WooHoo! 100%. I was really surprised so many folks didn’t now what was a caribou, but we usually use Direct Payment or E-transfers, so most of us really don’t touch coins that much.
Yup. Pretty sure more kids play street hockey than lacrosse, too. CAR scene in Wayne's World is SOOOO Canadian, with Mike Myers character having so many Toronto suburbs characteristics. Eh.
Lacrosse is the best❤ (street hockey is only played by many because they just play on the road or back alley - the parked cars around here have the dents to prove it) 😛
I watched a street level trivia in America....believe it or not one abject imbecile could not point to Canada on the world map. 😂😂😂 Future republican no doubt.
Tyler, we invented all the sports you enjoy in the USA. Basketball? Canadian. Football? Canadian. Hockey? Canadian. Lacrosse? Indigenous Canadians. Superman? Your shining hero of all things “American”…. Canadian. 🤣 You’re just southern Canadians in this regard. 🤣❤️
hockey was actually a nordic game, originally, but the very first baseball game in recorded history was played in canada in 1838, in beachville ontario.
Now you know how important those Heritage Minutes are for Canadian History and for Canadians....Thanks for the fun videos....Peace & Respect from Canada
Yes, it's worth paying millions of dollars to Heritage Canada so that people will hang on to these pathetic factoids as a replacement for a true national identity.
Many, many years ago when Tudeau senior won the election liberal MPs were elected from the Maritimes to Manitoba nothing further west. The next day the big headline in the newspaper was ''ad mare usque ad Mnitoba''
Chris Haney (August 9, 1950 - May 31, 2010) was a Canadian journalist and co-creator of the Trivial Pursuit board game with Scott Abbott. @@urbanlegendsandtrivia2023
I had a cynical (excuse me eh, REALISTIC) Ottawa cabby who sighed telling me "There are only really TWO damned seasons up here. Snowploughs and roadwork."
lacrosse has been Canada’s official sport for as long as I have been alive. The government added hockey as Canada’s official winter sport relatively recently- because everyone including canadians already thought it was.
Except lacrosse and hockey were actually both made officially Canada's sports at the same time in 1994. There was never actually a time with only one official sport.
Ob dear. Caribou and reindeer are the same species. Caribou is the North American name which Reindeer is the European name. Although they have a history of domestication in Europe, the ones here in North America are almost all wild. There are subspecies that have developed, but at the end of the day it is the continent not domestication that dictates what they are called.
To be fair… Canada releasing a ton of special edition limited time quarters featuring war memorials, olympians, breast cancer awareness, and many many more.
The 1973 Quarter is so cool they had a Mountie on it for the 100 birthday of the RCMP ( I know they wern't called the RCMP in 1873 they were the Northwest Mounted Police then) I was born in 67 so my Grandparents got me a set of the 1967 uncirculated coins and a few of the dollar bills as well for our centennial. All our coins except the penny and the nickel in Canada used to be real silver that is why we old people still call change Silver here in Canada,
@patriciabalzer4114 Limited edition quarters have been done MANY times! There was the Remembrace Day with a red poppy one year. Another set was all provinces and territories... a different one released each month. In our centennial year 1967 it was the Canada lynx!
@@RobertBreedon-c3b I just went to bank to buy some quarters for the laundry room. I bought 4 rolls. 3 of them were full of commemorative quarters. I now have 80 Mountie quarters to add to my collection. Someone must have been hard up & sold their collection to the bank.
We had two seasons where I grew up in Eastern Canada in the '60s; Hockey Season, and Lacrosse Season. When the ice was taken out of the arenas in the spring, we used the concrete floor for Box Lacrosse. It's not like University lacrosse; blood was spilled. Both sports are like a martial art in Canada.
Shared American Canadian/British trivia: How did the White House receive it's name? After the Americans burnt fort York on the shores of lake Ontario the British returned the favor and set fire to the Presidential Palace. The Americans could not remove the soot stains from the marble, so they painted it white which led the the present name.
You are not “ The Average American “ anymore! You know more about Canada than most Canadians! You’re like my little nephew! Definitely a Canadian in spirit 😊
I loved how you were able to link Heritage Minutes to two of the answers. The only one I didn't know was the motto. I've often heard Canada referenced as Sea to Sea to Sea (Atlantic, Arctic and Pacific), but I've never heard Sea to Sea before. Guess I learned something about my country today! So many Canadians answering 'moose' cracked me up! Pretty sure I learned it was a caribou in school as a child. FYI Tyler, the Canadian coins from lowest to highest are: Leaf (they were discontinued a while ago, I think there was more than 1 leaf but can't remember for sure), Beaver, Blue Nose. Caribou, Loon, and Polar Bear.
In the back of my mind I know it is a Caribou, but I tend to forget sometimes and say it is an Elk(Wapiti) . Note to non North Americans what we call an Elk (Cervus canadensis) is similar to the Red Deer in Europe and not the Eurasian Elk (what we call moose)
I still don't get it? I thought those were oceans. We have more gulfs and bays than we do seas. I guess sea to sea would still get you from Labrador to the Yukon.
@@pudlmaker I believe it was adopted from Psalm72:8 "He shall have a dominion also from sea to sea......". But yes technically we are surrounded by 3 oceans....
I was born in Ottawa, but was raised abroad with English as a Second Language teachers until returning to Ottawa for grade 10 from Jeddah. But I got to do 2 incredible years at Dartington Hall boarding school in Devon, where the 1 day we given off for "snow" the flakes which made it to the ground never met another before melting. Years before internet I just got mocked for all the "fibs" I told; Roit Jenny, so a foot of snow you can still drive with magic tires? And 4 feet of snow covers a whole neighbourhood so some people stay in and create another REFRIGERATOR out of their front door? Bollocks Jenny, who would EVA want ta chill a beer?
The WWll nickels had a beaver and the other a torch with a V for victory. They were also half nickel, half copper and had 16 sides. I believe the beaver came out in 1943 and the V with torch in 1945.
The thing about lacrosse is, we take lots of pride in it as our national sport, but other than once or twice in gym class, most of us never play it. Mainly because, if you think hockey is violent, now have everyone holding the sticks at head height.
A caribou, also known as reindeer in Eurasia, is a large species of deer native to Arctic, subarctic, tundra, boreal, and mountainous regions of North America. For Americans, Bullwinkle is a moose, Rudolf is a caribou.
And because most bull Caribou drop their antlers early, and the cows keep their antlers into the following year, Rudolf and Co. are all female. Which makes sense as only a female (or a team thereof) can haul a fat man in a red velvet suit and his sled around the world in one night and not get lost. (just teasing, Guys! 🙂)
@tyler bucket Penny (now defunct) was a maple leaf, nickle is beaver, dime is bluenose schooner, quarter is caribou, loonie is a loon, toonie is a polar bear. the bill demoninations until recently, were all former prime ministers with exception of the $20 bill (the most common). That is always the current reigning monarch. Some of the bills now display people of notable achievements instead of prime ministers. One other note: not all legal tender coins come with an animal on them. There are some special edition coins that circulate such as upon the Queen's death, the rings around toonies were colored black in rememberance. Other coins have sports depicted on them. One year they distributed coins with a poppy flower on them for Nov 11.
If I remember the OLD Nation Anthem it had “Sea to Sea” in it, but was changed later. This is why the older Canadian Lady knew what it was because she remembered that old Anthem.
I have from sea to shining sea stuck in my head, but would not have known it was our motto. Lol. Also, I too just assumed it was a moose on our quarter. I have not checked but I think the beaver is on our nickel? If I am right it is probably because I always seem to have more nickels than quarters. Darn. 😂
I actually knew the answer from SCHOOL myself, not from our National Anthem. - although we were taught it was "From Sea to SHINING Sea." - but I knew from the Latin he used that the answer was "From Sea to Sea."
If I'd stopped to think about it, it would have been obvious. "Mari" as in maritime (and I vaguely remember some seafood dishes with names in either Italian or French having mari in the name)
Can you imagine if an American discovered insulin….they wouldn’t have released it free to the world , they would have released it with copyright and money. And the National Sport is Hockey and Lacrosse, it used to be Lacrosse and a lot thought it was Hockey and it wasn’t
Banting was offered a million dollars by American drug companies for the secret, but he turned them down and gave the secret away for free. The Canadian government gave him $8000 to begin production and distribution.
@@ront769 don’t kid yourself , Americans did contribute, but your missing it or your trying to make yourself feel good knowing if a American discovered insulin he would of sold it and not give it away.
I got them all right, but I am of an older generation and have lots of experience. This sure goes to show the importance of education and Heritage Minutes!
James Naismith created Basketball while he was a professor in the us. I drive by his homestead in Almonte, Ontario weekly. Insulin, From sea to sea, Caribou on quarter. In 1973 it had a RCMP on a horse.
Me at 48 my wife at 57 both born and raised here have never heard of Canada having an "offfical motto", but yeah we knew of the term being used in Canada.
You are SUCH a CUTIE Tyler! - & YOU KNEW MORE than you think! You didn't get 1 right, you got 2 right, (lacrosse & insulin) - & I'm sure you'll do better & better in time. Keep up the good work learning about us & at the same time giving us a bright spot for the day with your nice & sunny personality. (Personality wise, you would actually fit right in to this country - & we would be glad to have you.)
Would he also fit into Norway? UK? Japan? (Tyler Rumple, Tyler Burger, Tyler Walker..) Or any other country he pretends to be interested in to make $$? He is here to earn, not learn! You'll find out as time goes on - it's all an act.
Wow are you ever a negative, critical person! Tyler may (or may not) fit into those other countries. I don't know enough about their personality types to say. I DO know his personality type would fit in here - & he is NOT faking his personality - he wouldn't be able to sustain "the act" for an entire video, each & every time! (THAT wouldn't be one of Tyler's strong points.) This is JUST Tyler's personality! As to your point that he is here to earn not learn - I say 2 things. Firstly - why does it have to be one OR the other? Why can't Tyler be doing both? Doctors, car mechanics, architects, singers, chefs - all make money (some of these make a lot) BUT they chose their jobs vs. others that make money - because they ENJOY that type of work. You CAN make money doing something you like! IT TRULY IS POSSIBLE! Why should Tyler be any different? It is also OBVIOUS - if you pay attention - that Tyler DOES like learning about us - because he could have chosen a different country instead of Canada ie. Ireland, Switzerland, South Africa etc. He chose Canada as 1 of his countries of interest - because he DOES want to learn about us. Also, it is clear that Tyler DOES like to learn. He is not only doing this for money - he is a NATURAL researcher. I have seen other reactors who don't know the answer to (many) things - & they will often (some always) say - to tell them the answer, whereas a good portion of the time Tyler wants to know the answer ON THE SPOT & LOOKS IT UP HIMSELF - mid video. THAT is someone who LIKES TO LEARN! You need to get some generousity back into your soul for people & NOT think the worst of them without just cause. Having a few other reaction channels doesn't make Tyler a faker or uninterested. Instead it shows his interest in learning for his income & Canada & Canadians are one of the things he is interested in. End of story in my opinion. PLEASE, for your OWN sake (because it rots your soul after a while if you think everybody has bad intentions) & for everybody else you are in contact with - give people THE BENEFIT of the doubt - & only when thinking it through that this CANNOT add up or has VERY little chance of doing so upon FULLEST thought, be more careful in your interactions with them. I do truly mean this in the best way. Take care 💝@@nolajoy7759
Good morning, nolajoy. I truly thank-you for your concern towards me & wanting to help me with your warning. I STILL DO stand by my opinion on Tyler & his intentions & I hope you will think what I said through. Is there something that I am missing besides Tyler having other channels? I AM always open to information that helps me in making proper choices & assessments. If not, I think that my points remain valid & I must give Tyler my belief. Even if I can't change your mind & you don't have anything else to add to support your negative impression of Tyler - I thank you for your kindness towards me & not wanting me to get fooled. All the best to you - (from Suzy Sunshine. 🌞☺)@@nolajoy7759
I'm a bit older and was stumped on the Canadian motto. I have heard the phrase however. You really do learn something new every day. I always enjoy your videos.
Lacrosse is particularly popular in Ontario as it essentially comes out of the First Nations communities that exist along the St. Lawrence River between Montreal and Toronto. It is commonly played in arenas over the summer after they've removed the ice. This is called Box Lacrosse as compared to Field Lacross which is played on a pitch the size of a soccer field.
I always thought it was a moose. You forgetting who invented basketball was hard to watch lol. I was pulling for you to reach into your heritage minute knowledge for that one 😂
Alan Doyle of Great Big Sea told of the fantastic day his whole band were backstage in the States when an announcement came on out front; Winter Olympics were just starting and "Let's all celebrate! The United States just earned their first Olympics Hockey medal; the SILVER!" And the crowd went wild, while every Canuck backstage exchanged grins, high fives and hugs before heading out, "Yay America eh!?"
I was today years old when I realized the animal on our Canadian Quarter isn't a Moose! Caribou makes lots of sense, but never crossed my mind that it was that.
@@waterjade4198 You're right. Looking now, of course it's not a moose. The face shape is totally different, not to mention the kind of antlers. Funny how we overlook some things. Hope you're having a great day!
There's a whole song about it, how did everyone get it wrong? 🎶The quarter has a Caribou on it, on it. The quarter has a Caribou, and it's worth 25 cents!🎶
I actually got ALL the answers right - although I will admit that I automatically said "moose" before immediately correcting myself with the caribou. I also knew the Latin motto he was looking for from the words he said - "From Sea to Sea", but at school we were taught the motto was actually "From Sea to SHINING Sea." I remembered these things FROM SCHOOL, NOT from Heritage Minutes. I thought those Heritage Minutes were great to teach the info to kids BEFORE they learn it in school, & as a REMINDER for afterwards, but from what I am seeing in some of these comments, we need to KEEP THOSE HERITAGE MINUTES GOING - & ON REPEAT - as it looks like some Canadians are only learning (somehow) these basic Canadian facts this way. VERY, SAD - but as long as they/all of you are learning - that's the main thing!
I got them all right, as well. But, "From sea to shining sea" is from the song America the Beautiful. There's no "shining" in A mari usque ad mare. Usque means continously, or without interruption, so the motto is from one sea all the way to the other. There was a suggestion at one point to change it to A mari ad mare ad mare to reflect the fact that we border three oceans, but nothing has come from that.
Thank-you for the information - even though it is upsetting. I knew that the answer he was looking for was "From Sea to Sea" based on the Latin he quoted, but as I said, my TEACHER AT SCHOOL told us it was "From Sea to Shining Sea." To hear from you that she was ACTUALLY giving us the words from an AMERICAN song & saying it was part of the CANADIAN motto - is AWFUL! (I feel used & dirty!) I just have to believe that she either just wasn't paying CLOSE attention to what she was telling us OR that she got confused, being aware of both. But to believe in your teachers & take in their teachings - only to find out MANY years later that it was wrong is terrible. Teachers need to do a better job (like the one in this video!) (I wouldn't normally just trust the words of a complete stranger [sorry 😶🌫] over someone I did know - "critical thinking", but I CAN still make out a little Latin & I have seen this phrase before, which I actually wondered a bit over since it was a little different from what my teacher said.) So once again I thank you for clearing up where the "shining" came from even if the answer is certainly disturbing.@@russellsketchley8830
@@Carrie-so3ro I wasn't trying to upset you at all. I guess teachers are as fallible as everyone else. It is an easy mistake to make, especially since we hear all those American songs and slogans all the time.
I know that you weren't trying to upset me. I DO TRULY appreciate the knowledge that you provided me with - (& I can hear those words in the song playing in my head now.) Sometimes the truth is not what we would like it to be, but I prefer NOT to live in a world of make believe so I appreciate KNOWING the most. This WAS however a BIG mistake for a teacher to make. It could be an EASY mistake, as you said we are familiar with the American song, BUT teaching school kids to add a phrase from SOMEONE ELSE's big, nationalistic tune into our motto - making us think those are the words is a pretty terrible mix-up - understandable (ONLY in a way), but a pretty bad mistake to make. (If it had been ANY other song, but one of America's most nationalistic ones...😔) All the best. ♥ @@russellsketchley8830
A Mari Usque Ad Mare - From sea to sea Coins: $2 - Polar Bear $1 - Loon .25 - Caribou (And NO, it does not look like a moose. The Antlers are wrong) .10 - The Bluenose .05 - Beaver .01 - maple leaf
There was a song about the Canadian quarter called "A quarter has a Caribou on it" on Canadian Sesame Street. The beaver is on the nickel. A quarter has a caribou on it, on it. A quarter has a caribou, that's me. A quarter has a caribou on it, and it's worth 25 cents. A quarter buys... a package of gum. A quarter buys... a newspaper. A quarter buys... a balloon. A quarter buys... a donut with a hole. A quarter has a caribou on, it on it. A quarter has a caribou on it, that's me. A quarter has a caribou on it, and it's worth 25 cents. Oh yeah, it's when 25 cents. Oh yeah that's me
I remember the days before sales tax when I'd walk to the 7-11 with a dollar (bill) and grab a chocolate bar, a bottle of Coke, and two comics to read. Each was a quarter. There were no taxes, and the total was exactly a dollar.
@@CorwinAlexander my family owned a little shop from 1979 to 1998. Things were so cheap back then. We used to get a grab bag full of different candies for 25 cents. A smaller bag of chips for about 30 or 40 cents. A big milk shake for less than a dollar. I watched prices go up as time went on, but nothing like it is now. It's cheaper to buy a big bag of no name potato chips, than it is to buy a "small" bag of lays.
The beaver is on the reverse side of the nickel. On the front of all Canadian coins and the $20 bill is Queen Elizabeth II, who will presumably be replaced by King Charles III. Her majesty was also on the discontinued $1 and $2 bills.
@@derrickfoster644 As someone who remembers grabbing the new mints when her portrait was last updated, I am with you on this. It's a bit of an adjustment to say Our King instead of Our Queen.
There was a commemorative 25cent/ quarter for the RCMP on the back of the country was a Mountie on a Horse ! Do you know what kind of horse it was? Answer-A Quuarter Horse ! 😊
An elks rack is two separate forks with distinctive tines, more like a deer. A moose has two separate forks which form a paddle. A caribou's rack is joined and curves over the middle of it's face.
Watch all Canadian heritage videos. They were on all Canadian commercial back in the day. That’s why children grew into adults that knew Canadian History.
Although typically thought of as American, the origin of the sport of baseball began in the Canadian town of Beachville, Ontario, and American football was initially developed by Canadians at McGill University. The Canadian invented sports, lacrosse, basketball, five-pin bowling, ringette, and wheelchair rugby as well🇨🇦😉
I learned all these things in grade 10 Canadian history. Indigenous peoples in eastern Canada played lacrosse for years before Europeans arrived. Everyone knows who invented insulin! I think one of the other comments was right on that we enjoy trivia.
The James Naismith Basket ball was bc the ball was put through an old fashioned apple basket...The lovely stone house still stands near Almonte Ontario.
Wasn’t it technically invented by the first nations and was “refined” into hockey after by quebec (and maritime provinces if pineo81 is correct)? I mean it’s the kind of thing that is played and developed over time in many places at the same time so it’s hard to pinpoint an exact place and date..
Nobody uses cash anymore. We older generation know because we handled money more. The beaver is on the nickel, schooner is on dime, maple leaf on penny and so on.
Lacrosse isn’t really that big in Canada, but they try to push it because it’s so similar to hockey and they try to claim it was started here with links to Native Canadian/American culture.
I've never heard of lacrosse being an official sport. I especially have never heard of it being Canada's official sport. Once in a while you hear about a friend who's friend played it. That's how often you actually hear about lacrosse in Canada. I would have thought soccer or golf. I had no clue who James Naismith was but I knew Basketball was invented in Canada so that was my guess. I have never heard this motto and I've lived in Canada my entire life. I don't know where this motto is coming from. That quarter looks like an Elk. Caribou and Elk look fairly similar. I always thought it was an Elk. It looks nothing like a moose.
Canada does not a the penny or a paper dollar bill, the beaver is on nickel, the bluenose is on the dime, the cariboo is on the quarter, a loon on the dollar and a polar bear on 2 dollar coin. I know the answer but can anyone out there tell us what a bluenose is and why it is on the dime?
Side note on identifying the animal on the quarter. I teach it in Kindergarten so these people should know this. I think that part of the problem is many people no longer use actual cash. They use their phones or credit cards.
The vertically flat paddle antler that sticks out forward above the caribou's nose is the distinguishing feature that only a caribou has, that you can see on the coin.
Love your videos. Drs. Banting and Best discovered insulin in my city, London Ontario. We have an awesome little museum here with tons of pictures and articles and their equipment.
When I was a kid in the 80’s we just had lacrosse as the national sport but somewhere along the line we added hockey officially as winter sport for obvious reasons.
Canadian here, I actually got them all right!!! I had no idea about the motto, but somewhere in the back of my mind said “sea to sea” and that was my guess! Now I couldn’t tell you what that motto means, except, “hey, we’re really big”
Canada motto is due to functioning as a land bridge. The cargo from the Far East (China/Japan) came to Vancouver on ships, was then transported by train to Montreal and then by sea to Europe. Before Panama and Suez canal, it was the only viable way. It is still significant, just not as much as before.
I really enjoyed your video and comments plus learning more about the world around me. Yes, due to the Canadian commercial of heritage minutes was always telling me about many famous Canadians and their inventions for medical and sports so many that do watch TV should know that grown up.
These are fun, thanks for them. Fun fact: the $2 coin has the queen on one side (as with all Canadian coins) and a polar bear on the other. When it was introduced in 1996, before everyone settled on calling it a "toonie", one of the proposed nicknames was "the queen with a bear behind"!
The game called Trivial Pursuit was invented by Canadians. Knowing trivia is a Canadian sport/pasttime.
There's only so much outside you want during the winter. Lol
It's all those long winters. It's that and card games.
And beer...😄
WooHoo! 100%. I was really surprised so many folks didn’t now what was a caribou, but we usually use Direct Payment or E-transfers, so most of us really don’t touch coins that much.
Canadians (unrelated) created Trivia Pursuit Jr. as well.
Lacrosse is the official summer sport.
But street hockey is the unofficial one. "Car!"
Yup. Pretty sure more kids play street hockey than lacrosse, too.
CAR scene in Wayne's World is SOOOO Canadian, with Mike Myers character having so many Toronto suburbs characteristics. Eh.
In an episode of "Murdoch Mysteries", detective William Murdoch calls to children playing street hockey, "Wagon!" 😅😅😅
Indeed. Every time "eye of the tiger" plays on the radio I have very fond memories of street hockey with my neighbourhood pals. 😅
“Game On”
Lacrosse is the best❤
(street hockey is only played by many because they just play on the road or back alley - the parked cars around here have the dents to prove it) 😛
Fun fact: Canadians know a lot more about America, than Americans know about Canada.
I watched a street level trivia in America....believe it or not one abject imbecile could not point to Canada on the world map. 😂😂😂 Future republican no doubt.
Canadian know more about america than american🤣🤣🤣
@@tigab16 We do!😏
Fun fact: There's no need for a comma between the first clause and the second clause of a comparative statement that uses the word than.
and american to america
Tyler, we invented all the sports you enjoy in the USA. Basketball? Canadian. Football? Canadian. Hockey? Canadian. Lacrosse? Indigenous Canadians.
Superman? Your shining hero of all things “American”…. Canadian. 🤣
You’re just southern Canadians in this regard. 🤣❤️
Superman is a joint effort by a Canadian and an American, an American wrote him, but a Canadian drew him. He has dual citizenship.
There's even an argument about Baseball being from St. Mary's Ontario.
@@irREVERENDly I can’t believe I forgot baseball. Beachville, Ontario. Also Canadian.
hockey was actually a nordic game, originally, but the very first baseball game in recorded history was played in canada in 1838, in beachville ontario.
@@irREVERENDly that's the guy who created superman and the dog that inspired snoopy. beachville ontario was baseball.
Now you know how important those Heritage Minutes are for Canadian History and for Canadians....Thanks for the fun videos....Peace & Respect from Canada
I loved those!
Especially important since people became woke instead when they started erasing the culture.
Yes, it's worth paying millions of dollars to Heritage Canada so that people will hang on to these pathetic factoids as a replacement for a true national identity.
It shows that of the 5 questions the 3 with heritage minutes were the ones that most got right.
@dra6o0n define woke.
Re: Canada's motto, we often hear new broadcasters saying "from sea to sea to sea", adding the Arctic Ocean as the 3rd sea.
Many, many years ago when Tudeau senior won the election liberal MPs were elected from the Maritimes to Manitoba nothing further west. The next day the big headline in the newspaper was ''ad mare usque ad Mnitoba''
I love me some good trivia. There's a reason a Canadian hosted Jeopardy for so long!
Chris Haney (August 9, 1950 - May 31, 2010) was a Canadian journalist and co-creator of the Trivial Pursuit board game with Scott Abbott. @@urbanlegendsandtrivia2023
It was a couple of Canadians who invented Trivial Pursuit too
@@casualcausalityyVery true!
Canada's unofficial winter sport is driving without winter tires.
I had a cynical (excuse me eh, REALISTIC) Ottawa cabby who sighed telling me "There are only really TWO damned seasons up here. Snowploughs and roadwork."
@@JenniferHarris-cv4uv There are actually three. You can't forget Tim's Roll Up season.☕
Guess where the road is hahaha
lacrosse has been Canada’s official sport for as long as I have been alive. The government added hockey as Canada’s official winter sport relatively recently- because everyone including canadians already thought it was.
Born and raised in Canada I'm 45 years old and this is news to me
Lacrosse was adopted from the natives
Except lacrosse and hockey were actually both made officially Canada's sports at the same time in 1994. There was never actually a time with only one official sport.
Because it's not true. They both got named official sports in the same act of parliament. Lacrosse had never been made official before@@erniebignose
Lacrosse was declared Canada's national game in 1858 @@neodemonhawk
I'm not surprised. After all, it was two Canadians who invented Trivial Pursuit.
There are 2.4 million caribou in Canada. Once a caribou is domesticated, it is called a reindeer. That’s why Santa Claus lives in Canada.
Ob dear. Caribou and reindeer are the same species. Caribou is the North American name which Reindeer is the European name. Although they have a history of domestication in Europe, the ones here in North America are almost all wild. There are subspecies that have developed, but at the end of the day it is the continent not domestication that dictates what they are called.
What's Santa Claus's postal code?
@@djsmithe H0H 0H0
@@djsmithe
H0H 0H0 😂
@@Sharon-bo2se Alex Trebek would be so proud.
To be fair… Canada releasing a ton of special edition limited time quarters featuring war memorials, olympians, breast cancer awareness, and many many more.
The 1973 Quarter is so cool they had a Mountie on it for the 100 birthday of the RCMP ( I know they wern't called the RCMP in 1873 they were the Northwest Mounted Police then) I was born in 67 so my Grandparents got me a set of the 1967 uncirculated coins and a few of the dollar bills as well for our centennial. All our coins except the penny and the nickel in Canada used to be real silver that is why we old people still call change Silver here in Canada,
@patriciabalzer4114
Limited edition quarters have been done MANY times!
There was the Remembrace Day with a red poppy one year. Another set was all provinces and territories... a different one released each month.
In our centennial year 1967 it was the Canada lynx!
@@rickkwitkoski1976 Yeah. That’s exactly what I was trying to get to. Thank you!
@@RobertBreedon-c3b I just went to bank to buy some quarters for the laundry room. I bought 4 rolls. 3 of them were full of commemorative quarters. I now have 80 Mountie quarters to add to my collection. Someone must have been hard up & sold their collection to the bank.
I liked the 1967 one that had a bobcat on it. I've only ever come across 2 or 3 and I probably still have one.
We had two seasons where I grew up in Eastern Canada in the '60s; Hockey Season, and Lacrosse Season. When the ice was taken out of the arenas in the spring, we used the concrete floor for Box Lacrosse.
It's not like University lacrosse; blood was spilled. Both sports are like a martial art in Canada.
That is a very apt description!!
I played box lacrosse '75-'82 (OMLA), though my knees will tell you I played yesterday. Concrete is not very forgiving on growing joints.
Ya, people think hockey is a violent game. Those who think that have never watched lacrosse. Where slashing and crosschecking are practly required.
Still have scars on my hands from playing lacrosse in phys ed in high school in Alberta. So much fun though.
Shared American Canadian/British trivia: How did the White House receive it's name?
After the Americans burnt fort York on the shores of lake Ontario the British returned the favor and set fire to the Presidential Palace. The Americans could not remove the soot stains from the marble, so they painted it white which led the the present name.
It's actually made of granite, I think. It had a pinky colour originally. This was long before pink was assigned to girls.
First Nations invented Lacrosse and Canadians invented Basketball.
You are not “ The Average American “ anymore! You know more about Canada than most Canadians! You’re like my little nephew! Definitely a Canadian in spirit 😊
I feel like our *actual* motto is “we’re not Americans” 😂
This gave me a good laugh
When other countries complain, we say, ‘at least we aren’t American’ it makes everyone nod and agree.
@@Graciesmom-gp5ngas an Aussie, can confirm this..😅😅
Brilliant!
I actually said this when I was asked in New Zealand and they thought I was American.
These days I have heard it expanded to "From Sea to Sea to Sea," indicating a reference to the Arctic ocean.
Actually it's "from Coast to Coast to Coast"
Of course. What was I thinking?@@exile220ify
Cause we don’t want to admit the border. 😂
@@exile220ify Well, the Latin means sea.
I loved how you were able to link Heritage Minutes to two of the answers.
The only one I didn't know was the motto. I've often heard Canada referenced as Sea to Sea to Sea (Atlantic, Arctic and Pacific), but I've never heard Sea to Sea before. Guess I learned something about my country today! So many Canadians answering 'moose' cracked me up! Pretty sure I learned it was a caribou in school as a child. FYI Tyler, the Canadian coins from lowest to highest are: Leaf (they were discontinued a while ago, I think there was more than 1 leaf but can't remember for sure), Beaver, Blue Nose. Caribou, Loon, and Polar Bear.
And the Canadian Coat of Arms, on the 50 cent piece. But probably only coin collectors, or older Canadians would know that.😊
The penny had two leaves! I recalled it having one so I double checked, but nope! It had two on one stem :3c
In the back of my mind I know it is a Caribou, but I tend to forget sometimes and say it is an Elk(Wapiti) .
Note to non North Americans what we call an Elk (Cervus canadensis) is similar to the Red Deer in Europe and not the Eurasian Elk (what we call moose)
I still don't get it? I thought those were oceans. We have more gulfs and bays than we do seas. I guess sea to sea would still get you from Labrador to the Yukon.
@@pudlmaker I believe it was adopted from Psalm72:8 "He shall have a dominion also from sea to sea......".
But yes technically we are surrounded by 3 oceans....
Canadian motto is: Never leave a case of pop in the car during winter 😂
I was born in Ottawa, but was raised abroad with English as a Second Language teachers until returning to Ottawa for grade 10 from Jeddah. But I got to do 2 incredible years at Dartington Hall boarding school in Devon, where the 1 day we given off for "snow" the flakes which made it to the ground never met another before melting.
Years before internet I just got mocked for all the "fibs" I told; Roit Jenny, so a foot of snow you can still drive with magic tires? And 4 feet of snow covers a whole neighbourhood so some people stay in and create another REFRIGERATOR out of their front door? Bollocks Jenny, who would EVA want ta chill a beer?
And we've all done it 🤣🤣🤣
10:37 close Tyler the nickel has a beaver
The WWll nickels had a beaver and the other a torch with a V for victory. They were also half nickel, half copper and had 16 sides. I believe the beaver came out in 1943 and the V with torch in 1945.
And the Blue Nose on the dimes. The extinct penny bore the maple leaf.
The real motto is keep your stick on the ice!
Yeeees! or Game On!
Or “car!”
Think you mean "I'm a man, but I can change. If I have to, I guess".
I thought it was "she won't find you handsome but she might find you handy"
The thing about lacrosse is, we take lots of pride in it as our national sport, but other than once or twice in gym class, most of us never play it.
Mainly because, if you think hockey is violent, now have everyone holding the sticks at head height.
Our kids grew up playing rep hockey in the winter and rep lacrosse in the summer.
And legalize slashing
Guilty
Lacrosse is second only to Girl's Field Hockey in the blood sports arena.
I'm so proud that I knew the motto right off the top of my head! I looked it up years ago out of curiosity and have never forgotten.
Lacrosse is technically Canada's official sport, hockey is just our favorite, and hence our "winter" sport.
A caribou, also known as reindeer in Eurasia, is a large species of deer native to Arctic, subarctic, tundra, boreal, and mountainous regions of North America. For Americans, Bullwinkle is a moose, Rudolf is a caribou.
And because most bull Caribou drop their antlers early, and the cows keep their antlers into the following year, Rudolf and Co. are all female.
Which makes sense as only a female (or a team thereof) can haul a fat man in a red velvet suit and his sled around the world in one night and not get lost. (just teasing, Guys! 🙂)
You have to remembercthat many of us grew up watching those heritage minutes (repeatedly on TV) that you've just watched once.
I still remember the words to the song where the loggers learn to step lightly!😂
Us northern Canadians, can easily tell the difference between a Moose, Caribou, or Elk.
I am an old guy 71 and I would think my generation would know. But the younger people don't handle money all digital
Honestly, in all my 73 years, I had never heard the distinction or correction that it was in fact a reindeer and not a moose.
@tyler bucket
Penny (now defunct) was a maple leaf, nickle is beaver, dime is bluenose schooner, quarter is caribou, loonie is a loon, toonie is a polar bear. the bill demoninations until recently, were all former prime ministers with exception of the $20 bill (the most common). That is always the current reigning monarch. Some of the bills now display people of notable achievements instead of prime ministers.
One other note: not all legal tender coins come with an animal on them. There are some special edition coins that circulate such as upon the Queen's death, the rings around toonies were colored black in rememberance. Other coins have sports depicted on them. One year they distributed coins with a poppy flower on them for Nov 11.
The one dollar bill had Queen Elizabeth and I remember when the last version of the bill came out ( 72? ) it was easily mistaken for the 20.
@@davidseanor4595 I wasnt referring to the $1 bill.. i was talking about current currency.
@@davidseanor4595 The $1 coin (or loonie) was introduced in 1987, while the $1 bill stopped being issued in 1989.
Don't forget.... The loonie had a Montreal Canadiens symbol on it to celebrate 100 anniversary!!!
If I remember the OLD Nation Anthem it had “Sea to Sea” in it, but was changed later. This is why the older Canadian Lady knew what it was because she remembered that old Anthem.
I have from sea to shining sea stuck in my head, but would not have known it was our motto. Lol. Also, I too just assumed it was a moose on our quarter. I have not checked but I think the beaver is on our nickel? If I am right it is probably because I always seem to have more nickels than quarters. Darn. 😂
In french it's "D'un océan à l'autre" from ocean to ocean. I would have missed that one on a technicality haha
I would have thought more people got it
I actually knew the answer from SCHOOL myself, not from our National Anthem. - although we were taught it was "From Sea to SHINING Sea." - but I knew from the Latin he used that the answer was "From Sea to Sea."
If I'd stopped to think about it, it would have been obvious. "Mari" as in maritime (and I vaguely remember some seafood dishes with names in either Italian or French having mari in the name)
Something many forget is that Canada is bordered by three (3) oceans. Atlantic, Pacific and Artic.
cough cough - Arctic Ocean 😅
Technically it’s all one ocean, we just named parts of it differently 🧐
techincally yes but only the first two really matter
@@kahwigulum that's an odd way to look at it
@carolmclean8513 cough, cough, cough ... Atlantic Ocean, Pacific Ocean and Arctic Ocean.
Can you imagine if an American discovered insulin….they wouldn’t have released it free to the world , they would have released it with copyright and money. And the National Sport is Hockey and Lacrosse, it used to be Lacrosse and a lot thought it was Hockey and it wasn’t
Banting was offered a million dollars by American drug companies for the secret, but he turned them down and gave the secret away for free. The Canadian government gave him $8000 to begin production and distribution.
America has contributed far more than people would like to admit. If you listed all the inventions it would embarrass the people using them today.
@@ront769true; bigger population means more chance of that.
@@theravyshow2570 The U.S having 10 times the population of Canada doesn't garuntee them to be better and stronger, but they are.
@@ront769 don’t kid yourself , Americans did contribute, but your missing it or your trying to make yourself feel good knowing if a American discovered insulin he would of sold it and not give it away.
True north, strong and free is far more widely used especially in the last few generations
If you went to elementary school in Canada, you KNOW that a quarter has a Caribou on it. At least it used to be taught years ago.
They're too busy dealing with behavioral issues to teach kids about change or how to make it sadly.
I got them all right, but I am of an older generation and have lots of experience. This sure goes to show the importance of education and Heritage Minutes!
Calgary's Heritage Museum is pretty badass someplace I would recommend checking out
James Naismith created Basketball while he was a professor in the us. I drive by his homestead in Almonte, Ontario weekly. Insulin, From sea to sea, Caribou on quarter. In 1973 it had a RCMP on a horse.
The antlers!! That's how you can tell! Me yelling at you through my phone! 🤦🏻♀️🤣🤣
Yes Tyler Canada did invent hockey, not just in your hearts but we really did
The Native did invent hockey.
I remember when Americans required the glowing puck in able to follow what was going on.
@@louisech1963 Oka-Hey
The beaver is on our nickel.... .... .... and we have a jackass in our Ottawa.🤣😂
I knew all but one. Only one i didnt know off top of my head was the motto. Once he said the answer it clicked in my head as "oh right". Lol
I got them all except I guessed moose instead of caribou. I forgot it was caribou.
Me at 48 my wife at 57 both born and raised here have never heard of Canada having an "offfical motto", but yeah we knew of the term being used in Canada.
It really should be from sea to sea to sea...Pacific, Atlantic, Arctic.😂😅😊
You are SUCH a CUTIE Tyler! - & YOU KNEW MORE than you think! You didn't get 1 right, you got 2 right, (lacrosse & insulin) - & I'm sure you'll do better & better in time.
Keep up the good work learning about us & at the same time giving us a bright spot for the day with your nice & sunny personality. (Personality wise, you would actually fit right in to this country - & we would be glad to have you.)
So true, I think he's got a personality of a can idiot. He's happy and he's fair and he's funny
Would he also fit into Norway? UK? Japan? (Tyler Rumple, Tyler Burger, Tyler Walker..) Or any other country he pretends to be interested in to make $$? He is here to earn, not learn! You'll find out as time goes on - it's all an act.
Wow are you ever a negative, critical person! Tyler may (or may not) fit into those other countries. I don't know enough about their personality types to say. I DO know his personality type would fit in here - & he is NOT faking his personality - he wouldn't be able to sustain "the act" for an entire video, each & every time! (THAT wouldn't be one of Tyler's strong points.) This is JUST Tyler's personality!
As to your point that he is here to earn not learn - I say 2 things. Firstly - why does it have to be one OR the other? Why can't Tyler be doing both? Doctors, car mechanics, architects, singers, chefs - all make money (some of these make a lot) BUT they chose their jobs vs. others that make money - because they ENJOY that type of work. You CAN make money doing something you like! IT TRULY IS POSSIBLE! Why should Tyler be any different?
It is also OBVIOUS - if you pay attention - that Tyler DOES like learning about us - because he could have chosen a different country instead of Canada ie. Ireland, Switzerland, South Africa etc. He chose Canada as 1 of his countries of interest - because he DOES want to learn about us. Also, it is clear that Tyler DOES like to learn. He is not only doing this for money - he is a NATURAL researcher. I have seen other reactors who don't know the answer to (many) things - & they will often (some always) say - to tell them the answer, whereas a good portion of the time Tyler wants to know the answer ON THE SPOT & LOOKS IT UP HIMSELF - mid video. THAT is someone who LIKES TO LEARN!
You need to get some generousity back into your soul for people & NOT think the worst of them without just cause. Having a few other reaction channels doesn't make Tyler a faker or uninterested. Instead it shows his interest in learning for his income & Canada & Canadians are one of the things he is interested in. End of story in my opinion.
PLEASE, for your OWN sake (because it rots your soul after a while if you think everybody has bad intentions) & for everybody else you are in contact with - give people THE BENEFIT of the doubt - & only when thinking it through that this CANNOT add up or has VERY little chance of doing so upon FULLEST thought, be more careful in your interactions with them. I do truly mean this in the best way.
Take care 💝@@nolajoy7759
Kumbaya, Suzy Sunshine. I hate to see people get fooled so try to warn them. I guess you will have to find out for yourself. ✌️ @@Carrie-so3ro
Good morning, nolajoy.
I truly thank-you for your concern towards me & wanting to help me with your warning.
I STILL DO stand by my opinion on Tyler & his intentions & I hope you will think what I said through. Is there something that I am missing besides Tyler having other channels? I AM always open to information that helps me in making proper choices & assessments. If not, I think that my points remain valid & I must give Tyler my belief.
Even if I can't change your mind & you don't have anything else to add to support your negative impression of Tyler - I thank you for your kindness towards me & not wanting me to get fooled.
All the best to you - (from Suzy Sunshine. 🌞☺)@@nolajoy7759
I'm a bit older and was stumped on the Canadian motto. I have heard the phrase however. You really do learn something new every day.
I always enjoy your videos.
Lacrosse is particularly popular in Ontario as it essentially comes out of the First Nations communities that exist along the St. Lawrence River between Montreal and Toronto. It is commonly played in arenas over the summer after they've removed the ice. This is called Box Lacrosse as compared to Field Lacross which is played on a pitch the size of a soccer field.
That would make sense since Lacrosse was invented by the Iroquois.
American motto is "E Pluribus Unum".
It is on the Seal of the US, and on your coinage - the origin of 1 nation from 13 colonies.
"From many, one"
Lacrosse is the oldest organized sport in North America, with its origins with the indigenous people of North America as early as the 12th century.
I always thought it was a moose.
You forgetting who invented basketball was hard to watch lol. I was pulling for you to reach into your heritage minute knowledge for that one 😂
He has only seen or once or twice. I am sure most Canadians (over a certain age) have seen the heritage minutes thousands of times
Hockey was born here in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, my hometown!!!
Alan Doyle of Great Big Sea told of the fantastic day his whole band were backstage in the States when an announcement came on out front; Winter Olympics were just starting and "Let's all celebrate! The United States just earned their first Olympics Hockey medal; the SILVER!" And the crowd went wild, while every Canuck backstage exchanged grins, high fives and hugs before heading out, "Yay America eh!?"
I was today years old when I realized the animal on our Canadian Quarter isn't a Moose! Caribou makes lots of sense, but never crossed my mind that it was that.
You probably didn't notice the antlers.
@@waterjade4198 You're right. Looking now, of course it's not a moose. The face shape is totally different, not to mention the kind of antlers. Funny how we overlook some things. Hope you're having a great day!
There's a whole song about it, how did everyone get it wrong?
🎶The quarter has a Caribou on it, on it. The quarter has a Caribou, and it's worth 25 cents!🎶
@@pineo81 I can't say I've ever heard that song. Perhaps I am too old.
@@TheRandomViewnever hear it either
Trivial pursuit - . Was invented in Canada. General Knowledge board game.
I actually got ALL the answers right - although I will admit that I automatically said "moose" before immediately correcting myself with the caribou.
I also knew the Latin motto he was looking for from the words he said - "From Sea to Sea", but at school we were taught the motto was actually "From Sea to SHINING Sea."
I remembered these things FROM SCHOOL, NOT from Heritage Minutes. I thought those Heritage Minutes were great to teach the info to kids BEFORE they learn it in school, & as a REMINDER for afterwards, but from what I am seeing in some of these comments, we need to KEEP THOSE HERITAGE MINUTES GOING - & ON REPEAT - as it looks like some Canadians are only learning (somehow) these basic Canadian facts this way. VERY, SAD - but as long as they/all of you are learning - that's the main thing!
They are done so well that they ought to be brought back and soon.
I got them all right, as well. But, "From sea to shining sea" is from the song America the Beautiful. There's no "shining" in A mari usque ad mare. Usque means continously, or without interruption, so the motto is from one sea all the way to the other. There was a suggestion at one point to change it to A mari ad mare ad mare to reflect the fact that we border three oceans, but nothing has come from that.
Thank-you for the information - even though it is upsetting.
I knew that the answer he was looking for was "From Sea to Sea" based on the Latin he quoted, but as I said, my TEACHER AT SCHOOL told us it was "From Sea to Shining Sea." To hear from you that she was ACTUALLY giving us the words from an AMERICAN song & saying it was part of the CANADIAN motto - is AWFUL! (I feel used & dirty!) I just have to believe that she either just wasn't paying CLOSE attention to what she was telling us OR that she got confused, being aware of both. But to believe in your teachers & take in their teachings - only to find out MANY years later that it was wrong is terrible. Teachers need to do a better job (like the one in this video!)
(I wouldn't normally just trust the words of a complete stranger [sorry 😶🌫] over someone I did know - "critical thinking", but I CAN still make out a little Latin & I have seen this phrase before, which I actually wondered a bit over since it was a little different from what my teacher said.) So once again I thank you for clearing up where the "shining" came from even if the answer is certainly disturbing.@@russellsketchley8830
@@Carrie-so3ro I wasn't trying to upset you at all. I guess teachers are as fallible as everyone else. It is an easy mistake to make, especially since we hear all those American songs and slogans all the time.
I know that you weren't trying to upset me. I DO TRULY appreciate the knowledge that you provided me with - (& I can hear those words in the song playing in my head now.) Sometimes the truth is not what we would like it to be, but I prefer NOT to live in a world of make believe so I appreciate KNOWING the most.
This WAS however a BIG mistake for a teacher to make. It could be an EASY mistake, as you said we are familiar with the American song, BUT teaching school kids to add a phrase from SOMEONE ELSE's big, nationalistic tune into our motto - making us think those are the words is a pretty terrible mix-up - understandable (ONLY in a way), but a pretty bad mistake to make. (If it had been ANY other song, but one of America's most nationalistic ones...😔)
All the best. ♥ @@russellsketchley8830
A Mari Usque Ad Mare - From sea to sea
Coins:
$2 - Polar Bear
$1 - Loon
.25 - Caribou (And NO, it does not look like a moose. The Antlers are wrong)
.10 - The Bluenose
.05 - Beaver
.01 - maple leaf
There was a song about the Canadian quarter called "A quarter has a Caribou on it" on Canadian Sesame Street. The beaver is on the nickel.
A quarter has a caribou on it, on it.
A quarter has a caribou, that's me.
A quarter has a caribou on it,
and it's worth 25 cents.
A quarter buys... a package of gum.
A quarter buys... a newspaper.
A quarter buys... a balloon.
A quarter buys... a donut with a hole.
A quarter has a caribou on, it on it.
A quarter has a caribou on it, that's me.
A quarter has a caribou on it,
and it's worth 25 cents.
Oh yeah, it's when 25 cents.
Oh yeah that's me
I remember the days before sales tax when I'd walk to the 7-11 with a dollar (bill) and grab a chocolate bar, a bottle of Coke, and two comics to read. Each was a quarter. There were no taxes, and the total was exactly a dollar.
@@CorwinAlexander my family owned a little shop from 1979 to 1998. Things were so cheap back then. We used to get a grab bag full of different candies for 25 cents. A smaller bag of chips for about 30 or 40 cents. A big milk shake for less than a dollar. I watched prices go up as time went on, but nothing like it is now. It's cheaper to buy a big bag of no name potato chips, than it is to buy a "small" bag of lays.
If you found a pop bottle on the way to school, worth two cents, you could get two candies or a double bubble gum.
Proud to me a Canadian. Grateful!
The beaver is on the reverse side of the nickel. On the front of all Canadian coins and the $20 bill is Queen Elizabeth II, who will presumably be replaced by King Charles III. Her majesty was also on the discontinued $1 and $2 bills.
I actually have a King Charles III one. The mint just put them into circulation.
@@LadyVineXIII - A coin or a $20 bill? If a coin, which denomination?
@@gregblair5139 A quarter. I got from my mom who works as a cashier. You should find one soon.
I got my first king Charles coin the other day. Pretty sure it was a toony. It seemed weird not to see Elizabeth.
@@derrickfoster644 As someone who remembers grabbing the new mints when her portrait was last updated, I am with you on this. It's a bit of an adjustment to say Our King instead of Our Queen.
Growing up in Newfoundland, Canada, the quarter is a caribou, not a moose. We have both and they are very different.
For a moose, think Bullwinkle, and for Cariboo think Rudolf
There was a commemorative 25cent/ quarter for the RCMP on the back of the country was a Mountie on a Horse !
Do you know what kind of horse it was?
Answer-A Quuarter Horse ! 😊
Coin not country- darn auto defect!
An elks rack is two separate forks with distinctive tines, more like a deer.
A moose has two separate forks which form a paddle.
A caribou's rack is joined and curves over the middle of it's face.
Watch all Canadian heritage videos. They were on all Canadian commercial back in the day. That’s why children grew into adults that knew Canadian History.
Although typically thought of as American, the origin of the sport of baseball began in the Canadian town of Beachville, Ontario, and American football was initially developed by Canadians at McGill University. The Canadian invented sports, lacrosse, basketball, five-pin bowling, ringette, and wheelchair rugby as well🇨🇦😉
I learned all these things in grade 10 Canadian history. Indigenous peoples in eastern Canada played lacrosse for years before Europeans arrived. Everyone knows who invented insulin! I think one of the other comments was right on that we enjoy trivia.
Yeah, the ones people got right are mostly on heritage minutes - they play on TV all the time - education during ad breaks
The James Naismith Basket ball was bc the ball was put through an old fashioned apple basket...The lovely stone house still stands near Almonte Ontario.
It originated from Indigenous who taught the settlers
Yes, lacrosse
Lacrosse was played by Indigenous natives.
Canada DID invent hockey! In Montreal
Hockey, Maple Syrup and Poutine, 3 inventions from Quebec that define Canada nowadays.
It was invented in Windsor, Nova Scotia. Come at us Quebec!
Wasn’t it technically invented by the first nations and was “refined” into hockey after by quebec (and maritime provinces if pineo81 is correct)? I mean it’s the kind of thing that is played and developed over time in many places at the same time so it’s hard to pinpoint an exact place and date..
Canada did not invent hockey they made it popular.
I didn't know that! We did?! Yay!
After 57 yrs, did not know we had a motto, and I too would have said a " moose ". Thank you for coming to my Tedtalk.
Nobody uses cash anymore. We older generation know because we handled money more. The beaver is on the nickel, schooner is on dime, maple leaf on penny and so on.
I came here for this.
From sea to shining sea- original motto... we have another sea up north Bering Sea
This guy sounds like he is one third circus announcer, one third Jerry Seinfeld, and one third radio newsman of the 1920s.
Thanks for this Tyler, I really enjoyed and this is a great learning experience too
Nickel-Beaver. Dime-Blue Nose Quarter-Caribou Loonie-Loon Toonie-Polar Bear
Lacrosse isn’t really that big in Canada, but they try to push it because it’s so similar to hockey and they try to claim it was started here with links to Native Canadian/American culture.
And a type of Baseball game was started in Canada, then an American played it and the rest is history
I've never heard of lacrosse being an official sport. I especially have never heard of it being Canada's official sport. Once in a while you hear about a friend who's friend played it. That's how often you actually hear about lacrosse in Canada. I would have thought soccer or golf.
I had no clue who James Naismith was but I knew Basketball was invented in Canada so that was my guess.
I have never heard this motto and I've lived in Canada my entire life. I don't know where this motto is coming from.
That quarter looks like an Elk. Caribou and Elk look fairly similar. I always thought it was an Elk. It looks nothing like a moose.
"from sea to shining sea", from the anthem.
But, the other saying "from coast to coast to coast", since we've got the northern coast.
That’s not from our anthem. That’s from “God Bless America”.
@@Kal_El_Krypton 🤦♂My bad! You're absolutely right... I never sing either so I easily forget which words go where! lol
Canada does not a the penny or a paper dollar bill, the beaver is on nickel, the bluenose is on the dime, the cariboo is on the quarter, a loon on the dollar and a polar bear on 2 dollar coin. I know the answer but can anyone out there tell us what a bluenose is and why it is on the dime?
Elk and caribou have similar antlers. A moose’s antlers are nothing like them. They are very flat and wide.
I had no idea we had a motto lol and I thought it was a moose on the quarter
Caribou = Reindeer .... anyone who says it's a moose has never seen one. Their antlers are more like a hand fan then a branch of a tree.
A quarter has a caribou on it, on it
A quarter has a caribou (That's me!)
A quarter has a caribou on it
And it's worth twenty-five cents
Hahah I posted this before I saw yours. Awesome
Side note on identifying the animal on the quarter. I teach it in Kindergarten so these people should know this. I think that part of the problem is many people no longer use actual cash. They use their phones or credit cards.
Finally people are starting to say "from sea to sea to sea" in recognition of our 3 coasts.
The vertically flat paddle antler that sticks out forward above the caribou's nose is the distinguishing feature that only a caribou has, that you can see on the coin.
Thanks for the laughs. So a Caribou but hadn't thought about it.
For a second I thought the guy in the red suit asking questions was you lol
I'm kinda stunned people didn't know what's on a quarter... lol. You learn that in preschool and use it every day for the rest of your entire life.
Love your videos. Drs. Banting and Best discovered insulin in my city, London Ontario. We have an awesome little museum here with tons of pictures and articles and their equipment.
The animal on the back of the dime is a blue nose.
😅😅
When I was a kid in the 80’s we just had lacrosse as the national sport but somewhere along the line we added hockey officially as winter sport for obvious reasons.
Canadians invented curling. 🤷🏼♀️
Canadian here, I actually got them all right!!! I had no idea about the motto, but somewhere in the back of my mind said “sea to sea” and that was my guess! Now I couldn’t tell you what that motto means, except, “hey, we’re really big”
Lacrosse: I’m the only one in my family in 3 generations that played it…..everyone else played baseball.
Love this video, makes me proud being Canadian.
Canada motto is due to functioning as a land bridge. The cargo from the Far East (China/Japan) came to Vancouver on ships, was then transported by train to Montreal and then by sea to Europe. Before Panama and Suez canal, it was the only viable way. It is still significant, just not as much as before.
The only time we played Lacrosse was in high school. Lacrosse was a native game. But otherwise no one cares about
Got them all right in Montreal - thank you, very entertaining. (And the American motto is also Latin: 'E pluribus unum' meaning 'from many one.')
Would anyone like to see Tyler take a quiz on USA stuff?
I really enjoyed your video and comments plus learning more about the world around me. Yes, due to the Canadian commercial of heritage minutes was always telling me about many famous Canadians and their inventions for medical and sports so many that do watch TV should know that grown up.
These are fun, thanks for them. Fun fact: the $2 coin has the queen on one side (as with all Canadian coins) and a polar bear on the other. When it was introduced in 1996, before everyone settled on calling it a "toonie", one of the proposed nicknames was "the queen with a bear behind"!
The US actually doesn’t have an official national sport.