It looks like you had a good time at the festival. By the way, in Germany we have those railroad crossings where you have to stop for a while aswell, but our trains are usually not that slow.
We do provide factual information on our channel from time to time (jk). I never thought much about it, either, until we visited the farm. And I have had lots of cranberries!
Hi Tom, this was the 2nd to last video we wanted to show from our recent trip to the USA. Next Wednesday will be the last USA video from our trip. We are currently in Germany and will be here for some time still while ellie works on her masters
Very cool, thanks for sharing 👍
More precisely, peat (called Torf in German) is decayed sphagnum moss. (which is why sphagnum is called Torfmoos in German)
It looks like you had a good time at the festival. By the way, in Germany we have those railroad crossings where you have to stop for a while aswell, but our trains are usually not that slow.
We did see one in the Netherlands. Maybe in the more rural areas?! Certainly not in Essen!
Interesting, never thought about how cranberries are grown and harvested...
We do provide factual information on our channel from time to time (jk). I never thought much about it, either, until we visited the farm. And I have had lots of cranberries!
Hi.
Ever tried sea buckthorn?
What is sea buckthorn?
Now you’re back in the USA. How long do you stay in Germany now?
Hi Tom, this was the 2nd to last video we wanted to show from our recent trip to the USA. Next Wednesday will be the last USA video from our trip. We are currently in Germany and will be here for some time still while ellie works on her masters
I'm going to ask my Steven's Point friend about cranberries from Wisconsin. I think of New England for cranberries, not Wisconsin.
It is one of Wisconsin's top commodities!
@@EllieandLucas Not to mention cheese, toilet paper, and lying quarterbacks!