About those ladders. The one in the bathroom was definitely just a drying rack made to look like ladder for design purposes. Ladders on the outside of houses and stuff are indeed because safety regulations and act as emergency escape routes and as easy means for chimney sweepers to climb to the roofs. And it does get snowy so you might have to be able to drop some snow off your roof.
Oh a drying rack! Yeah we have those towel drying racks in the UK. That one definitely looked more like a ladder lol! The ladder outside the house is one of the most practical things I’ve ever seen. I love it 👍🏾
@@dwaynesview personally that rack was awful, rather take stock one than that. might even do a renovation for new rack if my apartment had one of those ;D
Yeah, that stupid ladder in the bathroom was definitely someone's idea of design. The ladders outside of houses, undearneath the windows, are for emergencies, yes, but definitely not for chimney sweepers, or for snow felling. Very few buildings have working chimneys these days and for snowfelling and other roof maintenance there are complete more structurally sound ladders that go all the way from the ground to the roof.
Yes, I think you are right about Finnish common sense. Like in our written language every letter is always pronounced the same way and so spelling too is very easy. When first learning English (on 2nd grade), it felt like there was no way to predict how to pronounce words and it just seemed badly/stupidly designed language to me as a child🤣
The climate dictates that some logic, pragmatism and efficiency is needed. Those touch screen things are everywhere. That bathroom "ladder" is a heated towel drying rack. Reindeer live in Lapland so that's probably the place to go for that finest reindeer dish.
Last year after my flight back to Finland I bought the whole weeks worth of groceries from the airport because I knew I was going to be so tired from the trip that I didn't want to go food shopping the next day!
Recruiting on the street? Didn't recognize the green vest, but as you said, on the streets they can often be selling something. Or maybe he means recruiting like to become a monthly donor for some charity organization etc.
The recruiters were so called "feissari" or "facer", face to face sales people mostly trying to get you to pay monthly to some big charity institution or getting names to some addresses such as ending fur business or something.
Every home here has "the bum guns" and I could not live without them! When travelling Italy and Austria, my main complain was their absence. Also I could not share my blanket.
I don´t have it in my own appartment, but in my other rental apartment (i work in different city over 300km away so that´s why two apartments) i do have it. But think about that some countries have showers that are installed straight to the wall and you can only adjust little bit the angle. No hose at all 😬...
I am half Hungarian and I also don't share blankets. If I have a partner we have separate ones. During the day I fold them and put them at the end of the bed. Then I spray disinfectant.
It kind of does there was that Russian Pussy Riot I guess they are in jail now? Finnish version sounds better though that was just ruff translation.@@robertpetre9378
Yeah, I've seen this video before and remember thinking that a large number of these are 'we're Americans visiting Finland for a few days and, without knowing if they are also available across the rest of Europe, found 49 things in our hotel different to the US'.
Yeah, and also when they see a random ladder (not realising it was a weird drying rack) in one bathroom, they be like "oh, they have ladders in bathrooms in Finland!" 😅
'bumguns' are prevalent in Finland. We have had those as long as we have had indoor toilets. I can't remember a house not having those. My memory starts in the mid 70s.
21:40 Those are indeed meringues, as the little plaque says "jättimarenki" (giant meringue). According to the plaque there's also a liquorice variety ("laku").
I think the airport grocery stores are past the gates, though... so you can buy a drink for your flight, or the groceries like she mentioned, but you can't just walk in without a plane ticket... The little hose for washing yourself in the bathroom ("bum gun") is called a bidee here, though, despite not being a separate toilet-shaped thing. And they exist in pretty much all homes as well. I've seen a few of those juice dispenser ipad things in hotels, but not all of them have those. The ladder is probably to reach a top cabinet or bunk bed or something, and the bathroom is the only place they have the space for it in the en suite? Every house has to, by law, have a fire exit upstairs (I think the law says "all the rooms where people spend significant amount of their time in", so storage rooms don't count), hence the ladder on the outside of the building. And yes, I did use it to sneak out, lol. Pretty much all hotels have saunas, but not all hotel rooms have their own saunas. The hotel sauna is usually heated twice a week (Wednesday and Saturday are the most typical days) and there are separate 1-2 hour time slots for men and women. Some hotels allow you to pay extra for a private sauna time slot with your fellow hotel room residents. Same thing with apartment buildings - newer ones have their own saunas, older/cheaper ones have a shared sauna and the shared one is heated for free for all the residents once or twice a week (with separate time slots for different sexes), but you can also pay extra and get your own time slot for your family. Also love how so many things are just common sense to Europeans and Americans are like "GENIUS!!" 😂
Most of the recruits are fund raising for example WWF, Unisef, Greenpeace and so on. Usually sales persons are inside shopping centres not out in the streets
That’s what I thought, I use to do that job lol! I worked for various charities when I was younger. They mustn’t have people like that in America. I guess who would want to approach an American stranger in the street. They might be carrying a gun lol! (JOKE)
You dont need so much cash, you can almost always pay with card in Finland, Sweden and Norway.. It would be rarity to even find cash only place. And well, exchange rate with card payment might be little bit more for the bank, but I would assume 1-2% or so.. so not much..
I actually learned to speak American English, because I watched shows from America and played some online games with people from Canada and from The United States.
About the recruiters, they usually are from Greenpeace (as in video you can actually read it in english from the recruiters vest) and from Amnesty (humanrights organisation) and they are f******* annoying and i hope goverment bans that kinda activity by law (both). And about high tech hotels, most chain company hotels are high in tech here, tho if you wanna have nice oldie/romantic avenue for your visit i recommend old hotels that are not part of any chain.
In Sweden we have like a rope ladder that you can keep in the wardrobe. If it starts to burn, you open the window, hang on the rope ladder and you can climb down.
I think you are right about the technology part of hotela. While they weren't at the _best_ hotel in Helsinki it was among the top 5 hotels in Helsinki. I can't say for certain it isn't widespread but most likely it is spreading as a service used for that.
Couple of things if you wish to travel to Finland. Don't listen to americans or lean on the popular places on internet to make your beliefs. Remember, helsinki, where you will be, will be expensive, and will not be a reflection of the whole truth. There are some things that even most finns will fail to convince you. They will be cultural things. E.g. Taking a sauna and dipping in freezing water, or taking a shot of vodka or tasting salmiakki. There are cultural nuances you need to understand before judging them. It's not like french cuisine which leads you to a discovery of tastes. This is what many people fail to understand, some experiences need to be extreme and brutal. Like an example, you don't want to be stabbed slowly in your gut, you want it to be done fast, extreme and you feel the power of the thing you are trying to experience. Going from sauna to a freezing lake is a good example, which applies to many things in life. You feel too hot, and then you just DO it, dive in. You don't try to feel the water out. The experience you want to have can be ruined with the intention of having the good experience by overthinking and hesitation. The best things in life are the things where you throw your logical mind away and do it anyway. Watch the demon in yourself in the eyes. Blessings from fin. -Tom
The plaster looking things are meringue, I think the tag in front of them on the table might say "giant meringue". The picture is not clear enough to be certain. But this is something that I've come across in several videos that Americans don't seem to know what meringues are. I wonder why that is. As for the American football that they saw that was made in America, well... I doubt that anyone here makes them because the sport is not very popular here. Also, ordering stuff from overseas is very easy nowadays. So there really isn't anything unusual about it. If these people are from Minnesota themselves, then it probably was nice and/or surprising for them to see something here that comes right from where they live, maybe that's why they included it in the video.
Huh, we've always had those... "bum guns", but noone ever told me you could use them instead of toilet paper. I've only ever seen them used to clean the toilet.
Those bidee showers or bumguns as you call them have been around from the 1960's in Finland. Some even succest that they were invented in Finland but were first manufactured in France.
Depends where they make it you can end having bad one or good one if you get to lapland ask some folks there to make right one tough its making takes 24h if its made right i cut corners and use vodka while tendering the meat i use either reindeer oor moose meat to make it but its always so damn good
I think most countries wanna show their visitors some luxury amenities while in our home my parents hate these, my father sometimes asks me, can your smart phone make me some coffee?
Those ladders in the video at 12.37 are actual ladders as they are not attached to the wall (clearly visible that they are covering socket outlets). They are probably a safer way out of the room from window or balcony if the hotel is on fire and the hallway is full of smoke. Or there is some high wall cabinets in the room and those help you to use the upper ones. Some hotels have separate "cleaning" cabinets for room service or for the occupants. I have seen similar ladders stored on those... I would like to say that hotel staff left those there by mistake, or it is a tiny room.
Take part of meat thats frosen let it smelt litle cut thin slices then put it on pan with butter then ad some seasonings depends ehat you want bake em to brown then and vodka/whisky or something with ad stonger alcohol in it when alcohol burns it tenders the meat after its gone and beer and let it slowly burn away 3 to 6 hours and you get best tender mest with it smahed potstoes wich are made well and some lingonberry with them 😊😊
To note, this easy and fast payment methot isn't risk-free, of what I've heard and if they have'nt improved the security aspect of it.. which I hope they have!
Younger people use their phone instead of a card because its safer. Google Pay for example requires you to unlock your screen before you can pay using that
Cinnamon rolls originated in Sweden. The default cinnamon roll is the typical shape we all know. There are various other shapes with the same/similar ingredients but they're all rolled in some way. "Sweden began using cinnamon in its pastries, developing the kanelbulle. Since 1999, October 4 has been promoted as Cinnamon Roll Day (Kanelbullens dag)."
Thanks for that info, now I know which country to have Cinnamon rolls from. Sweden the originator. Are there any famous places to get them from? I’m coming to Gothenburg and Stockholm
@@dwaynesviewI don't know of any specific places. My suggestion would be to get them from a confectionary shop that sells freshly baked goods (baked the same day). The best ones I've had were still warm when I bought them. I found a list of the confectionaries with the best cinnamon rolls. Since I can't post links in the yt-comments section I'll pm it on patreon.
@@dwaynesviewjust to remind you, Sweden and Finland were the same country for like 600-700 years, so a lot of things are just common culture. Maybe try cinnamon rolls in both countries? 😊
If you get poop on your arm do you use paper and wipe it and think, yeah that is fine. I think southpark made an episode about this with Japanese toilets and Randy got shoot by big paper so be careful! 🤣
Never thought about the ladder on houses in other countries, is it just us nordics that does that? As a swede that is just common sense, why doesn't everyone use that.
dont need cash in the nordic countries, in Sweden many stores dont accept cash... Rather use your debit or credit card, mastercard or visa. just check your changerate with your bank
Well i don´t think all hotels have things as well. Some cheap places propably does not have all things like that. I once were at Hotel Tourist in Oulu and i have to say that there wasn´t basicly anything. It was like i had been somewhere in 80s Soviet hotel 😂. But i didn´t needed any luxury. I just needed place to sleep over night so can´t complain about that. Propably fine dining restaurants might have reindeer, but not in every restaurant. Helsinki has most of the tourists so there propably are more often reindeer on the menu as in rest of the cities. Of course if you go north to Lapland the there propably is almost every place reindeer. I ate reindeer tartar in hotel restaurant that was in Kemi and i liked it alot. Yes, we like to use common sense in things. Also places like US you just won´t instal ladder outside walls that burglars and perverts would stay away 😁.
@@jerrimenard3092 Well formal Radison Sas hotel (i don´t know what is it these days, but that name it had 2008) at the Torinranta were luxury if i would compair those two hotels. Haven´t visited in Oulu city centter since 2017 and propably last time in Torinranta 2015. I used to visit there often as i were driving taxi in Kokkola. We had lots of visits in OYS with customers and sometimes i had lots of time to spend in the city as i was waiting my client to getting back from the treatments. I moved to Tampere at 2018 to drive taxi and haven´t visited anywhere in northern Finland for years. I also had my ex-wife from Kemi and we both had relatives in Oulu too so we visited there also as we travelled to Kemi or came back from there. I think Kemi is more like Fargo for my point of view 😂. There is absolutely nothing interesting to do than drink and f**k 😂.
Yeah, this dude is listing a lot of fringe tech stuff that 99% of places don't have and most people don't want. When you visit here... Just use your card. You don't need cash at all in Finland or Sweden.
PART 2 UP ON MY CHANNEL NOW GUYS :)
About those ladders. The one in the bathroom was definitely just a drying rack made to look like ladder for design purposes. Ladders on the outside of houses and stuff are indeed because safety regulations and act as emergency escape routes and as easy means for chimney sweepers to climb to the roofs. And it does get snowy so you might have to be able to drop some snow off your roof.
Oh a drying rack! Yeah we have those towel drying racks in the UK. That one definitely looked more like a ladder lol!
The ladder outside the house is one of the most practical things I’ve ever seen. I love it 👍🏾
@@dwaynesview personally that rack was awful, rather take stock one than that. might even do a renovation for new rack if my apartment had one of those ;D
@@Gibbetoo LOL!! It's not the prettiest one I've seen haha! BTW Part 2 is up now :)
Yeah, that stupid ladder in the bathroom was definitely someone's idea of design. The ladders outside of houses, undearneath the windows, are for emergencies, yes, but definitely not for chimney sweepers, or for snow felling. Very few buildings have working chimneys these days and for snowfelling and other roof maintenance there are complete more structurally sound ladders that go all the way from the ground to the roof.
There are hi-tech dispensers and equipment almost everywhere in Finland. Finland is a very tech oriented country.
They are in all the expensive hotels, but you wont see them even in medium priced hotels.
Yes, I think you are right about Finnish common sense. Like in our written language every letter is always pronounced the same way and so spelling too is very easy. When first learning English (on 2nd grade), it felt like there was no way to predict how to pronounce words and it just seemed badly/stupidly designed language to me as a child🤣
😂😅 yeah it is a confusing language, too many influences from multiple European languages.
English: "Green" is green, "Wich" is wich, but "Greenwich" is grenits.
The climate dictates that some logic, pragmatism and efficiency is needed. Those touch screen things are everywhere. That bathroom "ladder" is a heated towel drying rack. Reindeer live in Lapland so that's probably the place to go for that finest reindeer dish.
Also "heated floors at lavatories" has zero to none tought wasted towards comfiness. It's quite literally as to prevent mold and mildew.
Last year after my flight back to Finland I bought the whole weeks worth of groceries from the airport because I knew I was going to be so tired from the trip that I didn't want to go food shopping the next day!
Recruiting on the street? Didn't recognize the green vest, but as you said, on the streets they can often be selling something. Or maybe he means recruiting like to become a monthly donor for some charity organization etc.
Green vests are used by Greenpeace (rather obvious isn't it?).
@@JDelwynn Good point 👍😄
The recruiters were so called "feissari" or "facer", face to face sales people mostly trying to get you to pay monthly to some big charity institution or getting names to some addresses such as ending fur business or something.
Every home here has "the bum guns" and I could not live without them! When travelling Italy and Austria, my main complain was their absence. Also I could not share my blanket.
Many homes do, but certainly not every home.
I don´t have it in my own appartment, but in my other rental apartment (i work in different city over 300km away so that´s why two apartments) i do have it.
But think about that some countries have showers that are installed straight to the wall and you can only adjust little bit the angle. No hose at all 😬...
It's not a bum gun, it's a pussy phone. Atleast that's the word I've heard more 😂
I am half Hungarian and I also don't share blankets. If I have a partner we have separate ones. During the day I fold them and put them at the end of the bed. Then I spray disinfectant.
In Italy every house has bidets, which is definitely better. I think it's one of the few countries to have this in the bathroom
In Finnish "bum gun" is called pillupuhelin aka pussyphone
That sounds like the name of a sleazy rock band 🎸
It kind of does there was that Russian Pussy Riot I guess they are in jail now? Finnish version sounds better though that was just ruff translation.@@robertpetre9378
No it's not, please don't teach that word to a foreigner. It's called käsisuihku (literal translation for it is "hand shower").
I bet you're fun at parties@@anniegreen9427
Yeah, I've seen this video before and remember thinking that a large number of these are 'we're Americans visiting Finland for a few days and, without knowing if they are also available across the rest of Europe, found 49 things in our hotel different to the US'.
Yeah, and also when they see a random ladder (not realising it was a weird drying rack) in one bathroom, they be like "oh, they have ladders in bathrooms in Finland!" 😅
11:30 Those ordering kiosks are nowadays a regularity in Burger & Fries places, like McDonalds, Hesburger and Burger King.
We have them in McDonald’s too but I don’t think I’ve seen them in a hotel before. But maybe I’ve not been to the right places lol
@@dwaynesview same
The Finnish home is not complete without a Sauna, it is at least as important as a kitchen or toilet!
'bumguns' are prevalent in Finland. We have had those as long as we have had indoor toilets. I can't remember a house not having those. My memory starts in the mid 70s.
21:40 Those are indeed meringues, as the little plaque says "jättimarenki" (giant meringue). According to the plaque there's also a liquorice variety ("laku").
I thought they looked like Meringues. Lol
"bum gun" is called "pussy phone" at least in some slangs here in finland
Niinpä, tai sitten "Tussutykki". 😅👍
Those ipad controlled juice dispensers are really common here in Finland. Pretty much every decent hotel has them.
It's a law to have those "stairs" to get out of upstairs if it happens that fire burns in downstairs.
The “recruiters” are are looking to make contracts, whether it be electric, mobile or Greenpeace donations
I'm shocked. American towels don't have loops for hooking
It's really weird, like, how do they dry their towels in America?
Welcome to the future, Welcome to Finland.
I think the airport grocery stores are past the gates, though... so you can buy a drink for your flight, or the groceries like she mentioned, but you can't just walk in without a plane ticket...
The little hose for washing yourself in the bathroom ("bum gun") is called a bidee here, though, despite not being a separate toilet-shaped thing. And they exist in pretty much all homes as well.
I've seen a few of those juice dispenser ipad things in hotels, but not all of them have those.
The ladder is probably to reach a top cabinet or bunk bed or something, and the bathroom is the only place they have the space for it in the en suite?
Every house has to, by law, have a fire exit upstairs (I think the law says "all the rooms where people spend significant amount of their time in", so storage rooms don't count), hence the ladder on the outside of the building. And yes, I did use it to sneak out, lol.
Pretty much all hotels have saunas, but not all hotel rooms have their own saunas. The hotel sauna is usually heated twice a week (Wednesday and Saturday are the most typical days) and there are separate 1-2 hour time slots for men and women. Some hotels allow you to pay extra for a private sauna time slot with your fellow hotel room residents. Same thing with apartment buildings - newer ones have their own saunas, older/cheaper ones have a shared sauna and the shared one is heated for free for all the residents once or twice a week (with separate time slots for different sexes), but you can also pay extra and get your own time slot for your family.
Also love how so many things are just common sense to Europeans and Americans are like "GENIUS!!" 😂
Thanks for explaining everything that was really helpful. Americans are funny lol!
@@dwaynesview You're welcome! 😊
Helsinki-Vantaa airport has a big S-Market right after the arrivals gate, next to the exit.
Most of the recruits are fund raising for example WWF, Unisef, Greenpeace and so on. Usually sales persons are inside shopping centres not out in the streets
That’s what I thought, I use to do that job lol! I worked for various charities when I was younger. They mustn’t have people like that in America. I guess who would want to approach an American stranger in the street. They might be carrying a gun lol! (JOKE)
You dont need so much cash, you can almost always pay with card in Finland, Sweden and Norway.. It would be rarity to even find cash only place. And well, exchange rate with card payment might be little bit more for the bank, but I would assume 1-2% or so.. so not much..
i think it is more common to have card only places than cash only.
We learn british english in schools. So sledge.
British English is real English, not that American version 😂👍🏾
I actually learned to speak American English, because I watched shows from America and played some online games with people from Canada and from The United States.
About the recruiters, they usually are from Greenpeace (as in video you can actually read it in english from the recruiters vest) and from Amnesty (humanrights organisation) and they are f******* annoying and i hope goverment bans that kinda activity by law (both). And about high tech hotels, most chain company hotels are high in tech here, tho if you wanna have nice oldie/romantic avenue for your visit i recommend old hotels that are not part of any chain.
The iPad thing I would say is pretty common, the order to work area not so much
In Sweden we have like a rope ladder that you can keep in the wardrobe. If it starts to burn, you open the window, hang on the rope ladder and you can climb down.
Are there hooks where to attach the rope ladder or how does it work?
@@joona2000 Yes, there are large adjustable hooks in the rope ladder at one end.
Sledges tear down walls. Sleighes tear down hills.
I think you are right about the technology part of hotela. While they weren't at the _best_ hotel in Helsinki it was among the top 5 hotels in Helsinki. I can't say for certain it isn't widespread but most likely it is spreading as a service used for that.
i know that i am late, but we have pads or ipads for dartboards to count any game and for karaoke.
11:50
Yeah no, you won't find these high-tech gadgets everywhere in Finland.
Couple of things if you wish to travel to Finland. Don't listen to americans or lean on the popular places on internet to make your beliefs. Remember, helsinki, where you will be, will be expensive, and will not be a reflection of the whole truth. There are some things that even most finns will fail to convince you. They will be cultural things. E.g. Taking a sauna and dipping in freezing water, or taking a shot of vodka or tasting salmiakki. There are cultural nuances you need to understand before judging them. It's not like french cuisine which leads you to a discovery of tastes. This is what many people fail to understand, some experiences need to be extreme and brutal. Like an example, you don't want to be stabbed slowly in your gut, you want it to be done fast, extreme and you feel the power of the thing you are trying to experience. Going from sauna to a freezing lake is a good example, which applies to many things in life. You feel too hot, and then you just DO it, dive in. You don't try to feel the water out. The experience you want to have can be ruined with the intention of having the good experience by overthinking and hesitation. The best things in life are the things where you throw your logical mind away and do it anyway. Watch the demon in yourself in the eyes. Blessings from fin. -Tom
I love extreme experiences. Then again, I am an odd first generation American. If I went to Finland, I would stay in a smaller city like Turku.
The airport grocery store is run by Alepa and you will find most everyday products there.
The plaster looking things are meringue, I think the tag in front of them on the table might say "giant meringue". The picture is not clear enough to be certain. But this is something that I've come across in several videos that Americans don't seem to know what meringues are. I wonder why that is.
As for the American football that they saw that was made in America, well... I doubt that anyone here makes them because the sport is not very popular here. Also, ordering stuff from overseas is very easy nowadays. So there really isn't anything unusual about it. If these people are from Minnesota themselves, then it probably was nice and/or surprising for them to see something here that comes right from where they live, maybe that's why they included it in the video.
recruiting is most likely new telephone subscription, cheaper than others and no data limit : D
The "best reindeer comment" is an intresting one ^^ It depends on where you get it, and on the Sami people ^^
Huh, we've always had those... "bum guns", but noone ever told me you could use them instead of toilet paper. I've only ever seen them used to clean the toilet.
Wait... People don't have designated blankets commonly? How do you sleep at night? 😂
that ladder was moustlikely towel dryer
Those bidee showers or bumguns as you call them have been around from the 1960's in Finland. Some even succest that they were invented in Finland but were first manufactured in France.
Reindeer are from northern Finland so its naturally more expensive in the south (Helsinki) and also Helsinki is expensive in it self
"Ladders" in bathroom is for drying your wet clothes.
Depends where they make it you can end having bad one or good one if you get to lapland ask some folks there to make right one tough its making takes 24h if its made right i cut corners and use vodka while tendering the meat i use either reindeer oor moose meat to make it but its always so damn good
I think most countries wanna show their visitors some luxury amenities while in our home my parents hate these, my father sometimes asks me, can your smart phone make me some coffee?
It is not a ladder it is a drying rack for wet towels .
Those ladders in the video at 12.37 are actual ladders as they are not attached to the wall (clearly visible that they are covering socket outlets). They are probably a safer way out of the room from window or balcony if the hotel is on fire and the hallway is full of smoke. Or there is some high wall cabinets in the room and those help you to use the upper ones. Some hotels have separate "cleaning" cabinets for room service or for the occupants. I have seen similar ladders stored on those... I would like to say that hotel staff left those there by mistake, or it is a tiny room.
Yes, euros since 2002
We have the same in Sweden when we pay by card
Take part of meat thats frosen let it smelt litle cut thin slices then put it on pan with butter then ad some seasonings depends ehat you want bake em to brown then and vodka/whisky or something with ad stonger alcohol in it when alcohol burns it tenders the meat after its gone and beer and let it slowly burn away 3 to 6 hours and you get best tender mest with it smahed potstoes wich are made well and some lingonberry with them 😊😊
To note, this easy and fast payment methot isn't risk-free, of what I've heard and if they have'nt improved the security aspect of it.. which I hope they have!
Younger people use their phone instead of a card because its safer. Google Pay for example requires you to unlock your screen before you can pay using that
I was wondering why they sounded northern. Because they got a northern accent and plus being in finland will help with that northern accent
In Finland and Estonia we use Euro, in Norway and Sweden they have their own currency, but none of these countries use cash so no prob
Cinnamon rolls originated in Sweden. The default cinnamon roll is the typical shape we all know. There are various other shapes with the same/similar ingredients but they're all rolled in some way. "Sweden began using cinnamon in its pastries, developing the kanelbulle. Since 1999, October 4 has been promoted as Cinnamon Roll Day (Kanelbullens dag)."
Thanks for that info, now I know which country to have Cinnamon rolls from. Sweden the originator. Are there any famous places to get them from? I’m coming to Gothenburg and Stockholm
@@dwaynesviewI don't know of any specific places. My suggestion would be to get them from a confectionary shop that sells freshly baked goods (baked the same day). The best ones I've had were still warm when I bought them. I found a list of the confectionaries with the best cinnamon rolls. Since I can't post links in the yt-comments section I'll pm it on patreon.
@@dwaynesviewjust to remind you, Sweden and Finland were the same country for like 600-700 years, so a lot of things are just common culture. Maybe try cinnamon rolls in both countries? 😊
Vetekatten in
Stockholm is a nice place adress- Kungsgatan 55 .@@dwaynesview
If you get poop on your arm do you use paper and wipe it and think, yeah that is fine. I think southpark made an episode about this with Japanese toilets and Randy got shoot by big paper so be careful! 🤣
That’s actually so true, but for some reason people think it’s fine in the UK and America lol 😅😂
those ladder outside house are emergensy use
Those bum guns u talked about we call them pu##y phones in Finland
In my family we eat ginnamon roll so they is made node. Its so good.
Plastic bags are more inwitement friendly then hawy processed paper!
Never thought about the ladder on houses in other countries, is it just us nordics that does that? As a swede that is just common sense, why doesn't everyone use that.
Yes, those were merangues
Yess!!!! What is wrong with these people? Who wants to go around with bits of poop hanging on them?
Lol maybe IT IS in fact the bum guns that make us the happiest place on earth, never thought about this before 😅
Maybe so lol!
Finland started to use only euro's in 2002.
If bird shit on your hand, you don't wipe it with paper! You'll wash it! I use "bumgun" everytime :D
dont need cash in the nordic countries, in Sweden many stores dont accept cash...
Rather use your debit or credit card, mastercard or visa.
just check your changerate with your bank
Who has the best reindeer? Why not try all three and give us your judgement on that! 😆
Black liquorish lemon filled sounds good tho. But just straight up black liquorish is gross. I like og flavor of the liquorish and few others.
Yes. Paperbags because we are trying hard to get rid of plastic waste of every kind.
One dont slice the pizza becuse one eat it with fork and knife!
That makes sense, saves time for the servers too. In the States they only eat Pizza with there hands.
🥰
Best reindeer on Finland lapland
There is virtually no cash used in Finland, Sweden and Norway! So the currency is irrelevant.
Well i don´t think all hotels have things as well. Some cheap places propably does not have all things like that. I once were at Hotel Tourist in Oulu and i have to say that there wasn´t basicly anything. It was like i had been somewhere in 80s Soviet hotel 😂. But i didn´t needed any luxury. I just needed place to sleep over night so can´t complain about that.
Propably fine dining restaurants might have reindeer, but not in every restaurant. Helsinki has most of the tourists so there propably are more often reindeer on the menu as in rest of the cities. Of course if you go north to Lapland the there propably is almost every place reindeer. I ate reindeer tartar in hotel restaurant that was in Kemi and i liked it alot.
Yes, we like to use common sense in things. Also places like US you just won´t instal ladder outside walls that burglars and perverts would stay away 😁.
All you had to say was Oulu. You went into a time machine. It's basically Fargo.
@@jerrimenard3092 Well formal Radison Sas hotel (i don´t know what is it these days, but that name it had 2008) at the Torinranta were luxury if i would compair those two hotels. Haven´t visited in Oulu city centter since 2017 and propably last time in Torinranta 2015.
I used to visit there often as i were driving taxi in Kokkola. We had lots of visits in OYS with customers and sometimes i had lots of time to spend in the city as i was waiting my client to getting back from the treatments.
I moved to Tampere at 2018 to drive taxi and haven´t visited anywhere in northern Finland for years.
I also had my ex-wife from Kemi and we both had relatives in Oulu too so we visited there also as we travelled to Kemi or came back from there. I think Kemi is more like Fargo for my point of view 😂. There is absolutely nothing interesting to do than drink and f**k 😂.
We have budays but no one buys or used them here.
Also why you dont see them here when you come here
Number 1 it's called internet connection, nothing weird technology.
14:00 Yeah. Imagine if the WTC had emergency ladders. A lot of people would have been saved.
bro, what are u doing in thai?
euros been currency here in y99
Yeah, this dude is listing a lot of fringe tech stuff that 99% of places don't have and most people don't want.
When you visit here... Just use your card. You don't need cash at all in Finland or Sweden.
Half of this is just a review of the hotel room.
Still love ya
cinnamonrolls are swedish and in finland we make them the original way
Well u can order almost everything at you doorsteps and over 30 euros its free.
delivery it's free :D
Do toilets with a built in bide exist?
Sled = sledge. Calling that a difference in Finland is just moronic. Americans sometimes...
Every home has a so called "butt hoses" its just a normal thing we all have
Hahahaha....just.....🤣