • @EdDueim
    @EdDueim Рік тому +10

    House names are not uncommon but we also have postcodes which pinpoint the location. A friend of mine found on an old map that a stream behind his house was known as "Hellpool". Immediately had a sign made; "Hellpool House"

    • @avaggdu1
      @avaggdu1 Рік тому +1

      Thank goodness he didn't live in Pissy Beds near Doncaster.

    • @EdDueim
      @EdDueim Рік тому +1

      @@avaggdu1 Could have opened a retirement home.

    • @avaggdu1
      @avaggdu1 Рік тому +1

      @@EdDueim I don't think life expectancy is high enough in Doncaster to need one.

  • @Becca-Louise
    @Becca-Louise Рік тому +13

    Purpose of the washing up bowl is you can put all your dirty dishes in it, but then lift the bowl out when you need access to the taps to fill up the kettle for example :)

    • @wobaguk
      @wobaguk Рік тому +4

      The kettles they dont have :). Also Amazon US seems to be full of 'washbasin dishpans" which seem to be exactly washing up bowls, so SOMEONE is using them.

    • @avaggdu1
      @avaggdu1 Рік тому

      Fortunately the UK is catching up to the US with mixer and monobloc taps so washing up bowls are disappearing where they belong. I can't stand them, but I understand why people with old-fashioned kitchens still cling on to them.

    • @wobaguk
      @wobaguk Рік тому +1

      When you have a double sink I see the solution, but just having a mixer tap, I would still want to lift out the bowl if I wanted to wash dirt off my hands or strain vegetables.

  • @barrysteven5964
    @barrysteven5964 Рік тому +1

    I like my washing up bowl because if you're washing a mug or plate or something and it slips out of your hand it doesn't break on the hard surface of the sink.
    My mother-in-law lives in a village in Yorkshire and her house has a name but no number. My sister lives in a small town in Lancashire and her house is in a row of three 1840s built cottages and hers has a name but now has been given a number too. In any case, the postcode narrows the address down to a smaller group of houses so the postie can find them easily enough.

  • @truxton1000
    @truxton1000 Рік тому +2

    Regarding the mail through the door in UK yes, it creates MORE work for the postman. But as this is a British tradition, and of course to break a tradition would be IMPOSSIBLE to change the mail through the door will stay. As I am from Norway and there we have certain places where all the letterboxes is located in the same place the postman just turn up in car and fills up all the letterboxes in a short time, saving walking from house to house. I recon it would take at least ten times longer for a UK postman to do a round compared to in "normal" countries. Well I guess they get very fit with all that walking... but it of course cost much more.

  • @BeYourself9982
    @BeYourself9982 Рік тому +1

    I find that I am more likely to use a washing up bowl if there's a lot of washing because I can carry it around and put the washing in it to take it to the sink. It's also helpful if you regularly camp because you can take it with you to use as a sink.

  • @sandracraig
    @sandracraig Рік тому +1

    I'm in Scotland UK I live in a flat and our postman climbs four storys to deliver our letters to twelve families in the building every day,.

  • @He1IoDev
    @He1IoDev Рік тому +10

    I would love a video of you just on google earth looking at the uk and how dense all of the towns, cities, villages are.
    Theres lots and lots of countryside especially down the middle of it but It would be fun having you see what villages look like, how different towns look like aswell as the contrast between them and the cities.
    Everywhere in the uk has tons of history and local stories and I feel you looking around and searching town and village names would be a really fun video idea :)

  • @Attirbful
    @Attirbful Рік тому +6

    Its the same in Germany. In the cities, a mailman is most usually on foot and has a hand-cart with the presorted mail. From one house to another, he walks about 8 yards (especially in major cities, where houses are built right next to each other forming entire blocks of houses)… and often, several dozen people live in the same house, so they will have a system of mailboxes in the lobby or outside the door (it is the same in American cities!). It would actually be a lot more work for them to take cars and drive from house to house to get out, walk to the mailbox, back to the car and go on to the next house… In smaller towns, mailmen will travel by bike (today, E-bike) with a large container for the mail in in and drive from house to house (everything in close proximity). There are few locations/addresses that are all by themselves out in the boondocks (such as large farms etc.) and the mail will be delivered there by car. Still, no mail boxes anywhere. Some people have some for fun (such as if they have nostalgic feelings for a USA stay), but they are not commonly used.

  • @emeraldscorpio
    @emeraldscorpio Рік тому +2

    I lived in Tampa, a city of 1m people and was shocked it didn't have a train network. I come from a small town in Scotland pop 75-80k and we have 8 train stations lol

  • @glenmartin7978
    @glenmartin7978 Рік тому +1

    Im my house I just fill the Kitchen sink with Hot water with washing up liquid added to the water to wash my dishes, we use the Washing up bowl if we need to take water to another area of the house away from the sink to wash anything or if we want to sit and soak our feet to relax etc, we also use the bowl when we are ill by filling it with hot water placing a towel over your head and the bowl and inhale the steam

  • @neilmarkwick1724
    @neilmarkwick1724 Рік тому +15

    It is also common for people from the UK to have short breaks / long weekends in European Countries as we have a network of low cost airlines. I'm watching your video in Porto, Portugal as I had a long weekend off. My return flights to / from the UK were £58 total but you can find flights for much less than that!

  • @timglennon6814
    @timglennon6814 Рік тому +7

    In the U.K. you can get same day delivery with some Amazon orders.
    Houses with just names are very few and far between in the U.K.

    • @no-oneinparticular7264
      @no-oneinparticular7264 Рік тому

      And the Co op

    • @patchday6750
      @patchday6750 Рік тому

      Amazon delivery in my rural area normally next day.. And where Iive lots have names on houses.. Very quaint 🙂 a town wouldnt work as too many 😬

    • @simonupton-millard
      @simonupton-millard Рік тому

      All the houses in my village only have names, but beleve its the age of the buildings most of our village is older than the idea of giving a house a number

    • @sooskevington6144
      @sooskevington6144 Рік тому

      Really?
      In the English town where I grew up there were, and are, whole streets of houses with just names. Also many more streets where the houses have name and number and in both cases the names were either applied when the houses were built or became customary as a means of distinguishing/identifying the house for convenience years, in some cases centuries ago.

  • @MaggieTheCat01
    @MaggieTheCat01 Рік тому +1

    3:25 The tube is an underground system that covers London only. The rest of the country has regular, overground trains.
    Washing-up bowl: I prefer them because I’m less likely to chip my crockery if I bash it against a plastic bowl.
    Holidays: there aren’t many countries to which a Brit won’t venture.

  • @TheBreadthatcausedLesMis
    @TheBreadthatcausedLesMis Рік тому +2

    As someone who delivered leaflets in the past, Letterboxes are a bane depending on the type. As theres a type which is just a single plate and the other which is a bit more secure. You definitely need to be careful as they can be spring loaded and I have had a letterbox flap slam on my fingers when delivering.

  • @zahidshabir4038
    @zahidshabir4038 Рік тому +3

    For the mail being sent directly to your home it has another benefit which is security. If your mail is outside your home someone can easily just walk up and take it whereas with a hole in the door they need to break in to your home to do that

  • @140cabins
    @140cabins Рік тому +5

    In the UK, you might still have an American-style mailbox if your front door is a long way from the road - I live in the countryside and farms often have them. Also if you have animals running around and don't want them (a) getting out, and/or (b) attacking the postman.

  • @slightlymaddog
    @slightlymaddog 11 місяців тому +1

    We only tend to use washing-up-bowls (at least in my household) when we have other things that need to soak, or we have a leak and need something to catch the water, just general times when it's useful to have something like that around.

  • @cayde7207
    @cayde7207 Рік тому +1

    As an extremely happy Amazon Prime customer in the U.K. we get the option of same day delivery, the quickest I’ve had a package arrive is 2hrs after purchase which was a grocery order.

  • @stevedale2840
    @stevedale2840 Рік тому +3

    Using a bowl in the sink to wash dishes has a few benefits:
    Water conservation: By filling up a bowl with water and soap, you can use just the right amount of water needed to wash your dishes, rather than letting the water run continuously from the tap. This saves water and can also reduce your water bill.
    Easy rinsing: If you rinse dishes directly in the sink, food particles and soap can easily get stuck in the sink drain, which can cause clogs over time. Using a bowl allows for easy rinsing without risking clogs.
    Organization: Having a designated bowl for washing dishes can help keep your sink area organized and tidy. It also helps to prevent dishes from getting lost in the bottom of the sink and makes it easier to see if any dishes are still waiting to be washed.
    Cleaning: Using a bowl makes it easier to clean dishes with a scrubber or sponge without having to worry about dishes slipping or falling out of your hands.
    Overall, using a bowl in the sink to wash dishes can save water, prevent clogs, keep your sink area organized, and make washing dishes easier and more efficient.

  • @psychosoma5049
    @psychosoma5049 Рік тому +8

    I’m 40 and never learned to drive (I suffer from seizures so am not allowed) and the transportation in greater Manchester is awesome for me 3:01
    The best thing about letterboxes is people can’t just take your mail out and steal it, but if you life in a flat usually there’s post boxes in the lobby for each flat that are accessed with a key. In a house you can buy a cage to go behind the door so the mail is protected from pets. 6:34
    12:23 we don’t have garbage disposals so the bowl is meant to try to filtrate the amount of crap going down the sink but most people (obviously this woman) just dumps everything down the drain….

    • @finneyonthewing804
      @finneyonthewing804 Рік тому +1

      Well said, all my points made but in one post - chapeau!

    • @audiocoffee
      @audiocoffee Рік тому

      tower block flats have letterboxes. I live in a low-rise flat and I (and my five neighbours) all have letterboxes.
      some places have mail boxes - but not all!
      it varies depending on the location/build of the property.

  • @candrian7
    @candrian7 Рік тому +2

    The washing up bowl saves water. We wash our dishes in the bowl then instead of tipping the old water down the drain we dump it out on the garden. Helps especially during droughts which are getting more common

    • @jetster785
      @jetster785 Рік тому +1

      True it'd be econmical for hot countries, but here in the UK, we dont have a ahortage of water to warrant it and there's a sink plug.

    • @candrian7
      @candrian7 Рік тому

      @@jetster785 We have droughts every summer. Last year most of the country turned brown

    • @katstorm13
      @katstorm13 Рік тому +1

      my parents live in the country (in the US) They have a septic tank since there's no community sewage system. Dumping the dishwater in the garden keeps the septic tank from filling up as fast.

    • @jetster785
      @jetster785 Рік тому

      @@candrian7 We also have reservoirs and lakes around the country to cope.

  • @spacechannelfiver
    @spacechannelfiver Рік тому +1

    The post in the UK is delivered by postcode, that usually limits it down to about 10-20 physical addresses - they are similar to Zip codes but much more specific. Post is routed across the country based on the first part and when it gets sorted locally all of the stuff for a street gets dumped into a bag locally. My postcode covers about a third of my street, so like 20 houses. The postie does this round amongst a few others so even if you get the number wrong it’ll usually appear in the right letterbox. Sometimes they mispost, but people just generally take it to correct address

  • @geekexmachina
    @geekexmachina Рік тому +4

    Letter boxes are also a bit more secure as its not likely you will have your mail stolen. Also the Mail service is seen as a public service. on the issue of names it is common for farms to have names eg Yew Tree farm, Lower croft farm, similar with manor houses and halls. Town houses may have a name plus a number eg Rosewood cottage, 4 Birch street. Im told in the USA this maybe true of ranches and stuff like that "The Carter ranch". As for the post getting to the adress the important bit is the post code (zip code) which gives the location within 40 houses or so. And most named houses would have a street name even small country lanes have a name

  • @timglennon6814
    @timglennon6814 Рік тому +16

    It’s very good exercise and keeps you fit being a post person in the U.K.
    The forgetting to turn the switch on an electric plug socket, I think it quite common with people up and down the U.K.
    I’ve done it plenty of times. 😆

    • @anthonyyarwood9558
      @anthonyyarwood9558 Рік тому

      It's postman or post woman, not post person

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG Рік тому

      @@anthonyyarwood9558 or Postie, we're happy to be called that.

  • @margueritejohnson8373
    @margueritejohnson8373 Рік тому +1

    My address in England is: Old Bakery Cottage, Church Street, Then the town name. The house is in the centre of the town and was, in fact the bakery until around 100 years ago. It’s about 450 years old, but not the oldest in this small town. I’ve also lived in houses called: Broadwater, Longsdale and Crossways Cottage.

  • @mumo9413
    @mumo9413 10 місяців тому +1

    In the UK we have, trains, buses & trams as public transport. With online timetables & season tickets, subsidised for students, free pass for pensioners. However, for a family of 4 it can work out more expensive than driving.

  • @richardbrown8966
    @richardbrown8966 Рік тому +7

    If she thinks a washing up bowl looks like a bucket, she needs her eyes testing.

  • @beverlyshane8433
    @beverlyshane8433 Рік тому +3

    The UK has fantastic public transportation. I have an English born Mom and I went to England for a year. The mailbox on front doors was very common here in the US In neighborhoods that were row homes (terrace houses). There was no front gardens here to have a mailbox so it was in your front door. So your mail was secure and didn’t get wet or blow away. I miss that having a mailbox on my outside wall now. It’s not at the end of my lawn here it’s right by my front door

  • @mothmagic1
    @mothmagic1 Рік тому +1

    As far as I know as long as the item will fit through your letter box it it is still officially illegal for the postie to hand hand your mail to you. It is classed as interfering with mail. The reason for switches on our electric sockets is that we use 220 volts as opposed to your 110

  • @Youssii
    @Youssii Рік тому +3

    Houses with a name will still usually have a street name associated with them, so unless there’s two Christmas cottages on your street you should be okay.
    That said, the UK post is famous for delivering letters even if there’s almost no address on there - “woman who lives across from the Spar (shop)” and “Anne who takes photos of Fairhead” “The department of creepy crawlies university of Gloucester” are all letters which were successfully delivered.

  • @The.Android
    @The.Android Рік тому +4

    Plastic bowls in sinks are important especially if you have original old or reproduction enamelled sinks which can chip or scratch easily. Even metal aluminium sinks can get scratched from sharp knives etc so plastic bowls help protect and prolong the life and appearance of your sink.

  • @seanmc1351
    @seanmc1351 Рік тому +4

    hi tyler, the plug outley has more safety features, you cant quite see it on picture, but if you look at the 3 slots, the top one is dark, this being, that there is access, the bottom to slots which look light which is where the main power is looks lighter, this is because they have stutters that close of those slots, so children cant poke something in, you need to look at a video about the UK plug design and they both go hand in hand for safety