9 British Things the Rest of the World Really Needs

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  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 995

  • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
    @GirlGoneLondonofficial  24 дня назад +163

    Sometimes I make you cry with heartfelt emotion, sometimes I teach you about obscure differences, and sometimes I talk about Weetabix and duvets...it's a mixed bag, this channel!

    • @kevs4252
      @kevs4252 24 дня назад +8

      And that's the best thing about you and the channel.

    • @redrumtruecrime
      @redrumtruecrime 24 дня назад +7

      Yes mate we have ziplock bags too‼️😆😆😆♥️

    • @mitsy40uk73
      @mitsy40uk73 24 дня назад +2

      I’m here for it lol 😊

    • @maddison5154
      @maddison5154 24 дня назад +1

      😂😂❤

    • @MsKaz1000
      @MsKaz1000 24 дня назад +1

      I have a duvet that separates or can be clicked back together it is so versatile and I have different covers with matching pillowcases and fitted bottom sheets to change the look of the whole bed I mean why wouldn't you if you can

  • @steven54511
    @steven54511 24 дня назад +391

    Top tip: after eating Weetabix - wash the bowl straightaway! If you don't the remnants solidify into something that resembles concrete and believe me, it takes some hefty scrubbing to remove!

    • @reggy_h
      @reggy_h 24 дня назад +24

      They used to call it Weetabix the builder. Wasn't for nothing.

    • @grenniespexify
      @grenniespexify 24 дня назад +36

      Definitely could be the solution to our pothole problem!

    • @AngelaVara-i4l
      @AngelaVara-i4l 24 дня назад +41

      Or just fill the bowl with water and leave for a while.

    • @RonSeymour1
      @RonSeymour1 24 дня назад +17

      So does porridge. Add milk to the oats and microwave, eat and soak the dish in water. Even then it needs a scrub.

    • @trueriver1950
      @trueriver1950 24 дня назад +13

      If you've made this mistake fill the bowl with cold water with a little washing up liquid in, and leave to stand for two days. Then the concrete becomes movable.
      Don't leave it much longer or it goes mouldy (or indeed moldy)

  • @grahamtruckel
    @grahamtruckel 24 дня назад +245

    You forgot to mention the most important element inside Christmas crackers - the paper hat. After groaning at the joke and dismissing the cheap trinket, it's compulsory for everyone at the table to put on their paper hat and wear it for the rest of the day.

    • @BillCameronWC
      @BillCameronWC 24 дня назад +13

      … or at least the next couple of minutes 😉, generally we discard ours after max. 5 minutes, but it’s ‘poor form’ not to make a gesture to the custom, haha bah-humbug 🤣.

    • @clivewilliams3661
      @clivewilliams3661 24 дня назад +4

      I hate those hats, apart from always being the wrong size I really can't come to terms with wearing headgear indoors. I was brought up to always take off my hat when indoors to the extent that it feels decidedly uncomfortable to leave it on.

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  24 дня назад +38

      very true...and then yell at other family members who aren't wearing it!

    • @richardpiper4828
      @richardpiper4828 24 дня назад +11

      The most important part of the contents of a Christmas Cracker are the really silly jokes. It is absolutely compulsory for everyone to read out the joke in their cracker and wait for the unanimous groans.

    • @TheMrTraynor
      @TheMrTraynor 24 дня назад +11

      ​@@richardpiper4828If it was actually a decent joke we'd feel ripped off.

  • @normanmart7933
    @normanmart7933 23 дня назад +66

    I think gaudy bright signs would spoil the look of the countryside so a brown or green is seen but not intrusive. You know we like to understate stuff.

    • @mrdaveh61
      @mrdaveh61 13 дней назад +8

      Signs in the UK are so much more subtle than just about anywhere else in the world and, in consequence, very much more effective. If you go to the states or Spain for instance, the equivalent signs are enormous hordings and everyone ignores them unless they are specifically looking for somewhere. The brown signs are easy on the eye.

    • @nikibordeaux
      @nikibordeaux 9 дней назад

      Here in Germany, we also have brown signs pointing out places of interest. But they're only found on the autobahn and highways, and they're shaped less than a sign post and more square-ish.

    • @wolfieandmasterturtle5728
      @wolfieandmasterturtle5728 8 дней назад

      Tourist information signs should not be distracting to the driver. They are brown and dull so that other traffic road signs are not 'lost' in a sea of information... Like the billboards in Florida.

    • @nlwilson4892
      @nlwilson4892 7 дней назад +1

      This is the exact reason and green is used for public footpaths.

    • @desperadox7565
      @desperadox7565 2 дня назад

      @@nikibordeaux Aren't they green here?🇩🇪

  • @mericet39
    @mericet39 24 дня назад +191

    Fun fact for Americans who've never been to the UK, about our front doors:
    We all live in castles.
    We all have moats around our castles.
    Our front doors consist of a drawbridge and a portcullis.
    We can pour boiling oil on unwanted callers.

    • @bobpockney
      @bobpockney 24 дня назад +10

      Yes, we've got our road signs well sorted out.

    • @phillipnash2843
      @phillipnash2843 24 дня назад +18

      I just release the hounds.

    • @Jill-mh2wn
      @Jill-mh2wn 24 дня назад +12

      @@phillipnash2843 Not by yourself, surely?😲
      Get the houndmaster to do it.

    • @phillipnash2843
      @phillipnash2843 24 дня назад +10

      @@Jill-mh2wn Where’s Jeeves?

    • @philjameson292
      @philjameson292 24 дня назад +16

      The moats around our houses are mostly due to flooding

  • @chrisnorman1902
    @chrisnorman1902 24 дня назад +217

    The doors are more sturdy in the UK because the inside is made of Weetabix

  • @jimclark8845
    @jimclark8845 24 дня назад +143

    Re-Brown signs. There is a reason.
    You are driving down the road looking for a particular Junction Town Exit You pass a brown sign and you can ignore it and keep your attention on the road.
    If however you are looking for something like some attraction like your example Lego Land and you know roughly the location then the Brown sign is likely to have pertinant information.
    That way you only need to concern yourself with Brown signs when necessary. This applies to Historic Sites, Nature Sites and the like.
    So brown signs are non road navigation information.

    • @carltaylor6452
      @carltaylor6452 24 дня назад +3

      I think Kalen was suggesting that instead of brown the signs should be bright yellow or pink, not that they should look like a regular road sign. But she can speak for herself.

    • @Jill-mh2wn
      @Jill-mh2wn 24 дня назад +16

      @@carltaylor6452 But we have some quite exacting ideas that garish stuff is just not appropriate for the Countryside.
      Her plan is still fixated on pleasing the motorist ,not quite British enough
      yet.

    • @clivewilliams3661
      @clivewilliams3661 24 дня назад +9

      Brown signs are information signs that are not related to the national road system. Brown is used as it is nearly the only colour that can make the sign easy to read and easily distinguished. Think of another colour and its either already in use or would make the written information indiscernible for instant recognition.

    • @roamingcurious6730
      @roamingcurious6730 24 дня назад +18

      They are also standardised (brown) throughout most of Europe. So even when on holiday on the continent you may discover interesting hitherto undiscovered tourist spots.

    • @WgCdrLuddite
      @WgCdrLuddite 24 дня назад

      @@carltaylor6452 I think "shit brown" is the ideal colour.

  • @Troubleatmill-h6d
    @Troubleatmill-h6d 11 дней назад +13

    Nothing beats the adhesive power of Weetabix!
    For those really tough repair jobs I recommend Weetabix. Simply dip the Weetabix biscuit in a milky solution, apply to the broken part then join together. Leave for 12 hours to set then it's as good as new!🙂

  • @PedroConejo1939
    @PedroConejo1939 22 дня назад +36

    It's worth pointing out - or not - that when they were first introduced in the UK, duvets were called 'continental quilts'. They are not British by origin but we had them in Germany and France for as long as I can remember. Now, they are almost universal here. You never see them hung out to air like we used to in Germany. Even that is less common there now.

    • @HNH421
      @HNH421 21 день назад +1

      you avatar is a flee or a bed bug LOLZ we had them in Germany and France but we only lived on rats when we first moved to Briton

    • @lat1419
      @lat1419 13 дней назад +2

      We had quilts, filled with feathers or down, that sat on top of the blankets. They were not washable. That was where the "continental quilt" came from.

    • @PedroConejo1939
      @PedroConejo1939 13 дней назад

      @@lat1419 Do you mean counterpanes? That's not the origin of the term, but is an English interpretation of a bed covering found by Paul Rycaut in Hamburg in 1689, which did not become popular in Britain.
      On the origin of the modern duvet/continental quilt:
      "Harrods was selling them in the 1950s, but it wasn't until the interior design chain Habitat opened in 1964 that duvets hit the mass market.
      "Founder Sir Terence Conran, external has revealed his inspiration: 'I had been in Sweden in the 1950s and was given a duvet to sleep under. I probably had a girl with me and I thought this was all part of the mood of the time - liberated sex and easy living. It was wonderful that when you came to make your bed, it was just a couple of shakes.'
      "Habitat promoted the duvet as a convenience product, allowing users to make a bed in around 10 minutes. Sold initially as the 'continental quilt', it was at first considered avant garde." -Justin Parkinson, BBC New Magazine, 2015.

    • @liz-qq9kb
      @liz-qq9kb 13 дней назад +2

      Yep I remember getting my first 'continental quilt' as a kid in the 80s. Before that my mum used blankets which were horrible for my asthma.

    • @lat1419
      @lat1419 13 дней назад +1

      @PedroConejo1939 as I recall, counterpanes were simple heavy cotton or wool bed covers. In the 60s they were often tufted cotton, with sculpted patterns, like the fashion for sculpted carpets. Up't north we were far, far away from the 60s Habitat and Conran of fashionable London. The term "continental" was used to distinguish them from the usual quilt. Some might have called the feather /down quilt a counterpane, but not in my part of the UK. It is not uncommon for there to be variations in what common words meant - wainscotting for example, meant any type of wooden boundary between wall and floor while in other places it meant a higher panelling. Add in a bit of regional dialect and it was a very different world.

  • @jacquiesbrood
    @jacquiesbrood 21 день назад +25

    I was married to my late husband for 30 years. As a native New Yorker he was always a little perplexed at all things British. Towards the end of his life he was more of a Brit than me x

    • @NiCdBatt
      @NiCdBatt День назад +1

      I'm sorry for your loss 😢

  • @HighWealder
    @HighWealder 23 дня назад +22

    In the US the equivalent of British brown signs are those that say 'historic', which means anything over ten years old 😂

  • @brumplum
    @brumplum 24 дня назад +68

    Brown signs aren't only British - in fact we copied the idea from the French who'd been using them for about 20 years previously. They have since become an EU standard (including the specific shade of brown) and can be seen all over the continent. There are many theories about why they are brown rather than another colour but the original idea was for them to stand apart from the usual blue, white or red motoring signs and for them to be less visually disruptive in natural surroundings alongside trees and farms etc

    • @graceygrumble
      @graceygrumble 23 дня назад +7

      When she says 'the rest of the world', she means 'The USA'. 😉

    • @trueaussie9230
      @trueaussie9230 23 дня назад +1

      Brown 'tourist signs' are one of the MANY 'WORLD standardized' road markings.
      They are seen in the US, but she would need to go outside.

    • @HNH421
      @HNH421 21 день назад

      lies lies lies
      the french claim they used them 20 years before us is bunkum the English have used them since the roman invasion which was a long long time, before the Normans started forcing any one to use silly French words
      SIGN -The earliest known use of the noun sign is in the Middle English period (1150-1500). OED's earliest evidence for sign is from around 1225, the french call them la-bâtonsign a word borrowed by the french from the Latin signum "identifying mark, token, indication, symbol; proof; military standard, ensign; a signal, an omen; sign in the heavens, constellation."
      POST - "a timber of considerable size set upright," from Old English post "pillar, doorpost," "post, upright beam," both from Latin postis "door, post, doorpost," in Medieval Latin "a beam, rod, pole,

  • @BernieRowlands-d4o
    @BernieRowlands-d4o 21 день назад +17

    Bit of a sidenote here. I cannot believe how many people have literally stolen your videos by reacting to them. You have done all the work. I'd blow a gasket. End of rant. Love your stuff.

    • @rjmunro
      @rjmunro 5 дней назад +2

      RUclips need to treat reaction videos like they treat videos with music in and pass the revenue to the creator of the original. This would mean original people would like that reaction videos are made and bring them more revenue.

  • @heatherhenderson4883
    @heatherhenderson4883 11 дней назад +10

    Growing up in Canada, I didn't know other people didn't have Christmas crackers. All our Christmas photos show us gathered around a laden table , wearing our crowns. I have a charming picture of my mom in her paper crown and wearing a gag clip-on mustache... priceless memory! There is a trick to making them pop.

  • @Sidistic_Atheist
    @Sidistic_Atheist 24 дня назад +121

    Duvets were not our idea. When we first started to purchase them, they were marketed as *Continental Quilts* ..
    Though we did have *Eiderdowns* but they were placed on top of our normal sheets and blankets.

    • @Rhianalanthula
      @Rhianalanthula 24 дня назад +11

      I remember my parents first getting continental quilts in the early 80s.

    • @nicolab2075
      @nicolab2075 24 дня назад +20

      I was 11 when my dad won £100 on the premium bonds and he gave us each £20.
      I spent my £20 on a continental quilt - the first in our house - that I sent off for from the Observer Sunday supplement.
      I remember our excitement when it arrived.
      It must have been about 1973 😊

    • @KC-gy5xw
      @KC-gy5xw 24 дня назад +2

      @@nicolab2075 Your parents read the Observer then? Oooh, posh!! My dad was still reading the Mirror - wouldn't have the Sun in the house, and I still don't to this day (though the Mirror has become somewhat the same as Sun, Daily Fail etc etc - thank god we have newspapers online now.)

    • @nicolab2075
      @nicolab2075 24 дня назад +3

      @@KC-gy5xw Yeah, remember the Sunday supplements? They still exist I suppose, I haven't bought a newspaper for years now 😁

    • @alisonp3280
      @alisonp3280 24 дня назад +8

      I always thought duvets originated in Scandinavia but were made popular here in the 70s by Habitat

  • @alanj9391
    @alanj9391 24 дня назад +39

    When I drove manual cars, red & amber together was the sign to select 1st gear ready to move.

    • @snubbii9276
      @snubbii9276 24 дня назад +4

      Also if you have stop/ start it's the prompt to restart the engine

    • @alangknowles
      @alangknowles 21 день назад +2

      Originally it was for steam waggons to get them ready.

  • @neilburns8869
    @neilburns8869 21 день назад +13

    Traffic Lights: you are spot-on, Get Ready is exactly what is meant by the Amber light and is obviously quite a sensible step.

    • @lozyoung4110
      @lozyoung4110 19 дней назад

      Pedant here, amber means stop (if it is safe to do so), even in conjunction with red

  • @artyonehundred
    @artyonehundred 24 дня назад +75

    The traffic light phases are: Green, Amber, Red, Red-Amber, Green. So you know if you see amber on its own then you should stop as the next light will be red, when it's turning to green, the red-amber indicates you can't go (as there is still red lit), but that green will be next.

    • @John.Mann.1941
      @John.Mann.1941 24 дня назад +9

      The purpose of the red/amber was originally to give drivers a heads up that it’s time to engage 1st gear and release the handbrake (foot on the foot brake of course). Back in the day we were taught to stop with gears in neutral and the hand brake on. I’ve been in Canada for the last 57 years so I don’t know,what’s being taught now.

    • @peterbrown1012
      @peterbrown1012 24 дня назад +4

      ​@@John.Mann.1941it annoys me when I'm behind someone using their foot brake with the lights glaring in my face instead of using their handbrake, and you still have to wait for them to decide to move.

    • @HDRW
      @HDRW 24 дня назад +6

      @@John.Mann.1941 If you stop at lights and don't apply the handbrake and take it out of gear you will fail the driving test. At least when I took mine! (I nearly got it wrong and the examiner asked me to recite the sequence when we got back to the test centre).

    • @CharlesStearman
      @CharlesStearman 23 дня назад +2

      @@peterbrown1012 I've seen people stopped at up-hill traffic lights holding their car on the clutch instead of using the handbrake, which can't be good for the clutch (obviously the only applies to cars with manual transmissions, which most UK cars have).

  • @chippydogwoofwoof
    @chippydogwoofwoof 24 дня назад +40

    Girl gone London & Adventure & Naps are proper OGs as far as my RUclips watching goes, a lot of channels either fall off or just become meh but after years of watching these two I still get a little buzz when they upload. Last year I got hacked and when I made a new account it was these two channels I subbed to straight away. It can't be easy to keep a channel fresh and interesting after years of uploads.

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  24 дня назад +20

      That means so much! I love Adventures & Naps as well. Thanks for watching - it's definitely not easy to keep it going, but having people like you who say they enjoy the content keeps me motivated!

    • @chippydogwoofwoof
      @chippydogwoofwoof 24 дня назад +6

      @@GirlGoneLondonofficial No thank you for keeping us all entertained.

    • @malcolmross8427
      @malcolmross8427 24 дня назад +3

      I love both of these reactions channels!

    • @dank9561
      @dank9561 24 дня назад +3

      Simple Scottish Living is another channel I started following recently. It follows a couple who recently moved from the US to Scotland.

    • @Cave_Monster
      @Cave_Monster 23 дня назад +2

      Hey, I subscribe to both the channels, they are great - you may also like to try The Magic Geekdom who have travelled a lot around the UK but don't live here - yet.

  • @SallyLovejoy
    @SallyLovejoy 11 дней назад +4

    Not many people know this, but Brown Signs have to be applied for and the tourism destination pays for them!

  • @paulkirkland3263
    @paulkirkland3263 24 дня назад +31

    Marmite. I was once entering the USA at Charlotte NC, and the TSA man noticed I was British. " You're not trying to smuggle in any Marmite, are you ? " he asked. " Why," I responded, looking round shiftily "...do you want some ? ". It was a nice bit of fun, but seriously, you do neeed Marmite more widely.

    • @andrrwprice7281
      @andrrwprice7281 23 дня назад +8

      The US needs marmalade, thick cut, preferably Chivers Olde English! I was once told I was cross to eat orange peel in my orange jelly!!

    • @grahvis
      @grahvis 23 дня назад +4

      @@andrrwprice7281 .
      My son lives in Germany, he was just telling me that a friend visiting him from the UK was bringing him some marmalade.

    • @leod-sigefast
      @leod-sigefast 23 дня назад +5

      Wow you actually got a TSA officer who wasn't a complete jobsworthy a-hole?! Everyone I ever encountered when passing through at US immigration control was horrible and condescending, treating you like trash.

    • @ferrarifilly
      @ferrarifilly 14 дней назад +2

      Marmite could have used that scenario as one of their ads.

    • @paulkirkland3263
      @paulkirkland3263 14 дней назад

      @@ferrarifilly Indeed! 😅

  • @harrybarrow6222
    @harrybarrow6222 20 дней назад +7

    Another great video Kalyn.
    And thank you for all the nice things you say about the UK.

  • @nickmail7604
    @nickmail7604 24 дня назад +36

    We went with brown as a colour for attraction signage specifically because it is neutral and plain (boring even) so that people (tourists and so on) could not confuse them with more important road signs that may save lives. Ziplock is a brand name used across at least the entire English speaking world.

    • @igotes
      @igotes 24 дня назад +1

      I assumed it was because they chose the colour in the 1960s when brown was cool 😆

    • @KC-gy5xw
      @KC-gy5xw 24 дня назад +3

      @@igotes ...brown was also cool in the 70's with vibrant greens and oranges - as I recall with the horrible wallpaper we had and even a dress my parents made me wear!! Tramautised

    • @brucebartup6161
      @brucebartup6161 23 дня назад

      @@KC-gy5xw Purple orange, brown and green. The hippy paintbox. Strong colour hides bad plasterwork
      lava lamps
      artex
      Rizla
      Rising Damp the fungus and the TV series
      you could take your kids to watch footy for less than a princes ransom
      and everywhere and everything was manky
      and cold, so efffing cold
      the 70's the decade that style forgot
      and punk ( my cue)

    • @HNH421
      @HNH421 21 день назад +1

      @@KC-gy5xw YES brown Y-fronts with horrible green or yellow edging - wot were they thinking/smoking ?

  • @graceygrumble
    @graceygrumble 23 дня назад +24

    When you can walk along the coastal cliffs, into coves and along the sands, with your children and your children's children and their dog; pop into a pub and have a delicious meal and a couple of pints... God is in His Heaven and all is well with the world. That was my experience today - joy!
    There are very few places in the world which are as... accepting... accommodating... civilised. 😉

    • @Benson...1
      @Benson...1 7 дней назад

      "...and your children's children....".....theres a word(s) for that...oh yeah...grandchildren, grandson, granddaughter, grandchild and any other similar ones

    • @graceygrumble
      @graceygrumble 5 дней назад +1

      @Benson...1 Nicely researched.

  • @Varksterable
    @Varksterable 9 дней назад +5

    Best tourist roadsign in the UK?
    "Secret Nuclear Bunker -->"
    😂
    These days, combinable duvets are less of an issue, as there are "all season" ones claiming to do just that. (Some cost hundreds of pounds, mind.)
    I can't say if they actually do that though, as I've only just got one.
    The doors thing is interesting. My house has an outer front door, a small area with utility offset (e.g. washing machine) and then the inner front door.
    It's like an airlock.
    So when I go back to my parent's house, where the front door opens directly onto the porch (not even street) I feel nervous about how unsecure that feels. And yet I never questioned that growing up there. Or how sturdy that door actually was. ("They were different times..")
    Great list of random things. Stuff like this really starts my brain off on random journeys into new places, and I love it.
    Thanks for posting your also pretty random thoughts. 😊😊😊

    • @helenchelmicka
      @helenchelmicka 3 дня назад

      I love that sign 😂😂😂

    • @desperadox7565
      @desperadox7565 2 дня назад

      It's not important how sturdy a door is. Thieves either pick the lock or brake the frame where the lock is.

  • @eleanorkeen1001
    @eleanorkeen1001 23 дня назад +9

    Such a wonderful random list, I had no idea where we were going! Your channel is a recent discovery and it’s cheering me up - as a Brit who has lived abroad and is not always enthusiastic about this country, your perspective is really refreshing for my cynical soul!

    • @HNH421
      @HNH421 21 день назад

      I agree america is a bit iffy BUT Americans are generally OK but they defo improve by spending some time in Briton. I think our cynical soul helps to mediate their childlike over enthusiasm.

  • @Wee_Langside
    @Wee_Langside 23 дня назад +14

    I like the French traffic lights which have small repeater lights at eye level for drivers stopped at the actual light. Much easier to know when your light has changed than trying to see one on the other side of the junction. Especially some modern junctions with lights everywhere on what were large roundabouts previously.

  • @LetoShibia
    @LetoShibia 24 дня назад +26

    The brown signs for tourist attractions are all around Europe: France (where I live), Italy, Spain, Ireland, Belgium, you name it... And brown is not to interfer with mre "vital" road sign I guess (speed limit, new intersection...)

    • @Tass...
      @Tass... 23 дня назад +1

      When they were first introduced to the UK different parts of the country trialed different coloured variations and then surveys were done to find out which coloured sign motorists noticed the most. The brown sign was the winner. (also some other colours were already taken for other types of sign)

  • @AmenJunglist1973
    @AmenJunglist1973 19 дней назад +3

    I'm 50 and British, never heard of the duvet thing, you learn something new every day 👍

    • @Jinty92
      @Jinty92 11 дней назад +1

      I'm Scottish and had the Duvet Kailyn described 30 years ago. The two parts had different Tog ratings and when added together made the Winter Tog rating. I think the Summer duvet was 4.5 Tog and the Autumn one was 10.5 Tog and for Winter you stuck them together. The clips were a pest so my dad attached Velcro to them. Nowadays I'm too hot for a winter one so don't need this.

  • @alfresco8442
    @alfresco8442 24 дня назад +47

    American don't know about bunting? Have you ever looked at the average used car lot? I think it was Bill Bryson who described them as having more pennants than Agincourt. 😀

    • @lungandfoot
      @lungandfoot 23 дня назад +5

      As another American living in the UK, the *only* places I remember seeing stringed triangle flags would be in commercial areas like car lots and therefore they have an air of being a bit tacky, like those giant blow-up noodles. In the UK, bunting seems a lot more…well…cute, mindful, and demure. And that’s a good thing.
      Man, I need to re-read some more Bryson!

    • @alfresco8442
      @alfresco8442 23 дня назад +1

      @@lungandfoot Yes, my comment was a bit tongue in cheek. The bunting here is generally hand-made with a lot of thought behind it. My wife is forever making the stuff for some wedding or anniversary, including stitching letters on each triangle to form a message.
      I suppose the nearest US equivalent would be quilting.

    • @lungandfoot
      @lungandfoot 23 дня назад +3

      @@alfresco8442Wow! I didn’t know bunting was often handmade.

    • @HNH421
      @HNH421 21 день назад +1

      @@lungandfoot IF IT IS NOT HAND MADE IS IT EVEN REAL BUNTING ?

  • @Pesmog
    @Pesmog 23 дня назад +9

    Re Weetabix. Personally, I prefer the similar looking, but more expensive, Nutribrex which is made from Sorghum and tastes way better. Its also Gluten Free for those who have sensitive stomachs. For the purists, it will still weld itself to the bowl if you don't rinse it afterwards just like Weetabix.
    I have just come back from three weeks in America and appreciate some of your comments. The one thing that I wish the USA would get a grip on is cheese. They simply do not understand cheese at all, with most local supermarkets having very little choice apart from pre-packed plastic cheese squares.

  • @adriannicol8529
    @adriannicol8529 11 дней назад +2

    The UK traffic light sequence is:
    Red = Stop,
    Red & Yellow(AKA Amber) together = prepare to start,
    Green=go,
    Yellow alone = prepare to stop.
    Really effective but until I lived in the USA for a few years I didn't realise just much safer it was!

  • @adamclark6756
    @adamclark6756 24 дня назад +5

    Probably my favourite channel on RUclips right now. You are smashing it .

  • @TukikoTroy
    @TukikoTroy 24 дня назад +21

    Talking of sturdy doors, the house I was born in had a front door designed to keep the Scots out; you don't get much sturdier than that. (Yes, it's still there.)

    • @alanj9391
      @alanj9391 24 дня назад +6

      But does it actually keep Scots out (speaking as one)?

    • @paidwitness797
      @paidwitness797 23 дня назад +3

      @@alanj9391 Yep, its a coin operated turnstyle and only takes quids! 😋
      Had to be said but love you guys, my mum lives up there for last 30 years!

    • @boxtradums0073
      @boxtradums0073 21 день назад

      @@paidwitness797the wealthiest part of the country outside of London and the south east.

  • @richardwilliams7692
    @richardwilliams7692 24 дня назад +15

    Yes, we do use the term Zip-Lock in the UK, but most people will not realise it is a brand. It is used as a generic name for the objrct, much in the same way that hoover and biro have lbecome common parlance, and mostly lost their brand specificity.

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  24 дня назад +1

      ah, interesting, thank you!

    • @tdurb0
      @tdurb0 23 дня назад

      @@richardwilliams7692 Like google/googling/googled has become a noun, a verb and an adjective.

    • @izibear4462
      @izibear4462 4 дня назад +1

      Ziploc is available in the UK but we have the brand, 'Bacofoil' which is a superior product, IMO. It is similar to how Ziploc used to be in the 90s and 2000s when I lived in the US. Don't find the quality the same now.

  • @rhysalexander182
    @rhysalexander182 17 часов назад

    I’m a London Tour Guide working mostly with private American clients. They love our little cultural differences like these, so I’m really enjoying your videos. Thank you!

  • @marianneshepherd6286
    @marianneshepherd6286 23 дня назад +5

    My favourite brown sign near my parent's place is 'Crocodiles of the World'. I've not been yet, but every time I see it, joy is sparked 😂❤

    • @luvstellauk
      @luvstellauk 23 дня назад +1

      Near Witney in Oxfordshire

  • @robertwatford7425
    @robertwatford7425 24 дня назад +37

    One of my favorite Brown Signs is in Kent and directs you to a Secret Nuclear Bunker :-)

    • @bygjohnuk
      @bygjohnuk 24 дня назад +5

      We have one in Cheshire, too, and I’m sure I’ve seen a sign for one somewhere else. Always raises a giggle!

    • @parshakamarsh
      @parshakamarsh 24 дня назад

      There are quite a few dotted around the countryside

    • @bobpockney
      @bobpockney 24 дня назад +2

      There are several of these. The one in Essex (Kelveden) is well worth a visit.

    • @davidjackson2580
      @davidjackson2580 24 дня назад +2

      @@bygjohnuk Indeed we do, at Hack Green. It was a lot more fun before the brown signs were put up when around Nantwich, there were yellow signs pointing to it, as they didn't look like tourist attraction signs and just a normal sign pointing to a Secret Nuclear Bunker caused a lot of puzzlement to non-locals.

    • @0utcastAussie
      @0utcastAussie 24 дня назад +3

      Is that the one with the "Spider Farm" brown sign underneath it ?
      Nuclear & Spiders.
      What could possibly go wrong ?

  • @hologenics1958
    @hologenics1958 20 дней назад +7

    2:38 the signs are brown so that they do not spoil the view of the scenery with a blot. Your brain has been blasted with McDonalds and bubblegum so you’re accustomed to the low-hanging brightness bomb, but learn ye well, student of Britannia, we prefer underfuckingstated.

  • @carolineskipper6976
    @carolineskipper6976 24 дня назад +31

    We come to you for the 'weird stuff no-one else has thought of' - so looking forward to this!
    I've seen several American reactors totally confused by the concept of a 'duvet'. When they see one they assume it's like the comforters they are used to, and get grossed out when they learn we don't generally use a top sheet. They somehow miss the whole 'duvet cover' aspect - which is why we don't need a top sheet.

    • @izibear4462
      @izibear4462 4 дня назад +1

      They were available over there 20 years ago when I lived there.

  • @quillerpen
    @quillerpen 23 дня назад +5

    Interesting to see the things you like that we take for granted. You might have noticed that different road signs are standardised colours; blue is used for motorways, green for 'A' roads, white for more local destinations, yellow for diversions and red for danger (e.g. ROAD CLOSED). So brown signs for tourist attractions stand out as something different.

    • @iansmith241
      @iansmith241 23 дня назад +1

      Also, the colours are international, the same (almost) wherever you go.

    • @nswinoz3302
      @nswinoz3302 22 дня назад

      @@iansmith241Glad to see that someone else also noticed this! Plus that the USA is total different to everywhere else in the world! NSW in Oz 🇦🇺

  • @greg5639
    @greg5639 24 дня назад +17

    Theres an American guy in London that picked a multi bag af crisps up, taking the piss out of our bag's of crisps being larger than the typical ones in Americs, unfortunately he wasn't quite bright enough to realise that it wasnt a singular pack but a multi pack !

    • @raystewart3648
      @raystewart3648 23 дня назад +1

      Seems that American could not read English, as it says how many packs are in the bigger pack in big bold letters.

    • @MrSinclairn
      @MrSinclairn 21 день назад +3

      I think that was Evan Edinger on his YT-channel and he was quickly corrected by his UK colleague Matt Gray ! 😂

    • @greg5639
      @greg5639 21 день назад +2

      @MrSinclairn thanks for that , me duck . I couldn't remember who's channel it was .👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

    • @MrSinclairn
      @MrSinclairn 20 дней назад +2

      @@greg5639 Yep,a rare mistake by Evan,who usually quite good on those things,but his taste-vid on the Top25 British Crisps (range) was overall very funny,espec. as I had tried all of the types featured ! 😂

    • @bubba842
      @bubba842 14 дней назад +1

      I'm pretty sure it would have said Multipack on the front somewhere.

  • @lloydcollins6337
    @lloydcollins6337 23 дня назад +8

    Believe it or not there's a whole science behind road sign design, fonts, sizes, colours, where to put stuff on the signs etc etc. Brown was chosen for tourist signs iirc because it denotes optional information and therefore can afford to blend into the background more than a green sign for a roads, white signs for local roads, or bright blue for motorways. Yellow is reserved for diversions and AA "traffic information" (like "expect delays during these dates on this road for Glastonbury").

    • @U2QuoZepplin
      @U2QuoZepplin 23 дня назад +2

      AA as in Automobile Association. Not to be confused with Alcoholics' Annonymous.

  • @JRLNeal
    @JRLNeal 24 дня назад +8

    Try Weetabix and warm milk, and a little sprinkle of brown sugar. Delicious!

  • @Riz_
    @Riz_ 23 дня назад +3

    Funny thing about the Duvets is that My wife and bought exactly that. You pin the corners with the buttons and instantly have a higher tog. We have never taken advantage of this as the thin one seems to work fine for us. It's still a really good idea though.

  • @shaneintheuk2026
    @shaneintheuk2026 24 дня назад +7

    6:24 we have what you described as a comforter in the UK and we call them Eiderdowns because they are filled with down from and eider duck. They are considered old fashioned because you need sheets as they don’t have washable covers.

    • @rosemarielee7775
      @rosemarielee7775 24 дня назад +4

      They also slid off at every opportunity!

    • @HDRW
      @HDRW 23 дня назад +2

      They are also incredibly heavy - a duvet is really light, but an Eidedown practically stops you moving because it's so heavy! (And if you've never heard an Eider duck's call, you're missing something - it sounds like Frankie Howerd expressing surprise 🙂

    • @letitiakearney2423
      @letitiakearney2423 23 дня назад +2

      @@HDRWabout fifteen years ago I bought a duck filled duvet from M&S and it was heavier slightly with a lovely cotton cover but even with my lovely covers the little feathers kept poking through and stabbing me in the night. Worse buy ever and an expensive mistake. 😂

  • @alfresco8442
    @alfresco8442 24 дня назад +8

    Yes, we have ziploc bags. My wife's pet hate about the multipack crisps is that it often seems to be the only way to get Smoky Bacon flavour (her favourite) but they usually come bundled up with a load of others she doesn't like.

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  24 дня назад +2

      oh yes I hate that too! I find it with hula hoops - I like the plain ones, don't want the rest and sometimes all I can find is the multi-flavor packs!

    • @pamcanning8592
      @pamcanning8592 23 дня назад +1

      Walkers do a 6 pack of Smoky Bacon. I have one in my cupboard at the moment from Sainsbury's.

    • @alfresco8442
      @alfresco8442 23 дня назад

      @@pamcanning8592 Yes, It's finding them that's the problem. We have a Waitrose and Tesco, who both obviously stock Walkers, Maybe they're so popular they just disappear almost instantly.

    • @dylanmeyer6614
      @dylanmeyer6614 10 дней назад

      We have ziploc bags, but they are generally known as resealable bags or freezer bags.

  • @johnl7710
    @johnl7710 23 дня назад +6

    Yes ziplok is a thing and weetabix with hot milk was a favourite breakfast in our house when I was a kid. It was half soft biscuit bordering on porridge but still just about maintaining the weetabix shape. It's making me hungry just remembering it now.

  • @EppingForest304
    @EppingForest304 24 дня назад +10

    Brits also like to buy “balance bikes” (small bicycles without the chain or pedals) for 3+ year-olds to learn cycling 😊 🚴 🚲

    • @HNH421
      @HNH421 21 день назад

      for 3 year-olds to learn about bleeding and crying 😫🚴spare the rod spoil the child

    • @bubba842
      @bubba842 14 дней назад +1

      We have these in Canada too.
      We call them striders.

  • @THEJAM-EATERS
    @THEJAM-EATERS 6 дней назад +2

    Weetabix with warm milk and brown suger 👌🏻

  • @mojojojo11811
    @mojojojo11811 24 дня назад +71

    A much more accurate title would have been: '9 normal things most of the world has but the USA does not'

    • @DenUitvreter
      @DenUitvreter 24 дня назад +13

      Indeed, a tenth thing Americans need is the realization there is a world outside the two countries they have been in.

    • @Paul_C
      @Paul_C 24 дня назад +2

      Sorry, you know she only knows just native speaker of English (or the American derivatives). Any other than those languages get disregarded, no French for her, not Spanish or German... What she forgot: those Brown signs have their origin in German, not the UK. Though in Germany they are usually signs motorway signs: Which Ausfahrt to take to visit some town, Permanent Exhibition and the like.

    • @GrumpyOldGit-zk1kw
      @GrumpyOldGit-zk1kw 24 дня назад +5

      Or 'Nine normal things the U.S. needs'

    • @DenUitvreter
      @DenUitvreter 24 дня назад +5

      @@Paul_C It's not a language thing, it's just a matter of not confusing the USA with the world.

    • @adrianmcgrath1984
      @adrianmcgrath1984 23 дня назад +3

      Well that’s nonsense. There are a number of things that are really quite specific to the UK. Colonial arrogance being one of the most obvious.

  • @SouxieSu1
    @SouxieSu1 24 дня назад +9

    Zip lock is the name of the mechanism to seal a bag - interlocking groove and ridge that form a seal when pressed together.

    • @igotes
      @igotes 24 дня назад +7

      There is a brand called "Ziploc" which I think has become genericised. I've seen that type of seal described as a grip seal.

    • @HNH421
      @HNH421 21 день назад +1

      ineinandergreifende-Nut-und-Kante-die-beim-Zusammenpressen-eine-Dichtung-bilden YOU SEE WHY THE WORLD USES ENGLISH NOT GERMAN 🙄

    • @igotes
      @igotes 18 дней назад

      @@HNH421 Haha, is that the actual German name for it? I love how Germans just stick a bunch of words together to make a new ridiculously long word. Many English words are actually German donor words.

    • @HNH421
      @HNH421 18 дней назад +2

      @@igotes ha ha no i just translated "mechanism to seal a bag - interlocking groove and ridge that form a seal when pressed together" in to German - ha ha -but it is prolly close' to wot the do realy call it.
      note :- i just watch a video -survive in Briton for one month using only German words
      note 2 - the closet lang to english is Freashian - becouse we are the "freashion-jute-saxi-angles"
      note 3 - France is not real norrmen is just northmen and the rest are just britons

    • @igotes
      @igotes 18 дней назад

      @@HNH421 I'm impressed by your English description of it, anyway. Sounds like something from a patent filing.

  • @bobpockney
    @bobpockney 24 дня назад +5

    Brown is fine for attraction signs, they may also indicate scenic routes and picnic areas. There are also the bright yellow signs. These can direct you to new housing developments, but more useful are the yellow temporary AA signs that direct you to special events.

    • @rogerjenkinson7979
      @rogerjenkinson7979 22 дня назад

      AA is Automobile Association not alcofrolics anonymous

  • @JB-ek4yx
    @JB-ek4yx 21 день назад +1

    Traffic light sequences are a common question on driving tests. You can be asked which light is next after red etc, there is a particular sequence to them so you always know which is next. They go red, red & amber, green, amber, red, red & amber, green etc.

  • @Brian3989
    @Brian3989 23 дня назад +5

    Think most Weetabix is produced in one factory and the wheat is grown within a short distance of the factory.
    Regarding tourist brown signs, the symbol on the sign shows what type the attraction is, for example castle, garden, racecourse, church. Brighter colours already in use for road signs.

    • @greva2904
      @greva2904 12 дней назад

      Weetabix is all made in Burton Latimer, which used to be a separate village but is now effectively a suburb of Kettering, Northamptonshire. And it smells absolutely fantastic in the summer when a light breeze wafts the smell of baking Weetabix across the whole town!

  • @izzyroberts5518
    @izzyroberts5518 24 дня назад +5

    On attraction signage by the road, I did come across 1 in the US, In Tenessee, 'Vintage Car Museum. NEXT FIELD' and there it was in the next field, lots of classic cars....... on bricks............

  • @missprimproper1022
    @missprimproper1022 24 дня назад +3

    I have the type of duvet you're talking about but there are 8 clips on mine so they don't get tangled up when you're tossing and turning in bed! Because it comes apart, they are much easier to wash and put in the tumble dryer. Heavier winter duvets do not fit in my washer but my combined duvet easily comes apart for washing. I love it. Oh, and we used to put margarine on our Weetabix growing up in the 50's & 60's. Yum.

  • @EppingForest304
    @EppingForest304 24 дня назад +5

    Multi-pack crisps are good for portion control & product freshness!
    The US portions are just too big, especially for sodas 😊

    • @ggedge7903
      @ggedge7903 19 дней назад +1

      I always thought this meant us British are greedy and eat crisps more regularly as a snack whereas other cultures only have them at a party where a big bag would be needed 😂

  • @FalcomScott312
    @FalcomScott312 24 дня назад +4

    I love watching your videos Kalyn and I'm subscribed to your second channel too! ❤

  • @paulkemp6057
    @paulkemp6057 23 дня назад +1

    On the subject of the signposts to attractions - I agree they're very useful, but I'm glad they're brown. They're often located beside roads in rural areas and brighter colours wouldn't complement the natural palette, which is predominantly greens and browns.

  • @dufflepod
    @dufflepod 24 дня назад +13

    Three words for you... 'Banana flavoured Weetabix'. It's the future.

    • @MsKaz1000
      @MsKaz1000 24 дня назад +2

      There is a chocolate flavour as well

    • @dufflepod
      @dufflepod 23 дня назад +3

      @@MsKaz1000 I don't know what sort of people you've fallen in with, but you need to join a group and stop all that chocolaty nonsense right now. That way madness lies.

  • @adamsermet5953
    @adamsermet5953 23 дня назад +1

    If you want an extra tough door you can get what’s called a London bar. It’s heavy strip of metal that’s anchored into the ground over and around the key way and into the ceiling. It makes your door basically kick proof.

  • @GrumpyOldGamer9221
    @GrumpyOldGamer9221 24 дня назад +6

    5:22 yeah multipack crisps are popular but sometimes I have more than one anyways 😄

  • @marvinc9994
    @marvinc9994 23 дня назад

    Really looking forward to Kaylin's new channel. An ingenious idea - and the lady's a _natural_ journalist and communicator. Insatiable curiosity is one of the signs of what I choose to call the Higher Intelligence - and the UK is a treasure trove of quirks, oddities, and eccentricities for the inquisitive!

  • @birdie1585
    @birdie1585 24 дня назад +5

    Traffic lights in the Uk are not quite that simple - amber alone means they are going red. Red and amber together means that they are going green.

    • @TheEulerID
      @TheEulerID 24 дня назад

      Yes, but it shares that feature with the USA.

  • @philrobinson9062
    @philrobinson9062 День назад

    Weetabix crushed up with natural yoghurt and honey, maybe chuck a few blueberries in too, lovely!

  • @simonstewart2095
    @simonstewart2095 24 дня назад +5

    The brown tourist signs are something I think we stole from the French, that's where I first saw them but I wouldn't bet a fiver on it.

  • @barbarahayden5602
    @barbarahayden5602 23 дня назад +2

    I loved this, you have brought my youth back. Scooters, bunting and Christmas crackers (by the way, I still have a little box for mending spectacles that I had out of a cracker and it has been very handy). Weetabix, spread with butter and jam or even toasted with cheese, I wasn't a milk fan as you may see. Never realised that some things aren't around the world but the brown signs are very handy. Legoland isn't age specific, it just is less embarrassing to have children with you. Thank you for your insights, I regularly watch you but I realised today that I hadn't subscribed. Oversight fixed xx

    • @chixma7011
      @chixma7011 23 дня назад +3

      I’ve still got my cracker set of mini screwdrivers from 50-odd years ago. Couldn’t tighten the screws on my specs or get the back off the remote control to change the batteries without them. 😊

    • @sueharrison7940
      @sueharrison7940 23 дня назад +2

      A few years ago I got a set of measuring spoons in a Christmas cracker, I use them all the time 😊

    • @alangreenwood292
      @alangreenwood292 9 дней назад

      Ditto for the screwdrivers (spec wearer)

  • @philipcochran1972
    @philipcochran1972 24 дня назад +3

    UK traffic light sequence: red, red and amber, green, amber, red.
    Try Shredded Wheat breakfast cereal; one ingredient, wheat.

    • @Phiyedough
      @Phiyedough 24 дня назад +2

      Alternatively just eat a bale of hay!

  • @billyhills9933
    @billyhills9933 24 дня назад +4

    In Essex there is a brown direction sign that says Secret Nuclear Bunker.

    • @Lily_The_Pink972
      @Lily_The_Pink972 23 дня назад +1

      There's one in Cheshire as well, called Hack Green. Very interesting day out. And another in the Kingdom of Fife.

  • @annaburch3200
    @annaburch3200 24 дня назад +1

    I've definitely gotten on board with the bunting! I first bought a cute, colorful strand of triangular fabric flags for my son's birthday. It was easy to store and use again, so I've gotten Halloween, Christmas, 4th of July, Mardi Gras, the UK flag (for the Queens Jubilee) and cute burlap flags with apples on them for our annual cider press day.

  • @BOABModels
    @BOABModels 23 дня назад +3

    Multipack bag - not to be sold separately

  • @Stuffed_Cat
    @Stuffed_Cat 3 дня назад

    Crisps: The advantage of bags within bags is not just portion control. It also means you can have a variety of flavours. Whilst you do get bags containing, for example, eight smaller packs of cheese and onion, you'll also get a big bag containing two fox and ferret, two grouse and mushroom, two squirrel and acorn, and two pigeon and pellet. Great if you're packing lunch boxes every day, but don't want to get bored by having the same thing each time, and are not particularly concerned with preserving our natural wildlife. [The grouse and mushroom flavour are only for adults, as you can never be totally sure whether or not the mushrooms used for that batch were hallucinagenic.]

  • @catinthehat906
    @catinthehat906 23 дня назад +3

    Weetabix is actually an Australian not British- invented in Sydney by Bennison Osborne in the 1920's originally called Weet-Biscs in Australia, it expanded to South Africa and then Osborne set up a factory in Northamptonshire. Interestingly in the UK Weetabix is now owned by Americans. In Australia the product is called Weet-Bix and is owned separately by the Australian company Sanitarium.

    • @PaulForeman-indievisuals
      @PaulForeman-indievisuals 23 дня назад +1

      It’s interesting that it’s practically the same product and the change seems to be down to the financial backer of the original selling it out twice and the original inventors wanting to secure their own ongoing venture at the time. So the name change because they couldn’t use the original but gather they also changed the recipe, so it’s the same but different 😊

  • @urseliusurgel4365
    @urseliusurgel4365 23 дня назад +2

    I suspect that the brown colour is deliberate as it is nothing like the colours of signs that impact road safety or the signs that indicate directions to actual settlements. Brown is not going to distract drivers who are intent on checking 'more important' road signs.

  • @bunclecar9246
    @bunclecar9246 24 дня назад +5

    Weetabix and butter... sighs with happiness :))

    • @roderickmain9697
      @roderickmain9697 24 дня назад +1

      Ive tried chocollate spread, marmalade, peanut butter and jam as well. (not all at the same time). Strawberry jam and cream works ok. Not every thing is successful and probably smooth peanut butter is better than crunchy.

  • @halfdragoness8767
    @halfdragoness8767 14 дней назад +1

    I assume brown was chosen because if you made it brighter it would vie for attention with other more important road signs, and the brown tourist attraction ones are technically not giving you essential road safety information.

  • @shaneintheuk2026
    @shaneintheuk2026 24 дня назад +4

    7:31 not only the front door but the whole house. One of the shocks I felt visiting Canada was how flimsy construction was. In the UK every house has cavity walls. Two layers of brick separated by an insulated air gap sometimes filled with insulation.

    • @bygjohnuk
      @bygjohnuk 24 дня назад +5

      Only in houses built from the start of the 20th century (approximately). Most 19th century terraces have solid walls (two layers of brick but no cavity), for example. Stone buildings also don’t generally have cavities.

    • @shaneintheuk2026
      @shaneintheuk2026 24 дня назад +2

      @@bygjohnuk good point. Some of the oldest are actually just lime plaster on wood but they are rare. I can’t imagine kicking my way into a uk property.

    • @lucylane7397
      @lucylane7397 24 дня назад +1

      Yeah moved to Canada and now live in a glorified shed

  • @simonmeadows7961
    @simonmeadows7961 24 дня назад +2

    One I would add that is very specific to London is the tap in/tap out system of payment on the London Underground. I've been travelling through Berlin, Barcelona and Paris recently and their fare systems are needlessly complicated in comparison. Some have advantages that London could benefit from, but the automatic application of price capping instead of having to try to work out before you travel what combination of tickets is most cost effective is excellent.

    • @Lily_The_Pink972
      @Lily_The_Pink972 23 дня назад

      The Manchester Metrolink trams have tap in/tap out systems; you tap your travel card/pass on the reader.

  • @LalaDepala_00
    @LalaDepala_00 24 дня назад +4

    We have these things in the Netherlands, including duvets and weetabix.

    • @jaidee9570
      @jaidee9570 24 дня назад

      And you're welcome... 😄 Duvets were an import to the UK, they were called continental quilts when they first arrived. I remember getting one for xmas in 1975. When I first went to Germany (I was in the army) I was initially surprised at seeing duvets hanging out of bedroom windows.
      I was posted in Wildenrath (close to Roermond) and loved the fact that I could go shopping in the Netherlands, pay with German Marks and get change in Gilders. As I recall the German shops were not so accommodating they wouldn't accept Gilders.

  • @JamesPetts
    @JamesPetts 23 дня назад

    I have lived in the UK since I was born over 44 years ago and I have never heard of the clip duvets! This is quite intriguing.

  • @ChrisGBusby
    @ChrisGBusby 24 дня назад +5

    Brown signs are brown because they are brown in Europe - and we adopted it from the French :)

    • @jaidee9570
      @jaidee9570 24 дня назад +1

      How very dare you!!! You should be locked in the tower for just thinking such a thing let alone committing it to print.
      Our brown signs are glorious in their magnificence, not like the filthy foreign signs you'll find over in Johnny Foreigner land.
      Sorry I came over all 1950s there for a minute. 🙂

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 24 дня назад

      @@jaidee9570 🤣🤣

    • @HDRW
      @HDRW 23 дня назад

      I wonder if there's one pointing to Agincourt? ;-)

    • @ChrisGBusby
      @ChrisGBusby 23 дня назад

      @@HDRW There are - and it's Azincourt :P

  • @bassmanbri57
    @bassmanbri57 5 дней назад

    Came here from JJLA React's channel. Great episode!

  • @carolineroberts9329
    @carolineroberts9329 24 дня назад +4

    Once again, so enjoyed, 😂😊

  • @elderflowermouse1110
    @elderflowermouse1110 24 дня назад

    I'm in Canada, and was able to find a 2-part duvet a couple of years ago. I live in an older house with poor insulation, and It's SO nice to be able to adjust the duvet with the seasons.

  • @gphill3954
    @gphill3954 24 дня назад +6

    The weetabix factory is just down the road from me!

    • @0utcastAussie
      @0utcastAussie 24 дня назад +1

      "Mr Weetabix" lived in Blatherwycke, Northants.

    • @gphill3954
      @gphill3954 24 дня назад +1

      @@0utcastAussie I got caught up in the morning sheep run regularly over there, often late for school..and I was the teacher!

    • @gphill3954
      @gphill3954 24 дня назад +1

      @@0utcastAussie ..and of course the factory is in Burton Latimer, Northamptonshire.

  • @alexmctear5420
    @alexmctear5420 24 дня назад

    Thank you for the frequency and inspired topics of your Channel: it is so pleasurable to turn on my computer and see your remarks on our peculiarities. you also read our responses and bother to reply.
    So many You Tubers piggy back on the creators of original material, and compound their laziness by not seemingly read our reactions.
    The colour of the tourist information signs seem apt, a respect for the countryside by not using glaring colours make sense.

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  24 дня назад

      Aw that's nice, thanks so much! I try to read as many comments as possible and appreciate people taking the time to watch. :)

  • @markjlewis
    @markjlewis 24 дня назад +4

    Weetabix with a sprinkle of sugar then add warm milk. So much better than porridge.

  • @michaelhather9753
    @michaelhather9753 23 дня назад +1

    I have one of those 'clip' duvets. I use the thin one from late April to late September, and the other one the rest of the year. My house doesn't really get that cold so I've never used them clipped together. It just seemed a cost effective way to get two duvets!

  • @TheCenobyte
    @TheCenobyte 23 дня назад +4

    Weetabix is more versatile than you think. I often crumble it in to a stew or casserole to help bulk it out.

    • @adrianmcgrath1984
      @adrianmcgrath1984 23 дня назад

      Americans do this sort of thing too, there are a number of savoury casserole recipes that actually use things like cornflakes as a crust. - it’s far better than it sounds

  • @paulcollins5423
    @paulcollins5423 23 дня назад

    Bizarrely, I was fascinated by your list - as you said, it was a bit random but really interesting choices. Thank you, I enjoyed this.

  • @sonia14335
    @sonia14335 20 дней назад +1

    Brown signs are really useful and they aren't too intrusive in the landscape. Green would be good but that's already in use for A roads.

  • @DazUK1
    @DazUK1 23 дня назад

    Fun fact, Weetabix spelled backwards becomes Xibateew. Actually blew my mind when it was pointed out to me. Great vid. Thank you.

  • @timypp2894
    @timypp2894 12 дней назад

    The red amber and then green is for the driver to put your car into first gear.
    Red, neutral
    Amber, select first gear
    Green, lift up clutch, handbrake off and go.

  • @diamk51
    @diamk51 10 дней назад

    Just discovered your channel. Interesting. I first moved to the UK in 1972. Biggest surprise? The ads on the tube escalators for small electrical items (toasters, irons etc.) from Morphy Richards with the line "the one with the plug on." I thought it was a joke, until I bought my first hairdryer and discovered there was no plug on it. You had to buy a separate plug and put it on yourself. Hah! In 1972 there was no standard outlet, although the three-prong pin was new and becoming the standard. There were round pins, flat pins, three pins, two pins - pretty much anything you could think of.

  • @Lammo666
    @Lammo666 9 дней назад

    The brown signs are there to direct traffic safely to the attraction. I like that they’re brown. It’s easy to ignore them when you’re not doing the tourist thing and you can just follow the regular signs without confusion

  • @JillHughes-n1h
    @JillHughes-n1h 23 дня назад +1

    Nice list 😊 things you take for granted ❤️

  • @davidwoods1337
    @davidwoods1337 30 минут назад

    There are a lot of the brown signs in the U.S., at least in my area of North Carolina. They aren't for commercial things like Legoland though. They're for things like zoos, state/national parks, or historic locations.

  • @davidgiddings8845
    @davidgiddings8845 24 дня назад

    Thank you, another brilliant and facinating video! I'd love your take on british paper sizes !

    • @johnwebster4123
      @johnwebster4123 23 дня назад

      I hope you do not mean foolscap. quarto etc - abandoned years ago

  • @bygjohnuk
    @bygjohnuk 24 дня назад +2

    On the road signs, you might want to think about doing a short video on how the UK ones were developed, which US viewers might find interesting. The woman who did a lot of the work died fairly recently and there was a documentary about it. Most of the choices re colours etc are to do with legibility, they even designed a new font for the system, after extensive testing. Which is why many have been adopted internationally.