When I talked to the Waterloopbos team, they said I'd be able to interview a guide: that guide turned out to be Dr Van Rijn, a world-class expert in hydrodynamics who worked there for 25 years. I am extremely grateful to him, and to all the folks there!
@@gwaptiva Be proud of your accent. It is more interesting than having a middle-of-the-road English pronunciation. I love this mans accent, could listen to it for hours.
That how we create jobs. we flood the rest of the world so we can build things for them. And keep doing it so they have to keep giving us money to upgrade it
@@ruv1610 there were basically a lot of pokemon to catch, there was even a report of someones phone being stolen becuz they were playing pokemon go there.
@@SeBi-lv3de I'll trade you one beach for one mountain, and you can have a canal for a piece of the black forest. We are lacking some high cliffs and old trees here 😞
@@smnoy23 when the land reclamation really started to get up to speed in the 16th century. Windmills were used to pump out the water. Hence all the windmills. The Dutch found out very quickly that very few things will actually grow in newly reclaimed seafloor soil. Except for tulips, they thrive in those conditions. So it's not that we're particularly crazy about to tulips, it's more that when we learned about it we just thought, "well, let's make some money with tulips then"
The Dutchies are going to do quite well out of any future ocean level rises: "Saaay, that's a nice coastal city you've got there. For a small ongoing fee, we'll protect it from the ocean for you."
Engineers from around the world already come here fairly regularly to learn how we do it, but i'm afraid we don't get much (if any at all) money for it.
Michael K the Netherlands build it themselves. The time of the voc etc. The country is small but they still managed to overcome all sorts of things. They deserve some spotlight
Every time you come to the Netherlands, I, being a Dutch person, wonder how you'll pronounce the Dutch words. I honestly think you're doing quite well.
@@JochemKuijpers It's too bad. We have few people that can't speak English well at all, then we have a lot of people like this expert who has the vocabulary but absolutely not the pronunciation. Luckily, I think most of us have both vocabulary and pronunciation. But most of us don't have the expertise this guy does.
I don’t know how it is arranged in other countries but in the Netherlands we also have mandatory swimming lessons in school because our country is so full of water.
Ironically because when there's a flood it's super dangerous to swim in it, And while part of the swimming lessons is "Swimming fully dressed", There's no exercise for having your legs strapped in trash or seaweed and such :') So 99% of the actual use-case of having learned to swim, is completely recreational! :D Yay!
@@lolindirlink The mandatory swimming lessons are more to do with the safety of children swimming in public places. It reduces the chances of drowning. And there are cases were they are tought to swim with clothes on. I remember when I was taking swimming lessons as a kid, that I was asked to put on old clothes next week for swimming. Plus the chances of survival during a flood with someone who knows how to swim vs someone who doesn't is also a major difference.
Not mandatory at school or in general, I took swimming lessons but it was completely apart from my school. Also there are still people here that never took swimming lessons while they lived here there whole life. (and yes I am Dutch of course, I wouldn't be saying this if I was not)
@@Metal73Mike The North sea is a marginal sea of the Atlantic. Marginal seas being a partially enclosed (by islands or peninsulas) division of an ocean. The Netherlands is still next to the Atlantic ocean.
@@ValleysOfRain The essential difference between oceans and seas is that oceans are massive saline water bodies that exist on the Earth's surface while seas are vast saline waters that are either connected or not connected to the ocean. The terms oceans and seas are often used interchangeably since they almost mean the same thing. It is, therefore, necessary to note these differences while talking about seas and oceans. Seas are usually smaller and less deep than oceans. In addition, seas and oceans host different kinds of marine animals. While aquatic species are generally abundant in the sea, they are generally less plentiful in the oceans.
@@Dockhead no actual incest, but many intermarriages between the same families over the centuries, has the same effect as incest. Many genetic diseases.
A gentleman in Amsterdam told me that I sounded like a Frenchman doing a bad impersonation of a very quiet German when I try to speak Dutch. I took it as a compliment because it sounded much worse to me.
I recently came across a study which was talking about the amount of people who would have to deal with a flood at least once a year if the climate keeps changing. At some point it said that it didn't take the Netherlands into account, which I thought was rather hilarious.
Reminds me of another comment when talking about water rise when someone pointed out contrary to what many videos say you shouldn't worry about them since they are used to dealing with it, it is the other countries that will drown because they have no clue how to handle it.
@@markfryer9880 You're totally right about that. The study I was talking about didn't take the Netherlands into account because a large part, if not most, of the Netherlands is already below sea level. But instead of losing land to the sea, we actually gained land by building dykes and draining the inside. There is even a saying "God created the universe. But the Dutch created the Netherlands". So, the study didn't take the Netherlands into account because it would break their model. That was the part I found rather hilarious :) Hopefully this clears it up a bit :D
I see a lot of Dutch here are proud of their country and they should be! As an 'outsider' who's a student of ocean engineering, I always adore the Netherlands for their brilliant engineering of the sea. Hope one day I can study there
And were planning to turn the whole Southern Sea into Even More Netherlands but international nature protection organisations wouldn't let us... Understandably
And there is a plan for a worst case scenario to polderize the entire north sea and connect England to NL, though that is only to show how bad global warming is.
My country! Yes, the Dutch are well known for our skills in water management. We're not usually that patriotic, but in this instance, I'm quite proud of our skills.
Patriotism is a blessing and is oft conflated with jingoism. Your country is home to so many engineering marvels. I would be proud and feel no shame. Your marvels reflect your culture, which in small part starts with the individual. The Dutch society is strong to have accomplished what they have.
Archeologists will be flabbergasted when they rediscover the remains of this structure about 1000 years in the future and can't figure out its purpose.
Lex Luthor - You can print money, manufacture diamonds and people are a dime a dozen, but people will always need land. It's the one thing we aren't making anymore. The Dutch - Hold my beer.
@@lintycarcass that's just the older generation.... hm, and basically everyone with lower education, and quite a bit of other people as well, nevermind
Awesome to see you do a video about this. I actually did a school project on the "Noordoostpolder" (the place where waterloopbos is located) recently, and its quite cool to see you make a video about this. I reckon waterloopbos is something many Dutch people don't know about, let alone the rest of the world, so it's nice to see you share this interesting project with the rest of the world.
Amazing... I read that a third of the street names on Canvey Island have Dutch origins because of the Dutch workers that got property on the island in turn for building the dykes.
As a former kid who loved digging little rivers in the sand at the beach and running water through them (and who still enjoys playing with, and simply watching, the snowmelt making small seasonal streams along roadsides and through the woods), this seems like it would have been a dream job, and something that computers, while making objectively better and easier, also completely ruined.
I just visited the Waterloopbos today because of this video! Thank you Tom for introducing me to this little gem of my country that I had never heard of before!
Hey Tom, I just wanted to let you know you are honestly my #1 favourite channel. You always show off really interesting places, facts and everything else and no-one else brings content as rich as yours so consistently!
Dr. Leo van Rijn has one of the best Dutch accents I heard in a while 😊 Always happy when you visit my country, especially when it’s about water or bridges.
Not only is this an immensely interesting place I didn't know about in my favourite European country, but also the clip is in a delightful Dutch accent! Tom, you make the best videos!
I need to hire a Dutch engineer to come and sort out my waterlogged back garden! I’m so glad you aren’t just another RUclips phone unboxing tech reviewer, I learn so much about the world from you.
@@Betaster3000 Sure, but you forget 2 things. 1. Nature isn't one living species, it's all of it together. If a thousands species die this second, nature doesn't care, it is still nature and it still exists. If one species, the human race, dies, then we would care. 2. Time. Nature doesn't experience time. It has millions or billions of years to claim anything back. We can destroy whatever we want. Eventually there is a huge chance the human race will perish. Nature just takes a few million years to recover and keeps on going.
I've been to those gates. They have a lovely museum there with very committed guides, they kept open an hour past normal closing time for me and my friends when we visited.
Thank You so much, Tom, for making videos about The Netherlands. I have recently moved in here and it helps me find out things I would have never thought of googling :)
@@emielvandersloot Came here to say this. The Dutch goverment, along with the British and other national goverments plan to create a couple of islands for collection and transmission of offshore wind power.
@@LetsGoGetThem Just to go a bit more philosophical for no reason: neanderthals lived harmoniously in their environment for hundreds of thousands of years before we showed up. It would be surprising to me if our 'intelligent' species could last as long.
Most of the world: "The sea levels are rising! It must be global warming!" USA: "Nah, it's not that, it must be something else." Netherlands: "No, it's definitely global warming. Hey, who wants to see our newest runway?" Denmark: "Didn't this used to be water?" Netherlands: "Nope, no idea what you're talking about." UK: "Yes it did! It was part of our fishing zone!" Norway: "No, it was, but then we took it off you." UK: "Oh yes, so you did. Bastards!" France: "What were we talking about again?" Netherlands: "Wine lake" The Netherlands whistles to itself and saunters off...
I have always had the utmost admiration for brilliant minds... the doers and builders of the world. And this is why I enjoy this awesome channel. Thank you!
I was in a bar in Helsinki, Finland. A guy on the bar was preaching how Finland will be flooded in near future. I told him to shut up because as long as Netherlands and Denmark is not complaining Finland is safe and actually the ground in Finland is rising due to the last Ice Age. I was banned from the bar.
Honestly it's amazing how our models work. A friend of mine who studied civil engineering here said that our models for floods from the rivers even take into account the flood defences of Germany upstream, such that we would still know what to do no matter what happens upstream
You've successfully defended the Netherlands against everything nature can throw at it, reached the final level, and now you have to face... the Water Loop Boss.
That's 5KM from my house, how cool! I've been there on many walks. Thanks Tom for taking a look and sharing this. And in response to other comments, great representation of the Dutss Accent(tm) indeed haha
@@jelleschelfthout3636 Tja, op welke wijze moeten we het dan leren? En nu we toch bezig zijn: 'engels' schrijf ik nog steeds met een hoofdletter 'E'...
@@jelleschelfthout3636 meh. Dat is niet typisch Nederlands hoor. Zelfs eigenwijs zijn niet - alhoewel we daar ook bekend om staan, net als gierig zijn. Zoals Martin zegt, mensen leren door op fouten gewezen te worden. Belgen zijn daar veel beter in - het Nederlands dat zij bezigen is veel correcter. Komt door Fransen, die wèl heel drammerig op taal zijn. Belgen zelf hebben zich erdoor verdeeld in een gedeelte dat 'correct' spreekt en een gedeelte wat het niet doet xD Vergelijk verder het Zuid Afrikaans maar met het Frans uit voormalige koloniën en je hoort direct het verschil.
When I worked for the MOD back in the mid-1990s we still did a lot of physical modelling - often 1:10 scale models of buildings and weapons and lots of high speed cameras...
Ini yg benar, tapi solusi harus mulai dng orangnya tinggal di Jakarta harus berhenti bangun gedung tinggi terus krn terlalu berat. Juga harus berhenti simpan semua sampah di sungai Ciliwung. Krn Belanda sdh ada pikiran solusi untuk Jakarta. Tp mentalitas orang Indonesia perlu ganti. Yg ll orang Belanda bangun banyak kanal di Batavia. Waktu merdeka orang Indonesia tutup semua kanal ini untuk air. Tidak pintar ya? Dan skg sering amat ada banjir.
I'm actually impressed by how good his English vocabulary/grammar is despite the ear-gratingly stereotypical "steenkolen Engels" accent haha. This guy's a legend.
When I talked to the Waterloopbos team, they said I'd be able to interview a guide: that guide turned out to be Dr Van Rijn, a world-class expert in hydrodynamics who worked there for 25 years. I am extremely grateful to him, and to all the folks there!
Video 1 minute ago, comment 1 week ago 🤔🤔🤔
@@thomazk2507 ikr
1 week ago 😮
Are you still in the netherlands?
@@thomazk2507 it was a private vid
Best fact about the reclaimed land in the Netherlands: The place where Schipol airport now is was once the site of a naval battle....
Haarlemmermeer, true.
The battle was near it but not directly where the airport is
@@inputsh A more accurate and cooler sounding name would be "ship's hollow"
@@shadowmanwkp or "schip's hell". Words get mangled over time.
Sorry what now? Can you repeat that? I coulda swore I heard you say that planes now fly where boats once fought!....
Madness I say, utter madness!
We simply cannot talk about the Netherlands without a professional with the most Dutchest of Dutch-English accents. I love my country :)
MidnightMagnolia jup
Wie niet aa lod of spees
Wie dit mennie studdies ol over de wurld
The man's accent was atrocious even though his vocabulary hints at academic level reading and writing skills (apart from some major dutchisms)
@@gwaptiva Be proud of your accent. It is more interesting than having a middle-of-the-road English pronunciation. I love this mans accent, could listen to it for hours.
ah yes, the dutch accent, even feared by the dutch themselves
Lmaooo
😂😂
In su yeer toesousent ...
Yep
Mostly feared by the dutch i would say, we hate that accent the most ironically
2030: The Netherlands have reclaimed so much of the ocean that the rest of the world starts to flood
That how we create jobs. we flood the rest of the world so we can build things for them. And keep doing it so they have to keep giving us money to upgrade it
That’s really not how it works lmao
I honestly believe given our constant focus on flood prevention we may well hold out longer against rising sea levels than most other countries
Not our problem 🤷🏼♂️😂
@@justinkoldenhof9039 STONKS!!!
"Too sousond"
Nice.
This dude has the thickest Dutch accent I've ever heard, especially considering his good vocabulary.
Knowing English is one thing, but speaking it is different cook
@@JoeriSmit123 Another biscuit*
@@mananasi_ananas r/woooosh
@@akka9089 I like hearing the waves too.
wooosh, woosh. They go.
Woosh, woosh. wwwrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr. woooosh. wwwwrrrrrrrrrrr. wooooosh.
@@mananasi_ananas r/wooosh
Ah, yes, the place that builds bridges so water can cross the road...
Oldschool Gamer the place that made land out of sea quite litterally
Learned that from the Romans
You know there's a structure like that right at the entrance to The Magic Kingdom in Florida?
A Q U A V I A D U C T
@@dionysdumbasschannel7772 aquaduct, without via.
Here's your fun fact of the day from a Dutch guy: this place was flooded with people during the pokemon go era.
"flooded", I like it!
flooded, punny. :-)
As a current pokemon go player, i’d like to know what happened.
@@ruv1610 there were basically a lot of pokemon to catch, there was even a report of someones phone being stolen becuz they were playing pokemon go there.
Just like Scheveningen? Whatever happened to that pikachu they placed there, anyway?
This guy has the thickest accent, yet his English is actually impeccable. You don't often see that combination.
Edit: for his generation.
the 'perpendicular' threw me off-guard lmao
I find him easier to understand than my oma and opa and they came to Australia in 1956
Lots of reading (technical literature), little speaking ;)
@@mishkapelepczuk oma = grandmother and opa = grandfather
Well, you should say that "studies have proven" it, but I get what you mean ;)
Putting ‘Netherlands’ in the title means 95% Dutch people and 5% foreign speaking watching this video
That goes for every country
It is kind of satisfying to see how proud we be.
Hello from Germany
Definitely, and I'm not sorry
engineer gaming
Tom travelling around Europe exposing regional accents.
heb jij iets tegen mensen die geen engels spreken?
volgende keer dat ik naar amerika ga, ga ik daar ook mensen nederlands doen praten om dan te lachen met hun accent :) Grappig niet
@@greenstonegecko het is maar een grapje
@@greenstonegecko Hij spreekt toch wel degelijk Engels hoor, het accent is hetgene dat opvallend is. Denk na voordat je onaardig gaat doen.
Melkmakker ah het was als grap bedoelt , niet onaardig! sorry voor de verwarring . ik zal beter moeten nadenken int vervolg
Dutch people calling out other Dutch people for their Dutch accent, huh.
As a Dutch person, I felt I had to call that out.
That's kinda common, though, right? No one is bothered by Dutch accents as much as the Dutch are.
Dunglish is objectively the best accent in the world.
Yes wie duts piepol lijk toe doe that because it sounds ferry funny
No worries. A ton of fellow Finns were complaining about our English in the previous videos related to Finland.
I like the Dutch accent, btw:)
i call you out
Interesting that it takes a Brit to point out interesting spots in my own country. Thank you!
Same XD
Der Stock dat is inderdaad interessant
Your people are too busy making large structures to make a video about the large structures they make.
@@SeBi-lv3de I'll trade you one beach for one mountain, and you can have a canal for a piece of the black forest. We are lacking some high cliffs and old trees here 😞
Inderdaad, en dan te bedenken dat ik in dat andere stuk polder woon en voor het eerst hiervan hoor :).
That accent was so Dutch, I kept unconsciously switching over to Dutch, only to not understand it because the words were indeed English.
Exactly!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Jes i dit det eswel
@@Kylllian lmaoo
Too sousand
Is it even an accent? I feel he's just going for the Dutch pronunciation every time English & Dutch have a word written the same way
I feel as far as national stereotypes go, the Dutch lucked out with “they are all excellent hydrological engineers”
They also go crazy for tulips and windmills, but who doesn’t!
@@smnoy23 when the land reclamation really started to get up to speed in the 16th century. Windmills were used to pump out the water. Hence all the windmills. The Dutch found out very quickly that very few things will actually grow in newly reclaimed seafloor soil. Except for tulips, they thrive in those conditions. So it's not that we're particularly crazy about to tulips, it's more that when we learned about it we just thought, "well, let's make some money with tulips then"
@@smnoy23 didn't tulips screwed everyone in the past because it was expensive until everyone grown it to the point it's not worth anything?
@@imageez Tulips = NFTs.
Even though when we were abroad with school a lot of people wanted drugs from us...
We are kinda like the waterbenders of the real world though...
Everyone: **Finds land, builds on it**
The Dutch: **Finds water, builds on it**
Everyone: ???
And now we know where New Orleans got the idea....
what an awful meme format, god i hate the youtube comments
The legend says it.
@@enricobianchi4499 This is not only on RUclips ;-)
@@IgnoreMyChan TheLegend27?
"I've been in meetings where they fight over every centimetre of the block".
As someone who attends multiple planning meetings, I can relate
Same in electronic, but then every mm :/
WickedOmenOfThunder nm in smaller electronics.
pm in even smaller electronics.
2:05 ‘Hier we have a natural water drop of about vijf mieters’ - dutch people Will understand
Dutch double letters like IJ are super interesting.
@@Commandelicious We also use a lot of oe's
Koe
Moe
Doe
etc.
@@MattieTobi ik sla je met een schoen
@@Commandelicious didnt know that was a special thing about us.
@@Commandelicious We have 3 Y’s in the Netherlands, the short “ei” the long “ij” and the greeks “y”
"How should we stop the floods?"
"Water loop, boss."
bos means forrest in dutch
water run forrest
Nice last name
Boss is actually an Anglicization of the Dutch word "baas".
@@bobdeinterlace isn't baas that one fish?
@@bobdeinterlace cookie is based on koekje
The Dutchies are going to do quite well out of any future ocean level rises: "Saaay, that's a nice coastal city you've got there. For a small ongoing fee, we'll protect it from the ocean for you."
Dutch Engineers have already traveled the world. (As have German or British Engineers for that matter) for their own obvious reasons and so on. :D
Yea they often say: The Dutch are going to struggle when sea levels rise. Ehh. No we are not.. At least not very soon.
Engineers from around the world already come here fairly regularly to learn how we do it, but i'm afraid we don't get much (if any at all) money for it.
Gouden eeuw part 2 soon to come?
@@Dylan-ci3lz niet als het aan broeder hugo ligt
Dutch engineers really outdo themselves. They’ve literally changed the earth.
It seems to be mostly a matter of scale and effort/money.
These people are waterbenders fr
Well, we just need to hope that others will note of it, and one day can do the same.
Michael K the Netherlands build it themselves. The time of the voc etc. The country is small but they still managed to overcome all sorts of things. They deserve some spotlight
New York City, their former colony, is gonna need their help soon.
For anyone wondering: "waterloopbos" can be quite literally translated as "watercourse forest".
And yes, Tom's pronunciation was correct.
Eh, it's sortof correct. Still a bit crooked
XD
It was even better than Dr van Rijn's pronounciation at some points.
@@Breax14 gasten, eerst even inademen en blij zijn dat een brit de w, a en o goed kon uitspreken
Literally it means water walk forest
Every time you come to the Netherlands, I, being a Dutch person, wonder how you'll pronounce the Dutch words. I honestly think you're doing quite well.
It doesn't help that the Dutch presenter is changing his pronunciation of Dutch words in English though
@@JochemKuijpers True. I was like "Tom does better than a native Dutch"
@@JochemKuijpers It's too bad. We have few people that can't speak English well at all, then we have a lot of people like this expert who has the vocabulary but absolutely not the pronunciation.
Luckily, I think most of us have both vocabulary and pronunciation. But most of us don't have the expertise this guy does.
Tom Scott studied linguistics (I think).
~[Ματ2468χκ] you are correct, Tom has a bachelor’s degree in linguistics. [insert cunning linguist joke here]
I don’t know how it is arranged in other countries but in the Netherlands we also have mandatory swimming lessons in school because our country is so full of water.
Ironically because when there's a flood it's super dangerous to swim in it, And while part of the swimming lessons is "Swimming fully dressed", There's no exercise for having your legs strapped in trash or seaweed and such :') So 99% of the actual use-case of having learned to swim, is completely recreational! :D Yay!
@@lolindirlink The mandatory swimming lessons are more to do with the safety of children swimming in public places. It reduces the chances of drowning. And there are cases were they are tought to swim with clothes on. I remember when I was taking swimming lessons as a kid, that I was asked to put on old clothes next week for swimming.
Plus the chances of survival during a flood with someone who knows how to swim vs someone who doesn't is also a major difference.
I thought every country got mandatory swimming class... In Belgium we have it too
We do in England aswell
Not mandatory at school or in general, I took swimming lessons but it was completely apart from my school. Also there are still people here that never took swimming lessons while they lived here there whole life. (and yes I am Dutch of course, I wouldn't be saying this if I was not)
The ocean: *exists*
The Dutch: How dare you.
FYI There is no ocean near The Netherlands, we have the North Sea, with an average depth of 30 meters ;-)
@@Metal73Mike The North sea is a marginal sea of the Atlantic. Marginal seas being a partially enclosed (by islands or peninsulas) division of an ocean. The Netherlands is still next to the Atlantic ocean.
@@ValleysOfRain The essential difference between oceans and seas is that oceans are massive saline water bodies that exist on the Earth's surface while seas are vast saline waters that are either connected or not connected to the ocean. The terms oceans and seas are often used interchangeably since they almost mean the same thing. It is, therefore, necessary to note these differences while talking about seas and oceans. Seas are usually smaller and less deep than oceans. In addition, seas and oceans host different kinds of marine animals. While aquatic species are generally abundant in the sea, they are generally less plentiful in the oceans.
*cries in Maldives*
@@Metal73Mike and there are plans to dam that too!
Some of the former isles are still islands in a cultural sense, as those on Urk can surely attest to.
Fun fact: because of all the incest there, Urk is like the Alabama of the netherlands
@@justjustin7060 lmao what? really?
@@Dockhead no. Alabama isn't even that high in incest
@@Dockhead no actual incest, but many intermarriages between the same families over the centuries, has the same effect as incest. Many genetic diseases.
WOAR AL MAAR DAN DUUZEND JOAREN
Everyone in the comments:
"As a Dutch person..."
It is highly annoying, indeed.
A gentleman in Amsterdam told me that I sounded like a Frenchman doing a bad impersonation of a very quiet German when I try to speak Dutch. I took it as a compliment because it sounded much worse to me.
Damn straight
As a Dutch person...
... I have to agree.
How dare the Dutch people try and comment on a video about the dutch.
I recently came across a study which was talking about the amount of people who would have to deal with a flood at least once a year if the climate keeps changing. At some point it said that it didn't take the Netherlands into account, which I thought was rather hilarious.
Reminds me of another comment when talking about water rise when someone pointed out contrary to what many videos say you shouldn't worry about them since they are used to dealing with it, it is the other countries that will drown because they have no clue how to handle it.
I do suppose that other river deltas like Bangladesh and maybe the area around New Orleans will have more difficulty indeed.
I wouldn't call being flooded out as hilarious. Quite the opposite in fact. Flood water presents many dangers and also in the mess left behind.
@@markfryer9880 You're totally right about that.
The study I was talking about didn't take the Netherlands into account because a large part, if not most, of the Netherlands is already below sea level. But instead of losing land to the sea, we actually gained land by building dykes and draining the inside. There is even a saying "God created the universe. But the Dutch created the Netherlands". So, the study didn't take the Netherlands into account because it would break their model. That was the part I found rather hilarious :)
Hopefully this clears it up a bit :D
I see a lot of Dutch here are proud of their country and they should be! As an 'outsider' who's a student of ocean engineering, I always adore the Netherlands for their brilliant engineering of the sea. Hope one day I can study there
We manage water so well, we've literally pulled an entire province out of the depths of the Southern Sea in 1918.
And were planning to turn the whole Southern Sea into Even More Netherlands but international nature protection organisations wouldn't let us... Understandably
And there is a plan for a worst case scenario to polderize the entire north sea and connect England to NL, though that is only to show how bad global warming is.
Almost, we already had Urk. A place we want to put back into the ocean.
we even put water in pipes and let that water flow throughout the whole country, into every house and building......just because we can....
Rest of the world: fighting WWI
Netherlands: Imma raise some land instead
Water: Exists
Dutch: G E K O L O N I S E E R D
ZEG MAKKER
@@Airborne675 kokosnoten zijn geen specerijen
S P E C E R I J E N ?
W A A R S P E C E R I J E N
W A S H A N D J E
Fun fact: Van Rijn is Dutch for "Of the Rhine".
Fitting, ain't it?
JT B just wanted to comment it 😂
Fun fact two: nearly nobody understand the language, but most like how strange and nice it sounds:-)
"Nominative determinism"
@@friedmule5403 that's completely wrong, if you speak German or/and English you can easily understand a lot of written Dutch
@@friedmule5403 Fun fact, Dutch is the easiest language to learn coming from English.
Venice: we live above and on the sea water
Netherlands: "we don't do that here"
The dutch have such a city as well only reachable by boats.
So its not like venice only has that.
i love how every single video with ''the netherlands'' in the title or ''dutch'' in it just gets flooded with dutch people.
> Flooded
I sea what you did there.
@@cogspace good at least someone drowns in tears from laughing :3
IT'S THE LAW!!
@regret A.B true
probably the youtube algorithm
Dutch professor: speaks proper English
Everyone: do a Dutch accent!
Dutch professor: so dis is wat we call de waterloop
My country!
Yes, the Dutch are well known for our skills in water management. We're not usually that patriotic, but in this instance, I'm quite proud of our skills.
Patriotism is a blessing and is oft conflated with jingoism. Your country is home to so many engineering marvels. I would be proud and feel no shame. Your marvels reflect your culture, which in small part starts with the individual. The Dutch society is strong to have accomplished what they have.
@@isaiahdaniels5643 thank you very much. I'm unfamiliar with jingoism, but I'll look it up.
@@mirjanbouma think basically every dictatorship ever and you have jingoism
Were not patriotic.... every video about the Dutch is littered with Dutch people in the comment section. what are you on about😂😂
@@glitterjapon doorgaans niet, behalve als het om voetbal gaat. Goede username trouwens!
Archeologists will be flabbergasted when they rediscover the remains of this structure about 1000 years in the future and can't figure out its purpose.
BrokenCurtain if there will be a 100 years
ritual or religious purposes, obviously.
It will then be down to digital archaeologists to rediscover this video to figure it all out.
BrokenCurtain - You mean when they discover it at the bottom of the ocean...? ;-)
They won't have that issue, modern day's data saving will prevent any loss of such knowledge
Lex Luthor - You can print money, manufacture diamonds and people are a dime a dozen, but people will always need land. It's the one thing we aren't making anymore.
The Dutch - Hold my beer.
Hold my beer more like Hold my terrible accent
@@lintycarcass joe are just jeloes that u cant understend us yes
@@lintycarcass that's just the older generation.... hm, and basically everyone with lower education, and quite a bit of other people as well, nevermind
Hold my stroopwafel
Hold my frikandelbroodje
Awesome to see you do a video about this. I actually did a school project on the "Noordoostpolder" (the place where waterloopbos is located) recently, and its quite cool to see you make a video about this. I reckon waterloopbos is something many Dutch people don't know about, let alone the rest of the world, so it's nice to see you share this interesting project with the rest of the world.
Netherlands gets flooded.
The Dutch: *dam it!*
:D
WHY THE JOKE but its a good one :>
im only 11 months to late
@@fekl0416 hey, at least "thatOneGuy" and 26 others appreciates it. So thanks! :D
they flanked us
punny
Thanks Tom, I grew up on Canvey Island in Essex. The reason it's an Island and not a tidal mudbank is the Dutch turned up and made it.
Amazing... I read that a third of the street names on Canvey Island have Dutch origins because of the Dutch workers that got property on the island in turn for building the dykes.
As a former kid who loved digging little rivers in the sand at the beach and running water through them (and who still enjoys playing with, and simply watching, the snowmelt making small seasonal streams along roadsides and through the woods), this seems like it would have been a dream job, and something that computers, while making objectively better and easier, also completely ruined.
I just visited the Waterloopbos today because of this video! Thank you Tom for introducing me to this little gem of my country that I had never heard of before!
Hey Tom, I just wanted to let you know you are honestly my #1 favourite channel. You always show off really interesting places, facts and everything else and no-one else brings content as rich as yours so consistently!
I live on canvey island in Essex it's metres below sea level and was built by the Dutch we have a Dutch cottage dating back to 1642
I'm from the Netherlands, and i never knew this existed. thank you Tom, for teaching me about my own country
Well, we all know whats going to happen now the Netherlands is in the title.
G E K O L O N I S E E R D
Zeg makker
@@Yoeri22 S P E C E R I J E N
Hondefluit.
@@mahj koeien bel?
Engels alstublieft
Dr. Leo van Rijn has one of the best Dutch accents I heard in a while 😊
Always happy when you visit my country, especially when it’s about water or bridges.
Not only is this an immensely interesting place I didn't know about in my favourite European country, but also the clip is in a delightful Dutch accent! Tom, you make the best videos!
I need to hire a Dutch engineer to come and sort out my waterlogged back garden!
I’m so glad you aren’t just another RUclips phone unboxing tech reviewer, I learn so much about the world from you.
-2019: Water
2019: ALBLASSERWAARDPOLDER
Fact: Biggest part of the viewers are dutch.
Dus iedereen hier zit engels te typen voor jan doedelzak.
XD
Oefenen. We have to keep de reputatie dat we all know engels very well hoog!
Wie bitte
@@fableagain nou nou, je hoeft Jan Doedel niet meteen een zak te noemen hoor. Niet zijn schuld dat we allemaal netjes in het engels schrijven.
Het is leuk voor Tom als hij de reacties onder zijn eigen video kan lezen, mocht hij daar ooit aan toe komen ;)
When you take something out of nature's hands, realise it's now in yours.
Disagree. Nature has the power to claim it back anytime. The only thing in our hands is our own survival. Nature doesn't care much either way.
@divorcedme Nature persists far beyond us, but are we not a part of nature?
@@hkr667 nature isn't some magical thing it has to abide by physics like us
@@Betaster3000 Sure, but you forget 2 things. 1. Nature isn't one living species, it's all of it together. If a thousands species die this second, nature doesn't care, it is still nature and it still exists. If one species, the human race, dies, then we would care. 2. Time. Nature doesn't experience time. It has millions or billions of years to claim anything back. We can destroy whatever we want. Eventually there is a huge chance the human race will perish. Nature just takes a few million years to recover and keeps on going.
@@hkr667 you said that nature can take it back anytime you're contradicting yourself now
Dutchman: I assure you, you are not being taken in the maling.
Me: Make that the cat wise.
I've been to those gates. They have a lovely museum there with very committed guides, they kept open an hour past normal closing time for me and my friends when we visited.
Thank You so much, Tom, for making videos about The Netherlands. I have recently moved in here and it helps me find out things I would have never thought of googling :)
This channel has got to be the best thing RUclips ever recommended to me.
At this rate I wouldn't be surprised if the Dutch reclaimed Dogger Bank
Know what your whising for :p
Sssh, don't let the English know.
@@FirefoxisredExplorerisblueGoog They'll claim it as their own.
There are actually dutch government plans to build a couple islands there to serve as a hub for wind energy and possible future hydrogen plants.
@@emielvandersloot Came here to say this.
The Dutch goverment, along with the British and other national goverments plan to create a couple of islands for collection and transmission of offshore wind power.
Congratulations on hitting 2 million subscribers. Well done tom. Thanks for all the entertainment!
It’s 2:30 am and I read this as neanderthals instead of Netherlands. It took me a while to realize what I was watching
Okay, Tom, you did great on the pronounciation. Now lets see you eat some double zoute drop...
Read that as "neanderthals" and was amazed that they could simulate the ocean 😂
That's not an insult, that's how I feel about many of my fellow countrymen.
The neanderthals were much smarter than what has been stereotyped about them.
@@LetsGoGetThem Just to go a bit more philosophical for no reason: neanderthals lived harmoniously in their environment for hundreds of thousands of years before we showed up. It would be surprising to me if our 'intelligent' species could last as long.
Same difference
so not just me.... 😄
Most of the world: "The sea levels are rising! It must be global warming!"
USA: "Nah, it's not that, it must be something else."
Netherlands: "No, it's definitely global warming. Hey, who wants to see our newest runway?"
Denmark: "Didn't this used to be water?"
Netherlands: "Nope, no idea what you're talking about."
UK: "Yes it did! It was part of our fishing zone!"
Norway: "No, it was, but then we took it off you."
UK: "Oh yes, so you did. Bastards!"
France: "What were we talking about again?"
Netherlands: "Wine lake"
The Netherlands whistles to itself and saunters off...
Some countries build islands to claim new territorial waters.
We just move the beach forward and turn it into a new canal system.
@@Healermain15 if china wants to claim the south china sea they can *damn* *well* *just* *make* *it* *south* *china* .
@@nikitamalikov6683 they already do so.
I have always had the utmost admiration for brilliant minds... the doers and builders of the world.
And this is why I enjoy this awesome channel.
Thank you!
Tom Scott has a knack for finding the Remarkably Foreign Guy with the strongest local accent for his videos.
Should’ve really let know you were in the Netherlands. You have a big ammount of fans here.
Tom's too busy for fans ;-)
If you want to meet him, you need to have something interesting. He's said that in a previous video.
I ride the train that passes that structure. Great to see you there Tom.
I love it when you create videos on the Netherlands because every time you post one, I learn something new about my own country! Thanks!
I was in a bar in Helsinki, Finland. A guy on the bar was preaching how Finland will be flooded in near future. I told him to shut up because as long as Netherlands and Denmark is not complaining Finland is safe and actually the ground in Finland is rising due to the last Ice Age. I was banned from the bar.
We need to see more of this 'Symbiotic Terraforming' as the world progresses
Honestly it's amazing how our models work. A friend of mine who studied civil engineering here said that our models for floods from the rivers even take into account the flood defences of Germany upstream, such that we would still know what to do no matter what happens upstream
And this here is why you go to engineering school in the Netherlands
2 million! Well done Tom!!
Water and its flow are truly interesting
This makes me so proud to be a part of the Dutch team as I have studied land and Watermanagement
prob 90% of the comments are dutch ppl being happy.
How about you? :D
Yes
You've successfully defended the Netherlands against everything nature can throw at it, reached the final level, and now you have to face... the Water Loop Boss.
My physics teacher actually worked at that Delta company as an engineer
Boss
Hello from the Netherlands, always nice to hear about people being here!
Tom should just be the Dutch's History teacher at this point
I read the title as “Neanderthals” instead of “Netherlands” and 50% into the video I was still very confused
Seriously nice shot at the end with that leaf going over the falls!
I originally read the title as "How the Neanderthals Simulated the Seas" The video was interesting and yet disappearing at the same time
My grandpa was part of that team and I live 5 minutes away from the waterloop bos
Kind of funny seeing a Tom Scott video about it
That's 5KM from my house, how cool! I've been there on many walks. Thanks Tom for taking a look and sharing this. And in response to other comments, great representation of the Dutss Accent(tm) indeed haha
Heerlijk accentje, maar accent betekend niet dat z'n engels slecht is. topper!
Betekent*
@@average-osrs-enjoyer Niets meer Nederlands dan elkaars spelfouten toewijzen
@@jelleschelfthout3636 Tja, op welke wijze moeten we het dan leren? En nu we toch bezig zijn: 'engels' schrijf ik nog steeds met een hoofdletter 'E'...
@@jelleschelfthout3636 meh. Dat is niet typisch Nederlands hoor. Zelfs eigenwijs zijn niet - alhoewel we daar ook bekend om staan, net als gierig zijn.
Zoals Martin zegt, mensen leren door op fouten gewezen te worden. Belgen zijn daar veel beter in - het Nederlands dat zij bezigen is veel correcter. Komt door Fransen, die wèl heel drammerig op taal zijn. Belgen zelf hebben zich erdoor verdeeld in een gedeelte dat 'correct' spreekt en een gedeelte wat het niet doet xD
Vergelijk verder het Zuid Afrikaans maar met het Frans uit voormalige koloniën en je hoort direct het verschil.
Z'n kennis is ook groot. En daar gaat het om.
water: **exists**
Some random tulip-loving hagelslag-eating bois: K O L O N I S E R E N H E T O V E R Z E E S
Don't forget their stroopwafel hunger
The slags always taste nice
Thanks to this video I went to visit the Waterloopbos and it was really cool! Definitely an underrated landmark
Love that forrest.
Did two shows there at the Oord Festival years ago.
Love the Delta Works too (Neeltje Jans)
Visited it with my father as a kidnn
There are 2 things in this world that I cannot stand: people who are intolerant of other cultures,
and 1-in-10000-year floods.
Yes
Funny enough....the Dutch are extremely intolerant towards intolerance.
So it's a bit hypocritical.
@@warriorson7979 that seems to be the only thing twe are intolerent towoards
@@warriorson7979 tolerating intolerance leads to a dilemma.
We swim the last one if we must
its like if new orleans was well planned
When hurricane Katrina happened, I could only watch the news in disbelief. What kind of water defense was that even. It was hopelessly inadequate.
If the Dutch built it instead of the French
Mother nature laughs at men but the dutch laughs at mother nature and says G E K O L O N I S E E R D
Seriously? No one is gonna mention 0:51? Such a slick movement XD
When I worked for the MOD back in the mid-1990s we still did a lot of physical modelling - often 1:10 scale models of buildings and weapons and lots of high speed cameras...
The sinking Jakarta: "We need the Dutch back"
Learn from Lagos, a comparable city to Jakarta. They had similar problems and it is now solved.
Ini yg benar, tapi solusi harus mulai dng orangnya tinggal di Jakarta harus berhenti bangun gedung tinggi terus krn terlalu berat. Juga harus berhenti simpan semua sampah di sungai Ciliwung. Krn Belanda sdh ada pikiran solusi untuk Jakarta. Tp mentalitas orang Indonesia perlu ganti. Yg ll orang Belanda bangun banyak kanal di Batavia. Waktu merdeka orang Indonesia tutup semua kanal ini untuk air. Tidak pintar ya? Dan skg sering amat ada banjir.
Joking about the genocides commited by the Dutch isn't funny
@@roodborstkalf9664 Deltarus came up whit the solutions for Lagos.
@@veneering4128 if it weren't for those genocides i wouldn't be here tho
I'm actually impressed by how good his English vocabulary/grammar is despite the ear-gratingly stereotypical "steenkolen Engels" accent haha. This guy's a legend.
came here after the recent Storror video - really interesting!
It is videos like this, that make me wish RUclips had an additional, larger, like-button!
Yes, I miss the days of the 5-star ratings.
Het waterloopbos is so nostalgic to me, because when i was young i always came there with my dad and went fishing...
The olden days.😊
Dutch people speaking any language are fun, this was both exceptionally educational and hilarious! Thank you SO much:)
The heaviest Dutch accent I've ever heard
Oh i've heard worse, trust me.
@@BatteryAz1z I'm not sure if worse is possible even while you're speaking in Dutch.
Som Dutsj piepel are hefing en ieven wurst akscent. XD
That was just for fun and yes, I am dutch. XD
At least I could understand him when being charitable to his vowel pronunciation.
Still better than van gaal