5 things we Love and 5 things we hate about Denmark!

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  • Опубликовано: 1 янв 2025

Комментарии • 339

  • @473specop
    @473specop Год назад +40

    Hedges are great for nature, for birds to shelter in safely when waiting their turn for the feeder for example. As a Brit who has spent a lot of time in DK I think the country and it's people are wonderful, they have a great sense of humour [very similar to the British, often dark], they're very sociable people and I love their beer and food. Denmark, keep on being great!

  • @Lorentari
    @Lorentari Год назад +82

    For any Americans wondering about the recycling center
    Imagine a landfill, but without the food waste, without the smell, and everything is sorted into containers so it can be recycled, and the space outside of the containers is just clean pavement/tile

    • @kenboje971
      @kenboje971 Год назад +1

      But do remember how much you pay in Taxes here in Denmark...for being in a wonderful world

    • @Lorentari
      @Lorentari Год назад +14

      @@kenboje971 Do remember that, after having to pay for health insurance, college funds and paying off debt and that housing is comparably aprox. 40% cheaper in Denmark; the average dane has on average more liquidity than their American counterpart. (37% of Americans can't pay an unexpected $400 expense)

    • @kenboje971
      @kenboje971 Год назад

      @@Lorentari I'm not allowed to answer🔥

    • @kajlauritzen9765
      @kajlauritzen9765 Год назад +4

      @@kenboje971... And if you fall over in the street and need an ambulance nobody asks about ypur money, they just get you treated first... Even if you are a tourist and need rescue at sea etc.
      And I do not think anybody here is homeless with a fulltime job.
      Maybe some people should stop worrying about the taxes...

    • @Taizunx
      @Taizunx Год назад +1

      @@kenboje971 With all of the deductibles in Danish taxes, there are some US states that sometimes end up higher than the danish taxes.

  • @davidpax
    @davidpax Год назад +26

    Well, I think hedges look better than fences. About the fish, no matter where you live in Denmark, the ocean isn't far away. We have eaten a lot of fish since the ice age 🐟🦞🦣.

  • @tw418
    @tw418 Год назад +8

    And when you live in an apartment building, you hardly ever have to go to the recycling places. The apartment buildings are required to have containers for recycling. For plastic, cardboard, glass, fabrics, metal, paper, batteries, paper, foodwaste, small electronics, “dangerous” waste like paint, etc, etc, etc

  • @mochtegerndane7097
    @mochtegerndane7097 Год назад +16

    One thing I like about recyckling centres is that, if you smile nicely and live in Jutland, you can find spare parts here. I once broke a glass shelf for my fridge - so I went to the Recycling centre, opened a few fridges and....yes, they had a spare.

  • @warlorddk2070
    @warlorddk2070 Год назад +13

    Think about it, hedges is god for the C02 it lets birds build nests helping wildlife, they are beatifuly natural seperator. Sure its a lot of maintainance but I think its worth it in the end :)

    • @lopaisate
      @lopaisate Год назад +3

      Dont get me wrong, I do love the look of them. And it’s so fun watching the birds disappear into there. But the maintenance. So much more maintenance 😬

    • @Evangeline31b
      @Evangeline31b Год назад +2

      @@lopaisate that’s why I have a gardener who trim them twice a year😉

  • @luffegasen7711
    @luffegasen7711 Год назад +58

    Well, of COURSE we don't like fences! We find them of-FENCE-sive! ;P

  • @thomasbarnes2275
    @thomasbarnes2275 Год назад +4

    I got a parking ticket in December on Ørebakken, the steepest hill in Helsingør. It had been snowing, and even though I had winter tires on, I couldn't drive up to my customer with their computer. So I stopped at the end of their driveway for 10 minutes. DKK 510,- in fines, and now I am fighting with "Parkeringsservice Helsingør" (strange name by the way, because there is no service at all). Now I have sent them a link to your video, and asked them to check 6 minutes and 50 seconds into it, because, as we discussed over the family dinner this evening, your description is so precise on what it is all about; that we in Denmark general believe, that people do not do harmful things on purpose, and that these parking fines is the total opposite off this believe.

  • @johnclements6614
    @johnclements6614 Год назад +12

    The long summer evenings do make up for the short winter days. Where I live in the UK it does not get completely dark until 2300 but the winter is gloomy when it is dark at 1630.
    Little stores are good because you can walk to them.
    You could compost most of your hedge clippings, just get rid of the branches or you will need a machine. It is surprising how much it rots down.

  • @pharol
    @pharol Год назад +10

    At least you dont have to repaint the hedges as you do the fences 🙂

  • @kasperthomsen8286
    @kasperthomsen8286 Год назад +1

    Such a fun list, and the points were fun to hear. Love ur style and view.

  • @Ferskvand
    @Ferskvand Год назад +17

    Uups former parking attendant here, trying to find a hedge that's not been trimmed yet to hide in 🙈 keep up the great content😊

  • @stellabogfeldt
    @stellabogfeldt Год назад +2

    The hedge is better to keep the noice down from your neighbour, that's why, but yes they are a lot of work, you can trim it once a year tho.
    And parking tickets, I think we all hate them, but they are to avoid most to park in the way, coz it was a problem, specially in the bigger cities. And the size of the tickets have been smaller, but has increased so many times coz people simply ignored it all the time, so the more expensive it is, the less people have parked where they shouldn't.
    It's just sad when people like you or turists come here and doesn't see it and gets a ticket.
    Hope it gives a perspective of why it's there 😁
    And the recycling stations are good, just remember that they are only for delivery of your old things, not to pick up things from there, coz that's illegal.
    Coz you never know the reason why it was thrown out. And the toilets are mostly coz they stopped working and they then needed a new one. 😁

  • @akyhne
    @akyhne Год назад +2

    Hedges/fences are actually a mandatory thing. They are not needed, but if just one of your neighbors wants a fence or hedge on the border between them and you, you have to cover half the cost.
    There are also rules of how high the fence or hedge must be.

  • @jinxbeecee
    @jinxbeecee Год назад +34

    Regarding the final issue, the messages in E-Boks tends to be alarming for other subjects as well.
    I live on disability pension (førtidspension), and I sometimes gets letters in E-Boks that start by saying "Your pension is changing", or "We have reassessed your pension".
    This typically just means that they have raised it for inflation, or that they have double checked their calculations, but it is pretty nervewracking every time.

    • @tobimobiv1
      @tobimobiv1 Год назад +2

      Not to mention the messages always comes late in the evening.

    • @wolfgangemmerich7552
      @wolfgangemmerich7552 Год назад

      @@tobimobiv1 Do you know you will loose your ,, Folkepension" if you didn`t worked longer then 10 years in denmark ?

    • @VincentGroenewold
      @VincentGroenewold Год назад +1

      I love everything is digital here, soooo much better than were I lived (Netherlands). I can at least take action immediately and I can see my info completely. I do get letters that start with "YOU HAVE TO DO THIS, OR IT"S JAIL TIME!" basically, had to get used to that a bit, but it kinda falls mute as everyone gets that and I doubt it ever is practiced. :) It's an aspect I don't like about any government, because it basically targets those who are super anxious or don't understand much.

  • @Panzerfury18
    @Panzerfury18 Год назад +1

    Also. I feel like you can get almost anything you need in Bilka. But i get it's not the same size as Target or Walmart

  • @bennyjorgensen
    @bennyjorgensen Год назад +3

    Comments as a Dane:
    Hedges - I have seen all the american fences and I find them cold and unpersonal, but I get the thing about maintaining them.
    Parking tickets - I know a guy that lives in Odense and never pays for parking, as the fine, when he gets caught is lower that the amount he otherwize had to pay. Therefor a lower ticket will not helpe.
    Migration / Work visa - Unfortunately we have a foreign policy that is dictated by a few politicians that have their entire polity build on the fear of strangers.
    As a dane I love to hear others view on Denmark and that includes your take on us. Thanks.

  • @thomasakerberg6765
    @thomasakerberg6765 Год назад +6

    Your politeness is actually quite cute! 🙂

  • @Troels_T_Kjoeller
    @Troels_T_Kjoeller Год назад +12

    Thank you for the video - it’s always interesting hearing your perspective on things. I think I’ll be more appreciative of recycling centres from now on. Considering complaining is a national pastime among Danish people, I think your list of ‘hates’ were rather mild. And I’m looking forward to the Danish summer as well!

  • @nightravenonline
    @nightravenonline Год назад +3

    Parking yes in all bigger town...but in a village no problems and its quiet peacefull..

  • @rasmusmathiasjuuljakobsen2980
    @rasmusmathiasjuuljakobsen2980 Год назад +1

    Just to let you know: The recycling centres are not free. They are paid for (at least partially) by owners of housing in the municipality you live in. If you rent your housing it is most likely a part of your base rent.
    But it is free in the sense that you don't have to pay at the station, to get rid of your stuff.

  • @sgtanders
    @sgtanders Год назад +4

    Regarding hedges, seems like it totally depends on where you live. I live in Denmark as well, and where I live, we only have a tall hedge on the right side, between us and those neighbour, while on the left, there's a semi tall fence going from the road to the neighbour garage, which then counts as the rest of the fence, covering between us. From our front lawn to the road, we have a rather small fence there. And the back yard is totally just fences.

  • @stephenhickman304
    @stephenhickman304 7 месяцев назад

    Love the recycling too , my daughter was at Copenhagen University for a year and I remember the janitor stressing that everything was separated into different bins boxes etc - it’s taken so so seriously

  • @jessicarudholm7663
    @jessicarudholm7663 Год назад +3

    Thanks for you input on our culture. However I personally like looking at hedges more than fences. I calming and love all the small birds that lives in the hedges. It is also nice to have something green during the long time where there is no leafs on the trees

  • @poulmadsen7969
    @poulmadsen7969 Год назад

    I love how you slag off hedges and being honest about the things you don't like in Denmark. I love Miranda's laughter @9:10 . Good job, and thanks for sharing

  • @CRBarchager
    @CRBarchager Год назад +2

    6:50 I COMPLETELY agree on this one. A couple of years back I have to pickup a package at a grocery store and I was in there for UNDER 5 minutes. When I got out a "nice man" told me that my parking meter wasn't working (the batteries had depleted) and I looked and said "Oh, thank you" and then he continued to hand a ticket. I was furious.

    • @svenhaheim
      @svenhaheim Год назад

      Ah yes parking wardens a hated species in all the world I suspect.

  • @JimmPratt
    @JimmPratt Год назад +1

    There are lots of places in Denmark that use fences.. usually the solid partition kind more often than the chain link type. we have rattan-style fence that you can't see through between our apartments up near Helsingor.

  • @MC-Racing
    @MC-Racing Год назад +34

    I love the concept of parking tickets. i don't like getting them (luckily VERY rarely), but i totally respect that it makes parking work. people would block traffic and not care if they got tickets. it just makes parking work

    • @decay79
      @decay79 Год назад +7

      The problem is how petty they are about it, i dont have a problem with it being expensive, it is more the "The booth is too small for this car, so you are to blame as you are parked 1" outside it." mentallity, and their lack of abillity to follow the set rules like observation time which they all too often just skip past and hand out the tickets as they see fit.
      Then there is their mentallity when people have actual well founded complaints and they just blatently ignore it as they know 9/10 people will just pay rather than take the fight to court, a fight which the company often already know they will lose if it hits the courts as they have lost them so often on the same basis.
      Problem is in general that it is now a business, where it used to be public servants that handed them out, who had nothing to really gain from handing em out apart from following the rules and that was their job.

    • @tineditmarunnerup9513
      @tineditmarunnerup9513 Год назад +8

      @@decay79 They are petty because the control is run by companies that have to make a profit. If it were the kommune, you could probably expect more leniency.

    • @EL-fd4fk
      @EL-fd4fk Год назад +4

      You misinform. It is not correct what you write in the last 4 lines. You must remember to distinguish between the private companies and the municipal.
      Municipal P-guards exist in the best of health, and carry out checks on all public and municipal roads as they have always done. The private p companies carry out checks on all private land registers, it can be shopping centres, housing associations, etc. Private companies are not allowed to carry out checks on public and municipal roads at all, and municipal p guards do not enter private land registers. So it is untrue when you write that the private sector has taken over control, that it is the private sector that "distributes" them on public and municipal roads.
      If you drive into an area where there is a large black sign with a white P, it is a private company that carries out checks in a private area. I have worked as a P-guard in the municipality for 10 years, And then as a traffic officer for 5 years.

    • @mi2595bs
      @mi2595bs Год назад

      Also- Just want to point out, You can explain your situation and depending on the scenario and reasoning you might be lucky. I know this because i had a timer which had broke, which i did not see. it automatically sets when the car stands still.. and i had to go 5 minutes into a store to get something needed to fix a situation at home. He was very understanding, and dropped the ticket. I then ran in after a new batery to make sure it did not happen again.
      So it all depends on the situation, ill intentions / miss parking intentionally or going over time often will hand you a ticket - mistakes can in some cases be overseen. and you can be let off easy.

    • @decay79
      @decay79 Год назад +1

      @@EL-fd4fk Dont change that they are petty and try to bend the rules, i cant even get dropped off by a mate at my home address before they are ready to hand him a parking ticket, even tho they clearly have not observed him for any ammount of time.

  • @mexxoverride
    @mexxoverride Год назад +4

    Go to Bilka then, its a one stop shop, just like Wal-Mart and Target.

    • @hotdogjudge
      @hotdogjudge Год назад

      Bilka is indeed the closest to Target and Walmart, but it’s still considerably smaller and with a less broad product portfolio.

    • @mariafriflet9082
      @mariafriflet9082 Год назад

      I can get pretty much anything I need in my Superbrugsen. I don’t need to go to four different stores for my groceries. Of course if I am looking for something like speciality fish or meat, I would go to fish monger or butcher, but for all my everyday groceries, they have everything I need

  • @mikkel5681
    @mikkel5681 Год назад +16

    A beautiful way to explain ones relationship with Denmark. "Five things we love, plus beer" :)
    I tend to agree with you on the fish thing though, and im sorry to hear you have so much trouble with the immigration system.. It really need a overhaul.

  • @knudsandbknielsen1612
    @knudsandbknielsen1612 Год назад +1

    One thing I love: You guys!

  • @charlottepetersen5289
    @charlottepetersen5289 Год назад +1

    So fun hearing your views. Great show. I am Danish living in an other country. Funny how enjoy doing my hedge in my House in DK but yes I don”t miss the 10 buckets for waste❤️

  • @skodass1
    @skodass1 Год назад +6

    Honorable mentions in both categories would for me be Digitization: Almost everything can be done online; car registration, doctors appointments, passports, moving places. This also ties into why i hate it... if you aren't the most IT savvy person you will suffer for it (as a former homeless person I can relate to people living on the streets and there you can easily lose your phone, ID etc and once you do... your down shitscreek).

  • @bofoenss8393
    @bofoenss8393 Год назад +4

    Great video as always.
    I completely understand and agree with your number one dislike. I know several foreigners who came here to Denmark and the system is set up almost as if we don't want them to come and apply at all.
    For example, as a foreigner you can't get a Danish bank account which is required for Nemkonto without a social security number. But you can't get a social security number without a signed job contract. But you can't get a job contract signed without a social security number. It's a Catch 22.
    Most foreigners who get invited to Denmark to work will have their contract ready when they arrive already so there will be no problems. But if you come without prior arrangements, it can be almost impossible. many cleaning companies now simply say they will sign you on and later put in the social security number simply to get staff because few Danes want to work in cleaning and it is so difficult as foreign unskilled labour to get into the Danish system.
    It is kind of ironic since on average a Danish couple makes 1,7 children, which means we depopulate the country by ourselves. We need the influx of other people to keep the population from declining and the same with our active workforce.

  • @Kasino80
    @Kasino80 Год назад +1

    Considering how expensive fish actually is, having at least one day at the workplace cantina, would be a treat.
    Also remember, two of the big pillars of Danish industry is farming and fishing. So pork and fish will always permeate Danish cuisine.

  • @Bjarne_Duelund
    @Bjarne_Duelund Год назад +1

    Danes also hates parking tickets!

  • @Purplefishish
    @Purplefishish Год назад +3

    Yay, a new episode. We have missed you.

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  Год назад +1

      Thanks! We’ve just been so busy :). Lots of things going on in the Young house.

  • @LazyJack2003
    @LazyJack2003 Год назад +1

    Why would one prefer a fence to a green hedge which - depending on the hedge - can bloom, changes colors with the season, provides a home to birds and hedgehogs and pleases the eyes? Work?

  • @henningmogensen9144
    @henningmogensen9144 Год назад +2

    As a native: I agree on all 10 points, maybe except for not being able to buy everything in the same place. I certainly buy my bread at a bakery, my cheese have to be in a special shop so much better ( and more expensive)

  • @rockerjim8045
    @rockerjim8045 Год назад +1

    i got a parking ticket in Oslo Norway at 1.30AM !! whilst parked in a Cul-de-Sac on a Sunday Morning because I parked less than 5M from the junction. Which had no markings to show you. Google translate struggled to translate the wording from the Ticket!

  • @tineditmarunnerup9513
    @tineditmarunnerup9513 Год назад +2

    You guys get garden stuff picked up??? Lucky you. We have to bring it to Genbrugsstationen ourselves (Lolland-Falster). That was actually quite a chock to me when I moved here two years ago.

  • @Zandain
    @Zandain Год назад +12

    I understand every point, including the hedges! Now, don't misunderstand...I LOVE the hedges, I much prefer them to fences (painting), but I hate the upkeep! Which is why I hire a very nice man; every year, to come and do it all for me 🤣
    Personally, I prefer the small grocery shops, baker, butcher, fruit/veg.
    They are quaint and easy-going.
    I actually detest the bigger stores like Bilka & Føtex! 🤮 They are so impersonal, every store is setup the same, from Cph to Hirtshals! It's hard to grasp the finer details and customer service is too 'pushy' for me.
    Good to see you again, guys!
    hello from Hundested 🌸 🌧
    (where it also is dreary, but we have the wild Kattegat!!)

    • @jameskavanagh4315
      @jameskavanagh4315 Год назад

      And you can blame the Americans for the big shopping centers 😂😂😂

  • @helensahagian1501
    @helensahagian1501 Год назад +1

    Ones in Denmark we got a parking ticket 500 DK , called them when back in Florida called . Then told to forget it. So saved $ 100. Yahhhh.🇩🇰🇺🇸🇩🇰🇺🇸❤️

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  Год назад

      Nice, I suspect in a lot of cases they send the bill to the rental car company who then forwards to you. That has happened to me with speeding tickets at least :). Every time I drive in France!

  • @unnix
    @unnix Год назад +9

    I think many People miss the small stores. Many towns are becomming ghosttowns because all the small shops are gone. Instead we now have a Brugsen, an Aldi, netto or something like that. Often over crowded. The small shops often had a bigger sortiment. They were specialists in their fields. Especially in the hollidays like Christmas it was much more cosy to walk from shop to shop and there would be music and All the Windows and streets were decorrated...
    .

  • @madst7521
    @madst7521 Год назад

    Best way to deal with the winter dark is a daylight alarm clock. Getting a dose of daylight to start off the day is a good way to get energy and keep the body on the right schedule.

  • @dittemusser1
    @dittemusser1 Год назад +2

    Hedges are good for biodiversity! And birds! Mostly birds:p

  • @charlottenrgaard7942
    @charlottenrgaard7942 Год назад

    I lived in the US for 25 yrs and I miss shopping and Target so much

  • @henningfischer3447
    @henningfischer3447 Год назад +2

    You must visit Sorø on 28 January at 5 - 10 pm and experience a beautiful light festival in the city and park.
    it will help you through the last part of the dark season😊

    • @triciabyrne7761
      @triciabyrne7761 Год назад

      My beloved grandfather grew up in Soro before he immigrated to the US. Please tell me more!

    • @henningfischer3447
      @henningfischer3447 Год назад

      @@triciabyrne7761 search at kyndelmisse Sorø👍

  • @carstenf279
    @carstenf279 Год назад +1

    If you cannot come to an agreement with your neighbor - hedges are the standard. It is the authorities way of saying - "You both lose!"

  • @charlottefich3928
    @charlottefich3928 Год назад +1

    Interesting to hear about your loves&hates. I don't understand the one about Small shops? If you need quick shopping - just go to the supermarket. But if you want to know about the goods and the person who sells the goods, the small shop will be able to result in increased quality for your family. Both in terms of the goods, but also in terms of human contact. And in Denmark, this personal meeting is just about to become a scarce commodity. As you may know, we don't even have to physically go to the supermarket to shop. You can have it ordered and delivered via the internet. Like in Everything via the net!

  • @gravballemandendk
    @gravballemandendk Год назад +3

    Nice to see leverpostej did not make the list :)
    Oh and im a dane, and i dont eat fish at all, so you at not alone there.

  • @williamjones4716
    @williamjones4716 Год назад +1

    More common to see trees and shrubbery planted along a yard fence-line in USA. I grew-up in suburban Maryland and there were a couple hundred things planted along the backyard fence-line, from mountain laurels to crape myrtles to hollies and other small trees. As a kid, not having front yard hedges added to neighborliness, made it easier for the mailman, and meant I could often cut four yards across at the same time for pocket money (the fifth yard had a hedged driveway). Why are you hauling away trimmings? Run the lawn mower over them to mulch it and put in a compost pile along with your vegetable peels, eggshells, and such.
    The parking ticket thing is part and parcel of the pettiness and jealousies of Janteloven, nothing to be done, Danes are passive-aggressively vindictive like that.

  • @obelix244
    @obelix244 Год назад +1

    If you like help with your sniffle. Put a blue wicks in kop of hot water. Stir untill its melted and drink the delicius hot beverage. 🙂 really helps

  • @CeeJayDK
    @CeeJayDK Год назад +2

    Fuck fish day. If the workplace would allow it, I would work from home on fish days.

  • @hassegreiner9675
    @hassegreiner9675 Год назад

    Hindbærsnitter is my favourit as well with 8-10mm icing on it.

  • @_-martin-_
    @_-martin-_ Год назад +1

    We have Target and Walmart type stores... but they are called Bilka in Denmark!

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  Год назад

      Yes, but there aren’t very many. It’s a bit of a drive to get to one, whereas we always lived no more than 10 minutes from a target in the US.

  • @ChrisBagge
    @ChrisBagge Год назад +1

    Some information about your hate object No. 2 Fish. Why is fish a that common dish in Denmark? The reason is that fish was the cheap way of getting meat. Look on the country, a small country with a very long coastal line. This gives a vast opportunity for fishing. There was on top of that a number of large rivers with plenty of fish. The most common fish was herring, and it was possible to store it for a prolonged time if salted. Salted herring was a very large export factor in the medevial time and even later on. This is as well the reason for all these weird servings of herring. Fish was the cheap way of getting protein outside the bigger cities. Salmon that is very common nowadays was in old day a very expensive fish. Nowadays you keep them in big nets, in the ocean. This makes it much less expensive.

  • @flemminglinnebjergrasmusse4338
    @flemminglinnebjergrasmusse4338 Год назад +1

    Haha - we've got cake day at the same day as fish day to sort of balance things out 😄. It Wednesday, by the way.

  • @BrianKlausen
    @BrianKlausen Год назад +3

    Yeah ... hedges... Danes do have a love-hate-relationship with those too. Guess it is just "that's what we usually do"-kinda thing. But ask some of your co-workers or other Danish friends living in houses what they think about trimming their hedges, and also try to explore the term "Liguster Mafia" (liguster being a particular type of hedge plant). It is a tongue-in-cheek sarcastic term for those who want to control the neighborhood and are very zealous about rules - one of them being the height of a hedge :).

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  Год назад +3

      Hilarious! The mafia has found us!!!

    • @BrianKlausen
      @BrianKlausen Год назад

      @@TravelinYoung Haha - hope not. The Liguster Mafia's natural habitat are the sub-urbs, where they have found particular ways of upholding Janteloven. So while Janteloven supposedly originated in Nykøbing Mors (that's a very loose interpretation as you might know), the Liguster Mafia are the ones upholding it in suburbia :).

    • @Kurkess
      @Kurkess Год назад +4

      @@TravelinYoung I've grown up with the term "Liguster facister" - sorta the same thing but more political I guess ;-)

    • @MartinGsl
      @MartinGsl Год назад +1

      @@TravelinYoung "Liguster facists" is the right term. Not mafia.

  • @thorbjrndietrich2585
    @thorbjrndietrich2585 18 дней назад

    all people i know have a hedge, if they have a garden. though enforcement is rare, i had heard few towns enforce hedges for all for aesthetics. A part of copenhagen have a rule that all residences have to be able to see a tree.

  • @SebMoellerM
    @SebMoellerM Год назад +3

    Try going to a German Christmas market this year - they go ALL-IN

  • @s4dpanda703
    @s4dpanda703 Год назад

    You guys need to add some descriptive b-roll, for instance of the recycling centers. It's much easier than trying to describe, what is a foreign concept to some.

  • @kennethcarslund2193
    @kennethcarslund2193 Год назад +2

    Im danish i hate seafood. I have never worked a place where if you told the canteen you do not eat seafood they would not serve you something else. Talk to the ladies. Tell them i really cant eat fish and if its permenant they will save something for you from another day. Its really not a problem

  • @charisma-hornum-fries
    @charisma-hornum-fries Год назад +2

    You don't have supermarkets where you live? I can't remember ever being in a grocery store or supermarket that doesn't sell toiletpapir while other basics.

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  Год назад

      Toilet paper wasn’t the best example, we for sure have toilet paper at grocery stores. But if I want something a grocery store doesn’t have AND toilet paper I would need to go to more than one place. It doesn’t take long to find yourself needing to go to 3-4 stores where in the us we could go to just one. At times that is charming but occasionally it is frustrating if we are in a rush.

  • @wollaminfaetter
    @wollaminfaetter Год назад +3

    Parking tickets... don't get me started! It's BIG BUSINESS in Denmark. Copenhagen is a complete nightmare. It's not for the faint of heart.

  • @VincentGroenewold
    @VincentGroenewold Год назад +5

    The weirdest thing immigrating here (and I'm an EU citizen so that already makes it easier, go figure), was getting my mitID. I was walking through the steps just fine, everyone was super friendly, but I had to get that mitID to actually take care of a lot of stuff. I was required to take along someone who has a mitID as a witness. I was like "huh?", I had all my ID stuff which is enough to identify me anywhere in the world, but nope, I needed a witness. I luckily knew someone who was so kind to join me, but if you don't know anyone, it makes no sense whatsoever. :)

  • @inge191157
    @inge191157 Год назад +1

    The hedges is because we love the natural things

  • @klausolekristiansen2960
    @klausolekristiansen2960 Год назад

    Most places I have worked have had fish day and cake day on the same day. Usually Wednesday.

  • @mikaelfiil3733
    @mikaelfiil3733 Год назад +1

    Parking tickets and the fees are way out of proportion, it has become a major revenue for the city and the companies. There are many stories over the years of unjust tickets, simple because they are on some form of commission, also the hourly price kept going up for years until the government put a lid on it. I hate both the fees and the tickets too!

  • @finncarlbomholtsrensen1188
    @finncarlbomholtsrensen1188 Год назад

    Fine! Then we Danes just may leave before the last 5! And as our friends from the east used to say. "Trust is fine, but Control is better!" And the hedges. I formerly lived in a house with a small garden, mostly clay and very hard!! So I dig a hole in the clay and filled it with clippings, compressed it and filled it on top. In a short time it became fine loam soil, intended for gardening, and much more soft than the clay had originally been.

  • @jenspraest
    @jenspraest Год назад +1

    from my (limited) experience with company canteens, they don't prepare the dishes like I do at home. Often strange combinations, especially in salads

  • @DiakosDelvin
    @DiakosDelvin Год назад +15

    I'd say parking tickets is part of our Danish trust system, we trust people to follow the rules, and trust the system to incentivize not repeating mistakes.
    Trust and Consequence.

    • @denmark39
      @denmark39 Год назад +4

      BUT there were much less areas 20-30 years ago where you could get a ticket. These parking “agents “ have been on the uprise … and it’s not necessary

    • @muchograndeyolatengo
      @muchograndeyolatengo Год назад +2

      I'd say that the whole commission based salary approach is build on anything but trust. The parking company doesn't trust their agents to write the tickets they are supposed to, and the agents don't trust that the car owners are following the spirit of the law when they catch them not following the letter of the law.

    • @Hansen710
      @Hansen710 Год назад

      like the germans says: Vertrauen ist gut Kontrolle ist besser
      how is that danish trust in any way..
      if you trust people you dont control them.
      if you control people you dont trust them

    • @denmark39
      @denmark39 Год назад

      @@Hansen710 Lenin said: trust but verify. Like you say not very Danish supposedly

  • @shreyathariani
    @shreyathariani Год назад

    Can you make a detailed video on the recycling centres in Copenhagen and the process to drop stuff there ? Thanks!

  • @johnphdk
    @johnphdk Год назад

    Regarding the shopping, we do have Bilka in Denmark, thats probably the closest you get to Walmart/Target, theres one in Hillerød, one in Fields and one in Ishøj, whichever is closest to your home

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  Год назад

      Yeah, problem is driving that far takes as much time as visiting multiple stores. We never lived 10 more than minutes from a Target, so that has been an adjustment.

    • @johnphdk
      @johnphdk Год назад

      @@TravelinYoung another good reason for not living in Copenhagen 😆😆

  • @LINKINPERRY
    @LINKINPERRY Год назад +3

    9:44 Interesting one to be on the dislike side. I think it is on my top 5 things I like about Denmark. Im not a fan of the shift towards big stores. The small stores and small local convenience stores are what make me feel like its hyggeligt. I dont want these monopoly conditions in Denmark. These small stores creates great social, cultural and hyggelig value to a small community that exist within a bigger city like Copenhagen. Perhaps just one Danes perspective on the topic. Thx for the video :)
    *Edit*
    - I totally agree with number one. Sadly over decades, our politicians have made it really hard for immigrants to settle here. And they keep changing it, as you point out. It's a shame :(

  • @lugatzmajr4714
    @lugatzmajr4714 Год назад +1

    I fully agree on those fish-dishes - I loathe them

  • @lassemadsen607
    @lassemadsen607 Год назад +3

    IN fairness to parking tickest, mind you I HAAAATE them too, but they are at the minimum of tickests. You can't get a lower ticket doing anything lower then 750,- . Which is why I am glad I don't own or need a car anymore. Now all I have to do is make sure my bikelights work and keep away from the oneway street traps^^

  • @peterhansen8594
    @peterhansen8594 Год назад +2

    I know you dont want to discuss politics, but I would like your opinion on what positive traits etc. danes in general could learn from the US and americans and vice versa. I would say danes could maybe learn about openness towards strangers (inclusiveness) and being serviceminded...

  • @kirstendrost
    @kirstendrost Год назад +7

    Like these videos with listing things. Top 5 etc…
    As a Dane I REALLY also like our cake and pastries. Haven’t found any similar good abroad and I’ve tried a lot! And yes - hindbærsnitter are the best. I even baked my own when I lived in Canada for 3 years cause I missed them + quality of baked goods…
    Think many of us welcome the long Christmas season cause it’s full of light and events, like the Christmas markets, you guys also did a video on, hanging out with friends and the whole darkness is lit up for 1-2 months before boring January begins…
    Hate hedges, would hate to own a house with one, love how green they are when others have them!! Expanding nature :)

    • @finn-rene196
      @finn-rene196 11 месяцев назад

      Hindbærsnitter for life!

  • @LynxLord1991
    @LynxLord1991 Год назад

    You mean that week of summer XD Fish is very important part of our culture so it does not surprise me but it sounds like a KBH issue we bring our own food any where I have worked in Jylland

  • @himtraldi
    @himtraldi Год назад

    we have cake day on fish day, to keep us going.
    though a couple of my colleagues will go for takeout at least once a month on fish day

  • @wildflower314
    @wildflower314 Год назад

    The christmas trees are only inside for a short time - because they will dry up and loose the pine needles. 20/30 years ago rødgran (red pine?) was a common sort used here, and they will shed after just a few days. Now other sorts of christmas trees have taken over, and they will keep for a bit longer.
    But if you are used to plastic trees (are you?) in the US, where I know it is quite common, that would not be an issue there.
    The milk with fish "you will not be my friend"- thing... Why? I don't get that

  • @anettebrogaard
    @anettebrogaard Год назад

    hihi... was that really what you hate, I was just nervous that you would come up with something much worse. But you love Denmark and that's great. Nice that you love the way the Danes, through 100 generations, have shaped the country we call Denmark and the way we live. As for fish, remember that no matter where you are in Denmark, there is only 30 km to the sea, so we eat fish in all possible ways. For many 1000 years it has been what we survived on. and if you have too many cardboard boxes, it's because you shop too much online... ;) spend time in the small shops, and you'll keep the wheels turning there too. And as for January, light sterin candles in the windows, also out in the garden, give the birds outside some food, snuggle under the blankets and enjoy the fact that the hedge won't be cut until 6 months from now ;) Thank you for your always wonderful way of telling about your life here in Denmark, I love that you love it. And I am a faithful follower.

  • @BenjaminVestergaard
    @BenjaminVestergaard Год назад

    I'm lucky enough to live within walking distance of a Bilka that has a pharmacy right after self-checkout... I don't complain about shopping in the same way... I'd complain that it'd be a 5km walk to save 100kr because the good prices are all in different places.

  • @Nygaard2
    @Nygaard2 Год назад +2

    Hedges? I mean I’m sure you share your hatred of them with overworked gardeners and steeplechase horses, but I had not seen that one coming.
    Fun video as always, guys.

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  Год назад +4

      Keeping you on your toes! :). We’ve had people complain about being to slow to trim our hedges as it’s not something we are used to doing.

  • @kickmyself1973
    @kickmyself1973 Год назад

    I asked for specific this video a little while back. Thank you for your opinions and i totally get it :) All the stuff your "hate" Goes for the native danes.
    But actually if you have good nabours you can come to an agreement to make a wooden fence, but it can only (like hegdes) be maximum 180cm (5,9-6 feet tall) Mostly people use it more as a thumb rule than being stict about it.
    Parking has gone nuts totally agree on that.
    Back in the days when i grew up in the early 80s it was very common for danes (in the middelclasses) to have a fish day, a soup day, every week.
    I think that us having the smaller shops was to keep a town alive. Many places specially in middle big cities (100k) pop, when they open a mall, the smaller bussiness are closing and struggles.
    I was interested what you think from being newcomers on how we handle crime and homeless people? whats your thoughts? ofc from your observance.

  • @kimhansen8615
    @kimhansen8615 Год назад +1

    Ha-ha, love you guys: 4 minutes about the good things and 10 on the hate stuff 🙂 You need to do a video about KOLONIHAVE - That's a danish summer thing! You're welcome to my place (I'll gladly serve fiskefrikadeller and homemade hindbærsnitter). The invitation is open if we can figure out how to arrange it.

  • @jannieklitsgaardtestrupgen8419
    @jannieklitsgaardtestrupgen8419 Год назад +1

    As a Dane, I really love to get your perspectives on living in Denmark 🇩🇰🙂
    And.... I totally love hindbærsnitter too🤣
    🇩🇰Velkommen 🇩🇰

  • @mikkelsgaming1551
    @mikkelsgaming1551 Год назад

    Yeah im from Denmark and i also love christmas its just the holiday. And if you haven't learned the word yet you need to know Hyggeligt if you dont know its kind of really cosy and its my favorite word. But another fact Halloween isnt that huge in Denmark but its because Fastalavn is a kind of danish Halloween. love your videos

  • @Gert-DK
    @Gert-DK Год назад +1

    Try to find help for your hedges in your local area. Maybe through FB. It shouldn't be very expensive.
    Parking fines are hated by everybody.
    I don't like cold fish.
    As long you have a job and only been in "prison" once, I don't think you should worry about visa and all that crap. Remember, we need hands here in DK, very badly indeed. Short-staffed everywhere.

  • @perfrchandersen4853
    @perfrchandersen4853 Год назад +1

    your right about the things that are bad in denmark, and that is why we love beer and make the best beer in the world

  • @PM-fs2eg
    @PM-fs2eg Год назад +1

    Hedges...but they're so so much prettier than fences 🤷😄

  • @Mininaus
    @Mininaus Год назад +1

    I don’t get the hate about small stores? it seems that you would be able to get most things at Kvickly/Føtex/Bilka and only need to visit a pharmacy or a Natas/Normal for very specific items, and on Fyn some
    of our grocery stores now have pharmacies in them. Must be the same at Sjælland.

  • @ArrayzableMusic
    @ArrayzableMusic Год назад +2

    I expected taxes to come up on the hate list.
    Personally I gladly pay my taxes because of the services that we all benefit from, here on Denmark 😊

    • @MaximDL1410
      @MaximDL1410 Год назад

      What you benefit? For example if you are sick or without job when you contact your jobcenter / kommune they are treating you like a .💩 😢

  • @Weise1001
    @Weise1001 Год назад +2

    hedgecutting... made me buy an apartment.. i hated it so bad

  • @flonekessa
    @flonekessa 8 дней назад

    Denmark's Christmas is the best in the world. God Jul til allesammen.

  • @birgitpugesgaard8708
    @birgitpugesgaard8708 Год назад +3

    I totally agree on your No 1! Being Danish with a Danish adult son who needed to leave this country to be with his Korean wife! Danish immigration rules/laws sucks!

  • @KK-E_DK
    @KK-E_DK Год назад

    Im a fence or wall guy hate to cut this damn hedges and i got a lot 🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @stephenhickman304
    @stephenhickman304 7 месяцев назад

    I thought the 5 things you didn’t like were weak. There are huge stores in Denmark - not sure where you are but hyperstores are there in the country

  • @kinuuni
    @kinuuni Год назад +4

    I don't know how long you are away from Amager but there is one big place close to Christianshavn and probably a lot of other places do this as well, but you can drop off items that are still usable and then you can pick up stuff that other people have left as well.
    As for the parking, I am getting my drivers licence right now and I just had three hour theory session solely on parking rules. It is insanity XD
    The immigration thing ... We are sorry :(

    • @danniandersen5858
      @danniandersen5858 Год назад

      Parking.
      2 timer
      10-18
      (10-17)
      8-17 (in red numbers)
      Test! When can you park more than 2 hours :p

    • @kinuuni
      @kinuuni Год назад

      @@danniandersen5858 XD Depends on the arrow below the sign, how far you are away from a corner in this scenario. But aside from that, all days after 18 and before 10. Exempt for sunday which is before 8 but after 17.

    • @EL-fd4fk
      @EL-fd4fk Год назад

      @@danniandersen5858
      I hverdagene kan der parkeres frit efter 18.00 til - 10.00 og Lørdag frit fra kl.17.00 - 10.00 Om Søndagen frit efter kl 17.00 til 8.00 UPS men jeg er også tidligere p vagt