49 Strange Differences This American Noticed about Finland

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @chrisplusmelissa
    @chrisplusmelissa  Месяц назад +3

    Join us on an exclusive 8-day walking tour of one of Europe’s most breathtaking coastlines. From summiting Monte Tre Calli to exploring the ruins of Pompeii, this trip is perfect for those who love an active vacation. Indulge in authentic Italian cuisine, including locally made mozzarella, Neapolitan pizza, and more, all while soaking up the stunning views. Travel dates are April 26th - May 3rd. For more info: ruclips.net/video/8t1j3NiHNZc/видео.html

    • @teknoaija1762
      @teknoaija1762 17 дней назад

      Sorry to say this but as an honest Finnish man,I have to say that only after first three points you showed your typical American ignorance.Firstly,nobody uses a credit card in a grocery shop.We pay debit.Secondly,we are taught proper English in schools,not raped English from US.And so on.....

  • @wileycousins9209
    @wileycousins9209 Год назад +441

    I've been living in Finland for over 25 years now. As an American, many of the Finnish cultural traditions had me stymied at first. Our American habit of aggressive initiative falls flat here; it's considered rude. So is our gregarious nature. Even at parties, I would be walking around introducing myself and attempting to mingle, and my Finnish wife would have to come over and tell me to sit down and be quiet. Looking back now, I cringe at all the things I didn't know. After a few years I began to grow accustomed to life here. Now I love it. The Finns value their personal space. This includes solitude from noise, which they also consider an intrusion. Now, when I visit The States, the feeling is like getting back in your car, starting it up, and having the radio blast you through the roof. Everyone sounds like they're yelling.
    I've grown to love my solitude. Other aspects of Finnish life I like are that everything works her. All official duties, train schedules, bus schedules, business transactions, and even the justice system works, and are there to enhance the lives of the citizens. The traditional worries that I would shoulder in America don't exist here. I don't have to worry about the financial effects of catastrophic illness, as health care is free. I don't have to save money or take out loans for my daughter's college education, because that, too, is practically free. The factory where I work bends over backwards to make my job safe and sustainable as I approach retirement. They supply all my tests in English. They even translate all the update courses for me. Their goal, as I understandvit, is to make sure I remain employed, which they do for all citizens. The Finns appreciate accuracy. When they say that they'll arrive at five, they arrive exactly at five; not 4:49. Not 5:01. When I generalize, my wife corrects me.....as do my friends. For instance, I have diesel car. I will say that I'm gonna go get gas for the car. Ears will perk up and someone will say, "Why are you putting gasoline in a diesel car?"
    Punctuality, honesty, directness, minimalism, humility, stoicism, and efficiency are all deeply admired traits for Finns. I love it here.

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад +46

      Oh my, thank you for your perspective. That's very interesting. It sounds like the right way to do things in so many ways. We've been living in Portugal for 9 months now and do love the different pace of life here. We're about to go back to the USA for a visit... and we're wondering what we're going to think of it.

    • @B1gLupu
      @B1gLupu Год назад +47

      If we say we will arrive at five, most of us will be there 5 minutes before. If you are not there at like 3 minutes past, we'll prolly call you 😅
      If you are too early, you waste your time. If you are late, you waste the time of the other person.

    • @thomasbarchen
      @thomasbarchen Год назад +20

      You did well to escape the US 25 years ago! I did the same but landed in Berlin. Finland seems more appealing to me at this point.

    • @abcd-gd1th
      @abcd-gd1th Год назад +18

      I see what you sayed through my daughter. She wanted to move to US but ended up in Finland and fell in love with this country, doesnt want to move anywhere.

    • @surfsusan
      @surfsusan Год назад +7

      I love Finland too and have lived here for 12 years. I have one question, how do you get free healthcare here? I pay every time I go to a health care center or hospital. I’m Danish and all healthcare is paid be the taxes.

  • @pasiojala3227
    @pasiojala3227 Год назад +481

    "Ladders" in bathrooms are probably: towel drying -- the pipes have hot water circulating.
    Ladders outside of houses: multistory buildings need emergency fire escapes, also if up to the roof for chimneysweeps and dropping snow.
    Bidee showers have become the norm since 1980's.
    The "exit" on the bathroom was more about the lock, not direction of where to exit the stall... "oven aukaisu" means "opening the door".
    You missed the chance to try salmiakki ice cream.
    Props for learning the Finnish pronunciation of sauna.

    • @magicofshootingstar
      @magicofshootingstar Год назад +14

      If you watched the video, the ladders in bathroom were actually ladders, not drying rack 😄

    • @pasiojala3227
      @pasiojala3227 Год назад +17

      @@magicofshootingstar There is a water tank above (but we don't see the ceiling to the right of it), so if they are ladders, they may not lead anywhere. Also, flimsy-looking for ladders. But, not enough information.

    • @karenneill9109
      @karenneill9109 Год назад +20

      The ladders in the bathroom are fire escapes, too. They hook over the window sill. In taller buildings the ladders are often rolled up in a bag somewhere in the room.

    • @tommi7554
      @tommi7554 Год назад +29

      @@magicofshootingstar yeah, well they are more like decorative "ladders" which are indeed used for towels and other wet clothes to dry....

    • @CultOfMU
      @CultOfMU Год назад +24

      @@magicofshootingstar those ladders looked more like a drying rack though. Very narrow and thin metal steps.

  • @HoseTheBeast
    @HoseTheBeast Год назад +332

    Don’t every towel everywhere in the world have loops? Am I crazy?

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад +40

      Unfortunately they do not. 😊

    • @dannil9878
      @dannil9878 Год назад +32

      That is crazy. A really helpful feature

    • @ktimantti
      @ktimantti Год назад +52

      I havent seen towel without loops 😳 crazy

    • @cherryc177
      @cherryc177 11 месяцев назад +3

      Unfortunately not, for ex; my zara towels don’t have, but h&m towels have etc.

    • @kukaliemikalie8157
      @kukaliemikalie8157 11 месяцев назад +1

      I asked myself the same question

  • @JDelwynn
    @JDelwynn 4 месяца назад +35

    I don't think Finnish teens need to sneak out, a boyfriend/girlfriend staying overnight at each others is pretty common. There's this little anecdote about the filming of the movie "Nightmare on Elm Street 4", when they were still rewriting the script during shooting, the director Renny Harlin (a Finn) suggested that one of the characters could stay over at their boyfriends. This was quickly shot down however, because the director didn't realize there's a cultural difference. I don't know, maybe the Finnish are a bit more relaxed about human nature I guess...

  • @jenh8015
    @jenh8015 Год назад +178

    If you're ever in Finland again observing the small details of life, please check out how most doors have a built in safety feature. They open in what I like to call 'the direction of panic'. In case of a fire they open in the direction you would use to get out of harm's way. (outwards if you are in an apartment, inwards if you are on a balcony since you need to get in to the apartment to get to the stairway and outwards if you're in a public building because you need to get out to the street). A neat and not always noticed security feature applied to most buildings.

    • @justskip4595
      @justskip4595 Год назад +22

      There's other things about the doors like the hinges are on the inside, in the inside on hinges there's usually metal lugs that go into the frame etc and these are going to make life of a burglar harder. Also locks being high quality.

    • @TrinaKristina
      @TrinaKristina Год назад +30

      Also a Finnish safety feature... All big cities have underground bunkers. They are used daily as sports halls, parking garages, ect but they are also for use in case of war, threat or nuclear emergency.

    • @EpicHashTime
      @EpicHashTime Год назад +29

      @@justskip4595 It is literally impossible to kick in a Finnish door.

    • @aarepelaa1142
      @aarepelaa1142 Год назад +2

      Hmm, in my house I don't remember the English name for the spot that's usually right after the front door where you put stuff like your shoes and jacket. But that spot has the door open inward, mostly because there's just no room it's like a crammed 1,2m long 1m wide hallway and if it opened i ward the entire room would pretty much be used up.

    • @aarepelaa1142
      @aarepelaa1142 Год назад +5

      @@EpicHashTime unless it's an indoors door.

  • @Randomizer939
    @Randomizer939 Год назад +93

    21:54 Da Capo means "again from the beginning":
    "Da Capo was born based on the idea of recycling, when liquor confections found to be defective in quality control wanted to be reused. They were melted and rum was added as a spice to the mixture, because it balanced the flavor of the liqueur. During production, the Da Capo mass is boiled to 110 degrees, when most of the alcohol evaporates." 😉

    • @karirautio
      @karirautio 8 месяцев назад +6

      Da Capo went on sale already in 1916.

    • @omiq7761
      @omiq7761 16 дней назад +2

      I remember hating these as a kid, but after cool 20 years or so, I've grown to love rum... and to my surprise Da-Capo was fine too :D

  • @jyrkiniinisto2465
    @jyrkiniinisto2465 Год назад +59

    As a Finn, I enjoyed watching this. Insightful and factual observations that interested me as well. I could easily identify with most of their opinions. A positive couple who clearly enjoyed making this video. Welcome to Finland again!😀

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад +5

      Glad you enjoyed it and thank you! We hope to come back again soon.

    • @AnthonyManzio
      @AnthonyManzio 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@chrisplusmelissa That ladder like thing in a bathroom area is a combination towel rack and heater. The heater is generally used to warm and/or dry the towels but can also lend to taking the chill off the bathroom

  • @Hippinaama
    @Hippinaama Год назад +92

    I have to say it's the most observed visit to Finland....ever 😀

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад +16

      It is my duty to observe and observe some more. 😁

    • @pinkyellowblue007
      @pinkyellowblue007 Год назад +2

      @@chrisplusmelissa So you're a spy ?

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад +1

      Far from it.

    • @kespa25
      @kespa25 13 дней назад

      @@chrisplusmelissa hmm what would spy answer ;D just kidding

  • @YrjoPuska777
    @YrjoPuska777 3 месяца назад +6

    The "butt hose" is called pillupuhelin in FInnish, which translates to pussy phone. Pretty much every bathroom has one in Finland.

  • @finnishculturalchannel
    @finnishculturalchannel Год назад +65

    When there's a floor drain in the bathroom, that bidet shower is handy when cleaning the bathroom. That ladder in bathroom is a towel rack. There's two kind of ladders outside the buildings; for climbing to the roof and to get out in case of a fire. The latter usually are difficult to climb up, you can just climb them down enough so you won't hurt yourself jumping down. You can usually ask your pizza to be sliced. Unsliced is probably so default, they don't even ask, if you want yours sliced. There's saunas everywhere and in everything. There used to be one in a Burger King in Helsinki. Needless to say, the only one in the world. If there's some Guinness World Record relating sauna, it's probably made in Finland. Karaoke records at least used to be there too. Design is one of those things, which put Finland on the map, so people know and value good design. Designers like E.g. Alvar and Aino Aalto, Ilmari Tapiovaara and Tapio Wirkkala. Wood have traditionally been a Finnish building material. There's also some Finnish-American designers, like Eero Saarinen, whose works include the St. Louis' Gateway Arch. Also the America's oldest log cabin, C. A. Nothnagle Log House in New Jersey, was built by Finnish settlers. Wood based products are perfectly eatable too. Juniper E.g. is good for flavoring and Xylitol is good for the teeth. Melissa might be interested in Sahti: "Brewing Nordic Brewing Sahti At The Ale Apothecary". If Chris is into drumming, he might enjoy checking out a drummer called Kai Hahto. Traditionally Finns don't look kindly on boasting. A Finnish poet Eino Leino wrote: "Whoever is happy should hide it." There might be some "Progress ends with contentment" thinking behind that also. Especially during winters, silence is everywhere. It helps, if you can embrace it. Then in spring and summer there's sounds you can not help not to stop and listen. Those Fazer's chocolate bars are oldies. That fruity one, Jim is from 1958. Da-Capo, with rum truffle filling, is from 1916, and it's the Fazer's first ever chocolate bar. Fazer was also the company to come up with the idea to put sal ammoniac into candies. In all, it's interesting how foreigners notice things the locals take for granted, like silence. Glad hear you enjoyed your stay in Finland.

    • @pekkaporsliini606
      @pekkaporsliini606 Год назад +5

      I believe there has to be a drain If there's Any sort of water inlet in a room. Which makes it very useful to have a shower there. I'd love one in the kitchen If the floors would be up to it.

  • @SimoExMachina2
    @SimoExMachina2 Год назад +30

    They will cut the pizza if you ask them to. Some places do it automatically, but in most places you have request your pizza to be violated with a knife.

    • @janiletoff6430
      @janiletoff6430 4 месяца назад

      i hava takean 1 or 2 pizza in diffrent countries in eoropa.they never slised.

  • @ullasofia9432
    @ullasofia9432 Год назад +21

    It's wonderful that you pronounce the word "sauna" correctly!!!

  • @Suvikki74
    @Suvikki74 Год назад +43

    A sledge is kelkka in Finnish. The ladder is for your towels to dry on. The literal meaning of cinnamon bun " korvapuusti" means a slap on an ear. The plaster is marenki, it is made of eggwhites, sugar, vinegar or lemon juice, then dried in an oven. I think it is originally French. The babybox comes with a condition,; they want to monitor the development but hey, universal healthcare. Da Capo is a rum-flavored chocolate. You missed the public healthcare, public libraries with computers ( it is in law to have access to internet) and babies having naps outside all the seasons ( I survived, it gives babies a good quality sleep at winter too.) There is no bad weather, only wrong clothes!

    • @ragulper
      @ragulper Год назад

      Sledge is closer to the Swedish "Släde".

    • @Atomisti
      @Atomisti Год назад +3

      Pulkka, rather, is the thing kids are transported with.

    • @anu83
      @anu83 20 дней назад +1

      @@Atomisti And pulkka is also a finnish invention.

    • @anu83
      @anu83 20 дней назад

      Marenki in english is Meringue.

  • @katriarjava658
    @katriarjava658 Год назад +69

    The bidet shower can be found in almost all Finnish homes and most public toilets. It is especially appreciated by the ladies. And Fazer is pronunced fatser. The letters in Finnish have only one way to say them. ( Actually the Fazer family came from Switzerland.)

    • @jussiautio8454
      @jussiautio8454 Год назад +3

      And the bidet showers nickname actually is similar to butthose, but not quite... it's called pussy phone or pillupuhelin.

    • @ristovirtanen6396
      @ristovirtanen6396 Год назад +7

      And the stress in always on the first syllable.👍 It’s HELsinki, not HelSINki!😠
      And its Swedish name Helsingfors is abbreviated from: Hell, sing for us…😉

    • @LegoGBlok
      @LegoGBlok Год назад

      False.
      Bidet showers are a not a common thing is Finland. Ive never seen one, nor have i heard that those are everywhere here in Finland.

    • @ristovirtanen6396
      @ristovirtanen6396 Год назад +4

      Not common in older houses but my bathroom was reworked five years ago and bidet shower was standard part in the renovation🤔👍

    • @duckeh1952
      @duckeh1952 Год назад +16

      @@LegoGBlok yes those are. Quite standard on houses (ofc you can have one without) and every women's toilet, every booth has one. Hotelsrooms have it. Most apartments in cities have it.
      I have two toilet seats in my house..one has it, the otherone does not.

  • @joonas1396
    @joonas1396 Год назад +33

    Those shiny people were part of the Helsinki Samba Carneval, the actual carneval was just around the corner but they had to walk down that road to get back to the start.

  • @catherinejewell8538
    @catherinejewell8538 Год назад +21

    I lived in Finland from 1967-1969. It was fun hearing all these interesting differences.

  • @lanebashford3982
    @lanebashford3982 Год назад +30

    They aren't ladders. They're towel drying racks. They had them everywhere, in Lapland hotels too. Great for drying out your towels or even your skiwear if you need to dry it.

    • @k.l.7788
      @k.l.7788 Год назад +1

      In this case they were for your clothes.

    • @Viper87th
      @Viper87th 7 месяцев назад +1

      and when they put heat to the "ladders" like here in Norway, the clothes/towels real dry fast :)

  • @duckmcduck007
    @duckmcduck007 Год назад +18

    The happiness report isn't a questionnaire where people say they're happy. The happiness report looks at statistics on corruption, safety, access to healthcare, average economic stability, trust in others, trust in the government, etc.

    • @Cocoonen
      @Cocoonen 14 дней назад

      Do they ask amount of eaten depression medicines, because I think maybe they should...

    • @duckmcduck007
      @duckmcduck007 12 дней назад

      @@Cocoonen They don't ask about anything. It's not a questionnaire. They do however look at usage of anti-depressants

  • @1andonlyMiro
    @1andonlyMiro Год назад +7

    The proper way of pronouncing sauna. Bravo. Love it.

  • @nellitheretrogamer8666
    @nellitheretrogamer8666 Год назад +18

    The cinnamon rolls are not turned sideways, they are baked that way. The dough is spread into a big flat square with a rolling pin, then they sprinkle the cinnamon all over it, and then it is rolled up like a swiss roll. But then it is cut into pieces in a zigzag way so that next cut always goes to a different direction than the previous one. When they come out of the oven, they look like in your picture.
    The people who are "recruiting" on streets are trying to get people to become monthly donors to the charity that they represent. They offer you several different options, like would you want to donate maybe 5 euros or maybe 10 euros a month. If you agree to it, then they write down your account number & other stuff and arrange it and the money gets donated automatically every month. Several organizations do this, the guy on the video seems to be wearing a Greenpeace vest.

  • @explorersara
    @explorersara Год назад +22

    Usually those recruiters on the streets are for different charities asking for you to donate. Could also be selling things usch as newspapers or electricity.

  • @Zarniwooper
    @Zarniwooper Год назад +13

    Fun fact, the type of plastic sled is called "pulkka", and the english translation is "pulk"! This is purely nordic word that english speakers picked up!

    • @timoterava7108
      @timoterava7108 Год назад +1

      It's a Sami word.

    • @Zarniwooper
      @Zarniwooper Год назад +2

      @@timoterava7108 No. Pulkka is proto-finnic word and Sami word pulkkē is borrowing from Finnish.

    • @timoterava7108
      @timoterava7108 Год назад

      @@Zarniwooper
      Ok, so it was first a Finnic word and then also a Sami one. "Nordic" however is not a language.

    • @Zarniwooper
      @Zarniwooper Год назад +4

      @@timoterava7108 never said nordic is a language. Jesus, what's your problem dude?

    • @timoterava7108
      @timoterava7108 Год назад

      @@Zarniwooper
      I don't have a problem - do you?
      You literally wrote: "This (pulkka) is purely (a) Nordic word..."

  • @magicofshootingstar
    @magicofshootingstar Год назад +25

    Some comments from a Finn:
    Wait, you don't have loops for your towels other places? 🤔 Why? That's the easiest way to hang them, home or hotel 😃
    "Butthose" I at least call "hand(held) shower" if translating directly to English. They are good beside personal hygiene to also help clean the bathroom and also fill bucket for cleaning etc.
    Oh and I wouldn't suggest going into train toilet without shoes (except if you travel in sleeper car which has private toilet for the cabin), so I newer knew they had heated floors.
    I have never seen lap desk but I have never been in coworking space.
    Single blankets are so also because if one is hotter than other at nights, they can have different thickness of blankets on their side 🙂
    I have never seen that kind of ladder in bathroom before 🤔 Nor paperbags in toilet bins but again, I rarely stay in hotels. 😄
    Those areas that sun doesn't come up during winter have lot of snow. Snow reflects all the light from moon and streetlights etc. so it's light but the autumn/spring if there is not yet/not anymore snow it's dark. Even in places that still get sunlight some amount during the day.
    This was fun to see what kind of things you picked up 🙂 Just know that Helsinki is not the whole Finland (if you only stayed there). Rest of the Finland is lot more sparsely populated and it shows on people. Helsinki is our "big city" even if it's small compared to the other countries big cities 😃

    • @timoterava7108
      @timoterava7108 Год назад +3

      Helsinki indeed is different. Many (myself included) think that it is not really Finland at all - at least anymore.

    • @repa999
      @repa999 Год назад

      i know the butt hose as pussyphone

  • @bettyhappschatt3467
    @bettyhappschatt3467 Год назад +14

    The flattened Finnish cinnamon roll is called 'Korvapuusti' which means 'Slap on the ear'.
    Finnish people consider the small Salty Licorice candies and Plain Licorice two different sort of candies. The Salty licorice is called Salmiakki and the salty flavour is ammonium chloride. The black lozenge shape means it is Salmiakki candy. There are, of course, licorice (lakritsi)candies that are seasoned with a small amount of ammonium chloride. Most Finns like ammonium chloride: we fill chocolate -bars with Salmiakki, we put it in ice cream and there is a drink called Salmiakki-Kossu = ammonium chloride candies dissolved in Koskenkorva, which is 40% spirit.

  • @formatique_arschloch
    @formatique_arschloch Год назад +15

    Never ever in my over 40 years living all over Finland have I seen those shiny people😅

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад +2

      You are saying they are not always walking around?!? 😂

    • @Nakkisampyla
      @Nakkisampyla 13 дней назад

      @@chrisplusmelissa Those are foreign entertainers giving performances in Helsinki, mostly in summertime

  • @DavidP793
    @DavidP793 8 месяцев назад +8

    I had an 80 yr old Finnish patient....he looked 58. He was the definition of stoic. Great man, I learned so much about Finland. Btw, the man was as strong as a bull....at 80 yrs old.

  • @Jantzku
    @Jantzku Год назад +17

    A Finn would probably choose exact opposite as you did with the candies 😅

  • @ventusastrea3850
    @ventusastrea3850 Год назад +9

    We do not have anywhere bidet, as with hose our toilets become bidets, so it's not only in hotels, it's literally in every home in Finland where you can find that little hose.

  • @LuonFoto
    @LuonFoto Год назад +4

    The "ladder" is the place to put a wet shower towel to dry. The tubes are usually headted too so it dries faster.

  • @rami1406
    @rami1406 3 месяца назад +2

    Pine candy?
    Never heard, and I'm 51 years old finnish. Maby it's for tourism. But anyhow, thanks for visit and wellcome again!

    • @rami1406
      @rami1406 29 дней назад

      I think it's called Terva. It's in some canies, liquers, soaps and saunathings. But this pakcage I have never seen, and I'm 50. Best goodies are in stores.

  • @martip2736
    @martip2736 Год назад +10

    the amazing thing is that you notice all those tiny little details. 😃

    • @martip2736
      @martip2736 Год назад +2

      and i've never ever seen anyone cut your pizza before serving it. In Italy that would probably qualify as deadly sin 🤣🤣

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад +2

      It's my curse. :D I'm always pointing things out to Melissa and wondering out loud about them and she's always going, "you know, maybe there's a way you can look that up to find out the answer." 😂 Of course, I seldom do because I'm an annoying husband.

  • @Harmitaako
    @Harmitaako 10 месяцев назад +8

    Im a Finnish person who have lived the most of the times in "northern" Finland ( Visited maybe twice in Helsinki) and 65% of the things you have listed was new to me too jeez :D. But you guys should visit some other cities and places too than Helsinki. Like Tampere, Oulu, Rovaniemi and if you have time then even Inari. Great places and on the way you could really get to know different lifestyles and cultures we have in here :)

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  10 месяцев назад

      Hopefully we can some day. I remember going through Tampere on the train and thinking that it looked like an amazing city. We did get to spend and afternoon in Rovaniemi. It too seemed like a nice place.

  • @kohinarec6580
    @kohinarec6580 Год назад +11

    You need to apply for the baby box, there are no automatic social benefits. But you will get one no matter your economic status, and you'll get one for each baby. You get twins, two boxes and so on.
    And you get a box for each baby born to the family. Doesn't matter you got one three years ago.

    • @finlanderxx
      @finlanderxx Год назад +4

      Instead of the baby box you can choose equivalent as cash payment

    • @kohinarec6580
      @kohinarec6580 Год назад +2

      That's true! Although not as popular. A good option if you already have kids and surplus baby supplies, IMO.

  • @Caurnots
    @Caurnots 5 месяцев назад +2

    As a finn I noticed that some of these things you picked are actually quite uncommon in Finland. For example the toiler ladders, paper trash bags, colorful clothes. But yeah, interesting video. =)

  • @vattulaitti
    @vattulaitti Год назад +5

    the hard candy and "mints" are originally thought for after smoke or substitute for smoking so the "bored while driving" is not far off :DD

  • @1andonlyMiro
    @1andonlyMiro Год назад +4

    The heated floors in toilets/showers are for drying the floor. As the temperature differences in Winter/Summer are big, it puts high demands on the structures of buildings to both insulate yet still breath so they don't create damp areas leading to severe health issues through air quality. When the floor of the toilet dries faster and the air circulation works as intended it keeps the air quality good.

  • @woodenclogs5830
    @woodenclogs5830 Год назад +12

    Good common sense ideas very evident in Finland.

  • @kievitz
    @kievitz Год назад +10

    Finnish people in general like peace and quiet, we do not want to disturb anyone or get disturbed, we abhore non-sensical conflict and avoid confrontations to the limit.
    Never piss off a Finnish person, we get extremely angry, especially if its done for a trivial reason.

    • @EattinThurs61
      @EattinThurs61 Год назад +2

      That is why you don't bother others, they WILL get mad at you.

    • @JimmyRingz
      @JimmyRingz Год назад

      "we get extremely angry" sounds a bit too much but yeah...😂

    • @EattinThurs61
      @EattinThurs61 Год назад +1

      @@JimmyRingz loosing ones temper at people that starts conflicts just because seem a natural thing.

    • @kievitz
      @kievitz 11 месяцев назад

      @@JimmyRingz Did you read the "never PISS OFF part :), yeah, i understand where youre coming from :)

    • @JimmyRingz
      @JimmyRingz 11 месяцев назад

      @@kievitz Please do tell fo you believe you know? I promise 100% I'll tell if you're right.🙂

  • @tuomasroysko
    @tuomasroysko Месяц назад +1

    Happy to see these differences, that are everyday normal things at Finland. Welcome back :)

  • @is200tt
    @is200tt 9 месяцев назад +3

    #21
    Those ’reqruiters’ you mentioned, we call as a ”feissari”, short from face-to-face fundraiser. But they are not necessarily neither, reqruiting nor fundraising. They can just be handing out flyers e.g. to a party, stand up gig or an exhibition, or offering a better deal for your electricity or a mobile subscription. Helsinki (and prolly many other Finnish cities as well) also has free-of-charge Tourist Guides for the tourists’ aid.

  • @jokuvaan5175
    @jokuvaan5175 Год назад +6

    Was an entertaining video. You two are great. Doing things your own way :D

  • @Vihtori_Lettunen
    @Vihtori_Lettunen Год назад +7

    About ladders on houses: It's mandatory to have fixed ladder going to roof if you have a fireplace like most houses in Finland do have. It's so that the chimney sweeper can get to the roof safely as it is mandatory to have your chimney and fireplaces cleaned and inspected by professional once a year or your fire insurance is invalid. Those ladders that come from a second floor are ofcourse fire-escape ladders. Don't know if they are required by law since not my area of expertise as a ex chimney sweeper. :D

  • @johncrwarner
    @johncrwarner Год назад +6

    I went to the theater in Jyväskylä
    and the clapping was very quiet
    and had to modify my clapping as
    I was the loudest in the auditorium.

    • @johncrwarner
      @johncrwarner Год назад

      Panda licorice was made
      in a factory near Jyväskylä
      in central Finland
      and it had a factory outlet
      where you could buy
      misshaped licorice sticks
      filled with a whole variety of flavours
      I used to bring it back for colleagues.

  • @Mizioty49mimiMimi
    @Mizioty49mimiMimi 8 месяцев назад +2

    Is exactly the same as Denmark 🇩🇰 everything’s is organised . Good video and thanks for sharing ❤❤

  • @Narangarath
    @Narangarath Год назад +7

    The tar flavor is definitely an acquired taste and many find it to be at it's best when combined with other flavors, like the dreaded black licorice. If you don't like them as candy, that kind of hard candies make great flavored alcohol you might like if you enjoy sipping herbal liquors. Just throw them into some (economical is fine) vodka and wait for them to melt away, then shake well before serving.

  • @ChristianJull
    @ChristianJull Год назад +4

    Many shops/cafes sell bottled alcoholic drinks, BUT 5.5% or less only. Higher percentage alcoholic bottles can only be sold by the state regulated Alko stores.

  • @webbtrekker534
    @webbtrekker534 Год назад +23

    My family is of Finish extraction. My grandfather moved here in 1902 and grandmother in 1905. They came from the Swedish speaking part of western Finland. (Vasa area). I visited in 1975. I'm sure much has changed in the years since. I've heard Swedish all my life by the parents never taught any of us kids the language. I was in Finland for 3 weeks and visiting tons of relatives. and hearing the language and same questions every day and the same translations. By the the time we were to leave I found I was dreaming in Swedish. I still have cousins in Finland I talk with from time to time.. It was interesting hearing about what you found interesting and I have to agree with you. Yes, Design is very important. Their fabrics and glass industries are among the top in the world.

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад +3

      Thank you fro sharing your memories and thank you for watching. :)

    • @Itapirkanmaa2
      @Itapirkanmaa2 Год назад +1

      Etelä-Pohjanmaa saw in general much people emigrate. The area was both badly hit by the 1850s-60s cold weather catastrophe where farms would often be sold at rock bottom prices or deserted, while many people had the general knowledge and the economic means to migrate. The previous migrants drew more people to do the same towards the 1900s.
      Of course they would not have known then that the cold little ice age climate disaster would not continue further but improve gradually until the 1920s. Within Etelä-Pohjanmaa the Swedish-speaking coastal strip further saw the most of the migration in relative terms.
      Many people think the Swedish speakers would be genetically or otherwise dissimilar to the Finnish speakers, but they are not.
      We would be likely 5-10th cousins with you. Everyone from the area is related to everyone else to some extent.

    • @Mabswer
      @Mabswer Год назад +1

      @@Itapirkanmaa2 ah the good old mount Tambora eruption that kicked up enough ash to cooldown the globe for several dacades

    • @Itapirkanmaa2
      @Itapirkanmaa2 Год назад +1

      @@Mabswer Yes the same 1815 Tambora that caused an even larger famine than the 1800s famine in 1601 when up to 25% of people in Finland perished, smaller famines were experienced most of the 1600s, 1696 was a noted larger one.
      In short, the 1850s-60s had nothing to do with any volcanic activity.
      It was the Little Ice age (LIA)

    • @deathofsteel7081
      @deathofsteel7081 Год назад +1

      @@Itapirkanmaa2 I think you're actually meant to write Pohjanmaa and not Etelä-Pohjanmaa, as most Swedish speaking Finns live in Pohjanmaa. When you go to Etelä-Pohjanmaa, almost all Finns there are speaking Finnish and not Swedish.

  • @NjoyMoney
    @NjoyMoney Год назад +6

    The baby box when it was introduced, massively reduced newborn deaths, i think it has everything you need for the first few months

    • @hemmo3732
      @hemmo3732 Год назад +3

      Back in the day the box came with the condition that the expectant mother must have a check-up and receive advice from a medical professional before receiving the box. This helped to radically reduce maternal-infant mortality rate.

  • @mariaketola9807
    @mariaketola9807 9 дней назад

    Ladders in toilets are for drying the towels used or if you wash small items, you can dry them out on ladders, which usually are heated. Ladders outside houses are for safety, so in emergency you can climb and also for maintaing the roofs and Pines

  • @thesilentshopper
    @thesilentshopper Год назад +4

    Thanks for the interesting observations. You seem like a lovely couple.

  • @tuomaspietinen1485
    @tuomaspietinen1485 Месяц назад +1

    Kudos for the observations! Da Capo is my favorite! Suffeli is btw. a slang word in the army for something being really easy and relaxing.

  • @k.l.7788
    @k.l.7788 Год назад +6

    Hopefully you visited Fazer Cafe which IMO have one of the best pastries and coffee in Helsinki.

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад +3

      Did not visit it, but walked by it many times ... maybe next time!

  • @janosriippa
    @janosriippa Год назад +3

    This was so much fun listening to you guys. It's interesting to see what foreigners think of Finland. Nice to hear your views of our way of culture, living, food, candies and habits.
    I think there's few other things I'd introduce you in summer time. Winter time is another thing. There's so much different things to see and experience during winter.

  • @satusmith738
    @satusmith738 5 месяцев назад +1

    Ladder is for drying towels,many bath rooms it also many time,raditor ladder.

  • @ilarikinnunen8266
    @ilarikinnunen8266 Год назад +4

    The "recruitment" people could also be people selling things to you. It is very common in Finland that electricity companies and telephone companies have marketers in public places, and they try to get you to switch to their company by giving you a better deal. There are also people selling major newspaper subscriptions etc.

    • @most_random_hero
      @most_random_hero 2 месяца назад

      @@ilarikinnunen8266 or they are trying to get you donate money to charity

  • @MrLinkola
    @MrLinkola 2 месяца назад +1

    The tar is definitely and acquired taste. We are really used to smoked food and tarred...well everything.
    Tar was the number one finnish export for hundreds of years.

  • @Ezz0Clan
    @Ezz0Clan Год назад +5

    The ladder you spoke of is for your towels. Looking back at the footage, I think it wasn't just placed properly by the maintenance guy as a rack for clothset, however there are some towel ladder racks on the bathrooms because more people just dry themselves, place the towel on the rack and go dress up. I think most people re-use the same one like... 1 or 2 times cos I mean... You've just cleaned yourself up, you just dry your clean body on the clean towel and then let it dry.

  • @dennislindqvist1265
    @dennislindqvist1265 4 месяца назад +1

    Salmiak is my favorite candy. It is often combined with licorice, popular in Finland and Sweden. Strange that it has not been discovered in more countries because it is quite addictive.

  • @274727
    @274727 Год назад +4

    I remember the juice dispensers having a touchscreen at least 10 years or more. Nothing new for me. 🧐

  • @jennifertiitinen9006
    @jennifertiitinen9006 6 месяцев назад +1

    You guys should really explore more of Finland

  • @merjas68
    @merjas68 Год назад +7

    It was nice to watch your video and the observations you made. I was suprised you didn´t mention Finnish invention: dish dryer cupboard. That is usually something that foreign people are amazed of. The paper bag in the trash can is an attempt to be enviroment friendly and avoid using plastic.

    • @deathofsteel7081
      @deathofsteel7081 Год назад +1

      Wait? What?! Dish dryer cupboard is a Finnish invention?! I'm a Finn and I didn't even know that. 😂

  • @eltonsalvador7620
    @eltonsalvador7620 Год назад +1

    glad you guys enjoyed the pleasantry of the culture of Finland, I know i enjoy it

  • @mattivoutilainen2348
    @mattivoutilainen2348 Год назад +1

    Heated floors in bathrooms are to prevent water damage. Finnish buildings are super well insulated and that means if water gets in to the structures it won't dry easily. Having heated floors in places that get wet will make them dry fast and prevent muisture getting deeper to the structures.

  • @pvdogs2
    @pvdogs2 Год назад +6

    In the pic it looks like the ladder is attached to something at the top. Was it a towel warming rack? Were your plaster cookies actually meringues? Scotland also has baby boxes that include items for mom.

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад

      The plaster pastries I assume were meringues... I just have never seen meringues done that way before.

  • @Vilhyto
    @Vilhyto 7 месяцев назад +1

    The 'Exit' sign on the bathroom door means the latch to open the lock. Finnish words are 'oven aukaisu' which means 'opening the door'. I guess there might have been an issue with people locking themselves in. The translation is quite bad thou. But otherwise I agree that we are quite good in making info signs. If you drive car in Finland you will notice that. Nice video to see what other people see here.

  • @sushikissa7777
    @sushikissa7777 Год назад +3

    Almost every finnish home has an sauna in de apartmet building or with the bathroom

  • @skywraith6454
    @skywraith6454 Год назад +7

    Bit sad that you didnt go for the best licorice brand being "Kouvolan lakritsi" its my home towns and its dubbed as worlds best licorice 3 years in row by brittish magazine

  • @aLoneCrusader
    @aLoneCrusader Год назад +8

    Those last two liquorices were in fact gluten free and the taste is a little bit different than in a normal liquorice.

    • @miiak.9932
      @miiak.9932 Год назад +6

      And they are made in Spain.

  • @suzyq8328
    @suzyq8328 10 месяцев назад +1

    This was fun to see.its fun to see how foreigner sees our country.thank you

  • @erik....
    @erik.... Год назад +5

    They have those "portable bidets" in Thailand too, where they were called "bum guns" (in english). I'm thinking of buying one, it's really handy sometimes.
    I think the "ladder" might be a drying rack, maybe?

  • @mwtrolle
    @mwtrolle Год назад +3

    7:14 #15 We also have a rule in Denmark that have to be ladders on the outside of buildings to escape fires or they are more than one floor, in some taler and old buildings they have two stairways instead and in newer tall buildings they have only one stairway but made to withstand even the highest temperatures in a fire and with no materials that can burn.

  • @1andonlyMiro
    @1andonlyMiro Год назад +3

    Tar is an UNDERRATED FLAVOUR. I'm actually amazed a tar liquor isn't more popular in drink making around the world fr. Not to be drinked as is, but in coctails for subtle flavour and scent.

  • @MikkoRantalainen
    @MikkoRantalainen Год назад +2

    About pizza: they will cut it if you ask for it while ordering. The assumption is that if you don't ask for cutting, you want to do it by yourself.

  • @TheGoreFist
    @TheGoreFist Год назад +4

    The colloquial term for the "butt hose" in Finland is "pillupuhelin" or "pus*y phone".

    • @Reliissi
      @Reliissi 21 день назад

      You have a typo. The term is "pussy phone". You're welcome.

  • @TintarellaDiLuna64
    @TintarellaDiLuna64 12 дней назад

    Bathroom ladder is for drying your towel. They are warmed up. Ladders outside is for winter to go to take out the snow ❤

  • @LadyRotterdam
    @LadyRotterdam Год назад +7

    They don't cut the pizza, because you have knife and fork to do that! 😁

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад +2

      I quickly figured that out! 😄 But I do have to say that a pizza cut with a pizza cutter by the chef is a pretty nice thing.

    • @timoterava7108
      @timoterava7108 Год назад +3

      ​@@chrisplusmelissa
      Yes - if you eat with your bare hands only. We normally use knife and fork though... 😉

  • @peitsasuoniemi1325
    @peitsasuoniemi1325 9 дней назад

    The exit sign also says "oven aukaisu" or "door opening", it is to give an instruction on how to use the latch. You have to rotate it to be able to press the handle and open the door. Our locks are different from some countries, so hotel guests etc. may get stuck there. There was also some duct tape so probably they had a problem with the lock as well.

  • @spookyscaryskeleton2211
    @spookyscaryskeleton2211 Год назад +5

    The butt-hose is also sometimes humoristically known as a "pussу-phone" 😂
    Its handy for washing after a number 2 if there is a urgent need to.
    The ladder in the bathroom is for drying towels, while the outside ladder is for maintenance and cleaning the roof of leaves or snow etc.
    Cute and warm-hearted video 🥰 i enjoyed alot.
    Greetings from Finland 🇫🇮

  • @teuteuteu100
    @teuteuteu100 19 дней назад +1

    number 50. The water in the hotel room's tap is many times as clean as you can buy in a plastic bottle. Same water is used for washing your back side 😊

  • @lisacosta8876
    @lisacosta8876 Год назад +6

    #12, ladders in the bathroom. Could they be to hang your towels to dry so you could reuse them? Or could they be towel warmers?

  • @VattenDemonen
    @VattenDemonen Год назад +1

    Many of these things are the same here in Sweden and in Norway and Denmark too.

  • @mwtrolle
    @mwtrolle Год назад +3

    9:50 #22 I absolutely hate places where they cut your pizza unless you ask them to. If at home or home at someone else I always eat the pizza with a knife and fork, then it sucks that its already cut. Also, it makes the pizza look less classy.
    If eating on the beach or in a park I'll ask them to cut it for me.
    I'm from Denmark BTW.

  • @FreisturzX
    @FreisturzX Год назад +1

    This was interesting and funny for me, hello from 🇫🇮 👋

  • @eerokutale277
    @eerokutale277 Год назад +3

    "Definition of sledge noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary.... ​a vehicle for travelling over snow and ice, with long narrow pieces of wood or metal instead of wheels. Larger sledges are pulled by horses or dogs and smaller ones are used for going down hills as a sport or for pleasure.
    a dog sledge
    COMPARE sleigh, toboggan"

  • @tawharanui5011
    @tawharanui5011 Год назад +2

    Yes, agree, Scandinavian countries are the most sophisticated countries on earth. Also they are calm …

  • @urrikolm1251
    @urrikolm1251 Год назад +4

    Why Finns are the happiest people on the planet?
    Well...
    3 coffee at the breakfast
    3 coffee at the lunch
    3 Koff'ee in the evening with sauna...
    Thats it 😅

  • @thedudefromrobloxx
    @thedudefromrobloxx 10 месяцев назад +1

    The ladder was propably meant to be a drying rack for towels 6:20, I'm guessing because thats weird lol

  • @kallek771
    @kallek771 Год назад +1

    #29 There's Exit showing from where to open the door. "Oven aukaisu" in finnish means "opening the door". I think it's for clearing because there's two knobs. Translated only with exit sign

  • @KalleKilponen
    @KalleKilponen Год назад +6

    @14:00 Fresh cheese sounds like a translation error (or more specifically a direct translation). What we call "tuorejuusto" or "fresh cheese" is typically called "cream cheese" in English.

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад

      Yeah, it very much tasted like the cream cheese I know.

  • @Mikey84
    @Mikey84 Год назад +2

    About the outside ladders - the ones leading to the roof of a building are... well, for that exact purpose: to have access to the roof in case you need to do something there, like clearing snow :D And the ones directly beneath a window work as a fire escape.

  • @tuomaspietinen1485
    @tuomaspietinen1485 Месяц назад

    The word we use for sled is "pulkka". Yes I have done my groceries with a pulkka when there is lots of snow.

  • @GnosticAtheist
    @GnosticAtheist Год назад +5

    On your first point about card payment I think that applies to a lot of countries, and it can be linked to lower population, not better tech. Here in Norway we do the same thing and it is usually close to instant. But since my country is a few million, the strain on the system is low.

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад +1

      That just might be.

    • @klapiroska4714
      @klapiroska4714 Год назад +1

      I don't know, but it could have something to do with the fact that most places have good quality internet connections. You'll find some slower card readers, but those have often worse connections (used in extremely rural area and/or routed wirelessly through slower networks). Everyday payments are even faster when you use contactless payment (payments up to 50€, no pin code required, included by default on most cards)

    • @nualapower9323
      @nualapower9323 Год назад

      Canada has instant credit card approval with a tap. At least here in Victoria British Columbia.

  • @shadyboy-c3k
    @shadyboy-c3k 3 месяца назад +1

    Here in England we have a sledge,we may have sled with a sledge

  • @MalinEkman96
    @MalinEkman96 Год назад +1

    The floor is heated to prevent water damage. 🙂

  • @kievitz
    @kievitz Год назад +4

    The Finnish response is "ei kurjuutta kummempaa", which literally means "nothing more special than misery/lousyness", life sucks, but it could be worse, much much worse.
    We know it sounds kinda strange, but we know when a person says that as a response, they are just fine and not in an immediate state of collapsing totally.
    When a person says "olo on ihan vitun perseestä", " i feel like absolute sht" something is definetly wrong, big time.
    We tend to say it straight if we feel like sht. If we dont feel absolutely fkd, no need to say it straight.

    • @klapiroska4714
      @klapiroska4714 Год назад +2

      Yeah, it's pretty much the standard answer if you don't really have anything to say. Little bit of satire, little bit of culture. It's not really too different than english speakers asking "How are you?" as a greeting (at least I'm assuming you are not interested in listening to how I actually feel). There is an interesting culture quirk, that Finns will never (or only rarely) complement themselves or tell others that they are doing great. We hide success and display misery and failure.

    • @kievitz
      @kievitz 11 месяцев назад

      @@klapiroska4714 one word "modesty", not the Blaise one though :). And we are a bit quirky, but in a good way :)

  • @tomixnieminen
    @tomixnieminen Год назад +8

    In Finland we call those butt hoses as "pus...y phones"

  • @SuviMatinaro
    @SuviMatinaro Месяц назад

    In finnish "happy" can be translated to "iloinen"= happy/joyful and "onnellinen"= content/happy. So finns see the study meaning happyness in the content/not lacking aspect.

  • @themakela
    @themakela Год назад +4

    Such a cool video folks! Great stuff! What comes to Finnish candies, it's a bit same like benji jumping, you either love it or hate it :-) Many of my American friends absolutely love Fazer chocolate. My favourite is that Da-Capo but I absolutely love American one called Whatchamacallit. So tasty!

    • @chrisplusmelissa
      @chrisplusmelissa  Год назад +3

      Thank you! I miss the Watchamacallit!!! It's one of my favorites. :)

  • @promealiens9659
    @promealiens9659 2 месяца назад

    As far as I know, in connection with salads, reindeer meat is cold dried meat. Reindeer meat that is heated has a different taste. In Finland you can e.g. reindeer meat pizza.