POOP SHELVES?! German vs. American Bathroom Differences | Feli from Germany

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
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    Have you ever been to a foreign country, gone to the bathroom, and felt completely lost? Like why does every toilet in Thailand have a trash bin and a water hose next to it? What are those weird-looking extra toilets in Italian bathrooms? And what's up with those German poop shelves?! 🚽Well, I can't cover ALL the bathroom differences in the world in one video so we're going to talk about the differences between German and American bathrooms because let me tell you, a lot of these things can be quite confusing the first time 😅
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    ABOUT ME: Hallo, Servus, and welcome to my channel! My name is Felicia (Feli), I'm 28, and I'm a German living in the USA! I was born and raised in Munich, Germany but have been living in Cincinnati, Ohio off and on since 2016. I first came here for an exchange semester during my undergrad at LMU Munich, then I returned for an internship, and then I got my master's degree in Cincinnati. I was lucky enough to win the Green Card lottery and have been a permanent resident since 2019! In my videos, I talk about cultural differences between America and Germany, things I like and dislike about living here, and other topics I come across in my everyday life in the States. Let me know what YOU would like to hear about in the comments below. DANKE :)
    -------------------------
    0:00 Intro
    1:20 Light switches
    3:17 Door locks
    6:30 Toilets
    10:06 Peeing & toilet paper differences
    10:51 Stay anonymous with ExpressVPN!
    12:54 Faucets
    13:49 Showers
    16:27 Shower Curtains
    17:05 Floors/walls
    17:29 Public bathrooms
    19:05 Pay to pee
    20:49 Share your bathroom experiences!
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Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @FelifromGermany
    @FelifromGermany  2 года назад +88

    I wanna hear YOUR crazy bathroom stories! 😅👇 Have you ever felt completely lost in the bathroom when traveling to another country? Or even just at a friend's place?

    • @YukiLuvsJesus
      @YukiLuvsJesus 2 года назад +2

      I wasted a bunch of hot water because in Mexico the hot water takes a lot longer to heat up but in the States the water takes like 30 seconds to heat up

    • @harrypotterzoup3886
      @harrypotterzoup3886 2 года назад

      When I worked at a mall in California the Asian’s would always 💩 on top the 🚽
      ….because in Asia people 💩 in a hole in the ground usually

    • @FelifromGermany
      @FelifromGermany  2 года назад +11

      @@YukiLuvsJesus Hahahaa oh gosh! I would say it depends, it can take a few minutes to heat up in the US sometimes too but that's usually in older homes

    • @kosmoman54
      @kosmoman54 2 года назад +16

      I heard the toilets referred to as "trophy shelves". And it was explained to me to create a "flying carpet" (use toilet paper on top of the shelf) to keep them clean.

    • @californiahiker9616
      @californiahiker9616 2 года назад +18

      I am female. In a Paris Restaurant : After using the toilet I went over to the sink to wash my hands. I couldn’t figure out how to turn on the faucet. Surprise #1: A male patron showed up (! Mixed bathrooms almost never happens in the USA) . He showed me a contraption below the sink that you push with your knee. That thing turns on the water. Makes complete sense. Once you know about it!

  • @ErnestThurston
    @ErnestThurston 2 года назад +94

    I had a bad experience using the "poop shelf" toilet when I was first stationed in Bad Kreuznach back in '77. One time the facilities engineers serviced the water system in our apartment building. They turned all the water of and then turned it back on. If you have ever turned of your home water system you may have experience that when you turn the tap on water spurts outbecause the is air in the pipes. Well, I used the toilet and as I was getting up I reached back to flush the toilet and the water came out in a strong gush. The water hit the "poop shelf" and threw all the poop all up and down my back side. Luckily this was at home and I cleaned up and changed clothes. Ever since the make sure I'm a safe distance from public toilets before I flush.

    • @barbarafrings9231
      @barbarafrings9231 2 года назад +5

      Hello Ernest! 🙂
      Grüße (greetings) from Bad Kreuznach. 🙋🏻‍♀️

    • @wayne00k
      @wayne00k Год назад +6

      When I was stationed in Germany, shortly after you, I rented a wonderful little apartment and, with my landlord, converted the old tub into a shower. Conversation eventually turned to the toilet shelf. He told me that this feature eliminated splash-back. I took his word for it.

    • @dennisg1045
      @dennisg1045 Год назад +3

      Yeah, stationed in Garmish 74-75, poop shelf in the barraks, Just got used to it, luckily no issues.

    • @rridderbusch518
      @rridderbusch518 Год назад +6

      My first "poop shelf" was in USSR 1981 with the same horrible result as yours.
      I thought it was only a Russian thing!

    • @seanconnors9912
      @seanconnors9912 Год назад +1

      What a great story! Thanks for sharing

  • @phoebus007
    @phoebus007 2 года назад +80

    For the luxury effect, some people in the UK are now installing Japanese style toilets in their homes. You need a degree to use them but you get a full service of your undercarriage on completion, including a wash and blow-dry. (You might also get a coffee while you wait.)

    • @rogink
      @rogink 2 года назад +2

      Brilliant! Clearly made up but it made me chortle.

    • @medicalwei
      @medicalwei 2 года назад +1

      I've been to a Japanese-ran Hotel next to Frankfurt Hbf, and they actually have the kind of robotoilet as well as pre-fabricated toilet room.

    • @777rogerf
      @777rogerf Год назад +10

      @@rogink The coffee part is humorous; : otherwise it is accurate..

    • @VenomHalos
      @VenomHalos Год назад +2

      @@rogink mostly true, actually 😂

    • @ZepG
      @ZepG Год назад +5

      That's a great idea, if the water tank doubled as a Keurig it would autofill and I could have my first cup of coffee whilst taking my morning dump.

  • @gribble2979
    @gribble2979 8 месяцев назад +12

    Having lived in Germany, the worst part of the poop shelf was that the water doesn't move all the poop off the shelf, resulting in the need to clean the shelf with a brush, which then got disgustingly poopy no matter how much you tried to rinse it off.

    • @thebewitchinghour831
      @thebewitchinghour831 4 месяца назад

      That's what I was picturing happening in my head while she was talking. Even though it's your own......Bluck! What if someone leaves theirs behind? LOL

    • @Einwetok
      @Einwetok 4 месяца назад

      Use a little vinegar, works on the mess, and the scale too.

  • @gijoecam
    @gijoecam 5 месяцев назад +5

    The dual shower curtain serves a functional purpose as well: with a single curtain, the water moving downward causes the air to move as well, which tends to draw the curtain towards the water stream. With a second curtain outside, it tends to greatly reduce that venturi effect.

  • @bobsmalser8304
    @bobsmalser8304 2 года назад +57

    The shelf toilets are holdovers from when pin worms in children were very common, being spread in the schools like head lice.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinworm_infection

    • @jeanjacques9980
      @jeanjacques9980 2 года назад +9

      Some U.K. hospitals had “hospital shelf toilets” for samples imported from Germany! Interesting explanation for German toilet design.

    • @BnORailFan
      @BnORailFan 2 года назад +7

      The first time I saw the shelf toilet and asked about it I was told it was so a person can check for worms. I guess this was the reasoning.

    • @natashaw401
      @natashaw401 2 года назад

      oh wow ok

    • @DesertRat332
      @DesertRat332 Год назад +2

      Yup, I grew up on a farm in the midwest, and had pin worms as a kid in the early 60s.

    • @Lucien86
      @Lucien86 Год назад +2

      Oo! The truth is always worse.. 🤢

  • @rdwright6708
    @rdwright6708 Год назад +24

    The best idea I saw in a German hotel bathroom was a full wet room with the shower drain in the floor - no need for a shower curtain at all. LOVE it - perfect for aging in place and easier to clean the bathroom.

  • @lonniemcclure4538
    @lonniemcclure4538 Год назад +12

    Regarding faucets, I find dual handle faucets (the ones that have levers that turn from 0 closed to 90 degrees full open) far easier to use to set the expected temperature than a mixer tap. They are also easier to turn on without touching the handle with "dirty" fingers, as one can more easily bump them into the desired open position with the back of the hand.

    • @thebewitchinghour831
      @thebewitchinghour831 4 месяца назад

      I'm 100% a double handle kind of girl.

    • @phydeux
      @phydeux 4 месяца назад +1

      @@thebewitchinghour831 - Oh this invites SOOOO many jokes.

  • @pjreads5014
    @pjreads5014 Год назад +9

    After my first trip to Europe in my twenties, I immediately bought a shower head with a handheld adjustable shower head - I love them! I get lots of comments on them - and you nailed it on how great they are for cleaning the shower!

    • @MarciaMatthews
      @MarciaMatthews 11 месяцев назад

      Same here! We’ve had a handheld spray in our shower ever since.

  • @markholm7050
    @markholm7050 2 года назад +144

    There is a practical advantage to the two layer shower curtain. The spray of water from the shower entrains a flow of air with it. That moving air will do the whole Bernoulli principal thing, just like an airplane wing. It sucks the curtain into the tub or stall. That can be annoying, especially if the bathroom is cold, because it also causes a flow of cold air onto your feet as well as the cold curtain getting friendly with your legs and body. An outside curtain in addition to the inside one is usually enough to block airflow, preventing both the draft and the overly companionable inner curtain.

    • @alysoffoxdale
      @alysoffoxdale 2 года назад +6

      Much depends on the thickness of the plastic liner there! My mother-in-law purchased a particularly cheap one (about as thin and flimsy as a produce bag) that nothing short of preheating the bathroom to about 80° could prevent from attacking the unhappy bather.

    • @themourningstar338
      @themourningstar338 2 года назад +6

      Another bonus is if your shower curtain has an innermost curtain or inner liner that is machine washable, it is really nice to be able to take that off and throw it in the washing machine with your towel load. Keeps the shower curtain clean and mildew free easily, without having to try to clean it by hand.

    • @ayesha36
      @ayesha36 2 года назад +1

      Yes the single curtain annoys me a lot with this.

    • @MrAronymous
      @MrAronymous 2 года назад

      Honestly had never heard of it until now.

    • @juliar1225
      @juliar1225 Год назад +3

      @@themourningstar338 while I understand, that a second outer curtain can be beautyful the single curtain in Germany normally can go into the washingmachine

  • @tomstech-gear-gadgetreview5827
    @tomstech-gear-gadgetreview5827 2 года назад +200

    Feli, great content. I want to address the commercial restroom divider issue though. There are a number of building codes, fire codes, ADA codes, venting codes, and general ease of cleaning issues that determine the toilet partition divider gaps at the bottom and top you have referenced in the USA. The gap at the bottom of the door is generally 12 inches or greater for three reasons. First ADA code says that doors must be solid to the floor below 12 inches or be above the 12-inch mark, we generally go above the 12 inches. The 12" or greater gap promotes ease of cleaning, and airflow from the HVAC system more effectively, and makes the doors themselves a little lighter so that the door hinges can last longer. Also, some toilet partitions are ceiling-mounted where weight is a huge issue. The larger gap at the top is driven by factors such as the Fire Code that needs 24" of gap to allow the fire sprinklers to reach inside the stalls. We also have to provide the visual/audio fire annunciator in each room. The large top and bottom gaps allow us to use one fire annunciator for the entire restroom. If the walls go full height, then each toilet compartment is considered an individual room requiring a dedicated fire sprinkler, annunciator device, and HVAC supply and return which gets very expensive. Higher-end public restrooms such as those in airline lounges, casinos, and hotels will do the full height walls and take the hit on the expense for the customer experience. I visited Germany in 2019 as I was inspired by your channel and was surprised to see what can be done building code-wise vs. the USA. In the USA we have extremely strict fire and life safety codes that dictate design that those not in the architectural industry may find baffling, but there is usually a valid code reason behind it.

    • @Trifler500
      @Trifler500 2 года назад +19

      Great details. I've also read that some states have codes that require a gap underneath the door large enough for someone to crawl under.

    • @tjblues01
      @tjblues01 Год назад

      @@Trifler500 Having installed a "dog's door" made of lighter and flexible material would do the same.

    • @LucasFernandez-fk8se
      @LucasFernandez-fk8se Год назад +5

      @@Trifler500 I think that’s all the states. That gap is for safe escapes

    • @Trifler500
      @Trifler500 Год назад +2

      @@LucasFernandez-fk8se Yeah, it's for safe escapes. I didn't know it was all states.

    • @bilyonarelifestile2226
      @bilyonarelifestile2226 Год назад

      Handy box

  • @WesB1972
    @WesB1972 4 месяца назад +4

    The swirling action in toilets is a design feature to promote a cleansing action on the side of the bowl as as the flush progresses.

  • @BOBZS1
    @BOBZS1 Год назад +12

    This gal is so sweet. I love her opinions on how we are so uncomfortable outside our own comfort zone. Different cultures make us feel uneasy .

  • @EdwardIglesias
    @EdwardIglesias 2 года назад +165

    I had a friend who was an exchange student in Germany in High School in the 80s. Obviously many things have changed since then but he was most impressed by the water pressure "you could flush a watermelon down those things".

    • @heiner71
      @heiner71 2 года назад +25

      For sure. When I lived in Germany for half of my life, I never even once clogged a toilet. Here in the US, this happens all the time. Here you don't have a brush next to every toilet but a plunger.

    • @bgrimlan
      @bgrimlan 2 года назад +5

      From the video, it seems like you are wasting more water from that volume/pressure than a toilet bowl of water.

    • @jody6851
      @jody6851 2 года назад +11

      @@heiner71 I lived in Kochel am See for three months as an American learning German there and being in Germany for the first time in my life and I had to deal with a Flachspüler toilet also for the first time in my life. I don't know about yours, but mine hardly ever did the job the first time around -- I don't care what your water pressure is -- and having to use the toilet brush afterward is a big understatement. And as far as clogged toilets in the US? What are you flushing down? Towels? The last time I had a clogged toilet requiring a plunger once back in the US was at least six years ago.

    • @christianwww
      @christianwww 2 года назад +12

      If it was in the 80s your friend had probably seen a "Druckspüler" (pressure flush valve). These were common in old houses back then. Nowadays they are quite rare. And yeah, if you're not expecting it, the water pressure of 6 bar (87 psi) streaming into the toilet with the loud noise it makes can be pretty astonishing.

    • @greg_216
      @greg_216 2 года назад +22

      On the flip side, I met a German who did a high school exchange program. His host family greeted him with cookies, which he just couldn't stomach. So, when the family left on a shopping trip, he tried to flush the cookies down the toilet. Instead of going down like a watermelon, they did a lazy spin, and kept on floating. He had to fish them out of the bowl and throw them into the woods behind the house.

  • @tylerdowdy3038
    @tylerdowdy3038 2 года назад +22

    I’m a plumber and a 2 handle faucet usually last longer without needing repaired and is usually easier to repair

    • @tomstech-gear-gadgetreview5827
      @tomstech-gear-gadgetreview5827 Год назад

      I moved away from single handle faucets in bathrooms as a design choice as they look more balanced. Single handle faucets tend to open the hot side more often even when not needed increasing hot water usage not even intended by the user.

  • @conlon4332
    @conlon4332 Год назад +6

    I once used a toilet in a fancy restaurant in England that had a living room-sized room that the toilet stalls were off, that had a fancy rug and sofa-chairs in the middle. The stalls also had stone walls and very sturdy, heavy, nice-looking doors that didn't even show any light at the bottom to my memory. This is the most luxury bathroom I have ever been to... and it was very hidden away, I believe it may have even been upstairs, but it was sign-posted and clearly for the use of customers. I have lived in England all my life and only once or maybe twice experienced anything like this, so definitely don't expect it, but I wanted to share because it was pretty amazing!

    • @karencarriere8104
      @karencarriere8104 5 месяцев назад +1

      In America I've been impressed with two bathrooms. One was an expensive gym in a rich part of town. It had a living room in it too.
      The other was my favorite restaurant, Cantino Laredo. Each bathroom toilet was a room. Like full drywall floor to ceiling with a real door (It was slated, but still -- not see through at all). Very fancy tile too. Excellent bathroom.

    • @PhilLesh69
      @PhilLesh69 5 месяцев назад +1

      There is (or was) a department store in Pearl Ridge, outside of Honolulu that had a ladies room lounge like that. It was almost nice enough to serve afternoon tea in.

  • @joeschermann7729
    @joeschermann7729 Год назад

    The aesthetics of a two-faucet configuration in a bathroom is undeniably more appealing than a single spout/tap, in the view of many. It's a simple (or as inexplicable) as that! Love your channel!

  • @gingerninjawhinger9986
    @gingerninjawhinger9986 Год назад +35

    On a trip to the Netherlands, back in the '90s, I stayed overnight at someone's house; eventually, I needed to use the loo and was surprised to see a 'poop shelf' staring up at me. I seriously believed that the toilet had been installed back-to-front!

    • @xsc1000
      @xsc1000 8 месяцев назад +1

      It was standard type of toilet i many european countries till 60s but maybe they are still made.

  • @MaternalUnit
    @MaternalUnit Год назад +228

    The first time I flew to outside of the U.S. was into Berlin. After the transatlantic flight, I was anxious for a restroom and did not know I would need to pay. The restroom had an attendant who spoke only German. It was obvious that I was supposed to tip her, but I had nothing but large travelers checks with me. We had not been through customs yet, so we had no opportunity to change currency. I had to leave without tipping. The attendant was angry, and she yelled so loud I could hear as I ran down the airport corridor. I was embarrassed, but why did they have an attendant expecting tips in a restroom inside the international terminal where foreign travelers would not have been through customs yet? Once I was able to get change, I was not allowed to go back into the terminal to tip her. That was thirty years ago and still bothers me!

    • @trespire
      @trespire Год назад +54

      @Kate Held I'm sure the German attendant is still angry !!😡

    • @orioleadams
      @orioleadams Год назад +37

      OMG, you reminded me of my first trip to Germany...during my first trip to Europe (with a friend), actually. Anyway, we'd taken the train from Brussels, Belgium, to Cologne, Germany. Something I'd eaten the night before wasn't agreeing with me so the minute we arrived at the Cologne train station I made a mad dash for the ladies' room. I was confronted by pay toilets and I had not yet exchanged any money....oh my, I had to run upstairs to the currency exchange and then go back down to the bathroom (in the nick of time). For some reason, though, the bathroom attendant started yelling at me and banging on the stall door and tried to open it with her key. I had to finish "my business" holding the door shut with one foot.

    • @simonbone
      @simonbone Год назад +28

      That kind of failure to think about things has been pretty common in Germany. For example, until a decade ago, the duty-free shops at Berlin-Tegel airport were cash only. Who wants to take a bunch of cash from the country you're leaving just in case you might want to buy a bottle of slightly discounted booze? The one time I shopped there, I saw it as a chance to get rid of some change and notes that would be useless once I left - only to get chewed out by the cashier for "too many coins".

    • @trespire
      @trespire Год назад +9

      @@simonbone In Hanover airport, you can pay in cash in Euro, US Dollar & if I recall Polish Zlotti (what ever their called).
      Cash is king.

    • @jimmym3352
      @jimmym3352 Год назад +7

      LOL, I would have just put a couple quarters in there. So many places in Europe I was at in the Navy accepted American cash iirc. I do remember buying something in Amsterdam airport when I had to fly home for Emergency leave after my dad died, I'm sure I paid in American dollars since I certainly didn't exchange any money. Very few times I actually exchanged money.

  • @chuzzrocket
    @chuzzrocket 9 дней назад

    Feli, I love how you always hit how 'the important' things are different.

  • @tomaszs2426
    @tomaszs2426 Год назад +2

    8:00 The shelf was the result of the method of connecting to the sewage system (assembly above/on the pipe), and the type of sewage system (cast iron) which required a large slope to prevent clogging. Now we have slippery pvc pipes so it is possible to connect almost horizontally through walls

  • @mirandahotspring4019
    @mirandahotspring4019 Год назад +38

    I was told by an Austrian guy, where they still have a lot of "traditional' toilets, that style was so people could check their poop before flushing as a check on their health. Parasites, blood, colour, etc. What I did find out very quickly is that you must lay down some toilet paper first so a mess isn't left on the shelf when you do flush!

    • @williamevans9426
      @williamevans9426 Год назад +1

      YES! A common-sense answer.

    • @lloydtxw
      @lloydtxw 11 месяцев назад +2

      That’s disgusting. I think I’ll just go to the doctor like a normal person, not try to diagnose my own stool. It’s not really worth the pungent smell of feces and having to scrub shit every time I use the restroom 🤢

    • @mirandahotspring4019
      @mirandahotspring4019 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@lloydtxw If you read my post I said you lay down toilet paper first so no scrubbing.

    • @samojanezic8186
      @samojanezic8186 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@lloydtxw It was also meant for little ampules that you get at the doctor so it was easier to collect a sample. Especially for old people.

    • @lloydtxw
      @lloydtxw 10 месяцев назад

      @@mirandahotspring4019 if it drops into water and is sucked down, there’s no wasted paper. I use a bidet, there’s no need for paper and no need to touch or smell feces. The shelf is unnecessary and gross. And before you comment on wasted water, US toilets use siphon flushing to suction the water down and clean the bowl. Europe uses wash down flushing that leaves residue requiring scrubbing and extra flushing, wasting more water. Yuck.

  • @CR3271
    @CR3271 Год назад +64

    I'm so glad you made this video. I went to Germany in 1993. The poop shelf definitely freaked me out more than anything else. On my return to the US, my family and friends had a hard time believing it. Now, 30 years later, I can show them I wasn't making it up! 😂

    • @hughjorg4008
      @hughjorg4008 Год назад +8

      The poop shelves freaked me out too when I first saw them in Dutch hotels in 1999 (it is just too gross). Good for me, the apartments I rented in the Netherlands and Belgium had standard toilet designs (like in the U.S.)

    • @marshalldonaghy4542
      @marshalldonaghy4542 Год назад

      I've visited Germany, but the only place I've seen a poop shelf was in a New York hotel.

    • @Drteomas
      @Drteomas Год назад +1

      Dumbdadumbdumbdummmb. You would rather have poopwater splash your butt..

    • @superdave8248
      @superdave8248 Год назад +2

      I have no idea why it is, but I do have a suggestion. The German monarchy. Back in the day it wasn't uncommon for a monarch to have his stool examined to verify health. So it wouldn't surprise me if the "shelf" wasn't put in place to make for the poop inspection easier and it just became a standard feature.
      However, the water usage in toilets differ and I believe the German design used less water, so that in itself may have played a role too. Less water in the bowl so less water waste.

    • @Drteomas
      @Drteomas Год назад

      @@superdave8248 Wait Americans don't inspect their poop?!?!

  • @jimwebb2901
    @jimwebb2901 9 месяцев назад +1

    Hi Feli. Planning a European vacation and Munich is on our list to visit. I enjoy learning more about Germany prior to our vacation. As an American, I was traveling on business in the US and had to call the front desk of the hotel to ask how to turn on the shower. You had to pull down on the outlet rim of the faucet which diverted the water from the spigot to the shower head. Just goes to show we can be just as confused in our own country, but that's ok. The front desk attendant was very understanding and kind.

  • @ralphwoodard609
    @ralphwoodard609 Год назад

    Hi Feli. I just found your channel by accident and enjoyed watching every minute of it. I love your voice and those eyes and your bubbly personality. Thanks for letting us know about German bathroom, etiquette, and stuff.

  • @tankboy2adfwd
    @tankboy2adfwd Год назад +35

    I was always told that the "inspection shelf" was to check for intestinal parasites. Makes sense in older homes as they were likely more common many decades ago, assuming meat inspection has improved since the 1950s.

    • @gordonb5571
      @gordonb5571 Год назад +6

      That's what I was told. The Germans like(d) to eat a lot of pork. In the old days, these could contain tapeworms which would be visible on the German toilet. Nowadays pork is tapeworm-free. But, after flushing there would be scrape marks left, so I always lined the shelf with toilet paper before starting.

    • @IGangsterOfLove
      @IGangsterOfLove Год назад

      Its not about parasites it is about general health.

  • @dvdraymond
    @dvdraymond 2 года назад +35

    My first normal international trip was to Belgium for work. After a very long trip where my brain was mush by the end I got to the hotel. I went to use the bathroom, looked inside, and saw no toilet. Just the shower and sink. And my brain did a complete blue screen of death.
    As my brain rebooted and got working again I kept saying to myself "no. no. no. This is not a cultural thing. There is no way a hotel room in any country does not have its own toilet."
    So I walked into the bathroom and looked around, and it turns out the toilet was hidden. The door to the bathroom opened inwards, and the opened door perfectly covered the entrance to a little side alcove where the toilet was, so you had to walk in and shut the door before you could see where the toilet was.
    If I had been more awake it probably wouldn't have been so bad. But brain dead after a full day of traveling for your first time abroad, where you're all ready to just crash and sleep... and it looks like you got a hotel room without a toilet... just broke my brain.

    • @mikebarnes2294
      @mikebarnes2294 2 года назад +4

      Thanks for sharing. I'll be sure to keep that in mind should I ever encounter that situation.

    • @okaro6595
      @okaro6595 Год назад

      In Finnish houses bathroom and toilet were traditionally completely separate rooms at separate parts of the house. Nowadays on new homes there is a separate toilet with the bathroom also but it is more like backup and not the main toilet. That makes the use of the term "bathroom" to refer to toilet strange to me. The bathroom is here with the sauna. Because it can be used for extended periods it would be inconvenient to have the only toilet there. On apartments they typically are combined.

  • @dhrekkin9055
    @dhrekkin9055 Год назад +1

    My father was stationed in Heilbronn in the early '90's and I was fortunate enough to be able to join him for a couple years there as a child. I never encountered a voluntary pay bathroom as you described, but coin operated stalls were everywhere and did take some getting used to. It is a beautiful country and I hope to be able to visit again as an adult and truly appreciate it.

  • @dianeledgerwood1091
    @dianeledgerwood1091 Год назад +6

    Thank you for explaining why there are toilet brushes in German public toilets. This was so confusing to me as I didn’t know if I was supposed to clean the whole toilet, the seat (as there was no paper to cover it) or what. And there wasn’t anyone I felt I could ask! One of life’s unanswerable questions is answered.

  • @annrogers8129
    @annrogers8129 Год назад +31

    I went to Austria on a skiing trip with my school many, many years ago. We saw the shelf and my friend said “ Wow look! you can see whatcha done, how much you done and why you done it! I’ve never forgotten that remark. We laughed ourselves silly 🙃

  • @MIKEMAKESTHINGS
    @MIKEMAKESTHINGS Год назад +70

    I notice the poop shelf when I first went into the bathroom in a relatives house in Essen Germany. I immediately thought It was a bad idea. It caused the bathroom to get really stinky since the poop did not go in the water. Also bad splatter if you had diarrhea. Sometimes the water flow was not strong enough to wash the poop off the shelf. All in all a terrible experience.

    • @beckypetersen2680
      @beckypetersen2680 Год назад +3

      I really disliked it - thankfully our newer toilets in Poland don't have them!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @onrr1726
      @onrr1726 Год назад

      Many toilets in Ukraine have poop shelves. Between takeing a shit and not trying to puke in your pants from the smell is a challenge with in it's self.

    • @mharrye
      @mharrye Год назад +4

      Absolutely - my first hotel in Germany had me staring at that poop shelf wondering how to directly poop into the water. Fortunately toilets got more like I was used to over the years. Then there is the no stool at all toilets found some places in France and a lot in Asia. My elder daughter went into one of those in France, came right out and said she was going to find a spot in the trees instead.

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco Год назад +1

      Yuck! 🤢💩

    • @williamevans9426
      @williamevans9426 Год назад +3

      Ugh! Enough said.

  • @timmartin6410
    @timmartin6410 8 месяцев назад +1

    The "shelf toilet" was an interesting experience when I visited Germany in 1994. I was in Hanover for CeBIT, staying in a home. Which was so much better an experience than a hotel.

  • @mirthiful1
    @mirthiful1 7 месяцев назад +4

    My husband and I went to Austria in 2001 and the poop shelf surprised us. We spent a good half hour coming up with different names for it (log flume got the biggest laugh). It still makes me smile when I think of it. Also, the public bathroom threw me... the bathroom attendant stopped me and I got so flustered, I started speaking Spanish (my second language) which confused her as well as myself.

    • @Powerstroke98
      @Powerstroke98 7 месяцев назад +1

      LOL, I've never had to pay to use a bathroom in my life, there again, I've never travelled to Europe, as there are enough locations I want to see in North America, some more than once! Thanks for the smile this morning!

  • @janverstraten5730
    @janverstraten5730 Год назад +26

    about the two taps at the sink (at 13:00): this originates from the UK, where it was common, and you still see it a lot there. the cold water was 'drinking water quality', but the warm water was in a tank on the attic, and not safe to drink. The building code (or similar) forbid mixing taps, because that could pollute the drinking water.

    • @imsnezhn8610
      @imsnezhn8610 Год назад

      It's about cold/hot water handles not tap. Tap is still single and mixing, but there are two handles to regulate hot/cold water independently

    • @janverstraten5730
      @janverstraten5730 Год назад

      ​@@imsnezhn8610 'tap' is correct for all types. the mixing thing is a 'mixer tap'.

    • @frostflower5555
      @frostflower5555 Год назад

      I dislike the mixing tap. Prefer hot and cold water handles separate. The single one can be pushed up and forgotten to be pushed down to close or maybe kids or pets can leave the tap running and then before you know it a flood in your bathroom.

    • @imsnezhn8610
      @imsnezhn8610 Год назад

      @@janverstraten5730 they are both mixers no matter how much levers they have or is it sink mixer, wall mixer or kitchen mixer. The difference is only in closing mechanism (cartridge or any kind of valves). Because right after the valve(s) two waters are combined to warm water (that's why it is a mixer). And the last pipe (spout) is used by both waters and may be contaminated by hot water. Only two separate taps can provide "drinking water quality" with no questions

    • @imsnezhn8610
      @imsnezhn8610 Год назад

      @@frostflower5555 what you should prefer are overflow holes and self-closing taps. And water leak detectors or consumption control system. It's the only way to protect your bathroom from kids, pets or obliviousness. In the picture 13:08 there are two long levers and they can be easily turned left or right by kids or pets

  • @kioku618
    @kioku618 Год назад +29

    I'm in the US and in my wildest dreams I never imagined people scrunch their toilet paper (I fold it a bunch). That said on a Reddit post not too long ago I learned basically everyone whipes differently, sits differently, etc. so as a whole I guess bathroom experiences is one of those things that varies wildly without people realizing.

    • @Whisperwomaneq2
      @Whisperwomaneq2 Год назад +6

      Yes, I am American and I fold and do so accordion style. I have always found scrunching is wasteful.

    • @victord8175
      @victord8175 Год назад

      Agreed! Lol, that kinda makes me shudder to imagine!

    • @brianspeck3568
      @brianspeck3568 Год назад

      I fold my toilet paper in fairly long folds. I'm less likely to get my hands dirty.

    • @brianspeck3568
      @brianspeck3568 Год назад

      @@matthewnienkirchen8083 😂😂

    • @FabienneSP
      @FabienneSP Год назад

      I am in SEA toilet paper certainly is used for cooking (whipping of the grease) but only foreigners use it in the bathroom.

  • @CharlesHess
    @CharlesHess Год назад

    Finally! You bring up what I was afraid to ask.

  • @RomanJockMCO
    @RomanJockMCO Год назад +2

    The light switch outside the bathroom brought back memories of my first time visiting Germany in December 1991. I actually celebrated my 18th birthday there. It was also a little weird seeing the electric wire on the outside of the wall. I also recall my friend's bedroom having an inside and outside window which he said was for insulation. I don't recall being confused by the door lock, however. I kinda giggled a bit when you went over some of the American style locks. Downstairs they had one of those shelf toilets which i found strange.
    Returning in 1996 and staying for a few nights in a cheap Munich hotel was definitely an experience. First of all there was a June heatwave and I couldn't figure out how to swing the window open so I left it slightly tilted at the top. The next morning I forgot my dictionary and asked for a wash cloth by explaining that I needed something to rub soap on and wash myself, auf deutsch. Die Waschlappen are different in Germany than the USA. Do Germans usually just rub soap on themselves because I had to ask my friend in 1991 for one as well?
    Going from Weimar to Halle was like stepping back in time. Understandably, as unification only occurred less than six years prior, it was typical to see a house that looked like it was from the 1950s next to a fully renovated one. My friend's apartment had a toilet where the tank was almost above you and you pulled on a chain to flush it. The bathroom also only had a really deep clawfoot tub, no shower. Ah the memories!

  • @andrewthomas7109
    @andrewthomas7109 Год назад +33

    I was very surprised by the floor-to-ceiling tiles in my dorm's bathroom when I studied abroad in Austria. It seemed stark and utilitarian at first, but I quickly came to appreciate how easy it was to clean and how it was basically impossible to get water on something that wasn't waterproof.

    • @RedHeadedTsunami
      @RedHeadedTsunami 8 месяцев назад +2

      That makes so much more sense to me than the 3/4s of the way up is tiled in the bathtub/shower.

  • @thehoneybadger8089
    @thehoneybadger8089 2 года назад +51

    Up to the 70's, most men's public restrooms in America had pay toilets. The standard charge was a 10 cent coin put in the mechanism to open the stall door. There was a little poem that was popular at the time:
    "Here I sit all brokenhearted;
    paid my dime and only farted."

    • @hydrolito
      @hydrolito 2 года назад +3

      No, they did not pay toilet were only used by a minority of businesses, and I was surprised the first time I saw one. What city had mostly pay toilets in businesses in 1960's I didn't know any.

    • @alysoffoxdale
      @alysoffoxdale 2 года назад +2

      It wasn't just the men's rooms. I remember needing a _quarter_ for coin-lock doors in public restrooms all the way into the early '80s!

    • @jameskirchner
      @jameskirchner 2 года назад +4

      That's a very, very ancient poem, but the more common version is, "Here I sit, brokenhearted, come to shit but only farted."

    • @BifMcAwesome
      @BifMcAwesome 2 года назад +5

      You would find them in bus stations and were probably discontinued because people would mess up the stall in resentment because they had a no-dime experience in the past.

    • @salbuda6957
      @salbuda6957 2 года назад +1

      Wrong. Public pay toilets have not been the norm in NJ during my lifetime. I’m 66. The exception to this are on boardwalks, which often include showers and lockers.

  • @RichardTheBigBunny
    @RichardTheBigBunny Год назад +3

    I've lived in Germany (briefly), the US, the UK, and Jamaica - but what springs to mind here are seemingly endless types of ways in the USA to turn on the shower. I've had to leave the bathroom and ask several times over the years. The worst [least obvious] 'shower activator' was the ring around the *spout* for filling the tub - 100% hidden - one had to grasp it between one's finger & thumb (around the flowing water) and pull it down! Yes, really. That was in San Francisco in 2017.

    • @taraskat
      @taraskat 4 месяца назад +1

      I have one of those in my home! The home inspector who looked at the house before we purchased it almost marked that down as an issue with that bathroom, because he couldn't get the shower to work at first. Then he remembered a rarer type of shower diverter he'd seen before, tried that out, and got it to work. 😂

  • @EduardQualls
    @EduardQualls 2 года назад +26

    *If there is a single outflow of water, it is a "mixer tap" no matter how many handles it has: you don't have to turn on only one faucet at a time.*
    Non-mixer taps have separate outflows for hot and for cold and, while common until recently in the UK, have not been used in new construction in the US since the late 1950's.

    • @emjayay
      @emjayay Год назад

      Exactly right.

    • @rdwright6708
      @rdwright6708 Год назад

      I hate non-mixer taps; you can't wash your hands with warm water in the winter - only hot or cold.

  • @richardhildreth4471
    @richardhildreth4471 Год назад +14

    I lived off post when I was stationed in Germany while in the Army. Yeah, that shelf was really weird. It's really embarrassing when a house mate informs you you forgot to flush. The toilet paper was weird too. It was wax paper, thick and smooth. Fortunately I heard my grandmother explain how they used pages from the Sears Roebuck catalogue. You hold an edge in both fists and crinkle it. There ya go. I'm 67 and will never forget my experiences in Germany. I was stationed in Heilbronn, by the way.

    • @williamevans9426
      @williamevans9426 Год назад +4

      Perhaps the 'paper stock' was the true origin of 'scrunching', versus 'folding' for those more affluent (as opposed to 'effluent'!).

  • @loggrad9842
    @loggrad9842 Месяц назад +3

    When I was there in the late 80's we called those toilets the "trophy shelf" toilet so you could show off what you made!

  • @jmuhles
    @jmuhles 7 месяцев назад

    Great stuff, Feli. I definitely experienced all of these things my first summer in Germany.
    It was different, even slightly weird to me. But, by the end of my first summer, I did not want to come back to the states.

  • @dimestorephilosopher3308
    @dimestorephilosopher3308 2 года назад +16

    My first visit to Germany was when I was young teen with my grandparents (my grandmother was from Germany) and as a 13 year old dealing with a "poop shelf" toilet might have been one of my most confusing and traumatic things. I was a kid. I was ridiculously embarrassed to ask anyone about how to use it. In an otherwise awesome summer in Germany, it freaked me out.

  • @robertcrabtree8835
    @robertcrabtree8835 2 года назад +5

    4:55 you can very much still confirm that the lock works. With door still open, press the button. Then check if the knob/handle on the outside is able to be turned/pushed down or not.

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 Год назад +2

    Many toilets from about 1920 had the tanks bolted to the wall, with a short length of pipe connecting to the bowl. My grandfather's house in British Columbia, Canada, built about 1901, had the tank up near the ceiling, and was flushed by pulling on a handle connected to a chain.

    • @xsc1000
      @xsc1000 8 месяцев назад

      It was common here in Czech republic till 60s.

  • @dperreno
    @dperreno 6 месяцев назад +1

    Having lived and travelled all across the U.S., I would say that your observations about our bathrooms are spot-on. The only exceptions would be in older city centers where the majority of housing pre-dates WWII. There you may find many un-renovated bathrooms with dual taps on the sink, different toilet designs, switches on the outside of the room, etc.

    • @thebewitchinghour831
      @thebewitchinghour831 4 месяца назад

      When we first bought our house (built 1930) we had the hot and cold separate faucets and our toilet we had back then had the biggest freaking toilet tank bolted to the wall with a separate pipe to the bowl but man, that thing could flush a cannon ball straight down. I couldn't wait to get rid of the hot / cold separate faucets and get a normal vanity but sometimes when I see a picture of one, I get a bit nostalgic and miss them. We used that sink for about two years before we had money to buy a new updated one. You actually have to get a certain timing groove, if you will, to get warm water at the same time when you washed your hands with them. It was all in the timing. LOL

  • @loroimperial
    @loroimperial 2 года назад +3

    4:50 you can check if it is locked. Just open the door and push the button, then check the handle/knob on the other side. If you can’t move it then it means it is locked. It doesn’t have to be closed in order to be locked.

    • @indigobunting5041
      @indigobunting5041 2 года назад +1

      This is also the reason for the many times as a child our bathroom was locked with no one inside. Dad had to use that slot on the outside knob to unlock the door so we could use the bathroom.

  • @brandonlaird6876
    @brandonlaird6876 Год назад +35

    My grandpa was first generation born American, his parents came from Germany. He completely renovated his house so many times (walls, support beams, bathrooms where there were none, etc). I remember, as a kid, my brother and I would ABSOLUTELY LOVE/HATE turning the light in the bathroom off on each other. Yes, he purposefully put the light switch on the outside! I never knew it was because this was how Germans did it. I now have a topic to talk to him about next time I see him in the nursing home. I'm sure he'll love talking about it lol 🤣

    • @chickenfishhybrid44
      @chickenfishhybrid44 Год назад +2

      The light is on the outside of my bathroom as well. I never realized it was a common thing in Germany. I'm going to try and dig up the info on the guy who built the house in the 50s and see if maybe he was German lol. I remember he was a dentist but thats about it.

    • @munzekonzarupe
      @munzekonzarupe Год назад

      That's for security reasons. If you splash the switch with water when you are in the tub you could be electrocuted. So to avoid that they put the switch outside the bathroom.

  • @Smilodon1985
    @Smilodon1985 Год назад +2

    I was in Iceland (having spent my entire adult life in the USA) over the winter break, retrieving my son from the university in Reykjavik, and I got to meet some of those bathrooms. The different toilets (they were all like the deep-flushers you described) were a bit strange, but overall I liked the design, and they never got plugged up. I did make a fool of myself about the shower water control, thinking that the two knobs were for hot and cold, when the one on the left was for temperature and the one on the right was for pressure (I think - unless I got it backwards?) But once I got some help with it, everything was good. I would have liked to have gotten to see more of Iceland than snow, but that's what happens when you go to Reykjavik at Christmastime.

  • @kentmckean6795
    @kentmckean6795 Год назад +2

    The light switch was on the outside of the bathroom in my parents house (built in 1950), in Manitoba, Canada. Most of the houses of this era were like that. Never seen it since.

  • @mccarterw
    @mccarterw Год назад +4

    I lived in Germany for 9 years. I could never understand the lack of a shower curtain. I did though learn to love the hand-held shower. My house, in Georgia USA, has 3 showers. All have hand-held shower heads. I also have one for traveling. I don't travel much, but when I stay in a hotel, I literally remove the shower head and install my hand-held one. I also have Teflon tape and tools so I can install the hotel's shower head back on properly. Really people, if you've never showered with a hand-held shower head then you don't know what you are missing. And those shelf toilets, ack, the bad smells. You have to poo and then instantly flush or you get to smell your work of art.

  • @furleyforever
    @furleyforever 2 года назад +12

    Funny how you brought up the push-button locking doors. At my last workplace we had a bathroom door that was notorious for the lock not working on all occasions. You always had to check the door by locking it while it was still open and checking the outside handle before closing the door behind you as you enter the bathroom.

  • @robertheinkel6225
    @robertheinkel6225 Год назад

    I had the same experience in Greece. Flushing did nothing, but the shower had a the shower head on a hose,and would reach the toilet. So you needed to wash the toiled bowl with the shower head after each use.

  • @anthonyrobertson2011
    @anthonyrobertson2011 2 года назад +7

    In the US pay toilets were around here and there when I was a kid. Never saw an attendant person but these were locks on a door or stall door that you had to put coins in to unlock. This was in the 70s. I don't remember ever seeing those after 1980.

    • @GrumpyXer
      @GrumpyXer Год назад +1

      same, mom said crawl under

    • @rhondaweber5638
      @rhondaweber5638 Год назад

      I saw them once too in am airport. It was the 70's and they made them illegal.

    • @ryanparker3_2_1
      @ryanparker3_2_1 Год назад

      Never seen em before myself

  • @richardburke6902
    @richardburke6902 2 года назад +3

    All the bathroom variations that were described are very interesting to me. But I cannot fathom the basis of comments that state emphatically that you don’t need warm water to wash your hands. Warm water helps the soap dissolve the dirt and grime on your hands. To think that cold water is all you need to wash your hands seems extreme and perhaps a relic of the outhouse days in the woods. But I don’t really know where it comes from. Maybe it comes from Germany too. Thanks Feli.

    • @SwissCHer
      @SwissCHer 2 года назад

      I agree 100% with you. Here in Switzerland, the cold water is freezing cold even during summer months. My house doesn't have water boiler. Hot water is provided by the municipality in a closed circuit which is transferred via a heat exchanger to heat our bathrooms/kitchen water and in winter the radiant ceiling and floor heating. Houses and apartments in most of Europe usually don't have ventilation and air conditioning systems (VAC).

  • @John-tr5hn
    @John-tr5hn Год назад +6

    You forgot to mention that at gas station bathrooms, you often either have to have the code to enter the bathroom or they give you a key, which is invariably attached to the most unwieldy thing possible like a broomstick, a giant spoon, or a hubcap.

    • @sexygeek8996
      @sexygeek8996 8 месяцев назад

      Those places often get drug addicts shooting up in the bathroom or people losing the key.

    • @karencarriere8104
      @karencarriere8104 5 месяцев назад

      I have always lived in Alabama, USA and I've never actually seen this. I've seen it in movies and understand the reasoning -- but I can't ever remember having to get a key to use a gas station bathroom.

  • @pennybrooks9038
    @pennybrooks9038 Год назад

    Feli, I loved Germany’s approach on bathrooms. They did it right 👍🏻😊

  • @tiffanymims8691
    @tiffanymims8691 2 года назад +9

    The two things that made me think, 'oh wow, that is different' in Germany (1996-97), was some of the public toilets and how they kept them sanitary. The first one was the toilet seat wrapped in plastic sheeting, and when you flushed, a new plastic sheet was reeled out, and the old one was reeled in. The really neat one was when you flushed, the toilet seat would have a small arm that came out the back of the toilet, and the seat would spin around, sanitizing the seat with a solution, and there was a tiny little squeegee on the arm that wiped the liquid off the seat!

    • @melindar.fischer5106
      @melindar.fischer5106 2 года назад +4

      The Kansas City, Missouri, airport had the toilet seats wrapped in plastic sheeting for a while, some time from 2000 - 2020. (I don't remember exactly which years I used the restroom at MCI while picking up friends who flew in). It's possible the moving plastic sheeting on the toilet seats was there earlier, in the 90s, but I wasn't living in the KC area then.

    • @WSupernatural77
      @WSupernatural77 Год назад +3

      This was a Swiss Enigeneered System, BTW

    • @fancydeer
      @fancydeer Год назад +1

      God I'd hate to be the person who has to maintain/clean that

    • @sfuterfas
      @sfuterfas Год назад

      We need that for the US. So many women squat when they pee and leave the toilet seat a mess and don't bother to clean it off.

  • @FreeSpirit47
    @FreeSpirit47 Год назад +10

    One aspect of European toilets (probably other places, too) I loved was the bidets!
    "Why wipe it dirty when you can wash it clean"
    When I experienced a bidet again when I stayed at the Moana Surfrider in Honolulu, I bought the add on type of bidet for my personal bathroom. It washes, dries, feels a lot more sanitary, to me!

    • @BeckBeckGo
      @BeckBeckGo Год назад +1

      I have a bidet in my home too. It's not a hot water one. It doesn't sing to you like the Japanese ones do (Everything sings to you in Japan...) it just uses cold water. But I don't think I could live without one. I don't understand why this hasn't caught on in North America.

    • @FreeSpirit47
      @FreeSpirit47 Год назад +1

      @@BeckBeckGo There are more people that have bidets than it might seem. It's not a subject that would be discussed over lunch or dinner.
      I only have one bathroom in my home. I keep a couple rolls of toilet paper if a guest doesn't want to use the bidet.
      I'm glad my bidet doesn't sing! That would become annoying & kinda creepy.

    • @fabricefauconnier2358
      @fabricefauconnier2358 Год назад +1

      Bidet is a french word and tradition. They were numerous in the old times and houses but now are disappearing for it was mainly designed for the maison closes aka bordels ..

  • @vlad48329reborn
    @vlad48329reborn Год назад +1

    Not sure if other people mentioned this about shower curtains, but adding an outer curtain helps reduce the inward suction that sometimes happens with the inner curtain. I think it has something to do with convection & how air of different temps likes to move around. I noticed a fairly strong up-draft between my curtains when i'm running a hot shower. This displaced air is likely caused from the temperature difference of the inner curtain (hot) & outer curtain (cold). It's really nice to not have your curtain drift inward & stick to your body while you're trying to clean yourself.

  • @MikeDuckwall
    @MikeDuckwall 4 месяца назад

    Excellent Video! But, I really gave you a Thumb Up for your looks and personality! And, how well you descriptions and commentary were! 👍🏼

  • @thehoneybadger8089
    @thehoneybadger8089 2 года назад +17

    My introduction to German shelf toilets was almost 60 years ago. Another feature then was the tank high up on the wall that was flushed by pulling down on a handle connected to a chain going up to the tank. And you had to make sure the toilet lid was closed or there was the possibility of a little something splashing out of the bowl.

    • @jc3drums916
      @jc3drums916 2 года назад +1

      Something always splashes out of the bowl. It's just not a large enough volume for us to be able to see it.

    • @ichselbst880
      @ichselbst880 2 года назад +1

      Oh yeah, I remember, in the aerly 60s this was the standard. Good ol' times....

    • @emjayay
      @emjayay Год назад

      The tank high up on the wall was how all toilets in the US were until at least the early 1900's.

    • @ladyelainefairchild3546
      @ladyelainefairchild3546 Год назад

      Have you never watched The Godfather? US toilets had the tank and chain also.

    • @thehoneybadger8089
      @thehoneybadger8089 Год назад

      @@ladyelainefairchild3546 Yes, but they went away in the US long before they did in Europe.

  • @TheRetroGuy2000
    @TheRetroGuy2000 2 года назад +14

    The strangest toilet experience I had was in Sweden, when I didn't want to pay for a restroom visit while in Stockholm. There was a free men's room, but there were no urinals; the floor was a grate, and you were just supposed to... pee anywhere... *shudders* I had to leave and find a pay toilet.

    • @silubr1
      @silubr1 2 года назад +5

      These things used to be relatively common in Germany, too, under the aptly poetic name _Pissrinne._

    • @TheRetroGuy2000
      @TheRetroGuy2000 2 года назад +2

      I have seen very primitive men's rooms in the US, which were basically a trough on one wall. But never just "pee anywhere on the floor". The same floor you are walking on. No.

    • @MrGettinlate
      @MrGettinlate Год назад +3

      @@TheRetroGuy2000 I agree, the concept is disgusting, but it's a pretty rare day in the USA when one can step up to a urinal without standing in a puddle of someone else's pee.
      I can't for the life of me, understand how anyone can "miss" when there's like 120 degrees of target area in both the horizontal and vertical directions.

    • @rwitter5333
      @rwitter5333 Год назад

      That's hysterical 😅

  • @rafaelshumaker1883
    @rafaelshumaker1883 Год назад

    As a truck driver, I access bathroom faucets all over the country. To get the perfect temperature on most double knob faucets, I open the cold to a slow trickle, and then open the hot until I have a flow that is not too fast or too slow. This works most of the time. I don't even have to wait for the hot water to reach the tap. By the time it does, my hands are already fully wet and I'm rubbing them with soap. I get to enjoy the perfect temperature when it's time to rinse them off. But on mixer taps, it takes a lot of guessing and adjusting to get the right temperature. So I prefer the separate knobs.

  • @dex1lsp
    @dex1lsp 2 года назад +6

    I'm from San Francisco and many of our older houses, especially the Victorian-style ones, do have some of these European features, like light switches on the outside and turning bolt locks. It's also common for those houses to have the toilet and the sink in separate adjacent rooms, which is very uncommon in the US in general. Fully tiled bathrooms are also common here. I currently live in a very modern building, but I did grow up in an old one. As someone with a physical disability, I also really like those versatile handheld showerheads. Getting one was one of the best decisions I ever made. I highly recommend it!

  • @TheDivayenta
    @TheDivayenta Год назад +6

    I was at a German traffic stop restroom. No toilet paper. You could buy one paper towel from a machine- so with diarrhea this was a creative challenge! I also remember living in Germany in the 60’s- when toilet paper could double as sandpaper! Explains the crankiness I often encountered.

  • @nbrown5907
    @nbrown5907 Год назад

    I live in a small house built in the 1940's in Illinois and the bathroom light switch is outside the bathroom. There is an outlet that was added at some point above the sink for convenience.

  • @ginnyhogan6386
    @ginnyhogan6386 Год назад

    In Vienna, my 90 year old Dad said about the poop shelf. , “ it is so you can admire your work”. Love it!

  • @jamesr1703
    @jamesr1703 Год назад +34

    I'm German-American and all of the strange stuff we did in my house as a kid made sense to me only after I moved to Germany as an adult. My grandma said the "poop shelf" was so that you could examine your feces. To see if you were healthy. New Subbie!

    • @mrdovie47
      @mrdovie47 Год назад +6

      the shelf might save a dropped cell phone.

    • @steinbockguy
      @steinbockguy Год назад +5

      That's what I was told when I first moved to West Germany in 1989 as a junior in college. I found them "horrible" as a male since urinating tended to splash more than the American toilet. It has become an insult for some men to be referred to as a "sitzpinkler," a guy who pees sitting down (often implied at the insistence of his wife who doesn't want to clean his pee that has splashed onto the floor). Her video is funny because it is an actual debated topic in Germany.

    • @roseg1333
      @roseg1333 Год назад +1

      I mean at least it has some valuable reason for the self if I did not know this I might have thought their toilets were absolutely bazaar

    • @19ghost73
      @19ghost73 Год назад +1

      ​@@roseg1333 Yup, it was designed esp. for taking feces samples more than 100years ago, when public health had LOTS of issues like parasites.
      However, that design is going away since at least 25+ years...the easier cleaning of the modern version finally won over here, too.

    • @LarsOfLegends
      @LarsOfLegends Год назад +4

      Well, no poseidons kiss is reason enough for me to always go for the poop shelves.

  • @garygibbs5732
    @garygibbs5732 2 года назад +5

    I have a few crazy-ish stories. I am a yank and went on an senior year of undergrad exchange program with université de technologie de compiègne). I stayed in a dorm room which had a bidet. I also did not have a refrigerator. This was during the fall semester. I kept my "cold" stuff setting on the sill outside of my window. The bidet was used to trickle cool my beer. Basically just crack the faucet to allow a small amount of water to continuously run. Beer got as cold as the water was. Further several bars I went to only had a ceramic "hole in the ground" with two foot pads for you to go #2. I was quite surprised at this concept.

  • @carolhipple9903
    @carolhipple9903 Год назад

    When we built our home about 30 years ago we put the main lightswitch for each of the 3 bathrooms outside the bathroom. Now the switch also had a red light underneath so that if the light was "on" you knew that the bathroom was occupied. This was very handy with 7 people in the house.
    We also had a secondary light/fan over the toilet with the switches for it within reach when using the toilet.

  • @napoleonmdusa8877
    @napoleonmdusa8877 Год назад

    For push-button door locks, I've always simply tested them before going inside to make sure the outside handle can't engage after the push-button is depressed and that engaging the inside handle disengages the locking mechanism.

  • @TheQuickSilver101
    @TheQuickSilver101 2 года назад +3

    The first home I owned had the light switch on the outside of the bathroom. That house was built in 1959 so not new construction.
    I totally agree about mixer taps. My current house has Two handles for water and I rather dislike it. This was fun learning the differences (and similarities) between German and American bathrooms, thank you!

  • @charlesgmcgill
    @charlesgmcgill 2 года назад +3

    After a trip to Europe I fell in love with the hand held shower head. First think I did when I returned home was purchase hand held shower heads and installed in my bathrooms.

    • @rdwright6708
      @rdwright6708 Год назад

      Me too. And as a short person, when I discovered the kind that goes up and down on a pole, I was in heaven!

  • @ronyerke9250
    @ronyerke9250 9 месяцев назад

    There's an old style of tub/shower fawcets in the U.S. that you don't see much anymore with 3 twist knobs. The left is for hot water, the right for cold, and the center directs the flow either down to the tub spout or up to the shower head.

  • @nwmacguy
    @nwmacguy Год назад

    When using the antique, high water tank toilet w/shelf at a relative's place in Höf, after doing my business and the "Aal" [eel] laying there on the shelf, I'd say "Achtung, fertig, los!" and hit the high pressure flush lever and it would fly off the shelf and down the tube in a blink of an eye. Always good for a chuckle.

  • @eljj7968
    @eljj7968 Год назад +6

    This was such a fun video haha! I'm not from Germany or the US but have spent quite a bit of time in both. The giant gaps around US public bathrooms never fail to confuse and amuse me lol. I must say though, I have just done a huge road trip around the US Southwest, almost 10,000 miles, and found every public bathroom I stopped in (and there were A LOT on that trip) to be immaculate, from gas stations to truck stops. In Germany I didn't think the bathrooms were actually as clean, especially given that you have to pay.

  • @hartmutbohn
    @hartmutbohn 2 года назад +6

    Simple life hack for German shower curtains: buy TWO curtains - a nice one for the outside, and a practical, easy to clean one for the inside, and mount them on the same hooks. Works perfectly, and you avoid moving the one curtain in and out again all the time.

    • @bengaljam4550
      @bengaljam4550 2 года назад +1

      Most shower curtains sold here contain a separate liner curtain for that purpose.

    • @emjayay
      @emjayay Год назад

      American cloth shower curtains intended for the outside do not come with the inside liner. You buy it separately. If you get a plastic one you could leave it outside and flip in inside to take a shower, or get a liner.

    • @bengaljam4550
      @bengaljam4550 Год назад

      @@emjayay I see them online with liner included. That is how i bought mine

  • @blainglenn7184
    @blainglenn7184 11 месяцев назад +1

    I was definitely perplexed by the poop shelf when I first when to Germany. This is the first time I found it mentioned. I always had to put toilet paper on the shelf first so that the poop wouldn't stick.
    Unfortunately the newer more efficient US toilets now have less water in the bowls, such as the ones in my home now. Which means that I have a toilet brush and cleaner next to all my toilets.

  • @timacrow
    @timacrow Год назад

    I have an older home (built late 1940s) in Seattle and the bathroom light switch is in the hall.
    My mother's even older house (late 1920s) has the same type of switches, and deadbolt locks on the bathroom doors.

  • @1djtraxx
    @1djtraxx Год назад +9

    I think you left out a really important detail that I learned as an American stationed in Germany when I was in the army. Germans (and other Europeans) don’t use the term “restroom,” or “bathroom.” Germans (if I remember correctly) use the term “WC” which I guess is an abbreviation that translates to “Water Closet” in English. Please correct me if I’m wrong.

    • @ianholloway3778
      @ianholloway3778 Год назад +3

      A bathroom in the UK has a bath in it (or at least a shower) and is found in a house. If you are looking for public toilets the room would be signed as 'toilets' or less often 'lavatories' if using words rather than than pictograms and sometimes WC.

    • @m_mx_05
      @m_mx_05 Год назад +7

      As a native german speaker, pls note that we would say "Toilette" in a more formal environment (such as asking at a restaurant or in a house where you're invited at). Among family or close friends, you would just say "Klo".. which is derived from "Klosett" or "Wasser Klosett" (i.e. "WC").

    • @killer6ten
      @killer6ten Год назад

      @Patriot Medic Here in the Netherlands we also use the term WC plus pretty much all other things she said bout german houses are same here.

  • @barrellcooper6490
    @barrellcooper6490 2 года назад +8

    IMHO, seperate hot and cold handles on modern faucets is that way primarily for aesthetic reasons. Though there is also a cost difference primarily only at the low cost end of the range. I think a lot of two seperate handle faucets are chosen because a single handle generally looks new and modern and many people are looking for an older look, non -"Jetsons" look.

    • @nmccw3245
      @nmccw3245 Год назад

      In some countries, only the cold water is potable, hence separate taps.

  • @triffton1
    @triffton1 Год назад

    Hey fellow ohioan here (cleveland). Growing up our light switch for the bathroom was outside the room. Also the only bathroom in the house was through my parents room…… little weird admittedly but thats the way it was. To quote SerpentZA “stay awesome”. Recently found your channel and i LOVE it!!!!

  • @berndm9743
    @berndm9743 7 месяцев назад

    I always found that many older homes in Germany, especially in smaller towns, have the toilet water tanks high up on the back wall with a long pull chain to flush. This creates a very strong flushing action compared to the normal tank height here in the US.

  • @reginakeith8187
    @reginakeith8187 2 года назад +10

    In my house, built in 1996 in Oklahoma, the master bathroom has one of those toilet rooms with its own door so someone can still use the sink or shower while the toilet is being used. It annoys me to no end that the lightswitch for it is on the outside. And, on the inside wall where the light swtich should be, there is a phone jack! WHY?!?! The people who built this house were crazy!

    • @themourningstar338
      @themourningstar338 2 года назад +2

      One of my cousin's built a house around 1992-93, and that's how they did their master bath! It had the little 'water closet' with just the toilet, light switch on the outside, and a freaking landline phone on the wall next to the toilet! It was so bizarre (and yuck), and he never had a good explanation as to why they built it that way. He just kind of shrugged and blamed it on the builder.

    • @lesliesheppard6112
      @lesliesheppard6112 2 года назад

      Because you wanted to have a good excuse to get off the phone when the telemarketer called you🤣🤣 ☎️ 🚽💩

    • @emjayay
      @emjayay Год назад

      @@themourningstar338 I think the logic with the switch is that you are already in the bathroom with a light on, so you can see the switch on the outside of the toilet room and won't have to search for it if you go in there and close the door at night.

  • @93mica
    @93mica 2 года назад +4

    I live in Serbia and our light switch for the bathroom is also on the outside so maybe it is a European thing and since most of the time the light switch comes with a little light on it to indicate the light in the bathroom is on (it is also the same switch for our boiler and heating in the bathroom) so maybe it is also made this way to indicate that someone is inside.

  • @paultomaszewski1964
    @paultomaszewski1964 Год назад

    Granted this is a very specific case, but this was the most unique "public" bathroom I had to use. I was in the Army and we were at NTC ( National Training Center ), Ft. Irwin CA. The set up they had was not your typical bathroom for us to use. No dividers at all for anything! Just a row of toilets and urinals down a wall. Now that was back in the mid 90's, they may have changed since, but that was quite the experience.

  • @jimjungle1397
    @jimjungle1397 2 года назад +3

    Many urinals in the US do not have dividers. I know the public library near my house has urinals without dividers. I don't remember any urinal dividers in any schools I attended. Public toilets are usually required to be a shape called, "elongated." In private homes these would take up space in the bathroom and be something to bang your shins on, on the way to the bath or shower.

    • @briansmith48
      @briansmith48 2 года назад

      I don't know what state you're in, but here in Ohio we have dividers in between each urinal.
      Even when I was in elementary School we had dividers. And that was back in the 80's. With those urinals that reach the ground.

  • @mikeohandley1922
    @mikeohandley1922 Год назад +11

    Hi Feli,
    I inspected homes for buyers for nearly 23 years. What I discovered is that most consumers don't know that even many cheap 1.6 gallon flush toilets in the US have a dual flush mode even when there aren't two buttons. For flushing urine with less water, just hit the handle once and the stopper will reset inside the tank quickly and you'll use only about 1/3 to 1/2 the amount of water used for a full flush. For fecal matter, hold the handle down all the way for a second or two instead of releasing it immediately and the stopper won't drop inside the tank until the tank has been almost completely emptied of water. The added weight of that extra water is what helps to push fecal matter down the trap built into the toilet. Many users don't know this; and, when their toilet clogs, after they've done No. 2, they get very upset and insist the toilet is defective and needs to be replaced. Showing them the handle trick fixes the issue immediately.

    • @davewright8206
      @davewright8206 Год назад +1

      yes i still think im the only one in my house who knows this ! and weve lived in it for 30 yrs !

    • @mikeohandley1922
      @mikeohandley1922 Год назад +1

      @@davewright8206 - Dave Wright?!! I don't suppose you're the same Dave Wright who was an Army Lineman in February of 1976 and got tangled up with another guy jumping out of a C141 on your third jump while going through Jump School at Ft. Benning?

    • @mikeohandley1922
      @mikeohandley1922 Год назад

      Dang! I was hoping someone would know that guy, reach out to him, and have him come on here.
      I was the guy that landed on his canopy, ran off, fell between his suspension lines, and then we rode those entangled chutes alll the way down. That day, I almost quit without completing the last two jumps I needed for graduation.
      Been trying to find him for a long time, but There are a helluva lot of Dave Wrights in this country.

    • @tararenemartin
      @tararenemartin Год назад +1

      @@mikeohandley1922 Our company commander in basic training at Ft. Jackson told of this happening to him in Airborne training. He said he landed on someone's canopy and had to run to the side to jump off as his own canopy was deflating. I don't remember much else of the story, but he was a Captain at the time. I was in basic training in June/July/August of 1977.

    • @mikeohandley1922
      @mikeohandley1922 Год назад +1

      @@tararenemartin - Yeah, that's what they train you to do. The thing about my situation was that I guess they put me and the other guy out of the two opposing waist doors almost simultaneously, when they're supposed to leave a second between the two doors.
      So, as I was finishing my count, before reaching up for my risers to check my canopy, the other guy's canopy opened right beneath my feet and it wasn't fully inflated yet either. I tried to run off but his canopy was up around my knees and hips and the edge of his canopy was kind of flattened out. His canopy tried to inflate, allowing me to begin moving toward the outside but then his skirt sort of collapsed under my weight and I fell straight down into the area under his canopy at about the same instance my canopy finally became fully inflated and jerked me upward under the edge of his canopy. Somehow, three of his suspension lines got broken when I fell down between his lines.
      I spread my arms and legs to stop myself from passing through the other guy's suspension lines, but then realized I was on the inside anyway so spread eagling wasn't going to do me much good - I needed to get down to him. He yelled at me, "Hey man, my chute's collapsing, get down here quick." I reached out and grabbed the nearest suspension line but then realized, that because his canopy was losing air where the thee suspension lines had snapped, he was falling faster than me and to get to him I had to drag myself down by pulling up on his suspension lines hand-over-hand, lifting his whole weight.
      I was under his canopy, his chute was losing air, he was yelling and swearing at me and I was yelling and swearing back. The training had kicked in and wall we were thinking about was what we'd been taught - we really didn't have time to be scared. He was yelling and me and reaching up, and I was swearing back at him, pulling so hard that the lines were cutting into my hands, but my fully inflated canopy above wasn't cooperating as he got heavier it was trying to drag me back toward his canopy which was starting to droop. Without something to put my feet against and the ability to use my back, I was trying to lift all of that with just my forearms. It was hard and it was too slow.
      In theory, entangled jumpers are supposed to level up and then lock arms facing each other and agree to roll away in opposite directions the instant their feet touch the ground. In practice, it's a lot harder than it sounds. We'd jumped at about 1,500 ft. and were falling slightly faster than the 26fps we were supposed to be falling. I got to within two feet of his outstretched hands when I heard a bullhorn "Goddammit!!! Entangled jumpers LOOK AT THE FUCKING GROUND!!!!"
      I said, "Oh shit!" as we looked down. We only had time to get our feet and knees together before we hit the ground. It felt like being run over feet first by a truck. One second I was crumpling into the ground and the next second there was one of the cadre standing over me with an open buck knife slashing at suspension lines to deflate the chute and prevent it from dragging us with the wind. I was surprised to find myself in one piece. I stood up and then the other guy, whose name was Dave Wright stood up and I realized we were both OK.
      For about the next five minutes we had to stand there at attention listening to the instructor reaming our asses over and over, threatening to wash us out of the course. The guy literally tired himself out yelling at us and finally just said, "Pick up your shit and get the fuck out of my sight." We gathered up our chutes and took off running as fast as we could for the collection point. It wasn't until we were halfway back to Benning that it hit us how close we'd come to becoming part of that DZ. We laughed hysterically for about five minutes. That night I thought real hard about dropping out of the course - I was married and my son was less than two months old. By morning though, I was feeling pretty invulnerable though and I stayed and finished my last jumps. That was the first time the god of jumpers tried to kill me but it wouldn't be the last.

  • @dontrapani7778
    @dontrapani7778 8 месяцев назад +1

    I've been to Europe several times and am always surprised by the differences in bathrooms. In a 5-star hotel in Rome, the bathrooms in the lobby were unisex: both men and women would enter the same room and just choose a stall. The stalls were a complete room with a normal door and walls. When done using the stall, you would wash your hands at a common row of sinks. As an American, I have to admit that walking into the room together with women, and washing my hands next to a woman, felt weird at the time, but also kind of liberating.
    As far as showers go, I agree that the most common American configuration is a fixed showerhead, and both hot and cold levers on the sinks. But I prefer the European model, with a single lever on the sink and a shower wand. Also, the Euro shower has 2 controls, one for the temperature and one for the force of the water. That is SO convenient because you never have to adjust the temperature once you find your comfort zone. I wish American showers had that kind of plumbing.

  • @afgncap
    @afgncap Год назад +1

    Pretty much everything you said about Germany applies to Poland as well aside from shower faucet location. We put it on the short side too.

  • @pablodelsegundo9502
    @pablodelsegundo9502 2 года назад +3

    18:17 - the bathrooms at my office (completed in 2017) have the urinals situated so that if you're doing your business at the furthest one inside, you see the (backside) reflection of anyone sitting in the first stall through the tile's reflection. So you can, if timed right, watch your colleague wipe his ass. Needless to say, I never use those stalls and opt for the disabled stall when nature comes screaming.
    Also, I'm now grateful to have lived in (West) Germany during the mid 80s in an OLD house in a village. The imprint the housing differences made on my young mind are lifelong. Even the one, detached bathroom we had with a shelf toilet was a learning experience.

  • @achecase
    @achecase 2 года назад +6

    New Jersey here and every one of your "commen in the USA" bathroom traits are virtually ubiquitous here, you totally nail it.

  • @walterlundby3286
    @walterlundby3286 Год назад

    My wife's best friend bought an architectural commune above Half Moon Bay, California (Just south and west of San Fran). The entire insides of the homes at the commune were "Free Form". For the bathrooms they tended to be done in free-form cement with the floors curving to a drain. (the master's were usually a large sort of oval shape about 20 feet by 15 feet. The showers had nothing separating themselves from the rest of the room and in the wall was a fire hose. To clean the bathroom one just took the fire hose and sprayed it down. Everything just ran down the drain in the floor. The roofs of the bathrooms let the sunlight in to dry and you could turn on fans and sun lamps too. Easiest bathroom to clean, ever.

  • @rafaelshumaker1883
    @rafaelshumaker1883 Год назад

    Actually, there is a way to check if the door handle locks. Test it with the door open. Push in the lock button and attempt to operate the exterior handle or knob. I always do this. And if I find that it does not lock, I skip using that bathroom. It's also a good idea to push on the door after you think it's locked. Sometimes the latch does not align with the hole. This happened to me a few weeks ago when someone just pulled the door open. I found that it was not quite aligned and needed to be slightly lifted by the handle to get the latch to engage correctly.

  • @randallgreen4084
    @randallgreen4084 2 года назад +3

    I've been in many a home that is 100 plus years old and don't remember ever seeing light switches on the outside of bathrooms, although, they may have done that when homes were wired with tube and knob.
    Fixed showers heads are literally dollars when bought by contractors. That is why you see so many in homes and hotels, they are much cheaper than handheld and plumbing contractors cut every little bit they can to make money as they've bid the job. In the one home we bought as it was being built, we had to buy sinks and fixtures ourselves to get what we wanted and have them installed by the contractor. The couple of bathroom sinks we didn't buy were spec'd as porcelain, they substituted plastic. We had to fight to have that corrected.
    Shower curtains, the inside one, because it seems to always be wet, will mildew at some point. Easier to replace the cheap plastic one and have nice fancy one on the outside.
    Having had several children, you'll find the "key" to the bathrooms on the molding above the door, which is just a cheap small flat head screwdriver like thing that comes with the lock. Kind-of a must.
    NOW HERE IS THE WIERD ONE for hotel/motel, there is a tub/shower faucet that you have to pull down on a weird end on the faucet to get it to divert to the shower. Every time I run into it; the front desk of the hotel will explain it to you when you check in.

  • @bronco5644
    @bronco5644 Год назад +8

    When I lived in Germany, the “shelf toilets” in the houses I lived in were always a topic of discussion among visitors from the US.

    • @radioflyer68911
      @radioflyer68911 Год назад +2

      Sign above toilet said, don't ask. We don't know.

  • @genxrants
    @genxrants 4 месяца назад +1

    17:33 - The good news is that some chain companies (Buc-ee's comes to mind) are paying attention and make their stalls more like rooms with vacant/occupied locks.