Yes, probably. Oil and especially gas prices became sky high and we supply 40-50% of Europe with gas. The same with electricity - we have 17 cables connected to other countries in Europe so they buy Norwegian hydropower at a good price. But - We are also, with our 5.5 million inhabitants, the one who has given the most to Ukraine. We have and will give them close to $12 billion
@@titlingur2009 It is totally irrelevant. Norway has not asked for any war - that you sell your products and make money is precisely what buying and selling is all about. Norway owes nothing to anyone. We also don't live in luxury for what we earn - we leave it for the next generation.
I remember when the king crab came to Norway well. It was considered an invasive spiecies, a pest, which harmed and drove out our native crab species. The ugly spider like crab was killing our friendly normal nostalgic crab. It was called an invasion from russia. 30 years later the russian invasion was a blessing. Interpret it how you want. Or not. Its just a crab. 😂
It can still threaten other local wildlife potentially. Perhaps deliberate over-fishing in certain areas could help to regulate it if the other species they threaten are considered more valuable to us.
@@wnosethey have always been very abundant deep on the subarctic cold ocean floor, but the most difficult part is extraction. Crab fishing boats have to pay workers insanely high wages or no one is willing to work under such harsh conditions. Also they need to be transported under refrigeration
Norwegian here, I can't believe how lucky we are. Oil? Found it. Minerals? Got it. Fisheries? Doing it. Climate change? Lets do agriculture in the Arctic. Ukraine war? Let's sell oil, gas and fucking king crabs. We're a nation making fun of the rest of the world, by sheer luck.
It ms amazing that this article never mentions that when the king crab invaded Norway, Russia FORBADE Norway to fish these things even after they made their way down to Bergen.
Its actually hard to do because those ae very cold waters to go check out how is everything down there, you can only get estimaes based around what the fishermen are caughting
It eats EVERYTHING on the bottom and used to be cursed by fishermen, and created a lot of fear propaganda on the news, until they started fishing it and saw the profit. I think a healthy quota system is the key to keep the whole ocean going normal for our children and grandchildren.
It has its natural range in the northern Pacific Ocean, but was released in the Murmansk Fjord on the Kola Peninsula in the 1960s by Russian scientists to build up a new industry in the area. In 1977, the first individuals appeared in Norwegian waters
king crab are from japan area of asia originally and since we have contained the crab we still have our other shellfish that the crab may compete against, plus they are way bigger than most of our shellfish even the lobster
Well much like the Dutch and the Danes, England has been a long time major trading partner and those have been global export and transport driven economies, so English language instruction starts early in school, so that helps a lot. Plus Norwegian, Danish, and Dutch are linguistically related to English so it isn't as foreign a language to them and between tourism and international business the local people use their English enough to stay proficient in it.
They are trying. Obviously, in Asia it is heavily consumed, but in the US it is relatively new to the dinner table, so turning it into a commercially viable species is difficult. It will take a while to nurture a market for it. I think it's major drawback is its bones. Americans are used to filleted fish that is plated individually and aren't used to a fish being served whole on a plate family style where you use your chopsticks or a fork to pick the flesh out from between the bones. I think too that Asian Carp suffers from an image that it is a trash fish and not something you would want to eat. Though like many fish, someone just needs to come up with the right trendy recipe (Blackened Redfish for example) or market it under a different name (Patagonian Toothfish became Chilean Sea Bass just as Chinese Gooseberry became Kiwi Fruit) and sales sometimes take off. Maybe if they started calling it Freedom Fish, sales would increase. :)
It is only regulated east of north cape in cooperation with Russia. There are no quotas west of north cape, as the authorities wants to prevent it to spread further south.
@@wlee9888Asia. You sell to the market. They still make money selling at $30 per crab yet charge us 10x that here because we can afford it. Real fair.
How much would they pay me for these crickets I got if I soak them in salt water first? I do not understand why people will treat something that used to be reserved for prisoners and the homeless as a luxury. It's fishy sea bugs.
@@JohnRNewAccountNumber3 supply and demand my friend, most asia havent sanctioned russia which mean shocker! they get cheap russian kingcrab and the west who has sanctioned russia get to only buy from expensive norway
Moral of the story short: People change their minds when money appears. Once a pest becomes a delicacy. And politicians always exploit what is there to exploit by using words like "extremely fine product" for an invasive species.
Norway has been fishing for king crab for decades. The fact that more money is being made from the king crab now is due to sanctions against Russia, in the same way that the USA is making large amounts of money from oil in the same situation. The fact that Norway is in the king crab segment is clearly a competitive advantage, nothing else 😊
I know this is a random question but does anyone in these comments know where to get King Crab in France? This Canadian is going through withdrawl. Absolutely impossible to find in the South West of France where I live.
I think I've seen some canned king crab a couple times. I suspect most people probably aren't too familiar with it and prefer tourteau from Brittany / Normandy and a few other varieties traditionally used in some regional recipes.
I wonder if there's a strategy for when sanctions against Russia will be lifted and the prices drop. I don't think the sovereign wealth fund will help this particular village rolling then. Norway's always been forward thinking so I'm guessing it'll prepare for the day but I wonder how just to satisfy my own brain.
Now that the industry have been established it's not going to go away just because competition returns. Established trade partners may still prefer to keep buying from Norway, especially if the prices are comparable. And with Russia's negative reputation bound to linger for decades the demand for non-Russian alternatives are bound to remain as well.
@@ShadowTani Probably will depend on how big the price gap is. Pre-sanction Russian King Crab was about $10 less per pound than Alaskan caught where I live in the US. As a result you hardly saw Alaskan King Crab at the grocer. Now part of that might be that restaurants were willing to pay a premium for the Alaskan caught crab and pass on that markup more easily than a grocer could.
Even if you froze them there to ship by container ship they would still be expensive as remote places like that are never cheap to ship from be it the North Pacific off Russia, the US, and Japan or the Arctic off Norway.
It's funny and easy to see why historically such a massive number of Norwegians came to the Pacific Northwest and Alaska. As far as fishing and many other things, the land is like a copy of Norway.
Well it is a bit like the upper midwest in the US had many Swedes, Finns, Norwegians, and Danes settle there in the late 19th and early 20th century as cold winters didn't bother them. Cold seas wouldn't be an issue either.
What else should we do? We didn't bring the king crab to the Barents Sea, the Russians did, and if we didn't fish them, they'd spread even more. We can't eradicate them because a large portion of the stock is in Russian waters.
@@wrobelda Market inside Russia was controlled by companies from Norway. All infrastructure belonged to Norway. And Russia invested a little into it's own "salmon industry" not Russian own salmon fishermen are booming.
That is a fish of the flyndre/flounder family and is called Kveite (in Norwegian), aka Halibut (in English), with a typical adult weight of around 180 kg. As I am aware of, the largest specimen caught in Norwegian waters weighed 314.5 kg, caught by fishing net in 2007. Kveite is considered a traditional delicacy in Norway since the Viking Age, and probably long before that era. Kveite is described in writing in the Egil Skallagrimsson's Saga, as a food and important trade commodity remembered from his early years in Hålogaland, North Norway, among other places. (The Viking chieftain Egil Skallagrimsson lived in the period 910-990, in Norway and Iceland).
All I can say is that price per Kg in grocery store in Norway is a ridiculous $90/kg ($41/lbs) last a checked a month ago. That’s what happen the there is no competition and I don’t like it. All this hoopla about sustainability is code word for it’s only for the rich and it’s disgusting.
strange things about the winner and loser in the distance war. Look at the diamond cutter in India, the sanction on Russian diamond makes them without any work. They have done nothing to deserve this.
Congratulations, Norway! Not only are you lucky, but you're also wise in how you manage your resources. My only suggestion is perhaps to be a little less frugal and enjoy yourselves more. You could also consider hiring people from abroad without necessarily granting them citizenship.
We do that, even if we're not in the EU we're still part of EFTA, which means anyone from the EU can come and work here. We have many people from Sweden and Poland coming here to work as an example.
We learn english because there are much more english movies, videos, websites, etc and thus there are much more (and better) english movies than norwegian ones. Also the fact that our languages are structurally the same. For example "Kan du gi meg det?" Is phrased the same as in english "Can you give me that?" Its just the words sounds different. The biggest problem when pronouncing english would probably be the "th" as in thought. Also a bit struggle in pronouncing "w" because we literally never use it and see it the same as a "v".
Leviticus 11:9-10 New Living Translation (NLT) You may eat anything from the water if it has both fins and scales, whether taken from salt water or from streams. But you must never eat animals from the sea or from rivers that do not have both fins and scales. They are detestable to you.
Nobody is thanking Russia for bringing the king crab to the region, there is only bad rhetoric coming from the Norwegian end, and honestly I don't even they are concerned about Ukraine.
saying its the only place western countries get king crab is a lie...... i live in Pacific northwest, most of our king crab comes from alaska.... except summer 2023 lol
And it will within the next 10 years if not sooner. Temperatures of the waters are increasing in that area (well, globally as well), which will kill off / push the crabs out. It's a temporary boon for them, they should make the most of it for what little time they can, cus the good times are going to come to a brutal halt in the near future due to global warming.
It's not like these were opportunities that were taken at the expense of Ukraine, they just happened to be the sole alternative to many Russian products, practically pressured by Europe to increase production too. Rather they are big supporters of Ukraine, it's nonsensical trying to place blame on them.
It seems old Europeans' warfares has been endless, the wound of fued re-openned every 5-10yrs ever since GB empire rising around 16 century. As to those historical warfares, either picking fight among Anglo-Saxon or west Europeans fighting against slavics. The only difference between warfares centuries ago in Europe and these in most recent fifty yrs is, the former was pulling strings by brits in its small islands far away from great continental Europe, the latter happening nowadays is US turn to pull the strings from the big new continent lol
@@DeBeard My point is that many of the wars fought in Europe had nothing to do with the Brits or the US. Like any of them caused the Mongol hordes or the Roman legions.
@@viggoholmsen7203 it seems to dunno how an empire run to make them be recognized as an empire, its like yo got no idea how many wars, proxy wars and coup d'etat operated by the us empire
Because any money that russia earns is money that goes to russia spilling Ukrainian blood in Ukraine. Stop russian money, and they won't have money to spill Ukrainian blood in Ukraine. Very simple.
It's very simple and not at all funny - russia earns money through international trade and evasion of sanctions, and immediately puts it into weapons that it then uses in Ukraine.
It seems to me Norway is the biggest winner of the Russia-Ukraine war
Chyna misinformation
Probably true
Yes, probably. Oil and especially gas prices became sky high and we supply 40-50% of Europe with gas. The same with electricity - we have 17 cables connected to other countries in Europe so they buy Norwegian hydropower at a good price. But - We are also, with our 5.5 million inhabitants, the one who has given the most to Ukraine. We have and will give them close to $12 billion
@@lpdude2005thats not much if you think how much Norway has made since the start of the war
@@titlingur2009 It is totally irrelevant. Norway has not asked for any war - that you sell your products and make money is precisely what buying and selling is all about. Norway owes nothing to anyone. We also don't live in luxury for what we earn - we leave it for the next generation.
I remember when the king crab came to Norway well. It was considered an invasive spiecies, a pest, which harmed and drove out our native crab species. The ugly spider like crab was killing our friendly normal nostalgic crab.
It was called an invasion from russia. 30 years later the russian invasion was a blessing. Interpret it how you want. Or not. Its just a crab. 😂
The image of a nostalgic local crab, sitting and smokeing a pipe , comes to mind
I never understood it, the king crab is so tasty.
It can still threaten other local wildlife potentially.
Perhaps deliberate over-fishing in certain areas could help to regulate it if the other species they threaten are considered more valuable to us.
All Norwegians care about is money…. The sea floor is destroyed.
When seafood were considered sea bugs and peasant food until they realize how great it is.
King Crab is a HUGE business. Even in Alaska, where it's caught in North America, for a pound at a restaurant you're looking at $100+.
That's because warming waters killed off billions. The king crab fishery in Alaska is a shadow of its previous self.
@@wnosethey have always been very abundant deep on the subarctic cold ocean floor, but the most difficult part is extraction. Crab fishing boats have to pay workers insanely high wages or no one is willing to work under such harsh conditions. Also they need to be transported under refrigeration
It's freaking bugs man... I can't believe what people will pay for fishy tasting sea bugs.
@@georgewashington7829 fishy, TASTY sea bugs.Try fresh lobster.
Norwegian here, I can't believe how lucky we are. Oil? Found it. Minerals? Got it. Fisheries? Doing it. Climate change? Lets do agriculture in the Arctic. Ukraine war? Let's sell oil, gas and fucking king crabs. We're a nation making fun of the rest of the world, by sheer luck.
and yet still the people of norway get poorer and poorer.
@@Vatnehol what horseshit you're smokin?
ya until russia decides to invade you and we will see how lucky you will feel then
@@Vatnehol Do u have data to support this?
@@Unazaki They don't have that in ruzzia.
Thanks for sharing news from my country. I'm half "northerner", so interesting to learn about what's going on up there, since I don't have a TV.
Wishing you the best Norway 🙏🏾😊
Ty brother 💪🏻
Thanks. The same back to you! 🙂
Thanks dude
It ms amazing that this article never mentions that when the king crab invaded Norway, Russia FORBADE Norway to fish these things even after they made their way down to Bergen.
There's practically no background on how it became an invasive species nor how it has affected the local ecosystem. 🤷♂️
Its actually hard to do because those ae very cold waters to go check out how is everything down there, you can only get estimaes based around what the fishermen are caughting
It eats EVERYTHING on the bottom and used to be cursed by fishermen, and created a lot of fear propaganda on the news, until they started fishing it and saw the profit. I think a healthy quota system is the key to keep the whole ocean going normal for our children and grandchildren.
It has its natural range in the northern Pacific Ocean, but was released in the Murmansk Fjord on the Kola Peninsula in the 1960s by Russian scientists to build up a new industry in the area. In 1977, the first individuals appeared in Norwegian waters
king crab are from japan area of asia originally and since we have contained the crab we still have our other shellfish that the crab may compete against, plus they are way bigger than most of our shellfish even the lobster
Norwegian people are smart and speak English super well
😅😂
Well much like the Dutch and the Danes, England has been a long time major trading partner and those have been global export and transport driven economies, so English language instruction starts early in school, so that helps a lot. Plus Norwegian, Danish, and Dutch are linguistically related to English so it isn't as foreign a language to them and between tourism and international business the local people use their English enough to stay proficient in it.
Psht, please add a "." to punctuate the end of the sentence.
Incredible how King Crab , an invasive species, became big business! Wish the US can spin the Asian carp into something profitable
They are trying. Obviously, in Asia it is heavily consumed, but in the US it is relatively new to the dinner table, so turning it into a commercially viable species is difficult. It will take a while to nurture a market for it. I think it's major drawback is its bones. Americans are used to filleted fish that is plated individually and aren't used to a fish being served whole on a plate family style where you use your chopsticks or a fork to pick the flesh out from between the bones. I think too that Asian Carp suffers from an image that it is a trash fish and not something you would want to eat. Though like many fish, someone just needs to come up with the right trendy recipe (Blackened Redfish for example) or market it under a different name (Patagonian Toothfish became Chilean Sea Bass just as Chinese Gooseberry became Kiwi Fruit) and sales sometimes take off. Maybe if they started calling it Freedom Fish, sales would increase. :)
If the king crab is an invasive species I'm surprised that EVERY crab caught is not sold
It is only regulated east of north cape in cooperation with Russia. There are no quotas west of north cape, as the authorities wants to prevent it to spread further south.
King crab is a very expensive seafood delicacy in Asian countries. They sell them well over $30 PER CRAB. Holy tamale!
Only $30 per crab?
@@wlee9888Asia. You sell to the market. They still make money selling at $30 per crab yet charge us 10x that here because we can afford it. Real fair.
How much would they pay me for these crickets I got if I soak them in salt water first?
I do not understand why people will treat something that used to be reserved for prisoners and the homeless as a luxury. It's fishy sea bugs.
@@JohnRNewAccountNumber3 supply and demand my friend, most asia havent sanctioned russia which mean shocker! they get cheap russian kingcrab and the west who has sanctioned russia get to only buy from expensive norway
Russia can still sell its King Crab to most Asian and Middle East markets without any restrictions
Moral of the story short: People change their minds when money appears. Once a pest becomes a delicacy. And politicians always exploit what is there to exploit by using words like "extremely fine product" for an invasive species.
Is the crab peeing? 6:31
Nah…it’s squirting
It was seen as an invasive species indeed. Now you even find it at the Bergen fish market :)
What a great video keep up with great work bringing us videos like this 🤟🤟😍😉
Norway has been fishing for king crab for decades. The fact that more money is being made from the king crab now is due to sanctions against Russia, in the same way that the USA is making large amounts of money from oil in the same situation. The fact that Norway is in the king crab segment is clearly a competitive advantage, nothing else
😊
The simple solution is to relabel the King crab caught in Russia, into King crab caught in Norway. Because there's no way of distinguishing the two.
That worked for Liberia selling diamonds from Sierra Leone.
I know this is a random question but does anyone in these comments know where to get King Crab in France? This Canadian is going through withdrawl. Absolutely impossible to find in the South West of France where I live.
Learn to love oyster!
I think I've seen some canned king crab a couple times. I suspect most people probably aren't too familiar with it and prefer tourteau from Brittany / Normandy and a few other varieties traditionally used in some regional recipes.
@@childesinthev.761 Thanks, yeah that's been my experience. It is available at Christmas for about a week but that's it.
They are truly delicious but very expensive. I bought a small glass jar (150 grams) of these king crab legs for $105 Euros in Helsinki.
I wonder if there's a strategy for when sanctions against Russia will be lifted and the prices drop. I don't think the sovereign wealth fund will help this particular village rolling then. Norway's always been forward thinking so I'm guessing it'll prepare for the day but I wonder how just to satisfy my own brain.
Now that the industry have been established it's not going to go away just because competition returns. Established trade partners may still prefer to keep buying from Norway, especially if the prices are comparable. And with Russia's negative reputation bound to linger for decades the demand for non-Russian alternatives are bound to remain as well.
@@ShadowTani Probably will depend on how big the price gap is. Pre-sanction Russian King Crab was about $10 less per pound than Alaskan caught where I live in the US. As a result you hardly saw Alaskan King Crab at the grocer. Now part of that might be that restaurants were willing to pay a premium for the Alaskan caught crab and pass on that markup more easily than a grocer could.
I hate how it looks irrelevant of the history. But if it sells it sells, and no fisherman will question that.
What is the use of the utterly irritataing 3-tone 'music' behind the voice? Terrible!
70 bucks when out of water, then has to be shipped fast and across world no wonder they so high in price 70 out water 400 in America I like it
Even if you froze them there to ship by container ship they would still be expensive as remote places like that are never cheap to ship from be it the North Pacific off Russia, the US, and Japan or the Arctic off Norway.
You see how they do it without drama... very demure very mindful 🎉
Hey, we have a brand new in-demand commodity? Artificially increase scarcity immediately! Genius.
Putin is creating millionaires in Norway😂
A great story. I'll have to visit now and eat some tasty crab.
I love this place
it was alaska I believe because the species can live in cold climates but there are only x and y that could support the US
What's the name of this place, I will add it to my list to visit.
It's funny and easy to see why historically such a massive number of Norwegians came to the Pacific Northwest and Alaska. As far as fishing and many other things, the land is like a copy of Norway.
Aloha. I used to work at a remote fishing lodge in Alaska. The owners were Norwegian descendants founded by their father.
Well it is a bit like the upper midwest in the US had many Swedes, Finns, Norwegians, and Danes settle there in the late 19th and early 20th century as cold winters didn't bother them. Cold seas wouldn't be an issue either.
They dont even care it invasive
4:13 Looks like the mere loves his city very much
The crab taste ok but regular crab is better. We caught some on long lines up there when I was a fisherman
Quotas on a blacklisted species, money talks.
Sure does… as long as it’s contained to one area at least it’s money that can be spent protecting the enviroment
What else should we do? We didn't bring the king crab to the Barents Sea, the Russians did, and if we didn't fish them, they'd spread even more. We can't eradicate them because a large portion of the stock is in Russian waters.
The king crab is a invasive species and is destroying the native fauna. They have to be regulated
Similiar things happened in Russia. Salmon import was controlled by Norway in Russia now domestic fishermen and farmers are thriving.
How could have Norway controlled Russian fishermen?
@@wrobelda Market inside Russia was controlled by companies from Norway. All infrastructure belonged to Norway. And Russia invested a little into it's own "salmon industry" not Russian own salmon fishermen are booming.
@@OCTAVIANVS_AVGVSTVS_CAESAR so what you mean is they nationalized the Norwegian infrastructure, which basically a theft and that's why they thrive?
They are building own infrastructure. Which is profitable without Norwegian competition. It was West who stolen Russian assets btw.
Alaska has huge king crab population. Bloomberg failing with thir fact checking.
Global warming is killing that population
Yeah. Apparently none of those people ever heard of wikipedia.
@@BH-yk5cn wait, why my comment was deleted? I just mentioned that their population was being decimated by GW
?? I missed the part in the video where they said 'Alaska does not have a huge king crab population'?
@@boarbot7829 Not the last few seasons...
No mention on who's the biggest buyer.
everyone
Not sure but for fish in general Japan buy most from us
@@Bubajumba Japan is not even among the top 10 countries we exported most fish to neither by volume nor value.
That's what I was looking for
China?
Aren't they a pest species in that area anyway?
Love king crab.
Why you showing footage of Oslo as it was Kirkenes? Three hour flight away.
I mean, at least they chose to show Oslo and not Paris, the capital of Europe.
Paris is nowhere near the capital of Europe.@@wrobelda
@@RK-cj4oc I guess the joke flew over your head.
0:17 Talks about cod, shows picture of salmon 🤦♂
Well, the wild Atlantic salmon and those that used to live from it, are mostly gone as well.
I did not expect to see a relative by clicking a random video
Are you a crustacean?
4:10 What kind of fish is that?
That is a fish of the flyndre/flounder family and is called Kveite (in Norwegian), aka Halibut (in English), with a typical adult weight of around 180 kg. As I am aware of, the largest specimen caught in Norwegian waters weighed 314.5 kg, caught by fishing net in 2007. Kveite is considered a traditional delicacy in Norway since the Viking Age, and probably long before that era. Kveite is described in writing in the Egil Skallagrimsson's Saga, as a food and important trade commodity remembered from his early years in Hålogaland, North Norway, among other places. (The Viking chieftain Egil Skallagrimsson lived in the period 910-990, in Norway and Iceland).
Aloha. Halibut.
WHY IS THERE A REPLICATOR ON THE THUMBNAIL?!
Irritating background music
But... Does not the King crab pretty much destroy the bottom? so the environment has changed totally there...
Aloha. Yeah probably, but how are you going to fix it?
All I can say is that price per Kg in grocery store in Norway is a ridiculous $90/kg ($41/lbs) last a checked a month ago. That’s what happen the there is no competition and I don’t like it. All this hoopla about sustainability is code word for it’s only for the rich and it’s disgusting.
Organized crab... is organized crime... Not something I thought I would hear but, it's got a ring to it. XD
strange things about the winner and loser in the distance war. Look at the diamond cutter in India, the sanction on Russian diamond makes them without any work. They have done nothing to deserve this.
“Welcome to the most exciting city in the world…pause…in Europe”
Talk about a Win-Win! Great product from sustainable fishing keeping the freaking Orcs out of the market. Well done Norway!
What exactly is the healthy population size of an invasive species?
I ask myself that all the time... They really are price gouging regarding these pests. Not because they are rare, but because everybody wants them.
Deadliest catch norway edition?
Its an incredible taste. Better than lobster in my opinion. And I love lobster. 😂
Congratulations, Norway! Not only are you lucky, but you're also wise in how you manage your resources. My only suggestion is perhaps to be a little less frugal and enjoy yourselves more. You could also consider hiring people from abroad without necessarily granting them citizenship.
What are you even talking about?
We do that, even if we're not in the EU we're still part of EFTA, which means anyone from the EU can come and work here. We have many people from Sweden and Poland coming here to work as an example.
very cool 👍
Welcome to the most exciting place in Europe…. Guess he’s never been to Bilohorodka ..
If the crab is an ivasive species. They should not throught them out if they are small or damaged. They should do their best to get rid of them
Was he wearing Jordan’s? 🤣
See food isnt sanctioned
Erling Haaland ❌
Erling Haugan ✅
Today Russia 🇷🇺 attacked a Norwegian 🇳🇴 fishing boat. Crab 🦀 wars
Only thing i hear is them making bank on sanctions
russian war?
Norwegians should share their wealth with Europe. Norway should be forced to join the European Union. Then the European Union will become richer.
😂😂
Norway would lose its control over the fishing quotas then, which would decimate the industry.
King crab likes money ask sponge bob 😂
Why do most of the YT documentaries from Europe have locals who speak English?
I don't know about the rest of Europe but in the Nordic countries you'll struggle to find somebody who doesn't speak passable English.
It's pretty much a requirement to speak and write english in any Nordic education system, pretty neat for sure
We learn english because there are much more english movies, videos, websites, etc and thus there are much more (and better) english movies than norwegian ones.
Also the fact that our languages are structurally the same.
For example "Kan du gi meg det?" Is phrased the same as in english "Can you give me that?" Its just the words sounds different.
The biggest problem when pronouncing english would probably be the "th" as in thought. Also a bit struggle in pronouncing "w" because we literally never use it and see it the same as a "v".
We learn english in school
@@AFN.90210
Is it because of Hollywood or science?
All those guys on deadliest catch should just go fish here, looks super calm and easy.
The reason why these guys are embarrassing it because of the show. Many American's like Capitan Sig are from Norway.
norway is an example for everything
Butters...old bay in the can in Norwegian
er der noen norske her?
All without involving bloody EU!
So all the Alaskan crab migrated to norway lol
It's not Alaskan crab but crab from Russian Kamchatka.
@@OCTAVIANVS_AVGVSTVS_CAESAR Yep, you can tell bye the Adidas track suits they wear.
Leviticus 11:9-10 New Living Translation (NLT)
You may eat anything from the water if it has both fins and scales, whether taken from salt water or from streams. But you must never eat animals from the sea or from rivers that do not have both fins and scales. They are detestable to you.
Aloha. You done yet?
Nobody is thanking Russia for bringing the king crab to the region, there is only bad rhetoric coming from the Norwegian end, and honestly I don't even they are concerned about Ukraine.
Have they been checked for nuclear isotopes
King RAGNAR YAHUWAH
saying its the only place western countries get king crab is a lie...... i live in Pacific northwest, most of our king crab comes from alaska.... except summer 2023 lol
Walk into Huma market in China and you will find the Russian king crab. Remember china is a big market
Well, I mostly see fish bones because I dig up old ones, but the old man in the photo is not carrying cod.
It's all good until the crabs run out
And it will within the next 10 years if not sooner. Temperatures of the waters are increasing in that area (well, globally as well), which will kill off / push the crabs out. It's a temporary boon for them, they should make the most of it for what little time they can, cus the good times are going to come to a brutal halt in the near future due to global warming.
@@Hathur see you in 10 years and then see you in next 10 years with the same global warming thing!
ALASKAN CRAB TASTES BETTER.
Blue crab tastes better than either of them, and you only need fishing line, chicken, and a net to catch them.
And everybody speaks fluent English!
When your language is only spoken by five million you'd speak English too
Just what Norwegians need... more money.
Indeed, we're playing civilization, and going for the economic victory, lol.
What about Alaska
Didn't watch did ya?
8:23
Sounds like something out of the House of Dragon lol
🎉🎉🎉🎉
The Barbarians
Norway is not out exporting Russia in the King Crab/Crab markets, it's not even close.
But they can sell to counties who doesn’t trade with Russia
Unfortunately to say, they are the people make the money from the blood of Ukrainian.
How? By fishing King Crab of the coast of Norway and selling it?
Please - connect the dots for me so I can see the logic behind your statement.
It's not like these were opportunities that were taken at the expense of Ukraine, they just happened to be the sole alternative to many Russian products, practically pressured by Europe to increase production too. Rather they are big supporters of Ukraine, it's nonsensical trying to place blame on them.
It seems old Europeans' warfares has been endless, the wound of fued re-openned every 5-10yrs ever since GB empire rising around 16 century.
As to those historical warfares, either picking fight among Anglo-Saxon or west Europeans fighting against slavics. The only difference between warfares centuries ago in Europe and these in most recent fifty yrs is, the former was pulling strings by brits in its small islands far away from great continental Europe, the latter happening nowadays is US turn to pull the strings from the big new continent lol
IMO you should go back another 2000 years to find an era without large empires and wars (remember the Roman Empire?)
@@viggoholmsen7203 Viggo from Sweden or somewhere else what's your point
@@DeBeard
My point is that many of the wars fought in Europe had nothing to do with the Brits or the US. Like any of them caused the Mongol hordes or the Roman legions.
2000 words and not one of them Putin smh
@@viggoholmsen7203 it seems to dunno how an empire run to make them be recognized as an empire, its like yo got no idea how many wars, proxy wars and coup d'etat operated by the us empire
"blood spilled in ukraine" because illegal crab trade ?🤣7:25
Because any money that russia earns is money that goes to russia spilling Ukrainian blood in Ukraine. Stop russian money, and they won't have money to spill Ukrainian blood in Ukraine. Very simple.
It's very simple and not at all funny - russia earns money through international trade and evasion of sanctions, and immediately puts it into weapons that it then uses in Ukraine.
Norway does not deserve any of this being complicit in the pipeline terrorism last year!
How's the weather in ruzzia today?
Germany has issued arrest warrants for 4 Ukrainians for that blast.,
@@floro7687 Psy-Op man. Do not believe the show!
Aloha. Not implicated. Germany, Poland, and Ukraine.
!
the quality of english from these norwegians are like so bad. lol
Aloha. How’s your Norwegian?
How many languages do you speak?
@@TabletMini English, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Norwegian, Swedish, Danish, German, and Spanish
They make their living as watermen, I don't think they are auditioning to host The Tonight Show.
smuggling opportunity. salmon from Norway king crab from Russia.