Many years ago Møns Klint had a tall structure close to the edge, named "Sommerspiret"! I walked pass it two days before it fell down, as much of it continuously does!
We hope you enjoy learning about Møns Klint as much as we did. Also, we're introducing a new video feature this week called Friday Facts where we share a quick fact about us! This week we tell the story behind Miranda's Star Trek jacket!
I love your show and watch evry episode as soon as they are released.... Having visited Møn, you should come to Omø.... A small island less than 2 hours from Copenhagen (+ a 45 minutes ferry ride). 165 people living in a small community, the smallest school in Denmark (7 students from 1st ot 7th grade)... It is roumored to be one of the best preserved farming villages on Vestsjælland. On the 3rd friday in July we are having a "regatta"... a more than a 100 year old tradition where all fishingvessels, sailingyachts and smaller boats spend two hours on the water together as an excuse to party and eat together for the whole weekend. My wife and I have a long history on the island, and even though we live in Hillerød we are there whenever time allows us. This summer we will reopen a small shop selling fresh fish (even though I am EXTREMELY allergic to shellfish and my wife cant stand the smell of fish). We opened it for the first time last summer, and it was a huge success.... So if you decide that you would like a trip to Omø this summer... let us know, and we will happily share all the local storys and give you the tour of this small authentic paradise in Denmark.
Martin, this sounds interesting. Would you mind sending an email to travelinyoung@gmail.com? That would be the best way to chat about this. Also, thanks for watching, it means a lot to us :).
I have visited Møns Klint several times, first time with Folkeskolen more than 50 years ago. I probably learned more from this video than I remember from any other of my visits. Thanks for this.
Next time you go to Møns Cliff, I can recommend to stop by Stevns Cliff and go underground in the old Cold War Museum "Stevnsfortet". Beside the history of the cold war and what this fortification was used for, you can also see and touch the layers of flintstone and chalk when you walk through the tunnels.
@@71kimg - in a helicopter it is just 15 min. apart ;-) I believe the family lives in/near Copenhagen, so it's pretty much on the way by car to/from Møns Cliff ...
When I was in school we went to Møns klint for a week on summercamp, and went up and down those stairs several times every day to go swim and find stuff on the beach.
It's quite fun to watch the #1 and #2 video from Møn. We visited Møn and Stege last weekend and by the looks of the leafs and flowers we must have been there right after you guys visited. Møn is our favourite spot in DK and have been it since we had a house there six years ago. Unfortunately we don't get by that often, but when we do we enjoy the forrest around the cliff and the local brewery restaurant. Great watch these two videos! Thumbs up and keep up the great work.
Thanks so much! We were there over the great prayer day weekend. That was our first time, but I think we will be back often. Such a cool area. Glad you enjoyed the videos :).
When you get back to Møn you have to go to Møn Is, it is locally made ice cream made on the farm youre at. It is some of the best ice cream i have ever tasted.
That is a good idea. I've been wanting to do a video about cows, milks, and local homemade ice cream. Perhaps I can reach out to them to organize something in the Spring.
@@TravelinYoung You should check out Karlstrup Kalkgrav, the old lime quarry just south of Copenhagen. The water there is also great looking, and you can even go swimming in it, if you're brave enough.
@@24Shigeru24 Yeah, they warn against doing it, as the water is ground water, ie. around 3 degrees celcius just under the surface, but it's not forbidden. You should not swim around for a long time, though, as you might suddenly not. Swim, that is. That's why I wrote "If you're brave" :)
You have to return on a clear summer morning and have a swim at Møns Klint. It is utterly beautiful! And don't miss Galleri Warrer which is an old farm house filled with wonderful arts and design. And of course Liselund Castle.
You guys have got to go see Stevns klint, if for no other reason than the medieval church where half of it fell into the ocean. Eventually it will all fall. The monument park down there is quite interesting as well.
The stairs from the beach to the top of the cliff are even more breathtaking than the views :) Last time I was there I didn't find any fossils at the cliff. However, if you go back in the summer, there are some nice beaches on the south coast of Møn west of Klintholm Havn (well, obviously the beaches are also there in the winter), and there I found plenty of vættelys (the squid fossils) in a very short time in the line of pebbles deposited where the waves stop.
i remember going to Møns Klint as a 8-9 yo boy, and i spend all day digging through the dirt, and and kalcium to find fossils. one of my best Memory's as a child. I still have a petrified sea urchin and some "vette lys" petrified squid as a Memento. I found a small shark tooth on the trip too and gave it to the museum, a proud moment for a young aspirering scientist :)
When I was a kid the stairs going down Møns Klint were pieces of metal hammered into the ground. So every step was either downhill when going down or uphill when going up. There were no breaks, no passages of not either descending or ascending. That was tough... 😁
You should take a look at Stevns Klint too. That´s where the layer of deposit from the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs was discovered and the klint is now a UNESCO world heritage site. One of the few places on earth you can actually see the layer.
Someone mentioned Stevns Klint. You can see the half church, which is a wonder. Small & quaint. An emotional place, falling into the ocean, over time...climb down the few steps to the waters edge and drink fresh water from the cliffs! (best on a sun-shiny day, around mid-day, where the sun will be just right!) Hello from Hundested 🌸💕🌱
A beautifull spot and thank you for your exellent videos! About 20 years ago a French family on their summer holiday walked down to the sea, not seeing or understanding the warning signs, then the chalk sides where unstable and suddenly it collapsed; several hundred tons of chalk buried the wife alive! She was never found and of cause the family was devastated including all the locals. - So watch out and avoid walking under the klint.
Of course I noticed the jacket. I covet it even more now after seeing the back :P I MUST get back to Møns Klint. Haven't been there since my childhood :(
You really should visit Stevns Klint also. Although not as tall as Møns Klint it has a beauty of it's own. And a very interesting history. There's a medieval church at Højerup situated right at the edge at the cliff. Parts of the church actually fell in the sea back in 1928. It's like a sacred place. Next to the church you can also see where building bricks for houses back in the days were cut directly from the cliff. It's quite fascinating. And if you want to chill out there's an idyllic place called Bøgeskov right next to the woods and the sea.
Did you see the romantic park at Liselund? It's absolutely beautiful although probably at its best during the summer. There are quite a few ghost stories connected with it too.
Hi Travelin´ Young. I would like to thank you for your many rich videos about our small, but still beautiful country. I would very much like to invite you to Djursland (the nose of the peninsular of Jutland). Here the rolling hills are combined with both distance and tranquility, and yet in the vicinity of the second largest city of Denmark, Aarhus. Here we accumulate a broad variety of alternative ways of living, and a homey sense of "togetherness". From the wild Horses in the natural park of Mols, to the traditional fishers on the northern bank of Djursland, we encapsulate a both historical yet present package of the transverse little nation that we are. You are hereby invited :) On another note. Taking into account that Denmark is part of a commonwealth, consisting of Denmark, Greenland and The Faeroe Islands, i can only urge you to look into this. In parts of visiting Greenland or/and The Faeroe Islands, I'm certain that I can arrange accommodation (private that is) both places.
I went to a Star Trek convention back in 1989 south of San Francisco where Leonard Nimoy attended. I remember it as a great experience. I remember being a Møns Klint as a child with my family and we went down to the beach too. Lots of exercise with all the stairs🥴
Ar the same Comic Con I also met Levar Burton who played Geordi Laforge and it was one of the best days! Later in the evening they had a panel with the full Star Trek TNG cast that was moderated by William Shatner. I still regret not being able to go to that 😭
I was thinking of something. The next thing you should be tasting is Johan Bulow licorice. As a dane I never really liked licorice until I tasted the ones he make. Maybe Maya will like those. They are coated with chocolate and different kind of powder. It's not salty but contains multiple flavours.
Remember to watch the Eurovision Song Contest shows this week and vote for your favorite song. Semifinals on Tuesday and Thursday. Final show on Saturday.
Now that you have been on Møns Klint you should definitely visit Stevns klint as Well it is actually more interesting from a geological perspective as it is One of the few places on Earth where the actual KT border is observale there is a layer called Fish clay which is High in Iridium content from the Chizculub asteroide which killed the dinosaurs Also on Stevns there is the Stevnsfortet which tells about the Danish military during the cold war
Good job on the pronounciation of Møn, Joshua - last time it was closer to "Moon" 😉 It almost sounded like two more Americans were going to the Moon - big deal 😂
Loved that alright so we are back from the stairs(tone of voice gets deeper) 😂 How lousy that the photo of the cast wasn't signed. But pretty cool you got a jacket that way. I generally prefer when it's "just" you guys. I don't know why maybe that's just the format that fits me.
The single cocolith algae that makes up the entire base of Denmark and pops up at Møn's klint, Stevns klint and all the way over to England's White cliffs of Dover and down to northern France to a depth of 2-8 km (2000 - 8000 meters) is only 0.0009843 inches - 0.025 mm across, so If you laid the Coccoliths side by side in only a single layer 0.0009843 inches - 0.025 mm high, a single square meter (10.7 sq ft.) would contain 1.6 billion coccoliths and a single uncompressed cubic meter (35,3 cubic ft.) would contain 64,000,000,000,000 cocoliths. At Stevns klint some 10 meters from the top you can also find a layer called fiskeler (fishclay) that is only a few cm thick. That layer were formed when the asteroid that killed the Dinosaurs struck, some 66 million years ago, long before there even were a Denmark!
@@TravelinYoung Strangely, it were an American that got me into learning about geology and science, a Young earth creationist who claimed the entire universe and earth is only 6000 years old, something some 40% of Americans apparently believes according to surveys.
Definitely a big jump, but life is short :). Josh here, I searched and found a job in DK that got us here. We did do a video with our ‘origin story’ if you’ve got time on your hands :) - ua-cam.com/video/YWVHfn_zIS8/v-deo.html.
Since i am Danish i have to make a joke because when he says "the swedish part of the Klint is unstable".. Its just like the Swedish part of Scandinavia :D
Suggestions if you are going to the northern part of central Jylland : Hjerl hede open air museum, Mønsted Kalkgruber (chalk mines) and Bispens Marked at Spøttrup (medieval show in week 30). Great places to visit except for the Danish weather you know.. 😑
You guys should check out the science park in Sønderjylland called "Universe" - It's really cool and such a great and scientific experiece for all ages😃
If you want to experience something truly amazing on Stevns Klint, start at the harbour of Rødvig. Walk on the beach, along the water east until you get to the first point. Here the layer of lime stone is at the top and chalk is at the bottom. In between there is a black 1” layer. It is the evidence of the extinction of the dinosaurs where 75% of all life on earth died. It marked the end of the Cretaceous period. The layer contains a high concentration of Iridium that is only found in asteroids. Denmark is one of two places on the earth where you can see this without digging under ground. So I highly recommend while you are here, to go whiteness it. Let me know if you need a guide.
Please provide a little more info. for me on the location. I'm going to Denmark and decided on this island for one of my travel days to see the cliffs. I like the idea of seeing everything without 500 steps down and 500 steps up, especially since I'm touring castles on other days. Thank you! 🌻
Just letting you know, that i don’t think you’re actually allowed to dig things out from the cliffs. You can only take what has fallen down naturally :/
@@TravelinYoung Is it available anywhere for a read at least? When you started talking about a fan script, I was thinking "did your brother write "The Emissary", afaik that's the only one that made it to the screen.
Unfortunately, no. Im not sure what he did with it. It was admittedly almost 30 years ago. That's the land before time 😂 It was an awesome plot about slmething happening to Data's neural network and he spent the whole episode like a 3 year old. There was a great scene where Picard had to get some key info out of him but it was a struggle because he was acting like a toddler.
@@TravelinYoung I like it already, a shame it never got made. If he finds it again, maybe he could adapt it to book format, surely others besides me would love to read it.
@ Jeg syntes han snakkede som et vandfald og gad næsten ikke på hvad hun sagde, det er som en bare min mening, men tak for mange gode videoer knus Peter
There are several stairs in various places along the coast and also in the tree coverage along it. Taking the entire route and traversing all the stairs on the route is quite a physical experience. The "Aborrebjerg" cliff is a striking feauture in Denmark. We got the highest points in Denmark in the middle of Jutland. This is not mountain terrains, but false hills left over from the ice age deposits. So it is gently rolling hills and you do not really see how high it is in the landscape. The Aborrebjerg and also Himmelbjerget is places where you actually see a top growing out of the landscape. One from the sea side and the other from the lake. As flat as the country is we incorporate something called peak factor into our assessment of the hills. Since the Aborrebjerg goes from sea level to 143meters within the last 1 kilometer from the summit. That makes Aborrebjerg the number 1. peak factor hill in Denmark as it raise 100 meter up in the first 200 meter of the sea. There is a graph here danskebjerge.dk/artikler-aborrebjerg.htm (in Danish), and it also says the three highest points in Denmark has a peak factor of zero.
Many years ago Møns Klint had a tall structure close to the edge, named "Sommerspiret"! I walked pass it two days before it fell down, as much of it continuously does!
We hope you enjoy learning about Møns Klint as much as we did. Also, we're introducing a new video feature this week called Friday Facts where we share a quick fact about us! This week we tell the story behind Miranda's Star Trek jacket!
I love your show and watch evry episode as soon as they are released....
Having visited Møn, you should come to Omø.... A small island less than 2 hours from Copenhagen (+ a 45 minutes ferry ride). 165 people living in a small community, the smallest school in Denmark (7 students from 1st ot 7th grade)... It is roumored to be one of the best preserved farming villages on Vestsjælland. On the 3rd friday in July we are having a "regatta"... a more than a 100 year old tradition where all fishingvessels, sailingyachts and smaller boats spend two hours on the water together as an excuse to party and eat together for the whole weekend.
My wife and I have a long history on the island, and even though we live in Hillerød we are there whenever time allows us. This summer we will reopen a small shop selling fresh fish (even though I am EXTREMELY allergic to shellfish and my wife cant stand the smell of fish). We opened it for the first time last summer, and it was a huge success.... So if you decide that you would like a trip to Omø this summer... let us know, and we will happily share all the local storys and give you the tour of this small authentic paradise in Denmark.
Martin, this sounds interesting. Would you mind sending an email to travelinyoung@gmail.com? That would be the best way to chat about this. Also, thanks for watching, it means a lot to us :).
I have visited Møns Klint several times, first time with Folkeskolen more than 50 years ago. I probably learned more from this video than I remember from any other of my visits. Thanks for this.
Next time you go to Møns Cliff, I can recommend to stop by Stevns Cliff and go underground in the old Cold War Museum "Stevnsfortet". Beside the history of the cold war and what this fortification was used for, you can also see and touch the layers of flintstone and chalk when you walk through the tunnels.
Stevnsfortet is definitely worth a visit.
Yeah, we are planning to go in the future for sure!
Not really close to each other
About 90 km from Møns Klint to Stevns Klint.
It really is to be reccomended to combine those places.
@@71kimg - in a helicopter it is just 15 min. apart ;-)
I believe the family lives in/near Copenhagen, so it's pretty much on the way by car to/from Møns Cliff ...
When I was in school we went to Møns klint for a week on summercamp, and went up and down those stairs several times every day to go swim and find stuff on the beach.
It's quite fun to watch the #1 and #2 video from Møn. We visited Møn and Stege last weekend and by the looks of the leafs and flowers we must have been there right after you guys visited. Møn is our favourite spot in DK and have been it since we had a house there six years ago. Unfortunately we don't get by that often, but when we do we enjoy the forrest around the cliff and the local brewery restaurant. Great watch these two videos! Thumbs up and keep up the great work.
Thanks so much! We were there over the great prayer day weekend. That was our first time, but I think we will be back often. Such a cool area. Glad you enjoyed the videos :).
So beautiful 😍 it reminds me of the Kelingking Beach of Bali back home ☺️ definitely it is on our bucket list ✅
When you get back to Møn you have to go to Møn Is, it is locally made ice cream made on the farm youre at. It is some of the best ice cream i have ever tasted.
That is a good idea. I've been wanting to do a video about cows, milks, and local homemade ice cream. Perhaps I can reach out to them to organize something in the Spring.
Another great video! You should visit the island of Bornholm as well - absolutely beautiful and very different from any other place in Denmark 😊
Love that you are coming with more content :D you will be stars in Denmark soon :D
Wow I can't get over that blue water 😳 Denmark has so many special spots ❤️🇩🇰
It was Aruba level blue!
@@TravelinYoung You should check out Karlstrup Kalkgrav, the old lime quarry just south of Copenhagen. The water there is also great looking, and you can even go swimming in it, if you're brave enough.
@@appledane Are you allowed to do that? I've seen people fishing there' but I don't think you are allowed to do that either ;)
@@24Shigeru24 Yeah, they warn against doing it, as the water is ground water, ie. around 3 degrees celcius just under the surface, but it's not forbidden. You should not swim around for a long time, though, as you might suddenly not. Swim, that is. That's why I wrote "If you're brave" :)
@@appledane Ahh, fair. It's most likely also very alkaline since it's surrounded by all that calcium carbonate and such
You have to return on a clear summer morning and have a swim at Møns Klint. It is utterly beautiful! And don't miss Galleri Warrer which is an old farm house filled with wonderful arts and design. And of course Liselund Castle.
Again i leared something about my little Denmark.. thx 2 u
So great to hear, glad you enjoyed!
You guys have got to go see Stevns klint, if for no other reason than the medieval church where half of it fell into the ocean. Eventually it will all fall. The monument park down there is quite interesting as well.
Definitely! That is a day trip over the summer got sure.
Can we conclude from the Friday fact, that you are the Young’s that boldly go where no Young’s has gone before. 😉
Well done!
Sounds Star Trekky 👍 Møns Klink er fantastisk
Ohh soo cool with the Star Trek, love that!!
The stairs from the beach to the top of the cliff are even more breathtaking than the views :)
Last time I was there I didn't find any fossils at the cliff. However, if you go back in the summer, there are some nice beaches on the south coast of Møn west of Klintholm Havn (well, obviously the beaches are also there in the winter), and there I found plenty of vættelys (the squid fossils) in a very short time in the line of pebbles deposited where the waves stop.
Glad you found Møns Klint. I have been to the Rocky's and Grand Canyon and i hope you don't feel under overwhelmed 😃
i remember going to Møns Klint as a 8-9 yo boy, and i spend all day digging through the dirt, and and kalcium to find fossils. one of my best Memory's as a child. I still have a petrified sea urchin and some "vette lys" petrified squid as a Memento. I found a small shark tooth on the trip too and gave it to the museum, a proud moment for a young aspirering scientist :)
When I was a kid the stairs going down Møns Klint were pieces of metal hammered into the ground. So every step was either downhill when going down or uphill when going up. There were no breaks, no passages of not either descending or ascending. That was tough... 😁
thanks for sharing such interesting video:)
Happy to, thanks for watching :).
You should take a look at Stevns Klint too. That´s where the layer of deposit from the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs was discovered and the klint is now a UNESCO world heritage site. One of the few places on earth you can actually see the layer.
Have you been on Samsø in the summertime!?
Someone mentioned Stevns Klint.
You can see the half church, which is a wonder. Small & quaint.
An emotional place, falling into the ocean, over time...climb down the few steps to the waters edge and drink fresh water from the cliffs!
(best on a sun-shiny day, around mid-day, where the sun will be just right!)
Hello from Hundested 🌸💕🌱
Wow, i have to go soon 😁 really nice to swim there in the summer (if we get summer 🤣)
A beautifull spot and thank you for your exellent videos!
About 20 years ago a French family on their summer holiday walked down to the sea, not seeing or understanding the warning signs, then the chalk sides where unstable and suddenly it collapsed; several hundred tons of chalk buried the wife alive! She was never found and of cause the family was devastated including all the locals. - So watch out and avoid walking under the klint.
Of course I noticed the jacket. I covet it even more now after seeing the back :P
I MUST get back to Møns Klint. Haven't been there since my childhood :(
Stevns Klint is also an awesome series of cliffs at the ocean
Plus the cold war museum of Stevns Fortet is great.
That is all on our list for sure! Will be a perfect day trip in the summer :).
@@TravelinYoung Can't wait for that video =)
Always beautiful to visit. Last time we sailed instead.
sejlkutteren-discovery 😉
You really should visit Stevns Klint also. Although not as tall as Møns Klint it has a beauty of it's own. And a very interesting history. There's a medieval church at Højerup situated right at the edge at the cliff. Parts of the church actually fell in the sea back in 1928. It's like a sacred place. Next to the church you can also see where building bricks for houses back in the days were cut directly from the cliff. It's quite fascinating. And if you want to chill out there's an idyllic place called Bøgeskov right next to the woods and the sea.
Thx a lot..!! :)
Did you see the romantic park at Liselund? It's absolutely beautiful although probably at its best during the summer. There are quite a few ghost stories connected with it too.
We decided to hold off and come back in the summer to see. We wanted a good excuse to return to Møn :).
It really is. I saw Thomas Blachman when I went there.
Hi Travelin´ Young.
I would like to thank you for your many rich videos about our small, but still beautiful country. I would very much like to invite you to Djursland (the nose of the peninsular of Jutland). Here the rolling hills are combined with both distance and tranquility, and yet in the vicinity of the second largest city of Denmark, Aarhus. Here we accumulate a broad variety of alternative ways of living, and a homey sense of "togetherness". From the wild Horses in the natural park of Mols, to the traditional fishers on the northern bank of Djursland, we encapsulate a both historical yet present package of the transverse little nation that we are. You are hereby invited :)
On another note. Taking into account that Denmark is part of a commonwealth, consisting of Denmark, Greenland and The Faeroe Islands, i can only urge you to look into this. In parts of visiting Greenland or/and The Faeroe Islands, I'm certain that I can arrange accommodation (private that is) both places.
How nice! I hope I meet nice people on my visit to Denmark. 🌻
I went to a Star Trek convention back in 1989 south of San Francisco where Leonard Nimoy attended. I remember it as a great experience.
I remember being a Møns Klint as a child with my family and we went down to the beach too. Lots of exercise with all the stairs🥴
Ar the same Comic Con I also met Levar Burton who played Geordi Laforge and it was one of the best days! Later in the evening they had a panel with the full Star Trek TNG cast that was moderated by William Shatner. I still regret not being able to go to that 😭
@@TravelinYoung Understandable☺️
You should visit Moesgaard Museum in Århus. I _love_ that museum, but I prefer the archaeological part of it, which is downstairs.
We went back in December and loved it! It's in our Christmas in Århus video
@@TravelinYoung // Ah, thanks. Found it!
I was thinking of something. The next thing you should be tasting is Johan Bulow licorice. As a dane I never really liked licorice until I tasted the ones he make. Maybe Maya will like those. They are coated with chocolate and different kind of powder. It's not salty but contains multiple flavours.
Oh we love Johan Bulow lakrids! We actually buy them as gifts for friends all the time
@@TravelinYoung I'm glad you found a kind of lakrids that you enjoy!
Remember to watch the Eurovision Song Contest shows this week and vote for your favorite song. Semifinals on Tuesday and Thursday. Final show on Saturday.
I really enjoyed your video. Great channel. ⭐️ ⭐️
Greetings from Albania. 👋🏼 🇦🇱
Now that you have been on Møns Klint you should definitely visit Stevns klint as Well it is actually more interesting from a geological perspective as it is One of the few places on Earth where the actual KT border is observale there is a layer called Fish clay which is High in Iridium content from the Chizculub asteroide which killed the dinosaurs Also on Stevns there is the Stevnsfortet which tells about the Danish military during the cold war
Good job on the pronounciation of Møn, Joshua - last time it was closer to "Moon" 😉
It almost sounded like two more Americans were going to the Moon - big deal 😂
Loved that alright so we are back from the stairs(tone of voice gets deeper) 😂
How lousy that the photo of the cast wasn't signed. But pretty cool you got a jacket that way.
I generally prefer when it's "just" you guys. I don't know why maybe that's just the format that fits me.
God video😎
The single cocolith algae that makes up the entire base of Denmark and pops up at Møn's klint, Stevns klint and all the way over to England's White cliffs of Dover and down to northern France to a depth of 2-8 km (2000 - 8000 meters) is only 0.0009843 inches - 0.025 mm across, so If you laid the Coccoliths side by side in only a single layer 0.0009843 inches - 0.025 mm high, a single square meter (10.7 sq ft.) would contain 1.6 billion coccoliths and a single uncompressed cubic meter (35,3 cubic ft.) would contain 64,000,000,000,000 cocoliths. At Stevns klint some 10 meters from the top you can also find a layer called fiskeler (fishclay) that is only a few cm thick. That layer were formed when the asteroid that killed the Dinosaurs struck, some 66 million years ago, long before there even were a Denmark!
That is so interesting and I had never thought about how all of this geology is so connected! Also so.many.cocoliths! Thanks for posting 🙂
@@TravelinYoung Strangely, it were an American that got me into learning about geology and science, a Young earth creationist who claimed the entire universe and earth is only 6000 years old, something some 40% of Americans apparently believes according to surveys.
You should make an on screen countdown for the friday fact, and make it blink red if she goes over ;)
Ha, just wait until I do one (Josh here) :).
@@TravelinYoung "1 minute Josh! not 1 hour!" ;)
You must have been on one of my work calls, my coworkers say that whenever I start taking :).
What month was this?
The Flintstones are chilling on the beach.
I may have secretly sang the song in my head when he said Flintstones
What made you guys move to denmark? work or? kind of a big jump :)
Definitely a big jump, but life is short :). Josh here, I searched and found a job in DK that got us here. We did do a video with our ‘origin story’ if you’ve got time on your hands :) - ua-cam.com/video/YWVHfn_zIS8/v-deo.html.
@@TravelinYoung Thanks!
Since i am Danish i have to make a joke because when he says "the swedish part of the Klint is unstable".. Its just like the Swedish part of Scandinavia :D
Ha Thats why I said "invasion" when he mentioned the silt coming from Sweden 😂
No-one expects the Swedish Invasion 😂
@@TravelinYoung 😂
@@TravelinYoung Sweden cant invade anyone :) They never could :)
@@AceHighVictory They took my home Scania from denmark unfortunately.
Suggestions if you are going to the northern part of central Jylland : Hjerl hede open air museum, Mønsted Kalkgruber (chalk mines) and Bispens Marked at Spøttrup (medieval show in week 30). Great places to visit except for the Danish weather you know.. 😑
3:26 Josh thinking - does he REALLY want the camera man with fear of heights to go to the very edge??!!
Haha!
You guys should check out the science park in Sønderjylland called "Universe" - It's really cool and such a great and scientific experiece for all ages😃
If you want to experience something truly amazing on Stevns Klint, start at the harbour of Rødvig. Walk on the beach, along the water east until you get to the first point. Here the layer of lime stone is at the top and chalk is at the bottom. In between there is a black 1” layer. It is the evidence of the extinction of the dinosaurs where 75% of all life on earth died. It marked the end of the Cretaceous period. The layer contains a high concentration of Iridium that is only found in asteroids. Denmark is one of two places on the earth where you can see this without digging under ground. So I highly recommend while you are here, to go whiteness it. Let me know if you need a guide.
Please provide a little more info. for me on the location. I'm going to Denmark and decided on this island for one of my travel days to see the cliffs. I like the idea of seeing everything without 500 steps down and 500 steps up, especially since I'm touring castles on other days. Thank you! 🌻
Try Langeland.
Just letting you know, that i don’t think you’re actually allowed to dig things out from the cliffs. You can only take what has fallen down naturally :/
So we're missing an episode of TNG! OMG!!! Make it, make it, make it, make it....
Man it was such a good script too! I was so mad on my brother's behalf. Poor guy was just totally robbed 🙃
@@TravelinYoung Is it available anywhere for a read at least? When you started talking about a fan script, I was thinking "did your brother write "The Emissary", afaik that's the only one that made it to the screen.
Unfortunately, no. Im not sure what he did with it. It was admittedly almost 30 years ago. That's the land before time 😂 It was an awesome plot about slmething happening to Data's neural network and he spent the whole episode like a 3 year old. There was a great scene where Picard had to get some key info out of him but it was a struggle because he was acting like a toddler.
@@TravelinYoung I like it already, a shame it never got made. If he finds it again, maybe he could adapt it to book format, surely others besides me would love to read it.
you have to try and go to FUR to you have to sail by ferry I came over for free I get Fur beer too👍🏻😊. and then take Nykøbing's mother.
I am sorry that the person do not have the rest to let the informations fell to ground
"Thousands of years"... ehrm... little lady... it's "millions of years" :D
Could be thousands. You werent there
@@jimmybaldbird3853 Go way you silly creationist!
@@_-martin-_ 😏
Engage!
Yes, something new each time you go ----- because, erosion :P
Muahahaha.
We are living on top of the bodies of billions of our enemies!
😂😂
Interessant, men en meget irriterende dansker der fortalte om klinten
@ Jeg syntes han snakkede som et vandfald og gad næsten ikke på hvad hun sagde, det er som en bare min mening, men tak for mange gode videoer knus Peter
Being negative towards people who are kind enough to give us their time and insights will discourage experts from joining us on future videos.
@@TravelinYoung ja det skal du selvfølgelig sige Men kan du have en god dag
@@peterskovgaard1623 Du har vist en dårlig dag. Op med humøret, sommeren står for døren.
@@peterskovgaard1623 der vist en som har fået det forkerte ben ud af sengen var. Det var da fedt at han havde en masse at fortælle om Møns klint.
There are several stairs in various places along the coast and also in the tree coverage along it. Taking the entire route and traversing all the stairs on the route is quite a physical experience. The "Aborrebjerg" cliff is a striking feauture in Denmark. We got the highest points in Denmark in the middle of Jutland. This is not mountain terrains, but false hills left over from the ice age deposits. So it is gently rolling hills and you do not really see how high it is in the landscape. The Aborrebjerg and also Himmelbjerget is places where you actually see a top growing out of the landscape. One from the sea side and the other from the lake. As flat as the country is we incorporate something called peak factor into our assessment of the hills. Since the Aborrebjerg goes from sea level to 143meters within the last 1 kilometer from the summit. That makes Aborrebjerg the number 1. peak factor hill in Denmark as it raise 100 meter up in the first 200 meter of the sea. There is a graph here danskebjerge.dk/artikler-aborrebjerg.htm (in Danish), and it also says the three highest points in Denmark has a peak factor of zero.