Reduced to foraging in Dusseldorf
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- Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025
- Names are Tia & Cheveyo
Traveling full-time since July 2021.
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Good thing you found out about the open shops at the central station. Other emergency shopping options on Sundays in Germany can be found at airports, most gas stations, and some designated emergency pharmacies (only medicine). Bakeries may also be open and sell some additional products. Other than that in many cities there are mini marts all around which carry basic foods and hygiene products (with regionally varying names such as "Kiosk", "Büdchen", "Trinkhalle", "Spätkauf" etc.). Except for those, flower shops, and souvenir shops in tourist regions, other stores are not allowed to open by law. Sunday in Germany is a day protected by law for recreation, family, and contemplation due to a long tradition and the political influence of churches and workers' unions.
This information was invaluable! Thank you. I think it's actually pretty cool that Sundays are legally protected for leisure time. It was just a bit of a surprise, is all!
I always love to see foreigners discover that almost everything is closed on sunday.
It was quite a surprise!
@@OnePackWanderers Looks like a thorough preparation of your journey to Germany.:-)
Tia... what happen to "Subscribe". I miss how you say it at the end, I always look forward to it. Always enjoy your videos.
Those berries (02:50)are "Brombeeren", blackberries, and no "Himbeeren", raspberries". They are ripe when they are almost black, very, very dark violet to be presise. We had too little sun in September to turn them ripe.
Thank you for taking me with you 👍🏻😃
Thanks for coming along 😄
The museums are open at Sundays.
Love Cheveyo’s jokes 😂
Keep those wordplays coming. ("Ducks in a row", etc, etc.) They are actually very good. And the fact you both think they are lame makes it extra funny.
Some of our most memorable moments are just walking the cities we’ve gone to. Have fun it’s the journeys not the destinations.
Wise words.
Yeah nothing is really moving on Sunday in Germany. They shut it down. There are a few countries that follow this. So lesson learned for the next adventure. 👊😎
Yes! Lesson learned.
OHHH my God...I ❤ GERMANY..went to DUSSELDORF few times...I traveled many cities in 🇩🇪 since I have families live there...KOLN, FRANKFURT, MUNCHEN, HAMBURG, DUSSELDORF, AACHEN etc
Hello there, i really enjoy to see walking so much in your videos.
Thank you! We want to try and show the normal city streets of these places as much as possible, and not just the huge attractions that everyone knows. We were worried it was boring, though, so it’s nice to read this!
ducks in a row. you are ready for when you become a dad. you have the dad jokes sorted. 🙂
"Extravagant dinner in our hotel kitchen." #DucksInARow 🤗🇦🇺
Note to the wise, on Sundays in Germany they take their time off seriously.
Yes they do! No disrespect to the Germans, we just did not know! Our fault entirely. But we learned something, and that is one thing we treasure most about travel.
👍👍
Everything closed on Sundays: welcome to Germany! Their opening hours laws are some of the most old fashioned/conservative ones in Europe.
What surprised us the most is that more things were closed in Germany in comparison to a more traditionally catholic country such as Italy.
@@OnePackWanderers Yep, but it´s mainly about employee´s rights to have at least one free family day a week. Furthermore its aimed to a certain fairness between big companys, who can affort to plan open sundays, bc they have lots of employees and little businesses, who only have a few, which would have to work on every sunday then. Religious reasons aren´t ivolved in the law of opening hours.
I wonder you went to Düsseldorf but missed Köln, the 4th biggest city in Germany, just like 40 min from Düsseldorf. Btw you can easily go in a restaurant eat for like 8-10 Euro, you just have to know where. ;)
We definitely would have benefitted from a guide! Next time we visit Germany, we will reserve a month or more for it. We have 90 days to see as much of the EU as possible, so unfortunately we miss a lot of places along the way. We will put Köln on our list!
With the exception of the really impressive cathedrale I would always skip Cologne! Its an completely overrated city and - as far as you love good beer - the absolutely wrong city ;-)!
I have been real enjoying your videos.
But, one thing.
If you are washing your clothes in a machine. You don't need laundry soap. It's just a luxury
Of course it’s not necessary, but it definitely makes a difference when you’re wearing the same 5 shirts for months.