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The UK has very strict rules on how hens are reared and housed. Since 1st January 2012 chicken farmers who use batteries (cages) must provide cages large enough for the hen to move around. The alternatives are: open floor barns or access to 'free range' outdoor space. In other words, the birds are treated as living creatures not simply as egg producers. Consequently eggs are produced in cleaner surroundings and do not require intense washing.
My old UK keyboard didn't have a € sign so when I moved to Spain 10 years ago I had to get one that did. But none of them had an easy access £ sign. As I needed both symbols for work, it was always an annoyance!
I've always put eggs in the fridge after buying it from the store as a British citizen but also have you noticed that fridge-freezers have always had egg section in the fridges where you can out eggs individually
Travel insurance is directly related to health cover. Here in the UK we take for granted that health care is free at the point of use, Even going to the Channel islands (rather strangely between the two best health systems in the world France, and the UK) you need travel insurance for illness. I know it does include other things, but they are really only addons. For example my son has pre existing condition for which treatment in the USA is over $2.5 million, so he cannot get health cover in the USA for love nor money, luckily here this treatment is provided free at the point of use by the NHS, and at a considerably lesser charge to the NHS of £600,000. However he does need a card for cover that is preloaded when he has to go to the USA for business, which having a US company or two is quite often.
Nursery is where the plants are grown. If they are sold at the place where they're grown it's still a nursery; garden centre is a relatively modern term to describe where the plants (and loads of tat) are bought in to be sold
The reason for the popularity & the diverse range of items at garden centres is because of an antiquated shopping laws that were not changed until the mid 1990’s. Only restaurants, petrol stations, certain other specific shops/ services were allowed to open on Sunday- Garden Centers were one of the only places to go to on a Sunday, they started having tea room’s & gifts & kept on diversifying as they had a whole market place to themselves on Sundays. It was a real treat on a Sunday to go to the local garden centre- we normally went with grandma as well, met up with other family 😂 what a treat!! But it was what everyone did & now people still treat garden centres like this & most people can’t remember why it started 😂🌺🌼🌹🦋🌸🛍
It was frustrating with the old Sunday Trading Laws, wasn't it. MFI and DIY Centres were open, but one could not buy anything! One furniture manufacturer tried selling apples for £299.99, with a Free Sofa included! Great idea, but they were prosecuted. Pubs had limited opening times. Shops were closed. Newsagents were open for the mornings. I loved the story that one could buy a nudie mag on a Sunday, but it was illegal to sell a bible on the sabbath day. That one made me chuckle. You are correct about Garden Centres. We still meet up with friends there, if we are meeting up on a Sunday, even though our options are far better today. Cheers.
We have plant nurseries in the UK too, I live about ten minutes walk from one. They sell plants, trees, compost, etc, give advice, and that’s it. No cafe or random other things. Plant nurseries cater to a different audience, garden centres are aimed more at family days out, hence the cafes and other items to buy. Most people I know who go to garden centres wander around aimlessly, eat lunch, then maybe buy a house plant or random item that isn’t plant related. Serious gardeners go to nurseries if they can.
I met my late wife in a garden centre over 30 years ago when we bumped into each other while looking for black bamboo individually.We were both Goths and thought it looked cool lol, I still can't see it without remembering that day and her :)
I came to the comments to mention Milton Keynes too 🤣. I went to a gig at the Milton Keynes Bowl and everyone followed the signs causing literal gridlock... not me, two roundabouts to the right, turned left and it was clear almost to the M1..🤣
when you get close to your destination in Milton Keynes the GPS gets stuck on a loop of "take the first exit at the next roundabout" and you drive round and round the block ha ha
I'm British, a few points: - we do have coupons, just not as many (usually you get them if you have a loyalty card for a particular supermarket and can only use them for that chain) - the town I know with the most roundabouts is actually built in a grid, but I get your point - nurseries in the UK are where the plants are grown for the garden centre, so some garden centres have nurseries attached
Good points ...and we tend to call coupons, vouchers. I live on the Isle of Wight and the Ferry company posts out a book of 'coupons' bi-annually with huge discounts for residents, so they do exist but aren't a big part of our culture, we tend to just like being given a fair price in the first place :)
Milton Keynes is indeed built in a grid. Confusing as hell when trying to follow google maps! Cause you have H 1 and V 1 (horizontal and vertical roads), and if you don’t know the place well, you can get mixed up easily.
Vouchers here in the UK are usually distributed by brands rather than shops, also. So you might get a coupon for a well known brand in a magazine but its only available to use in participating retailers, which are usually bigger well known stores. Independent shops like the one I work in don't usually participate as they lose out too much.
Omg the garden centre point made me laugh so much, I bloody love a garden centre 😂 I love going at Christmas when they have all of the decorations and everything!
The dollar symbol is only there because it's used as a specific function in Excel. It freezes part of a formula to 1 cell e.g. =sum($A$1*B1) when I populate that down A1 will remain the number all the others are multiplied by which would be B2,B3 etc
I'm a massive fan of UK-US difference videos but this one, which I clicked on accidentally (!), is fantastic as it's the first I've ever watched where all 8 differences are unique. As a Brit this was very educational... thank you!
One garden centre in London has a sign “unattended children will be given a double espresso, and a free puppy”. A 1950s edition of the Highway Code said “there are no special rules at roundabouts”; but there was much less traffic in those days. When I visited west coast USA, I was amused by a very rare roundabout, in the town of Seaside.
Interesting! I'm not aware of any nurseries near me and often hear of people just talking about the garden centres, so I'll have to do some digging (no pun intended!!)
@@GirlGoneLondonofficial When I was growing up a nursery was the standard name of the place where you would go to buy plants. I think the evolution of nurseries into garden centres was a case of businesses branching out into other product lines to grow and attract more customers. Have you come across any "garden centre rows" (like furniture rows) in the UK where you are? There are some places where there will be several garden centres all right next to each other along the road (Crews Hill in Enfield is an example).
We have had several nurseries where I live. They have always tended to specialize in particular types of plants. They really only ever sell plants and maybe plant food or something like that. Certainly from the nurseries I have been to you wouldnt be able to get garden implements or garden furniture or anything like that
Huh! If you're as old as me, you'll remember green shield stamps, pink stamps and numerous rivals. Shops, petrol stations and everywhere else screaming DOUBLE STAMPS!!! TRIPLE STAMPS!! WE STAMP ON YOUR HEAD!! No, not the last one, but it was almost as mad.
Us Brits love Garden Centres because they are part of our history ... it goes all the way back to the early explorers who often brought back rare and beautiful plants from unknown parts of the globe. Schools often plan day trips to garden centres to learn children about Horticulture ... I can remember in the early teens going to Batree Garden Centre when it was first opened in Lincolnshire.
Garden Centres are part of the culture, and it goes back, in part, to the restricted shops hours of a few years ago. Shops were not allowed to open on a Sunday. But, garden centres, DIY shops (before the big Sheds came in) and motoring spares places could. So, the Sunday trip out was to the garden centre, hence the cafes. Same with Bank Holidays; Only a lunatic would attempt to go to a garden centre on a bank holiday.
@@GirlGoneLondonofficial........the UK is such a small country that, as fable has it, no where in the country is more than 70 miles from the sea....and when you get to Dover, a very different culture is more that 22 miles away.
In the section on roundabouts, you showed a photo of the Magic Roundabout (yes, that is its official name) in Swindon. This is atypical (there is another, larger. one in Hemel Hempstead). Most roundabouts in the UK are a single island with traffic flowing clockwise.
There's one on one of the exits of London Heathrow Airport. I think it was put there to totally confuse foreigners who had just picked up a rental car.
The popularity of garden centres dates back to before the Sunday trading laws were relaxed in the mid 1990's. Before this the only retail outlets open on a Sunday were the local newsagent and garden centres, so people would have a Sunday afternoon wandering around the local garden centre just for something to do.
I'm 36 and LOVE garden centres. I live in Hertfordshire and there are about 10 garden centres (me and the missus visit sometimes just to go to the cafe!) within 30 minutes drive, plus one or two nurserys that I can think of that JUST deals in growing plants.
Those card readers still exist but their functions are now available in the bank’s App on your smartphone. Garden centres have evolved from nurseries over the last 50 years as part of “retail”. They used to be just some greenhouses that the public could visit and buy plants but then evolved into the destinations they are now.
That's what I thought, so I was surprised when my banking app required me to use my card reader before it would process a payment to a new person. Of course, I hadn't used it for ages and couldn't find it. I had to go into the bank, the next day, to make my payment and pick up another card reader.
@@RedMW My husband was the world`s worst driver .After a time ,I made sure I did most of the driving ,especially after an horrendous trip round the Swindon `magic roundabout`. Hooted at from all directions , I asked him how he worked it out .His reply was " Oh ,as far as I`m concerned it`s always my right of way" !!
The egg this is right and also as a chef you find if in the fridge some of the water content of the egg will be drawen out of the egg. So when frying a egg that has been in the fridge for some time it will be more likly to explod and spit when frying as the protine in more concentrated
I remember fighting with my brother to stick the Green Shield Stamps in the book, and mum and dad both collected cards from cigarettes. They got some good things with them.
Even as a 90s kid I remember some of them. You tend to only really find them now in loyalty card schemes, the back of cereal boxes, paper bus tickets, random products (like hand-wash) or given out from store deliveries. Though all of these seem to be a dying breed now things are replaced by smart bus cards/apps, online ordering and savings communities (like hotukdeals/groupon)
Mike I think America still use a lot of coupons. I think its a great idea and should be brought back over here. People on low wage could really benefit from collecting coupons from news papers.
Travel insurance comes to mind when it comes to health, because British people will immediately be aware that if they have an accident or get sick in another country, they might not get treatment for free like we do at home. You don't want to end up in US-style medical debt, so you buy insurance especially for countries which don't have an equivalent of the NHS, especially as a parent. Edit: Americans don't have to worry about health insurance most places they visit, because most places they visit have socialised medicine free at the point of use. Brits, and other Europeans do have to worry about health insurance if they visit the US.
Belgian here and yep. Visited the US twice and I checked my health insurance over there more than I checked whether I had my plane ticket. Taxes are high and all but the money I do save is fucking mine. Losing it through no fault of my own is just not a thing that computes for me.
Travel insurance also covers you for loss, theft or damage to luggage, cancellation of holiday due to accident illness, or missed flights etc. As with all insurance, its a matter of peace of mind and its a gamble as to whether you might need to claim on it. Maybe americans are more optimistic than Brits?
Some countries, such as Australia, have/had a reciprocal healthcare arrangement with the NHS, but it is still sensible to have travel insurance for all those other reasons you might need it, and sometimes for health-related reasons too. Always wise to check.
When I was younger we used to get quite a lot of coupons and vouchers for discounts on products in stores in the UK, but it seems much less common now. Some websites have discount codes sometimes.
Also in the UK, coupons tend to be loaded with stupid conditions in the small print. People just got fed up with having them rejected by checkout staff. Every time customers tried to redeem them in store, there would normally be a queue of other shoppers standing behind them rolling their eyes. It was also seen as something that poor people used to use, simply to make ends meet. In reality 5p off a pint of milk... 15p off a loaf of bread... or 50p off a box of cereal... won't be worth the hassle to most people these days. We just look for the offers in-store. I can honestly say, i haven't seen anyone redeeming coupons in years.
A lot of the coupons in the UK are based off loyalty cards for particular shops, so rather than getting your coupons from magazines or anywhere else, you "earn" them from what you've bought in the shop previously.
We also used to call garden centres 'nurseries ' too but now as you point out they serve multiple purposes. I have one near me which has a seperate large arts and crafts shop on site. It also has a large restaurant, a fabulous gift shop, artisan grocery shop, outdoor clothes shop and a pet supplies store. Many people go there on a Sunday for a day out for many years they were the only type of stores allowed to open on a Sunday - which is still the case in France where I used to live.
There are garden centers in parts of East Texas exactly like you described in the video. We used to meet my cousins there, get coffee and just walk around.
Roundabouts are safer than "intersections" without lights and better for traffic flow - this is even true in the US. Nurseries (for plants) do exist in the UK as well - but Garden Centres are the Supermarket to the Nursery "corner shop". Travel Insurance is primarily about Health Insurance - when we were in the EU I rarely bothered with it travelling in Europe - as Healthcare was "inexpensive/free" for all EU citizens - depending on the country.
It's actually been studied properly now and roundabouts are safer full stop than any other form of intersection, even with lights, the USA has a huge number of accidents at intersections primarily because a driver ignores red lights, every year over 33,000 people are killed on the roads of America. In the UK there has been a deliberate policy by some councils to remove roundabouts and replace them with lights, this has been done to reduce traffic flow in order to dissuade drivers from city and town centres.
Also important to note that roundabouts and traffic circles (AKA Rotaries) are not the same, roundabouts are safe and permit faster flow of traffic than intersections. Traffic circles are hideously dangerous.
@@RushfanUK I wonder if it also makes a difference to safety that in some parts of America they're actually allowed to turn right on a red light! Our closest equivalent is the left filter lane, which still sometimes has its own light.
Hi - Roundabouts and gridded roads, well I live in Milton Keynes, England and we have roundabouts and a grid of roads. Many of our grid road 'intersections' use roundabouts (we have 103 grid road roundabouts -in an area of about 34 sq miles. We actually have more as we ALSO have small/mini roundabouts (some people say between 300 and a thousand - nobody has counted) on many of our neighbourhood roads (actually I designed a few back in the 1970's.) They work well and yes we do have accidents on them but they are usually just fender benders. As traffic densities increase we are converting some of the grid road roundabouts to partly traffic lights or with dedicated left turn lanes, or even a change FROM a roundabout TO a traffic light controlled junction. (PS I enjoy your videos!)
My local garden centre Dobbies (which backs onto Brighton Racecourse) has got a pet shop with a pet parlour as well as a little Sainsbury's convenient store that's open plan that took over what used to be the aquarium, so you can watch horse racing then shop at the garden centre
I remember going on a coach trip a few years ago and we stopped off at a garden centre on the way home just for refreshments and a toilet stop (pre-areanged with the GC of course). They made a mint from 75 people visiting in a 45 minute window for sure!
The reason the U.K. keyboards have a dollar sign on them (and almost every other keyboard in the world has them), is that the $ symbol is Wesley used in computer programming.
Actually, the so-called "dollar" sign is present is most keyboards (as it was in pretty much all type writers before computers even existed) because it is a pretty standard currency symbol (e.g. Brazil's Real is abbreviated R$). Though in some countries, when hand drawn, it has 2 vertical lines, not just 1.
I think it's used for programming and spreadsheets because it was already a common keyboard symbol. Most international prices are quoted in dollars, so it's still common outside of these uses.
In the sixties most of the eggs on sale in uk were white. Brown eggs became fashionable maybe because they look less anemic. The colour is dependant on the breed of hen.
The move to brown-shelled eggs was partly influenced by a feeling that brown eggs were more 'natural' than white ones, which had a more artificial, sanitised, laboratory, battery-farmed connotation.
The card reader is part of a 2 factor authentication method. You need your pin or password but also the device. The reader that you showed is only used for Barclays. If you are with another bank, they will give you another device. Some may not need you to insert a card and some banks like HSBC (personal accounts) have gotten rid of the security device but use your phone as the security device. 2 factor authentication method gives an additional layer of security when you try to log in to your account.
When I go online and log on to my account apart from the three random characters from my memorable word, I get sent a 6 digit code to my mobile and have to enter it in or speak it on the mobile. This part of the authentication can be disabled if you have set your computer as a trusted device.
Or you could bank with Lloyds, they don't have them at all. I don't think I'd bank with a bank that required me to put my card in a device to use internet banking, the security measures I have to go through seem more than enough. Id, password, random characters from my passphrase and entering a code that's either text to my mobile or phoned through to my landline if I'm on a new 'untrusted' device..
@Michael Sharp Yes I know how they work, I didn't say they had internet connectivity and I don't really think anyone would expect something that looks like a pocket calculator would do. There's a balance between usability and security and for me Barclays go too far along the security path which impacts usability. When Barclays first started using them I was accessing my Lloyds/TSB account at home, at work and using my phone (before there were banking apps). So I'd have had to carry the token generator with me, had I been with Barclays. Don't they still use PINsentry readers? So if you want to access your account at home and work via a PC you'd still need to take the reader with you?
We do love a garden centre. I have a DIY store (B&Q) at the bottom of my street and it does have a garden centre attached, so I love going there for my houseplant needs. I do love a proper garden centre too, though. They're great, but often very expensive.
The US is one of the very few countries that wash their eggs and thereby have to refrigerate them. Nearly all Western European countries don’t wash the eggs, which keeps the CUTICLE intact, and they stay fresh for weeks at room temperature. Roundabouts are increasing in the US before they need very little upkeep and are therefore cheaper to maintain than a large junction with many traffic lights where the bulbs need to be changed and cleaned. The roads in Europe were built hundreds of years ago for use by horse and carts which is why they’re narrow and the technology wasn’t available to bore through rock, so the roadway curved around obstructions. The US being a younger country with SO much room (45 times larger than the U.K.) was able to build wider and straighter roads.
Although the eggs aren’t refrigerated in Supermarkets we will still stick them in the fridge when we take them home. Although we don’t have a coupon culture the Supermarkets have loyalty card schemes (e.g. Nectar Cards in Sainsbury’s Supermarkets) where you can build up points with each purchase.
In New Hampshire there's a place that was "Epsom Four Corners" on one, older, road map I had. They upgraded to a roundabout and renamed it "Espom Circle" on the map supplied by the car hire company.
Roundabouts and road layout. Go to a place in England called Milton Keynes. It's set out like American grid system street. Go from one end to the other and try keep count of how many roundabouts there are. They do work better than lights, but still room for improvement.
A lot of coupons are now on supermarket apps you often have to select them weekly, also eggs are often in the home baking section. I work in a supermarket
Didn't know about coupons on supermarket apps, will have to check that out! We also love coupons for restaurants in the US, which I haven't seen that much of here!
@@GirlGoneLondonofficial If you get supermarket loyalty cards they often give you tailored coupons (either paper or digital) in exchange for data about your shopping habits. They use this data to decide which products to put near each other, especially for promotions - the famous one is beer and nappies often get bought together
Plant nurseries are also a thing in the UK. BTW, in it's simplest terms a roundabout is just a one-way road bent into a circle, all of the intersecting roads form tee junctions. If nobody's coming on the one way road, then you can go.
Nothing like to the extent you mentioned but we do have coupons in the U.K. A lot of the major supermarkets have loyalty cards where we present it, and get points then around every month or so we get vouchers/coupons that can be used towards our shopping, also some have offers on items if you present the loyalty card
Some Garden Centres do actually sell normal clothing, for example, Tong Garden Centre near Bradford, West Yorkshire has a branch of Bon Marche attached. About insurance, it is absolutely necessary to have insurance when you travel. I've never needed it abroad, but when I stayed in an hotel in Felixstowe, Suffolk a few years ago, I got a virus and was unable to travel home when the time came. Having insurance meant I could stay in bed another day to recover properly, meals for me and my friend were upgraded and after 3 days, a taxi took us home, a distance of over 200 miles, and it didn't cost us anything. So it's worth it to insure.
Hi Kalyn! Just stumbled across your channel thanks to UA-cam recommendations and am so glad I did! Love your content and your style of presenting info and telling stories! Time to binge the rest of your videos 😂
Roundabout make absolute PERFECT sense in a grid system. Milton Keynes was built from the ground up as a grid with roundabout. It's a fantastic system that keeps the traffic flowing.
The US are missing out, our Garden Centres are great 🤓! We have a huge one near us, takes a couple of hours to get around and has a Delicatessen, Cafe and all sorts. You'd think it would be the other way around considering the majority of states in the US are usually warmer and sunnier than here, therefore resulting in actually being able to sit in your Garden without being rained on! 😂
@@GirlGoneLondonofficial To be fair I would be too if I lived there! We used to have an Inflatable Hot Tub (unfortunately it broke 😞) but we would go into the shop we got it from for all the cleaning products (and dream of the day we can actually get a fixed/built in one) and they smell like Chlorine because they have the show Hot Tubs in there, so I can imagine half what it must be like 😂
🤣 loved the garden centre bit, my mom and aunt are both 70s and they goddamn love a garden centre meet up for coffee or, of course, a pot of tea and a cake! They also sell like tons of books and gifts at ours
All my older relatives are obsessed with garden centres! I think one of the reasons Brits tend to travel to India, and some other countries, is because of the historic link between the countries. Indian culture and food has obviously had an impact on the UK so we are interested in seeing the country.
In the UK it is very common for young adults on a "gap year" to travel to SE Asia including Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam, or Australia and New Zealand!
I met a similar age American couple in New York & mentioned having been to Thailand & they were like “why ?” Turns out that Vietnam & all the S.E. Asia region resonates with the 70’s & war there & therefore not a happy place. Incidentally it is a fantastic place & especially Vietnam.
@@colinpearce5856 As an English man of a certain age I can understand that, for me in my mind Vietnam and Thailand will always remind me of the Vietnam war.That would however not stop me wanting to visit, but maybe that may not now happen.
@@blackvulcan100 Since I have family that live in Edinburgh, Thailand is, to me, where ladyboys come from, since they've been a regular feature at the festival fringe for years.
Coupons used to be quite big in the UK. At one time some of the big supermarket chains, such as Tesco would accept coupons that were meant to be used in their rivals as long as the product available in their store. I remember a couple of times one of the local Tesco's accepting my coupons even if I hadn't got the item in my basket.
Garden centres are an interesting example. Most people in the UK, I feel, would judge a garden centre not on its range of plants, but whether they had a cafe and if so was it any good. Also if they had a decent Christmas section and grotto in December! And further this seems a natural antidote as a place to go versus endless coffee chain stores on your local high street.
We have nurseries here in the UK which is just a place to buy plants and may have other gardening supplies. Garden centres are a morning/afternoon/day out always important to have a good café, cakes etc... and a place for over priced gifts.
My wife’s the gardener in our house and at garden centre she sometimes says “which plant do you like?” I point to something saying “they’re nice” she then gives me a look of disgust as if I’ve just insulted her and says a firm “No!” If I do manage to get something home she puts my choice in a separate patch away from everything else and calls my plant’s “Dave’s Dasies”.
LOL, in our house it is the other way round. I do most of the gardening, but my wife does like what I call showy stuff, Gladiolus, HT Roses, big Blowsy kind of flowers whilst I like species, so I have a mix of wild primroses ,Fritillarys and Summer snowflakes in bloom currently in my area.
Perhaps the garden centre came as a later thing or 'experience' driven way of shopping as we also have nurseries which seems to be the more serious garden supply place.
I’ve been to Thailand and Vietnam many times-would be unthinkable to not have full travel insurance -imagine something going wrong six thousand miles away.......
I don't have to. My dad decided to retire to Thailand. He had a few good years there, then found out he had cancer early this year. He booked a flight back to the UK and the NHS, but he collapsed and became paralysed just a few days before setting off. He hadn't taken out health insurance, as private medical care was relatively cheap there. However, paying for a medical repatriation is incredibly expensive. And Covid restrictions, especially quarantine, made things more difficult. It took me over two months to organise for my father to be flown home, accompanied by health care professionals, at a cost of over £20,000. (I was lucky that he could still sit in a wheelchair, otherwise he would have needed a flying ambulance, at a cost of over £100,000). I had to organise everything, without the cooperation of the Thai hospital, which would have been easier if an insurance company was dealing with it all. My dad died 6 weeks after arriving in the UK. I'd urge everyone to make sure that they take out insurance when travelling abroad.
We used to keep eggs in the fridge in the shop I worked at years ago. We were then told that getting the eggs cold then the probability of them getting warm on the journey home then people putting them in the fridge when home was not a good idea.
Interesting! We do have these where I'm from in Florida, but I definitely have more memories of coupon clipping for specific brands instead of the grocery store deals.
Nurseries are smaller garden centres. Most big garden centres are not allowed to open on Sundays, but garden nurseries are usually between 10 and 4pm which is also when supermarkets are normally allowed to open. Covid permitting.
Most garden centres of all sizes open on Sundays. In fact, before 1994 there was very restricted Sunday retail legislation in place and one of the few types of shops that COULD open were garden centres. I am pretty sure that is where the tradition of garden centres selling groceries, furniture, books, household goods etc began - because the "normal"places where you could buy these things were closed on Sundays.
It is 19-20 hours from the US to Bangkok, whereas the UK is around 12 hours, so I think it is just a distance thing. Most US visitors to Thailand seem related to the Military as maybe they were stationed in the Asia region at some point. Interesting video for me to learn about these less well-known differences.
No a direct flight is 12hrs but if you want to pay under £400 for flights, which the majority will, your looking at 14 to 19hrs depending on the lay over. The difference is we have the time, we get 28 days paid hoilday (vacation) minimum a lot will get more, I for example have 35 days, compared to USA whose workers get 0 to 10 days (which also has to incorporate sick leave, again we get that as a seperate paid thing). So it's cheaper and we don't have to worry about having no vacation time.
we do have 'coupons' just to a much lesser degree. Vouchers from the sun, macdonalds vouchers from WHSmiths and a few others. Nice vid, i'll defintly look out for more from you!
We also have nurseries that are devoted to plants rather than other things, they are often devoted to a specific plant group and only sell plants and possibly compost etc. specific to that group
Outdoor shops in the UK tend to be relatively small - mainly outdoor 'all weather' and travel wear, walking shoes, camping equipment, backpacks, etc... in the US outdoor centres are massive - the ammunition section itself can be bigger than most stores in the UK, and then all the guns, rifles (and semiautomatic weapons), hunting knives, decoys, trailers (some with freezers), ... In the US, everything seems larger (such as milk and juices in 2L+), cheaper, but blander, or more sugary
I don't think I'd ever noticed a lack of grocery coupons until you mentioned it. Up until, say, a couple of decades ago, there were coupons everywhere, such as in newspapers and magazines, as part of product labels, as well as some attached to free miniature product samples, posted with the (other) junk mail through the letterbox. I think the only ones I've seen sort of recently have been Macdonald's promotions on the back of bus tickets.
They don't keep eggs in the refrigerator here in Germany either, it's the same as the UK. Another difference you may have noticed, you mention the kitchen surface as being called "the counter". The counter in the UK is what you get at shop checkout areas (more so smaller shops), in the home, the kitchen surfaces are called just that, or kitchen work top. I lived in America for a while so I got used to hearing them referred to as 'counters'. My German boyfriend is fascinated with UK garden centres, I never really thought about them before, but it's funny you mention them too :)
as a kid our parents used to drag us to a local garden centre, it had a café, restaurant, aquatic centre(the pond shop), pet shop, playground, ice cream vans and a large plastic camel that doubled as a slide. all this was vital as parents would often disappear into "the plant bit" for hours on end. everything else was just to keep the kids entertained lol
I can remember the days, back in the 60s, maybe early 70s, in the UK, when you used to go shopping with your purse stuffed full with coupons cut out from magazines or from cereal packets. Green Shield stamps were issued by some shops, which you stuck in a book and could redeem for household items.
We call places that grow and sell plants nurseries as well. Garden centres, though, include the ornaments and other garden features, plus anything else that they think they can sell to Sunday shoppers. Even before they included nice cafés, garden centres were a place to go for an afternoon, not just to buy plants. I liked them when I was young, as they're kind of aspirational. I would have loved to have a garden with all those beautiful plants! Now, I've filled my flat with pot plants 🌷🌼🪴
Here in the UK, a nursery is where plants are grown (and yes, it's also the name given to an institution where young children will begin their education in an informal way), whereas a garden centre is where plants (and lots of other things) are sold. A nursery might sell to the public, or it might only sell to retailers such as garden centres. A garden centre might also grow the plants it sells, but in that case it is more likely to call itself a nursery.
Thank you for watching! Funnily enough, I used to have a friend in Milton Keynes so know it well! My favorite part about Milton Keynes is the often free and spacious parking everywhere, haha!
@@GirlGoneLondonofficial I used to work in MK and was told that it was designed on the American system of grids as the town planners at the time thought that the future was in the car rather than on foot. This meant that the pedestrian walkways were set back from the road often obscured by trees and foliage. and the only way to cross the roads were by underpasses This made them an absolute nightmare for safety, The planners were also really keen on building pretty much identical glass fronted buildings so oftentimes unless you knew the town really well you could get horrendously lost just driving round and round as literally everywhere looked the same
You're missing out on exclusive weekly videos (and the controversy over how I tiered British food...sorry, Yorkshires are the best!) if you haven't checked me out on Patreon! www.patreon.com/girlgonelondon
The UK has very strict rules on how hens are reared and housed. Since 1st January 2012 chicken farmers who use batteries (cages) must provide cages large enough for the hen to move around. The alternatives are: open floor barns or access to 'free range' outdoor space. In other words, the birds are treated as living creatures not simply as egg producers.
Consequently eggs are produced in cleaner surroundings and do not require intense washing.
My old UK keyboard didn't have a € sign so when I moved to Spain 10 years ago I had to get one that did. But none of them had an easy access £ sign. As I needed both symbols for work, it was always an annoyance!
I've always put eggs in the fridge after buying it from the store as a British citizen but also have you noticed that fridge-freezers have always had egg section in the fridges where you can out eggs individually
Travel insurance is directly related to health cover. Here in the UK we take for granted that health care is free at the point of use, Even going to the Channel islands (rather strangely between the two best health systems in the world France, and the UK) you need travel insurance for illness. I know it does include other things, but they are really only addons. For example my son has pre existing condition for which treatment in the USA is over $2.5 million, so he cannot get health cover in the USA for love nor money, luckily here this treatment is provided free at the point of use by the NHS, and at a considerably lesser charge to the NHS of £600,000. However he does need a card for cover that is preloaded when he has to go to the USA for business, which having a US company or two is quite often.
Nursery is where the plants are grown. If they are sold at the place where they're grown it's still a nursery; garden centre is a relatively modern term to describe where the plants (and loads of tat) are bought in to be sold
The reason for the popularity & the diverse range of items at garden centres is because of an antiquated shopping laws that were not changed until the mid 1990’s. Only restaurants, petrol stations, certain other specific shops/ services were allowed to open on Sunday- Garden Centers were one of the only places to go to on a Sunday, they started having tea room’s & gifts & kept on diversifying as they had a whole market place to themselves on Sundays. It was a real treat on a Sunday to go to the local garden centre- we normally went with grandma as well, met up with other family 😂 what a treat!! But it was what everyone did & now people still treat garden centres like this & most people can’t remember why it started 😂🌺🌼🌹🦋🌸🛍
It was frustrating with the old Sunday Trading Laws, wasn't it. MFI and DIY Centres were open, but one could not buy anything! One furniture manufacturer tried selling apples for £299.99, with a Free Sofa included! Great idea, but they were prosecuted. Pubs had limited opening times. Shops were closed. Newsagents were open for the mornings. I loved the story that one could buy a nudie mag on a Sunday, but it was illegal to sell a bible on the sabbath day. That one made me chuckle. You are correct about Garden Centres. We still meet up with friends there, if we are meeting up on a Sunday, even though our options are far better today. Cheers.
We have plant nurseries in the UK too, I live about ten minutes walk from one. They sell plants, trees, compost, etc, give advice, and that’s it. No cafe or random other things. Plant nurseries cater to a different audience, garden centres are aimed more at family days out, hence the cafes and other items to buy. Most people I know who go to garden centres wander around aimlessly, eat lunch, then maybe buy a house plant or random item that isn’t plant related. Serious gardeners go to nurseries if they can.
There's a plant nursery in Woking, in Surrey. It's half the size it used to be, since they built a school on one half.
And in plant nurseries you're more likely to be able to find a member of staff who knows what they're talking about, and can give in-depth advice.
So no serious gardeners go to garden centres? What a load of bollocks.
@@SvenTviking I can only assume you have issues with reading comprehension, Sven, because that isn’t what I said.
Oh that reminds me need to get seed potatoes.
I met my late wife in a garden centre over 30 years ago when we bumped into each other while looking for black bamboo individually.We were both Goths and thought it looked cool lol, I still can't see it without remembering that day and her :)
Aw, love that story!! You're taking the fondness for garden centres to a new level! :) Thanks for watching!
That’s a lovely memory
Sounds lovely. Wish they had them in the US!
I haven't seen coupons like that since the sixties! They were popular then. We are a nation of gardeners, not yarders.
Roundabouts would actually work very well with a grid system! That's sort of the point of them.
Exhibit 1: Milton Keynes.
Milton Keynes comes to mind
I came to the comments to mention Milton Keynes too 🤣. I went to a gig at the Milton Keynes Bowl and everyone followed the signs causing literal gridlock... not me, two roundabouts to the right, turned left and it was clear almost to the M1..🤣
when you get close to your destination in Milton Keynes the GPS gets stuck on a loop of "take the first exit at the next roundabout" and you drive round and round the block ha ha
If roundabouts are so effective, why are they fitted with traffic lights? Sort of defeats the object.
I'm British, a few points:
- we do have coupons, just not as many (usually you get them if you have a loyalty card for a particular supermarket and can only use them for that chain)
- the town I know with the most roundabouts is actually built in a grid, but I get your point
- nurseries in the UK are where the plants are grown for the garden centre, so some garden centres have nurseries attached
Good points ...and we tend to call coupons, vouchers. I live on the Isle of Wight and the Ferry company posts out a book of 'coupons' bi-annually with huge discounts for residents, so they do exist but aren't a big part of our culture, we tend to just like being given a fair price in the first place :)
If you want to start a brawl in the supermarket, get in the queue where someone has coupons. 😂
Milton Keynes is indeed built in a grid. Confusing as hell when trying to follow google maps! Cause you have H 1 and V 1 (horizontal and vertical roads), and if you don’t know the place well, you can get mixed up easily.
@@eattherich9215 LOL
Vouchers here in the UK are usually distributed by brands rather than shops, also. So you might get a coupon for a well known brand in a magazine but its only available to use in participating retailers, which are usually bigger well known stores. Independent shops like the one I work in don't usually participate as they lose out too much.
When people say "i went to europe for holiday/vacation" im like "Where??? There a big difference between Romania and France"
Dude, Europe is like the size of the Eastwood mall, you could walk to Berlin from London. - Points for those that get the quote.
@@frag2k12 Europe may not be massive but the cultural difference between each country is insane
@@bluecrimzon3122 I am well aware of this, I was making a quote from the film Eurotrip.
I usually say if they are bragging " so how was the 50yds from the beach" ?
What is the difference??
Omg the garden centre point made me laugh so much, I bloody love a garden centre 😂 I love going at Christmas when they have all of the decorations and everything!
The dollar symbol is only there because it's used as a specific function in Excel. It freezes part of a formula to 1 cell e.g. =sum($A$1*B1) when I populate that down A1 will remain the number all the others are multiplied by which would be B2,B3 etc
I'm a massive fan of UK-US difference videos but this one, which I clicked on accidentally (!), is fantastic as it's the first I've ever watched where all 8 differences are unique. As a Brit this was very educational... thank you!
Going to a garden centre in the UK is literally like a day out!
Light switches. In the UK it's down for on, up for off; opposite in the US. Also, most UK power sockets have switches.
One garden centre in London has a sign “unattended children will be given a double espresso, and a free puppy”. A 1950s edition of the Highway Code said “there are no special rules at roundabouts”; but there was much less traffic in those days. When I visited west coast USA, I was amused by a very rare roundabout, in the town of Seaside.
We have nurseries too in the Uk. They tend to be much simpler garden centres - often where they actually grow the plants.
Interesting! I'm not aware of any nurseries near me and often hear of people just talking about the garden centres, so I'll have to do some digging (no pun intended!!)
@@GirlGoneLondonofficial When I was growing up a nursery was the standard name of the place where you would go to buy plants. I think the evolution of nurseries into garden centres was a case of businesses branching out into other product lines to grow and attract more customers. Have you come across any "garden centre rows" (like furniture rows) in the UK where you are? There are some places where there will be several garden centres all right next to each other along the road (Crews Hill in Enfield is an example).
We have had several nurseries where I live. They have always tended to specialize in particular types of plants. They really only ever sell plants and maybe plant food or something like that. Certainly from the nurseries I have been to you wouldnt be able to get garden implements or garden furniture or anything like that
To me, the nursery is where the garden centre gets the plants. 🤷♀️
@@ib9rt as someone who used to work at Crews Hill I can confirm this. 😀
No coupon shoppers in the UK as they’ve all been executed by the people waiting behind them, natural selection 😂
Someone in front of me at the till in B&Q had a coupon for a chainsaw. I've still got the chainsaw. It cleaned up nice.
🤣🤣
@@globetwig4401 get a free pressure washer with it 🤣
Huh! If you're as old as me, you'll remember green shield stamps, pink stamps and numerous rivals. Shops, petrol stations and everywhere else screaming DOUBLE STAMPS!!! TRIPLE STAMPS!! WE STAMP ON YOUR HEAD!! No, not the last one, but it was almost as mad.
@@MartinJames389 yes remember them we also had a membership number at the coop
Us Brits love Garden Centres because they are part of our history ... it goes all the way back to the early explorers who often brought back rare and beautiful plants from unknown parts of the globe. Schools often plan day trips to garden centres to learn children about Horticulture ... I can remember in the early teens going to Batree Garden Centre when it was first opened in Lincolnshire.
It's a fascinating history!
I knew the owner when I lived that way
Garden Centres are part of the culture, and it goes back, in part, to the restricted shops hours of a few years ago. Shops were not allowed to open on a Sunday. But, garden centres, DIY shops (before the big Sheds came in) and motoring spares places could. So, the Sunday trip out was to the garden centre, hence the cafes. Same with Bank Holidays; Only a lunatic would attempt to go to a garden centre on a bank holiday.
@@terencejay8845 now days or when I last visited large garden centres cant open on Easter Sunday
@@GirlGoneLondonofficial........the UK is such a small country that, as fable has it, no where in the country is more than 70 miles from the sea....and when you get to Dover, a very different culture is more that 22 miles away.
In the section on roundabouts, you showed a photo of the Magic Roundabout (yes, that is its official name) in Swindon. This is atypical (there is another, larger. one in Hemel Hempstead). Most roundabouts in the UK are a single island with traffic flowing clockwise.
There's one on one of the exits of London Heathrow Airport. I think it was put there to totally confuse foreigners who had just picked up a rental car.
Also, to say roundabouts wouldn't be easy in a USA style grid system, go to Milton Keynes!
Don't forget the Tring one.
Try.... East Kilbride! Polo mint city! Worst roundabout ... The Whirlies ! 🥴🥴🥴
The popularity of garden centres dates back to before the Sunday trading laws were relaxed in the mid 1990's. Before this the only retail outlets open on a Sunday were the local newsagent and garden centres, so people would have a Sunday afternoon wandering around the local garden centre just for something to do.
I'm 36 and LOVE garden centres. I live in Hertfordshire and there are about 10 garden centres (me and the missus visit sometimes just to go to the cafe!) within 30 minutes drive, plus one or two nurserys that I can think of that JUST deals in growing plants.
Those card readers still exist but their functions are now available in the bank’s App on your smartphone.
Garden centres have evolved from nurseries over the last 50 years as part of “retail”. They used to be just some greenhouses that the public could visit and buy plants but then evolved into the destinations they are now.
That's what I thought, so I was surprised when my banking app required me to use my card reader before it would process a payment to a new person. Of course, I hadn't used it for ages and couldn't find it. I had to go into the bank, the next day, to make my payment and pick up another card reader.
I live in the midwest USA and round-abouts ( yep, what we call them) are getting to be the common thing here!
A plant nursery in the UK will grow plants from seeds, cuttings etc. Garden centres simply sell plants.
Roundabouts are 70% safer and let 20% more traffic through and they are simple give way to traffic on the right ,can’t really be any more simple.
Once you get through the initial wobble as a learner driver: "Where the hell are the lines telling you where to go?" - Kinda use the force, eh?
Don't think Swindon listened to the simple part. I'm looking at you magic roundabout.
Yeah, never understood drivers who are scared of roundabouts. Even as a learner I was thinking "So I only have to look one way and then I can go?"
@@RedMW My husband was the world`s worst driver .After a time ,I made sure I did most of the driving ,especially after an horrendous trip round the Swindon `magic roundabout`. Hooted at from all directions , I asked him how he worked it out .His reply was " Oh ,as far as I`m concerned it`s always my right of way" !!
Funny how I've seen a lot of accidents on roundabouts.
The egg this is right and also as a chef you find if in the fridge some of the water content of the egg will be drawen out of the egg. So when frying a egg that has been in the fridge for some time it will be more likly to explod and spit when frying as the protine in more concentrated
Barclays "PINsentry". The buggers make you buy your own replacement batteries for those. No all banks operating in the UK use these BTW.
We also have plant nurseries. They tend to be specialists and grow quantities of specific groups of plants they also supply the garden centres
13.55 in UK a garden centre that doesn't have all the peripherals, like a cafe and 'souvenir shop' is also called a nursery.
There used to be coupons used in UK shops. I remember my mum giving in coupons.
Yes, many years ago they were the thing
I remember fighting with my brother to stick the Green Shield Stamps in the book, and mum and dad both collected cards from cigarettes. They got some good things with them.
Even as a 90s kid I remember some of them. You tend to only really find them now in loyalty card schemes, the back of cereal boxes, paper bus tickets, random products (like hand-wash) or given out from store deliveries. Though all of these seem to be a dying breed now things are replaced by smart bus cards/apps, online ordering and savings communities (like hotukdeals/groupon)
Mike I think America still use a lot of coupons. I think its a great idea and should be brought back over here. People on low wage could really benefit from collecting coupons from news papers.
So do i it was called a ration book
Travel insurance comes to mind when it comes to health, because British people will immediately be aware that if they have an accident or get sick in another country, they might not get treatment for free like we do at home. You don't want to end up in US-style medical debt, so you buy insurance especially for countries which don't have an equivalent of the NHS, especially as a parent.
Edit: Americans don't have to worry about health insurance most places they visit, because most places they visit have socialised medicine free at the point of use. Brits, and other Europeans do have to worry about health insurance if they visit the US.
Belgian here and yep.
Visited the US twice and I checked my health insurance over there more than I checked whether I had my plane ticket.
Taxes are high and all but the money I do save is fucking mine. Losing it through no fault of my own is just not a thing that computes for me.
Travel insurance also covers you for loss, theft or damage to luggage, cancellation of holiday due to accident illness, or missed flights etc. As with all insurance, its a matter of peace of mind and its a gamble as to whether you might need to claim on it. Maybe americans are more optimistic than Brits?
Some countries, such as Australia, have/had a reciprocal healthcare arrangement with the NHS, but it is still sensible to have travel insurance for all those other reasons you might need it, and sometimes for health-related reasons too. Always wise to check.
For a Brit to travel to the US without about $5 million worth of medical cover would be unthinkable.
How many North Americans venture out of the US or Canada anyway? Gawd I hate that term 'North American' too, as it never seems to include Mexicans.
In terms of couponing the UK has got club cards from Tesco’s and other places I think that’s worth mentioning as well.
When I was younger we used to get quite a lot of coupons and vouchers for discounts on products in stores in the UK, but it seems much less common now. Some websites have discount codes sometimes.
Also in the UK, coupons tend to be loaded with stupid conditions in the small print. People just got fed up with having them rejected by checkout staff. Every time customers tried to redeem them in store, there would normally be a queue of other shoppers standing behind them rolling their eyes. It was also seen as something that poor people used to use, simply to make ends meet. In reality 5p off a pint of milk... 15p off a loaf of bread... or 50p off a box of cereal... won't be worth the hassle to most people these days. We just look for the offers in-store. I can honestly say, i haven't seen anyone redeeming coupons in years.
A lot of the coupons in the UK are based off loyalty cards for particular shops, so rather than getting your coupons from magazines or anywhere else, you "earn" them from what you've bought in the shop previously.
@@stevieinselby Exactly. They give you points at the checkout.
We also used to call garden centres 'nurseries ' too but now as you point out they serve multiple purposes. I have one near me which has a seperate large arts and crafts shop on site. It also has a large restaurant, a fabulous gift shop, artisan grocery shop, outdoor clothes shop and a pet supplies store. Many people go there on a Sunday for a day out for many years they were the only type of stores allowed to open on a Sunday - which is still the case in France where I used to live.
There are garden centers in parts of East Texas exactly like you described in the video. We used to meet my cousins there, get coffee and just walk around.
Roundabouts are safer than "intersections" without lights and better for traffic flow - this is even true in the US. Nurseries (for plants) do exist in the UK as well - but Garden Centres are the Supermarket to the Nursery "corner shop". Travel Insurance is primarily about Health Insurance - when we were in the EU I rarely bothered with it travelling in Europe - as Healthcare was "inexpensive/free" for all EU citizens - depending on the country.
It's actually been studied properly now and roundabouts are safer full stop than any other form of intersection, even with lights, the USA has a huge number of accidents at intersections primarily because a driver ignores red lights, every year over 33,000 people are killed on the roads of America. In the UK there has been a deliberate policy by some councils to remove roundabouts and replace them with lights, this has been done to reduce traffic flow in order to dissuade drivers from city and town centres.
Also important to note that roundabouts and traffic circles (AKA Rotaries) are not the same, roundabouts are safe and permit faster flow of traffic than intersections. Traffic circles are hideously dangerous.
@@RushfanUK I wonder if it also makes a difference to safety that in some parts of America they're actually allowed to turn right on a red light! Our closest equivalent is the left filter lane, which still sometimes has its own light.
Hi - Roundabouts and gridded roads, well I live in Milton Keynes, England and we have roundabouts and a grid of roads. Many of our grid road 'intersections' use roundabouts (we have 103 grid road roundabouts -in an area of about 34 sq miles. We actually have more as we ALSO have small/mini roundabouts (some people say between 300 and a thousand - nobody has counted) on many of our neighbourhood roads (actually I designed a few back in the 1970's.) They work well and yes we do have accidents on them but they are usually just fender benders. As traffic densities increase we are converting some of the grid road roundabouts to partly traffic lights or with dedicated left turn lanes, or even a change FROM a roundabout TO a traffic light controlled junction. (PS I enjoy your videos!)
We also use
Nursery for places that sell plants
My local garden centre Dobbies (which backs onto Brighton Racecourse) has got a pet shop with a pet parlour as well as a little Sainsbury's convenient store that's open plan that took over what used to be the aquarium, so you can watch horse racing then shop at the garden centre
I remember going on a coach trip a few years ago and we stopped off at a garden centre on the way home just for refreshments and a toilet stop (pre-areanged with the GC of course). They made a mint from 75 people visiting in a 45 minute window for sure!
they used to have coupons in the UK but i guess the supermarkets werent making enough money.
Eggs in Australia are found on the shelf , same as the UK.
The reason the U.K. keyboards have a dollar sign on them (and almost every other keyboard in the world has them), is that the $ symbol is Wesley used in computer programming.
Actually, the so-called "dollar" sign is present is most keyboards (as it was in pretty much all type writers before computers even existed) because it is a pretty standard currency symbol (e.g. Brazil's Real is abbreviated R$).
Though in some countries, when hand drawn, it has 2 vertical lines, not just 1.
And Excel. I would be quite wealthy if I had an actual dollar for every absolute reference I have inserted into an Excel spreadsheet 😁
I think it's used for programming and spreadsheets because it was already a common keyboard symbol. Most international prices are quoted in dollars, so it's still common outside of these uses.
In the sixties most of the eggs on sale in uk were white. Brown eggs became fashionable maybe because they look less anemic. The colour is dependant on the breed of hen.
Really interesting, thank you for sharing!
The move to brown-shelled eggs was partly influenced by a feeling that brown eggs were more 'natural' than white ones, which had a more artificial, sanitised, laboratory, battery-farmed connotation.
we also have a thing for fish ponds in our gardens. So some garden centres sell live fish and accessories for that.
Us btits my be known to love queuing, however if one pulls a coupon out at the till, they will receive a big chain of tut's
British women out shopping are the World Champions at Tutting.
The card reader is part of a 2 factor authentication method. You need your pin or password but also the device. The reader that you showed is only used for Barclays. If you are with another bank, they will give you another device. Some may not need you to insert a card and some banks like HSBC (personal accounts) have gotten rid of the security device but use your phone as the security device. 2 factor authentication method gives an additional layer of security when you try to log in to your account.
When I go online and log on to my account apart from the three random characters from my memorable word, I get sent a 6 digit code to my mobile and have to enter it in or speak it on the mobile. This part of the authentication can be disabled if you have set your computer as a trusted device.
Or you could bank with Lloyds, they don't have them at all.
I don't think I'd bank with a bank that required me to put my card in a device to use internet banking, the security measures I have to go through seem more than enough. Id, password, random characters from my passphrase and entering a code that's either text to my mobile or phoned through to my landline if I'm on a new 'untrusted' device..
yeah HSBC has much easier security system from your own device. I saw Barclays reader long time ago I think they got rid of that recently.
Thats correct I have one for my Barclays and nationwide accounts. But my brother Hsbc accould has a very small device, I doubt he will use though.
@Michael Sharp Yes I know how they work, I didn't say they had internet connectivity and I don't really think anyone would expect something that looks like a pocket calculator would do. There's a balance between usability and security and for me Barclays go too far along the security path which impacts usability. When Barclays first started using them I was accessing my Lloyds/TSB account at home, at work and using my phone (before there were banking apps). So I'd have had to carry the token generator with me, had I been with Barclays. Don't they still use PINsentry readers? So if you want to access your account at home and work via a PC you'd still need to take the reader with you?
Look up Green Shield stamps, it was a mad 60's / 70's thing. My mum had thousands of them when they ended, very weird.
Oooh, interesting, will look it up! Thanks!
That takes me back...
We had them in the US too! They were called S & H Green stamps! Could fill up a book with the stamps and trade them in for certain products.
The Green Shield Stamp company morphed into Argos - named after the Greek resort where the CEO was holidaying at the time.
Don't forget the old CO-OP dividend stamps.
Garden centres developed from plant nurseries here. The nurseries that still exist here are usually wholesale, selling only to the trade.
Garden centres are awesome. Where else can you go buy a fleece, some goldfish, an iguana, planter of daffodils and have some lunch. Best places ever
We do love a garden centre. I have a DIY store (B&Q) at the bottom of my street and it does have a garden centre attached, so I love going there for my houseplant needs.
I do love a proper garden centre too, though. They're great, but often very expensive.
The US is one of the very few countries that wash their eggs and thereby have to refrigerate them. Nearly all Western European countries don’t wash the eggs, which keeps the CUTICLE intact, and they stay fresh for weeks at room temperature.
Roundabouts are increasing in the US before they need very little upkeep and are therefore cheaper to maintain than a large junction with many traffic lights where the bulbs need to be changed and cleaned. The roads in Europe were built hundreds of years ago for use by horse and carts which is why they’re narrow and the technology wasn’t available to bore through rock, so the roadway curved around obstructions. The US being a younger country with SO much room (45 times larger than the U.K.) was able to build wider and straighter roads.
Although the eggs aren’t refrigerated in Supermarkets we will still stick them in the fridge when we take them home. Although we don’t have a coupon culture the Supermarkets have loyalty card schemes (e.g. Nectar Cards in Sainsbury’s Supermarkets) where you can build up points with each purchase.
In New Hampshire there's a place that was "Epsom Four Corners" on one, older, road map I had. They upgraded to a roundabout and renamed it "Espom Circle" on the map supplied by the car hire company.
Roundabouts and road layout. Go to a place in England called Milton Keynes. It's set out like American grid system street. Go from one end to the other and try keep count of how many roundabouts there are. They do work better than lights, but still room for improvement.
A lot of coupons are now on supermarket apps you often have to select them weekly, also eggs are often in the home baking section. I work in a supermarket
Didn't know about coupons on supermarket apps, will have to check that out! We also love coupons for restaurants in the US, which I haven't seen that much of here!
@@GirlGoneLondonofficial If you get supermarket loyalty cards they often give you tailored coupons (either paper or digital) in exchange for data about your shopping habits. They use this data to decide which products to put near each other, especially for promotions - the famous one is beer and nappies often get bought together
Yes, the UK is more digitised than the US
The "dollar" sign is used in programming languages to prefix variables and what not
Plant nurseries are also a thing in the UK. BTW, in it's simplest terms a roundabout is just a one-way road bent into a circle, all of the intersecting roads form tee junctions. If nobody's coming on the one way road, then you can go.
Nothing like to the extent you mentioned but we do have coupons in the U.K. A lot of the major supermarkets have loyalty cards where we present it, and get points then around every month or so we get vouchers/coupons that can be used towards our shopping, also some have offers on items if you present the loyalty card
The clothing in most garden centres is for gardening in all weathers, which is why you can buy weatherproof coats and wellies there too.
Some Garden Centres do actually sell normal clothing, for example, Tong Garden Centre near Bradford, West Yorkshire has a branch of Bon Marche attached. About insurance, it is absolutely necessary to have insurance when you travel. I've never needed it abroad, but when I stayed in an hotel in Felixstowe, Suffolk a few years ago, I got a virus and was unable to travel home when the time came. Having insurance meant I could stay in bed another day to recover properly, meals for me and my friend were upgraded and after 3 days, a taxi took us home, a distance of over 200 miles, and it didn't cost us anything. So it's worth it to insure.
We do still have nurseries but they tend to be either parts of the garden centre or a garden centre just for gardening
Hi Kalyn! Just stumbled across your channel thanks to UA-cam recommendations and am so glad I did! Love your content and your style of presenting info and telling stories! Time to binge the rest of your videos 😂
Aye up, Ravens 😘
Thanks so much for watching and your kind words! Looking forward to checking out your channel as well! :)
@@GirlGoneLondonofficial 💕
Roundabout make absolute PERFECT sense in a grid system. Milton Keynes was built from the ground up as a grid with roundabout. It's a fantastic system that keeps the traffic flowing.
The US are missing out, our Garden Centres are great 🤓! We have a huge one near us, takes a couple of hours to get around and has a Delicatessen, Cafe and all sorts. You'd think it would be the other way around considering the majority of states in the US are usually warmer and sunnier than here, therefore resulting in actually being able to sit in your Garden without being rained on! 😂
So true! Though, where I'm from, we're obsessed with our pool stores, not our gardening options - mmm, I can smell the chlorine now!
@@GirlGoneLondonofficial To be fair I would be too if I lived there! We used to have an Inflatable Hot Tub (unfortunately it broke 😞) but we would go into the shop we got it from for all the cleaning products (and dream of the day we can actually get a fixed/built in one) and they smell like Chlorine because they have the show Hot Tubs in there, so I can imagine half what it must be like 😂
I'm sure there are garden centres in the US. There even used to be an association to promote them called "Garden Centers of America".
🤣 loved the garden centre bit, my mom and aunt are both 70s and they goddamn love a garden centre meet up for coffee or, of course, a pot of tea and a cake! They also sell like tons of books and gifts at ours
All my older relatives are obsessed with garden centres! I think one of the reasons Brits tend to travel to India, and some other countries, is because of the historic link between the countries. Indian culture and food has obviously had an impact on the UK so we are interested in seeing the country.
Definitely! My parents in law have been to India for that reason! I can get on board with a garden centre, especially if it's bright with a good cafe!
Quite true.
Garden centres are often called 'nurseries' in the UK - generally when they grow some or all of the plants for sale on site.
In the UK it is very common for young adults on a "gap year" to travel to SE Asia including Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam, or Australia and New Zealand!
Yes, I've definitely noticed gap years are way more common here - another difference I should mention in a future video! Thanks for watching!
I met a similar age American couple in New York & mentioned having been to Thailand & they were like “why ?” Turns out that Vietnam & all the S.E. Asia region resonates with the 70’s & war there & therefore not a happy place. Incidentally it is a fantastic place & especially Vietnam.
Ghap Yah Dahling
@@colinpearce5856 As an English man of a certain age I can understand that, for me in my mind Vietnam and Thailand will always remind me of the Vietnam war.That would however not stop me wanting to visit, but maybe that may not now happen.
@@blackvulcan100 Since I have family that live in Edinburgh, Thailand is, to me, where ladyboys come from, since they've been a regular feature at the festival fringe for years.
Some roundabouts do have lights that are only switched on during busy times
Coupons used to be quite big in the UK. At one time some of the big supermarket chains, such as Tesco would accept coupons that were meant to be used in their rivals as long as the product available in their store. I remember a couple of times one of the local Tesco's accepting my coupons even if I hadn't got the item in my basket.
Garden centres are also called nurseries in the UK, but it depends on what the centre label themselves as, we would recognise both.
Garden centres are an interesting example. Most people in the UK, I feel, would judge a garden centre not on its range of plants, but whether they had a cafe and if so was it any good. Also if they had a decent Christmas section and grotto in December! And further this seems a natural antidote as a place to go versus endless coffee chain stores on your local high street.
We have nurseries here in the UK which is just a place to buy plants and may have other gardening supplies. Garden centres are a morning/afternoon/day out always important to have a good café, cakes etc... and a place for over priced gifts.
My wife’s the gardener in our house and at garden centre she sometimes says “which plant do you like?” I point to something saying “they’re nice” she then gives me a look of disgust as if I’ve just insulted her and says a firm “No!”
If I do manage to get something home she puts my choice in a separate patch away from everything else and calls my plant’s “Dave’s Dasies”.
LOL, in our house it is the other way round. I do most of the gardening, but my wife does like what I call showy stuff, Gladiolus, HT Roses, big Blowsy kind of flowers whilst I like species, so I have a mix of wild primroses ,Fritillarys and Summer snowflakes in bloom currently in my area.
We’ve a system. I keep the green bits green and the brown bits brown - any other colour is the GLW’s responsibility.
Poor dave 😂 just get a cactus 👍
Loyalty cards over vouchers/coupons in the uk.
I heard 'roundabout' I thought 'Swindon' and low and behold, the magic roundabout
Love Swindon's magic roundabout!
It's so confusing until you just stop thinking, work out where you're going and kinda point and go
Its not too complicated after 1 or 2 times, take it a mini roundabout at a time 😂
Perhaps the garden centre came as a later thing or 'experience' driven way of shopping as we also have nurseries which seems to be the more serious garden supply place.
I’ve been to Thailand and Vietnam many times-would be unthinkable to not have full travel insurance -imagine something going wrong six thousand miles away.......
I don't have to. My dad decided to retire to Thailand. He had a few good years there, then found out he had cancer early this year. He booked a flight back to the UK and the NHS, but he collapsed and became paralysed just a few days before setting off.
He hadn't taken out health insurance, as private medical care was relatively cheap there. However, paying for a medical repatriation is incredibly expensive. And Covid restrictions, especially quarantine, made things more difficult.
It took me over two months to organise for my father to be flown home, accompanied by health care professionals, at a cost of over £20,000. (I was lucky that he could still sit in a wheelchair, otherwise he would have needed a flying ambulance, at a cost of over £100,000).
I had to organise everything, without the cooperation of the Thai hospital, which would have been easier if an insurance company was dealing with it all.
My dad died 6 weeks after arriving in the UK.
I'd urge everyone to make sure that they take out insurance when travelling abroad.
There were coupons in the UK years ago, a very old fashioned marketing ploy. Now there are loyalty cards, 3x2 etc. Try and keep up USandA.
We used to keep eggs in the fridge in the shop I worked at years ago. We were then told that getting the eggs cold then the probability of them getting warm on the journey home then people putting them in the fridge when home was not a good idea.
Yes standards covering storage and sale of all foods in the UK are actually stricter than they are in the US.
If you prefer boiled eggs, it's also better to not keep them in the fridge because they can crack easily when cooking them.
We have garden nurseries here in UK. They often supply garden centres
Never seen in US supermarket a 'BOGOF'' deal (Buy One Get One Free) which appear a lot in UK
Interesting! We do have these where I'm from in Florida, but I definitely have more memories of coupon clipping for specific brands instead of the grocery store deals.
Nurseries are smaller garden centres. Most big garden centres are not allowed to open on Sundays, but garden nurseries are usually between 10 and 4pm which is also when supermarkets are normally allowed to open. Covid permitting.
Most garden centres of all sizes open on Sundays. In fact, before 1994 there was very restricted Sunday retail legislation in place and one of the few types of shops that COULD open were garden centres. I am pretty sure that is where the tradition of garden centres selling groceries, furniture, books, household goods etc began - because the "normal"places where you could buy these things were closed on Sundays.
@@EricIrl True; Garden centres, DIY shops and motoring spares had Sunday opening.
It is 19-20 hours from the US to Bangkok, whereas the UK is around 12 hours, so I think it is just a distance thing. Most US visitors to Thailand seem related to the Military as maybe they were stationed in the Asia region at some point. Interesting video for me to learn about these less well-known differences.
No a direct flight is 12hrs but if you want to pay under £400 for flights, which the majority will, your looking at 14 to 19hrs depending on the lay over. The difference is we have the time, we get 28 days paid hoilday (vacation) minimum a lot will get more, I for example have 35 days, compared to USA whose workers get 0 to 10 days (which also has to incorporate sick leave, again we get that as a seperate paid thing). So it's cheaper and we don't have to worry about having no vacation time.
I love a good garden centre especially at Christmas
we do have 'coupons' just to a much lesser degree. Vouchers from the sun, macdonalds vouchers from WHSmiths and a few others. Nice vid, i'll defintly look out for more from you!
We also have nurseries that are devoted to plants rather than other things, they are often devoted to a specific plant group and only sell plants and possibly compost etc. specific to that group
Outdoor shops in the UK tend to be relatively small - mainly outdoor 'all weather' and travel wear, walking shoes, camping equipment, backpacks, etc... in the US outdoor centres are massive - the ammunition section itself can be bigger than most stores in the UK, and then all the guns, rifles (and semiautomatic weapons), hunting knives, decoys, trailers (some with freezers), ...
In the US, everything seems larger (such as milk and juices in 2L+), cheaper, but blander, or more sugary
I don't think I'd ever noticed a lack of grocery coupons until you mentioned it. Up until, say, a couple of decades ago, there were coupons everywhere, such as in newspapers and magazines, as part of product labels, as well as some attached to free miniature product samples, posted with the (other) junk mail through the letterbox. I think the only ones I've seen sort of recently have been Macdonald's promotions on the back of bus tickets.
I'm from the UK and have never seen a card reader like that. I think I've heard them mentioned, but I don't think they're really used anymore.
Maybe only for Barclays. I have one for their accounts but not for Lloyds.
I've got one for my NatWest account, but it's only used when setting up a new payee or making a large payment (like over £1000).
I have one for Barclays Bank
They don't keep eggs in the refrigerator here in Germany either, it's the same as the UK. Another difference you may have noticed, you mention the kitchen surface as being called "the counter". The counter in the UK is what you get at shop checkout areas (more so smaller shops), in the home, the kitchen surfaces are called just that, or kitchen work top. I lived in America for a while so I got used to hearing them referred to as 'counters'. My German boyfriend is fascinated with UK garden centres, I never really thought about them before, but it's funny you mention them too :)
I call it the kitchen bench
as a kid our parents used to drag us to a local garden centre, it had a café, restaurant, aquatic centre(the pond shop), pet shop, playground, ice cream vans and a large plastic camel that doubled as a slide. all this was vital as parents would often disappear into "the plant bit" for hours on end. everything else was just to keep the kids entertained lol
I can remember the days, back in the 60s, maybe early 70s, in the UK, when you used to go shopping with your purse stuffed full with coupons cut out from magazines or from cereal packets. Green Shield stamps were issued by some shops, which you stuck in a book and could redeem for household items.
The evidence for Roundabouts is quite conclusive. They move traffic faster & safer, than using lights at an intersection.
Intersection? Oh, I thought she said innersection.
We call places that grow and sell plants nurseries as well. Garden centres, though, include the ornaments and other garden features, plus anything else that they think they can sell to Sunday shoppers.
Even before they included nice cafés, garden centres were a place to go for an afternoon, not just to buy plants. I liked them when I was young, as they're kind of aspirational. I would have loved to have a garden with all those beautiful plants! Now, I've filled my flat with pot plants 🌷🌼🪴
Here in the UK, a nursery is where plants are grown (and yes, it's also the name given to an institution where young children will begin their education in an informal way), whereas a garden centre is where plants (and lots of other things) are sold. A nursery might sell to the public, or it might only sell to retailers such as garden centres. A garden centre might also grow the plants it sells, but in that case it is more likely to call itself a nursery.
Actually where I grew up in Suffolk we call a garden centre a nursery...
I use it interchangeably..
I've never known of a personal card reader. I've certainly never known of needing one when ordering anything online
They're really used in digital banking where you need it to add a new payee.
I use mine. Like Carol says, it's essential when you add a new payee. Perhaps different banks have different rules.
We don't clip coupons but we do use Clubcard vouchers i.e Tesco nectar card that take money off your shopping and free coffees after 6 etc
Loving the channel. You should go to Milton Keynes. A city built on a grid system but with roundabouts at most intersections. It works well.
Thank you for watching! Funnily enough, I used to have a friend in Milton Keynes so know it well! My favorite part about Milton Keynes is the often free and spacious parking everywhere, haha!
@@GirlGoneLondonofficial I used to work in MK and was told that it was designed on the American system of grids as the town planners at the time thought that the future was in the car rather than on foot. This meant that the pedestrian walkways were set back from the road often obscured by trees and foliage. and the only way to cross the roads were by underpasses This made them an absolute nightmare for safety, The planners were also really keen on building pretty much identical glass fronted buildings so oftentimes unless you knew the town really well you could get horrendously lost just driving round and round as literally everywhere looked the same
Arghhh, the 13(?) roundabouts of Milton Keynes. 😁
Fascinating! Thank you for sharing!
Try the hundreds of roundabouts in MK! I’ve lived here most of my life and cannot stand traffic lights!