Canada got weird since I've been gone... | 9 Reverse Culture Shocks

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  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024

Комментарии • 684

  • @penname5766
    @penname5766 2 года назад +48

    The U.K. has its own weather system because of its position in the Atlantic and as a collection of islands, and so it’s entirely possible that the cloud base is much lower here as we do get a lot of cloud buildup that is constantly coming off the seas.

    • @charlestaylor9424
      @charlestaylor9424 2 года назад +9

      In Edinburgh there is a weather phenomenon called haar and it's like the clouds have landed. It's not raining but you get soaked just walking through it. It can last all day.

    • @williamjackson2089
      @williamjackson2089 2 года назад +1

      In the UK we have the Arctic weather system in the north, the Siberian system in the east, the African/European system in the south and the Atlantic system in the west.

    • @daylonmurray8068
      @daylonmurray8068 Год назад

      The cloud base depends on the relative humidity (concentration of water vapour in the air) and the dew point (at which point water vapour condenses to water droplets to form clouds). The UK having a very oceanic climate heavily depending on the ocean with weather systems frequently passing through, usually has a much higher relative humidity and a lower dew point, so clouds are formed way lower than in Ontario, which has a continental climate and is thus usually drier until a strong weather system comes from the Gulf of Mexico and brings moisture and rain. When it rains in Ontario, it’s usually strong and short-lived showers and the air is nowhere near as damp as in the UK or like Vancouver.

    • @mothmagic1
      @mothmagic1 Год назад

      We live under the junction of 5 different weather systems, something our weather forecasters seem to ignore. Which could explain why they get the weather forecast wrong so often

  • @raiskis1
    @raiskis1 2 года назад +20

    I'm a UK expat living in New Mexico and the tendency of plugs to slide out of the wall socket drives me round the bend!

    • @wilmaknickersfit
      @wilmaknickersfit 2 года назад +2

      I used to travel all over Europe for work and the 2 pronged plugs and sockets drove me mad. It wasn't unusual for me to be trying to prop up the plug in my hotel room!

  • @angelique_cs
    @angelique_cs 2 года назад +46

    I just got back home to California from Bournemouth and even though I was only away for 3 weeks, the culture shocks were real! Chatting with strangers at the airport, the weather difference (including the sky height! The clouds are so much more "dimensional" in the UK if that makes sense) and I'll tell ya, I got really used to paying the sticker price for things without having to mentally add the tax!
    Total side note: I mentioned your channel to one of my fellow volunteers at Glastonbury. He happens to be a Green Party council member in Kent and he was really interested in the idea of your channel. So who knows? You may have gained a new follower!

    • @AdventuresAndNaps
      @AdventuresAndNaps  2 года назад +4

      Hey thank you so much!! Hope you had a great trip!

    • @joannakennedy6005
      @joannakennedy6005 2 года назад +2

      Well guess what, Britain is an Island with all weather fronts, hope you enjoyed your stay here. America is a big country and I have been, but give me the different Islands in Europe I will choose them!

    • @patrickpowers5995
      @patrickpowers5995 Год назад

      @@joannakennedy6005 That's why weather forecasting in the UK is 'pants' whereas in the US and Canada it is really quite good.

  • @MattClementson
    @MattClementson 2 года назад +29

    I also get reverse culture shock when I go back to the UK. It's strange how what was weird when you first arrived becomes normal and now your home country is the weird place.

    • @AdventuresAndNaps
      @AdventuresAndNaps  2 года назад +4

      So true!!

    • @ingaborlowski1536
      @ingaborlowski1536 2 года назад

      Absolutely! Same thoughts apply to living in one region of the USA and going back to the previous one you lived in.

  • @jameskelly8586
    @jameskelly8586 2 года назад +28

    The one that shocks me--living in Canada, in Vancouver--is the high prices. Back in November, the storm cut us off from the rest of the world and the supermarket was picked over and prices went up. But prices have kept going up. And the amount of money I have has remained the same.
    The highest skies I found were in Alberta and Saskatchewan. In Ontario you have stuff on the horizon that takes away from the height--but on the prairies it's just sky all around you.

    • @ukpaullouis2708
      @ukpaullouis2708 2 года назад +2

      Vancouver is great if you are a multimillionaire, otherwise not so much.

    • @KenFullman
      @KenFullman 10 месяцев назад

      Picked over?

  • @juliewatts2117
    @juliewatts2117 2 года назад +17

    As a Canadian, who has been to England (love it and miss it), I agree about the sky, it is quite high up there. I think that is why I love my country. I agree about food has gotten very expensive here over the past two years. Enjoyed the video.

  • @wolfie854
    @wolfie854 2 года назад +7

    Yes, doggy bags. We use them all the time (in England). Even with a chef's special deal (cheap price) on restaurant food there is always far too much served for us to eat so we always ask if they can put the rest it in a bag or box for us. Especially in Indian restaurants. Put the food in the freezer in plastic boxes and have it another day. It always tastes just as good and feels like we are getting a 'free' meal too! More people should do it.

  • @stephenphillip5656
    @stephenphillip5656 2 года назад +6

    You mused on the "High Sky" issue. In 🇨🇦, you have enormous open vistas where your horizon is a lot further away, whereas here in 🇬🇧 we're more hemmed in. It makes a *big* difference to your perception of your surroundings.
    Ice makers & American 'fridges. They are becoming a bit more popular, but only if you have the space for them. I live in a small house & my kitchen is 9ft x 6ft, so a *huge* 'fridge is a no-no! If I need ice cubes, I fill the tray supplied with the freezer with water, put in the freezer & wait a couple of hours. Hey presto!
    Glad to see that you've fully recovered from your illnesses - hope your partner has also recovered. That must've been a nightmare 😱. Keep safe Alanna, we always look forward to your "take" on 🇨🇦/🇬🇧 life. Have fun!

  • @Superstitious33
    @Superstitious33 2 года назад +8

    The high sky thing is definitely a thing! I live in Chicago and when I go to Florida I think to myself “The sky is so much lower here” like the clouds feel so much closer. I never vocalized it before though! Lol

  • @YearRoundHibernater
    @YearRoundHibernater 2 года назад +8

    I think my dinner would have been pasta with tinned tomatoes and hold the mascarpone if it was that price, lol. You're sounding better, hope you're feeling better.

  • @billmayor8567
    @billmayor8567 2 года назад +13

    As a Brit, I must admit I like the fact that houses in canada are so much bigger.
    There plus and cons wherever you go. I totally understand the point you made about the high skies.
    Hope you’re feeling much better after your illness. Your experience of it sounded absolutely awful.
    As far as the cheese is concerned, it’s much cheaper here,so enjoy eating it to your heart’s content. It will never bankrupt you😉

    • @KenFullman
      @KenFullman 10 месяцев назад

      When I went out to Australia, at first the sky just seemed so high. When I got back to the UK (an overcast sky) it felt very claustrophobic. I suffered from chronic depression for months.

  • @DontPanicDear
    @DontPanicDear 2 года назад +16

    Uk Main sockets are taken for granted here, but we’re spoiled 🤓
    Such a well thought out design and so safe.
    Travelling abroad and seeing the annoying mess other countries have to deal with, is quite an eye opener 👀

    • @DuskHorizon
      @DuskHorizon 2 года назад +1

      I normally modify an extension lead to have the appropriate "weird plug" instead of using travel adapters. Just a small one, and then put it in the hold luggage.

    • @davetdowell
      @davetdowell 2 года назад

      @@DuskHorizon Me too.

    • @marcelwiszowaty1751
      @marcelwiszowaty1751 2 года назад +3

      Yeah, I just came back from a holiday in Germany (thoroughly enjoyable btw!) and I'd really forgotten about the seeming flimsiness of the plug/socket arrangement... very similar to Canada/USA. I think we've been spoiled here in the UK... they're so robust, with a satisfying click as they make that final contact. You also need a certain amount of force to remove the plug... you just know it's safe.

    • @divin5186
      @divin5186 2 года назад

      about technical standards, EU is the best, but when talking about political self-awareness, Britannia rules! Hope the coup they prepare you won't bury this, together with the whole country.

    • @davetdowell
      @davetdowell 2 года назад +2

      @@divin5186 No idea where that comment came from, but I should point out that according to almost all electrical safety authorities, the UK standard plug is recognised as one of the safest designs.
      As for coups, whoever they are, and whatever they're planning, I'd recommend not trying that in England, we have a historical reputation for brutality, and I wouldn't want to see just how brutal we'd be willing to be towards anyone attempting such a move here. We'd rather the entire country burned than cower before some self declared supremacist movement.

  • @Malfie657
    @Malfie657 2 года назад +8

    Very interesting Alanna! Couple of things - firstly, the difference in pollen probably depends where you are even in the UK. I live in a small village which is surrounded in all directions by countryside and my car also gets yellow with pollen every summer's morning and I sniff and sneeze all the time. Also, I totally get the high skies thing - I probably wouldn't have if I hadn't travelled in Canada too but the sky really does go on forever when you're crossing an area that isn't so busy with buildings, pylons, airplanes etc (like the prairies for instance, and Ontario too, outside the cities) -so don't worry, you aren't going crazy just yet!!

  • @richardmattocks
    @richardmattocks 2 года назад +25

    Totally understand the “high-sky” thought. I’d never thought of it before but thinking back, when I visited Australia, it was the same…. The sky felt infinite while the UK sky is very claustrophobic (but I’m strange and like it that way. It’s cosy) 😎

    • @IanTindale
      @IanTindale 2 года назад +3

      Same here. When I lived in PNG and Australia ages ago the height of the sky was impressively ‘up there’, and coming back to the UK it all seemed so close and almost reachable. The dome of the sky even on blue cloudless days was a smaller dome in the UK. Cloudy UK days seemed like a miniature shot of model or toy scenery.

    • @AdventuresAndNaps
      @AdventuresAndNaps  2 года назад +6

      Thank god it's not just me! 😂

    • @Greenwood4727
      @Greenwood4727 2 года назад +3

      when i lived in texas from the uk the sky felt as if it was pressing down on me, i felt claustrophobic in the open air, here in the uk its contained

    • @AnxietyAddict
      @AnxietyAddict 2 года назад +2

      Can’t actually believe someone other than me has noticed this. When I was in the US the sky felt massive but in the U.K. it’s like everywhere feels like you’re in a matchbox. Like a miniature toy village, everything is just so small.

    • @jrd33
      @jrd33 2 года назад +12

      In the UK we have a lower sky because we are closer to heaven :-)

  • @harrisonandrew
    @harrisonandrew 2 года назад +6

    You are obviously feeling much better in this latest video, which is great news. It was interesting to hear what struck you as a returning Canadian. The “high sky” thing made me laugh because I know exactly what you mean. It took me a while to understand the concept of shelves being “picked over” - I got it in the end, the shelves were emptier than usual. Great content as usual. Cheers 👍

  • @bryanlea8115
    @bryanlea8115 2 года назад +23

    I think doggy bags are becoming more usual in the UK (at least London), but it never occurred to me to order more with a view to just taking it home. BRILLIANT! and so obvious!

    • @TheYorkRose
      @TheYorkRose 2 года назад +2

      Everything she said describes exactly my experience in the UK and I have never experienced it abroad. We took food home from the restaurant last night, and "cakeaway" is now a proper thing.
      No idea why anyone would order soup to take home though, that one baffles me 😂

  • @naitchb16
    @naitchb16 2 года назад +12

    I’d hate not being able to pop to the shops. My house is within 10-15 mins walk of shops in three different directions. I really wanted to understand the high skies but 😵‍💫 (Maybe I’ll rewatch and try again 🙃) Thank you for this insightful vid, Alanna!

  • @RatKindler
    @RatKindler 2 года назад +13

    I watch a British RUclipsr who often shows off their groceries and I've been shocked at how cheap food is there compared to Ontario. Even the cheapest dollar store here wouldn't sell food as cheap as the standard grocery stores in Britain. There's lots of supply issues here right now and many products are unavailable or in short supply. Since we get much of our food from the US, Mexico and South America, the high fuel prices / shipping costs are probably a major contributor. Even if things normalize, I doubt prices will come back down to pre-pandemic levels.

    • @tiggerwood8899
      @tiggerwood8899 2 года назад

      We're all suffering rising prices, especially here in the UK. Food has gone up a lot and, if you buy ready meals and canned goods the weight has gone down. Ready meals that used to be 450g and £2.26 are now £2.80 and 400g.

    • @najmehkasiri9952
      @najmehkasiri9952 2 года назад +1

      Canadian food quality is not good as much as Brit's food chain .Organic veggies and meat can be found easily in the Uk ,but in Canada the price for organic food and diary is exremely high

    • @critchley999
      @critchley999 2 года назад

      @Colin Deal That's what I kept thinking when Alana was on about grocery prices. As you say, it's all relevant to earnings. Obviously, if you're earning more then the prices will still be the same percentage of earnings I would imagine. Wages are pretty low here in the UK I think so food isn't that cheap as a percentage.

  • @simonandrewx
    @simonandrewx 2 года назад

    Some restaurants have caught up with the doggy bag idea but only for puddings. The afters. The whatever at the end of the meal... but they call it cake away. Yknow coz..take away... humour! Chortle chortle.
    Loved this video.

  • @georgecaplin9075
    @georgecaplin9075 2 года назад +31

    Who else on here wants to know if Alannah used the phrase “pop to the shops” in Canada by accident and what the reaction from confused onlookers was?

    • @shaunpcoleman
      @shaunpcoleman 2 года назад

      Why would onlookers be confused? Everyone knows what pop to the shops or pop across the road means. At least they do here in southern Ontario. Where do you live?

    • @jeremyandrews3292
      @jeremyandrews3292 2 года назад

      Yeah, I'm from the Southern US, and if I heard someone say that I would just think it was a very quirky/goofy way of saying "pop into the grocery store" that someone was saying to be cute. It wouldn't confuse anyone, but it might get you an odd look because that's not exactly how people usually say it. Without context, I'd think they were just saying it that way because it rhymes or something, or maybe it was a weird movie reference I missed, etc. What's really confusing, IMO, is calling a soda/cola a "pop," and I don't even have to go across the Atlantic to encounter that one. My Mom went to Illinois for the first time and thought someone offering her a beverage wanted to hit her. LOL.

    • @patrickpowers5995
      @patrickpowers5995 Год назад

      @@jeremyandrews3292 Yes and of course if you were to say that in an English accent you'd be forgiven - a little!

    • @lordcharfield
      @lordcharfield 6 месяцев назад

      I don’t want to know 😆

    • @c.c.c.c.c.c.c.c
      @c.c.c.c.c.c.c.c Месяц назад

      @@shaunpcoleman the hell I’ve never heard “pops to the shops” ever until this video. I’ve never heard a single person in Ottawa say that including me😅

  • @john_smith1471
    @john_smith1471 2 года назад +2

    About plugs falling out of the socket outlet, its not just the shorter pins (not prongs) the Canadian/American plugs have the appliance cable entry on the back of the plug which makes it more sticking out and unbalanced also continually trying to pull down and out, the UK appliance cable entry is at the bottom of the plug, so is better balanced and stable, helps keeps the plug in the socket with a flatter profile as well.

  • @MCallsen
    @MCallsen 2 года назад +1

    Happy culture shock comment, from where the skies can be both ;)

  • @nightwing369
    @nightwing369 2 года назад +2

    You're sounding a lot healthier (like you've recovered from your recent sickness) in this new video, Alanna 😊😀
    👍 , so without further ado, let's go! 😀

  • @petersmitham8273
    @petersmitham8273 2 года назад

    I think ‘comedian’ is a very apt description!….🤣😂😅😘🥰🇬🇧

  • @fsujavi16
    @fsujavi16 2 года назад

    Been watching your vids all year at 1.25x and for so long I thought u were saying “I’m Alana and I’m a COMEDIAN” lol

  • @TusharPankaj
    @TusharPankaj 2 года назад +6

    Wow I didn't realize the pollen was quite that bad there!
    US/Canadian outlets do have a 3rd prong but it's not always used. I believe British plugs are required to have the 3rd prong even if it's not wired up because the doors on the outlet won't open without the 3rd prong. The US/Canadian ones do fall out a lot though. I think it's because they weaken over time until they can't keep the plug from falling out.

    • @charlestaylor9424
      @charlestaylor9424 2 года назад

      The long prong on a UK plug is mainly to open the shutters to the powered prongs.

  • @wonhung
    @wonhung 2 года назад

    Your Sky thing makes perfect to me as I come from the Norfolk Fenns where they have HUGE skies.

  • @martinwilson2400
    @martinwilson2400 2 года назад +1

    Hello alanna! Nice to see you back in the uk.. the electrical system in Canada operates at 120 volts. in the uk its 230 volts nearly twice the power = twice the speed. we need the speed for the amount of tea we drink 😄

  • @Clayton-S.
    @Clayton-S. 2 года назад +1

    Great to see you're looking and sounding a lot better☺👍.
    You really are a proper British convert, going to Canada and having fish and chips! 😂 thanks for another of your fun, interesting video.

  • @cassandragough
    @cassandragough 2 года назад

    I usually hear "Canadian" but I did hear "comedian" in the last video of yours I watched so I thought you were a Canadian comedian. Well you do have a great sense of humour!
    Tom Scott did a RUclips video on the safety features designed into the British plug. It's very interesting.

  • @tawawhite9668
    @tawawhite9668 2 года назад +1

    Totally get the high sky thing. Moved to Wellington NZ from UK in 74 and that was one of the main things we noticed here too. Also, we have 240v power and sockets in the bathrooms. So quick tea and toothbrush rechargers taken care of. 🙂

  • @Kakashifangirl27
    @Kakashifangirl27 2 года назад +2

    Really interesting all the differences! I am a US expat living in South Korea. I have a 15-20 minute walk to and from work and four grocery stores on the way. This is in a rural areal too! I'll definitely miss just popping in for a few things and not getting in a car to get groceries when I head back to the states.

  • @jimsanderson4180
    @jimsanderson4180 2 года назад +3

    The brick hanging from the electric outlet is called a “wall wart” (great name!). We do have 3 prong plugs in North America, the third prong is the ground wire. But 3 prong plugs are definitely in the minority.

    • @Efferpheasants
      @Efferpheasants 2 года назад

      Probably in the US as well ? but the three prong dates back to when appliances were made of metal rather than plastic. It is still needed in the UK to open the socket connectors but is not actually connected anything anymore most of the time - unless the appliance has say exposed metal parts or used where it might get wet.

  • @deenas.phelps3298
    @deenas.phelps3298 2 года назад +16

    I love this community I have been here since January '21. I'm not leaving until we crush WS and achieve life changing $. I sold one of my motorcycles yesterday . All of that money is going straight to AMC and GME shares.

    • @marthabender7622
      @marthabender7622 2 года назад

      I have 500 shares for the next 20yrs for generational wealth 100k I have 500 shares for 5k…retirement 1000 shares for 1k!!! Never selling cheap!!!

    • @MelanieEMann
      @MelanieEMann 2 года назад +1

      @@marthabender7622 They say AMC is the best at the moment, But do you have an idea how well it would do? l just retired and set aside $83k to invest aggressively with mainly AMC and NIO. Kindly let me know your thoughts

    • @marthabender7622
      @marthabender7622 2 года назад

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    • @rthompsn2007
      @rthompsn2007 2 года назад

      As a Canadian I have no idea what you guys are talking about, but it seems kind of off topic.

  • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
    @t.a.k.palfrey3882 2 года назад +10

    Hi Alana, I think you suffered more from Ontario reverse culture shock than a generic Canada variety. I often visit family in BC, and even within that one province my experiences of quiet nights, allergies, etc, varies massively between the Interior, the Island, and the Lower Mainland. In effect, to say Canadian in this context is similar to saying European, for experience in Yellowknife will be as different from Markham or Windsor as between Tromsø and Istanbul or Rochester.

    • @terryomalley1974
      @terryomalley1974 2 года назад

      She's talking about her personal experience in Canada, as I believe her family home is in a fairly rural area. She wouldn't be talking so much about the peace and quiet if she'd gone to Toronto, Ottawa, Hamilton, or London, ON. As is to be expected, she's only in her 20's and young people usually lack objectivity. Because of inexperience, they tend to generalize from their own very subjective experiences.

  • @MarkARhodie
    @MarkARhodie 2 года назад +1

    I remember doggy bags being a thing in Canada, when I was across in 84.
    When you first mentioned doggy bags, I thought you were talking about poo bags. lol

  • @gamingtonight1526
    @gamingtonight1526 2 года назад +1

    Totally agree with the sky height. Felt the same in Houston, Texas. And the night sky just a few miles out of town is amazing! And we have ice makers in the UK. They're called ice trays!

  • @adam9612
    @adam9612 2 года назад +1

    I like the words "picked over" never heard that before? I've just been to the Co-op and it was exactly like that!! £9 for Mascarpone!?? Bugger off 👍😁🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @michaelwhitcombe7749
    @michaelwhitcombe7749 2 года назад +12

    Hi Alanna, looks like you got over your Canadian flu, good to have the old Alanna back again!

  • @gusdapuppywilliams2967
    @gusdapuppywilliams2967 2 года назад

    Doggy Bags! To be honest Alanna, I thought you were going to talk about poop bags! Lol! But, anyhoo, with the price of food today, we’re takin it the leftovers home!

  • @oopsdidItypethatoutloud
    @oopsdidItypethatoutloud 6 месяцев назад

    Popping to the shops. I have 3 corner shops within a 2 or 3 minute walk, 1 supermarket within 5 minutes and another 3 within 10 minutes.
    4 chippy, 1 indian, 1 Chinese all within 5 minute walk. 1 chippy is about 50 yards away 😊
    ❤from North East England ❤️

  • @suzannahmontreal1051
    @suzannahmontreal1051 2 года назад +1

    Oh, Girl the thing about the High sky is so true. I was in England for a month many years ago and the first thing I'd noticed when I went back to Montreal was exactly that. The ceiling of the sky was incredible high, the vastness is not only with the land spread but the vast distance from ground to space. England is often covered by clouds that must act as a grey blanket that lowers the sky ceiling or the impression of it. And yes the price of food is just crazy, it getting scary and people talk about it a lot.🇨🇦🇬🇧

  • @charlestaylor9424
    @charlestaylor9424 2 года назад +3

    When the last bout of panic buying was happening I read "I spent 3 years in Syria during the war there, we never ran out of toilet paper".

  • @michaelbowling1362
    @michaelbowling1362 2 года назад +2

    High Skies....?! *backs slowly away* - Ok Alanna, just have a little rest - maybe a Nap.... You'll be fine (Probably reacting with your antihistamines) 🤣

  • @johnwatson5235
    @johnwatson5235 2 года назад

    The sky is higher in Canada 😄 your as mad as a box of frogs,love it! Yes our lower skies is the reason why we have such variable weather 😁 glad your all healthy again 😊 👍

  • @stuarts1219
    @stuarts1219 2 года назад +1

    Interesting observations Alanna. As you surmised the time to boil the kettle is down to the lower Canadian mains voltage. Canadian kettles are around 1000W in power versus 2000W in the UK - hence roughly twice the time to boil.

    • @jrd33
      @jrd33 2 года назад +1

      May take longer than that because of heat losses - longer boil time will cause more heat loss which will make boil time even longer...

  • @Elwaves2925
    @Elwaves2925 2 года назад +3

    Hey Alanna. Glad to see you feeling better. Great video and you make great points that you wouldn't think of until you experience them.
    Never knew the pollen was that extreme over there. I wonder if there's something scientific to your sky thing? I'll take a quick cup of tea over bathroom outlets any day, you've gotta get your priorities right.
    Enjoyed your newsletter, looking forward to more. 🙂

  • @MS-19
    @MS-19 2 года назад +1

    I'm glad to see and hear that you're winning the battle against flu, Alanna! As for your specific points herein...
    1) This can actually be a thing even if you've never left your home country. I've lived in big cities and small towns, in different parts of the UK, and the latter (especially in the north of England) are much quieter. My university was based near a quiet village on the edge of York; a friend who went away to London remarked, on paying a return visit, how amazingly quiet it was compared to the capital. I suppose almost anywhere is quieter than the capital!
    2) Allergies are best preempted by eating locally produced honey or taking locally produced pollen. If that isn't possible, you could try spraying Beconase or another form of hay fever relief medication into your nostrils...
    3) The sky probably isn't higher in Canada, but it might feel that way because of the relatively wide open spaces in the terrain, compared with the more packed built-up areas in the UK.
    4) I use a stove-top / fireplace kettle, which takes minutes to boil, so it's not just a Canadian thing!
    5) The saying goes that you never truly realise how precious something is to you until you lose it. That's true of conveniences like local shops, you could argue!
    6) My local tea room in Warwickshire will provide a doggy bag if you cannot manage everything, so they *do* exist in the UK. When I lived in Cumbria, an elderly couple I knew were forever taking their own to restaurants, cafés etc. - in the form of baking foil, which they would use to wrap up and take away whatever they couldn't finish. It would usually emerge at their home a day or two later - waste not, want not!
    7) Indeed, it's not such a thing in the UK but it's catching on - and I would note that the family of a school friend of mine had a fridge-freezer with ice dispenser, as long as 30 years ago....
    8) Two prongs are quite common on the European mainland, it seems, and the UK's triple prongs are thus a world oddity. That being said, I believe some UK appliances are wired to just the lower two prongs, with the third prong in place purely to fit our sockets, so perhaps things aren't so different as they appear!
    9) Cost of living is becoming a crisis all the world over. I have my doubts that prices will subside, here or in Canada; I hope I may be proved wrong, but will say no more and thus keep your channel relatively free of politics.

  • @markwalsh1474
    @markwalsh1474 2 года назад +2

    What a great vid. .Going home can seem very strange. As you say the price of food the plugs. Silly things but you do notice .Anyway ,thank you .Hope your feeling better . Sounded more like you ..😷😷

  • @billhaigney5080
    @billhaigney5080 2 года назад

    Like the Skull shirt! I think Canada feels like it's living over a Meth lab right now...

  • @marck717
    @marck717 2 года назад

    Hi Alanna,
    My allergies are really bad here in Illinois. I have to take Claritin daily in the summer. So I totally understand what you went through. The other day, it was so bad outside when the fluffy things blew off the trees, it looked like it was snowing. When it gets like that all you can do is stay inside. I also agree with you about food prices. I was at the store yesterday, and eggs were $5.00 a dozen. This is due to crazy inflation in North America right now. When gas prices increase, the cost of everything else goes up.
    I’m also really sorry to hear about how sick you got when you were in Canada.
    When I was in college, I had a bad case of the flu, even though I was vaccinated, so I went to the student health center and they gave me Tami-Flu, and it just made me much sicker. I’m glad that you are feeling much better now, and I hope that your trip to Canada next year will go much smoother.

  • @maxwellmoore8424
    @maxwellmoore8424 2 года назад +2

    I've got a a plastic tray that makes Ice cubes six at a time ,who says we're backwards. SIX at a time ,

  • @LaraRayCanada
    @LaraRayCanada 2 года назад +1

    Totally agree on the doggs bags. Every restaurant we’ve been to in BC where I’ve not finished my meal they’ve asked if I want the rest to go - every single time!! X

  • @scottlp2323
    @scottlp2323 2 года назад

    Alanna's Tech Talk should become a regular slot like cooking/baking. :) Hilarious and informative...kind of. ;) I think one of the reasons we don't really do Doggy Bags here is that restaurants rarely give you enough to eat in the first place. lol. :)

  • @bodhipeace
    @bodhipeace 2 года назад

    I thought you said Comedian even before you said it at the end LOL
    Pretty excited to meet a comedian until I realized it was just Canadian

  • @christina5545
    @christina5545 2 года назад

    Great video Alanna! I too couldn’t get over the skies in the UK when I moved here.. like the clouds are closing in on you. My husband said it’s because of the low pressure which causes them to be heavy and dense. I definitely do miss the clear, high skies back home in the US!
    Don’t miss driving ages to get to the shop, or the expensive food prices, or the lengthy time it take to boil the kettle!
    Funny about taking home leftovers, I never noticed that before but it’s so true! Kind of prefer not taking anything back home now.

  • @evergreen5975
    @evergreen5975 2 года назад

    OMG!!! As a fellow Canadian here in the UK I noticed the sky feels closer here too!!!!

  • @sardonicus1966
    @sardonicus1966 2 года назад

    There is nothing better than being able to pop to the shops, My local ones are 3 minutes walk away. Joyous....

  • @davebirch1976
    @davebirch1976 2 года назад +2

    Having worked in a pub in the UK i can say that people wanting to take leftovers home happened a couple of times a week....but then again I'm from Yorkshire and we're well known for being "careful" with our money 😂

  • @johnturner8383
    @johnturner8383 2 года назад

    Keep the good work up. You allways make me smile, as we say, you are a lovely cheeky chops..

  • @loopeygirl101
    @loopeygirl101 2 года назад

    Doggy bags are very much a thing and term used in the UK! Me and my partner regularly take leftovers home. Kids often take doggy bags home from parties too.

  • @ruthfoley2580
    @ruthfoley2580 2 года назад

    High skies. I get what you mean. I had the same feeling in Vermont when I visited Montpellier.

  • @martinbobfrank
    @martinbobfrank 2 года назад

    The UK plugs are the safest in the world by design, but I have electrecuted myself three or four times with 240 volts (230 V now, I think); mainly by being stupid and young. Once, as an adult, I switched off the mains to fix and replace a mains socket. I heard a very faint click. I stopped what I was doing (bare wires around me) and went downstairs to check. My five-year-old son was watching the TV. He had come in from the garden, saw the TV wasn't turning on and actually flipped the mains switch back to on! From that point onwards, I would always also take out the fuse for the sockets in the section I was doing something and keep the fuse in my pocket until I had finished. It was nice to see some more insights from Canada. Thanks.

  • @riccardo-964
    @riccardo-964 2 года назад

    I have had the same experience about the ceiling of the sky - when mentioned it to people they thought I was crazy - it's nice to know I'm not alone!

  • @greyman3515
    @greyman3515 2 года назад +1

    I get the whole sky thing. I remember being in a country town here in Australia and a young kid said to me, ‘we have a lot of sky out here, lots of sky.’ It made sense, especially as the area was fairly flat and the sky a crystal clear azure that day.

  • @RunicMike
    @RunicMike 2 года назад

    I hear you with the high skies, it always felt that way coming to visit family while I was living in London. Even in an area without large buildings/skyscrapers, looking up in London just seemed more closed in than when elsewhere. Weird, but nice to know I'm not the only one.

  • @davidknowles3459
    @davidknowles3459 2 года назад

    I live in an end of terrace house in Southern England.The nights are very quite.We have double glazing,but have windows open and it's still very quite

  • @nigelanscombe8658
    @nigelanscombe8658 2 года назад

    Ah, a doggy bag for left-over food.
    I thought the conversation was going in a different direction at first. 😳 😁

  • @lizrichardson3309
    @lizrichardson3309 2 года назад +1

    I totally understand your high skies! I call them big skies (and my husband just rolls his eyes and says 'yes dear')😏😄

  • @sjnm4944
    @sjnm4944 2 года назад

    It's certainly an eye-opener seeing the difference in prices between the UK and Canada, and even more so in the context of the cost of living crisis we're going through here. Thanks for the informative vid!

  • @xorsyst1
    @xorsyst1 2 года назад

    One of my top tips for power adapters - take a UK 4-way bar plug and plug it in with a socket adapter. Then you can plug in all your UK chargers, and there's little weight on the main socket.

  • @BSWVI
    @BSWVI 2 года назад

    I live in Victoria BC on Canada's Pacific Coast - the weather influences are similar to much of the UK. In the Prairies and even Ontario, yes the sky is much higher! And the clouds are puffier ☁️🌥️☁️

  • @jeanpage3
    @jeanpage3 2 года назад

    I'm a Canadian living over here in the UK. Have just recently moved house and its got an American style fridge with the ice and water dispenser. I'm love, love, loving it!! I do find that over here the brits aren't so into ice as we are.

    • @mdx7460
      @mdx7460 2 года назад

      That’s true. I order drinks and say no ice 😅

  • @AB-ku4my
    @AB-ku4my 2 года назад

    Hi Allanah. If you visit the Lincolnshire Fens on a nice day you can experience "Big sky". We had an "American" style fridge-freezer in the mid 1970s. It had an ice cube dispenser in the freezer door and a chilled water dispenser in the fridge door, and was plumbed in to the cold water supply. Most houses in the U.K. are just not big enough to fit such a beast.

  • @penname5766
    @penname5766 2 года назад

    I honestly don’t know how people are hearing “Comedian” when you’re saying “Canadian” but I think they need to clean their ears out 😂 😂 😂

  • @julianperkins81
    @julianperkins81 2 года назад

    High skies? Yes, I had the same thing when I was living in Siberia for 3 years, such massive skies!

  • @oopsdidItypethatoutloud
    @oopsdidItypethatoutloud 6 месяцев назад

    Once in a blue moon we get high sky's in the UK. I love it
    ❤from North East England ❤️

  • @sheilaenglish3293
    @sheilaenglish3293 2 года назад

    I thought I was the only one who thought you said “I’m a comedian” I’m Canadian but it really does sound like you’re saying “comedian” 😆

  • @c.c.c.c.c.c.c.c
    @c.c.c.c.c.c.c.c Месяц назад

    D-D-Doggy Bags? I understand the concept but in my Whole life in Canada Never have I once heard of this until this video! I’m learning some words I’ve never known until this video. usually doggy bag would be substituted for a Container

  • @jahnome
    @jahnome 2 года назад

    LOL! I’m back in Ontario too and that “high sky” thing is what I’ve been noticing recently but I couldn’t put my finger on it haha

  • @jimcounter4945
    @jimcounter4945 2 года назад +1

    Good to see that your throat is sounding back to normal and on top form 👌👍

  • @sheilaenglish3293
    @sheilaenglish3293 2 года назад +1

    Had never really thought about the high sky/ low sky thing. I’ll make note next time I go over to the UK.
    I get the slow kettle times here. The first time I made tea in England I wasn’t prepared! At home there is plenty of time to take out all the accoutrements necessary for a tea break - pot, teabag, cup, sugar, teaspoon, biscuit, little plate to put the cookie in, little bowl to put the tea bag in and still have “hours” to stand around staring at the kettle, contemplating the universe 😄 Hurry up already! In England tea making is a much speedier affair.

    • @davidjones332
      @davidjones332 2 года назад +1

      I still remember the ads for the Hotpoint High Speed Kettle -"boils three pints in three minutes" -for when you desperately need tea!

  • @jonnymurgatroyd856
    @jonnymurgatroyd856 2 года назад

    Ontarian here, often times here the server will ask if you want to take the rest home if they see you have leftovers while the rest of your party are done. I havent heard it called 'doggy bag' but they will either bring you stryofoam containers or take your plate back and box it up for you. Also "popping to the shop" is very dependent on where you live. Ontario is huge and I lived in a small town for years that a trip to the stores was only a couple minutes away.

  • @franciscook5819
    @franciscook5819 2 года назад +1

    Hi Alanna, love the content. Keep up the amusing content. Just a little FYI in case it is of use:
    Re item 1 on your list, the population densities are (2020):
    Ontario 14.1 people per square kilometre.
    England 430 people per square kilometre.
    Southeast England 483 people per square kilometre.
    So the southeast is thirty-four times more densely populated than Ontario - it's even worse if you compare rural vs town/city living.

  • @davidrowlands441
    @davidrowlands441 2 года назад

    I've now listened to the whole post. Every country has different structures, rules etc. Regarding plugs. There are posts comparing American and British plugs and the British model came out as being better in every way, including safety.
    I enjoyed your post and it was interesting to hear your views about going home after a few years but there's no place like home!

  • @barriehull7076
    @barriehull7076 2 года назад

    Once a long time ago I took an almost complete steak home and it was not mine but a random diner. Sliced in half and under a grill, luscious.

  • @adrianmcgrath1984
    @adrianmcgrath1984 2 года назад +1

    Heavier duty electronics in Canada do use a third prong on the plug, which makes them more stable, but yes it’s irritating when two prong plugs slide out. And kettles take longer. But the first time you accidentally tread on a UK plug barefoot, you will long for North American plugs.

  • @kenc6748
    @kenc6748 2 года назад

    Hi Alanna, good to see you're getting over the lurgy. Low sky! rain clouds at only 6000ft like a big grey duvet , if you see blue run out and take a pic cos you never know when you will see it again.

  • @TheKableMan
    @TheKableMan 2 года назад

    Hey! (Watched your videos for years and first comment ☺️). I lived in the US for nearly 4 years and have experienced many of the same culture shocks going back and forth. I miss the High Skies too! Totally get it. I had allergies in the UK before I went but not in the US! Opposite to you, apparently you develop allergies to your local pollen. Slow kettle boiling drove me nuts in the States! Also plugs falling out of the wall!! Crazy expensive cheese too because it is made in Europe and imported to the States. Also you need to live further south or north away from the cities in an detached house to experience quiet in the UK 👍🏻

  • @mirvids5036
    @mirvids5036 2 года назад +1

    Great video.
    Never heard the term "picked over" before. Don't they regularly refill shelves or is it total lack of stock ?

  • @BG-hy6pe
    @BG-hy6pe 2 года назад

    sensational discrptions hahah loved it

  • @anneheffner6389
    @anneheffner6389 2 года назад

    Alanna... You are not alone, I completely get it about the high and lower sky feeling. Gads, the prices here in America are atrocious. The same bag of cat food cost $11.99 a year ago costs $27.99 today. This is at Walmart! I can't afford Walmart anymore. It's horrible. Thanks for the great (as usual) video.

  • @grantparman4705
    @grantparman4705 2 года назад +39

    I'm an American living in the US, and I wish we were as good of a neighbour to Canada as Canada is to us.

    • @AdventuresAndNaps
      @AdventuresAndNaps  2 года назад +6

      🙏🏻

    • @d3gres170
      @d3gres170 2 года назад +3

      Amen ,brother

    • @Trevlead
      @Trevlead 2 года назад +1

      Ahhh, you guys are pretty good too.

    • @kjmorley
      @kjmorley Год назад

      My personal experience, though has always been nothing like what you see on the tube. Y’all a pretty friendly bunch!

  • @kennethstealey1311
    @kennethstealey1311 2 года назад +1

    Yes, my neighbour's snoring often keeps me awake. Thin walls are what we do here in England.

  • @nightshift3635
    @nightshift3635 2 года назад

    we need the doggy bags in canada cause as you said its probably a 45 minute drive to get to the food to begin with and it saves you a trip lol

  • @paulberrey1161
    @paulberrey1161 2 года назад

    Hi I totally get what you said about the sky I was recently in the Amazon in brasil and I said to my mate that the sky looks lower down he said I was talking nonsense but I'm glad someone else notices stuff like that too 🤣

  • @londongrower4578
    @londongrower4578 2 года назад

    I totally get what you mean about the low sky in the UK 🤷🏻‍♂️ I love your hair btw. The plug sockets here are the best in the world

  • @jackincanada163
    @jackincanada163 2 года назад

    The doggy bag thing is so true. When my partner started doing that in the UK I was very confused, now I’m in Canada taking food home feels like the norm😂

  • @galaxywhispers1787
    @galaxywhispers1787 2 года назад

    Great video as always Alanna. You sound better now, hope you have gotten over your sickness. 🙂

  • @ashofthe3yamyamsa.k.aasher675
    @ashofthe3yamyamsa.k.aasher675 2 года назад +2

    Great video. I get the high sky thought, never thought about it myself but think I'm with you. Note to self should I ever get to plan a Canada trip, avoid the spring,I have enough sinus trouble here with pollen, dust or any other irritant. Sounds like an expensive place to have a cheese addiction as well, I'd be screwed