That "crazy entertainment" program, was called "Hurtigruten minutt for minutt", which means "The coastal line minute by minute". It was a live feed shown on TV back in 2011, from the coastal liner (ship) which takes about 5.5 days for a one-way trip between Bergen and Kirkenes. 2.6 million Norwegians (half the population) tuned into it during that week, to check what it was about, though most didn't keep watching. It was quite popular among international viewers, watching it online. It was also shown live on a subway station in Seoul, South Korea. It was awarded with a Guinness world record, for longest un-interrupted live documentary ever, clocking in at well over 134 hours.
The 'spotting the foreigner' part of the 'trolly trolls' was that the husband didn't touch the child or the pram. The mother had the child on her hip and was pulling the pram after her and the husband was just walking along side, doing shit-all. Cultural differences.
exactly, its not that he was the one pushing the pram. but look at her holding child AND pram, struggling, while he just walked empty handed behind them, not even helping with neither.
"74% electric cars" is not the entire car population but the percentage of new cars being sold that were fully electric at the time of filming this video. Now that number is probably around 80% or higher (and climbing). As for the total population of cars about 16% is electric as of 2021 and growing fast.
Snow, depends on where in the country you are, but normally you can have snow from november to april... usually there is still snow in the mountains during easter, and norwegians love going skiing during easter holiday.
April weather, in swedish: aprilväder. It's a phenomenon on the northern hemisphere that is caused by spring warming. During April the temperature raises the most and that causes all kinds of weather. It can be sunny and 15-20 C one day and snow and rain the next day.
we have multiple "false-springs" .. meaning.. the snow will melt, the birds will sing.. the grass will green and flowers will blossom... then it will all be covered once again by snow ... this process repeats a few times before true spring arrives.
The disposable grill is very common here in Sweden as well! It's just so easy to bring in a backpack or a bag when you're out with your friends! You can just sit down anywhere you'd like and start a barbecue, like on a beach, in the park or even at a mountain top 😊 I use one at least once every summer. Honestly I'm surprised americans don't have them? 😅 I thought YOU out of all people on the earth would be using them the most! 😆
I live in Norway, its a special place on Earth❤️ yes it snows in the spring here, even in the summer sometimes. have several times scraped ice and brushed snow off the windscreen of the car in June. Paying NOK 130 for a beer in a bar is normal😂 but it's a place where you can do what you want and often have a good interaction between the urban and old tradition. for example, I am an electrical engineer myself at the same time that I live on an old farm and drive a tractor and plow snow and mow fields. but works in the city during the day. you should also check out the hunting and fishing traditions here, we are one of the countries with the most guns per inhabitant in the world, but so to speak no crime involving the use of firearms😄
When it comes to norwegian weather it all depends. In oslo and south east norway you will generally have snow from december maybe november until febrauary/mars maybe april. In south west norway you are lucky if you see any snow at all, then if you go to northern norway you will generally see snow from early november maybe even october until late may maybe even june if you are enough north. So it all depends on where you go in norway really.
The #4 "Slow TV" - consider it more like your TV is turned into a windows to a view you do not normally have. The idea is that you just have it on in the background.
You just earned a subscriber 🙂 Not only for the content you upload, but because you have that "RUclipsr personality" that is easy to like! (And no, it does NOT mean that you're just like everyone else BTW 😅)
You also get a lot of information about Norwegian culture in the comments. It would have been more intresting to follow your channel if you sometimes read and gave response to the comments of your subscribers. Just an advice.
@@eVOLUC Ikke mange som gidder følge en kanal og bidra med mer kunnskap og info om temaet til en som aldri leser kommentarer liksom? Nå trøkka jeg til på norsk jeg også ;) Spiller neppe noen rolle innpå her det ...
@@lailajensen8012 han har en annen kanal som omhandler UK også, akkurat det samme. Reaksjonsvideoer om landet. Mulig det er flere andre land og, det er under ett annet kanal navn.
Yes, it does actually snow in the spring in Norway. Not only April, but also May, also June (summer month ! ) sometimes in the northernmost parts of Norway. In 2020 we had snow for a whole week lying in the middle of May, and that was in southern Norway as well. But that was really very unusual. Look at my videos, two of them are showing this..
The disposoble grill, is for ease the possiblity to taking on hiking and all sorts of trips, boat trips, picnic about anywhere:) Quite handy:) and snow in the spring quite possible even tho it migth change due to the climate change of globlal warming:)
It wasn't the best example of slow-TV. A better one was the time where they broadcasted eight hours of people knitting. You must admit that's a bit crazy? I've experienced snow in Oslo in June, but that is extremely rare. Snow in April is fairly common, but it doesn't happen every year. Norway is a very tall country though, so it can be full summer in Oslo a month before the snow melts in the north.
Snow used to occur from October to May, but in northern Norway even longer parts of the year. In the last two years there has been little snow, probably due to changes in the climate.
My friends came for a visit in July and we took them over to the West Coast a bit and it snowed up at the view-lookout. It's when Latitude meets Altitude. But, yes, we can have snow during the 17 Mai parade here in Trondheim.
Late snowfall. At the latest in 2015, large parts of Eastern Norway received 16 cm of snow on 1 May. And it has rained before too, like in 1998, when 25 cm fell on 3 May.
He is talking about Slow TV. The concept is following a specific vessel or vehicle minute by minute from city to city. For some reason that became popular...
Minute by minute is big in Norway, you follow the theme of that series every minute. Every christmas eve in my house, we have minute by minute: Juleribbe (christmas pork ribs) on tv, while juleribba is in the oven.
Where I live in the hills of Oslo, it always snows between December and April. But we have had snow in early October and June at the extreme cases. Just downtown winter is one month shorter in each end because it is typically 4 degrees C warmer year round. I feel like I live in Narnia.
08:30 I suspect what he means is that it's crazy how some people would consider something so boring as a slow dragged out sightseeing-esque TV Program to be called "Entertaining" when it's nothing entertaining at all, but we still have it on some of our TV channels... 13:50 Disposible grills are sold in nearly all grocerystores, some specialist stores, and gas stations, almost all year round - if not all year round - for relatively cheap money. What you get is basically an aluminum pan filled with some charcoal, usually on top of these will be a sheet/pad moistened from some kind of accellerant, with a bbq grill/rack on top of that held in place by the aluminum pan's top edges being bent over the edges of the grill/rack. You'll also get metal rods shaped to function as feet of sorts, to lift the grill up a little from the surface it is on. People will often buy these for a quick barbeque while out with friends or family in the park or the beach, or anywhere else ideal for such eating, and they'll usually bring with them packs of ready made burgers and hotdogs that just have to be heated up to eat, along with the hamburger and hotdog buns. Some will get even more fancy about it and bring along other stuff, but those people are generally the minority as far as people using these disposable grills are concerned. 17:25 That is indeed possible, if you are at the right places in Norway, you can easily find yourself surrounded by snow even in spring, and some places even taller snow than in this clip.
In sweden even those metal disposable grills are banned, now you can only get them made from natural materials. Like the last one I used was made from a log, and one made out of cardboard, volcanic stone and bambu.
By far not everybody is not drunk in the weekend but we got a lot people of weekend alcoholics. period addicted but they refuse to admit that they are addicted , i don`t drink at all , high on life and a lot of hobbies. topless tanning is quite normal in sweden and norway
Regarding snow. In northern norway (interior), where I live, it snows and the ground is (usually) covered in snow from october/november to april. But it varies quite a bit. Some years there's barely any snow before christmas. Other years, the snow may come as early as september, but that is a long time since I saw last. It seems that snow cover happens later and later. I guess that might be due to climate change. Regarding the south of Norway, like Oslo, I honestly don't know the usual times, because I'm not down there very often. Oslo is a two hour flight away so I don't usually go there. Snow falling (but not staying on the ground as it melts immediataly) can happen as late as may and as early as september. I have personally never seen snow in june, july or august. Right now, september 23, there is no snow here and it's 11C outsite (52F) at six in the afternoon. There has been no freezing yet, not even at night. The trees are getting all kinds of fall colors and the grass is getting more brown. I don't think we'll have any snow coverage for at least a month yet, but it's very unpredictable. I have my winter tires ready for my car for whenever it happens. Only the tallest mountains (1000 meters+) in my area have a bit of snow on top right now.
I have lived in 51 year...and i have in all this years had snow more and less , all months in the year.....winter is normally here in mid Norway from October till may but it can snow every month, but we hope for summer from may til august......
The car thing: the ads are all in nature to show off how capable the car is. Like "Look, you could even drive it in this terrain! and this terrain! and your car wouldn't even get a scratch!" Us Norwegians REAALLY want to know how durable and good quality something is before buying! xD
Up north where I'm from we had about 22 inches of snowfall in May this year and broke the previous record.. from 2020 The snow wasn't completely gone until the last week of may/first week of June. But that's up north, down south they had spring and sun and summer temperatures
Its possible as we do live abit north, I live above the arctic circle and we have snow to atleast may .. but even sometimes into june, then summer starts and because I live in a arctic enviroment average summertemperature is around 10 degrees celcius, but we can have warm days ofcourse... like days with 25-30 degrees celcius. We can have snow from October to may ... as we had this last winter 🙂
Hi. About the snow in the end. This year 2022 it start snowing in October, and then it is normal to snow until April. Some years as late as into the national day of Norway The 17 of May. I been a band instructor for 26 years, and i have had outdoor exercise in May. But i also have had weeks in April with close to 28C . This last days we have had some stormy days, with wind up to 130 km per hour and snow. So we will have at least 4 months more with winter weather from now on. One of the other things in the video was about the babies sleeping outside in the winter. I have to grown boys that has their child sleeps outside. My boys did sleep outside when they grew up, and i did sleep outside when i was a baby years ago. The children is watched by their parents, grandparents, kindergarten, neighbours as a traditional way of taking care of the children. You always have an eye on the stroller to watch. To sleep out helps to get the healthcare system in your body to get stronger. I am still sleeping in a bedroom were it can be under 0 Celsius, but i use blankets to keep my body warm, but i sleep much better in cold clear air. I wish you a Happy New Year
The climate in Oslo is somewhat like living in Boulder, Colorado. Only with slower transitions between the seasons. If that makes sense... I guess not that many people have lived in Boulder, CO
I love the arguement that breasts are sexual organs and thats why they are frowned upon seeing in public, even though male breasts are also a sexual organ and we don't lose out shit when a guy doesn't have a shirt on. The argument that breasts control horomones that contribute to sexual function is also funny since in both men and women they do produce estrogen, which yes is required to sexually function, but once again is something that occurs in both sexes. male breasts are often smaller because our reproductive system is more sensitive to high levels of estrogen, but we still got estrogen. The funniest by far is the argument that it's because women have more nerves or can be sexually stimulated by the breasts is why it's a sigma to see them, even though men and women have the same amount of nerves in their breasts and can both feel sexual preasure from them. It's easily the funniest because it's so unbelievably dumb, and so obviously written by some old man.
we have snow 8-9 months, east and north, west south west is a litle diffrent, 6-7 monts or a small part in the west near bergen, has 4 monts with snow, bearly sticks to the ground though
3:18 I wonder if they counted with hybrid cars that are partially electric. 8:55 I thought it was gonna be about all the troll statues and souvenirs we have... I have never heard of/noticed the "mysterious tracks" myself
The transport thing not sitting " together" is also a thing here in Denmark... it's all about respecting your personal space....and . that we don't vaste time doing superficial conversation
I think this is much more common than people think. I was recently in Switzerland and people do the same there as well. You only start sitting next to someone once all the double seats already have someone in them. And a lot of pople choose to rather stand on trams and buses than sit down next to another person. We Scandinavians like to believe this is very unique, but I don't think it is.
But it's also quite common that people HAVE to sit together if they want a seat because its actually crowded (talking of Norway, but it would surprise me if that never happens in Denmark). I have taken the train a lot and more often than not end up sitting next to someone simply because its whats available. Given the choice Id still prefer to sit alone and I assume most others would
As to Feb. 1,2022 the percentage is 83.7% of first-time registered owner of electric cars in Norway. Aa Elon Musk said - «Thank you Norway» Tesla founder Elon Musk delivered a heartfelt and grateful «thank you» to Christina Bu of the Norwegian EV Association for Norway´s strong support to electric vehicles.. So thats says a lot about the Norwegians involvement and awareness w.r.t. Climate change. Myself I have to wait 5 months (in Feb. 2023 to be exact) to switchnfrom hybrid to a full electric car. Marvelous presentation Tyler Thank you so much for your attention and love for Norway🌸🌸🌸🍃❤️😍
Hi, I'm from Norway. Its so fun to watch your videos 👍😃 I recommend to watch " The Norwegian kings speech" . Its a famous speech, so you'll have no problem finding it on utube.
the ship thing was "hurtigruta minutt for minutt" its an ferry route rather kniwn in norway south to north and they followe di tmnute for minute for five days we also had a show when we follwoed a train from oslo to bergen i belive
This RUclipsr you're reaction to here is kinda serious, but as you probably noticed he exaggerates and stereotypes to gets his points across. How much and when it's snowing in Norway greatly depends on where you live. Along the coast in southern Norway (like Oslo) the snow has usually melted in early April. Ocassionally it will snow a little in April still, but the snow usually melts almost immediatly. In Oslo the first snowfall in the fall usually comes in late October, but the it doesn't really get "stuck" before mid to late November. In late spring, summer and early fall the temperatures in the Oslo area is pretty similar to other places in Northern Europe (like northern Denmark, Germany and Poland, and southern Sweden). In contrast, in the very north, in Arctic Norway, the snow usually comes in late September and can stay well into May. The coldest place in general is Karasjok, in the far north of Norway. Here the winter temperature is often below -30 Celcius (-22F) and not seldom lower than -40 C (-40F). The record coldest temperature ever in Norway is also recorded here, at -51.4 C (-60.5F), although that record was set as long ago as in 1886.
Up north above the arctic circle we the last snow is falling down in April month. And we usually have the most snow in beginning of April (Tromsø have had a record of 240cm / nearly 8 feet of snow in April). But as soon as we enter May month, the snow starts melting and its gone in a few weeks. Tromsø is pretty close to the coast and we have a very mild winter here and I think the average is -5 C in the wintertime.
@@F0NIX Coast has alot to say. Just move half an hour inland and the temperature is suddenly something different. That warm water really comming in clutch, or we would have more like the climate of Northern Russia.
@@ImperialMJG Same here in Skien. Used to be lots of snow 25-30 years ago when i was a kid. But barely any snow anymore. The little we get usualy turn into slush in a day or two. Then disapears completely. Rather rare it stays these days. Winter is just a wet sloppy mess for the most part. If you go inland, the snow actually stays abit tho.
It is illegal to use sex in advertisements here in Norway. Unless there is a specific call for it. If they sell a car, a bikini girl has nothing to do with the car. If you sell a bikini, then yes a photo of a person in a bikini is OK. This was brought in to effect by popular demand as companies selling chain saws were showing irresponsible use as it is unsafe to wear only a bikini and a hard hat using a chain saw. It is now also mandatory for social media influencers to inform about retouched photos or videos. So if a cute girl is making money on her instagram account marketing cosmetics, she is no longer allowed to alter the photo without a disclaimer.
The year I spent in Norway (Bergen) it started to snow in December 12th and it didn't stop until the first week of April. And I'm fairly convinced that the rest of the world don't have those portable bbq because no land is as rainy and well cared for as Scandinavia. It's not easy to start a fire by accident there, and their people are much more ecologically aware than most of us elsewhere.
Oppdaget nettopp at Tyler her har i alle fall to andre RUclips-kanaler, henholdsvis Tyler Rumple (som reagerer på Storbritannia) og Tyler Bucket (som reagerer på Canada). Morsom gesjeft :)
Northern parts of Norway it can snow 8-9 months a year. But I'm the western part where I live, Bergen, we get around 2-4 weeks of snow each year. Usually the snow rains away after a couple of days.
Also on and off for months though, but it comes one day and rains away in the night or next day usually. And it continues like that on and off, unless it just rains and rains.
@@MrSolenoid true but we usually get these cold periods of times during the winter.. this year it lasted about a month didnt it, at least the year before.. hopefully not this year/next winter with the crazy electricity prices.
April has snow sometimes, if the winter is long.. Easter holiday is in April and that holiday is all skiing and go to the mountains. Because of climate change there arent as much snow as it used to, mostly in Dec-Febr/March
I don´t exactly know how many percent of the cars in Norway are electric, but a few years ago drivers with electric cars could pay less at the road tolls. So it makes sense that a lot of newer cars are hybrids or electric, not just because of the environment, but because of demand. "Crazy Entertainment" well... it is pretty crazy that we can find a super slow show filming the country minute by minute, entertaining. I once watched that show for about 3 hours and it filmed the route of a train. It was just nature and train stations again and again for hours.
You might get snow in early April, but not often, especially further south. But summers can be a bit chilly, more often than not it’s a bit warm but raining. You don’t have to take a dip in the ocean, you can just take a shower in the rain 😂
This summer it has been between 12-14 °C and raining every day. This in the north and West. In the south it's been the dryest summer in 21 years. So, yeah, we travel to warmer places when we can. Years ago I lived in the north and it was snowing on 5. June. It came 0.5 meter og snow that day.
We have a song that jokes we 12 months of winter. But not gonna lie. We had snow on the 17th of May, depending on where and what the weather was like. But when packing to come here, pack primarily warm and wet-resistant clothing.
For the weather... it seems like Quebec (Canada). In april we still can have big snowstorm ! 😅 And for the distancing thing, I'm soo Norwegian on that !
In canada we don't sit together on the bus unless we have to, even before covid, but if you take the aisle seat, and completely block off the window seat, you are generally looked upon as if you're a unbelievable douche. If you sit alone then take the window seat, but if somebody really needs to sit, then let them sit down, don't force people to stand why you block a seat off
winter in norway it dippends where you live in the contry. up in North there a lot of snow usely oslo is usely not that much but can be. And what we think as usly is ababut 39" but we can get more . can get cold in winter here from 23 F to -13 F .
How often does it snow in Norway?? It depends of where you are...but here, midland, from about mid november to late april. Last year the snow actually passed the top of our barn door. That's aboout 7 feet.
Winter is changing, but not unormal to get snow between October to may. Some place less some place more. And some places don’t get any snow almost at all. Go 30 yrs back or 50 yrs, it was another story.
@tyler walker Oslo has public beach at "Huk" as a "naked beah" and yes it is so that people passing by can see ALL of you, but this is considered normal in summers.....a naked person wanting some sun
the most sunny part of Norwegiay is in the east like Oslo but its usually very cold there. In Bergen and the westcost there is alot of mountains so it rains alot and tend to be pretty stormy but its not so cold as in the east. You cant really win with the weather in Norway no matter what
Up north its snowing from october to may.Now in september it has snowed twice already.3 years ago it snowed every month of the year.So if you like the boring sun and have a easy life,you go down south.If you hate the sun and loves a challange the far north is the way to go,where it is total darkness for a couple of months,and then the fucking sun wont go down for some months.And the heatwave lasted for so long this year it almost melted all the snow in the mountains.Luckily we had ALOT of rain so didnt have any issues with the heat.Most of us got a cold anyway.
the dude directly translates typical norwegian cheesy slang. that's why it sounds weird, it makes sense in norwegian. (it's basically what you'd call dad humor) and the weather just comes in waves, sometimes we get three days of snow in april.
Im pretty sure those 74% electric cars are new sales, not the actual amount of electric cars on Norwegian roads. But yeah, electric has been heavily subsidized for a decade now
The high percentage of electric cars is not true if you look at all cars in Norway. Though the stat is roughly true for FIRST TIME registration of cars in Norway, as of 2021.
That "crazy entertainment" program, was called "Hurtigruten minutt for minutt", which means "The coastal line minute by minute". It was a live feed shown on TV back in 2011, from the coastal liner (ship) which takes about 5.5 days for a one-way trip between Bergen and Kirkenes. 2.6 million Norwegians (half the population) tuned into it during that week, to check what it was about, though most didn't keep watching. It was quite popular among international viewers, watching it online. It was also shown live on a subway station in Seoul, South Korea.
It was awarded with a Guinness world record, for longest un-interrupted live documentary ever, clocking in at well over 134 hours.
Anti social: There is a joke in scandinavia: finaly 2 meter covid distanse is over, now we can go back to 5 meters.
The 'spotting the foreigner' part of the 'trolly trolls' was that the husband didn't touch the child or the pram. The mother had the child on her hip and was pulling the pram after her and the husband was just walking along side, doing shit-all. Cultural differences.
as a slavic i bet it is or slavic or far east europe family..
exactly, its not that he was the one pushing the pram. but look at her holding child AND pram, struggling, while he just walked empty handed behind them, not even helping with neither.
"74% electric cars" is not the entire car population but the percentage of new cars being sold that were fully electric at the time of filming this video. Now that number is probably around 80% or higher (and climbing). As for the total population of cars about 16% is electric as of 2021 and growing fast.
Correct and january 2024 the number is at 92.1% of new cars sold. And in 2023 the total amount was up to about 24% of the total fleet.
seems about right. i got the impression that every 5th car is a Tesla.
Snow, depends on where in the country you are, but normally you can have snow from november to april... usually there is still snow in the mountains during easter, and norwegians love going skiing during easter holiday.
yeah where i live we had snow until May the last 2 years
I remember snow on 17.mai one year.
@@irismagnussen7101 Same! Instead of dressing up in a nice dress, I instead wore a full-body snowsuit 😝
At 8:34 i also thought that something he was going to show something crazy, instead I got something that I've never heard about, and I'm from Norway
April weather, in swedish: aprilväder. It's a phenomenon on the northern hemisphere that is caused by spring warming. During April the temperature raises the most and that causes all kinds of weather. It can be sunny and 15-20 C one day and snow and rain the next day.
we have multiple "false-springs" .. meaning.. the snow will melt, the birds will sing.. the grass will green and flowers will blossom... then it will all be covered once again by snow ... this process repeats a few times before true spring arrives.
The disposable grill is very common here in Sweden as well! It's just so easy to bring in a backpack or a bag when you're out with your friends! You can just sit down anywhere you'd like and start a barbecue, like on a beach, in the park or even at a mountain top 😊
I use one at least once every summer.
Honestly I'm surprised americans don't have them? 😅 I thought YOU out of all people on the earth would be using them the most! 😆
Hva sier du til å ta med et par 100 til texas og bli milionærer?
I live in Norway, its a special place on Earth❤️ yes it snows in the spring here, even in the summer sometimes. have several times scraped ice and brushed snow off the windscreen of the car in June. Paying NOK 130 for a beer in a bar is normal😂 but it's a place where you can do what you want and often have a good interaction between the urban and old tradition. for example, I am an electrical engineer myself at the same time that I live on an old farm and drive a tractor and plow snow and mow fields. but works in the city during the day. you should also check out the hunting and fishing traditions here, we are one of the countries with the most guns per inhabitant in the world, but so to speak no crime involving the use of firearms😄
When it comes to norwegian weather it all depends. In oslo and south east norway you will generally have snow from december maybe november until febrauary/mars maybe april. In south west norway you are lucky if you see any snow at all, then if you go to northern norway you will generally see snow from early november maybe even october until late may maybe even june if you are enough north. So it all depends on where you go in norway really.
I'm Canadian & it snowed on my grandparents (mother's side) wedding day in the middle of June in southern Manitoba...
The #4 "Slow TV" - consider it more like your TV is turned into a windows to a view you do not normally have. The idea is that you just have it on in the background.
Like watching a train or boat go from town to town for days or following some animal for a whole season on their journey.
You just earned a subscriber 🙂 Not only for the content you upload, but because you have that "RUclipsr personality" that is easy to like!
(And no, it does NOT mean that you're just like everyone else BTW 😅)
74% is a old number. These days more than 90% of all new cars (none comercial) are EV's...
You also get a lot of information about Norwegian culture in the comments. It would have been more intresting to follow your channel if you sometimes read and gave response to the comments of your subscribers. Just an advice.
har tenkt det samme
@@eVOLUC Ikke mange som gidder følge en kanal og bidra med mer kunnskap og info om temaet til en som aldri leser kommentarer liksom? Nå trøkka jeg til på norsk jeg også ;) Spiller neppe noen rolle innpå her det ...
@@lailajensen8012 tror de fleste denne kanalen blir promotert for er nordmenn.. ;D
@@lailajensen8012 han har en annen kanal som omhandler UK også, akkurat det samme. Reaksjonsvideoer om landet. Mulig det er flere andre land og, det er under ett annet kanal navn.
@@lailajensen8012 synes det er veldig rart at han spør seerne om ting og ikke leser kommentarene
Yes, it does actually snow in the spring in Norway. Not only April, but also May, also June (summer month ! ) sometimes in the northernmost parts of Norway.
In 2020 we had snow for a whole week lying in the middle of May, and that was in southern Norway as well. But that was really very unusual.
Look at my videos, two of them are showing this..
The disposoble grill, is for ease the possiblity to taking on hiking and all sorts of trips, boat trips, picnic about anywhere:) Quite handy:) and snow in the spring quite possible even tho it migth change due to the climate change of globlal warming:)
17:21 yes, it is possible to have snow in spring, in 2020 on may 17th, we had snow and last year, we got rain, but this year, we get sun
It wasn't the best example of slow-TV. A better one was the time where they broadcasted eight hours of people knitting. You must admit that's a bit crazy? I've experienced snow in Oslo in June, but that is extremely rare. Snow in April is fairly common, but it doesn't happen every year. Norway is a very tall country though, so it can be full summer in Oslo a month before the snow melts in the north.
Or a fireplace for 8-12 hours were you once in a while saw people adding new wood🤣 now thats even more boring. But its background tv though.
The north is the north, and the high lands are high. But, some times we do still have snow mid May, but usually the winter is over by then.
Snow used to occur from October to May, but in northern Norway even longer parts of the year. In the last two years there has been little snow, probably due to changes in the climate.
your reactions to the titles cracked me up so much
My friends came for a visit in July and we took them over to the West Coast a bit and it snowed up at the view-lookout. It's when Latitude meets Altitude. But, yes, we can have snow during the 17 Mai parade here in Trondheim.
Late snowfall. At the latest in 2015, large parts of Eastern Norway received 16 cm of snow on 1 May. And it has rained before too, like in 1998, when 25 cm fell on 3 May.
He is talking about Slow TV. The concept is following a specific vessel or vehicle minute by minute from city to city.
For some reason that became popular...
Minute by minute is big in Norway, you follow the theme of that series every minute.
Every christmas eve in my house, we have minute by minute: Juleribbe (christmas pork ribs) on tv, while juleribba is in the oven.
nowdays Winters ( snow weather) comes really late but a few days of snow started around Tromsø area in October earliest I think this year
I think its 74% of new cars sold today are electric.
minutt for minutt is basically a live stream of something.
no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurtigruten_minutt_for_minutt
There was a blizzard on 17th of May here some years back, so yeah, weird weather...
Where I live in the hills of Oslo, it always snows between December and April. But we have had snow in early October and June at the extreme cases. Just downtown winter is one month shorter in each end because it is typically 4 degrees C warmer year round. I feel like I live in Narnia.
cold wheather is possible in the summer but usually not. hot weather also happens at winter time.
when my aunts were kids they built a snowman in summer, but now it's more common for the snow to last till around the middle of spring.
08:30 I suspect what he means is that it's crazy how some people would consider something so boring as a slow dragged out sightseeing-esque TV Program to be called "Entertaining" when it's nothing entertaining at all, but we still have it on some of our TV channels...
13:50 Disposible grills are sold in nearly all grocerystores, some specialist stores, and gas stations, almost all year round - if not all year round - for relatively cheap money.
What you get is basically an aluminum pan filled with some charcoal, usually on top of these will be a sheet/pad moistened from some kind of accellerant, with a bbq grill/rack on top of that held in place by the aluminum pan's top edges being bent over the edges of the grill/rack. You'll also get metal rods shaped to function as feet of sorts, to lift the grill up a little from the surface it is on.
People will often buy these for a quick barbeque while out with friends or family in the park or the beach, or anywhere else ideal for such eating, and they'll usually bring with them packs of ready made burgers and hotdogs that just have to be heated up to eat, along with the hamburger and hotdog buns. Some will get even more fancy about it and bring along other stuff, but those people are generally the minority as far as people using these disposable grills are concerned.
17:25 That is indeed possible, if you are at the right places in Norway, you can easily find yourself surrounded by snow even in spring, and some places even taller snow than in this clip.
In sweden even those metal disposable grills are banned, now you can only get them made from natural materials. Like the last one I used was made from a log, and one made out of cardboard, volcanic stone and bambu.
I really like your content and how you speak about things. It makes me appreaciate norway.
By far not everybody is not drunk in the weekend but we got a lot people of weekend alcoholics. period addicted but they refuse to admit that they are addicted , i don`t drink at all , high on life and a lot of hobbies. topless tanning is quite normal in sweden and norway
Regarding snow. In northern norway (interior), where I live, it snows and the ground is (usually) covered in snow from october/november to april. But it varies quite a bit. Some years there's barely any snow before christmas. Other years, the snow may come as early as september, but that is a long time since I saw last. It seems that snow cover happens later and later. I guess that might be due to climate change.
Regarding the south of Norway, like Oslo, I honestly don't know the usual times, because I'm not down there very often. Oslo is a two hour flight away so I don't usually go there.
Snow falling (but not staying on the ground as it melts immediataly) can happen as late as may and as early as september. I have personally never seen snow in june, july or august.
Right now, september 23, there is no snow here and it's 11C outsite (52F) at six in the afternoon. There has been no freezing yet, not even at night. The trees are getting all kinds of fall colors and the grass is getting more brown. I don't think we'll have any snow coverage for at least a month yet, but it's very unpredictable. I have my winter tires ready for my car for whenever it happens. Only the tallest mountains (1000 meters+) in my area have a bit of snow on top right now.
I have lived in 51 year...and i have in all this years had snow more and less , all months in the year.....winter is normally here in mid Norway from October till may but it can snow every month, but we hope for summer from may til august......
Great reaction video 😀👍😊
In the south of Norway well sometimes get snow on our national day; May 17th.
80°F is a very hot summer day, all over the country.
The car thing:
the ads are all in nature to show off how capable the car is.
Like "Look, you could even drive it in this terrain! and this terrain! and your car wouldn't even get a scratch!"
Us Norwegians REAALLY want to know how durable and good quality something is before buying! xD
It's called "slow-TV", 24/7 film of a boat traveling the coast
Up north where I'm from we had about 22 inches of snowfall in May this year and broke the previous record.. from 2020
The snow wasn't completely gone until the last week of may/first week of June.
But that's up north, down south they had spring and sun and summer temperatures
You can have snow on 17th of may in Oslo. But also 25 degrees and sun.
Its possible as we do live abit north, I live above the arctic circle and we have snow to atleast may .. but even sometimes into june, then summer starts and because I live in a arctic enviroment average summertemperature is around 10 degrees celcius, but we can have warm days ofcourse... like days with 25-30 degrees celcius. We can have snow from October to may ... as we had this last winter 🙂
Hi. About the snow in the end. This year 2022 it start snowing in October, and then it is normal to snow until April. Some years as late as into the national day of Norway The 17 of May. I been a band instructor for 26 years, and i have had outdoor exercise in May. But i also have had weeks in April with close to 28C . This last days we have had some stormy days, with wind up to 130 km per hour and snow. So we will have at least 4 months more with winter weather from now on. One of the other things in the video was about the babies sleeping outside in the winter. I have to grown boys that has their child sleeps outside. My boys did sleep outside when they grew up, and i did sleep outside when i was a baby years ago. The children is watched by their parents, grandparents, kindergarten, neighbours as a traditional way of taking care of the children. You always have an eye on the stroller to watch. To sleep out helps to get the healthcare system in your body to get stronger. I am still sleeping in a bedroom were it can be under 0 Celsius, but i use blankets to keep my body warm, but i sleep much better in cold clear air. I wish you a Happy New Year
You should move to Norway (or any Sscandinavian country), it seems like you'd fit right in!
Please do a video about the sami people i Norway
The climate in Oslo is somewhat like living in Boulder, Colorado. Only with slower transitions between the seasons. If that makes sense...
I guess not that many people have lived in Boulder, CO
Look up "slow TV" on RUclips.
Or just, "you know that you're dating a Norwegian when".
I love the arguement that breasts are sexual organs and thats why they are frowned upon seeing in public, even though male breasts are also a sexual organ and we don't lose out shit when a guy doesn't have a shirt on. The argument that breasts control horomones that contribute to sexual function is also funny since in both men and women they do produce estrogen, which yes is required to sexually function, but once again is something that occurs in both sexes. male breasts are often smaller because our reproductive system is more sensitive to high levels of estrogen, but we still got estrogen. The funniest by far is the argument that it's because women have more nerves or can be sexually stimulated by the breasts is why it's a sigma to see them, even though men and women have the same amount of nerves in their breasts and can both feel sexual preasure from them. It's easily the funniest because it's so unbelievably dumb, and so obviously written by some old man.
we have snow 8-9 months, east and north, west south west is a litle diffrent, 6-7 monts or a small part in the west near bergen, has 4 monts with snow, bearly sticks to the ground though
3:18 I wonder if they counted with hybrid cars that are partially electric. 8:55 I thought it was gonna be about all the troll statues and souvenirs we have... I have never heard of/noticed the "mysterious tracks" myself
The transport thing not sitting " together" is also a thing here in Denmark... it's all about respecting your personal space....and . that we don't vaste time doing superficial conversation
I think this is much more common than people think. I was recently in Switzerland and people do the same there as well. You only start sitting next to someone once all the double seats already have someone in them. And a lot of pople choose to rather stand on trams and buses than sit down next to another person.
We Scandinavians like to believe this is very unique, but I don't think it is.
But it's also quite common that people HAVE to sit together if they want a seat because its actually crowded (talking of Norway, but it would surprise me if that never happens in Denmark). I have taken the train a lot and more often than not end up sitting next to someone simply because its whats available. Given the choice Id still prefer to sit alone and I assume most others would
@@Antares2 maybe not 😁
Couple of years a go I had to drive like 20 miles ekstra to get home because of a foot of snow...on may 5.
The Snow usually lasts to april maybe really early may in the city i live in
As to Feb. 1,2022 the percentage is 83.7% of first-time registered owner of electric cars in Norway.
Aa Elon Musk said - «Thank you Norway» Tesla founder Elon Musk delivered a heartfelt and grateful «thank you» to Christina Bu of the Norwegian EV Association for Norway´s strong support to electric vehicles..
So thats says a lot about the Norwegians involvement and awareness w.r.t. Climate change. Myself I have to wait 5 months (in Feb. 2023 to be exact) to switchnfrom hybrid to a full electric car. Marvelous presentation Tyler Thank you so much for your attention and love for Norway🌸🌸🌸🍃❤️😍
Hi, I'm from Norway. Its so fun to watch your videos 👍😃 I recommend to watch " The Norwegian kings speech" . Its a famous speech, so you'll have no problem finding it on utube.
the ship thing was "hurtigruta minutt for minutt" its an ferry route rather kniwn in norway south to north and they followe di tmnute for minute for five days we also had a show when we follwoed a train from oslo to bergen i belive
Where i live, a bit south in Norway, it is snowing from november/december to march/april. You could say it is not a one time thing.
Three years ago we got 10 inches of snow 5. of May. And I'm not even in the north of Norway. :)
This RUclipsr you're reaction to here is kinda serious, but as you probably noticed he exaggerates and stereotypes to gets his points across. How much and when it's snowing in Norway greatly depends on where you live. Along the coast in southern Norway (like Oslo) the snow has usually melted in early April. Ocassionally it will snow a little in April still, but the snow usually melts almost immediatly. In Oslo the first snowfall in the fall usually comes in late October, but the it doesn't really get "stuck" before mid to late November. In late spring, summer and early fall the temperatures in the Oslo area is pretty similar to other places in Northern Europe (like northern Denmark, Germany and Poland, and southern Sweden).
In contrast, in the very north, in Arctic Norway, the snow usually comes in late September and can stay well into May. The coldest place in general is Karasjok, in the far north of Norway. Here the winter temperature is often below -30 Celcius (-22F) and not seldom lower than -40 C (-40F). The record coldest temperature ever in Norway is also recorded here, at -51.4 C (-60.5F), although that record was set as long ago as in 1886.
Up north above the arctic circle we the last snow is falling down in April month. And we usually have the most snow in beginning of April (Tromsø have had a record of 240cm / nearly 8 feet of snow in April). But as soon as we enter May month, the snow starts melting and its gone in a few weeks. Tromsø is pretty close to the coast and we have a very mild winter here and I think the average is -5 C in the wintertime.
@@F0NIX Coast has alot to say. Just move half an hour inland and the temperature is suddenly something different.
That warm water really comming in clutch, or we would have more like the climate of Northern Russia.
in dec 6 2021 it was -43.8 in Naimakka here in sweden...pretty damn cold...
And in Stavanger you should be glad if you Get snow at all
@@ImperialMJG Same here in Skien. Used to be lots of snow 25-30 years ago when i was a kid. But barely any snow anymore. The little we get usualy turn into slush in a day or two. Then disapears completely. Rather rare it stays these days.
Winter is just a wet sloppy mess for the most part.
If you go inland, the snow actually stays abit tho.
It is illegal to use sex in advertisements here in Norway. Unless there is a specific call for it. If they sell a car, a bikini girl has nothing to do with the car. If you sell a bikini, then yes a photo of a person in a bikini is OK.
This was brought in to effect by popular demand as companies selling chain saws were showing irresponsible use as it is unsafe to wear only a bikini and a hard hat using a chain saw.
It is now also mandatory for social media influencers to inform about retouched photos or videos. So if a cute girl is making money on her instagram account marketing cosmetics, she is no longer allowed to alter the photo without a disclaimer.
The year I spent in Norway (Bergen) it started to snow in December 12th and it didn't stop until the first week of April. And I'm fairly convinced that the rest of the world don't have those portable bbq because no land is as rainy and well cared for as Scandinavia. It's not easy to start a fire by accident there, and their people are much more ecologically aware than most of us elsewhere.
Oppdaget nettopp at Tyler her har i alle fall to andre RUclips-kanaler, henholdsvis Tyler Rumple (som reagerer på Storbritannia) og Tyler Bucket (som reagerer på Canada). Morsom gesjeft :)
Public drinking is not legal in Norway and can get you finned, but drinking in parks is socially accepted and rarely will ever get you in trouble
Not fully true, there are pubs in Norway and some restaurants that serve alcohol, people drink alcohol on festivals and concerts too
Northern parts of Norway it can snow 8-9 months a year. But I'm the western part where I live, Bergen, we get around 2-4 weeks of snow each year. Usually the snow rains away after a couple of days.
Also on and off for months though, but it comes one day and rains away in the night or next day usually. And it continues like that on and off, unless it just rains and rains.
@@Miamia_01 yeah, that’s true. Specially in Bergen. But luckily it rarely gets colder than 0 degrees Celsius.
@@MrSolenoid true but we usually get these cold periods of times during the winter.. this year it lasted about a month didnt it, at least the year before.. hopefully not this year/next winter with the crazy electricity prices.
@@Miamia_01 jo stemmer det. Bor du i Bergen også?
@@MrSolenoid 👍🏼
as someone who lives in norawy, Its a lot of snow
April has snow sometimes, if the winter is long.. Easter holiday is in April and that holiday is all skiing and go to the mountains. Because of climate change there arent as much snow as it used to, mostly in Dec-Febr/March
I don´t exactly know how many percent of the cars in Norway are electric, but a few years ago drivers with electric cars could pay less at the road tolls. So it makes sense that a lot of newer cars are hybrids or electric, not just because of the environment, but because of demand.
"Crazy Entertainment" well... it is pretty crazy that we can find a super slow show filming the country minute by minute, entertaining. I once watched that show for about 3 hours and it filmed the route of a train. It was just nature and train stations again and again for hours.
You might get snow in early April, but not often, especially further south.
But summers can be a bit chilly, more often than not it’s a bit warm but raining.
You don’t have to take a dip in the ocean, you can just take a shower in the rain 😂
This summer it has been between 12-14 °C and raining every day. This in the north and West. In the south it's been the dryest summer in 21 years. So, yeah, we travel to warmer places when we can. Years ago I lived in the north and it was snowing on 5. June. It came 0.5 meter og snow that day.
We have a song that jokes we 12 months of winter.
But not gonna lie. We had snow on the 17th of May, depending on where and what the weather was like.
But when packing to come here, pack primarily warm and wet-resistant clothing.
I have actually celebrated our independence day 17 of may in Bergen, going in a parade while it was snowing. Snow in may is very rare though.
Maybe it's rare in Bergen, not very rare in the north.
Weather: same in Britain, except not so cold and less snow, but unpredictable.
For the weather... it seems like Quebec (Canada). In april we still can have big snowstorm ! 😅 And for the distancing thing, I'm soo Norwegian on that !
It's important to know that drinking in public is illegal in Norway. People often get away with it if they are in parks tho for some reason.
In canada we don't sit together on the bus unless we have to, even before covid, but if you take the aisle seat, and completely block off the window seat, you are generally looked upon as if you're a unbelievable douche. If you sit alone then take the window seat, but if somebody really needs to sit, then let them sit down, don't force people to stand why you block a seat off
Oh I have experienced snowing in May several times. We have confused weather gods!
winter in norway it dippends where you live in the contry. up in North there a lot of snow usely oslo is usely not that much but can be. And what we think as usly is ababut 39" but we can get more . can get cold in winter here from 23 F to -13 F .
How often does it snow in Norway?? It depends of where you are...but here, midland, from about mid november to late april. Last year the snow actually passed the top of our barn door. That's aboout 7 feet.
Winter in the southern parts of Norway is far from extreme 😂
It can snow from October until May.... If you are in the northern Norway especially!
Winter is changing, but not unormal to get snow between October to may. Some place less some place more. And some places don’t get any snow almost at all. Go 30 yrs back or 50 yrs, it was another story.
@tyler walker Oslo has public beach at "Huk" as a "naked beah" and yes it is so that people passing by can see ALL of you, but this is considered normal in summers.....a naked person wanting some sun
the most sunny part of Norwegiay is in the east like Oslo but its usually very cold there. In Bergen and the westcost there is alot of mountains so it rains alot and tend to be pretty stormy but its not so cold as in the east. You cant really win with the weather in Norway no matter what
17:56 special holiday ? no just normal summer holiday
Snow in spring. Oslo and inland YES. Not so much along coastline. FYI.
In Northern Alberta, the only month that I have not seen snow is July…🇨🇦
The southwest coast of Norway we have snow maybe 2 days a year if we are lucky. Rain rain rain and more rain
Up north its snowing from october to may.Now in september it has snowed twice already.3 years ago it snowed every month of the year.So if you like the boring sun and have a easy life,you go down south.If you hate the sun and loves a challange the far north is the way to go,where it is total darkness for a couple of months,and then the fucking sun wont go down for some months.And the heatwave lasted for so long this year it almost melted all the snow in the mountains.Luckily we had ALOT of rain so didnt have any issues with the heat.Most of us got a cold anyway.
We don't typically talk to strangers in public.. Personally I do cause I enjoy smalltalk but I'm a bit of a black sheep ^^
the dude directly translates typical norwegian cheesy slang. that's why it sounds weird, it makes sense in norwegian. (it's basically what you'd call dad humor) and the weather just comes in waves, sometimes we get three days of snow in april.
Im pretty sure those 74% electric cars are new sales, not the actual amount of electric cars on Norwegian roads. But yeah, electric has been heavily subsidized for a decade now
Winter in the northern Norway is extreme. Winter from mid October to mai....
You should react to the famous Norwegian king’s speech!
The high percentage of electric cars is not true if you look at all cars in Norway. Though the stat is roughly true for FIRST TIME registration of cars in Norway, as of 2021.
To put it this way, my birthday is in May, and I have lost count on how many times it has snowed on my birthday...
You could also be in Denmark with the most of this signs of being in Norway. But the TV thing was very different.