American CULTURE SHOCKS in Germany! | Feli from Germany

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  • Опубліковано 9 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 978

  • @FelifromGermany
    @FelifromGermany  Місяць тому +75

    THANK YOU so much to everyone on the trip for sharing their experiences on camera! 😊🙏
    👉Go to piavpn.com/felifromgermany to get 83% off Private Internet Access with 4 months free!

    • @rishiraj2548
      @rishiraj2548 Місяць тому +4

      🙂👍🏻

    • @FreezyAbitKT7A
      @FreezyAbitKT7A Місяць тому +3

      IDK if you received my question about pronunciation. Is Waltz the dance and Walz -path road (new vp candidate name) . Are there German accents the say it different if there isn't a "T" in the word?

    • @MrOpacor
      @MrOpacor Місяць тому +7

      @@FreezyAbitKT7A The German name for the dance is "Walzer" ("waltz" in English). To my knowledge (I am German) there is no German word with the "t" in it, but a "z" is usually pronounced like "ts".

    • @johnc4928
      @johnc4928 Місяць тому +3

      on the corn comment. I lived in Germany with my parents in the late 1950s. My parents gave a dinner for a German couple who were friends. They served corn and the German couple though they were being insulted because corn was only give to pigs. After some discussion and assurance no offense was intended they tried the corn. It was sweet corn not the field corn grown in Germany at the time.My parents then had to provide the German couple with cans of sweet corn for the remainder of the time we were in Germany. Nice to hear American corn is now in Germany.I would have missed it when i go to Germany next year.

    • @FelifromGermany
      @FelifromGermany  Місяць тому +6

      @@FreezyAbitKT7A no, it would be pronounced the exact same :)

  • @gregbromberg5427
    @gregbromberg5427 Місяць тому +388

    I had a great time traveling with this group of folks. We had a great time in Germany and it was terrific to experience The food, beer, architecture, the people. A waitress in Cologne was confused on how I wanted to tip her paper cash, and a German who was at the table next to me jumped in and explained to the German waitress that I wanted to compensate her for good service. Only then did she understand. I later learned that you can round off the price of the meal with a price you want to pay, but I wasn’t clear on tipping culture in Germany. I appreciate how Germans who speak English will help out non-English speaking Germans. Really friendly people. I wound up speaking with and connecting with this gentleman. Great experience!

    • @desperadox7565
      @desperadox7565 Місяць тому +34

      People do tip for good service but tipping with bills probably seemed unexpectedly generous. Great you enjoyed your time in my country. People should generally travel more to better understand each other.

    • @EngelinZivilBO
      @EngelinZivilBO Місяць тому +12

      Regional differences are real 😂 here in the north where the payment is low and the energy prices high, you usually tip them around 15-20% (but only if the service is as good as expacted) 😅
      I love that you had fun visting my country, I definitely enjoyed my trip to America very much! It's just awsome to see both countries as allies and friends and I hope it will be like that for a long time.
      You're always welcome here 😊

    • @darksparkle9849
      @darksparkle9849 Місяць тому +8

      Grüße aus Köln! Cologne is among German cities one of the friendliest places. I’ve lived here for more than two decades and just this week had a water for €3.60 in a restaurant. I felt slightly guilty for rounding it to €4 because in the US that would be incredibly disrespectful and rude. But here the servers totally appreciate it because not everyone would even tip for just a drink. Old habits die hard 😂

    • @xxstadtkindxx
      @xxstadtkindxx Місяць тому

      @@desperadox7565 Das mit dem Reisen wird leider in den nächsten Jahren nur noch der Elite möglich sein. Aber warten wir ab wann das CO2 Punktekonto kommt.

    • @viperpit-lr2rp
      @viperpit-lr2rp Місяць тому +4

      Why tip? People here get paid enough and tipping is not necessary.

  • @desperadox7565
    @desperadox7565 Місяць тому +263

    The world would be a better place if everybody had been to at least 1 or 2 other countries and learned that there are good people everywhere and your own country isn't always better in everything.

    • @davesaunders7080
      @davesaunders7080 Місяць тому

      So true

    • @dharmachile999
      @dharmachile999 Місяць тому

      That’s all it takes!

    • @danimunmen
      @danimunmen Місяць тому

      True!

    • @EinNerd
      @EinNerd Місяць тому +3

      Actually, the most people which have the money for travelling have been to other countries. It's just the Americans who tend to stay in their own country all their life.

    • @Julian-p7q-b4t
      @Julian-p7q-b4t Місяць тому

      USA is the greatest country on the planet. Tell me what is better in Germany/Europe?
      Nothing.

  • @bonnsavant
    @bonnsavant Місяць тому +275

    Wenn man hört, wie unsere Gäste aus dem Ausland über Deutschland reden, wird man sich erst wieder bewusst, wie gut es uns geht und wie schön es hier ist. Das vergessen wir leider viel zu oft. Thank you for opening our eyes, dear american friends ❤

    • @christopherx7428
      @christopherx7428 Місяць тому +6

      So true! It is much easier to concentrate on (real or just perceived) problems than acknowledging all the things that are well thought out and works.

    • @tonimuellerDD
      @tonimuellerDD Місяць тому +2

      I entirely agree!

    • @floh667
      @floh667 28 днів тому +9

      wie schön es hier NOCH ist. Das ist aber dabei, sich leider zu ändern. Das Land verkommt auch immer mehr.

    • @bonnsavant
      @bonnsavant 28 днів тому +19

      ​@@floh667Aber du engagierst dich doch bestimmt persönlich mit ganzem Einsatz, dass es nicht so schlimm wird, oder? Schreib doch mal, was du so für dein Land tust außer meckern.

    • @floh667
      @floh667 28 днів тому

      @@bonnsavant Ich hab eine Äußerung über eine Feststellung getätigt. Ist das in deinem Universum automatisch mit "meckern" und Tatenlosigkeit verkörpert?
      Erwartest du nun von mir, dass ich versuche in den Bundestag zu kommen um eine Veränderung vornehmen zu können?
      Ich bin es so leid diese dummen gehaltlosen Sprüche von Leuten, die nicht damit umgehen können, wenn man den verfall des Landes anspricht, ohne gleichzeitig als Retter der Nation aufzutreten.
      Dir ist klar, dass eine einzelne Person hier nur sehr limitierend gegenwirken kann? Ich trage meinen Teil dazu bei, aber eben nur in dem mir möglichen Rahmen.

  • @Klo1973
    @Klo1973 Місяць тому +201

    I love it how everybody is so positive about everything. In Germany we often tend to see things in a too negative way.

    • @johnlabus7359
      @johnlabus7359 Місяць тому +12

      Maybe it's just American optimism and positivity that you are seeing/hearing? I think that many Americans will only be able to visit Europe or any particular country once in their lives, and I think that we look for those experiences to be positive.

    • @southcoastinventors6583
      @southcoastinventors6583 Місяць тому +2

      Maybe they haven't been to Berlin yet ?

    • @Klo1973
      @Klo1973 Місяць тому +1

      @@southcoastinventors6583 Well, Feli did mention they where on the way to Berlin in the beginning of the video. So this could be it.

    • @Klo1973
      @Klo1973 Місяць тому +1

      @@johnlabus7359 You may be right. But that doesn't mean Germans are not too negative. Maybe Americans are just a bit too positive at the same time.

    • @johnlabus7359
      @johnlabus7359 Місяць тому +2

      @@southcoastinventors6583 LOL. No kidding. I traveled to Berlin by myself and had a much different experience. I think it helps that these folks are on a structured tour.

  • @AoibheannNova
    @AoibheannNova Місяць тому +224

    I visited West Germany in 1986 when I was 15. We were staying at a B&B kinda place and as we were getting breakfast, I asked for some milk and they asked back if I wanted it fresh or cold. I told them I wanted fresh, even though I was confused by the question. When it finally arrived, it was warm. And I was confused again. And then I realized that fresh milk meant THEY JUST MILKED THE COW! 😂
    Best tasting milk I've ever had

    • @desperadox7565
      @desperadox7565 Місяць тому +3

      I'm not sure that's even legal, but what a great experience

    • @thb3306
      @thb3306 Місяць тому +31

      In 1986? Probably in some village? No problem at all 😊

    • @mpeGii
      @mpeGii Місяць тому +13

      @@desperadox7565 idk why it shouldnt - europeans dont make it like americans do on eggs or milk. ^^

    • @AoibheannNova
      @AoibheannNova Місяць тому +5

      @@thb3306 Yeah, it was somewhere in the north in some small area on our way to Legoland. Definitely had a farming community feel about it

    • @Tomsnothere
      @Tomsnothere Місяць тому +8

      Trying fresh milk is on my bucket list. A glass will do - don't need a bucket, lol.
      Another milk/language barrier tale:
      in 1994 we missed a domestic flight in the Philippines and were put on standby for 3 hours, but our child needed milk. I hiked from the airport to a bar nextdoor, where the language issue began when I asked for milk to go. Bartender: no clue. After a few minutes I remembered that Tagalog word for milk is gatas. Progress, but she handed me a glass of milk. I repeated "to go." She responded "sago?" Sago are gelatin pearls made from palm. It took me several more minutes to remember they use the phrase "take out", not "to go." Mission accomplished!

  • @hartl002
    @hartl002 Місяць тому +57

    Meine erste Reise nach Deutschland war mit dem MS Europa im Hebst 1969. (Ich nahm am Aussenstudiumprogramm von Kalamazoo College teil.) Wir stiegen ins Bremerhaven aus. Unser Programmführer sagte uns wir sollten unser Abendessen unabhängig versorgen. Ich bin um die Innenstadt herum gegangen und habe mir einen Imbißwagen gefunden. Dort kriegte ich meine erste echte Bratwurst. Ich war aber zu schüchtern als Pommes frites auch zu bestellen. Nachdem ich die Wurst erledigte, hatte ich noch Hunger. Ich bin um die Ecke gegangen und dann wiederum zur "Mobile Wurst Unit" und habe mir die Kartoffeln bestellt.

    • @Eijiko1
      @Eijiko1 4 дні тому

      Pretty good German, Sir.

  • @Hellasta
    @Hellasta Місяць тому +111

    German people were much more polite than I was led to believe and were patient with me when I was trying to speak their language. I'm not very good at it but I tried to speak German out of respect for the people/country.

    • @Ryan88881
      @Ryan88881 20 днів тому +3

      I’ve never heard of a German “stereotype” with regard to being rude. Sounds like you’re talking about France, especially the locality of Paris.

    • @Muck006
      @Muck006 16 днів тому

      Just wait 30-50 years and nobody will speak german anymore. The language is being anglified more and more ...

    • @publicminx
      @publicminx 11 днів тому

      @@Muck006 "Angeln", a Germanic tribe - mainly from what is now Schleswig Holstein/Northern Germany (close to Denmark), Thats from where 'England' got its name from. AngloSaxons = Angeln + Sachsen/Saxon tribes (basically same story).

    • @hugocabret9720
      @hugocabret9720 4 дні тому

      @@Ryan88881Feli, herself, stated that Germans are generally rude and cold in one of her videos comparing Germany with the USA.

  • @MisaMlc-l7o
    @MisaMlc-l7o Місяць тому +55

    I am from Germany but one culture difference I learned 20 years ago. In my free time, besides school, i did some First aid for the German Red Cross during sports events. Once there had been an icehockey Team from Michigan. IT was a youth team and they played in a small village in Niedersachsen and we had the privilige to be there when they played. One of the American Players get injured and we helped him. After some time his father came into the locker room and wanted us to stop because he wasn't sure how much IT would cost. He was shocked when he saw that we were 15-20 years old and did it for free and that the Team just pay something Like 30-50 German Mark to our local red Cross Office and that we helped as our hobby in our free time.
    After the game we had a nice chat and drank some tea.

    • @CakeCakeCake
      @CakeCakeCake Місяць тому +10

      Yes, we are very accustomed to medical services being extremely expensive. I was in Scotland last October and I ended up having to go to the emergency room one night.
      I was so concerned about how much it would cost because I didn't have any insurance and I didn't know how it would work with me being a foreigner.
      I was seen by a doctor and received two prescription medications, and there was no charge at all. This would have cost hundreds of dollars even with insurance in the US. Without insurance, it would likely have been thousands of dollars.
      It's so wrong that medical care is that expensive. Many people go without care that they need because then they wouldn't be able to afford their housing or food costs.

    • @nicmiller7905
      @nicmiller7905 13 днів тому +1

      ​@@CakeCakeCakeIf one goes to germany for example, it is possible to buy an insurance for foreign tourists. I do it, when I get visitors. It is not expensive, but of course only for issues, you did not bring with you. Medicin in Germany is not free, better you have an insurance.

    • @Billy-vi8nu
      @Billy-vi8nu 19 годин тому

      Yeah try to be patient. The father wasn’t trying to be rude, it’s just that Americans are more accustomed to predatory medical practices.
      You could have an injury or illness (doesn’t matter what it is) and instead of fixing/curing it in 1 visit they will stretch it out to 5 visits so they can charge more money.

  • @erinl1265
    @erinl1265 Місяць тому +56

    I was in Germany last year. My culture shock was the joy that people have there and the way they enjoy the outside and each other. America is lied to about how other countries and how there is so much unhappiness anywhere other than the US.

  • @stephenwilling7287
    @stephenwilling7287 Місяць тому +67

    Being from England, (now living in the US), and serving in the British Army I was stationed in Germany twice. Both time for two years and in the same place, Fallingbostle, I loved it. this was obviously when Germeny was still split. One of the first things I notice was how people would come up to our table, we were with local girls, but they would shake hands and say hi like they knew us for years. After being there for a few months we also noticed if you were to ask or at lest try to use Germen you would be helped more. Noticed this when those new recruits who didn't even attempt it got the "EH?" from the waiter, that we knew could maybe speak better English than some of those recruits.
    LOve the food, and so much of it on a large plate for a reasonable price. And people were so helpful, if you looked lost they would ask if they could help.
    The second time I went, having been gone for 2-3 years. Poeple in the resteraunts and bars remembered me, like I was a member of their family. Like I said I loved it there, wish I could go back and see what it is like now.

    • @stephenpederson7471
      @stephenpederson7471 Місяць тому +4

      I went to the British Zone in Northern Germany when one of our planes went down. I was amazed, all the families from the nearby town came out in the evening with gifts (mostly food and cookies). They just wanted to talk to Americans and learn about Americans. It was like they were starved for exposure.

    • @prh4540
      @prh4540 7 днів тому +3

      Greetings from Bad Fallingbostel, a shame you guys left. Had some great experiences with you folks at the lokal pubs !

    • @stephenwilling7287
      @stephenwilling7287 7 днів тому +2

      @@prh4540 Had a great time there both times. I loved evey minute of it there. Would have loved to have stayed, or go back. But that won't happen now.

  • @christianwenzel1529
    @christianwenzel1529 Місяць тому +85

    Hallo Feli, ich finde es echt interessant die Reaktionen der Amerikaner über Deutschland zu hören. Gerne mehr von solchen Videos. Grüße aus Baden-Württemberg.

    • @Theo_T.
      @Theo_T. Місяць тому +3

      Dem stimme ich zu.
      Ich bin auch schon auf die "Reaktionen" gespannt, wenn es aus den schön herausgeputzten Touristenhochburgen herrausgeht und auf das Leben und Wirken in Ballungscentren, Großstädten usw. getroffen wird.

    • @viperpit-lr2rp
      @viperpit-lr2rp Місяць тому +1

      My biggest reaction was seeing die everywhere. I teased my girlfriend at the time that germans wanted everyone to die. Of course she ruined it by saying it means the.

    • @randomguyfromgermany
      @randomguyfromgermany Місяць тому

      Dafür gäbe es z.B. "The Natasha & Debbie Show", die Feli auch bereits bzgl. einer kooperation angeschrieben haben und seit über einem Jahr keine Antwort erhalten haben...

    • @jurgenhaflinger1188
      @jurgenhaflinger1188 8 днів тому

      Der Film ist gut geschnitten.

  • @MisakiSelch
    @MisakiSelch Місяць тому +114

    Man I love the American loving our fixtures and windows. Like just generally appreciating the buildings it made me crack up a little cause it's so normal to me. I love how they all had a thing that they cared about. Playgrounds, fixtures, cultrual things, pricing, food. They all took note of something and compared it to american stuff from home. They all have a kind of positive experience an open mind and I love that. It's so cool I hope they continue to have a great trip! And when they come back see even more stuff they like!

    • @armyfirefighter
      @armyfirefighter Місяць тому +21

      Haha -my wife and I have already decided that if we need to move back to the US, we are importing German windows and shades with us. And we need to establish a pipeline for jam to go back to the US. Our families insist on us mailing them jam care packages as often as possible. Because it was illegal in the US - and mostly still is - I had never had black currant jam until coming here and I love it. It would be so hard to go back to apple, grape, and strawberry jam and that is about it.

    • @JonaxII
      @JonaxII Місяць тому +3

      The older I get, the more I crave nongerman windows. I hate that I can't open my windows without moving all my plants. As a kid in my parents' house, we had Danish windows that open to the outside, and I thought that was normal. Later, I got annoyed at our normal German windows because they all open inwards. Now I understand that they can't open outward for cleaning and danger reasons... So I really want to try American windows, even when they don't have Kipp. They should be available in better options than shoddy single pane, right?

    • @armyfirefighter
      @armyfirefighter Місяць тому +3

      @@JonaxII Newer windows are all dual pane for insulation purposes. And when I was a kid, most windows also had an inner "storm window" that was a single pane between the normal sash windows and the screen. Window screens will be different for most Europeans since they rarely exist here but are in every American windows you'll ever see. But, if you put plants in your sill, you'll like an American window.

    • @martinpoulsen6564
      @martinpoulsen6564 Місяць тому +5

      ​@JonaxII If you're used to Danish windows, then you would likely want to stick to them.
      Even though American windows are double and triple pane, the structural integrity of the window itself usually doesn't compare to Danish standards, and certainly not German. Only a select few very high end ones would do so. Without knowing exactly, I'd imagine it relates to building styles, where a rough opening in Europe can be just about anything from store to wood, 2x framing in the US is very systematic, and windows rely on the wall framing around it to keep everything in place. Usually European windows do not have the nailing flange on the outside, that windows do in the US, where they practically get stitched to the wall with nails, where a European window is typically fastened with 6-8 stout screws, and the the joints are packed for support. 2 very different systems of building.

    • @flitsertheo
      @flitsertheo Місяць тому

      @@armyfirefighter No cherry jam ? I used to eat that if no strawberry jam was available.

  • @scottinphoenix739
    @scottinphoenix739 Місяць тому +78

    The trip was a blast, even getting caught out in the rain just added spice to the experience. 😅😅

    • @tommay6590
      @tommay6590 Місяць тому +7

      Hey Scott, you did it twice! Respect! Maybe there will be a chance to buy you a beer (Kölsch) on your next trip!

    • @Excds
      @Excds Місяць тому +3

      What was your Berlin visit like?

    • @scottinphoenix739
      @scottinphoenix739 26 днів тому

      @@tommay6590 👍

    • @scottinphoenix739
      @scottinphoenix739 26 днів тому

      @@Excds It was a lot of fun.

  • @udorechner6846
    @udorechner6846 Місяць тому +65

    As a german i can't stop smiling about the us visitors experiences. Only one thing i would like to mentioned. German playgrounds are NOT build to be dangerous! in no way. There are strict rules of hights and material... but they shouls give the kids the possibility to be active, make decisions and try again if one try didn't work.. I'm sorry for my bad english.

    • @drunvert
      @drunvert Місяць тому +9

      American playgrounds got overly safe. Way too safe. Part of the fun of climbing something tall is being up high in the air and having a little bit of fear.

    • @drunvert
      @drunvert Місяць тому +1

      I want to say that we have bike paths all over Los Angeles and what it has done is taking away a lane for cars and gets used almost never by bikers because Los Angeles is huge. They do get used on the weekends when there is very little traffic, but when there's a lot of traffic during the week the cars get screwed out of a lane

    • @devenscience8894
      @devenscience8894 Місяць тому +9

      I was one of the folks in the video that mentioned this, and while "dangerous" may have been going too far, I watched a mini-documentary while on my visit there that specifically said they are designed with small risks, to help children develop safe decision making skills.

    • @RalfDieter
      @RalfDieter Місяць тому +6

      My daughter is a safety officer at the kindergarten (German). She is annoyed about the rules for the play equipment, which she has to comply with by law. She thinks they are too strict.

    • @drunvert
      @drunvert Місяць тому +2

      @@RalfDieter playgrounds definitely do not need a safety officer. Is a place to play. Which by definition does not have a safety officer

  • @laser8389
    @laser8389 Місяць тому +137

    The crosswalk shaming is real! I stepped off right as it turned red and a little kid yelled at me. ,,Der Ampelmann ist rot!"

    • @Anna-xn8ds
      @Anna-xn8ds Місяць тому +9

      I live in Germany. While I have heard about it, I shall say that I jaywalk all of the time and I have never experienced it. And plenty of people jaywalk here.

    • @Anna-xn8ds
      @Anna-xn8ds Місяць тому +4

      That being said, people in America are far more likely to jaywalk.

    • @Felix-st2ue
      @Felix-st2ue Місяць тому +32

      There is always the conception that you should act as a good role model to kids. So that when the kids walk to to school etc without their parents, they don't jaywalk. Grownups usually can judge the risks Kids not so much. And for parents it's hard to justify why someone else is jaywalking and there Kids see that. So one strategy is to tell their child that the person they saw jaywalking is stupid. And that's how you get those reactions like that of this little child.

    • @karinpeterson5366
      @karinpeterson5366 Місяць тому +13

      Yep. Traffic safety is taken seriously and adults are expected to be role models for kids...you see it is common for our 7 yr olds to walk 4 blocks or so to their school by themselves.

    • @la-go-xy
      @la-go-xy Місяць тому +4

      Actually crossing on red is an offence in Germany, while there is not exactly any definition like jaywalking. You just mustn't cross near a red light or endanger anybody.
      Besides that, there are regional differences how many poeple do that or speak out.

  • @Anna-xn8ds
    @Anna-xn8ds Місяць тому +51

    I have one! Literal strangers will walk up to you and ask you if you will watch their stuff for them, even expensive stuff... like when they go to the bathroom or whatever. And another is people will let strangers borrow their expensive stuff here. There is a level of trust and safety here that is not in the USA.

    • @andremauboussin2705
      @andremauboussin2705 19 днів тому

      That is refreshing and great to hear!

    • @leedoss6905
      @leedoss6905 15 днів тому +1

      I've had that happen in airports in America

  • @bobnieland4827
    @bobnieland4827 Місяць тому +56

    My wife and I lived and met in Germany and have been back at least 6 times (most recently 4 weeks ago), so the cultural differences we notice are more about how Germany has changed over the last 40 years. Things like the incorporation of so many English words and expressions into the language, the widespread availability of electronic payment v. cash in recent years, the shift from stick shift to automatic transmission cars when renting, the superiority of kitchen equipment and the wider variety of food (including regional. vegetarian and lactose-free options) available in restaurants.

    • @Anna-xn8ds
      @Anna-xn8ds Місяць тому +4

      The affordable vegan food compared to the USA. That's definitely one and not one many would suspect.

    • @rjsieder
      @rjsieder Місяць тому +3

      I'm an American who has driven a stick shift for almost my entire life, until 4 years ago. I rented a car in Germany a year ago, reserving a stick, only to be given an automatic. I was disappointed as I really wanted to drive a stick again.

    • @bobnieland4827
      @bobnieland4827 Місяць тому +2

      @@rjsieder Me too! The same thing happened in England as well. I guess it's an outdated skill now.

    • @darksparkle9849
      @darksparkle9849 Місяць тому

      Interesting to hear your view. I find it amazing how many Germans still use cash only. It is getting less though that’s for sure.

    • @ilanarhian
      @ilanarhian Місяць тому +3

      I moved to Germany in 2012 and the amount of vegetarian/vegan food available and veggie restaurants have gone up a lot just in 12 years.

  • @debrafuhrman550
    @debrafuhrman550 Місяць тому +14

    I'm a military brat and spent 4 years in Wiesbaden as a kid and had a great time seeing the country. One of my best friends now is from Unterwössen in Bayern and I went there 7 years ago for her daughter's wedding and fell in love with the area. Spent 3 weeks with her at her mother's in Unterwössen last summer and loved it. Going for Oktoberfest in 2025.

  • @Andrew-jv7tc
    @Andrew-jv7tc Місяць тому +27

    This is not just Germany but Europe overall. The prices in the grocery store are so much lower and for much higher quality produce and foodstuffs. Special to Germany (and Austria) is the hot food available in the store, as well as the cheese and cured meat selection at just a regular Rewe or other grocer. It’s just spectacular!
    Also, you can get groceries more easily in smaller portions to fit one person. In the US, everything is portioned for a family.
    I wish we took the European approach to our food more. We would be so much happier and healthier.

    • @Trifler500
      @Trifler500 27 днів тому

      Food in the US isn't portioned for a family. It's portioned with the expectation that you will not finish and will take the leftovers home (not throw it away).

  • @darksparkle9849
    @darksparkle9849 Місяць тому +25

    This was super interesting. American here in DE since 2003. I still feel like a lazy bum that I’m not outside galavanting through the forest every chance I get, I’ve learned to get out and active more and it’s obviously worth it, but indeed we “Amis” are very sedentary compared to the average German. Also, I’m glad I raised my son here and he’s able to run around the neighborhood with his friends and from elementary school was out there on public transport alone. In fact, the government here in NRW has done campaigns to educate parents that their children should NOT be driven to school! Whereas in America people get CPS called on them if they let their elementary school kid walk through a park alone (true story).

    • @Klust413
      @Klust413 6 днів тому +1

      This is part of why I do not want to have children in the US anymore. I want to move to Germany or the Netherlands to have children because they'll get to have experiences closer to what I had as a child in the US before helicopter parenting and stranger danger took so much of kids' independence.

  • @colorfulsomething5008
    @colorfulsomething5008 Місяць тому +31

    Such nice people telling what they've noticed in a very respectful way, pointing out the positives (something a lot of germans on the internet can actually lern from, haha). Very nice that you were here! I hope everyone enjoyed their trip :)

  • @dustinrosenau2733
    @dustinrosenau2733 Місяць тому +18

    I'm from Minnesota, and I have been to Germany 5 times. In December, it will be 6. I think the thing I was surprised the most about the first time is the bakeries. They are amazing.
    The second thing is the windows(the tilt/vent mode) and the shutters, I definitely would love both on my own place someday here.

    • @darksparkle9849
      @darksparkle9849 Місяць тому +2

      German windows are world class. Every time I go back to the US I can’t believe the low quality of the windows.

  • @robertmoore8166
    @robertmoore8166 Місяць тому +12

    My parents met in Heidelberg back in the 1950s as American High School students. After getting married and having four kids, we were lucky enough to be stationed at Rhein Main Air Base in Germany. We were close enough to visit Heidelberg many times. We spent every weekend over an almost six year period travelling throughout Germany. I have many fond memories of Germany. Yes, Neuschwanstein (the model for the Disney Castle) was one of our trips.

  • @Fadamor
    @Fadamor Місяць тому +36

    VERY long post. I understand if you skip it. An experience from Kiel back when I was in the Navy:
    Our ship was there for Kieler Woche (a huge international regatta held once a year) circa 1982. Apparently the U.S. sends a navy ship for Kieler Woche every year. I had duty the first day in port, but after a while the word was passed for anyone who has sailed before to report to the Quarterdeck. There was a miscommunication between the Squadron Command and our ship, because we didn't know the Kieler Woche officials expected us to provide a crew for one of the boats racing in the regatta the first day. I had been on the Thames River in Connecticut as a boy with family friends and manned one sail at the time, so I reported to the Quarterdeck. WHAT could go wrong? 😬
    As the only crew onboard when the need for a regatta crew was discovered were "on duty" (everyone else was already ashore on liberty), only about 1/4 of the crew heard the call for experience with actual sails. We were able to muster 8 enlisted plus the 1st Lieutenant, but the total regatta experience amongst our small contingent was an anemic 0 hours and 0 minutes. WHAT could go wrong? 😦
    We're given permission to go ashore in our "civvies", but it was still considered a work detail rather than "liberty" and we reported to the regatta officials. Our 1st Lieutenant takes charge and gets the race details from the regatta officials. We understand the course, but we are embarrassingly ignorant of regatta strategy. Our first objective is to get to a large round buoy in the distance and make a hairpin turn around the buoy in a counterclockwise direction. The starting line is relatively perpendicular to the course we'll need to take to the first buoy and it's a timed start - a starter pistol sounds prior to the start, synchronizing everyone's watches, then at the specified time after the first shot, the actual start is shot. The strategy we DID understand was we need to be as close to the starting line as possible without being over and at max speed when the second starter pistol sounds. We ACED IT! All those other "fools" to our right were up on the other (upwind) side of the starting line stealing each other's wind, while we were on the downwind end of the starting line and crossed the start perfectly - or so we thought. Those of you with sailing experience can already see our problem. Draw a right triangle with the starting line making up one side, the 90° angle of the triangle is at the upwind end of the starting line, and the first buoy to the 90° angle makes the second side. All those "fools" had to travel along the upwind side of the triangle to get to the first buoy. Because we picked the downwind side of the starting line we were effectively traveling along the hypotenuse of the triangle to get to the first buoy. Our path - by definition - was going to be longer than the "fools". As I said, we crossed the start perfectly and quickly gained an apparent lead. However, our course to the first turn forced us to steer more into the wind in order to keep heading towards the buoy, lowering our speed. Additionally, wind pushing your sails from the side also pushes your boat to the side. The closer we got to the first turn, the more we had to turn into the wind to pass around the correct side of the buoy. By the time we finally reached the turn, the rest of the racers had already made the turn and were halfway to the next turn.
    I estimate we crossed the finish line a half-hour after the rest of the racers did and in all likelihood delayed the start of the next race. Embarrassing. 😞

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 Місяць тому +7

      ⛵ ⛵ 👍thx for sharing

    • @himmel-erdeundzuruck5682
      @himmel-erdeundzuruck5682 Місяць тому +8

      Never mind. By this people had something to laugh. Just laugh about it, too. You were strong fighters, so no need to be ashamed.

    • @ytgray
      @ytgray 27 днів тому +3

      You know, I remember one internal championship of my son's then swimming club. There was one boy who was, well, bad. On the larger sider and much slower than the others. No chance at all. But, you know, participation was not obligatory. He could have dropped out, stayed at home. He didn't. He completed every part of the whole competition. And I respect that. It shows sportsmanship/honour/a sense of duty, pick your favourite trait. On that day, so did you. In spite of not having experience you went ahead. OK, you did not actually have a choice. Still no reason to be embarassed.

  • @outxbear
    @outxbear Місяць тому +21

    I was in Berlin December of 2023. Three things have stayed with me since then. One of the first things I noticed was the pace of German people. For them, I'm sure that this was there normal speed, but to me it seemed like they were race walking. Second, the bathroom in the hotel was like wow. An entire wall of shelving for the mirror and sink, the fantastic showers, heated towel rack. I was truly amazed (I think this was like a 2.5 star hotel). Finally, form truly does follow function. The built in kitchen had no wasted space (whoever thought of putting a cutlery draw below a cooktop, genius!) Oh yeah, the carbonated bottled water :)

  • @saraht3196
    @saraht3196 Місяць тому +17

    a lot of youtubers go on these trips and it's kinda fascinating hearing their opinions, especially from an older crowd! i just lived in germany teaching english for 10 months, and there were lots of culture shocks. the focus on quality rather than consumerism, dressing for the season not the weather, and the intense scams and picpocketers at hbfs jumped out to me. i also love the "grab and go" set-up that allows you to grab a cheap sammy or a pretzel and hop on your train rather than mcdonald's or something overpriced. while there, i lived in a happy little gray zone between local and tourist as an expat haha, it was a really awesome time!

  • @luanvoable
    @luanvoable 18 днів тому +3

    I agree that the quality of food in Europe is really good. Everything in Europe is small, like car, hotel room, elevator, etc...If you go to Europe, get the best shoes as you can, because you need to walk a lot

  • @alder96ontwitch88
    @alder96ontwitch88 Місяць тому +23

    You can hear that Hannes know German when he said Heidelberg and Baden-Württemberg

    • @ulie1960
      @ulie1960 Місяць тому +4

      him talking about that there are more corn on the fields this is because it is used for bio gas production.

  • @franzklein5397
    @franzklein5397 Місяць тому +15

    Very friendly and very nice people you traveled with. I hope you all had a pleasant time in Germany.

  • @DavidNelsonATX
    @DavidNelsonATX Місяць тому +25

    I've been to Germany a bunch of times starting in the mid 1970's. Things that have changed over the years: timeliness of public transportation, cleanliness, and perspective of Americans. Those also pertain to the rest of Europe too. In the seventies train departures were to the second and I don't remember one ever being late. A few years ago we missed a connection in Frankfurt due to a 20 minute delay from Heidelberg, and other trains were a minute to five minutes late fairly regularly. There is way more graffiti now than there was in the 70's. I also remember the pride people had in washing and sweeping their entryways daily (almost seemingly hourly). Another change is back then before Schengen the US passport was golden, and being an American (an perhaps being an unconscious student) we were treated extremely well by the German people. Now, and perhaps because I'm older there is less grace granted for my stupidity. What hasn't changed is what a lovely country Germany is and the rich history it has, like most countries, including the USA, both good and bad chapters...an opportunity to learn.

    • @la-go-xy
      @la-go-xy Місяць тому +5

      Graffity in the modern form was copied from the US 😂

    • @darksparkle9849
      @darksparkle9849 Місяць тому +6

      Yeah the train system has really gone downhill to the point the majority of DB trains are late. They’re now finally investing in fixing it but it’s gotten really really bad.

    • @remy2718
      @remy2718 Місяць тому

      Fun fact: Deutsche Bahn only considers a train to be late if there's a delay of at least 6 minutes

  • @kawiwi85
    @kawiwi85 12 днів тому +1

    So interesting! Everyone in this video was so nice about Germany. 🥰
    Will you upload more videos from this trip? I would love to see your visit to Heidelberg, cause that's where I am living. Would have been cool if I would have run into your group while you were there 😄
    I was also curios from which little town near Heidelberg Hannes in your video is from 😉

  • @davesaunders7080
    @davesaunders7080 Місяць тому +15

    When we were in Germany last Aug we were surprised by the great conversations we had in our AirBnB locations, even backyard neighbours for 1 evening inviting us over for beers and schnapps or table mates in Munich ( Andechser am Don) asking us how our visit was then conversing into the evening. Or at a little community festival in Seeg in the Allgau one lovely afternoon with dancing and bands and home cooked food, magical. Overall the serving staff all over Germany was better than we expected.

  • @user-zl8hs6jc7y
    @user-zl8hs6jc7y Місяць тому +10

    What nice interviews these are! All these travelers from the States noticed a lot of interesting points about Germany. They are all good conversationalists and communicators. Feli, you are a great moderator. Danke!

  • @jimgeiser487
    @jimgeiser487 Місяць тому +6

    I had to check my passports to see how many times I was in Germany-primarily Berlin. The first trip was in 1968. It was the first trip for me and our two preschool children and the first trip back home for my wife. We flew from Cleveland to New York, to Newfoundland, to Frankfort and finally Templehof in Berlin. The 4 of us lived with my mother-in-law and father-in-law in a one-bedroom apartment. All of our sightseeing was done with public transportation. Mutti only knew "hello" and "goodbye" in English, but Vatti was pretty good at it. In 2022 My son and I made a trip (the 12th one) and this time we flew into the new BER airport and stayed at a hotel. We relied on public transportation and only got lost once.

  • @adamb50
    @adamb50 13 днів тому

    I remember when I was 6 years old going to my grandfathers house back in 1991 here in tamaqua PA, it was Christmas Eve, they used to play old German music on the radio from 1930’s but they don’t play that anymore.

  • @stephanieiv1163
    @stephanieiv1163 Місяць тому +6

    It’s just so nice to see such friendly visitors!

  • @Sergio-sr5wf
    @Sergio-sr5wf 28 днів тому +2

    I’m currently on holiday in Frankfurt from Los Angeles. I love it here, should’ve educated myself more before traveling. Feli is right about finding parking is a nightmare. The autobahn is awesome. I’m definitely coming back more and more. This country is beautiful

  • @treyokelly9662
    @treyokelly9662 Місяць тому +18

    Growing up here in the US, most of our playground equipment was wood. But that was the 90s and into the very early 00's. They definitely overstepped with the "safer" stuff

    • @Wud-f2r
      @Wud-f2r Місяць тому +4

      I wonder how much of that is due to marketing from the makers of plastic playground equipment?

    • @southcoastinventors6583
      @southcoastinventors6583 Місяць тому +1

      It really more about liability than anything else since around that time they really went lawsuit crazy of safety proofing everything due to minors being around.

    • @treyokelly9662
      @treyokelly9662 Місяць тому +1

      @@southcoastinventors6583 also why most fast food places have opted to remove playgrounds. Liability insurance is insane. I understand it, but dang at what cost?

  • @KikiBerlin
    @KikiBerlin 8 днів тому +2

    Ich war dieses Jahr das erste Mal in Amerika. Es war ein großer Traum und ich hatte von Filmen und Dokumentation ein bestimmtes Bild geformt. Amerika, das Land in welchem du vom Tellerwäscher zum Millonär werden kannst. Das Land der unbegrenzten Möglichkeiten. Alle Menschen sind super freundlich, usw. Vor Ort habe ich schnell festgestellt, dass dies eher eine Illusion ist. Ja, die meisten Leute sind sehr freundlich. Es wirkt allerdings manchmal sehr aufgesetzt. Ich habe auch viel Elend gesehen und als ich krankheitsbedingt zum Arzt musste, verließ ich die Praxis mit einer 600 Dollar Rechnung. Das Land ist wunderschön und es leben tolle Menschen dort, aber auch dort gibt es eine Kehrseite der Medaille. Ich habe durch diesen Urlaub Deutschland mehr zu schätzen gelernt. Das Sozialsystem, das leckere Brot (😅) und das angenehme Klima. Wir meckern immer sehr viel und ja, auch in Deutschland müssen sich einige Dinge verbessern. Wir können jedoch froh sein, hier leben zu können.

  • @juliustimmerman2071
    @juliustimmerman2071 Місяць тому +6

    Hello, I was stationed in Schweinfurt West Germany, January 1989 to November 1991. I was there for the fall of the wall to Berlin in August 1991. That was a great time to go there. Then in October 2019 went to Berlin for a week and I could not believe how Americanized Berlin was. Still a beautiful city, but definitely Americanized to go back again. I’d like to even go check out Schweinfurt again.

    • @Muck006
      @Muck006 17 днів тому

      It wasnt "americanised" ... it was "Bonn-i-fied" thanks to the TERRIBLE (small-town-minded) BUREAUCRATS which came from Bonn and completely ruined the city[1]. Also: INVESTORS are the bane of the city ... because they still buy what is left of OLD and BEAUTIFUL BUILDINGS ... to let it rot, tear it down and replace with UGLY BLAND BLOCK ARCHITECTURE.
      Apart from that the most annoying "americanisation" is GRAFFITI ... because there is no will to punish the "artists".
      We always had a really ANNOYING clubbing scene, which seems to have grown bigger.
      [1] I was in university in '89 and a friend of mine and I created a rule that "anyone with a car numberplate of more than two letters should be forced to park at the edge of the city and stick to public transports". German numberplates have 1 to 3 letters denoting the city ... and three-lettered cities are small, i.e. they DONT KNOW HOW TO PROPERLY DRIVE!

  • @heikej.5705
    @heikej.5705 28 днів тому +1

    Dankeschön für das teilen der Eindrücke, ich finde das sehr spannend 🇩🇪♥️🇺🇲

  • @datguy8371
    @datguy8371 Місяць тому +14

    We had a blast on a trip to Germany recently. We rented a car and spent several days each in Munich, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Freiburg im Breisgau, Friedrichshafen on Bodensee, and Rosenheim. Then 3 days in Vienna, Austria. We went on a lot of walking trips in the towns, and hikes in the mountains. Beautiful country and so much to see! I think perhaps the funniest event for me is when I drove into a parking garage in one of the towns. There was a sign that translated means Parking on First level was reserved for women who are alone, I assume so they have a safer quicker exit from the garage and are closer to attendants. However, my German is very very rusty and I thought it was telling me that I shouldn't take the ramp up to that level so I passed that ramp. The only other ramp was the exit ramp, and the attendant, an older man, thought I was going to drive up that ramp, so he came out and shouted at me in German. He didn't speak English, so it took a minute to sort it out. Once we were on upper floors and parked, I was able to translate some of the signs better. I think that may have been in Freiburg. We did drive to Colmar in France for a day, and we were shocked at the change in countryside. In Germany, everything was neat, well cared for and maintained. Crossing the border into France, we started seeing overgrown lawns, tall weeds and grass growing through sidewalks, roads that needed repair, trash along the roads, and other things that were very different from Germany.

    • @dieterwtm8941
      @dieterwtm8941 Місяць тому

      I might have a reason for that event in the parking garage: first level (in german: erster Stock) means the first level above ground - so I think the US calls this the second floor.
      First floor in US means (in german: Erdgeschoss (grounded floor)) - I hope that was the source of misunderstanding.
      Greetings from Germany!

    • @TheMave34
      @TheMave34 29 днів тому

      Wait 4-5 years and you'll have your french experience in Germany too. Government ist working on it.

  • @Kimj-e5y
    @Kimj-e5y 25 днів тому +2

    I visited Germany in 2012 and was struck by the beauty of it, the little villages surrounded by green countryside, not suburban sprawl like the US, the beauty and history of the cities, and just a general feeling that quality rather than quantity is valued. I loved it so much and that surprised me for some reason!

  • @Luv2tickt
    @Luv2tickt Місяць тому +5

    Shout out to Greg at 1:42 sporting my hometown baseball shirt! Well done and way to rep over in Germany! Same for the couple actually from Milwaukee!
    Yes, at 6:30, one of the big things that I had noticed was how difficult it was for the disabled. A very good friend suffered from MS. He had a very difficult time navigating as there were no "kneeling busses" or ramped sidewalks, even the apartments were not set up to get into for someone with limited mobility. That said, people were always there to help him with either getting home or getting on a bus, shopping, just everyday life. So the German people do see the need for something to be done to assist disabled folks.

    • @gregbromberg5427
      @gregbromberg5427 Місяць тому +1

      @@Luv2tickt I am actually from Milwaukee. So, I still support all of the home teams.

  • @lynnharper3048
    @lynnharper3048 6 днів тому

    I wasn't on this trip. But I have been in Germany five times now and really enjoyed it. I was surprised to discover that Frankfurt was the European city that reminded me most of Toronto where I live. Everyone I encountered in Germany was helpful. The food was great everywhere I ate. I was also amazed that even on a Sunday, the bars were open and people were out dancing before noon in some areas. The best was how friendly people were. As soon as they heard us speaking English, they would come over and ask where we were from and when we said Canada, they had to buy us drinks and had endless questions. Would go back again in a flash!

  • @gooseberrydell8095
    @gooseberrydell8095 Місяць тому +10

    Sadly, Germany "lost its song as a result of television. ...I was stationed in Munster bei Dieburg Kaserne in pre-television days in the mid 1960s. I very much enjoyed going to beer/wine fests in the small villages surrounding my Army post. ..Hundreds of Germans would sing traditional folk songs. It was absolutely wonderful. ,,,I returned to Germany on a vacation in 1979 and found that no one sang songs anymore. Also, i noticed people in gasthauses staring at the television rather than sitting in a circle talking, and on occasion -- singing. ...Sadly, television truly transformed America as well as Germany.

  • @douganderson771
    @douganderson771 Місяць тому +7

    I first went to Germany as a soldier, stayed for 7 years. Then went back as a civilian and lived there for another 6 years so not much your travel group had to say surprised me. I would dearly love to go again to see my German family, but at 80 and somewhat handicapped I don't see it happening.

  • @lawrence31415
    @lawrence31415 Місяць тому +19

    Awesome video, this looks like a super fun way to have fascinating conversations on die Autobahn! Safe travels!

  • @jerrihadding2534
    @jerrihadding2534 Місяць тому +4

    Thanks everyone, this was so fun to watch!

  • @armyfirefighter
    @armyfirefighter Місяць тому +15

    I moved to Bavaria near the Czech border in January. Perhaps it is the fact that I am older but other than learning the language - which is an ongoing thing to be sure - I did not have a lot of culture shock.
    But - a big part of that is because at least in this area, a lot of the cultural practices are the way things were for me growing up in the rural American Appalachians. I remember everything from how a cash economy worked and our small town bakery to even things that seem quite odd to many Americans now like Easter Egg trees. Even closing shops on Sunday here is exactly the same as my childhood and what Americans called "blue laws" back then that governed shopping. The level of smoking is something I have had to readjust to, and the lack of AC on 30+ degree days.

    • @joergvader
      @joergvader Місяць тому +1

      Do you struggle with the local dialect and the harsh winter☃? I grew up in that region (Tirschenreuth) , but moved to Munich 30 yrs ago.

    • @armyfirefighter
      @armyfirefighter Місяць тому +3

      @joergvader Funny you should say that. My landlord is a linguist. And he warned be careful of of the Palentine dialect/ accent here and that it would be difficult not only for me to understand others but also other Germans have difficulty with the accent. (He used the example of how many English speakers struggle with a Scots accent.) He has told me that my American accent isn't that bad really, but to stick as much as I can to my German classes and the more north and west accents. I'm still new enough not to hear a lot of the difference but I was in Frankfurt last week and the folks at the airport immediately knew what area I lived in even with my Anglicized pronunciation of some words.
      Winter isn't bad for me at all. When I was in the Army I was stationed in Colorado, Utah, and Montana through various parts of my career. Meter plus blizzards and temps -40C or lower in some nights every winter. At least this past winter was damp but mild compared to those.

    • @Anna-xn8ds
      @Anna-xn8ds Місяць тому

      My family lives in Furth im Wald and Weiding. I live up here in Berlin, have lived in Leipzig and stayed a long time in Bremen. I went from living in Sunny SoCal to the PNW and then spent 7 years in Buffalo, NY, survived blizzard of 2022 and 7 feet of snow. There's nothing Germany can throw at me that I'm not prepared for.

    • @himmel-erdeundzuruck5682
      @himmel-erdeundzuruck5682 Місяць тому +1

      ​​@@armyfirefighterlast winter indeed was damp and cold, the next winter metereologians exspect to be very cold. Climate change did a lot since I was in Arzberg, but still it might get cold and snowy.
      Btw. Palatine is (Rheinland-) Pfalz in the west, but you are in Oberpfalz which is a part of Bavaria.
      With the dialect: They consequently exchange d and t, g and k, p and b. Additionally they might replace j by g. I can't pronounce it even though I lived in Arzberg for 2 years. I guess that's how they knew where you are coming from. Additionally there are regional words that won't be understood elsewhere.

    • @armyfirefighter
      @armyfirefighter Місяць тому

      @himmel-erdeundzuruck5682 Thank you. I had to look it up as I was sure I heard him correctly. But I did mistype it. The term for the dialect he used was "Upper Palatinate" which I guess is the English name for Oberpfalz region. I live in Weiden and see the term all the time but never connected that English term with the German. Still much to learn, lol.
      Anyway, with that overview, I started thinking and I have started to pay attention. That may very well be the reason I have difficulties with understanding German spoken to me here, while I have much less difficulty reading and much less speaking compared to understanding what I hear. I thought most of it was me with American pronunciation but those sort of transpositions between the German I learned / am learning and local speech would be part of it. To help my conversational, I am doing what a lot of Spanish speakers do in the US to learn English- watch evening television. I have a much easier time understanding those shows than live speaking here and this may be the reason.
      My landlord is helping me too as he is helping me with German in exchange for me helping him with gym workouts and learning American idiom. I guess unless you all have a specific need, Germans all learn British English. This close to Britain makes sense. But there is enough difference in word choice between the US and UK to cause issues.
      Example- getting summer tires put on my car in Amberg this Spring. The clerk asked for my cars documents and if I brought the tires. (In English). I said yes, the paperwork was in the dashboard and the tires were in the back seat and trunk.
      She looked up totally confused and then it clicked. "Papers in the glove box and tires in the boot." She understood perfectly well then.

  • @kenoverbay-baker4653
    @kenoverbay-baker4653 4 дні тому

    I lived in Landsberg am Lech from 1979-1984 and in Frankfurt am Main-Harheim from 1984 to 1991. To this day I miss Germany deeply. While living in Frankfurt my landlady became like my grandmother. My neighbors were all very friendly and helpful and I felt more part of a community than here in my own country.

  • @danellis-jones1591
    @danellis-jones1591 Місяць тому +7

    As a Londoner, I went to Germany over Christmas for the first time as an adult. Apart from the insane amounts of Christmas markets (we were on the edge of the Black Forest, near the French border) and the crazy beautiful villages and towns, was how much Germans look like British people! French are different. Spanish and Italians are very different. Even dutch are different and definitely taller. But you can totally see how genetically close British and Germans are.. both (Anglo) saxon I guess

    • @jurgenhodapp2973
      @jurgenhodapp2973 Місяць тому

      The egde of the Black forrest...
      Near Freiburg ?? 😊

    • @danellis-jones1591
      @danellis-jones1591 Місяць тому

      @@jurgenhodapp2973 indeed

    • @rasselbock5699
      @rasselbock5699 26 днів тому

      Die Holländer sind die größten Menschen im Durchschnitt in der Welt.

  • @MrFlazz99
    @MrFlazz99 13 днів тому

    I'm British, but was born in Germany (father posted there in the '70s attached to the military). I always had the intention to go back and see where I had lived for the early years of my life, so in about 2008 I decided to stay in the local area for a couple of days while already in Europe for another reason. My hotel was very conveniently located not far from the nearest autobahn - easy to find - but I found that local motorists treated the urban road like an extension of the autobahn. I learned to make very large allowances for approaching traffic if I wanted to cross the road near the hotel, with cars approaching at >>100kph on a road theoretically limited to 70kph (or even 50kph). I found this quite surprising in a country that is supposedly good at sticking to the rules.
    I think I've only been in two cities with a stereotypical traffic light grand prix - and one of them was Monchengladbach/Rheydt (the other being Trieste in Italy). Germans like to drive fast, everywhere.
    I also experienced the famous German customer service in a local pub. On my second visit to the same city (a year or two later), I knew I could get Leffe Brun (a dark beer) at a particular pub/restaurant (which had also treated me very well on my first visit), so I returned there to enjoy a good meal. I asked for "Ein Dunkelbier, bitte" - leaving it open to the waitress to pick me the appropriate brew - and was served something that I would have classified as ale rather than dark. When I queried this with the waitress in my best schoolboy German, she wasted no time on any apology - "Das IST Dunkelbier!" I should have been precise in my request, of course - and I know she was not being intentionally abrasive - but it slightly spoiled my visit. By way of balance, the staff / family owners of the hotel I stayed at were super polite - I tried my German language and they tried their English equally. As the saying (almost) goes: 'when in Rheydt...'.!

  • @addiemiller2874
    @addiemiller2874 Місяць тому +35

    This is perfect as I am leaving tomorrow to live in Germany as an American!

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 Місяць тому +5

      Willkommen!
      Welcome!

    • @krakentoast
      @krakentoast Місяць тому +1

      Nice

    • @paulm.sweazey336
      @paulm.sweazey336 Місяць тому +1

      Good luck. I'm 8 years in as a Silicon Valley retiree. It's a beautiful place to live. If you're not used to long, cold winters, find a way to really enjoy the occasional bouts of hibernation. Spring, summer, and autumn, just invest in the right clothing and play!

    • @TainDK
      @TainDK Місяць тому +1

      Vielen glück und gute reise =)
      A tip for using google - if you strugle to find ö and ü when typing in google to search stuff - just write oe or ue instead - glück as i used before then becomes glueck - google will give you the right answer if you do so - not sure if Germany also have the ä - but in case they do, its the same, ae. You can almost say that the ¨ can be spelled with an e after the letter its above instead of using the ¨ - you can also do that in emails, normal mail etc, but by that time, when you feel confidant to type an email in German, you would probably also have figured out how to use the ¨ above letters =)
      until then - use the e after, its easier in the beginning.
      - Welcome to Europe (soon), by a Dane

    • @TainDK
      @TainDK Місяць тому

      Oh - yeah, sorry for being just to the point - its a thing - straight to the points that can help without much "hey how are you, did your kids get home safe, how was the spa... etc." talking points.
      When you meet these interactions, its not a sign of disrespect, rather a sign of respect of your time, you dont need to worry about me, but these points i think are crucial for xyz (in my case about ä ö and ü - but you will for sure find other interactions such as mine during your stay)
      Once again - good luck and have a nice travel =)

  • @YodaPagoda
    @YodaPagoda Місяць тому +1

    My trip to Germany in 2008 was a lot of fun. I think my German classes in high school 14 years earlier served me well, and I visited a lot of places that were on a planned overseas trip, but prices shot up and never got to go in 1994. I had a Bayern FC shirt on when I was walking towards my hotel in Munich, just out of the exit from the Hauptbanhof when an American asked in halting German "wo ist der Hauptbanhof?" I kind of chuckled and let him know I was American, and that the entry was just around the corner, in English of course.

  • @rjsieder
    @rjsieder Місяць тому +5

    I'll be visiting Germany for the third time in 18 months two weeks from now. I agree with all of the observations your tour group made. I'm especially fond of the Euro-style windows and doors and wish those were available here in the US. It looks like you had a great group for this year's edition of the Feli tour.

  • @edwardmeade
    @edwardmeade 22 дні тому +1

    My wife and I have been to Germany several times, both on river cruises and on our own self-organized tours and I'll echo most of the comments these folks made. Last fall, however, we went to the Baltics, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia. If you like Germany, you'll love the Baltics. A lot of the comments people made apply to the Baltics as well. Especially the playgrounds. :-) I was amazed at the challenging playgrounds. And it's not just for the kids. Jurmala (outside Riga, Latvia) even has a playground for adults!

  • @bradleycegelsk804
    @bradleycegelsk804 Місяць тому +9

    Feli, I love this video. Very well done. It is very interesting, insightful, and and pleasant as usual. I especially love when Nancy had to say. I am on the same page that she is. I'm a very pleased by the fact she is teaching others who will be teaching young children. She appears to be from my generation. And I noticed that she originally came from Chicago, as I was born and raised in Chicago. We've probably had very similar experiences growing up. I couldn't be more agreeable with her point of view, how children's learn about themselves, what they can do and their limits, how to watch out for oneself and the people that are around you. And probably most important your sense of personal responsibility. God bless her.
    And I'd like to do a shout out to that nice couple from Milwaukee. I've never met a person from Wisconsin that I did not like. And I've met plenty. From the countless times I've been in Wisconsin, to those I've met in the United States Air Force. I cannot say enough good things about Wisconsin people.❤

  • @bernhardhaas8424
    @bernhardhaas8424 15 днів тому +1

    Hi Feli,
    you ha e to come from the outside to see the beauty of germany i guess? There are to much negativ people calling our country bad, going down or even a bad place to live. I like what you are doing! You allways stay positive, be an optimistic person and call out the good things that happened.
    Thank you girl, keep on doing your great work for "Völkerverständigung". ❤

  • @Transterra55
    @Transterra55 Місяць тому +8

    I agree with the woman who discussed waiting for a Red light to turn green when no cars were coming… I also crossed the street and angered people…. People were also irritated when I did not get a basket at the grocery store and walked around with products in my arms.

    • @Sketchblopp
      @Sketchblopp 28 днів тому

      To be fair, as a German I also sometimes don't bother with a basket or cart, but that's usually when I only want to grab a few items real quick (or can't find a basket). So it's not entirely uncommon, but unless you just want a bread roll and a small bottle of water, it's not super common.

  • @4Lizett
    @4Lizett 19 днів тому

    The bathroom ladies! My first time in Germany was in 2008 when I was 17. For context, I'm from Peru. I grew up there till I was 10 and then my family migrated to the US, where I lived till I was 27. In the US, I think from what I can remember, you don't typically pay to use the public bathroom. It's either you have access to one or you don't because you are at a McDonalds or restaurant that limits use to only customers. In Germany (and Europe as a whole), you have public bathrooms that you have to pay to get into. Some have a lady collecting the money from you rather than those turn dials or whatever they are called. In my home country, there are plenty of places where you have to pay a fee to use the bathroom. Seeing that on my first trip to Munich really brought me back home, with the exception that public bathrooms there are well taken care of and constantly clean for the most part. In Peru, it can be a hit or miss depending on where you are 😆😅

  • @platinum_vault
    @platinum_vault Місяць тому +7

    Loved the video. I hope, there will be more content like this. (I loved how many generations shared their different experiences.)

  • @I.exist.for.
    @I.exist.for. 27 днів тому +1

    So random but i literally met her at the mall where i work today, and omg she's so sweet and humble for such a popular person. Just became an even bigger fan now ❤❤

  • @dragonheartstudio
    @dragonheartstudio Місяць тому +9

    As a brit, my first German trip (excluding Rock Am Ring) was to Baden-Baden, the thing that I noticed straight away was the calmness (along with the affluence of that particular area), cleanliness and and how much care people took in shops and bakarai

    • @jackscheppert
      @jackscheppert Місяць тому

      This is very regional though. The calm, cleanliness and craftsmanship are all things that the Baden and Pfalz regions are particularly known for -- Germans from other regions notice the same things when they visit Baden. The Ruhrpott for example looks and feels quite different. And in Berlin, there's always a Techno party in walking distance.

    • @MydieLy
      @MydieLy Місяць тому

      Currently living in Baden-Baden, so that mention made me smile. Baden-Baden is a "Kurstadt", a spa town, so it was built very spaciously and with representation in mind. It's also calm because the demographic is a lot of old people. It's sometimes too calm for my taste^^ it's a great place to visit, sometimes quite boring to live in

    • @dragonheartstudio
      @dragonheartstudio Місяць тому

      Haha yes old and affluent definitely seems the demographic, I love it though , been in Baden for Christmas the last 9 years! Though we‘re now visiting bad reichenhall every Jan… I do love spa towns :-)

    • @MydieLy
      @MydieLy Місяць тому +1

      @@dragonheartstudio i *adore* the Baden-Baden Christmas market. We always stop by after work

    • @dragonheartstudio
      @dragonheartstudio Місяць тому

      @@MydieLy it’s also such a great base to explore from :-) with Königssee , Schwarzwald … I’m missing it, I might have to book a flight haha :-)

  • @andremauboussin2705
    @andremauboussin2705 19 днів тому

    Thanks for all you're doing Feli. I look forward to visiting Germany soon. You're a great ambassador and now we Americans are blessed to have you.

  • @omarzi64
    @omarzi64 Місяць тому +12

    I'm from Saudi Arabia,
    I've been to Germany in Dortmund, Essen and Dusseldorf, and hang out with my German friends last year

    • @thing-a-day
      @thing-a-day Місяць тому +1

      I was on this trip, and became a joke among us to "DO THE EYE THING!" when we clinked glasses. They told us otherwise it was 7 years bad sex, lol.
      I think Feli has a video that mentions "the German stare" it is real!

    • @gigi2091
      @gigi2091 Місяць тому +2

      I am from Germany and I am surprised that foreigenrs always complain about the staring, didn't know that or have never noticed that, maybe they stare out of curiosity

    • @omarzi64
      @omarzi64 Місяць тому

      @@thing-a-day lol 😂

    • @omarzi64
      @omarzi64 Місяць тому

      @@gigi2091 I'm not complaining, it is just strange to see and its interesting 😝

  • @conlon4332
    @conlon4332 28 днів тому +3

    Feli standing up in a moving vehicle is making me anxious haha! Also, it's interesting how much more of an accent she has after having been in Germany for a while!

  • @troyhooper923
    @troyhooper923 20 днів тому

    The first thing that caught my eye in Berlin was the blend of old and new. From the architecture to the food to the culture, the theme of old and new was omnipresent.

  • @philipu150
    @philipu150 Місяць тому +10

    Neat.
    On my trips there, I love being surrounded by centuries of history as soon as yo get out of the (Frankfurt) airport; the local bakeries everywhere (yes, some are chains) and pastry shops; the welcoming service in small shops in cities. We lived in Manhattan for 9 years in the '70s and 80s, which was hardly welcoming. Or clean.

  • @sylviagibson4639
    @sylviagibson4639 5 днів тому

    We lived in Germany in the 70s-early 80s. Heidelberg was first date with my husband. Munich was the last place we lived. Still miss the food...and the bread, pure heaven. Our kids spent their early years there. The people and places were great.

  • @aphermion
    @aphermion Місяць тому +3

    The playground at 6:02
    Whoever designed this, just from a purely visual standpoint, chef's kiss.
    I'm not sure how accurate this is, but it looks as if the wood they had at hand played a major part in the design of the structures.
    I really love the look.

  • @jeffjeziorowski8612
    @jeffjeziorowski8612 19 днів тому

    Your videos are great! This is very cool you showing off Germany to Americans. I’m divorced and our kids are grown so my last couple of trips to Germany was solo. I’m going back in April and a friend from work is coming with me. I’m looking forward to sharing this country that I love so much. Ich liebe Deutschland!

  • @DIVERSION-one
    @DIVERSION-one Місяць тому +17

    Das is ja mal n spannendes Format! Vielleicht könntest das auch umgekehrt mit deutschen Touristen in den USA machen - obgleich das dort nicht so einfach ist wie hier, dass alle zusammen in einem bus hocken.

    • @TainDK
      @TainDK Місяць тому +2

      well she did do a few of those when her relatives (or friends?) come and visit - like tasting the "German" food in the US - thats one that came to mind. Saying this in German would take a little while so i just did it in English (könte es eben besser auf Dänish sagen, aber das kennt noch kein =)

    • @DIVERSION-one
      @DIVERSION-one Місяць тому +2

      @@TainDK I know that, i'm watching her channel for a long time. But this one was different though, because she was interviewing multiple foreign people.

  • @California92122
    @California92122 27 днів тому

    How refreshing to learn about these people's first-hand observations. Thank you!

  • @no-one.in.particular
    @no-one.in.particular Місяць тому +4

    Its pretty cool how many different things different people notice about places

  • @MrSlot-zc6el
    @MrSlot-zc6el 22 дні тому +1

    I lived in Erding (is a suburb of Munich) for about 7 years before moving back to Greece.
    There I made friends from different countries, but the ones who treated me the best of all were the Germans.
    Even my landlady, when I was leaving back to Greece in 2018 I had to pay her 150 euros which was the balance for the water, not only did I not pay the 150 euros but she also gave me back the 2,000 euros guarantee I had given for the house telling me ... .. "You have to make a lot of expenses now with your return to Greece, I don't want to make it more difficult for you".
    After 6 years I have visited Munich 5 times to see friends and relatives, I never forget to visit Ulrike and have a tea with her.

  • @Dadadin
    @Dadadin Місяць тому +6

    das ist ja cool, dass Du so einen Trip organisiert hast! ich hoffe, es hat allen gefallen :)

  • @sandmanderl
    @sandmanderl 21 день тому

    It's very interesting to hear the various views of people with obviously very different professions and therefore different perspectives. Vielen Dank, Feli.

  • @TCPUDPATM
    @TCPUDPATM Місяць тому +12

    I agree with so many of the points here. One thing that surprised me is how people are able to handle the heat with no AC indoors! Each day is brutal for me with the heat 🤣
    I’ve been in Germany for 2 weeks and I’m now comfortable riding on the bike lane and taking those scooters.
    I’m currently in Berlin till Friday. I’d love to meet the group if you are all here by Friday!

    • @southcoastinventors6583
      @southcoastinventors6583 Місяць тому

      They just can't afford the electricity rate ever since they shut down the nuclear power plants.

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 Місяць тому

      @@southcoastinventors6583 BS

    • @Sketchblopp
      @Sketchblopp 28 днів тому +1

      German pro tip: Open your windows at night or very early in the morning. Not just tilting, opening entirely, so the cooler night air can flow inside. Keep them closed around noon and on the afternoon, maybe put up curtains or blinds if you have some. :)

    • @TCPUDPATM
      @TCPUDPATM 27 днів тому +1

      @@Sketchblopp I figured that out the hard way! Thank you :)

  • @nicholasharvey1232
    @nicholasharvey1232 Місяць тому +1

    9:50 I can really relate to Ben here. I don't even own a raincoat-- walking in the rain for just a minute ain't gonna kill me. If I get wet I'll just dry off in the car or wherever. The most I'll use is an umbrella, and that's only if it's coming down an absolute frog choker. As for temperatures, anything over 50F (10C) is T-shirt weather for me, if it's particularly windy I might wear a long sleeve shirt but absolutely nothing more. Jacket doesn't come on until it's close to freezing, i.e. cold enough that any precipitation would fall as snow. If I know it will be much warmer in the afternoon, I will tough out a 40F/5C morning in just short sleeves. It just feels more satisfying to be able to physically adapt to the elements the way nature intended, and not have to drag a jacket, sweater, or raincoat around with you everywhere you go, especially during the warmer half of the year when you certainly aren't going to freeze to death without extra clothes, even in Germany's often tepid springs and summers (I live somewhere where dressing in "layers" is out of the question from April to October). Also, I tend to "run hot" and personally prefer to be cold rather than sweat in layers I don't really need.

  • @peteraltenhovel7495
    @peteraltenhovel7495 Місяць тому +6

    ich mag Feli's videos, es ist immer ein Highlight, wenn ein neues Video auf der UA-cam-Startseite erscheint. 👍

  • @kenburke3045
    @kenburke3045 Місяць тому +1

    Stationed in the Canadian Army in the Black Forest area near Freiburg for 6 years. The most fun I had in my life! Beautiful place!! My ex-wife is German and my son was born and lives in Freiburg.

  • @tomb1345
    @tomb1345 Місяць тому +4

    I think you’re Amazing Feli !… I think you are an Amazing Ambassador for the Germany of Today …. Love your content … keep it up

  • @stevencompau4163
    @stevencompau4163 21 день тому

    could have happened anywhere but in Heidelberg I ate sushi, at a Chinese owned restaurant, where everybody spoke German. I got nothing that I had originally intended to order but amazingly some of the best sushi I've ever had. To me it was amazing how everybody spoke different languages in there and yet everything ran smoothly. If I had just pointed instead of trying to use my German I'm sure I would have gotten the right orders.

  • @TheMcIke
    @TheMcIke Місяць тому +2

    I got to visit Munich, Rothenburg ob der Tauber, and Heidelberg when I visited in the early 1980s (school tour that started and ended in Frankfurt and included stops in Salzburg, Lucerne, and passed through Stuttgart on our way back to Frankfurt to fly home). Though I was only 15 at the time, I found Rothenburg to be one of my favorite stops in Germany... While most of the kids went to the discothèque that evening, I spent the evening walking along the old city wall (for those that don't know, the old town's wall was [mostly] laid out in the shape of a wine goblet) [and yes, I'm an introvert, or as they called it back then, shy, so night clubs were not my thing...].
    Now my favorite stop on that trip was Lucerne... being Good Friday, the shops were closed, so a few of us took a cable car to the top of Pilatus and had lunch on the patio outside the hotel at the top while overlooking the snow-covered mountain (it was April and part of the snow pile between the cable car station and the hotel was at least 15'/~4.5m... despite the time of year, the sun was bright and we only needed light jackets).
    I still have some of my Deutschmarks from that trip... before they converted to the Euro, I'd hope to have gotten back, but now they're great souvenirs.

  • @nickelo7970
    @nickelo7970 27 днів тому

    Thank you for that great video, Feli! The tour group makes a very friendly impression. Since I am German myself, it was very interesting for me to find out what people noticed about Germany. Who would have thought that different playgrounds for children would be one of those things? Overall, it's great to hear that the American guests generally liked Germany. I also really like how you interact with people, Feli! You should continue to include such videos on your channel. And if you plan to organize a trip through the USA some day, I would definitely join the group! :)

  • @emmaerbsenbluete881
    @emmaerbsenbluete881 Місяць тому +3

    Thank you for this video, liebe Feli! It-s always interesting to hear what people from other countries are telling. Most of the experiences were positive, I‘m so glad and thankful for that. I expected to hear more disappointed reaction to be honest.
    Hope you enjoyed your visit in Berlin too, it‘s such an exciting and vivid city.

  • @Rondo2ooo
    @Rondo2ooo 24 дні тому

    I'm happy to hear that people had such a great experience. Good for us. What is also true is that we tend to treat tourists much better than ourselves. If you are Britain or American and don't speak German, you will find a lot of helpful people. If you have a darker phenotype, your experience will be frequently different. Regions also vary.

  • @doppeltegenkidama
    @doppeltegenkidama Місяць тому +7

    Hast du den trip organisiert?
    Wenn ja muss das echt Premium gewesen sein so begeistert wie die alle sind 👍😄

    • @WienerVL
      @WienerVL Місяць тому +1

      Ja hat sie getan mit einem Reisebüro! Das war schon die 2. Fanreise! Letztes Jahr war Premiere!

  • @84com83
    @84com83 14 днів тому

    Cultural "differences" - not cultural "shocks", thank You! In Sweden we also (mostly) differ between "shock" - "surprise" - "difference".

  • @ManualClips
    @ManualClips Місяць тому +15

    I think Nate fell victim to a common misconception when he complained about kids being disrespectful at the Nuremberg Trials Court Room. This court room was important to preserve because something positive happened there. Nürnberg is very different from a place like Dachau or Auschwitz: We don't have many places that relate to victims, but mostly places that relate to the aggressors. These places are still important memorials, but they aren't "sacred spaces" where you'd be disrespectful to victims of the Nazis by being loud, because they weren't there. So there is no need to act extra reserved and respectful there compared to other places like concentration camps. This court room is where the bad guys found their end. While still serious and important to learn about, for some it's a place of joy and resolution. For all the other Nazi-related places here, most aren't preserved as they were, but we also haven't broken them down. We've just taken that space back for the public and use them for things that bring people joy, like music festivals, skateboarding, etc...

    • @gigi2091
      @gigi2091 Місяць тому +3

      so true

    • @Naikomi95
      @Naikomi95 Місяць тому +1

      Yea, it's just a place where American war criminals judged Nazi war criminals

    • @sancho-4457
      @sancho-4457 28 днів тому +1

      I think kids often dont got enough empathy for such dark places. We went to the Battlefield in Verdun in 8th grade as a teenager and another time in 2021 as an adult. A totally different visit. As Feli said. Kids will be Kids.

  • @boRegah
    @boRegah Місяць тому

    Listening to all these kind words, and praises even, about my culture were a well needed treat to me that I didn't expect at all. Stabile Leute, alter 💪

  • @sc00p4stoned
    @sc00p4stoned Місяць тому +8

    I love american tourists in Germany

    • @olgahein4384
      @olgahein4384 Місяць тому

      Damn, i always forget how big the Danube gets further down the stream. I live the Black Forest and grew up next to Donaueschingen, the town where the Danube is born from the rivers Brigach and Breg. You can't get anything bigger than a fisher boat on that part of the river lol.

    • @Brian-vn4xb
      @Brian-vn4xb Місяць тому

      @sc00p4stoned, danke

  • @ralphpeteranderl4063
    @ralphpeteranderl4063 27 днів тому

    Watching the video (and the comment about the conversations going on in Germany), I just realized how common TV screens are in US restaurants. As soon as you can sit down, there will be a a muted flat screen TV with sports on and a sign with the password for the WiFi (OK, slight hyperbole). Almost as if they want to avoid people talking to each other. This is a lot less common in Germany

  • @missedapproach57
    @missedapproach57 Місяць тому +5

    Sounds like a great trip. When we were stationed in Erlangen we went to Rothenburg ob der Tauber often for Christmas shopping year-round.

  • @lindaniedringhaus8790
    @lindaniedringhaus8790 Місяць тому +2

    Thank you! I will be in Germany in September!

    • @guzziwheeler
      @guzziwheeler 9 днів тому

      We Germans look forward to welcome you!

  • @gerdforster883
    @gerdforster883 Місяць тому +10

    Americans remarking on how much more kid friendly Germany apparently is will mever cease to amaze me.
    When I was a little kid, back in the day when you still had to specify which Germany you came from, we went on a family holiday in the US.
    And for years afterwards, my parents told everyone how much more kid friendly the US were.
    So somewhere along the way, there must have been quite the shift.

    • @gsmith6897
      @gsmith6897 Місяць тому

      They aren't friendly. I have lived in Bavaria for 6 years and 95 percent of the people have a😐🫤frown or NO EXPRESSION on their face! I always say after they pass or later, smile life is good or smile your breathing today etc! I have a handful of German neighbours that are nice and friendly! And no it's not me! We tell them we (American love to talk and help). They don't seem to care! But we definitely are going back to the USA!🇩🇪❤️

    • @darksparkle9849
      @darksparkle9849 Місяць тому +1

      @@gsmith6897 I think this may be worse in Bavaria than many other places in Germany. Within Germany Bavaria doesn’t have the best reputation. As a whole it’s a pretty conservative, uptight place. I’m American and live in Northrhein Westfalia for two decades now and you’re very right that Germans as a whole are less friendly and open than Americans. I miss this most about the US. But within Germany Bavaria really is not the model place for openness to others, hell they even think they’re better than the other Germans. I’m sorry you had a bad experience there.

    • @darkiee69
      @darkiee69 Місяць тому +6

      @@darksparkle9849 Speaking as a Swede, we're not less friendly, we just respect a persons space more than americans seems to do. We don't want to intrude on, or have our "bubble" invaded, by complete strangers.

    • @darksparkle9849
      @darksparkle9849 Місяць тому +4

      @@darkiee69 thank you, we seem to be UA-cam name cousins 😆 I totally get what you’re saying. Germans perceive Americans to be superficial, and in a way it is. In Germany / Northern Europe, if someone is nice to you it’s more authentic and if they’re your friend they’re really your friend. In the US everyone is your “friend” and yet not really. And I absolutely hear you about personal space and boundaries. These cultural differences are fascinating to analyse and often more complex than they appear. Still, I miss having small talk while waiting in line at the supermarket, which is normal for Americans and considered invasive by Germans 🤷‍♀️

  • @wontondestructxn
    @wontondestructxn 6 днів тому

    I have never seen such well-behaved dogs anywhere. We went to Munich 9 years ago, and were amazed to see people being accompanied by there dogs, and they didn't make a sound and just stood or sat quietly next to their owners.

  • @user-lk2cj2qs1d
    @user-lk2cj2qs1d Місяць тому +4

    We do have some very old architecture Oldest is from the 1600's But the farther you go back It would be like the Pueblo Indian dwellings back to about the 1190's America was the last land that can handle people living there After Europe Asia Australia and such So our very old architecture is limited Glad you had a great time looks like fun