7 CULTURE SHOCKS OF MOVING TO SCOTLAND!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 17 июн 2017
  • When Joe and I first moved to Scotland there were a few culture shocks we experienced right away. Mainly the language, the friendliness/customer service, the queues, the lack of religion, the legally drinking in public, the censorship on TV, and their holiday time.
    www.patheos.com/blogs/friendly...
    Follow us (^_^):
    *On Twitter: @SonnieTravels
    *On Instagram: @SonnieTravels
    Music:
    Daily Beetle by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
    Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-...
    Artist: incompetech.com/

Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @giuliaromana1842
    @giuliaromana1842 7 лет назад +1355

    You arrived on January 1st. People were in bed with hangovers after Hogmanay.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +42

      +Giulia Romana I understand that, but in the US I had to win a sales contest to get that day off.

    • @giuliaromana1842
      @giuliaromana1842 7 лет назад +136

      No-one interferes with the Scots and Hogmanay :)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +35

      +Giulia Romana And I hope that never changes ;)

    • @hwguy13
      @hwguy13 6 лет назад +5

      not really i work retail and we were on shift 10am newyears eve till 9am newyears day, near princes st actually...

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +2

      +Mhairi o0o0o that stinks! :(

  • @greyjackal
    @greyjackal 6 лет назад +928

    Good lord...an American who can pronounce Edinburgh!

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +18

      😉😁

    • @greyjackal
      @greyjackal 6 лет назад +12

      (I lived in Boston for 2 years when our other office was here in Edinburgh. I think I ground two teeth away :D)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +15

      Hahaha! Boston is a lovely city, but some people don't enjoy that accent very much haha To put it mildly. 😂😂😂

    • @curtisdavidson7948
      @curtisdavidson7948 5 лет назад

      Like

    • @smoothfags20
      @smoothfags20 5 лет назад +12

      Really refreshing. I so hate the way that mainly Americans always, without fail call it Edinboro, Even when its pointed out, they still use it. GRRRR !

  • @oldlongfellow4178
    @oldlongfellow4178 6 лет назад +334

    In Scotland we only care about things that annoy/directly contrast with England.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +13

      Hahahaha I've noticed that sometimes ;)

    • @geraldwalsh6489
      @geraldwalsh6489 4 года назад +3

      And what about Brexit then?

    • @mjudec
      @mjudec 4 года назад +34

      We hate brexit.

    • @Jenna_Talia
      @Jenna_Talia 4 года назад +29

      @@geraldwalsh6489 We hate Brexit. That's why a second referendum is being talked about. Our opinions of independence are all of a sudden changing due to what's at stake.

    • @itsallrobbish
      @itsallrobbish 4 года назад +1

      Yep, I’d go along with that and at times it grates.

  • @tweetiepie551
    @tweetiepie551 5 лет назад +191

    Going to work( asda *Wal-Mart)) ,standing at the bus stop I'd been waiting a while and no bus came. I knew I was screwed and would be disciplined for absence, at that moment a car stopped and a customer I'd served 2 weeks before told me the bus service was cancelled and she gave me a lift to work. I expected her to go in to shop but she said no, it was just on her route. She wouldn't take any cash for the ride, wished me a good day and drove away.
    That is my Scotland.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +6

      That's so wonderful! Yes! That certainly is my Scotland too. Your story sums it up well

    • @tweetiepie551
      @tweetiepie551 5 лет назад +28

      @@SonnieTravels I can give you a new one that occured only last night.
      Doing my groceries an older man stopped his trolley and just looked at me with a confused face, I asked him if a was ok, he replied.. I have no idea what I came in for and I've been round three times.
      After about ten minutes 5 other shoppers had gathered and it had turned in a game show of guess the activity guess the product.
      With their children in competition running to find products to bring back.
      It took 20 minutes before a man said to buy all that you'd need to be minted( rich). The old man's face lit up and said MINT I CAME for MINT!!! A big cheer was given and much handshaking and laughter as a child ran up with a mint plant and I WIN . The old man bought him a huge bar of chocolate as a prize.
      That's my Scotland.

    • @jessk7240
      @jessk7240 5 лет назад +3

      tweetie pie wow! I want to move to Scotland even more now!

    • @davidcraig9538
      @davidcraig9538 4 года назад +2

      Yeah I had the complete Opposite thing happen in America every time I said hi to someone on the street they looked like I was trying to mug them

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  4 года назад

      Where were you in the US?

  • @oORussellOo
    @oORussellOo 6 лет назад +599

    You should discuss the hidden queue at a bar. There is no formal line of people, but everyone knows who is next to be served, to the point where people will actually tell the barman that they should serve that person before them. Its pretty cool and not respecting the queue at the bar has the same social consequences as if you were lining up for anything else.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +5

      +The Life of Ryan Ooo maybe! I'll think if I can fit it into any of my upcoming videos on Scotland :)

    • @oORussellOo
      @oORussellOo 6 лет назад +6

      Being from Edinburgh myself, now living in London and having half my family from the US, I have a pretty good grasp of the differences myself. You seem to be doing a good job assimilating :-).

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +10

      +The Life of Ryan Thanks so much! It really felt more like home to me than the US ever did honestly. I miss it so much. We're in Japan now.

    • @BrianFeral1
      @BrianFeral1 6 лет назад +5

      In many clubs tall folk are served first.

    • @SANDSCORCHER
      @SANDSCORCHER 6 лет назад +3

      We could do with some more of that in England.

  • @ryanallen3116
    @ryanallen3116 5 лет назад +233

    Sorry just a correction on what you said it's actually illegal to drink in a public place in most places in Scotland with the exception of Edinburgh

    • @bluebird123xyz
      @bluebird123xyz 4 года назад +24

      Legally you can drink in a public place, but a lot of local councils put up no-drinking zones to try and prevent disorderly conduct. It's up to the town council though, and they have to clearly sign-post where the no-drinking zones are

    • @ruthmcneil3368
      @ruthmcneil3368 4 года назад +3

      If your at a pub you can take your drink outside to have a smoke but you can't do it after 10pm

    • @Eph.6_10-20
      @Eph.6_10-20 4 года назад +3

      You can’t drink in the streets in Fife. Drinking in the streets is the exception in Scotland isn’t it? It goes against the Scot Gov ideals.... 🤔

    • @lukemacinnes5124
      @lukemacinnes5124 4 года назад +3

      @@Eph.6_10-20 depends where, for a few years there was a law against it but the country wide law was gotten rid of years ago, a lot of places still enforce it but there's a few places where it's not illegal now

    • @SitatheNightGoddess
      @SitatheNightGoddess 3 года назад

      We walked around Edinburgh castle. Oasis (or just the 1 guy) was playing “wonder wall”!! We sat in the vennel to listen! There were people everywhere with alcohol lol

  • @ando19bs
    @ando19bs 5 лет назад +424

    Glasgow is way friendlier than Edinburgh and I'll batter yer heed in if you say otherwise.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +21

      😂🤣😂 OK, OK ! Point proven 😉

    • @Jamie-ph6so
      @Jamie-ph6so 5 лет назад +33

      I believe the correct response here is "come at me, big man"

    • @john-paulmcghie7721
      @john-paulmcghie7721 5 лет назад +10

      The correct answer is come on then big yen 😂😂😂

    • @MrDylanm842
      @MrDylanm842 5 лет назад +11

      I believe the words you were looking for were “I’ll kick her cunt in if ye say otherwise dafty”

    • @lindsaymacpherson8782
      @lindsaymacpherson8782 5 лет назад +1

      away with ya self Livi best :)

  • @timclarke6087
    @timclarke6087 5 лет назад +14

    I'm from England but spend a lot of time in Scotland, especially Glasgow. My culture shock was just how friendly the people are up there. I had a girlfriend a while back who was victim to a hit and run incident and her left leg was broken just 2 weeks before she moved there (due to circumstances at home in England). People were so kind to her! She had a huge suitcase to drag around while on crutches, she had a duffle bag with clothes in, and could barely manage more than a few steps without needing to stop. At the time I couldn't get the time off work to help her move up there (I tried my hardest, and she understood completely that i couldn't). I was amazed to hear that so many people had helped her on her journey, she went on a 12.5 hour coach journey to get there (it's gruelling, I've done it myself many times because it's much cheaper than the train), other passengers were helping her on and off when it stopped for a little while so people could get food and drinks, get something to read etc. Then when she got to Glasgow, people were offering to pull the suitcase for her, or hold the duffel bag, call a taxi for her, and one gentleman even paid for her taxi on the final mile of her journey because the buses were cancelled (due to heavy snow). I've experienced similar hospitality up there on many occasions, I've got several complicated health issues, and often end up in hospital. On one occasion I'd quite literally passed out in the middle of Glasgow city centre (in Buchanan Galleries, a shopping centre). When i came to, there were several people sheltering me from the public so I didn't feel like i was being stared at, they made sure that the ambulance crew arrived quickly, and didn't leave my side until the ambulance crew said I was going to be okay. One lady even travelled to hospital with me in the ambulance to make sure I wasn't alone, as my family were 400 miles away in Norfolk, England. We actually became really good friends, and I'm travelling to Glasgow in September to surprise her with a little weekend getaway to say thank you! This was a culture shock to me because where I'm from, people aren't so kind. If I'd passed out on the street in Norwich for example, maybe 1 in every 50 people might stop to help, if you're lucky. My partner wouldn't have received the help she did on her travels if the coach driver and his co driver weren't also Scottish. I'm always made to feel so welcomed up there, so much so that I'm only applying to Scottish universities when the time comes, because I want to live there!

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +3

      That's exactly the Scotland I know and love! I actually made a video about what I miss from Scotland and mention their warmth, hospitality, and overall immense kindness. I love it there and I'm so glad you've had similar experiences.
      I've actually taken that bus ride you mentioned a couple times from Edinburgh to London. It's a rough one haha I'm so glad people were so helpful to your partner :)

    • @maggiep265
      @maggiep265 7 месяцев назад

      Nobody's ever helped me with my luggage or anything unless I asked for it, in fact, I made a complaint about one specific bus driver (Aberdonian) who not only refused to help me but was downright rude. Similar thing happened with a taxi driver in Edinburgh. Only people helpful were the railway workers. Never lived in Glasgow but several other places, high and low, big and small and had the same experiences everywhere.

  • @accidentalanarchist3304
    @accidentalanarchist3304 6 лет назад +160

    It's awesome that you've found living in Scotland a positive experience, we're a friendly bunch most of the time, even if we're a tad hard to understand at times.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +13

      Haha I agree! I personally had no troubles in Edinburgh, but the Glasgow accent got me some times lol

    • @accidentalanarchist3304
      @accidentalanarchist3304 6 лет назад +8

      Sonnie Travels
      I'm not from Glasgow myself, Ayrshire born and raised, then onto Loch Lomond after that. I did however work in the finance sector for a well known Scottish bank in Glasgow, and boy, did I ever get a pummelling for my own accent..Hahaha
      I'm currently in New Zealand, and now I just morph into Kiwi as I'm scunnered being asked "pardon" or "excuse me", or worse, they just roll their eyes.
      Hope you make it back over, and I'm coming home soon myself, canny wait..X

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +3

      I've heard New Zealand is amazing!!! Where in NZ are you? I almost did my MSc there 😁 My friend Rachel is from Ayrshire! Idk if you saw it, but she's in my Speaking Scots video. :)

    • @accidentalanarchist3304
      @accidentalanarchist3304 6 лет назад

      It is lovely, but there's only so much greenery you can take, and it's so far from everywhere. I'm in Hawkes Bay, which is basically a farming and agriculture community. It's unusual, in that it's like the South of France, only upside down. Heaps of olive groves, fruit orchards and the likes down here, and the heat! But whilst it is beautiful, it's a struggle to find work in specific areas, that's why I'm heading back home this year.
      I'm away to see this video of you & your pal from Ayrshire, it's been a while since I heard my own accent..Xxx

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      Wow! That sounds so beautiful!!! I love green spaces (it's one of the things I loved about Edinburgh so much). We just moved to a huge city for the first time, so I made sure we were near a park. 😁

  • @Markyboimw
    @Markyboimw 7 лет назад +157

    Edinburgh is one of the only places in Scotland that does allow drinking on the streets tbh

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +3

      +Markyboi We got lucky by moving here than!

    • @alistairgourlay9443
      @alistairgourlay9443 7 лет назад +9

      Edinburgh is the exception in the law due to the fringe.

    • @kimjong-john1ultrainkorea319
      @kimjong-john1ultrainkorea319 7 лет назад +1

      Markyboi Never been to Edinburgh tbh is it better than Glasgow?

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +7

      +Kim Jong-John #1 Ultra in Korea It's very different than Glasgow so it just comes down to personal preference. Glasgow is bigger and certainly more metropolitan. It also has more livelier nightlife, but I personally prefer the smaller feeling of Edinburgh.

    • @jack987y
      @jack987y 7 лет назад +7

      Kim Jong-John #1 Ultra in Korea no Glasgow is much better

  • @DMTDEZIGNZ
    @DMTDEZIGNZ 5 лет назад +72

    Scotland! The biggest wee country in the world ❤🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @FORCED_REASSEMBLY
    @FORCED_REASSEMBLY 5 лет назад +210

    we don't have churches
    we have bars

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +8

      Which are better ;)

    • @rosaevydaemoniea948
      @rosaevydaemoniea948 5 лет назад +11

      Pubs not bars ya ejiot

    • @gamer53yearsago53
      @gamer53yearsago53 4 года назад +2

      Popin jimbo wats a bar

    • @YoshiToastie2
      @YoshiToastie2 4 года назад

      @@jaylang1529 oi mate. W.A.T.P 2-1 AGAINST THE SCUM. BEST NEW YEAR GIFT

    • @jaylang1529
      @jaylang1529 4 года назад +1

      @@YoshiToastie2 Ano pal best a wishes tae you and yer family buddy. Happy new years. 🙌 WATP 🇬🇧

  • @smp6565
    @smp6565 6 лет назад +558

    I had no idea they don’t say “half ten” in the US?!? 😱

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +45

      Yeah haha We say, "half past 10" and "ten thirty" instead 😁

    • @smp6565
      @smp6565 6 лет назад +4

      Jo Maher whaaaat? Awesome 😂👍🏻

    • @smp6565
      @smp6565 6 лет назад +6

      Jo Maher crazy haha never heard that before either 🙈

    • @jamma246
      @jamma246 6 лет назад +38

      The only confusing thing about "half ten" is between countries like Germany and the UK. In Germany I think that "half ten" would translate to "half to ten", so 9:30, whereas in the UK it would translate to "half past ten", so 10:30.

    • @smp6565
      @smp6565 6 лет назад +6

      jamma246 omg that’s so funny as I ran into that exact problem! I live in Switzerland currently and ohhhh the confusion 🤦🏻‍♀️I keep having to think “shoot, did they say half ten or halb zehn?!?” 😂

  • @TheAnon03
    @TheAnon03 7 лет назад +309

    Customer service is usualy pretty good in the UK.
    When it's not is when people get angry (looking at you O2)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад

      +TheAnon03 Agreed! The customer service here is phenomenal!Haha We have no personal experience with O2.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +5

      Anon Ymes Very true.
      Ben Nevis! Yes! It was incredible. I got good footage too.
      Oh, I believe it! We have some friends visiting right now from the US and when they asked how to pack I just stressed, "layers" and, of course, a raincoat. :)

    • @FirstLast-cf4mi
      @FirstLast-cf4mi 7 лет назад +6

      I would rather have someone tell me to fuck off than have someone's spirit so broken that they have to act like a robot i.e. "have a nice day!!!!!"
      The only limit I've seen with this in the UK is when some drunk is trying to be slyly racist to staff. In that situation is is acceptable for another customer to leave the queue and tell the idiot to leave.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +4

      +First Last I was allowed to hang up on customers over the phone if they started cursing at me :)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +1

      +First Last I was allowed to hang up on customers over the phone if they started cursing at me :)

  • @lloydscott6707
    @lloydscott6707 5 лет назад +237

    This is a pretty fun video to watch as a Scot.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +5

      Thanks! I'm glad. 😁

    • @Kelly14UK
      @Kelly14UK 5 лет назад +2

      Ah as a half Maltese, born here, i've suspected for decades, the entire world would eventually come to Glasgow. They did. Now i'm bored and considering a move to Nova Scotia : D : D

    • @smashedcandle
      @smashedcandle 3 года назад

      Aye!

    • @Rathardican
      @Rathardican 3 года назад +1

      Everyone’s welcome here. Glad you like it.

  • @SomethingStupide
    @SomethingStupide 5 лет назад +50

    You cannot drink in the streets up here in Aberdeen.
    As a German living in Scotland, that will never stop being weird to me.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +3

      You can openly drink in Germany?? I didn't know that!

    • @SomethingStupide
      @SomethingStupide 5 лет назад +7

      @@SonnieTravels Absolutely.
      Apart from certain public transport companies, you can drink literally anywhere in Germany.
      Of course, there are places where common sense and/or basic human decency dictate you not to - like, in a cemetery or, of course, institutions like schools, which can also ban drinking on their premises (though I vividly remember drinking at school on several occasions).
      But yeah, public drinking (and also public intoxication by itself) aren't criminal offenses or even misdemeanours in Germany.
      The police might put you in a cell over night to protect yourself and others from harm but once you've sobered up, you're free to leave without any charges.
      Apart from drunk driving (which is obviously not allowed) you can't even be held accountable for crimes to the fullest extent if they were committed while the perpetrator was under the influence.
      We sure love our drinks over in Germany :D
      And, funnily enough, these lax laws do not lead to public drinking and intoxication being significantly more of a problem as it is in countries with strict laws on public drinking have.
      Best regards from Aberdeen :)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +1

      That's so awesome! It's the same here in Japan actually :)

    • @spambotful
      @spambotful 3 года назад +3

      I beg to differ, go up union street on a Saturday night and it’s full of people of drinking

    • @gcraib
      @gcraib 3 года назад

      Correct. There might be some by-law or something but it's not really enforced (maybe except near football games) so nobody really knows about it or pays attention to it.

  • @FranVerzeletti
    @FranVerzeletti 6 лет назад +227

    I am Brazilian and recently moved to Scotland. Totally agree with everything that you said especially about being able to be myself and not just when it comes to religion but everything else. I find that people here don’t really care about what you are wearing, how much you weight, what color your hair is.. they just simply let you be and I think that is awesome! And I am also constantly amazed at the customer service provided in Scotland!

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +3

      +Fran Verzeletti That's so awesome! It's cool to hear that we've experienced the same things even coming from different countries! 😁 What part of Scotland are you in?

    • @polifriedman1633
      @polifriedman1633 5 лет назад

      where you at ?.......i·ll come round n hang .

    • @frgc6159
      @frgc6159 5 лет назад

      E aí Fran, tudo joia? o que cidade você mora? Eu preciso praticar meu português :)

    • @aldozilli1293
      @aldozilli1293 5 лет назад +4

      That's cos everyone is so bloody fat and ugly

    • @abcxyz-cx4mr
      @abcxyz-cx4mr 5 лет назад +2

      Aldo Zilli - hahah true even though I’m English I can admit Brits (from all three countries) are some of the ugliest people within Europe, which is sad :/.

  • @ellis9505
    @ellis9505 7 лет назад +218

    In the UK there are a lot of words that we don't consider to be swearing like 'damn' and generally people are more chilled out about mild swear words so it's kind of weird for us when we consume American media and see people getting freaked out about stuff like that. The 9pm thing is the watershed. You can say almost anything you want post-watershed because it's assumed that children have gone to bed by this point.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +12

      +Rachel Elizabeth Yeah I think the US is a bit extreme with the lack of curses allowed.

    • @lozzylols
      @lozzylols 6 лет назад +2

      We also do make a lot of family friendly shows in the UK, they just don't write swearing into the script, and are shown before 9pm. Soaps are a good one to show it, because in real life, the people living in 'soap land' would have a lot more swearing involved lol

    • @lozzylols
      @lozzylols 6 лет назад +4

      I will add though, I think American writers/directors/producers get over excited when they do 'adult' movies as they put soooo many more swear words in! .......... or is it just me that thinks that?

    • @MakeshiftMelody
      @MakeshiftMelody 6 лет назад +8

      I live and have grown up on Scotland and we were actually allowed to swear in our plays in drama class (at like age 15) the only word we were not allowed to say was C***

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      +DavianJEP Lmao Omg that's awesome!

  • @DrBrunoRecipes
    @DrBrunoRecipes 3 года назад +13

    Greetings from Scotland. Scottish people are the friendliest people on earth. Have a lovely day 😊

    • @ners.nurona
      @ners.nurona 3 года назад +1

      can't agree more,. i have 1 Scot friend and he is soo friendly 😭

  • @robig1978
    @robig1978 4 года назад +52

    The Scottish Sense of Humor is Fantastic , they love a good Laugh. Hope to visit from NZ some Day

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  4 года назад +1

      You should! And I hope to visit NZ one day!

  • @simidhel
    @simidhel 7 лет назад +109

    "they speak a different sort of English here..." - very diplomatic, which made me chuckle ;)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +3

      +Simon B ::bows::

    • @StrathpefferJunction
      @StrathpefferJunction 6 лет назад +6

      Simon B It's not just diplomatic, it's entirely true. Scots speak Scottish Standard English, which is different from the English spoken in England or the USA.

    • @simidhel
      @simidhel 6 лет назад +1

      Strathpeffer Junction I'm aware of that - I've lived in Scotland. I think you perhaps missed my point... ;)

    • @StrathpefferJunction
      @StrathpefferJunction 6 лет назад +4

      No, I didn't. The point I'm making is that the English spoken in Scotland is a distinctly different strain, which is an important point for an informational video like this, not least as most Americans visiting Scotland will probably have read 'UK' guides which rarely make the distinction.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +3

      +Strathpeffer Junction I believe both of you are in agreement. Simon was simply remarking that the WAY I chose to state it was funny because I was obviously trying not to offend anyone.

  • @hpp123
    @hpp123 6 лет назад +267

    It's quite refreshing to see an American not constantly insisting that their country is the best and being actually willing to see how others do things and be open to the idea that those things might be an improvement on the American way.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +17

      Yeah you don't have to worry about that mentality with me ;) Haha

    • @hpp123
      @hpp123 6 лет назад +6

      Sonnie Travels love your videos! You seem a really lovely person. Hope you enjoy your time in the UK :)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +10

      +h pp12 Thank you so much! :D
      I absolutely love it here

    • @Mike7O7O
      @Mike7O7O 6 лет назад +6

      Sean Mac Diarmida Scotland is NOT a carbon copy of Ireland. Scotland was NEVER a Theocracy!

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +2

      +King It's sooooo not the best. AT ALL. Not even close!

  • @paulinegreenwood6732
    @paulinegreenwood6732 2 года назад +12

    My first solo travel to Scotland will remain a beautiful memory 🥰🥰

  • @shannonfindlay244
    @shannonfindlay244 6 лет назад +42

    I am in LOVE with Scotland. The landscape, the history but especially the people. Couldn't be better!

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +2

      I feel the exact same way! 😍😍😍 I made a video about the things I miss the most from Scotland and mentioned every one of those :)

    • @geraldwalsh6489
      @geraldwalsh6489 4 года назад +1

      You could try Ireland,its very similar,e.g.,loads of rain,drink,craic,fab scenery,friendly people,great pubs,the history,and yes,everyone speaks English,and of course,we have Gaelic,very similar to Scots Gaelic

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  4 года назад

      We considered that actually! Sadly, Joe didn't like the rain so he's hoping for a sunnier place. We'll see where we end up! 🤔😊

  • @tygrahof9268
    @tygrahof9268 7 лет назад +42

    When I went to Italy, I found that in many small stores and butcher shops (I love salami) the locals will push you out of the way to get to the counter. I had little old ladies shoving me out of the way to get their meat. Never get in the way of a little Italian mother and her quest to feed her family. LOL

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +2

      +Tyg Rahof Hahaha That's kind of awesome. We didn't have any crazy run ins with old ladies, but we experienced a lot of that in Greece

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад

      +Allington Marakan Haha wow! I'll have to pay attention to that when we visit Kyoto. I've heard it's the most tourist packed place in Japan

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +1

      +Allington Marakan I don't know if any other city can live up to the beauty of Edinburgh in my eyes ;) But that's also because it holds such a special place in my heart

    • @FirstLast-cf4mi
      @FirstLast-cf4mi 7 лет назад +1

      You've got to LOL (YGTL) because YOLO. LOL.

    • @bugsygoo
      @bugsygoo 7 лет назад

      You are so right. Kyoto is sinfully ugly. Cracks me up when people talk about how beautiful Kyoto is. The sites, on the other hand, are really magnificent.

  • @ffeya
    @ffeya 6 лет назад +1079

    tbh here in scotland, nobody really gives a crap 😂

    • @jacobm1696
      @jacobm1696 6 лет назад +75

      JinsWonderland unless you get short changed at the spar then WWIII breaks out

    • @michaelkennedy8573
      @michaelkennedy8573 6 лет назад +31

      Or get handed foreign money in a corner shop hahahaha

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +8

      +Michael Kennedy Hmm I don't think that ever happened to me. I did get foreign coins mixed in at work sometimes though

    • @michaelkennedy8573
      @michaelkennedy8573 6 лет назад +16

      Sonnie Travels oh lucky you😂😂I’ve been hit with francs euros middle eastern money, some common ones are Gibraltar coins

    • @disneynightcore9535
      @disneynightcore9535 6 лет назад +4

      So true xD

  • @jvgreendarmok
    @jvgreendarmok 4 года назад +84

    "Although there's *supposed* to be a separation of church and state..."
    *dramatic close-up on the "IN GOD WE TRUST" written on the US dollar bill*
    Nice. :)

    • @davidcooley275
      @davidcooley275 3 года назад +1

      Installed in 1952 by a GOP congress...not in the constitution.

    • @davidfryer9359
      @davidfryer9359 2 года назад +1

      Separation of church and state only means the government can not form a religion like the church of England. The queen is the head figure. We have never had that in America. No one should have treated you differently because you are atheist. I hate that.

    • @jvgreendarmok
      @jvgreendarmok Год назад

      @@davidcooley275 One of those Cold War innovations, like "one nation, under God"?

  • @Jack8897
    @Jack8897 6 лет назад +98

    Glasgow might be a slightly different experience to Edinburgh 😂👀

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +20

      Yeah, it was when we visited. I know a lot of people LOVE Glasgow, but I personally prefer Edinburgh :)

    • @bigste5771
      @bigste5771 4 года назад +6

      Alot more smackheads for starters hahahaha

    • @joshferguson1954
      @joshferguson1954 4 года назад +5

      @@SonnieTravels don't say that there or you'll be getting wheeled out in a gurney 😂😉

    • @jmurphy17vinnie
      @jmurphy17vinnie 4 года назад +12

      We experienced Glasgow and Edinburgh for the first time this year. Only couple days in each, but what I took back from the cities was glasgow seemed more of a party town, compared to edinburgh being more touristy. However ....needless to say we showed up in glasgow on a rangers vs. Celtics game day...haha

    • @smallrossy
      @smallrossy 4 года назад

      @@jmurphy17vinnie oh dear lord

  • @conor7474
    @conor7474 6 лет назад +42

    only time religion becomes an issue in Scotland is with football, Celtic and Hibs are catholic while hearts and rangers are Protestant

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      Yeah and if religious people in the US heard about that they'd call it blasphemous hahaha

    • @fin.lay.4270
      @fin.lay.4270 5 лет назад

      GGTH

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +1

      A lot of Christians in the US are like that too

    • @1875Riordave
      @1875Riordave 5 лет назад

      I know your comment's a year old but still just for clarification: Even then Hibs and Hearts have generally moved away (but remain proud) from the religious aspect of our rivalry, we just tend to focus more on past success and recent form. Though there are still idiots from both sides that bring shame to their respective supports

    • @yasmineelbekhti2758
      @yasmineelbekhti2758 5 лет назад

      Mon the hibs

  • @denewst01
    @denewst01 6 лет назад +49

    I've heard - and also occasionally been involved in - this kind of exchange:
    "Oh you're an atheist? Thank Christ, me too."

  • @reallyryan_
    @reallyryan_ 5 лет назад +15

    I'm from Edinburgh. I love Scotland it's truly a beautiful place at times.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +1

      It definitely is. I'm envious :)

    • @brianbreen1026
      @brianbreen1026 3 года назад

      What do you mean,beautiful at times?.I'm intrigued.

  • @christopherhiller1035
    @christopherhiller1035 4 года назад +2

    I vacationed in Glasgow for a week and a friend from Facebook there toured me around. She was AMAZING! She planned everything, took such great care in detail, was very knowledgeable on everything, and we were laughing and joking, even when we got stuck on the A1 Motorway to York and then it rained when we got there, we had a blast!
    In 2012, I went on a UK tour trip, and like my visit to Glasgow, my time there was meeting some of the kindest, most generous, friendly people in my life!
    Both times, I was really happy and my faith in humanity grew tripple-fold!

  • @americanmade6996
    @americanmade6996 7 лет назад +18

    Your customer service anecdotes say nothing about customer service but speak volumes about the customers.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +3

      +American Made I definitely don't disagree ;)

    • @uzrdutiutfiztdf3545
      @uzrdutiutfiztdf3545 6 лет назад +6

      from my experience, that is the same. good and friendly service=>happy and friendly custumers. bad service=> angry customers

    • @seraphina985
      @seraphina985 6 лет назад

      +uzrdut iutfiztdf The trigger threshold for what some customers consider to be a valid excuse for acting like a prize asshat does seem to vary significantly between customers.

  • @clemencetoutcourt7834
    @clemencetoutcourt7834 7 лет назад +281

    Religion is a private matter in the UK and France. We even don't speak easily about it.

    • @spoonovic
      @spoonovic 7 лет назад +34

      private matter? you are aware Scotland's biggest city is divided by religion? 😂

    • @PhilHoy97
      @PhilHoy97 7 лет назад +10

      +Soar Alba Glasgow and Northern Ireland? Sure our religious views are really private...

    • @MegaRugster
      @MegaRugster 7 лет назад +6

      a think it's only divided when that noisy marche goes through on a sunday mornin, if they're still doing the orange marches that is. When a lived in cessnock, was a real pain to listen to first thing in the mornin. But a don't think we're really that divided, I have loads o mates in glasgow, with all kinds of religions.
      There's even a few that think drinkin is a religion.

    • @haggissupper7779
      @haggissupper7779 7 лет назад +12

      Soar Alba The divide has nothing to do with religion. It's purely tribal. 90% of the "Catholics" and "Protestants" I know in Glasgow don't believe in God but they identify with the tribe. This idiosyncrasy is the only thing that keeps the "religious" figures in Scotland from being tiny.

    • @MegaRugster
      @MegaRugster 7 лет назад +1

      Barbara Hallinan - You're.. What? Republic of Scotland.. has a nice ring to it. Unsure of the little englander reference, explain?
      I never really had any issue with Orange Marches, so long as they weren't at 8am.. on a Sunday.. That's strictly hangover time. Heads already going "boom boom boom" Don't need drums to highlight it.
      NI kinda odd place.. they have lines down the roads.. where people of one religion can only walk.. very odd. But the people were great. I once asked how they got to the fish market and a few replied, we just walk over the line.. which begs the obvious question.. who painted it there.. maybe those lines are gone now tho, was a few decades ago. Segregation lines I think they're called. (seem to be gone now, was in Portavogie. Looks really nice now, or whenever googlemaps last photographed it.)
      Little Englander noun noun: Little Englander; plural noun: Little Englanders a person who opposes an international role or policy for England (or, in practice, for Britain).
      Nope. No clue as to what you're referring. I don't care about roles or policy in England.
      I also don't know if you meant that as an insult or compliment.. so I'll default to compliment and say Thanks!! :D

  • @collieclone
    @collieclone 3 года назад +6

    What a pleasure to hear someone describe us as being friendly and not dour (wherever that came from - guess where?). It probably helps that you are open and friendly yourself, Sonnie. BTW, drinking on the street is also not allowed in Dundee!

  • @jennifer-xo8cu
    @jennifer-xo8cu 5 лет назад +1

    I vacationed in edinburgh last summer and found most everything in this video, but was most shocked by most restaurants refusing to split the bill. There was four of us, and we all were paying separately and all but one restaurant refused to give us separate bills. Two restaurants also would not give to-go boxes for our leftovers. My biggest shock was that there are no trespassing laws. We were allowed and encouraged to walk through fields and take pics of the beautiful country side.

  • @jonathanmarr9231
    @jonathanmarr9231 7 лет назад +43

    From experience of living in both countries, US Customer Service is better on the surface but less genuine. British Customer Service is a bit poorer in quality but more genuinely helpful and friendly.

    • @forexalised9053
      @forexalised9053 6 лет назад +4

      Genuine is better because it doesn't feel like repeated bull, it feels like the service is being given out of care

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +2

      +Forexalised Definitely!

  • @matt.6774
    @matt.6774 7 лет назад +70

    I finally found someone who isn't Scottish that can say Edinburgh right 😂

  • @chriskent86
    @chriskent86 5 лет назад +13

    I live in fife and my bro lives in Inverness Florida (ironically). I'm from s. England and religious but most of my pals aren't. I've never even considered it to be an issue. In fact, most of the time if ever, you get attitude for being religious.
    Wouldn't mind retiring to Malibu, just putting that out there.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +1

      I've never been to Malibu myself, but I don't think I'd ever be able to afford that haha
      Oh, that's cool! I'm glad it's not an issue for you, but sorry some people give you an attitude for your beliefs :(

    • @johnavery3918
      @johnavery3918 4 года назад

      @@SonnieTravels Sonnie it is actually for your non believes, great video love from Dundee

    • @niamhdee9487
      @niamhdee9487 4 года назад

      I love fife Fife’s the best

  • @johnmcdonald1237
    @johnmcdonald1237 5 лет назад +2

    The bustop queue is all about respect for who's been waiting longer..and the person who's been waiting the longest approachs the bus first when it's coming.. All vulnerable people come first though. I'm proud of our queueing. the bus stop one is a particular faviourite :) great video

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +1

      Thanks so much! I'm glad you enjoyed it. 😁

  • @douglasm3386
    @douglasm3386 7 лет назад +49

    however drinking in the streets is illegal in many parts if Scotland

    • @angryjock3938
      @angryjock3938 7 лет назад +13

      not in Edinburgh

    • @suszh8981
      @suszh8981 7 лет назад +6

      To be fair, that's about the only place it's legal, most regions have bylaws that forbid drinking in public

    • @johncandie
      @johncandie 6 лет назад

      It is however to leave a bar in edinburgh with an open alcoholic drink container resulting in fines for the owner!

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +2

      +Megan Goodhart Cool! Where do you live? I wonder if I've been there

    • @alexwright4930
      @alexwright4930 6 лет назад +1

      In England technically it depends on the byelaws and technically it's only illegal to drink in the street (assuming you're over 18) if a copper asks you to stop IIRC.
      There's more confused, varied and complex social norms and class based/snobbish attitudes about drinking in public though - eg the spectrum from a "middle class" picnic in a park with wine through to a beggar drinking Special Brew.

  • @PirateDogAMV
    @PirateDogAMV 6 лет назад +50

    I have been watching a few vids on what it is like for people coming to the UK. Whether it be a holiday or coming to live here etc.. I must say I'm shocked that for example, Koreans are amazed we hold doors for people like they also do in the US. Things like our customer service or our Queuing. For me it's instinct, it's how I was brought up. If I ever ring, let's saaay... Vodafone as they are my provider. I always end up going off topic just being nice and you can tell the people who deal with customers really appreciate a little bit of banter as they will deal with people who can be really nasty to them.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +3

      It's certainly been a big adjustment living in Asia now! I love Korea because of how different it is. To westerners, it can seem like they lack manners, but their manners are just different :) Compared to Japan, where the politeness level is sky-high, I actually found it refreshing! Hahaha

  • @anulikaononye
    @anulikaononye Год назад +5

    As someone who lives in Scotland too (Glasgow), I must confess I was also shocked with the queues at the bus stop, unfortunately no one warned me, I may have offended some people especially because I was traveling with my 4 children who were excited to get on the double decker bus quicker 😂

  • @CastilloDelDiablo
    @CastilloDelDiablo 5 лет назад +29

    When I went to Canada they would ask who I was, so, I would say Scottish then they just kept looking at me then would ask what else, I told them Scottish.

    • @casualprince8779
      @casualprince8779 4 года назад

      El Diablo that’s because most of us have uk blood of multiple countries. Never just one really lol

  • @AlanWattResistance
    @AlanWattResistance 7 лет назад +46

    Yep, we don't really care if you're atheist, just don't go on and on and on about it, afterall there's nothing to more to say.

    • @giuliaromana1842
      @giuliaromana1842 7 лет назад +14

      Likewise we don't really care what religion you are either - just don't go on about that either. Really I think we just think it's your own business.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +4

      +Giulia Romana I wish everyone felt that way

    • @jemima885ify
      @jemima885ify 6 лет назад +2

      AWResistance the thing is, is that religion is still forced into places where it shouldn't be, and it's our right to "go on and on and on" about it until there is a complete separation of church and state

    • @AlanWattResistance
      @AlanWattResistance 6 лет назад

      +Jemima Jones, No, you're just being petty and causing a problem where there isn't one. Unless it's some sort of radical fundementalism, then you don't really have an argument.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      +AWResistance I'm agreeing with Jemima Jones on this one. Religion is a personal thing and should be kept as such. It doesn't belong in politics, public schools, etc. That's when it causes problems.

  • @neilhay4311
    @neilhay4311 7 лет назад +117

    Did you hear about the agnostic, insomniac, dyslexic man that was awake the whole night wondering if there was actually a dog???

  • @johnscott3714
    @johnscott3714 3 года назад +1

    Hi Sonnie!
    I've just had another look at this video you made three years ago, Sonnie, and you are pushing for a million views! Very well done! You must be very pleased with that!

  • @garynewell1533
    @garynewell1533 4 года назад +2

    In the north east we are even more vague. We don't say half ten, we say the back of ten which means any time after 10 but before 11

  • @BaddaBigBoom
    @BaddaBigBoom 6 лет назад +33

    I sincerely hope you learned fast that "cut lines" means a TOTALLY different thing from "jump queues" :-O

  • @oscarchica5566
    @oscarchica5566 6 лет назад +64

    I was genuinely surprised to learn that in the USA, it's considered so wrong to be an atheist. Up here in Canada, spiritual beliefs are considered a very personal thing, something you keep to yourself. We just don't care about other people's beliefs. For the most part, it has very little bearing on social life and politics. At least in Montreal, Quebec.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +5

      Yeah! Canada and America are very different in a lot of ways. My Canadian friends who have visited the US have noticed it too so we've talked about it. Sadly, I've never been to Canada.

    • @CatrionaSilcock1
      @CatrionaSilcock1 5 лет назад +1

      And yet, attempts at legislation by the Coalition Avenir Québec to show Quebec as "secular" seems to be a xenophobic attempt to target non Christian symbols and clothing.
      montrealgazette.com/opinion/columnists/martin-patriquin-on-signs-of-religion-caq-targets-imaginary-problem

    • @ArturAxmann-zp3cm
      @ArturAxmann-zp3cm 5 лет назад +2

      @@SonnieTravels well you need to go, young lady! Especially in TORONTO, Ontario Canada, and Vancoucer, Btitish Columbia, you'll find plenty of Open minded people there.

    • @Cynthia-Landers
      @Cynthia-Landers 5 лет назад +4

      @Oscar Chica Well, that's because Canada is rational and connected to reality, and here in my country, the U.S., we are not.

    • @Dr.Nagyonfaj
      @Dr.Nagyonfaj 5 лет назад +5

      Bogus! No-one here gives a toss as to whether or not you're an atheist. Give me a break! Every second person who walks into my shop is an atheist and is not afraid to say so. I think it's more of "Oh look at me - I'm so hard done by!"

  • @midori4760
    @midori4760 3 года назад +1

    THANK YOU for getting to the point right away👏❤️

  • @redf7209
    @redf7209 4 года назад +4

    You need to be careful about drinking in the street. There are sometimes local laws applying to town centres that prohibit drinking alcohol in the street to prevent rowdiness etc

  • @TheBaconWizard
    @TheBaconWizard 6 лет назад +32

    Re Atheism, I think it goes further than there being more atheists here: There's an entirely different culture surrounding religion which is akin to a sort of religious libertarianism. You believe what you want, that's fine as long as it doesn't hurt anyone. You'll encounter MANY (majority, actually) people who are believers in something, but you won't necessarily know that they are and they won't be especially interested in whether you are or not. It's just not that important. And that's how I like it :)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +3

      +TheBaconWizard That's how I like it too. Live and let live.

    • @lozzylols
      @lozzylols 6 лет назад +1

      TheBaconWizard I think as well people in the UK can feel they have a religion/belief, but don't take it as seriously. I have things I believe in, but I don't go to church, or any religious building regularly, where I get the sense in America to have a religion means you have to take it very seriously.
      I like that I can believe what I choose but don't have to act it out regularly or put it on show, and I don't think that makes my beliefs any less real.

    • @oregonchick76
      @oregonchick76 6 лет назад +1

      "Religious libertarianism" is a great phrase and a pragmatic and respectful approach to other people's religions, IMO.
      Just FYI, Sonnie, if/when you return to the U.S. and want to find a similar bent toward religion, consider Oregon (or Washington, come to think of it). Oregon is considered the least religious state, with only 32% of Oregonians being affiliated with any particular religion. We also have higher percentages of participants in groups that are less mainstream in the U.S. (such as Buddhists and Mormons), which indicates some of the flexibility people have here in regards to others' faith practices--or lack thereof. Of course, we also had a cult of Rajneeshi followers form a small town in central Oregon in the 1980s where they launched a (minor) bioterrorist attack on local authorities, so... a "do what you want" approach to religion might not ALWAYS be for the best. LOL

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      +Staci McDaniel My husband and I actually spoke about that! We're not planning on returning to the US, but if we were forced to for whatever reason we agreed to live in either Portland, Oregon or Washington for that exact reason :D

    • @TheBaconWizard
      @TheBaconWizard 6 лет назад +1

      Staci, thank you; pragmatic and respectful is what I am trying to be, and that works out as long as it is reciprocated.

  • @sammckinlay4821
    @sammckinlay4821 6 лет назад +609

    Admit it we are the best nation in the world.
    Also- you’re in Edinburgh, just wait for Glasgow 😂😂 (the only city where someone will stab you and then give you directions to the hospital)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +23

      +Sam McKinlay Been to Glasgow too :)
      Out of all the nations I've lived in, Scotland takes first place easily ;)

    • @hotcoffee6911
      @hotcoffee6911 6 лет назад +3

      Sam McKinlay lololololol

    • @jackmccourt2648
      @jackmccourt2648 6 лет назад +17

      If you are lucky you may even get a friendly Glasgow kiss!

    • @steveperry6047
      @steveperry6047 5 лет назад +11

      Sam Griffenhaven McKinlay this is such a false stereotype. What a way to promote one of the friendliest cities in the world.

    • @abdallah1586
      @abdallah1586 5 лет назад +4

      I've heard many people say this and they say it's a joke?! I don't get it, someone explain

  • @chipy1kanobyjedi521
    @chipy1kanobyjedi521 4 года назад +2

    Thanks for speaking openly about your beliefs, I feel the same. My father was a Baptist minister so, you can imagine the backlash. I live in the Bible Belt as well so, there’s that. I believe that you need to be yourself and accept everyone as themselves. Cheers everyone!

  • @meldy9227
    @meldy9227 5 лет назад +3

    I know you love Scotland and just the UK in general, but you're absolutely welcome to back to the UK at anytime, and when you do you should visit Blackpool Pleasure Beach, it's so fun there's a theme park, the huge beach, and there's the Blackpool Tower which is really tall. :D

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад

      I'll definitely be back to visit. I wish I could return to live there, but we'll definitely be moving back to Europe after Japan.

    • @meldy9227
      @meldy9227 5 лет назад +1

      Sonnie Travels great! Are you enjoying Japan? XD

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад

      It's had its ups and downs. We're living in a new city now which I like more and travelling this August which I wthink will help :)

    • @meldy9227
      @meldy9227 5 лет назад

      Sonnie Travels great!

  • @samleheny1429
    @samleheny1429 6 лет назад +137

    Most of this sounds like not so much Scottish culture shock specifically and more like, outside North America culture shock. A lot of the stuff you point out in this video is pretty common in most of western culture. At least in the places I've been. In my experience, the US and France stick out the most from the pack, culturally.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +27

      In the US, religious people think they're the ones being oppressed ;) They're all sorts of special.

    • @majorgeneralrobertclive7979
      @majorgeneralrobertclive7979 5 лет назад +10

      Sonnie Travels The Pilgrim Fathers didn't sail to America to escape religious oppression, they went there to oppress others.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +1

      Apparently :/

  • @BuckS122
    @BuckS122 7 лет назад +45

    the glasgow drinking ban came in to force in 96' i believe, but that was to combat football violence (especially old firm)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +2

      +tboatz99 Oh! Interesting! :) Thanks for sharing!

    • @sumboi2321
      @sumboi2321 7 лет назад

      tboatz99 I thought it had something to do wæ the 1980 Scottish cup final, or was that the ban of terracing?

    • @09weenic
      @09weenic 7 лет назад

      Somerled Henderson the cup final riot of 1980 brought in the banning of alcohol at football games in Scotland

    • @alphaprawns
      @alphaprawns 7 лет назад +1

      The ongoing scourge of football violence is one of this country's biggest shames, the sheer thuggishness of it all

    • @09weenic
      @09weenic 7 лет назад

      Actual football violence is not one of the country's biggest problem - the blade culture that exists is far worse that football violence

  • @theglodetrotterty
    @theglodetrotterty 2 года назад +2

    Love this video!! New subbie here :) I really enjoy your vids 😊 I'm christian myself and I have a high respect for people who are different belief backgrounds:) It's exciting to me that you moved to Scotland too 😊 congrats btw

  • @JannaGiles206
    @JannaGiles206 Год назад

    Hi there! Great content!
    Do you have any moving and shipping companies that you can recommend between the US and Scotland?

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  Год назад +1

      I'm sorry, I don't. In order to avoid extra costs, we only brought the luggage that the airline allowed. Once there, we got a furnished apartment and bought anything else we needed second hand. Then donated everything we weren't bringing to Japan before we left.

  • @chairninja
    @chairninja 6 лет назад +295

    I am from Scotland and moved to Texas 2 years ago. The whole religion thing in the US really was a culture shock to me...I am atheist (brought up catholic and protestant) and never felt that tension before around expressing my beliefs openly. But Texas is just sooo super religious and it seems very acceptable for those who are religious to judge those who aren't and its OK for the religious to be very open about it, but if your not religious then you really feel a pressure to keep that to yourself. But I do tell anyone who wants to know because I am Scottish and don't give an F what others think of me ;) But the religious tension over here really surprised me for a country founded on religious freedom. If you really want to experience a country founded on personal freedoms then Scotland is the place to go. #freealba #homesick

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +17

      +jilly G I'm homesick for Scotland too right now :( Yeah the way religion is viewed and how the non-religious are treated in the US makes no sense to me either. I personally always just felt like I fit in better in Scotland. I felt more understood and accepted for who I was.
      Thanks for the link! :D

    • @Boooo_39
      @Boooo_39 6 лет назад +6

      Dang, that sucks Jilly G, I'm sorry. I actually had a friend move back to California from Texas because of the religious and racial attitudes over there. The areas I've lived in (in southern california) aren't extraordinarily religious. I actually volunteer at a YMCA camp and most of us are atheists, agnostics or deists. People know it too, it actually encourages non-christian families to enroll their kids. I hope you find (or have found) your niche in Texas, where people don't care about whether or not you practice religion. That just seems rough.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +43

      +Daniel Williams People aren't trying to eradicate religion. They're trying to keep religion out of public licensing places where it doesn't belong. We shouldn't be saying, "under god" in our pledge. We shouldn't have, "in god we trust" on our money. We shouldn't swear n a bible in court, etc etc etc. Religion should be kept in church and people's homes. No where else and definitely not on the government.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +37

      I disagree and I've studied it. Religion is private and doesn't belong pushed on others. You're ok reading, "In god we trust" on everything because it's your god. What if it said, "in Allah we trust"? Would you feel differently? If every religion and lack thereof was represented then sure, but they're not. Only one is and that's he main problem.
      Also, global warming is agreed upon by 99% of scientists who dedicated their lives to gaining knowledge. It's fact and its a man made problem that we need to fix.
      But my channel isn't to discuss this. Yes, we eat a lot of ramen.

    • @dededenver9560
      @dededenver9560 6 лет назад +17

      Religion is a license to judge others. I have never gotten the point.

  • @dreamscape8292
    @dreamscape8292 7 лет назад +37

    stumbled upon your channel. Just wanted to say hi and welcome to Scotland. Lang Mae your lum reek!

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +5

      +t3h funk3r Hahaha I love your user name! Thank you very much and right back at you :D

    • @marconatrix
      @marconatrix 7 лет назад +9

      Translation for foreigners : He is wishing you good fortune, the phrase literally means "long may your chimneys smoke" i.e. may you never go short of fuel etc. :-)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +8

      +marconatrix One of my favourite Scottish phrases ♡ A few people have said it to me and it warms my heart every time

    • @DjJooze
      @DjJooze 6 лет назад

      Sonnie Travels you're beautiful. Love everything you had to say ♡

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      +Alfredio d' joliette Aww! Thanks so much! That's so sweet :)

  • @Flyforawhiteguy1982
    @Flyforawhiteguy1982 2 года назад +1

    Thinking moving to Scotland. Would you recommend moving from the US to Scotland?

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  2 года назад

      Absolutely! But sadly not right now. The UK is suffering from crazy high energy prices.

  • @craigstewart9079
    @craigstewart9079 5 лет назад +1

    Edinburgh has different bar laws meaning on certain streets you can. Although everywhere else in Scotland you can’t legally drink on the streets. If the police catch you it’s like a £60/£100 on the spot fine.

  • @peterhogg2567
    @peterhogg2567 7 лет назад +149

    I like how you do not knock our differences, on your videos. Just get on with life and except them. we are all different live and enjoy.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +5

      +Peter Hogg Yeah. It bothers me when people say things like, "They drive on the wrong side of the road!" It's not wrong. Just different. I really enjoy the differences personal. Life would be so boring without them. :)

    • @peterhogg2567
      @peterhogg2567 7 лет назад +3

      on one vid you said you were going to Japan that will be a culture shock, the culture will blow you away, but the people are just like us. they just do it there way. 45 years ago i went to japan for a year to study Judo. i was taken to a bar and asked for a pint of what you drink, they emptied a flower vase and filled it with sake, the whole bar sat and watched me drink it, that night i made 20 friends who helped me to fit in, sometimes it can help to mess up.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад

      +Peter Hogg That sounds incredible!! What a great story :) I've heard there's a big drinking culture there. I'm not a big drinker so we'll see how I fare. I'm really excited about it, but I'll miss Edinburgh. I've really fallen in love with this city. I hope I can come back one day.

    • @peterhogg2567
      @peterhogg2567 7 лет назад

      if you don,t drink you can ask someone to drink for you, all you have to do is be there. also Kudo is japan's archery may i suggest you try it or watch it, it will give you a line on the culture

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад

      +Peter Hogg Great! Thanks :) I'll definitely check that out.

  • @ffeya
    @ffeya 6 лет назад +443

    i'm glad you're having a good time here in Scotland:) Us Scots are pretty chill most of the time😂

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +7

      +JinsWonderland Yup. You're pretty much the best ;)

    • @imtryingmybest8342
      @imtryingmybest8342 6 лет назад +5

      JinsWonderland hey! Another scottish army!

    • @ffeya
      @ffeya 6 лет назад +3

      I'm Trying My Best / Hi omg!!

    • @sc0423
      @sc0423 6 лет назад +20

      Aye apart frae junkies, young teams and alcoholics we're awright

    • @ffeya
      @ffeya 6 лет назад +2

      Unit 456 pahaha young teams man nawww

  • @emilygrant7288
    @emilygrant7288 5 лет назад +39

    The atheism acceptance made me so happy! I’ve always wanted to move out of the United States and I’ve had to stay silent about being an atheist out of fear of losing friends, family ties, etc.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +6

      I can totally relate and I'm sorry about that :/ I hope you get to go to another country and experience how different religion is there!

    • @JoeySchmidt74
      @JoeySchmidt74 4 года назад +5

      You should tune in to the Atheist Experience if you haven't already. I hear horror stories about US religiosity that is so alien in this country.

    • @celticminstrel8252
      @celticminstrel8252 4 года назад +3

      We are a very tolerant society here, people are taken for who they are and not what they are.

    • @maximuslongrod6361
      @maximuslongrod6361 4 года назад +7

      Here in Canada not much different. Nobody cares

    • @johnredmond6723
      @johnredmond6723 4 года назад +6

      I am a Christian living in Scotland and though many of my friends do not believe I feel welcome. I would hope Christians in America would also accept your beliefs

  • @brianh7834
    @brianh7834 3 года назад

    Scotsman living in Ohio, Just came across your RUclips videos and enjoyed them greatly. Made me a little homesick but always good to hear a new perspective.
    So happy you enjoyed 👍

  • @miney046
    @miney046 6 лет назад +26

    It's only really Edinburgh that you can drink in the streets (because of festivals etc,), and it's important to note that police may ask you to stop. If they do you have too 😁

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      +Miney gaming There are a couple other places from what people have commented, but it's definitely good to know and to check local by-laws ☺️

    • @miney046
      @miney046 6 лет назад

      Yeah I just wanted to make sure people know, I think at night (you know going out to the pub or something) you can do it at more places than you can in the day (idk 😂), you can’t do it at all where I live

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      +Miney gaming Oh! Maybe! Where do you live?

    • @miney046
      @miney046 6 лет назад +3

      In fife 🖖🏼

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад

      +Miney gaming Cool! I've heard it's beautiful! :D

  • @psychicvacuum83
    @psychicvacuum83 6 лет назад +85

    I'm from Montreal, and it sounds to me like Scotland is much more like Canada than the US!

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +9

      +Ricky M That's what a few of my Canadian friends have said too :)

    • @mavezy
      @mavezy 5 лет назад +19

      I'm from Scotland and the way I always see it is, Scotland is like Canada and England is like US. Rise and stand with Scotland my Canadian brothers and sisters! :)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +3

      Sounds about right to me! 😁

    • @LordTenma
      @LordTenma 5 лет назад +10

      Ricky M probably all western European countries are more like Canada than the US, but especially Scotland yes👍

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +2

      I'd agree with that, even having never been to Canada haha Just from what I've heard

  • @dearptsd4092
    @dearptsd4092 5 лет назад +1

    Wow. Stumbling across this when you only had 200 subscribers and now you have 9,000! This was a nice find. It's been my lifelong dream to move to Scotland. This just cements my belief that the people of Scotland are awesome!

    • @paulinekelly8016
      @paulinekelly8016 Год назад

      It's not any better living here than anywhere else. We still have lots of social issues, political issues the same as anywhere else it's no fairytale.

  • @bobbijeanshields1520
    @bobbijeanshields1520 2 года назад

    You may find that those drinking in the streets are drinking outside somewhere which is licensed as some place's licenses extend to the street outside the premises. This is why you'll see outside beer gardens during the fringe festival. You'll also notice that most locals who want to drink in the streets will cover their bottles in paper bags or will pour the alcohol into soft drinks containers.

  • @douglasreeves9938
    @douglasreeves9938 7 лет назад +5

    There is a difference between being atheist/agnostic and non-religious. Organized religion is no different than politics. Your faith is something personal and private, not to be governed by priests, pastors, rabbis, imans, etc.

    • @RoyalCaymanian
      @RoyalCaymanian 6 лет назад

      Douglas Reeves Spot on mate! That's something that people don't seem to get!

  • @kongsquad7821
    @kongsquad7821 6 лет назад +43

    I live in Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Scotland is nice

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      It is! You're lucky :)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +1

      Haha Tourism is definitely in demand in Scotland which is great! I love that people want to visit such an amazing country :)

    • @geraldwalsh6489
      @geraldwalsh6489 4 года назад

      I live in Ireland...Ireland is nice too and we do love the Scots,especially when we beat them at rugby!

    • @geraldwalsh6489
      @geraldwalsh6489 4 года назад +1

      @@SonnieTravels hey Sonnie,if you loved Scotland you would love Ireland too! Very similar, great scenery,great rain,friendliness, quiet roads, good hotels,and we love the craic as well!
      Don't mention Brexit though although we have grown to tolerate and even like some of the English! The Irish get on so well with the Scots and Welsh though esp.at our regular rugby matches

    • @celticminstrel8252
      @celticminstrel8252 4 года назад

      @@geraldwalsh6489 I live in Scotland....I visit Ireland often, a close call between Dublin and Cork, both very friendly places.

  • @blankblank9389
    @blankblank9389 5 лет назад +1

    Just to let you know that it is now illegal to drink alcohol on the streets of Scotland, it has been for a few years now.
    And its illegal to smoke inside a public building too, so you can no longer enjoy a smoke and a drink at the same time any more.
    So, you have to go outside the pub if you want a cigarette, but your not allowed to take your drink with you.
    Although saying that there are some places which have beer gardens and serve food outside where you can take your drink with you.

    • @TriMarko
      @TriMarko 5 лет назад

      Sorry, that is not true, each local council has its own regulations about alcohol in public. In some places you can be fined, but it's not a law and not countrywide

  • @ok-_-_-_-8353
    @ok-_-_-_-8353 6 лет назад

    Wait...... I had no clue other countries don’t say things like half ten for 10:30. I’m not sure that you would want to tell me this but if you wouldn’t mind me asking where in Scotland were you staying?

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад

      We lived in Edinburgh off of Gorgie Road. :)

  • @tropicalscot
    @tropicalscot 6 лет назад +30

    Good video...I'm a Scot that lived in the USA for a few years and I agree with the differences you mentioned.
    Drinking in public places is illegal in quite a few places in Scotland, not just Glasgow. It's illegal in the whole of Strathclyde region (includes Glasgow but a lot of other places as well, and also some parts of Perth & Kinross, and some parts of Fife). And although it may be legal in other places, it isn't widely done (other than when standing/sitting outside bars, or maybe in a park) and is sometimes frowned upon by local communities. It may also be banned on some public transport.

    • @johnross3127
      @johnross3127 6 лет назад

      i didn't realise you could, i guess getting charged for drinking in the street was all in my head. Please don't come to scotland and drink i the street, you will get charged, this is misinformation. If its a venue, or on private land and Hogmanay the police will maybe turn a blind eye, as long as your behaving. Any other time of year, don't do it. Roaming police CCTV and more CCTV than people, regardless if you actually see a police guy or are charged at the time, you could still get caught and you can still be charged. £75 spot fine Standard, last i heard.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      As I've said, it's legal in Edinburgh. Not just during Hogmanay.

    • @Lee-bv7tj
      @Lee-bv7tj 6 лет назад

      tropicalscot wow I did not know this. In England you can drink anywhere unless there is an order in place which is rare. Do you know why there is such a different?

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      Scotland's drinking laws and much stricter in an effort to help lower the number of alcoholics or so I've been told. There's no happy hours and things like that either.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад

      In Japan, its legal to drink anywhere outside which is pretty cool! It's relaxing to have a beer in the park or sitting by the canal

  • @DeniseMarshall
    @DeniseMarshall 6 лет назад +13

    :) another American in Scotland, here! About 11½ years, actually! I had a pretty similar experience for your first few months, it was pretty fun, until I suffered proper culture shock and nearly had to leave because I was struggling to cope! It's really disorienting feeling like you've stepped onto an alternate dimension where things are familiar but so very, vastly different.
    Brace yourself for the reverse culture shock if you ever go back to the States! 😅🙈

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад

      11 years! I'm so jealous!!! What were your proper shocks? I don't think I ever had any there. Here in Japan now, it's a different story haha I'm not planning on returning to the US, but we're going to Australia in August and I have think we'll have some huge shocks there!!!

    • @DeniseMarshall
      @DeniseMarshall 6 лет назад +1

      Sonnie Travels "Culture Shock" doesn't really mean "culture differences that surprised me". It's the complete disorientation while you're in that different culture.
      It was fun for me until a casual English friend at uni poured her heart out and I learned Iwas her best friend. She was distraught that I hadn't seen our friendship as that intense. She'd seen my stereotypical American friendliness as me being totally committed to the friendship and I'd seen her stereotypical English reticence as her keeping some distance.
      I'd been here about 9 months at that point and that's when I realised that I didn't really understand this place I'd been inhabiting. It made me feel so alien! I started to question every conversation I'd had since arriving and question whether I'd ever belong!
      About the same time, I befriended a local Scot who helped me find my feet. He's now my husband and we're settled here with two kids!
      I struggle when I go back to the US to visit family and friends because the interpersonal interactions are VERY different.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад

      Very cool about your husband! :) I do understand about culture shock, and that sounds like a crazy one that you experienced! I didn't personally have anything like that occure. Idk what I would have done in that situation.

    • @DeniseMarshall
      @DeniseMarshall 6 лет назад

      I think the big problem was that I thought I'd cracked living here. I loved the queues, saw the Argos catalogue as the book of dreams, avoided the word 'pants' altogether (always either 'trousers' or 'underwear')... but that one conversation was a "You know nothing, Jon Snow" moment.
      You would have managed :) Maybe vlogged about it and gotten loads of support -- because the people here are super kind and helpful and welcoming!

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад

      Hahaha! Did you see my video where I talk about my embarrassing moment in Scotland?? It involved, "pants" lol

  • @magicsteve5523
    @magicsteve5523 3 года назад +1

    4:36 Some places in Scotland have so many different words either of slang or regional dialect that their versions of English can sound like a different language sometimes. The biggest example of this I can think of is Aberdeen, Aberdonians talk with such a different dialect and with such different slang words to the rest of Scotland that most of us have a really hard time making them out.

  • @jillswabash6024
    @jillswabash6024 Год назад

    Love hearing about your experiences. Wonderful how friendly and open minded people are in Scotland. Makes me want to visit even more!

  • @hevacat
    @hevacat 6 лет назад +19

    I am from aberdeen, but have lived in Houston for 3 years when I was 9-11 years old. I have to say that I was shocked by how serious americans are about religion. They seemed to preach god 24/7. In the UK there is such a diverse range of beliefs, and we are just very used to it and don't make a deal out of it at all. I am not religious at all and have never thought twice about it, nor has anyone else.
    Also public drinking is illegal in Aberdeen, except for when the christmas village is on, because we all know going on fair rides is a great idea when drunk 😂

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +2

      +xStarRiftx Ooo I loved the Christmas Village in Edinburgh :) Yeah Usually American cities are better about it, but Houston is a very unique city in many ways. But the constant god talk is something I don't miss haha

  • @Sara1FiM
    @Sara1FiM 6 лет назад +32

    Yeah I love Scotland!!! and the UK general, noone really bothers about random things. Why should you get annoyed about things you cannot control. But its funny when British ppl go abroad and noone queues OMG WWII breaks immediately hahahahaha. Why people dont queue in other countries! its just rude to come late and push yourself in front of someone else.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      Heck yeah! Scotland rocks! I agree that we think it's rude, but in other cultures, they don't think that. You know? Thanks for watching and commenting! :D

  • @ukp42
    @ukp42 6 лет назад

    Big congrats on the 500,000 views Love from Scotland

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      THANKS SO MUCH!!! 😍😍😍😁😁😁

  • @franganr.e.searthra-macleo9214
    @franganr.e.searthra-macleo9214 4 года назад +9

    I'm glad the shocks are positive 🙂

  • @ritamarques6536
    @ritamarques6536 6 лет назад +12

    Drinking on the street is illegal everywhere except Edinburgh

  • @MrJonnyswanny
    @MrJonnyswanny 6 лет назад +3

    The City of Edinburgh allows the consumption of alcohol in public places but under the Edinburgh by-law, anyone drinking in public would have to stop if asked by police. In the Strathclyde region that includes Glasgow, the consumption of alcohol in public places has been illegal since 1996.

  • @Jonboyx55
    @Jonboyx55 3 года назад +1

    New Year's eve is a big celebration in Scotland, and "First footing" is a tradition of visiting friends after midnight. Lots of people will be hung over on new Years Day. It is also a public holiday, though some people. Half 10 = Half past 10! (ie 10:30)

  • @TheFiown
    @TheFiown 5 лет назад +3

    I am Scottish but have lived in France since 40 years and every time I go home its still surprising!

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +1

      Wow! 40 years! What part of France do you live in? I have friends in the South and Centre :)

    • @TheFiown
      @TheFiown 5 лет назад

      Hi, after sixteen years in the ( real ) highlands, four years in London in university, then Paris working in couture , moved to Brazil for 2 1/2 years then China, worked in Russia, India and Saudi Arabia , now in the Mayenne between Normandy and Brittany in the middle of no where !! fields and cows and me and the dogs !! Good luck with your next move, it's important to drink in other cultures.

  • @shelleybean1112
    @shelleybean1112 6 лет назад +17

    We are probably one of the most diverse countries in the world respect for each others differences is very important here

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад

      +Shelley Bean i agree!

    • @benwheeler8456
      @benwheeler8456 6 лет назад

      What about Northern Ireland

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад

      We said, "one of the most" not, "the most" :)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад

      Edinburgh is incredibly diverse. People from all over Europe, Australia, India and Hong Kong. :) I loved it

    • @phreakbee2436
      @phreakbee2436 6 лет назад

      Scotland, as a whole, is 98% "Caucasian". "Caucasian" also including a vast # of Poles (my aunts husband being one [# 1 in my book]). But we need people like the Chinese, Greeks, Indians and Arabs, because our foods are dreadful shite, and we all have the same facial/body structure and skin tone. And once you get to the west highlands and islands, it's all glow in the dark vanilla white folk.

  • @shortbreadhead
    @shortbreadhead 6 лет назад +157

    LOL drinking in the streets depends where you are in Scotland, but generally nope, I've been fined a couple of times so... no.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад

      Definitely!

    • @paulmcdonald6192
      @paulmcdonald6192 6 лет назад +9

      In ma bit of Glasgow nobody gives a fuck

    • @daveaglasgow
      @daveaglasgow 6 лет назад +3

      You can drink anywhere in public in Edinburgh. Nobody cares. Take a beer or whisky to the top of arthurs seat. Nowhere better.

    • @ruaridhknott9692
      @ruaridhknott9692 5 лет назад +5

      Only allowed in edinburgh as it is a festival city with special rights, most other towns are no drinking unless they are classed as a festival city but is very loosely enforced

    • @kumori1986
      @kumori1986 5 лет назад +3

      Aye, would'nae try drinking in the street in Dundee either. Perfectly good beer gardens for that type of activity.

  • @orangemanok5800
    @orangemanok5800 2 года назад

    For those unfamiliar with the reference to the "separation of church and state" in the US. The state is forbidden from enforcing or favoring one particular religion. That does not mean religious practices and iconography must be scrubbed from all public forums, it simply means the state can't legally force us to practice one particular faith. Also, they may not pass laws favoring a particular faith. The citizens and elected officials are free to express their faith openly in public. When this issue is challenged in court the rulings overwhelmingly favor free expression.

  • @richlafave
    @richlafave 4 года назад +2

    Just went to Ireland, I was amazed at seeing soft-serve ice cream available everywhere, especially most gas stations

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  4 года назад +1

      I didn't notice that! That's so cool!

    • @geraldwalsh6489
      @geraldwalsh6489 4 года назад +1

      Yup And the best ice cream in Ireland has to be in killarney. Couple of weeks ago,we got ice cream cones in the gas station by the turn off for Ross castle....delicious! Btw,the Irish consume more ice cream per capita than anywhere else. That's cos our grass is so lush due to all that pesky rain they get in South west ireland

    • @richlafave
      @richlafave 4 года назад

      God bless the dairy in Ireland. My stomach was doing horrible things when we first got back home to Boston because our food isn’t real food.

  • @banterinthefastlane6647
    @banterinthefastlane6647 6 лет назад +198

    Drinking On The Street is ok just dont do it on Football Day as Police are more strict with it.
    Also Yea our T.V Swears daft we dont hold back from words here just go watch Frankie Boyle and you will see.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +6

      +Banter In The Fast Lane I LOVE HIM! Rachel recommended I watch him and he's hysterical

    • @gavinoliver7655
      @gavinoliver7655 6 лет назад +7

      Drinking on the street is OK in Edinburgh. YOU WILL BE ARRESTED FOR DOING IT IN GLASGOW. i have seen this happen.

    • @bobbyorr9285
      @bobbyorr9285 6 лет назад +11

      We dont bother censoring because by the age of 9 you know every swearword in the book

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +1

      +Bobby Orr Hahaha Nice!

    • @Paulamon92
      @Paulamon92 6 лет назад +2

      Yeah. It's illegal in Glasgow and basically the Lanarkshire area. I think Edinburgh has its own ruling for drinking in public.

  • @Michael-Oh
    @Michael-Oh 6 лет назад +14

    The queue thing is a big thing.
    Especially taxi queues.

  • @davidmacgregor5193
    @davidmacgregor5193 4 года назад

    When my parents went to Florida on holiday in November, they noticed that the place was very quiet with not many people around, they found out the reason was the Americans celebrate "Thanksgiving" in November, it's a national holiday there. When I was a lad in 1960's Scotland, the swings in the playground were chained together on Sunday's so that we couldn't play on them. There was also a gate at the top and bottom of the chute (slide) so that we couldn't use it either. I was born in the north east of Scotland, we went to the kirk three times on Sunday, 10:30 Morning Service, 13:00 Sunday School and 18:00 Evening Service. Scotland was far more religious sixty years ago than it is today.

  • @racer_x3572
    @racer_x3572 5 лет назад +24

    Good lord, I can’t imagine not queuing

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  5 лет назад +2

      It's like a mob. It was stressful in Italy and Greece hahaha

  • @letseatgrandpa2905
    @letseatgrandpa2905 6 лет назад +46

    Well I'm a Christian and if people say that they have a different religion I wouldn't Mind, I would still talk to them because it's not a Christian way to leave them and not talk to them. People just need to be a bit more understanding.

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +3

      +Janette Chayna That's great :) Also, ARE THOSE THE WEASLEY TWINS IN YOUR PROFILE PICTURE?!?!?!

    • @letseatgrandpa2905
      @letseatgrandpa2905 6 лет назад +2

      Sonnie Travels YES THEY ARE!!! 😍

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад +4

      +Janette Chayna 😍😍😍😍😍😍😍💘❤️💓💕💖💗💙💜💛💚💝💞💟❣️😍😍😍😍😍

    • @marleybu7984
      @marleybu7984 6 лет назад +7

      To be honest eh treat a'body wi respect til they dis me. I was brought up tae be polite and eh am. Don't think ye hif tae be a Christian tae be nice tae folk. :-)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  6 лет назад

      That's how I feel too. Although there are Christians (not all) that firmly believe it's impossible to have morals or be good people without religion. You can just read some of the comments on this video for examples of that.

  • @Evalisak
    @Evalisak 7 лет назад +17

    i love your videos /channel please keep it up😘 as i am planning to move to scotland in 4 years time

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  7 лет назад +4

      +evalisa89 x Oh how exciting! Do you know which part you're moving to? Have you been before?
      Thank you so much :D

  • @stormiej.436
    @stormiej.436 3 года назад

    thank you so much for sharing your adventure your experiences with us:)

    • @SonnieTravels
      @SonnieTravels  3 года назад

      Thanks so much for caring enough to watch 😁

  • @clapperproductions8655
    @clapperproductions8655 4 года назад

    How many places have you visited in Scotland.