American reacts to 6 Things Unknown Things About Australia

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • Thanks for watching me, a humble American, react to 6 Things We Didn't Know About Australia Until We Moved
    Thanks for subscribing for more Australian reactions every weekday!
    Original video: • 6 Things We Didn't Kno...
    🤓Ways to support the channel!🤓
    ↬ purchase one of my Aussie-themed T-shirts: ryanwas.com
    ↬ Send me Australian stuff if you want to! It may end up in a video. Thanks!
    River City - Post Office
    1915 Washington Ave #14686
    Evansville, IN 47714

Комментарии • 893

  • @JourneyOfLight_ShamanOfMemory
    @JourneyOfLight_ShamanOfMemory Год назад +143

    I lived in the Botswana - Kalahari desert as well as other African Countries and never used sun glasses, hats or sunscreen. You could even sleep in the sun. Not once did I ever get sun burnt... Not until I moved to Australia where in the 2nd week I got sunburnt everywhere including my armpits. That's a special kind of hell! You learn very quickly to respect the sun here.

    • @mythicalwatermellon5254
      @mythicalwatermellon5254 Год назад

      I can totally relate I got so tan in a outdoor pool!😂

    • @SerenitySoonish
      @SerenitySoonish Год назад +2

      Wow! That makes me feel better that I get suburnt within standing 10 minutes outside (I'm very pale). I knew something must be different here!

    • @dainesswatkins9805
      @dainesswatkins9805 Год назад +4

      I feel you, I used to sit under the mid day sun ☀️ in east central Africa, Tanzania 🇹🇿, but now I’m vitamin D deficient, due to being scared of the Australian ☀️

    • @georgemoore7186
      @georgemoore7186 Год назад

      I am an Australian and I have lived in Australia for more than 70 years, I only occasionally wear sunglasses (and it's not for sun protection) and never wear sunscreen....and have never been sunburned....cos I am not STUPID, same reason I have never been bitten by a snake, a spider, a Shark or a Crocodile, I have never been killed crossing the street either, so not sure what your point is?

    • @XaviRonaldo0
      @XaviRonaldo0 Год назад +1

      Never even been outside Australia and I'm as white as it comes and I never wear sunnies or sunscreen.

  • @johnangouras6781
    @johnangouras6781 Год назад +140

    Ryan is one of the few youtubers that you can tell actually enjoys making content.

    • @birreboi
      @birreboi Год назад +8

      Yeah Ryan has a charm about him. I wish him good luck if, at the least, he gets to explore some of our unique country.

    • @Bellas1717
      @Bellas1717 Год назад +2

      as much as we enjoy experiencing it?

    • @mattyallred
      @mattyallred Год назад +2

      And generally loves australia, Like iwrocker, Both great channels and i love watching them react to aussie content, Even if they some how react to a similar video its the reaction i love, Like with maggies they are so shocked a bird will dive bomb you so fearlessly and yet as a kid we used to run past the nests to get swooped and see who could make it past with the less attacks and damage. Id always win cuz i have a secret to them, it includes food, obviously, you feed the maggies in your area from young or during mating season they wont attack you. second thing is, and this is the main one, stop moving, Watch were they are and as soon as one goes for you, head towards it and try grab it, sounds silly but they back off real quick, they watch you from the trees but know you arent to be messed with, Thats one bird, The emu is different, run away and climb a tree or it can and will kill you, You wont out run it by any means, but it will know you dont mean harm, It may not care hence the tree but yeah. Funny thing about emus is if you lay on your back and pretend to cycle like riding a bike you will get a heard of them to come over, Not aggressive but curious like whats this thing

    • @cgkennedy
      @cgkennedy Год назад +1

      My son has Irish colouring and if he's outside five minutes he feels himself burn. The sun is not a joke.

    • @heatherhayes7947
      @heatherhayes7947 Год назад +3

      I don't watch any of the others only Ryan.😃

  • @chrlz904
    @chrlz904 Год назад +76

    Befriending magpies is one of the most rewarding pastimes. I put out food and water for them and have two families of them. We all love each other, and their warbling calls are just beautiful. Note that I only occasionally give out a very small amount of mincemeat in the shape of tiny worms... Mostly I put out a birdseed mix. They never swoop me or anyone I'm with, in fact they're more likely to swoop down next to me to see what I'm doing or to ask for food..

    • @judyadamson6631
      @judyadamson6631 Год назад +5

      Same here. Our maggies bring their new babies every year to the front garden to show them off - and, of course, get some food.
      Oh PS: Yes, everyone says "rego" 🙃

    • @sueaddison9958
      @sueaddison9958 Год назад +6

      My little Grandmother used to hand feed Pee-wee's in the mornings, she'd have minced beef in the fridge to give to them 🤗🤗🤗🤗❤️👣❤️❤️❤️

    • @janeamelia7140
      @janeamelia7140 Год назад +1

      I LOVE this..mince as worms, brilliant, gonna try it.😊

    • @kerryskee2494
      @kerryskee2494 Год назад

      They used to eat right from my hand. (not any more because I live in a high rise in Surfers Paradise now)

    • @Peter-cm8vi
      @Peter-cm8vi Год назад +3

      agreed. feed them once and they are friends for life.

  • @KB-eu5xi
    @KB-eu5xi Год назад +44

    Your personality and willingness to learn about our culture with an open mind is exactly what embodies what we call Australian spirit

  • @antheabrouwer3258
    @antheabrouwer3258 Год назад +98

    Rego is a term everyone uses, almost no one says registration. I always carry an umbrella in swooping season and keep my eyes peeled. Then I use it to shield me from attacks. For the most part, no one carries a gun around in Australia. And you would be charged. Many beaches have nets up to stop sharks and other places have a helicopter circling the water around the beach to watch for sharks.

    • @warwickofnorwich
      @warwickofnorwich Год назад +17

      Don’t you mean you carry a brolly? 😉

    • @crackers562
      @crackers562 Год назад +10

      do you carry an umbrella.... I carry a BROLLY :-)

    • @Ainzleeriddell
      @Ainzleeriddell Год назад +6

      Magpies know I like them. They don’t swoop nice friendly people. They never swoop me even during nesting season.

    • @ianmontgomery7534
      @ianmontgomery7534 Год назад +11

      @@Ainzleeriddell I presently have five juvenile maggies that I say hello to as walk out the of the driveway every morning. We have about twenty around my place (within 200 metres there is a 15metre high tree where they live). I do get woken up with a chorus of them in the morning - it is great.

    • @shaz464
      @shaz464 Год назад +11

      I don’t think I have ever said “registration”

  • @VoMFilms
    @VoMFilms Год назад +39

    I've got an old Australian trick for being safe from snakes while walking through the bush. Walk heavily, make your presence known to the snake. If you trick them into thinking a big animal is coming they'll be like nah I don't wanna be crushed, gotta go! Most snake bites happen when you startle each other

    • @jonothanmcleod-crouch3138
      @jonothanmcleod-crouch3138 Год назад

      People don't get killed by snakes in Australia anywau

    • @FM-qm5xs
      @FM-qm5xs Год назад +4

      That may work for a red belly or some other timid snakes but a death adder is not gonna move away so you gotta watch where you step. And a bloody brown snake will chase you down if he is pissed. They are the ones you really need to worry about.

    • @Peter-cm8vi
      @Peter-cm8vi Год назад +1

      true. In summer I bush walk with a stick belting the ground so they know I am coming.

    • @JustMattyb
      @JustMattyb Месяц назад

      Unless you heavily step on a snake then you will surely get bitten. Just keep your eyes peeled when your around any scrubby/bushy area vigilance is all you need to stay safe from snakes

  • @terryallen345
    @terryallen345 Год назад +23

    Ryan, love your work. You will be ready to come here when you can accurately translate the phrase "Shazza and Dazza played Accadacca on the way to Macca's" 🇭🇲

  • @kirk5152
    @kirk5152 Год назад +57

    We were the ones that originally shortened "self portrait" to "selfie".....your welcome world!!!

    • @bucinsk
      @bucinsk Год назад +1

      Yep, this one checks out, a drunk youth posting while hung over from his own 21st.

    • @kirk5152
      @kirk5152 Год назад +6

      @@bucinsk Yep correct 👍😄
      way back in 2002, in the days of the old Nokia and Ericssons camera phones, That's as far back as the word can be traced.
      Out of the hundreds of words that we shorten and throw an, ie, o, or y at the end, I think selfie is really the only one that actually went global.

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад +2

      @@kirk5152 hmm I'd never actually made the connection that selfie was Aussie slang till you said that. Makes perfect sense though, learn something new everyday :)

    • @kirk5152
      @kirk5152 Год назад +2

      @@mehere8038 Yea, I'd feel more proud if the world was saying mozzies and sunnies for mosquito and sunglasses. But the world of social media is so vein and self
      obsessed so not surprised the word "selfie" took off!!!

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад

      ​@@kirk5152 I guess those words are too old & terms established in other places before they heard the Aussie version, whereas in an internet/ social media age, they were able to pick up the more convenient Aussie slang at the origins of the word/invention, plus stuff like mozzies, they probably mostly experience when holidaying to more tropical places, where there's probably a range of slang terms in use to mess with things
      Probably more surprising would be that they haven't really picked up terms like budgie & in the US, they stupidly don't even call it a budgerigar, but try to call it a "parakeet" instead, with parakeet actually being the name for any small parrot, so on par with calling a cocky a "parrot". They also call gallahs "rose breasted cockatoos", which again I find weird & quite frankly wrong, given those are Aboriginal words, I feel like the original word should be used & go with the animal when it's exported. Same with 'koala BEARS" too, although I kinda get that one more than the bird names, renaming a budgerigar to a generic small parrot name reeks of US denial of other cultures to me, kinda like how they claim wifi & the internet & everything else as "their" inventions

  • @listayngeorge6929
    @listayngeorge6929 Год назад +23

    The fact you google your own questions to know the answers is so awesome..

  • @liammcintosh8466
    @liammcintosh8466 Год назад +44

    Keep doing this. I love you and your family’s interest in my country and your reactions are bloody hilarious!

  • @EmbraceThePing
    @EmbraceThePing Год назад +23

    Hey Ryan! :D
    One thing about spf30+. When we first became aware of the ozone hole over antarctica the government through its science arm, the CSIRO researched sun block and found that after spf 30, more numbers meant very little so mandated that no one could advertise sun block as having anything greater than 30(+).

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад +5

      @@tlihdsnm26947 yup, it's now up to spf50, which means most companies just re-branded their sunscreen from spf 30 to spf 50, since they were already spf50's, but only allowed to call them spf 30. Most nowadays are not doubt way above spf 50 too

    • @Wyz369
      @Wyz369 Месяц назад

      Secret to avoiding sunburn?.....Stay out of the sun in the middle of the day. Wear appropriate clothing.
      I haven't used conventional sunscreen for decades.....it's toxic.

  • @bhsaproduction
    @bhsaproduction Год назад +31

    Generally Jaywalking is limited to crossing the road within 20 meters of a set of lights or pedestrian crossing. Often this is applied if you do not cross in a safe and timely manner and you need to be crossing at right angles to the road, not on an odd diagonal path.

    • @GeeeEm61
      @GeeeEm61 Год назад

      I was fined for jaywalking in Parramatta about 7 years ago. I crossed against the “Don’t walk” and the copper walked straight over with his fine book. I demonstrated that it was safe as it was a one way Street and the other street still had the green for traffic, too no avail! 😢

    • @philinator71
      @philinator71 Год назад +1

      People Jay walk all the time in my part of Australia and no one gets fined.

    • @XaviRonaldo0
      @XaviRonaldo0 Год назад

      I thought it was 50m

    • @XaviRonaldo0
      @XaviRonaldo0 Год назад

      @@philinator71 true but they occasionally do blitzes

    • @AussieFossil
      @AussieFossil 5 месяцев назад

      @@XaviRonaldo0 I've lived in Melbourne for 70 years and I've never been fined and I don' know anyone who has.

  • @Janis.7-
    @Janis.7- Год назад +12

    Sparky is electrician , Chippy is a carpenter . See you’re pronouncing Canberra correctly now lol

    • @cree_VI
      @cree_VI Год назад

      sounds very cute 😄

  • @optimusmaximus9646
    @optimusmaximus9646 Год назад +36

    I think that Johnston dude needs to get out and explore the country a bit more because he knows SFA about it apart from the stereotypes.

    • @markflint2629
      @markflint2629 Год назад

      Agree

    • @FionaEm
      @FionaEm Год назад +2

      Yeah, he comes across as pretty patronising.

    • @CK-solutions
      @CK-solutions Год назад +4

      I don't think so, but then I have Pommy relatives. I know what it looks like when they are actually stereotyping others, or being patronising.

    • @DiDiana55
      @DiDiana55 Год назад

      I agree with You‼️

    • @karenstrong8887
      @karenstrong8887 Год назад +2

      He was way worse when he first got here. He knew everything and it was all wrong. My husband is a Brit, just not one of the stupid one’s.

  • @nicolek1676
    @nicolek1676 Год назад +47

    Magpie’s live for over 20yrs and have great memories. They won’t attack people they know or have their nests near or in your yard.
    We have 3 regular magpies we feed every afternoon

    • @ValerieKerr11
      @ValerieKerr11 Год назад +7

      So true, I've always got time for them, some food, have a little chat, and never been swooped.

    • @shadowkyber2510
      @shadowkyber2510 Год назад +7

      I feed my magpies awell, last spring they even started coming in my house looking for food (unvited) so I had to keep my door closed

    • @commentsforthealgorithm1740
      @commentsforthealgorithm1740 Год назад +7

      I work at a golf course.
      We feed our Maggies. They have never swooped anyone.
      They are a beloved attraction/ entertainers.

    • @ariesfool3064
      @ariesfool3064 Год назад +9

      We have the same ones come back year after year and they bring their young to meet us (naturally because we feed them!). They walk up to our garage to say hello. And their song is beautiful.

    • @chriscurrey1447
      @chriscurrey1447 Год назад +3

      Very true, every year my magpies bring their young down to meet me. I never have trouble with swooping.

  • @mrfrancyofficial
    @mrfrancyofficial Год назад +36

    Thank you so much for all these videos Ryan! I'm from Melbourne Australia and somehow randomly stumbled upon your channel. I'm now watching all the old ones every morning before work and they're putting me in the best mood! Thank you so much!
    Good Arvo! 😂😂💖😊

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад +1

      arvo in the morning.... hmm

    • @azzure001
      @azzure001 Год назад +2

      hahaha. i have been on this same journey a few weeks now. i also love ross’ vids too.

  • @tysonholmes9255
    @tysonholmes9255 Год назад +8

    5:12 The crosswalk sound is definitely NOT for the deaf people😅

    • @narellesmith7932
      @narellesmith7932 Год назад +1

      Hilarious

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад +2

      our pedestrian crossing buttons actually are though, that's what the video he reacted to was about, how inclusive they are for everyone, including Deaf, Blind & Deaf Blind & even guide dogs!

  • @lucindasavona2278
    @lucindasavona2278 Год назад +8

    If you're on a beach patrolled by life guards there are shark alarms & shark spotters to give warning. Some beaches are netted to prevent the shark from coming near swimmers.
    Shark attacks usually occur at unpatrolled beach & on people swimming or surfing alone.

  • @mandaweekes3771
    @mandaweekes3771 Год назад +13

    You have to do a video on Kakadu and the Daintree rainforest. These places make Australia special.

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад +1

      really? After I went to Kakadu & then got chatting with some locals, they laughed & told me they call it "Kakadon't" cause it's not worth it. tbh the Daintree didn't impress me that much either, but I was there not that long after a cyclone. There was a rainforest somewhere on the NSW coast, north of Sydney that I saw as a kid/teen & found much more impressive than the Daintree tbh. The falls in Kakadu were nice, as was Yellow thingy Billabong, but not exceptional. I think the Blue Mountains are probably just as nice as those ones, especially for a tourist not used to gumtrees. Great Barrier Reef is probably my favourite Aussie place

  • @dee-smart
    @dee-smart Год назад +8

    Regarding the heat and sun in Australia - it's different in different states. The more up north you are, the more the humidity and sweating - very tropical and more like going to one of the other Asian countries. The more down south where I am the dryer it is. Although Melbourne, Victoria next to my state of Sth Australia is a pretty coldish type of state. Not as cold as Tasmania but it is cold. My state is known as the driest state on the driest continent on earth. However it's fine when the weather is mild, but when we get into the really hot weather 42 degrees C and have days of it, it's yuck. I stay inside and close all the blinds and have the air conditioning going at 22 degrees. You can't even feel the cold of the air conditioner during that period but you are not breathing in hot air. Just think a hot blow dryer in your face the minute you walk out the door.

  • @pamelahardy2907
    @pamelahardy2907 Год назад +7

    Love your reaction vids! Snake bite are mostly no longer fatal only because of the hard work of Australians dedicated to supplying antivenom. If it wasn't for the antivenom, absolutely snake bites would be the cause of too many deaths in Australia

  • @adamhastie5718
    @adamhastie5718 Год назад +15

    Great stuff buddy..I think we are all Aussies in chat..most of us as surprised as you about some facts..😂😂
    Steve got hit in the heart with the barb of the stingray…lots get stung by stingrays but not like that.
    I believe Steve pulled the sting out right away also not realising just how bad it was…if you get stabbed never pull out what has stabbed you.
    Steve was a beautiful amazing man..

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад +6

      I was a first aid instructor at the time of his death & that was raised a LOT in first aid classes. Reality is that all first aid books at the time said to leave any embedded object in place EXCEPT for a stingray or stone fish barb, that should be removed immediately & then hot water used on the wound.
      First aid books were changed after his death, as a direct result of it, but in reality, the reasoning for the removal was sound, with most objects, you have no idea how long they are, or what they're in & they're not doing any further damage while there, but pulling them out DOES cause more damage, stab someone with a knife, knife's fine in place, but muscles spasm & tighten around it, pull it out & you cut more tissue in the process.
      Sting ray barb however continues to pump venom into the body after being separated from the sting ray & it's venom causes excruciating pain, but generally minimal injury, so deaths from it (and stone fish) have always been from the pain from the venom, NOT from the physical injury. Steve did the right thing, as per first aid & medical protocols at the time

    • @adamhastie5718
      @adamhastie5718 Год назад +2

      @@mehere8038 sounds right..he was a smart guy..probably knew more than the guy who wrote the article I read at that time.👍

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад +1

      @@adamhastie5718 yeh, in terms of management of bites & stings from Aussie (& probably all global) critters I have no doubt he was the expert. He would have been, not only for his own safety, but also because he was passionate about education & therefore would have wanted to educate the world on best practice in managing bites & stings too

  • @marklivingstone3710
    @marklivingstone3710 Год назад +9

    In the comedy series on radio called How Green was my Cactus, when they covered the discovery of Australia (Cactus Island) they had Captain Cook describing the great southern land to the King. The first thing he says is the sun is so bright it can actually cast shadows😊 yeah, I’ve lived in the UK, I get it 😂

    • @kayelle8005
      @kayelle8005 Год назад +1

      Oh I miss that program. Used to be a highlight of the morning getting ready for school.

    • @kimgould2020
      @kimgould2020 3 месяца назад

      I so loved How Green Is My Cactus!!

  • @davidmc105
    @davidmc105 Год назад +6

    Magpie attacks are unavoidable unless you hibernate during swooping season which is longer than 6 weeks, more like 10. Butcherbirds are close relatives of magpies and share that swooping habit. Getting to know them will mean they won't swoop but there's a lot more magpies out there than you'll ever get to know so you're safe if you only walk around your home. They say you should just avoid them but you never know where they are until they snap at your ears. The further you walk or cycle, the more likely you will be swooped, unless go the same places every time so you get to know where they are. But don't be too afraid of them, not all of them want your blood or eyeballs.

    • @doubledee9675
      @doubledee9675 Год назад

      I always wear a hat when out walking - works for both sun and magpies.

    • @cherylemaybury9967
      @cherylemaybury9967 11 месяцев назад

      I’ve been swooped by a plover as well. Usually they are on the ground because they lay their eggs on the ground so they will charge you if you go near their nest but I wasn’t even close to the nest just headed towards it and got swooped.

  • @warwickofnorwich
    @warwickofnorwich Год назад +6

    Pretty sure jaywalking is only a crime if you do it less than 20m from a legitimate crossing or if you are at a crossing and cross when the little man is red.

    • @tonytutone2003
      @tonytutone2003 Год назад +1

      And I have only ever seen it enforced in Sydney Cbd

    • @sonjaschulz74
      @sonjaschulz74 Год назад +1

      I've been fined in Melbourne many years ago. The cops do a blitz on it often and just wait on each corner of a crossing waiting to fine people. Now i just make sure i walk away from the lights and cross there.

    • @warwickofnorwich
      @warwickofnorwich Год назад

      I’ve heard they get rookie cops to enforce it to see how they handle it.

    • @sonjaschulz74
      @sonjaschulz74 Год назад

      Yeah it's like trainee cops. They also sometimes practice directing traffic through the busy CBD intersections, even though the lights are working

  • @ianmontgomery7534
    @ianmontgomery7534 Год назад +5

    Nearly every snake is keen to get away from you unless you corner it or perhaps tread on one.

  • @lillibitjohnson7293
    @lillibitjohnson7293 Год назад +4

    We use SPF 50

  • @cecilias_shorts
    @cecilias_shorts Год назад +7

    I have never heard of anyone getting fined for jay walking....magpies are so amazing..but then so are all Aussie animals..I've been swooped once but never got attacked...he forgot ambo for ambulance...those girls and guys do such an amazing job

  • @3scarybunnies211
    @3scarybunnies211 Год назад +6

    The last time I was swooped by a magpie was in 1990. It swooped me once, then I turned around with my bag and waited. Its next attempt was thwarted when I swiped at it with my bag. It tried one more time, then told its mates never to mess with me again. And that is my legend origin story.

  • @danmiranda2288
    @danmiranda2288 Год назад +13

    Hi Ryan, I agree with some comments here. U should be getting opinions from Aussies. He is interesting & very entertaining but he's a pom with limited experience living here. Australia is vast & climate varies in many areas. I live on the beach in the South Coast of NSW. I do think he has omitted the more concerning bluebottle issue for beach goers & what about Jack Jumpers that are an absolute nuisance at the beach in Tassie (Tasmania). Way more common issues for a lot of Aussies than say jay walking for example. Love ur stuff mate. Look forward to it every day. 👍

    • @shauna1103
      @shauna1103 Год назад +1

      Hahaha is a Jack jumper a kangaroo even I an Aussie don’t know that one!!!

    • @Aussie565
      @Aussie565 Месяц назад

      I like this comment
      No new Aussie can be an expert

  • @JustJokes-bw4fs
    @JustJokes-bw4fs Год назад +12

    Hey Ryan, I live in Western Australia. The melting bitumen road is true, I've seen it. It was 45°C though and it ripped up from the weight of a large turning truck.

    • @indigocheetah4172
      @indigocheetah4172 Год назад +3

      We would pop the bitumen bubbles as kids .

    • @bronwyn6415
      @bronwyn6415 Год назад +3

      Seen it in SA too.

    • @catherinegiesige7169
      @catherinegiesige7169 Год назад +2

      Yes, I’m in WA, and I’ve seen the melting bitumen.

    • @psychokitty9325
      @psychokitty9325 Год назад +2

      I still remember running across a car park as a kid with no shoes. By the time I reached the shop my feet were a patchwork of black with lumpy tar stuck to them and pink from missing skin - fun times! 😂

  • @Jessie20032
    @Jessie20032 Год назад +3

    50 plus is what we have here for sunscreen and yes 40 plus degrees is normal here for summer in Australia used to it haha oh btw visit the country parts of Australia most people forget about it or have no idea and always head to the big cities why not come to WA it’s vast of country and bush 😁

  • @mattoman-sport
    @mattoman-sport Год назад +12

    I'm never disappointed with these videos. It makes me smile and I'm subscribing

  • @sueaddison9958
    @sueaddison9958 Год назад +2

    Ryan, did you hear of the slang 'mamil'? Middle aged men in Lycra. 😂😂😂😂😂😂 I love our slang words😊 thanks for your channel🌹🌏🪐🌕🙏🌸🇦🇺🦋🐦🏡🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹

  • @starwyn7
    @starwyn7 Год назад +3

    I’m subscribing, I love these videos, and you Ryan, who probably won’t see this, are such a lovely humble American. This is nice to see.
    So, I live right on the east coast of Australia and have never seen a shark. Not to say they aren’t around as we have helicopters that do checks. Apparently they tend to be more active at dawn and dusk so I avoid the ocean at those times. I have seen seals and dolphins though.
    I’ve never been swooped by a magpie, but I feed them whenever I see them and love their song 🥰 I have been charged by a Plover though, but they call your bluff. They are just protecting their babies as they lay their eggs on the ground. Stupid things.
    I jaywalk all the time! I’ve never been fined for it. It probably only happens when the cops get bored or doing their regular revenue raising 😒
    I do admit I’d be terrified of swimming up North Queensland during box jellyfish season and I would not go near croc infested waters uh uh no way.
    If you do ever visit the outback, be sure to invest in a hat with built in fly cover. I promise you will thank ‘some person who mentioned in the comments section once’ for it haha . Those lil fkers stick to you like their lives depend on it.
    And don’t worry too much about the killer sun 🌞 we do have air con over here lol and awesome water fun 😁

  • @ThatJohnstonLife
    @ThatJohnstonLife Год назад +2

    Thanks for the reaction bud 👍

  • @PrincessGold1
    @PrincessGold1 Год назад +2

    PS Magpies are hilarious, intelligent, have quite the personality, very friendly with the neighbours that live around them and trusting them not to interfere with their nests and babies, and their singing is called carolling because it is just gorgeous! Having them live nearby is a treat.

  • @dodge59
    @dodge59 Год назад +5

    i live in qld and i believe that if you are more than 20 metres from a crossing, you can J walk. the only punishment is being hit by a car if you don't look both ways.

  • @ariadnepyanfar1048
    @ariadnepyanfar1048 Год назад +3

    Australia is so huge. You want the natural wonders of the outback, and to see the native animals. I highly recommend you find one state with a great nature reserve/zoo, with tours of reptile houses, or whatever. Maybe do two states at most in the one visit. I really think you want to be here for more than a week if you're going to travel between states without exhausting yourself. Also get really good weather advice for the area. It can be close to freezing in the deserts areas at night time. It matter what season, and what area of what state you're going to.

  • @raelenevinciullo7416
    @raelenevinciullo7416 Год назад +3

    About ‘spf’, manufacturers can put any number on the bottle but the reality is that the cream looses its protective nature over time, sweat, swimming etc. by having an SPF of 100 would give a false sense of security and would in fact be a bogus claim. I think the highest that manufacturers can claim is 30+. This encourages users to reapply frequently which you need to do for effectiveness.

  • @helza
    @helza Год назад +7

    The jaywalking thing isn't really true. In NSW you have to use a crossing if you're within 20m of one and only cross when the green man is on where relevant but otherwise you can just cross when it's safe

  • @FredPilcher
    @FredPilcher Год назад +2

    How often do we say "rego"? At least once a year. :D

    • @fiyerolee
      @fiyerolee Год назад

      Yeah when rego needs to be renewed. Ha

  • @tonytutone2003
    @tonytutone2003 Год назад +10

    In Far North Queensland there are some v scary animals. The one that seems most insidious and has hurt alot of people recently are the ‘Irukandji’. These tiny jellyfish are so dangerous and nearly invisible.

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад +1

      yup, they're the invisible ones to worry about, waters in Australia are too clear for sharks to be invisible

    • @alurker3985
      @alurker3985 Год назад +1

      Don't forget the Blue Ringed Octopus, the Box Jellyfish and the Stone Fish - even the humble Bluebottle Jellyfish can give you a nasty sting.

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад

      @@alurker3985 Blue ringed octopus like cooler waters, can't give all the deadly ones to FNQ :) Tourists can just go to the rockpools at Bondi for the quickest access to the deadly ones :) (octopus). FNQ do have cone snails though, which have the same venom type as the octopus

  • @nancycurtis7315
    @nancycurtis7315 Год назад +7

    A couple of years ago, the indoor temp of my house was 46 degrees C. The day after, a medical thermometer exploded in it's case. Was a bit hotter. Yes. It gets a tad warm at times. Greetings from Dimboola, in Victoria, Australia.

    • @lucindasavona2278
      @lucindasavona2278 Год назад +3

      Yeah. I know what you mean. A few years back I was living in a rental property without air conditioning.
      The landlord had removed the ancient, broken one & wanted me to pay for the new one.
      The temperature inside my 3 room bedsit unit got to 60 C.
      It was 49.8C outside.
      I was lucky. The lady 2 doors down came & invited me to her air conditioned home for the day.

    • @shauna1103
      @shauna1103 Год назад +2

      @@lucindasavona2278how awful for you but what a beautiful neighbour - I guess a lot of aussies spend the day at the shopping centre but then then if, like me, you’re regional then that’s a bit more difficult / thank god where I live there is all ducted air con - life saving

    • @XaviRonaldo0
      @XaviRonaldo0 Год назад +1

      Hit 48+°c in the shade in Penrith a few years ago

    • @psychokitty9325
      @psychokitty9325 Год назад +1

      My rental back in '97 hit 58c (no aircon).

    • @nickwhite6717
      @nickwhite6717 Год назад +1

      Workshop at work back when the last lot of bushfires happened was 54c inside, with the wind blowing. Made you feel sick. North Central vic

  • @pippacarron1861
    @pippacarron1861 Год назад +6

    Chippie is a carpenter (from wood chips), sparkie is an electrician (obviously!).

  • @georgemoore7186
    @georgemoore7186 Год назад +3

    the Stingray didn't "kill" Steve Irwin, Steve was messing with it, it didn't mean to hurt him but it has a very sharp barb with toxicity, it was actually trying to get away from Steve, he was the 3rd fatality ever recorded in Australia, but Stingrays are everywhere, not just in Australian waters, saying the Stingray killed Steve would be like shooting yourself and saying the gun did it! it was a freak accident, Steve was trying to film it and got too close

  • @robertcrimmins8806
    @robertcrimmins8806 Год назад +3

    Not so much the heat That burns you, its the high UV rating.

  • @Stuffyim
    @Stuffyim Год назад +2

    I have sunburnse over my sunburns from work bc I didn't want to get into my dad's car and get the sunscreen out.
    It's more surprising if I go out to my dad's work or go fishing and I come back without a sunburn at this point

  • @Lnch4ALion
    @Lnch4ALion Год назад +4

    Im in Midland, Perth. The new shopping centre carpark melted just before Christmas . Wasn't even that hot 38c

    • @psychedelicprawncrumpets9479
      @psychedelicprawncrumpets9479 Год назад

      Sorry to hear you live in midland. My condolences 😂

    • @Lnch4ALion
      @Lnch4ALion Год назад

      @@psychedelicprawncrumpets9479 im not actually midland (midvale), but too close for my liking

    • @psychedelicprawncrumpets9479
      @psychedelicprawncrumpets9479 Год назад +1

      @@Lnch4ALion I worked at the old pub there in midvale back in the late 80s to cover a mates shifts for a while.. Some nut cases around then

  • @Teagirl009
    @Teagirl009 Год назад +4

    Happy Arvo Ryan. (I say at 9pm lol)
    I subscribe to Ross's channel, enjoyed your reaction to his video. He's a nice guy with a lovely family and pretty good attitude in embracing Aussie life. I've seen him pop up on a couple of other RUclipsrs channels both in Aus and the US. Maybe your paths will cross for a Collab some time.
    The UV radiation or intensity is higher here because as he said, the earth's orbit brings us closer to the sun in summer. About 7% higher I think.
    Yes there's an ozone thinning but it has been healing and that was over Antarctica, not Australia. Though it apparently did affect Tasmania which is closest to Antarctica and has intense UV. Also another factor is our low or light pollutions levels in Australia. Some of the cleanest air anywhere is in Tasmania, which means a bit less protection too.
    The Rego thing reminded me of a post or something I saw the other other, it was a screenshot of an American dissing Australia for saying "doco" for documentary. He called us a "deeply unserious country" hahaha.
    Yep Chippie is a carpenter, Sparky is an electrician, Brick layer is a Brickie, fire fighter is a firie, the post delivery person is a postie, a politician is a pollie, a truck driver is a truckie, a musician is a muso, a paramedic or ambulance officer is Ambo, the people that come and collect your garbage bins from out front of your home - that's a Garbo, a journalist is a Journo. Relatives are rellos (or rellies). Lol I'll stop because I could go on for ages. 😆

    • @rodnob231
      @rodnob231 Год назад +1

      If the Earth has an Elliptical path then why is it Winter in the northern hemisphere and Summer in the southern Hemisphere (or visa versa)IT DOESN'T MAKE SENSE.
      I was taught at school (in the 60's)that the Earth goes in an Elliptical orbit, satellites don't go in an Elliptical orbit or the Moon, Comets do however.

  • @reannejarvis9464
    @reannejarvis9464 Год назад +5

    Tasmania’s magpies don’t swoop. Lucky us. During the 1967 bush fires in Tasmania some houses and trees definitely exploded. To help avoid shark attacks no black diving suits, use coloured ones, don’t swim at dawn or dusk that’s their feeding times.

  • @jayemes1552
    @jayemes1552 Год назад +4

    Lived my whole life in Australia (Sydney until recently) and I have never even been warned about jaywalking let alone fined for it. It's not a thing.
    The first time I ever heard of it was when I was a tourist in New York. Crossing the road and I hear a siren go and then a cop yelling at me through his loud speaker "YOU ARE JAYWALKING! DO NOT JAYWALK!"

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад +2

      They do regular blitzes in Chatswood & I'm pretty sure teh CBD too & I'm sure a few other places. Basically if there's a LOT of pedestrians in an area & a pedestrian fatality happens in said area, they will blitz the area for years after

    • @alurker3985
      @alurker3985 Год назад +1

      Same here. Besides in my small country town there is only one set of traffic lights so people wander across the roads at all hours and in all places.

    • @jayemes1552
      @jayemes1552 Год назад

      @@mehere8038I must just be lucky because I've jaywalked all over Chatswood. Not so much as a warning.

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад

      @@jayemes1552 bottom of the mall is the one to watch. Numbers fined usually appear in an article about it (after the event) in the north shore times

  • @lisc7204
    @lisc7204 Год назад +2

    My cousin was driving to Darwin, but turned around and headed back south as she passed far too many melted car tyres on the roads.

  • @samanthageorge4531
    @samanthageorge4531 Год назад +4

    Ryan, we Aussies here down under have a slang term for everything.

  • @lillibitjohnson7293
    @lillibitjohnson7293 Год назад +4

    Aussie doesn’t have self protection laws as such, we can fight back but as soon as you’ve contained them you have to stop (people that is)

  • @JustJokes-bw4fs
    @JustJokes-bw4fs Год назад +2

    Hey Ryan, tradie is any tradesperson (I added this one in)... Yes I call firefighters....firies. Carpenters and definitely chippies and I've never heard anyone say registration. I've noticed on American shows that you say refrigerator, I couldn't believe it, so long and formal. It's a fridge here. If you can make it shorter, we will 😃

  • @Di_678
    @Di_678 Год назад +3

    Hi Ryan. It was so hot in Eastern Victoria Monday, my phone told me it couldn't use the camera due to the heat 🤣 I also have an email Folder called REGO 👍

  • @rais1953
    @rais1953 Год назад +1

    "Rego" - how often do you say it? Well, depending on whether you can afford to pay for 3, 6 or 12 months' registration when it falls due, you might have to "renew my rego" up to four times a year. The "rego" charge includes the mandatory third party insurance fee so it's not cheap.

  • @ValerieKerr11
    @ValerieKerr11 Год назад +5

    You can do all that in Canberra, dodging kangaroos on the road etc... I volunteer at a hospital where there are about 200 kangaroos lying in the sun all around the grounds early in the morning.

    • @shauna1103
      @shauna1103 Год назад +1

      Is that on lake burley griffin?

    • @ValerieKerr11
      @ValerieKerr11 Год назад

      @@shauna1103 No, but you'll find them there too, it's at the new teaching hospital, on the grounds of the University of Canberra in Bruce. I've also seen the odd 3 or 4 quite often around the ANU in the city.

  • @Shado_wolf
    @Shado_wolf Год назад +1

    Jaywalking isn't specifically illegal... "the Australian Road Rules a number of offences exist in relation to walking without regard to other road users or without regard to safety"
    It is an offence to cross within 20m of a crossing, and to cross an intersection diagonally, unless that intersection allows it. That's about it 🤷 so those 3000 people were just being STUPID!

  • @ThatguyPurps
    @ThatguyPurps Год назад +1

    Jaywalking? Um, born and raised Aussie... lived in a few of the cities and towns in this country.. NEVER heard of anyone getting a jaywalking ticket. 🤷‍♂️

  • @janetslama7997
    @janetslama7997 Год назад +1

    Just love your channel it's awesome that you appreciate our cultural behaviour
    Can you do a reaction video to Eric Bogle's ::::: The Band Played Waltzing Matilda
    I saw it for the first time the other night and I think that you'll appreciate watching it also
    Av a fair dinkum awesome Arvo

  • @Sarah-et3pj
    @Sarah-et3pj Год назад +1

    So on the sunscreens, Australia has the strictest sunscreen standards in the world. To the point where some brands don't even get their sunscreens registered here, or they get downgraded. Paula's Choice sunscreen comes to mind. I've seen the same product labelled SPF50 outside Australia, and SPF30 inside Australia.
    The plus on the SPF50+ label means the SPF is tested at a minimum of 65. Products aren't allowed to be labelled higher than that. I guess they don't want people feeling like they can leave it ages without reapplying.

  • @lillibitjohnson7293
    @lillibitjohnson7293 Год назад +2

    Happy arvo mate

  • @martinellis38
    @martinellis38 Год назад +1

    Don't fight a Kangaroo. Beside being an bad, cruel and idiotic thing to do You'll get arrested. And even if you don't, kangaroos don't box. They kick. And they aim between your legs.

  • @trixnia463
    @trixnia463 Год назад +1

    actually australia sunscreen spf is stronger and works way better than most. if i remember your guys spf 30 is kinda like our spf 15 (do correct me if i'm wrong) and our spf 30 is like your spf 50

  • @mainlyfine
    @mainlyfine Год назад +1

    We ALL say Rego. It is What we call car registration. No other kind of registration mind - just car registration..

  • @KayveePlays
    @KayveePlays Год назад +2

    So. About that only two dangerous spiders in Australia bit. It's true for the most part. But other spiders will leave you quite sick. Also one of those dangerous spiders, the redback is actually a fairly common spider, that hides in wood piles and in small enclosed spaces. So moving and doing garden stuff makes gloves a must. Another horrid spider that is also common is the whitetail which hangs about inside your house and their bite makes you quite unpleasantly sick. Killed one of those just last night.

  • @dee-smart
    @dee-smart Год назад +3

    People go to safe well known beaches to swim and mainly in large cities as opposed to rural areas where there are small beaches that are not manned. You will find, for instance in Sydney, that a lot of the beaches have shark proof pools so you can do laps for instance and not worry about predators. I do recall on one of the TV show Bondi Rescue the lifesaver had to go and find a small baby shark that managed to get into the pool, but generally speaking you are pretty safe. Also we have choppers that circle around and check the main beaches for possible sharks. They patrol areas and the lifeguards can call them into their beach if someone comes up to them and says they thought they saw one and have it checked out and there are sirens and people have to get out of the water until they get the all clear.

  • @XaviRonaldo0
    @XaviRonaldo0 Год назад +1

    The jaywalking thing is slightly wrong. At least in NSW unless the rule has changed but you can cross wherever unless it's within 50m of a designated crossing.

  • @devolve2645
    @devolve2645 Год назад +1

    I’ve travelled throughout a bit of Australia and lived in some of the main cites. And I’m saying it now, the Gold Coast is probably the best. If it’s a bit too hot then live in Melbourne. Gold Coast is the best tho, especially the beach. The outback is so overrated. Maybe good for holidays but not for living

  • @50NewEyes
    @50NewEyes Год назад +1

    Rego is said only 3 times a year..
    Shit when’s rego due?
    Where’s the rego paperwork?
    I paid the rego!….

  • @cbjones2212
    @cbjones2212 Год назад +1

    Yep, a carpenter is a chippie (wood chips of course), an electrician is a sparky, a tradesperson is a tradie, a bricklayer - brickie, but a plumber is...a plumber (unless someone can help me out here?)

  • @DD-58
    @DD-58 Год назад +1

    Jay walking fines..Think thats a 'city' thing..Here in Geelong we cross roads wherever we can safely😁 & cops dont care. A crossing sound for deaf people?..Think you fluffed that Ryan..Its for visually impaired..but we know what you meant🤔🙄🤣 Yep gum trees combust under extreme heat. I feed my adopted wild magpie family evey day..yes they do recognize & remember you & tell their mates!😊 Why say a long word when you can shorten it! Happy Arvo😉😁

  • @jba221
    @jba221 Год назад +3

    $80 is nothing for a fine 😔
    Fines here in Australia are crazy high

  • @lesleyvass8739
    @lesleyvass8739 Год назад +1

    We ( Australians) do not have guns, ‘at the end of the day’ ! Forget guns! Also, do not take on a kangaroo, unless you want your intestines wrapping your ankles!

  • @zwieseler
    @zwieseler Год назад +6

    What he was getting at about the elliptical path of Earth around the sun was that when you’re in the Dominican Republic you are farther away from the sun than you are when you are in Australia in the summer.

    • @rodnob231
      @rodnob231 Год назад +2

      If the Earth has an Elliptical path then why is it Winter in the northern hemisphere and Summer in the southern Hemisphere (or visa versa)IT DOESN'T MAKE SENSE.
      I was taught at school (in the 60's)that the Earth goes in an Elliptical orbit, satellites don't go in an Elliptical orbit or the Moon, Comets do however.

    • @rodnob231
      @rodnob231 Год назад +1

      Agree on the Earth Tilt But not on an Elliptical orbit,The northern hemisphere is tilted to the Sun in summer while the Southern hemisphere is tilted away making it winter there.Autumn (fall) & Spring have a neutral tilt so climates in both North and south have similar Temperatures.

  • @crystalclear8358
    @crystalclear8358 Год назад +1

    Everyone uses rego, but only people on the East Coast say cozzie. In WA we call them bathers.

  • @tomzz2712
    @tomzz2712 Год назад +1

    Im pretty sure the jaywalking rule is only applied if there is a crosswalk within 50 or something like that meters.

  • @TheSamleigh
    @TheSamleigh Год назад +1

    REGO is the ONLY WORD USED - NEVER registration.

  • @markflint2629
    @markflint2629 Год назад +1

    Actually Pedestrians in Australia have the right of way at all times it’s in the road rules so this J walking thing is bullshit

  • @garros
    @garros Год назад +1

    Only certain male magpies swoop, and they only swoop selected people. They very literally hold grudges against specific people - this has been proven scientifically. They're superintelligent birds and they have the most beautiful warblng call.

  • @mrcocopop2423
    @mrcocopop2423 Год назад +3

    I actually live in Australia and people some say it’s bad

  • @barryluxford5969
    @barryluxford5969 Год назад +1

    magpies are not dangerous, it's the plovers that are dangerous.

  • @washyshortshot3013
    @washyshortshot3013 Год назад +1

    There have only every been 4 people who have died from Stingrays

  • @wogozyt
    @wogozyt Год назад +1

    Thanks for the video, I laughed a lot 😂 no seriously. The guy in the video must have just googled: most famous Australian stereotypes. Isacc Butterfield made some good videos about Australia a while ago.
    .

  • @lillibitjohnson7293
    @lillibitjohnson7293 Год назад +3

    We fixed the ozone hole but our positioning in the sun is just different lol I get tanned sitting under an awning lol

  • @musicalneptunian
    @musicalneptunian Год назад +1

    Pt 1: when the first settlers came to Australia they painted the light wrongly; they had never met light and sun as bright.

  • @michelleclark79709
    @michelleclark79709 Год назад +1

    I just watched a video I think you’ll love. A beginners guide to Australian football. It’s very accurate and succinct. It actually explains the rules very well and it’s the best one of these I’ve seen.

  • @ianmontgomery7534
    @ianmontgomery7534 Год назад +1

    If you want to check the registration status of your car (or even a hire car) in my state the websit is called vicrego.

  • @PaulMurrayCanberra
    @PaulMurrayCanberra Год назад +1

    Ozone layer - it's not so much that the sun is hotter, it's that it has more UV in it.

  • @melissajadetarot5401
    @melissajadetarot5401 Год назад +2

    The spontaneous combustion is true I'm pretty sure, also get dry lightening which starts fires. It's becoming an issue to prevent bushfires and floods. We generally have icey cold aircon everywhere to stay comfortable.
    Everybody jaywalks lol

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад

      @@tlihdsnm26947 Look up the Black Saturday fires for pretty shocking stuff. At least last time I looked, the info on them was much more intense than the Sydney ones, 1,500 hiroshima bombs in power apparently & over 30km spotting!
      I think one of the Canberra ones was where the spontaneous combustion was first filmed, but there's been more of them since & lots more reports without filming of that from fireies

  • @callo1276
    @callo1276 Год назад +2

    When I was a child, a magpie we had at a local park went for me every day I walked past. In my opinion the wing hitting you is a horrible feeling.
    He should also react to the inland taipan and the brown snake.

  • @franbenson8294
    @franbenson8294 Год назад +3

    Hi Ryan ,at the moment I am feeding about 6 magpies who come to visit. An interesting thing about magpies is that they imprint your face , so if you are kind , they recognise you and won't swoop !!! Very smart birds. What is the your postal address? I have a few goodies to send you. All the best. Fran 🤔🦅

    • @JB-zs1oq
      @JB-zs1oq Год назад +2

      I have a friend who started feeding a magpie, who eventually brought his "wife" to be fed. When they had young they would eat and take additional food back to the nest. As they grew a bit older they also visited. My friend named each magpie and they learned to trust him, sitting on the side of his chair as he brought out food. this has been happening now for over 6 years and he has met several generations. He has never had a magpie swoop and rather looks forward to the daily visits.

  • @lyndawebb6867
    @lyndawebb6867 Год назад +1

    Hi Ryan, howzit going? Speaking from the perspective of an indigenous Australian. The best deterrent from a magpie attack, is to strip a small branch from a tree, and swing it around your head. It will keep anything with wings, from attacking you.

    • @Aussie565
      @Aussie565 Месяц назад

      I’d rather hear your opinions than a new Aussie

  • @delgadotoothless1659
    @delgadotoothless1659 Год назад +1

    We use the word “Rego” very often. My family very rarely say “car registration”😂

    • @doubledee9675
      @doubledee9675 Год назад +1

      I don't know anyone who uses the full word.

  • @aleeshawillow4017
    @aleeshawillow4017 Год назад +1

    Pleaseee react to 5 seconds of summer Aussie slang

  • @ProudAussieKateFace
    @ProudAussieKateFace Год назад +1

    Crossing the road is not that big of deal 😂😂😂

  • @levlylove
    @levlylove Год назад +2

    Rego. It's not about how often a word comes up in conversation, it's about having a shortened version prepared for when it does.

    • @Mirrorgirl492
      @Mirrorgirl492 Год назад +1

      Exactly. I's not unsusal for a workmate (or yourself) to say: "Bloody Rego is due this week."

  • @mikeparkes7922
    @mikeparkes7922 Год назад

    Ryan is obviously unaware that kangaroos can (and try to) disembowel you by kicking with their back legs...