@Tobias Reiner Who’s really fooling themselves here? The one that is working to find peace with other people. Or the one that says peace is impossible and resigns themselves to a tribal hate.
Hey, Wave. Funny seeing you over here. YT brought me me to Eva's vlog and she looked interesting. With that green tattoo, I gotta follow her journey to Alaska. She's got some cojones to do what she's doing. I hope she can stay safe. See ya back at your channel.
I'm from Texas, and I was 30 years old when I went to Europe for the first time. That was the first time I had ever heard someone refer to water as "still" water. Like a hick, I was like, "well, what was it before?" 😄
@@drewpamon I know you mean it as sarcasm. But may i ask: Do you ever ask yourself why this Flat Earth Conspiracy Theory became mainstream? Or do you just accept it like it is? Or perhaps you have a dog in the race? Just questions. I always find it funny to see people bring it up for NO reason what so ever. And when someone like me asks about it, i find the responses hilarious. I know you meant it sarcastically. But do you ever think about such things? Or do you just act like a parrot, repeating the same nonsense over and over again until people believe it? (Like AH did)
@@drewpamon ps: no, the earth is not flat. It is an Oblate Spheroid. Obviously. Even Stevie Wonder can see that. (after all, he can see everything, including falling microphones. He has no problem catching them, even though not able to see or hear them fall.)
I'm a 70 yr. old man who clicked onto your site bc of the title. When I saw how young you were I thought this may be a waste of my time. Instead, it was a delight. So many things we take for granted in the US that you give us a different perspective on. So many stereotypes we have of each other that major media promotes and that you are brave enough to challenge. Your positive attitude and refreshing personality made me a subscriber. Keep up the good work. You are a treasure!
Nah the stereotypes held true at least through the intro. I am a gun enthusiast, shot guns from the time I was teeny tinny, but hearing some old white dude from Texas tell her not to leave without a gun kind of hit the stereotype to a tee.
@@anthonyproffitt5341 As a european this feels like the real USA experience to me ( it suprised me that everything is really super super sized in texas tho. this is even more than expected why even put mega size on the pack if there is no normal size)
@@cfealzy in the U.S. I feel like Detroit is our London, Indianapolis does its best to be our Amsterdam, NYC Florida is as Australia as Australia is to the U.K. and the rest of the world, Texas is a magnum opus of Ukraine Poland and France in a sense for their love of their homeland, the national spirit, and GUNS!; Alaska is our Sweden for being cold and GUNS! as well, always prepared to turn any invader into a past tense, Minnesota is our Finland for the same reason as the GUNS! but also for being forgotten 90% of the time, cold, and for its 'land of 10,000 lakes,' and more... The U.S. is the land of the free, not an American Dream because you got to be dreaming to get it but more of an American Opportunity where you got to be gritty, be passionate, and be lucky for it to come and grasp it when the opportunity comes which forms the American belief that you can be whatever you want to be if you never give up. Then there are taxes on average lower than most of European countries that hovers depending on the state around 5% if you live in Alaska to 13.3% if you live in California which is nothing to where Bulgaria, Europe's least flat tax country at a 10% flat tax rate to Hungary which has a 27% tax rate and according to European statistics the average income salary is deducted though tax by 30% which jeez is a lot for mostly free public transportation, free healthcare, 'higher food quality' whatever that means and no Second Amendment in most of Europe. Most American people are not well traveled enough in the U.S., or California or NY at least to understand that the U.S. is a tax heaven in comparison to the rest of the world
I was born and grew up in Canada. In my early 30s, I received a job offer from the US and wound up spending a few years working down in Texas. I admit that I moved there with MANY pre-conceptions. It was a formative experience for me. Today, 20 years later, I still strongly believe that Texans are some of the most welcoming and kind people I've ever met. I was treated by co-workers like family during Thanksgiving and Christmas and many of the friendships I made there persist to this day.
As long as you have good sense of humor mostly everyone is welcomed , I can imagine the Canadian joke you must have endured in the work force of Texas . 🤘🏼🦅
Eva so glad you chose to stay with us at Fabulous 40s Motel in Adrian Texas. I pray for you every day to have a fun safe journey across our great Country. Take care have fun. Love to you. Ramona
Just saw this video when it showed up in my queue. Surprised to see my cousins motel show up at beginning. (Hello Ramona and Roy.) Hope you have a safe and enjoyable journey.
Unless you're: gay, black, trans, any non-Christian, in need of an abortion, want voting rights for all Americans, an immigrant, speak with an accent...the list goes on.
@@jimmyoverly3512 I have at least 5 trans friends in Texas, and offered the same hospitality to everyone. As a long haired hippy looking guy that same hospitality has been offered to me unconditionally. Texas comes from the Spanish word for friend, and is consistently the way strangers of all I'll are treated, with the exception of encounters with law enforcement.
@@michaelmansfield8294 Michael, I'm glad you and your friends were treated well. My experience and that of my friends has been very very different. Have a good day.
@@jimmyoverly3512 that is terrible to hear. Is there a specific geographic locale you had problems with? If you ever want to feel welcome in Texas, go to Austin. Great music also as a bonus. Westheimer area of Houston is similar, as well as much of coastal Texas,
As a Texan, I appreciate your positivity! We are so often stereotyped and looked upon negatively. This was a fun video! Enjoy all your travels! I admire your courage and sense of adventure!
I Believe Texas is only looked down upon by other americans because here in europe ive lived my whole live thinking texas is like the REAL USA and this video is pretty much just confirming what i believed in
My wife grew up in the Soviet Union, And road trips are our favorite thing to do. She just loves it! So much to see and do in the USA, every state has its own flavors, culture and history.
Different parts of each state of the United States are different from each other in culture and history. For example, East Texas and West Texas are vastly different in culture.
@@jspur22 Texas should be divided itself into five states of Northeast Texas, Northwest Texas, Southwest Texas, Southeast Texas and Middle Texas. The cities and towns such as Dallas, Tyler, Nacogdoches, Longview, Texarkana, Marshall, Corsicana should be in the state of Northeast Texas. The cities and towns such as Fort Worth, Wichita Falls, Abilene, Amarillo, Lobbock, Midland should be in the state of Northwest Texas. The cities and towns such as El Paso, San Angelo, San Antonio, Brownsvills, Corpus Christi, Nuevo Laredo, New Braunfels should be in the state of Southwest Texas. The cities and towns such as Beaumont, Port Arthur, Houston, Galveston, Lufkin, College Station should be in the state of Southeast Texas. The cities and towns such as Austin, Waco, San Marcos, Round Rock, Killeen should be in the state of Middle Texas.
The intersection of Route 66 and the Rio Grande is a bridge. Central Ave SW/Route 66 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Your business is not on a bridge in the middle of the river. Liar
@@SonOfMuta verified with 1.5m subs I dont think he needs to lie. he might mean one of the businesses around the intersection, not literally on the intersection. 🤦♂
As a born and raised native Texan for the last 67 years, I found your report charming and for me somewhat emotional. I like the way you see the good and everything. I’m subscribing because I wanna see more. And good luck with your travels.
She does look like a really kind and curious person, I discovered her when she did a tour of my own country, Romania. Now I am fascinated to see America experienced by a regular traveler. It's amazing!
I just kinda skimmed it, but *_I DID NOT SEE HER GETTING BRISKET._* horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible mistake~! That's like going to Kansas City & not goin to Arthur Bryant's. MADNESS.
I grew up in Alaska, spent 20 years in the Army, travelled all over the world. Each place has it's own flavor, literally. Experience as much as you can
I lived in Alaska for 12 years . I only left because how bad the economy got after Covid . I was an Army brat growing up so I lived in Europe and England and Texas and many other places , but Alaska is my favorite.
I grew up in Austin, Texas and have lived in Eagle River, Ak the past 15 years. My last three years in the Air Force here and I’ve been here ever since. I’ve also been to Galena, Nome, Kotzebue, Bethel, Barrow, McGrath, Ft. Yukon, and radar sites around isolated villages. I wouldn’t want to move back to Texas, too crowded, too hot, and I would become morbidly obese within a month of living there even if I hit the gym 5 days a week.
@@scoobertdooperson2695 you used a lot of words but you didn’t really say anything. What did you see or experience in texas that makes you feel this way? Be specific.
As a lifelong Texan, I was so amused by the "Do what?" response at the drive-thru. Some people would say "I beg your pardon" or "What did you say", but a Texan will give you a "Do what?" I wish you all the best on your travel experiences.
I've travelled the US for the past 3 years nomadically and have found that despite any differences we are suppose to have this positive person to person experience as you show here is not unique. Despite what the news may tell us about each other... this is the real America. Love your channel!
So true the division mainstream media would like to see in this country it's absolutely crazy I wish we could hold these news organizations with that agenda responsible
Mark Twain once said, "Travel is the greatest cure for social prejudice". As a Native Texan who has traveled all over the U.S., Canada and Mexico, I believe this to be absolutely true.
@@two2truths For all the bad, there is enough good to offset the stereotypes a person has. Yeah, if she went to India, she'd be catcalled, scammed, etc etc, but there would certainly be some nice families to take her in and humanize their people and culture. Rarely has a person lived among a different people and came out with more scorn towards them than they initially had.
@@maaz322 Yes, I wasnt implying anything negative about Asia at all lol. I was born, raised, and lived much of my life in Asia. I was just saying that Asia, compared to the US, Canada, and Mexico, which he mentioned is most of his traveling, is an entire other worldly, surreal experience sometimes that teaches you even more about yourself and the world around us. Worth the trip, always! Best wishes, I love you.
@burjalmadre is right, southeast Asia is a different beast. I lived in China for a time, and boy they are RACIST! You won't experience that in the western hemisphere, not even close. That being said, I loved my time in China and learned a fair amount of Mandarin, but I know exactly how it is over there and how incredibly dumb we are in the west about this topic. Everybody is tribal in absence of an overriding belief system - such as Christianity - which is severely suppressed in China. As a result they are overwhelmingly tribal towards specifically Han Chinese. You will never be one of them, only ever a foreigner. But I met a lot of good people over there that I made friends with, and talk to them to this day - Chinese are a very curious and social people, I love them despite their flaws. But I don't pretend they don't have all those blemishes like westerners love to do
I think I can speak for all of your subscribers that we all have fallen in love with you. Your honesty, joy, beauty, intelligence and fearlessness speaks to the person that I wish I was when I was younger. You are truly an old soul. I so enjoy seeing the world through your eyes and you make me feel that I’m along for the ride. I’m so grateful to have found you on RUclips! Wishing you and Vilk the best in your future travels.
The woman that said “I’d be very apprehensive of my children doing it so i have to be worried about you!” That melted my heart 🥺 typical southern hospitality
Texas is actually the right state to visit when someone wants to be safe. Both ends of Route 66 are the equivalent of third world countries. In Texas, you're as wealthy as you are self-sufficient.
@@adventurefaps9571 no, i didn’t actually… i was mostly just listening to this while cleaning. I think it’s kinda fucked up for y’all to assume that the only reason they were nice to her was because she’s white 💀
@@davidhibbs4737 I've gotten Southern hospitality from both black and white people during my visits to the southern states. And I'm Asian from central California.
In late 2020, I drove from Canton, Texas to Great Falls, Montana for an old Air Force buddy's funeral. It was a seven-hour drive from Canton to Texline and the Texas/New Mexico border. Seven hours out of a 22- to 23-hour trip (not counting sleep time and leg-stretching time, and I had packed several lunches so I didn't have to stop to eat anywhere), and I hadn't even left the State of Texas yet! Imagine what the Alaskans have to deal with! o_o
Seeing my state through someone else's eyes is really beautiful. There are so many things about Texas that I didn't realize are special, and yes exotic - I agree. Thank you for this video.
When I was in the military I was stationed in Texas for 3 months to attend a school, and I loved it! One thing that surprised me was how many all you can eat restaurants there were for all types of cuisine! Loved that!
Moved from Spain to Dallas and lived there two years. Honestly my misconceptions where broken straight away. The most friendly and helpful people I have ever met. I never experienced that and I've lived in four countries in my adult life.
Welcome! And yes, the press likes to take shots at Texas all the time. Nothing can ever be reported positive in their callous insults, and many have never been here. It takes months to see all of the regions and people. (And weather)
@@davidanalyst671 extremely friendly, when I tell people here what happened there with people I just met they think I'm talking BS. On our second day we went to open a bank account in Chase and the bank manager that just met me saw that we were walking in the heat. We still didn't have a car and he told us to wait 15min and he actually drove us to a car rental place. He gave us a number of a car salesman who actually phoned us to ask what car we where looking for, after I told him my small budget he did not have any cars to offer me but the next day he came to pick us up at our hotel and drive us to a couple of places to look for cars. We didn't but anything and he drove us around for two hours showing us the city. That was just in the first 3 days. Things like that happened to us all the time.
Another story: I phoned a job advert I saw online and only after talking to the lady I realized the advert was two years old. The woman was so friendly, asked me where I was from and what we where doing in Dallas, she told me to send my CV anyway and the next day phoned me again and after interviewing me gave me a job. I only had positive experiences, the only time I got stopped by police for speeding I told them I was studying part time and I was late for class as I got held up at the IRS. He let me go without a fine even though I went 15mph over the limit. I have nothing but love for Dallas!
As a Texan myself I loved seeing this. Having visited 48 states Texas is definitely it's own. One tip I have is when ordering at a drive thru turning off a diesel can help them hear your order better. Best of luck on your future journeys. Be safe
I watched the entire video, laughed at her new experiences. learned some myself, even. I've never been to Texas but have always felt that it's where I belong 🇺🇲
I'm a native Texan and that drive thru bit cracked me up 😂 I relate to the struggle 😂 The amount of pride I feel to see you having a blast and enjoying Texas for what she is. I've grown up in the plains region of Texas and I would always complain about how flat and boring it is, but your excitement has reminded me of just how beautiful the plains are.
I grew up and live in Kansas. when I meet people of other states who now abide here, I always ask why? and I end up complaining about the plains and how flat this state is - but then they always seem to correct me and tell me that they're glad to see plains. they say it's absolutely beautiful the way you can see the entire horizon, and they always say "the sunsets here are incredible, you should learn to love your state more!" it's pretty refreshing.
Great plains Texan here. After moving to VA for work I realized I was a little down. Took a minute to realize I was claustrophobic. In the daytime, no lateral view. At night a small strip of stars. You never see a rainbow end to end. VA is visual wedding cake, but West Texas is also beautiful if you just look up.
I just found your channel and been binge watching it. I am also from Europe and visited Texas 20 years ago right after college....except I never left😊. I felt in love with this place, the people, all the critters that I used to see only at the ZOO as a kid (yes I still think possums living in my yard are super exotic and adore them 😆). It just felt like home from the beginning and even after 20 years I keep finding awesome places to visit and experience. Safe travels!
It looks like you missed some huge and significant parts of Texas. Texas isn't just all desert and countryside. The I-35 corridor and the I-45 corridor have interesting cities and people along the way. You should come back sometime and do San Antonio, Austin, and Dallas/Fort Worth, plus all the little towns in between.
@@zachw2538 I lived in Fort Worth for 40 years and it's a great city. I've visited all the cities in Texas and they all have positives. Traffic is what it is.
"seeing nuance is our most underrated superpower" well said. Glad you liked Texas. You will find regions of the US differ quite a bit from one another, yet each is beautiful in its own way.
Your channel just showed up in my RUclips options. I’m so glad I clicked on it. I am housebound because of health issues. Eva, watching your travel experiences and hearing your thoughts on those experiences is a delight. Thank you for sharing!
Great stuff! You basically hit the middle part of TX that is the southern reaches of the "Great Plains" of the USA. Had you gone further east, you would have seen rolling hills, forested land and the big cities. Further west: arid desert, canyons, and mountains. The people are really friendly and goodhearted no matter where you go.
Nah I'm a legal Mexican immigrant, I love TX people are nice in the country and little towns,it's just the big cities that suck. And I've also been in California,Virgini, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi...yeah no Texas is my favorite state.
Eva, you are a gem with an open mind. America is so big that even most Americans have not had the opportunity to visit the various regions and cultures. I envy you. Enjoy America, and praying for your health and safety.
This was beautiful, thank you for sharing your enthusiasm, curiosity and sense of adventure. You got the "West Texas" impression of our amazing state. If you every have a chance to explore Texas again, try a route that takes you through, Abilene (The Storybook Capital of the World), Dallas/Fort Worth, Austin, San Antonio Fredricksburg and a coastal community like Galveston or South Padre. These are all rich and unique cultural experiences VERY different than the semi-abandoned, rural Route 66 perspective. Oh yeah, East Texas is another experience altogether. One thing I'm confident you will find, wherever you land in Texas, is generous, kindhearted people who will gladly make your stay as pleasant as possible. Enjoy the rest of your adventure, we hope to see you again soon!
San Antonio here. There is a great deal of history in this city, as every Texan knows. You could spend a lifetime Traveling small towns in Texas and never get the full experience. The state is it's own country. That is why we love it and have such pride. I mean, to be honest, I have never seen a waffle or hamburger meat in the shape of New York. This state is fantastic.
Love your videos. I visited Poland for the first time in 1994, my first of ten or so visits. Felt super exotic to me, just as you describe your first days in the United States. I loved so much about Poland. The people were so friendly, warm and generous. They thought me exotic because they heard about America but had never met an American - most of them. People invited me into their homes and their lives. Behaved as if I were the king of England. Wanted to discuss politics and know everything possible about the U.S. I loved the food. Pirogi, kapitka, bigos. Oh, how I loved bigos. In those days there were still milk bars. They were amazing. Sadly, within a few years they were all but gone, replaced by KFCs and Burger Kings. I’ll never understand why Poland was so eager to embrace the worst of American culture. My first trip to Krakow was a kind of heaven. In those days, the buildings were still decrepit and they had stuff like toilet paper (brown and rough like sand paper) in the shop windows. The people hadn’t yet wrapped their minds around basic capitalistic concepts, which led to a lot of interesting economic choices. But it was all so real and so beautiful and so charming. I liked Krakow way better then than, later on, after it had all been fixed up and the shops filled with tourist goods. I met many wonderful people who became good friends. I also met a woman. We fell in love, dated long distance and eventually married. We were young and still had much to learn. We had love to burn but burn it we did. Eventually she left me but she was brilliant. In Poland, she was on a track to be someone important. She gave up that track to move to the U.S. but she began again, graduated college with a 4.0 GPA, attended medical school and is not just a cardiologist today but the head of a cardiology department. More impressive than that, the nurses adore her. For me, that’s the greatest honor a physician could have - to be loved by those who are in the trenches caring for people day and night. I met so many other folks whom I’ll never forget. People so kind, so generous, so full of idealism. I remember one family, poor as church mice but their home (with ten children) was overflowing with love. My grandmother came from a small town in Poland. She told me all these stories from her childhood. That’s what motivated my odyssey. To see those places. That’s the same town where I met my ex-wife. I don’t mean to imply that Polish society is perfect or ideal. There were many problems, just like anywhere else. What one loves is more about the person making the evaluation than the place itself. So I guess, in speaking about Poland, I’m speaking about myself. I love the Polish nation, its people and its culture. I love the huge Slavic soul that embraces life with idealism and passion.
Well Miss Eva, I hope your visit to Texas was everything you hoped for. Have a great trip, and do be careful. Not everyone is as friendly as the Texans. You have a wonderful spirit.
"Not everyone is as friendly as the Texans." Truer words were never spoken! I live on the opposite side of the country & was caught off-guard by the friendliness of Texans when I've visited. Wish I could live there!
"Seeing nuance is the most underrated super power." Yes! It's fun to watch you experience Texas. Half of my family lives there, and I used to. I'll always miss it. I grew up traveling and it changes your perspective on life. God bless and keep you safe. As a grandmother and a fellow adventurous person, I feel compelled to say: lock your doors, keep your wits about you, and have a fantastic time!
As a Polish American who came here 18 years ago, it has brought back so many memories to watch your excitement and enthusiasm, especially in the grocery store. I remember being just blown away by how much food there is! And how many different brands of the same thing! Having an entire aisle of cereal to pick from almost made my head spin.
On the truck question 1) city boys tend to buy farm trucks because they think it makes them manlier 2) those of us that do live in the rural parts and use our trucks for work (I own a 50 acre farm) don’t ALWAYS have something in the back. But we use it as our primary vehicle still. In fact, I usually clean the bed of my truck out before driving into town. So you would rarely ever see my truck with a load in the back.
I am a texas native, born and raised. Ive been to 9 countries including Poland. Watching you experience what I live everyday with such excitement is so entertaining lol.
You're probably already out of Texas by now, but my suggestions as a Vermont born, Pennsylvania raised Texan - don't leave without trying the brisket, a crawfish boil, and of course some good old fashioned banana pudding. If you swing by PA I of course recommend the cheese steak sandwich. (note: do not get those anywhere else in the country, they will not be right.) Inside the tristate area, pizza from a mom & pop store will also be on a level well above most of the continental united states. And swinging by Vermont, of course you gotta go for the maple syrup. Maple syrup anything, maple syrup candies, maple syrup infused... everything! And dress warm. I know it's summer, BUT DRESS WARM.
Yeah, but you can't just go anywhere for a cheesesteak lol. I'm from Philly, I recommend Oregon Steaks and Philips (my personal two favorites). Gooey Looie's is a local spot, it's decent not the best (in my opinion) but definitely worth mentioning. as for more touristy locations go, I think either Jims or Steve's prince of steaks are your best bet. A good rule of thumb when ordering a good cheese steak though is that the place uses real kraft wiz, ribeye steak and good Italian bread (preferably from Sarcone's bakery) speaking of which Angelos a really great Pizzaria also makes good cheese steaks with Sarcone bread.
I've been to 49 states and all of Canada in a truck. The route you chose is actually a very smart one. You will see a lot of beauty. I have zero idea why RUclips put you in my suggestions but I'm thankful. I love seeing Texas through the eyes of someone that is visiting for the first time ❤ Avoid the major cities if possible, like in other countries, dishonest people target tourist.
From a Native Texan- Glad you had fun! Texas truly is one of the friendliest places in the world. I love that you’re doing this and living your life!Enjoy the rest of your trip- Safe travels!
Native Texan from Houston and I'm not at all confused by European accents. But I can tell you for sure it was the "still' that had them confused. We do in fact have sparkling water in Texas lol. You go out of the cities in Texas though, west or east really, and the local dialects become pretty distinct. Its quite different if you go to Dallas, Houston, or Austin. Speaking of which, I'm suprised she didn't stop in Austin. She would have felt quite at home! I mean that in a good way.
I'm glad she went to many rural areas, and ran into a lot of people who politically different minded. Given how divided we are here in the US, it's nice to see how well they get along, and maybe remind us here that we can have different views on lots of things, but still get along.
If she really wanted to see differences in the way people talk and live, she should go through Louisiana! North is way different than South La. Rednecks in the North, Cajuns more in the South and New Orleans is a whole world of its own! I came here from Colorado via military and it was a HUGE culture shock!
Glad she skipped Austin. Young people her age in Austin all wear the same uniform, are ideologically the same, and would have bummed her out with their entitlement mentality, while affording their hedonistic lifestyle by being dependent on their parents. Which is the exact opposite of the supremely independent Eva
When I was in prague I was asked if I want my water "with gas" frequently. I mean I figured out what they meant pretty quickly but saying "water with gas" felt wrong on so many levels.
As someone who's lived in Oklahoma, i.e. next to Texas, for two decades, I find your enthusiasm for what you find exotic about this part of the world to be infectious. This is such an adorable video. May your entire expedition be this positive of an experience for you!
Good Onya Eva. This well-travelled 77 year old is mighty pleased with the words of wisdom you imparted at the summary of this video. Young folks like you are keeping bits of the World's population from falling into the trap of "Binary Thinking". Yes, the world is a kaleidoscope of beautiful alternatives. Greetings from Chiang Mai in far north Thailand 🇹🇭
I love talking to foreign visitors. I live on the California coast (Monterey Bay area) and talked with some visitors from Poland. I warned them about the poison oak that grew where they planned to camp. The father pulled it up on his iPhone and saw what the plant looked like and also saw pictures of the kind of skin rash he could get from contact with the plant.
As a native Texan, I enjoyed your video concerning Texas and its diversity. I especially appreciated your enthusiasm! Now having identified myself as a native Texan, I can attest to our state's vast size because you've now been through areas that I have never ventured. I live in NE Texas where we live in the piney woods. Be safe in your adventures!
I can still remember when I headed out west. Spent the night in a tent in Ft. Stockton, I had NEVER experienced wind like that in my entire life! LOL. Headed down to Big Bend the next day, I felt like such a goob when I started seeing mountains out there and I realized that the though had never occurred to me that there were mountains in the great state of Texas! I think my heart will forever be blowin' in the winds of West Texas now.
@@mud5377 It blew my mind watching some demoranch videos because i didnt know texas had mountains either. but when you think about it texas is so big its got a countrys worth of climates inside.
@@ZepyhrLight Very true! ALSO, that mountain range goes all the way around the entire planet anr doesn't just skip over Texas, lol... Big Bend National Park was the first real park I ever visited as well so it's always gonna have a special place in my heart. Highly recommend going and campinh in the Chisos Basin, just don't bring a crazy huge tent or anything cause the wind when the sun goes down is like a huge monster and I saw it demolish a couple's 8 person mansion of a tent they popped up. Me in my 2 person lightweight Marmot had little issue!
@@mud5377 Haha wow bud sounds like you had an absolute blast. I realize in life im either gonna JUST DO IT or im going to sit around watching others just do it wishing i was.. I GOT TO GET OUT AND TRAVEL!!!! I dont need to go explore Europe my own Backyard of Georgia would satisfy me for a month at least XD Theres so much here ive never seen or been too like A GOLD LEVEL DARK SKY PRESERVE which is as good as big bend ( may be better sometimes hehe ) LIKE UGH. Pray for me if you will, and ill do the same for you. Jesus wants the best for both of us Im gonna trust him to get there. But one thing i need to remember is HE NEEDS MY FIRST STEP INTO THE UNKNOWN. The Kingdom of God wont accept cowards ,so i must be brave. :) Fear is the only thing holding us back EVER.
Eva seriously needs her own Travel Channel show, she’s so damn good at this. She can walk into just about any room, anywhere in the world, with her bright smile and positive attitude and bring out the best in the people around her.
She is so pretty and intelligent she will be well received wherever she goes.im glad to see she appreciates the United States,maybe we could get our politicians to do likewise
I just randomly stumbled across one of your videos, followed 4 more links, ended up here, and have officially fallen in love with them. The Fruit Loops scene in the Walmart reminded me of my first time in Poland in 1992, finally eating pierogi in the homeland of my stepmother, who cooked them for us every holiday out here in the American southwest when I was a kid. Your wide eyed enthusiasm and razor-sharp intellect also reinforced a feeling in me that I need to get out there and see more of this land I've lived in all my life, share it with my dog, and try to remember that regardless of all the divisions and hostilities that exist between us as Americans, we're all just people floating on this rock for a brief moment in time. And if we could just recall that every now and again, our world could be a much more exciting place to live. I wish I could see it all with brand new eyes, and until I learn how to do that, I will be following you right here for more inspiration. Thank you for showing me that, and I wish you many more safe travels and returns!!! *LIKED AND SUBSCRIBED* 🤩 PS: If you ever need a place to park Odyssey in Austin, we got you covered, and there are plenty of treats for Vilk!
I’m having fun watching your exuberant stories of visiting Texas . I’m from San Antonio and love hearing what folks think about our friendly little state!
I'm seventy years old and I remember times when I drove across west Texas all I could pick up on my radio was static at times. I remember as a child sitting in the back seat looking out the window watching the scenery scroll by, I'd see a house in the middle of nowhere with the porch light on. I remember feeling a deep sense of loneliness that followed us down the road. Actually, I love solitude, but not loneliness. I am never alone....
I moved from Nebraska to Texas when I was 17. Houston. Culture shock. I moved back to Nebraska 1993. Culture shock. At three am in the u-haul, the only song I could pick up was "Puff The Magic Dragon" lol. My only thought was, Oh boy, here we go again! lol. My BIL welcomed me by saying "We have both kinds of music here, Country AND Western"
@@broncobra I actually Grew up with Stevie Ray Vaughn, and that not Country. I knew many of the local early Rock N Rollers. Texas is a large state with some very diverse music. I'm from Texas and I don't like Houston either. :)
@@monroetruss4737 I absolutely LOVED every minute I was in Texas. All my exes live in TX, lol. All one. It is one of the most beautiful States, with the most beautiful people. I miss the weather, ungodly hot for 6 months, and rain for 6 months, lol. Trees green year 'round. I'm a solitude person myself. How cool is that? Your brush with greatness Stevie Ray wow! Sounds like you have lived a blessed life.I live 45 miles from work, and I drove a early Bronco for 5 years. No top, no doors.Winter or summer. Most times there was not another person on the highway. It was so soothing to look up in the air and see the milky way. It was exhilarating. Nothing like it in the world. Just me and the universe. People must have thought I was batshit crazy? lol. Just me and the universe. Wouldn't trade those memories for anything. Take care.
@@broncobra -- I'm in the Houston area... I WISH we had rain for 6 months, maybe it would be cooler... Hot & humid for 10-11 months out of the year... I was in the UK for a month in the July to August range a few years ago and the temperature was like a "cold" winter day around here... Back home, it was 100F and 90+% humidity.... I definitely preferred the weather over there during the "summer", but I prefer my freedoms here in Texas...
Your joy and excitement are infectious. I caught myself smiling several times at being reminded of my own trips through Route 66. Cheers to you and safe travels!
The infection spread to me too, Her smiles infectious ! What i like most though i the genuine Joy she has meeting people. IT reminds me of what i need to be doing and not be so scared of, human interaction , doing things that actually make us human ( things common for folk to do not living in a modern world )
Welcome to Texas from Dallas, Eva. My daughter, Charity, and I have enjoyed your videos from around the world and we look forward to seeing your impressions of the USA. My wife and I have many fond memories of our travels in Poland back in the 80’s and 90’s. Hearing your comments reminds us of the many wonderful people we met there. We love Texas, but if your route allows, be sure to drive through northern Arizona and southern Utah. In my opinion, it is some of the prettiest country on earth, and I have been a lot of places. May God give you a safe and prosperous journey!
I love and get a kick out of seeing your excitement and appreciation of simple Americana things. You have a humble loving heart that allows you to love and appreciate so openly and genuinely! Loving your journey alot, I'm so envious of you! You are headed to a place where I have worked for 7 yes and had become my second home. I'm a seafood processor. You liked the same cereal that I liked as a kid!
I enjoyed watching your vlog. I like that you brought up the positive things you have experienced in your journey. Thank you for sharing. May you have more wonderful experiences ahead! :) I came to TX in 2018 (which also was my first time to be in the US) after I was recruited as an RN from the Philippines to work in a nice town of Kerrville. I lived in an RV park, and the people there are really kind. The owner of the park made sure that I was comfortable in my new environment, and my neighbors really looked after me. I came to the US with absolutely zero driving experience. But when I learned to drive, in three months' time I started my first road trip to Nebraska. That's when I truly realized how massive Texas (and the US) is! The people are so amazing. There is one thing that is hard not to notice - every stranger that I met is friendly, always ready to offer help whenever I needed one and kind especially in rural towns. I have to say, my road trips in the US offered kind of a profound spiritual experience. I come from a country where a great number of the population claim being religious. But I have never experienced in my life having random strangers invite me to a moment of silence while they pray over me as I go along my journey. For this, I want every Texan (or American for that matter) to know how grateful I am for being here. :) This is such a great country!
You are so stinking adorable Eva! I love your channel. The traveling experiences we get to see along with you, so many beautiful places, the emotional realness that you share, and wisdom gained from your experiences. And you wax and reflect poetically. I love it! Great experiences with your content and YT channel! Blessings 💜 to you!
@@evazubeck ...welcome to Texas...!!! I'm just a bit east of your travel as you head north. I don't know if you follow or know of this lady adventurerer... ruclips.net/user/ItchyBoots She is doing much the same as you....she is crossing Mexico now headed to Alaska via motorcycle. I enjoyed your Texas "impression"....I'm a child of the 50's born and raised in Texas and still here.
I have worked the length and breadth of Texas (from Nacogdoches to Pecos and Harlingen to Dalhart) and have rarely encountered unfriendly people. I love that beautiful smile and your enthusiastic attitude. You are right about Europe. We had to pull in the side mirrors of the Volkswagen to enter the parking lot
I loved this video! I've lived in Texas 3 different times all across the state and I really do miss Texas. It's refreshing to see someone take it in and see the fascination with rural Texas. And, for the great majority of Texas, you will find friendly, honest, and hard working people. Texans are really proud of their state.
Welcome to America! May your travels be safe, trouble free, and adventurous~ Best wishes from Tennessee, now following and thank you for the great content!
@@veritorossi Actually you're not really correct. The term "America" is applicable to neither the continent of "North America" or "South America". You can dig into some historical documentation to verify this - I did. Even prior to the formation of the United States the term "America", was the term applied specifically to the English holdings on the North American continent, and the people residing there were referred to as "Americans". In the English language the term "America" has never really been in use to describe "North America" or "South America". If you refer to South America or any portions of it as "America" you are not being specific enough. For South America the term "South America", or whatever specific country to which you refer should be used. The same is true for "North America" and the nations there - except the term "America" without the North/South prefix is a correct usage when referring to the political entity "The United States Of America", as it has retained this nomenclature from it's precursor - the English colonies that were here.
@@veritorossi I actually find it a little funny for me to get so pedantic about use of the term "America", considering half my ancestors lived on these continents prior to colonization by Europeans! Maybe I should instead say that using any of the European nomenclatures is incorrect, and that you all should be referring to North America as A'nó:wara tsi Kawè:note (Turtle Island)!!! 😁
@@veritorossi only 1% of the population gets irritated by the damn OBVIOUS! so AMERICA STAYS chickie, sorry your feelings got hurt! Nurture that wound Gen Z
I have done few road trips in the USA and you captured my experience as a foreigner so well that I felt like being there all over again! those vast landscapes, empty - endless side roads, huge parking lots and shops (especially those gas station shops that are the size of a small supermarket back at home) , small forgotten motels and cute looking diners, countless RV's and drive through's everywhere, felt so exotic to me as well and it totally makes you feel like an extra in a huge movie set.. but meeting up with the locals was always the thing that dragged me back each time. It's amazing how many nice and generous people you can meet when you put your fears and embarrassment away and just go talking to them. I met so many great people on those trips and I'm sure you will have many more great experiences as well on your's! As someone who grew up in the 90s' as well, the part about the froot loops made me laugh so hard! It makes you realize that some nostalgic things are better stay like that! I wish you a safe and most joyful trip and waiting in an anticipation to see the next chapter of this cool journey :)
You are amazing! I just spent 2 months in Guatemala and had all of the same negative advise. I was gong to get robbed and killed, ripped of and kidnapped. Guatemalans were drug dealers and not to be trusted. Instead I met amazing people, honest, poor and rich, and consistently welcoming. Like you I followed my heart and once again it was so worthwhile. I am a 70 year old man from Canada and it holds true for me still. It is great to see such an adventurous young woman from Poland take on the stereotypes and meet the people with an open heart. Keep it up, you are an inspiration to all of those people frozen and desperate behind their desks. 🥰👍👍🙏
Love this SOOOO MUCH!!!! Americans don't appreciate what we have until we are reminded by amazing people like you about how not to take it for granted. Thank you, grrrl.
I remember the first time I went to a foreign country. I was in Wales, and everyone there was so shocked that I had never traveled to a foreign country before. They would take weekend trips to other countries all the time. I decided to pull out my phone and look at a map. We discovered that most of the countries they had been to were about the distance of me traveling a few states over in the US. People often don’t realize how vast the US is. You can travel to another state, and it feels like you are in another continent.
Yes I wish I, and all Americans, traveled more, but many people in Europe don't realize how easy it is for them to travel to, well all of Europe! We are across the pond lol
I've driven across it three times. In one day my last trip, I went from high desert with snow on the ground and daytime temps in the low 20s to eastern woodland, torrential rain and highs in the 70s. It's amazing and never gets old.
The continental US is the same size as Western Europe. I don't think many Europeans actually realize that. The distance between Los Angeles and New York City is 1000 km FURTHER than the distance between London and Moscow!
@@anthonyz7000 Yeah, it’s the same way in China. I remember when I learned how many cuisines there are in China, and how our usual image of “Chinese food” is really just one of the cuisines. It’s like someone saying “American food” compared to the way we think of Southern food, Midwestern food, New England food, East Coast food, South West food, and West Coast food all being so different.
I saw you on a reaction video and just loved your vibe! So I figured I would subscribe and enjoy your content! We need more people like you in this world! People that don't agree with certain things but don't judge people for being who they are! Appreciate you.
I love your excitement in this episode! The culture varies from state to state similar to the differences between European countries. As an American living in the northeast of the country, Texas would feel like a foreign country to me! The food, the accents, the landscape will all change so much that you'll forget you're still in the same place. Enjoy!
I appreciate the open minded response to traveling anywhere but especially so as an American (and a black man no less). The US has a ton of problems, everywhere does, but there's so much good in the country and good people in spite of everything that's portrayed through the media and internet. I wish and hope there are folks like yourself that appreciate the US for the good things and that you can highlight them for the rest of the world. Thanks for doing what you do. I'm glad the algorithm recommended your channel to me.
Oh God…I was laughing SO hard, that I was crying. A can of beans the size of your head; people driving pickups without hauling anything; you can drive up for anything and live in your car. Welcome to the U.S.!! I hope you meet wonderful people. Americans, generally, love everyone. I was born in NYC and presently live in the forrest/mountains of Tennessee on a river, with my own 40-ft waterfall next to my cabin. So, it is a very varied country. Safe travels!
" Americans generally love everyone lol. What America do you live in. Probably the most divided country sinc eit was founded and nothing has changed. The dollar is number one. You are an obvious troll .
Yeah, she was like, they're not hauling anything! Well, not right now! Haha We can't all afford to have multiple vehicles and only drive the truck when we have a load. Lol
I moved to Texas recently and absolutely love it. Spent a year in Poland and I thought it was amazing. Got to see the sights from Krakow, to Warsaw, Gdansk, and even went up to Lithuania for a while. Absolutely beautiful country and amazing tough people.
Your videos are so inspiring, Eva, but this one must be one of my favorites! Nowadays it's just so easy to just put people who have different views of the world in a box and never try to connect with them at all, so it was awesome to see how you found nothing but welcoming and friendly people along your way in Texas. So excited for the next videos! ❤
This was by far one of the best mini docs I have ever seen! It was covered so well and so well explained from a view from a European. I will continue to watch other posts!!!
Seeing someone from so far away experiencing and praising my state brought a tear to my eye. I'm so glad you were received and treated well and enjoyed yourself.
I had such a giggle watching this. I lived in Texas for three years, and when I first arrived, my initial impressions where exactly like yours - drive up everything 😂Texans are wonderful, they wear their heart on their sleeves, what you see is what you get. I miss the place dearly.
I love seeing the US through your eyes. I lived in Cali for a few years but now live in Canada. These videos made me feel a lot more comfortable going on my first solo road trip last week (Ottawa to Labrador) through super remote Canadian wilderness and roads and Quebec. Your enthusiasm for overlanding is inspiring.
I’m so happy to see you finally having fun here in the U.S. The border crossing stuff sucked for sure. I hope the rest of your adventure is just like this video.
I'm 74 and grew up in Indiana, and I felt the same enthusiastic way when traveling in the west. Old TV shows like Route 66 held were very exciting, and it being the pre-insterstate highways then, it was a road filled with intriguing roadside attractions. This vicarious view of your adventures bring me back to my own thrills, thank you!
Really love this. just stumbled upon this by chance. I'm a Texan around the same age and have explored all over Asia and nothing is quite like home for me! We are an extremely welcoming people!
Texas has everything! Great people, food and the most beautiful geographic locations! I know you had a destination but you could spend 3 months exploring Texas and not see it all❤️
I'm from the U.S. and I just the last year in Poland for work. I'm really enjoying your vlog I just found. It's funny the see the differences and familiarities between the two countries.
I'm a Texan, and I love this! You really understood what makes this place special. Now I need to watch your other videos, so I can learn about the people in other areas of the world. You're a rare treasure.
Yeah, if she were to come over here to Jersey, I guarantee she'd hate America. Bad that Texas gets such a bad rap. Dealing with people from all over the south at my job, is a pleasure nearly all the time.
Lovely to see my home state through the eyes of a stranger. Welcome to Texas, I hope your time here was adventurous and fun. Thank you for giving us your time and a chance to show you what Texas life is all about. The people in this video are not folks I've met or even known, but at the same time I know them intimately because I grew up in rural north Texas. And these are the same type of people I grew up around. The same type of people who helped me learn and grown, and who made me the man I am today. Thank you for spending time with them. If in your travels you make it through Fort Worth, be sure to try some Barbecue and some Tex-Mex food. I believe the best tacos in the world are made within the borders of our state, but that may just be pride talking. Also, if you find yourself in Denton Texas, there's a little burger place called Brisket Burger. Easily the best burger I've ever eaten in my lifetime (50 years, to be exact). Also also, sorry about the Froot Loops. Even when I had them as a kid , I thought they tasted of styrofoam. Disgusting mush.
Dude, you're right about the tacos. When I went to Colorado and ate their Mexican food, it was junk. The chips and salsa were those round nacho chips and Pace pecante sauce. The best tacos are right here in Texas. The tiny places, where there's just a fan blowing and old lady sitting there watching Mexican soap operas.
@@manymany5076 wow. Seems like your projecting some hate that you have in your heart, hope you get the help you need! And hope you learn to love, bless your heart.
Im glad to see your enthusiasm. Im a transplant from mexico, and i share your thoughts. I dream of visiting an English or Irish pub and touring the countryside. Staying at a castle manor for a week would be novel. The next idea would be an Irish cottage getaway month.
I just moved to Texas (San Antonio) this week and I totally agree. Texas are SOOOO friendly! All my new neighbors came out to say hello and made my family and I feel 100% welcomed. This video you did was very well done! Question for you @Eva zu Beck - what drone do you use to get your driving shots? Thanks!
Seeing the world trough Eva's eyes is kinda like seing it through the eyes of a child and I love it. She's just so happy about these small things. It's contagious. :) Thanks Eva!
@@evazubeck I was about to say something similar: you're so positive about everything and I absolutely love it! It's really contagious! Lots of love from Switzerland, I'm a huge fan of your channel 🥰
@@evazubeck Heck yeah, that's a compliment. I could've told you before that someone slowly turning vegan might not enjoy cereal made entirely out of sugar and unicorn farts. But how would a child know that the oven is hot? 🙃
Great video! Glad you took the route through "middle America" as opposed to going through the big cities. You meet amazing people and see beautiful landscape through the rural areas.
It’s actually kind of nice to see someone being enthusiastic about the U.S. these days. Thanks for this.
😂right
@@wendyforest3582 someone as hacked Eva YT that message is a scammer 🙄 grr!
USA USA USA Says this Indian.
@Swarti you live in Texas?
@Swarti thank you. Great barbecue in Texas. Weed. Some great beers too.
"In a world where our differences become our identities, we need to focus on finding common ground." So beautifully said.
@Tobias Reiner Who’s really fooling themselves here?
The one that is working to find peace with other people.
Or the one that says peace is impossible and resigns themselves to a tribal hate.
Hey, Wave. Funny seeing you over here. YT brought me me to Eva's vlog and she looked interesting. With that green tattoo, I gotta follow her journey to Alaska. She's got some cojones to do what she's doing. I hope she can stay safe. See ya back at your channel.
@Tobias Reiner Only interested in finding common ground with people who haven't completely lost their minds.
@@TomClark-Futoura Hey Tom! Good to see you too!
@@frozenfirenow7485 Thank you.
I'm from Texas, and I was 30 years old when I went to Europe for the first time. That was the first time I had ever heard someone refer to water as "still" water. Like a hick, I was like, "well, what was it before?" 😄
Ha ha!!! Right! I'm from too.
Science recently proved that most water on earth is not carbonated. That's right according to science the earth is flat.
@@drewpamon I know you mean it as sarcasm.
But may i ask: Do you ever ask yourself why this Flat Earth Conspiracy Theory became mainstream?
Or do you just accept it like it is?
Or perhaps you have a dog in the race?
Just questions.
I always find it funny to see people bring it up for NO reason what so ever.
And when someone like me asks about it, i find the responses hilarious.
I know you meant it sarcastically.
But do you ever think about such things?
Or do you just act like a parrot, repeating the same nonsense over and over again until people believe it? (Like AH did)
@@drewpamon ps: no, the earth is not flat. It is an Oblate Spheroid.
Obviously.
Even Stevie Wonder can see that.
(after all, he can see everything, including falling microphones. He has no problem catching them, even though not able to see or hear them fall.)
Hi
I'm a 70 yr. old man who clicked onto your site bc of the title. When I saw how young you were I thought this may be a waste of my time. Instead, it was a delight. So many things we take for granted in the US that you give us a different perspective on. So many stereotypes we have of each other that major media promotes and that you are brave enough to challenge. Your positive attitude and refreshing personality made me a subscriber. Keep up the good work. You are a treasure!
Nah the stereotypes held true at least through the intro. I am a gun enthusiast, shot guns from the time I was teeny tinny, but hearing some old white dude from Texas tell her not to leave without a gun kind of hit the stereotype to a tee.
@@anthonyproffitt5341 As a european this feels like the real USA experience to me ( it suprised me that everything is really super super sized in texas tho. this is even more than expected why even put mega size on the pack if there is no normal size)
@@cfealzy the USA is probably similar to Europe. Every state and bigger city vs rural creates different worlds as you travel across America.
@@cfealzy in the U.S. I feel like Detroit is our London, Indianapolis does its best to be our Amsterdam, NYC Florida is as Australia as Australia is to the U.K. and the rest of the world, Texas is a magnum opus of Ukraine Poland and France in a sense for their love of their homeland, the national spirit, and GUNS!; Alaska is our Sweden for being cold and GUNS! as well, always prepared to turn any invader into a past tense, Minnesota is our Finland for the same reason as the GUNS! but also for being forgotten 90% of the time, cold, and for its 'land of 10,000 lakes,' and more...
The U.S. is the land of the free, not an American Dream because you got to be dreaming to get it but more of an American Opportunity where you got to be gritty, be passionate, and be lucky for it to come and grasp it when the opportunity comes which forms the American belief that you can be whatever you want to be if you never give up. Then there are taxes on average lower than most of European countries that hovers depending on the state around 5% if you live in Alaska to 13.3% if you live in California which is nothing to where Bulgaria, Europe's least flat tax country at a 10% flat tax rate to Hungary which has a 27% tax rate and according to European statistics the average income salary is deducted though tax by 30% which jeez is a lot for mostly free public transportation, free healthcare, 'higher food quality' whatever that means and no Second Amendment in most of Europe. Most American people are not well traveled enough in the U.S., or California or NY at least to understand that the U.S. is a tax heaven in comparison to the rest of the world
She's cute
I was born and grew up in Canada. In my early 30s, I received a job offer from the US and wound up spending a few years working down in Texas. I admit that I moved there with MANY pre-conceptions. It was a formative experience for me. Today, 20 years later, I still strongly believe that Texans are some of the most welcoming and kind people I've ever met. I was treated by co-workers like family during Thanksgiving and Christmas and many of the friendships I made there persist to this day.
Southern hospitality believe it or not still exist.
Im glad im a Texan cause i can brag about our friendliness, and fun fact Texan got thier name from being friendly
As long as you have good sense of humor mostly everyone is welcomed , I can imagine the Canadian joke you must have endured in the work force of Texas . 🤘🏼🦅
Thanks for the nice words, and am glad you enjoyed your time here in Texas.
Thanks a million, God bless!!
Eva so glad you chose to stay with us at Fabulous 40s Motel in Adrian Texas. I pray for you every day to have a fun safe journey across our great Country. Take care have fun. Love to you. Ramona
Nice of you to say !! She seems like a very nice adventurous woman. I hope she stays safe in America !! I’m from Los Angeles.
@@markevans8977 You're in LA?... run.. Forrest... run.... Dallas and Ft. Lauderdale are wonderful.
Were you able to get the smell of hippie out of the room? J/K
Just saw this video when it showed up in my queue. Surprised to see my cousins motel show up at beginning. (Hello Ramona and Roy.)
Hope you have a safe and enjoyable journey.
@@R.L.KRANESCHRADTT
Dallas is Not wonderful. Overcrowded and crazy drivers
As a Texas native, I can attest to the very sincere hospitality of people, especially those in RVs.
Hey, when you are renting a spot and call it home, you BETTER get along quickly. Good skillset.
Unless you're: gay, black, trans, any non-Christian, in need of an abortion, want voting rights for all Americans, an immigrant, speak with an accent...the list goes on.
@@jimmyoverly3512 I have at least 5 trans friends in Texas, and offered the same hospitality to everyone. As a long haired hippy looking guy that same hospitality has been offered to me unconditionally. Texas comes from the Spanish word for friend, and is consistently the way strangers of all I'll are treated, with the exception of encounters with law enforcement.
@@michaelmansfield8294 Michael, I'm glad you and your friends were treated well.
My experience and that of my friends has been very very different.
Have a good day.
@@jimmyoverly3512 that is terrible to hear. Is there a specific geographic locale you had problems with? If you ever want to feel welcome in Texas, go to Austin. Great music also as a bonus. Westheimer area of Houston is similar, as well as much of coastal Texas,
As a Texan, I appreciate your positivity! We are so often stereotyped and looked upon negatively. This was a fun video! Enjoy all your travels! I admire your courage and sense of adventure!
Your Texan ancestors were a bunch of rogue slave masters. Are you proud of that?
I Believe Texas is only looked down upon by other americans because here in europe ive lived my whole live thinking texas is like the REAL USA and this video is pretty much just confirming what i believed in
We will see. Trip end of this year for Tesla gigafactory.
@@nahkanukke How was it?
@ It was a nice trip to see Tesla factory and space-x. The friendy people did get to me. I loved all of it.
As a fellow Texan we’re glad you’re enjoying your time in our beautiful state. Safe travels.
Now it's time to politely go back home :)
@@PavethaWay wow like WTF! Mayflower doesn't ring a bell to you? Why you here trolling..miserable much? You know how many Americans lives overseas..
@@Chic.Geek75 Prob troll commented for someone to take the bait. And you took it.
@@PavethaWay nailed it (everyone calm down, it's a joke...from someone you don't know...and will never know...on the internet...)
as a fellow non texan. I can say that there is nothing beautiful about texas lmao you like deserts and just flat ground? trash.
My wife grew up in the Soviet Union, And road trips are our favorite thing to do. She just loves it! So much to see and do in the USA, every state has its own flavors, culture and history.
Different parts of each state of the United States are different from each other in culture and history. For example, East Texas and West Texas are vastly different in culture.
@@powerfulstrong5673 Yeah Texas is a country in and of itself. We'll drive 11 hours and still be in the damn state.
@@jspur22 Bullshits. Texas is not an independent country.
@@jspur22 Texas should be divided into five smaller states.
@@jspur22 Texas should be divided itself into five states of Northeast Texas, Northwest Texas, Southwest Texas, Southeast Texas and Middle Texas. The cities and towns such as Dallas, Tyler, Nacogdoches, Longview, Texarkana, Marshall, Corsicana should be in the state of Northeast Texas. The cities and towns such as Fort Worth, Wichita Falls, Abilene, Amarillo, Lobbock, Midland should be in the state of Northwest Texas. The cities and towns such as El Paso, San Angelo, San Antonio, Brownsvills, Corpus Christi, Nuevo Laredo, New Braunfels should be in the state of Southwest Texas. The cities and towns such as Beaumont, Port Arthur, Houston, Galveston, Lufkin, College Station should be in the state of Southeast Texas. The cities and towns such as Austin, Waco, San Marcos, Round Rock, Killeen should be in the state of Middle Texas.
The interstate system built in the 50s killed route 66. Virtually every town on route 66 is a ghost town. I live right off of route 66 in Albuquerque
So why then, have a business on Rt 66? 🤔
The intersection of Route 66 and the Rio Grande is a bridge. Central Ave SW/Route 66 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Your business is not on a bridge in the middle of the river. Liar
@@SonOfMuta verified with 1.5m subs I dont think he needs to lie. he might mean one of the businesses around the intersection, not literally on the intersection. 🤦♂
Maybe he's a troll? 🤣
I'll take, "places I didn't expect to see you here for $200, Alex"
As a TEXAN, it is facinating to see your view of my home. glad you enjoyed it. Sorry the entry was so difficult. ps. I love froot loops!
Hoping to get there someday! I heard you guys have the best bbq lmao, couldn't miss that in life!
As a northerner, quick question, why is it that half the time I see a comment about Texas from a Texan it’s in all caps.
A Texan animal that is.
As a born and raised native Texan for the last 67 years, I found your report charming and for me somewhat emotional. I like the way you see the good and everything. I’m subscribing because I wanna see more. And good luck with your travels.
as a born n raised Texan, vouch
She does look like a really kind and curious person, I discovered her when she did a tour of my own country, Romania. Now I am fascinated to see America experienced by a regular traveler. It's amazing!
@Ahmet Kirdag Texican
She truly couldn’t have camped with a more authentic Texan family! Love it ♥️
I just kinda skimmed it, but *_I DID NOT SEE HER GETTING BRISKET._* horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible horrible horrrible horrible mistake~!
That's like going to Kansas City & not goin to Arthur Bryant's. MADNESS.
@@theminister1154 She's vegetarian.
@@MfckingDye That just means I should have cut and pasted more "horribles."
Thats not really camping. Just going to the woods with a house on wheels. But they are old I guess.
If it was at the beginning. You can tell they're were originally winter Texans but adapted to the hospitality
I grew up in Alaska, spent 20 years in the Army, travelled all over the world. Each place has it's own flavor, literally. Experience as much as you can
Did you experience ethnic persecution? Like so many in the world.
I lived in Alaska for 12 years . I only left because how bad the economy got after Covid . I was an Army brat growing up so I lived in Europe and England and Texas and many other places , but Alaska is my favorite.
@@tzermonkey you mean in the non-western world, right?
I grew up in Austin, Texas and have lived in Eagle River, Ak the past 15 years. My last three years in the Air Force here and I’ve been here ever since. I’ve also been to Galena, Nome, Kotzebue, Bethel, Barrow, McGrath, Ft. Yukon, and radar sites around isolated villages.
I wouldn’t want to move back to Texas, too crowded, too hot, and I would become morbidly obese within a month of living there even if I hit the gym 5 days a week.
@@scoobertdooperson2695 you used a lot of words but you didn’t really say anything. What did you see or experience in texas that makes you feel this way? Be specific.
Your smile and zest for life is contagious. Don’t let anyone dissuade you from pursuing your dreams. Thanks for who you are and what you do.
As a lifelong Texan, I was so amused by the "Do what?" response at the drive-thru. Some people would say "I beg your pardon" or "What did you say", but a Texan will give you a "Do what?" I wish you all the best on your travel experiences.
In Georgia, we say God Bless yr heart. And then politely ask a for a repeat of the question. Texans and Georgians may reflect each other.
I say do what & it Never dawned on me till you mentioned it. LOL
This is true...lol. Never thought of it before though...
@@wahdurci I had an Australian guy go on a whole rant at me after I said I was fixing to do something.
Say wuh?
I've travelled the US for the past 3 years nomadically and have found that despite any differences we are suppose to have this positive person to person experience as you show here is not unique. Despite what the news may tell us about each other... this is the real America. Love your channel!
@@masonthunkwell9786 more likely with anitfa and the far left, but they are already unhinged as is.
Exactly this. There will be moments ofc but generally when you're engaged in person, people are more accepting and kind.
So true the division mainstream media would like to see in this country it's absolutely crazy I wish we could hold these news organizations with that agenda responsible
Only liberals and democrats are scum . Every other normal person is awesome/😊
Mark Twain once said, "Travel is the greatest cure for social prejudice". As a Native Texan who has traveled all over the U.S., Canada and Mexico, I believe this to be absolutely true.
Just wait until you go throughout Asia... 😳
Texas is a big turd !
@@two2truths For all the bad, there is enough good to offset the stereotypes a person has. Yeah, if she went to India, she'd be catcalled, scammed, etc etc, but there would certainly be some nice families to take her in and humanize their people and culture. Rarely has a person lived among a different people and came out with more scorn towards them than they initially had.
@@maaz322 Yes, I wasnt implying anything negative about Asia at all lol. I was born, raised, and lived much of my life in Asia. I was just saying that Asia, compared to the US, Canada, and Mexico, which he mentioned is most of his traveling, is an entire other worldly, surreal experience sometimes that teaches you even more about yourself and the world around us. Worth the trip, always! Best wishes, I love you.
@burjalmadre is right, southeast Asia is a different beast. I lived in China for a time, and boy they are RACIST! You won't experience that in the western hemisphere, not even close. That being said, I loved my time in China and learned a fair amount of Mandarin, but I know exactly how it is over there and how incredibly dumb we are in the west about this topic. Everybody is tribal in absence of an overriding belief system - such as Christianity - which is severely suppressed in China. As a result they are overwhelmingly tribal towards specifically Han Chinese. You will never be one of them, only ever a foreigner. But I met a lot of good people over there that I made friends with, and talk to them to this day - Chinese are a very curious and social people, I love them despite their flaws. But I don't pretend they don't have all those blemishes like westerners love to do
I think I can speak for all of your subscribers that we all have fallen in love with you. Your honesty, joy, beauty, intelligence and fearlessness speaks to the person that I wish I was when I was younger. You are truly an old soul. I so enjoy seeing the world through your eyes and you make me feel that I’m along for the ride. I’m so grateful to have found you on RUclips! Wishing you and Vilk the best in your future travels.
The woman that said “I’d be very apprehensive of my children doing it so i have to be worried about you!” That melted my heart 🥺 typical southern hospitality
Well Eva is white
Texas is actually the right state to visit when someone wants to be safe. Both ends of Route 66 are the equivalent of third world countries. In Texas, you're as wealthy as you are self-sufficient.
@@adventurefaps9571 no, i didn’t actually… i was mostly just listening to this while cleaning. I think it’s kinda fucked up for y’all to assume that the only reason they were nice to her was because she’s white 💀
@@kinley.-. their name is Adventure Faps, do we really expect more?
@@davidhibbs4737 I've gotten Southern hospitality from both black and white people during my visits to the southern states. And I'm Asian from central California.
She found out what us Texans have always known. The longest part of any roadtrip for us is just getting out of the state. 😂😂
I feel the same way in New Mexico
@@nukem8128 like California... IF you're going north - south. East - West is much easier.
@@kbanghart lmao fr
@@kbanghart left, right, up, down doesnt matter. Lol it's like it's never ending in Texas.
In late 2020, I drove from Canton, Texas to Great Falls, Montana for an old Air Force buddy's funeral. It was a seven-hour drive from Canton to Texline and the Texas/New Mexico border.
Seven hours out of a 22- to 23-hour trip (not counting sleep time and leg-stretching time, and I had packed several lunches so I didn't have to stop to eat anywhere), and I hadn't even left the State of Texas yet! Imagine what the Alaskans have to deal with! o_o
Seeing my state through someone else's eyes is really beautiful. There are so many things about Texas that I didn't realize are special, and yes exotic - I agree. Thank you for this video.
When I was in the military I was stationed in Texas for 3 months to attend a school, and I loved it! One thing that surprised me was how many all you can eat restaurants there were for all types of cuisine! Loved that!
Moved from Spain to Dallas and lived there two years. Honestly my misconceptions where broken straight away. The most friendly and helpful people I have ever met. I never experienced that and I've lived in four countries in my adult life.
Welcome! And yes, the press likes to take shots at Texas all the time. Nothing can ever be reported positive in their callous insults, and many have never been here. It takes months to see all of the regions and people. (And weather)
...and the Texas people get friendlier the farther away from Dallas you get....hahahahahahha. Jokes! Glad it was a good experience.
Texas people are friendly, but you liked the people in dallas??? dallas people are friendly? OOooo.... Okay...
@@davidanalyst671 extremely friendly, when I tell people here what happened there with people I just met they think I'm talking BS. On our second day we went to open a bank account in Chase and the bank manager that just met me saw that we were walking in the heat. We still didn't have a car and he told us to wait 15min and he actually drove us to a car rental place. He gave us a number of a car salesman who actually phoned us to ask what car we where looking for, after I told him my small budget he did not have any cars to offer me but the next day he came to pick us up at our hotel and drive us to a couple of places to look for cars. We didn't but anything and he drove us around for two hours showing us the city. That was just in the first 3 days. Things like that happened to us all the time.
Another story: I phoned a job advert I saw online and only after talking to the lady I realized the advert was two years old. The woman was so friendly, asked me where I was from and what we where doing in Dallas, she told me to send my CV anyway and the next day phoned me again and after interviewing me gave me a job. I only had positive experiences, the only time I got stopped by police for speeding I told them I was studying part time and I was late for class as I got held up at the IRS. He let me go without a fine even though I went 15mph over the limit. I have nothing but love for Dallas!
As a Texan myself I loved seeing this. Having visited 48 states Texas is definitely it's own. One tip I have is when ordering at a drive thru turning off a diesel can help them hear your order better. Best of luck on your future journeys. Be safe
I watched the entire video, laughed at her new experiences. learned some myself, even.
I've never been to Texas but have always felt that it's where I belong 🇺🇲
They could hear her, they just didnt initially know what still or sparkling water were, I guarantee it.
more importantly turn the diesel off for the other people in the drive thru too.
@@Kronk-rp3jf Texans know what sparkling water is
@@atheistconservative6211 you'll probably hate it
I'm a native Texan and that drive thru bit cracked me up 😂 I relate to the struggle 😂
The amount of pride I feel to see you having a blast and enjoying Texas for what she is. I've grown up in the plains region of Texas and I would always complain about how flat and boring it is, but your excitement has reminded me of just how beautiful the plains are.
Yep, I was sitting here thinking, why would you want to stay in one of those motels... lol
I grew up and live in Kansas. when I meet people of other states who now abide here, I always ask why? and I end up complaining about the plains and how flat this state is - but then they always seem to correct me and tell me that they're glad to see plains. they say it's absolutely beautiful the way you can see the entire horizon, and they always say "the sunsets here are incredible, you should learn to love your state more!" it's pretty refreshing.
As a fellow Texan to another Texan.. Well said. Her loving Texas like we do filled me with pride and excitement too.
Great plains Texan here. After moving to VA for work I realized I was a little down. Took a minute to realize I was claustrophobic. In the daytime, no lateral view. At night a small strip of stars. You never see a rainbow end to end. VA is visual wedding cake, but West Texas is also beautiful if you just look up.
I just found your channel and been binge watching it. I am also from Europe and visited Texas 20 years ago right after college....except I never left😊. I felt in love with this place, the people, all the critters that I used to see only at the ZOO as a kid (yes I still think possums living in my yard are super exotic and adore them 😆). It just felt like home from the beginning and even after 20 years I keep finding awesome places to visit and experience. Safe travels!
As a Texan, I really enjoyed watching you marvel over all the little things that make Texas so great. ☺️🫶
*SHE DID NOT GET BRISKET.*
Grevious error.
It looks like you missed some huge and significant parts of Texas. Texas isn't just all desert and countryside. The I-35 corridor and the I-45 corridor have interesting cities and people along the way. You should come back sometime and do San Antonio, Austin, and Dallas/Fort Worth, plus all the little towns in between.
Stay away from these cities, they will ruin your love of Texas
@@JayR607 sounds like you have a really narrow view of Texas. I enjoy all of Texas, not just the country portion, and yes I live in the country.
@@gw2955 the cities suuuuuuck. traffic is terrible, people suck. it's terrible. i know, i live in one.
@@zachw2538 I lived in Fort Worth for 40 years and it's a great city. I've visited all the cities in Texas and they all have positives. Traffic is what it is.
See TEXAS A and M University in College Station
"seeing nuance is our most underrated superpower" well said. Glad you liked Texas. You will find regions of the US differ quite a bit from one another, yet each is beautiful in its own way.
ditto - and she has an amazing way with words, considering English is not her first language.
There is usually good and bad in everything. Nothing and no one is perfect so that is where an open mind comes in.
And she only saw a small slice of Texas. Piney Woods are completely different from Central Texas, and West Texas might as well be another country.
The media today tries it's hardest to remove that power from us.
@Swarti If you live in Texas, leave. Lots of states don't support gun ownership, and maybe you should be there. New Jersey comes to mind.
Your channel just showed up in my RUclips options. I’m so glad I clicked on it. I am housebound because of health issues. Eva, watching your travel experiences and hearing your thoughts on those experiences is a delight. Thank you for sharing!
Great stuff! You basically hit the middle part of TX that is the southern reaches of the "Great Plains" of the USA. Had you gone further east, you would have seen rolling hills, forested land and the big cities. Further west: arid desert, canyons, and mountains. The people are really friendly and goodhearted no matter where you go.
I live in the north of Texas ,and I get slot of death threats across the street lol
Nah I'm a legal Mexican immigrant, I love TX people are nice in the country and little towns,it's just the big cities that suck. And I've also been in California,Virgini, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi...yeah no Texas is my favorite state.
@@joeojeda4651 I’m going back to Mexico in 3 years. How is the status in Mexico?
Did she get a gun?
Yeah its kind of crazy she drove through all the parts where theres nothing
Eva, you are a gem with an open mind. America is so big that even most Americans have not had the opportunity to visit the various regions and cultures. I envy you. Enjoy America, and praying for your health and safety.
Pretty much anyone lower or middle class hasnt gone everwhere ive done most ofnthe east coast tho im from chicago most of my freinds dont travel
This was beautiful, thank you for sharing your enthusiasm, curiosity and sense of adventure. You got the "West Texas" impression of our amazing state. If you every have a chance to explore Texas again, try a route that takes you through, Abilene (The Storybook Capital of the World), Dallas/Fort Worth, Austin, San Antonio Fredricksburg and a coastal community like Galveston or South Padre. These are all rich and unique cultural experiences VERY different than the semi-abandoned, rural Route 66 perspective. Oh yeah, East Texas is another experience altogether.
One thing I'm confident you will find, wherever you land in Texas, is generous, kindhearted people who will gladly make your stay as pleasant as possible. Enjoy the rest of your adventure, we hope to see you again soon!
Yes stop thru abilene area. I am nearby. We are all very welcoming!
I'm in East Texas by Tyler 😂😂 🤘
San Antonio here. There is a great deal of history in this city, as every Texan knows. You could spend a lifetime Traveling small towns in Texas and never get the full experience. The state is it's own country. That is why we love it and have such pride. I mean, to be honest, I have never seen a waffle or hamburger meat in the shape of New York. This state is fantastic.
Kerrville baby! The hill country is a place to see! Fredericksburg is AMAZING! One of my favourite spots.
Very well put, cheers.
Love your videos. I visited Poland for the first time in 1994, my first of ten or so visits. Felt super exotic to me, just as you describe your first days in the United States.
I loved so much about Poland. The people were so friendly, warm and generous. They thought me exotic because they heard about America but had never met an American - most of them. People invited me into their homes and their lives. Behaved as if I were the king of England. Wanted to discuss politics and know everything possible about the U.S.
I loved the food. Pirogi, kapitka, bigos. Oh, how I loved bigos. In those days there were still milk bars. They were amazing. Sadly, within a few years they were all but gone, replaced by KFCs and Burger Kings. I’ll never understand why Poland was so eager to embrace the worst of American culture.
My first trip to Krakow was a kind of heaven. In those days, the buildings were still decrepit and they had stuff like toilet paper (brown and rough like sand paper) in the shop windows. The people hadn’t yet wrapped their minds around basic capitalistic concepts, which led to a lot of interesting economic choices. But it was all so real and so beautiful and so charming. I liked Krakow way better then than, later on, after it had all been fixed up and the shops filled with tourist goods.
I met many wonderful people who became good friends. I also met a woman. We fell in love, dated long distance and eventually married. We were young and still had much to learn. We had love to burn but burn it we did. Eventually she left me but she was brilliant. In Poland, she was on a track to be someone important. She gave up that track to move to the U.S. but she began again, graduated college with a 4.0 GPA, attended medical school and is not just a cardiologist today but the head of a cardiology department. More impressive than that, the nurses adore her. For me, that’s the greatest honor a physician could have - to be loved by those who are in the trenches caring for people day and night.
I met so many other folks whom I’ll never forget. People so kind, so generous, so full of idealism. I remember one family, poor as church mice but their home (with ten children) was overflowing with love.
My grandmother came from a small town in Poland. She told me all these stories from her childhood. That’s what motivated my odyssey. To see those places. That’s the same town where I met my ex-wife.
I don’t mean to imply that Polish society is perfect or ideal. There were many problems, just like anywhere else. What one loves is more about the person making the evaluation than the place itself. So I guess, in speaking about Poland, I’m speaking about myself. I love the Polish nation, its people and its culture. I love the huge Slavic soul that embraces life with idealism and passion.
Well Miss Eva, I hope your visit to Texas was everything you hoped for. Have a great trip, and do be careful. Not everyone is as friendly as the Texans. You have a wonderful spirit.
"Not everyone is as friendly as the Texans." Truer words were never spoken!
I live on the opposite side of the country & was caught off-guard by the friendliness of Texans when I've visited. Wish I could live there!
I'd argue most are, most...
"Seeing nuance is the most underrated super power."
Yes!
It's fun to watch you experience Texas. Half of my family lives there, and I used to. I'll always miss it.
I grew up traveling and it changes your perspective on life. God bless and keep you safe. As a grandmother and a fellow adventurous person, I feel compelled to say: lock your doors, keep your wits about you, and have a fantastic time!
As a Polish American who came here 18 years ago, it has brought back so many memories to watch your excitement and enthusiasm, especially in the grocery store. I remember being just blown away by how much food there is! And how many different brands of the same thing! Having an entire aisle of cereal to pick from almost made my head spin.
But don't eat the Fruit Loops!
Cereal is stuffed full of vitamins these days .. much differed than cereal of the 60's and 70's when I was growing up ..
@@priceisright1580 still garbage.
Hahaha, samesies when I travelled stateside back in the day...
Immediately connected the size of grocerie stores and people, lmao!
Capitalism FTW!
On the truck question
1) city boys tend to buy farm trucks because they think it makes them manlier
2) those of us that do live in the rural parts and use our trucks for work (I own a 50 acre farm) don’t ALWAYS have something in the back. But we use it as our primary vehicle still. In fact, I usually clean the bed of my truck out before driving into town. So you would rarely ever see my truck with a load in the back.
I am a texas native, born and raised. Ive been to 9 countries including Poland. Watching you experience what I live everyday with such excitement is so entertaining lol.
You're probably already out of Texas by now, but my suggestions as a Vermont born, Pennsylvania raised Texan - don't leave without trying the brisket, a crawfish boil, and of course some good old fashioned banana pudding.
If you swing by PA I of course recommend the cheese steak sandwich. (note: do not get those anywhere else in the country, they will not be right.) Inside the tristate area, pizza from a mom & pop store will also be on a level well above most of the continental united states.
And swinging by Vermont, of course you gotta go for the maple syrup. Maple syrup anything, maple syrup candies, maple syrup infused... everything! And dress warm. I know it's summer, BUT DRESS WARM.
Only if it's a REAL banana pudding. Not the garbage from a box...
Now I want bannana pudding.
Yeah, but you can't just go anywhere for a cheesesteak lol. I'm from Philly, I recommend Oregon Steaks and Philips (my personal two favorites). Gooey Looie's is a local spot, it's decent not the best (in my opinion) but definitely worth mentioning. as for more touristy locations go, I think either Jims or Steve's prince of steaks are your best bet. A good rule of thumb when ordering a good cheese steak though is that the place uses real kraft wiz, ribeye steak and good Italian bread (preferably from Sarcone's bakery) speaking of which Angelos a really great Pizzaria also makes good cheese steaks with Sarcone bread.
Holy heck, its the internet personality with the best hair. Definitely agree with your suggestions as a born and raised texan!
"Don't forget the nana puddin"
I've been to 49 states and all of Canada in a truck. The route you chose is actually a very smart one. You will see a lot of beauty.
I have zero idea why RUclips put you in my suggestions but I'm thankful. I love seeing Texas through the eyes of someone that is visiting for the first time ❤
Avoid the major cities if possible, like in other countries, dishonest people target tourist.
Thank you!!
yeah... our cities have democrats in them. completely ruined.
From a Native Texan- Glad you had fun! Texas truly is one of the friendliest places in the world. I love that you’re doing this and living your life!Enjoy the rest of your trip- Safe travels!
Native Texan from Houston and I'm not at all confused by European accents. But I can tell you for sure it was the "still' that had them confused. We do in fact have sparkling water in Texas lol. You go out of the cities in Texas though, west or east really, and the local dialects become pretty distinct. Its quite different if you go to Dallas, Houston, or Austin. Speaking of which, I'm suprised she didn't stop in Austin. She would have felt quite at home! I mean that in a good way.
I'm glad she went to many rural areas, and ran into a lot of people who politically different minded. Given how divided we are here in the US, it's nice to see how well they get along, and maybe remind us here that we can have different views on lots of things, but still get along.
If she really wanted to see differences in the way people talk and live, she should go through Louisiana! North is way different than South La. Rednecks in the North, Cajuns more in the South and New Orleans is a whole world of its own! I came here from Colorado via military and it was a HUGE culture shock!
I’ve lived in rural Texas my whole life & I’ve met like 10 Europeans
Glad she skipped Austin. Young people her age in Austin all wear the same uniform, are ideologically the same, and would have bummed her out with their entitlement mentality, while affording their hedonistic lifestyle by being dependent on their parents. Which is the exact opposite of the supremely independent Eva
When I was in prague I was asked if I want my water "with gas" frequently. I mean I figured out what they meant pretty quickly but saying "water with gas" felt wrong on so many levels.
It’s really fun to see someone appreciate stuff we take for granted and grew up with.
Honestly, it was the positive energy and vibes you give off that make this video. Thanks for being optimistic about your travels.
Your use of the camera and drones to put this together is amazing, also fabulous editing. Glad you experiences in America were mostly great!
As someone who's lived in Oklahoma, i.e. next to Texas, for two decades, I find your enthusiasm for what you find exotic about this part of the world to be infectious. This is such an adorable video. May your entire expedition be this positive of an experience for you!
As a citizen from Texas....thank you for experiencing my state. My state is great.
Yeah, it’s super great where men make decisions for women. 🙄🙄🙄🙄🤬🤬🤬
Good Onya Eva.
This well-travelled 77 year old is mighty pleased with the words of wisdom you imparted at the summary of this video.
Young folks like you are keeping bits of the World's population from falling into the trap of "Binary Thinking". Yes, the world is a kaleidoscope of beautiful alternatives. Greetings from Chiang Mai in far north Thailand 🇹🇭
I love talking to foreign visitors. I live on the California coast (Monterey Bay area) and talked with some visitors from Poland. I warned them about the poison oak that grew where they planned to camp. The father pulled it up on his iPhone and saw what the plant looked like and also saw pictures of the kind of skin rash he could get from contact with the plant.
Thank you for just taking Texas in and enjoying it for what it is. It's wonderful to see your wide-eyed, childlike wonder. You are awesome
As a native Texan, I enjoyed your video concerning Texas and its diversity. I especially appreciated your enthusiasm! Now having identified myself as a native Texan, I can attest to our state's vast size because you've now been through areas that I have never ventured. I live in NE Texas where we live in the piney woods. Be safe in your adventures!
I'm a native Texan who hasn't been to the piney woods in over 30 years!
I can still remember when I headed out west. Spent the night in a tent in Ft. Stockton, I had NEVER experienced wind like that in my entire life! LOL. Headed down to Big Bend the next day, I felt like such a goob when I started seeing mountains out there and I realized that the though had never occurred to me that there were mountains in the great state of Texas! I think my heart will forever be blowin' in the winds of West Texas now.
@@mud5377 It blew my mind watching some demoranch videos because i didnt know texas had mountains either. but when you think about it texas is so big its got a countrys worth of climates inside.
@@ZepyhrLight Very true! ALSO, that mountain range goes all the way around the entire planet anr doesn't just skip over Texas, lol... Big Bend National Park was the first real park I ever visited as well so it's always gonna have a special place in my heart. Highly recommend going and campinh in the Chisos Basin, just don't bring a crazy huge tent or anything cause the wind when the sun goes down is like a huge monster and I saw it demolish a couple's 8 person mansion of a tent they popped up. Me in my 2 person lightweight Marmot had little issue!
@@mud5377 Haha wow bud sounds like you had an absolute blast. I realize in life im either gonna JUST DO IT or im going to sit around watching others just do it wishing i was.. I GOT TO GET OUT AND TRAVEL!!!! I dont need to go explore Europe my own Backyard of Georgia would satisfy me for a month at least XD Theres so much here ive never seen or been too like A GOLD LEVEL DARK SKY PRESERVE which is as good as big bend ( may be better sometimes hehe ) LIKE UGH. Pray for me if you will, and ill do the same for you. Jesus wants the best for both of us Im gonna trust him to get there. But one thing i need to remember is HE NEEDS MY FIRST STEP INTO THE UNKNOWN. The Kingdom of God wont accept cowards ,so i must be brave. :) Fear is the only thing holding us back EVER.
Eva seriously needs her own Travel Channel show, she’s so damn good at this. She can walk into just about any room, anywhere in the world, with her bright smile and positive attitude and bring out the best in the people around her.
no doubt
Its far better to be on RUclips than on cable tv.
@@dominicvioli7098 nowadays that might be very true.
She is so pretty and intelligent she will be well received wherever she goes.im glad to see she appreciates the United States,maybe we could get our politicians to do likewise
I just randomly stumbled across one of your videos, followed 4 more links, ended up here, and have officially fallen in love with them. The Fruit Loops scene in the Walmart reminded me of my first time in Poland in 1992, finally eating pierogi in the homeland of my stepmother, who cooked them for us every holiday out here in the American southwest when I was a kid. Your wide eyed enthusiasm and razor-sharp intellect also reinforced a feeling in me that I need to get out there and see more of this land I've lived in all my life, share it with my dog, and try to remember that regardless of all the divisions and hostilities that exist between us as Americans, we're all just people floating on this rock for a brief moment in time. And if we could just recall that every now and again, our world could be a much more exciting place to live. I wish I could see it all with brand new eyes, and until I learn how to do that, I will be following you right here for more inspiration. Thank you for showing me that, and I wish you many more safe travels and returns!!!
*LIKED AND SUBSCRIBED* 🤩
PS: If you ever need a place to park Odyssey in Austin, we got you covered, and there are plenty of treats for Vilk!
I’m having fun watching your exuberant stories of visiting Texas . I’m from San Antonio and love hearing what folks think about our friendly little state!
Little?
@@Mcat78 Friendly?
I'm seventy years old and I remember times when I drove across west Texas all I could pick up on my radio was static at times. I remember as a child sitting in the back seat looking out the window watching the scenery scroll by, I'd see a house in the middle of nowhere with the porch light on. I remember feeling a deep sense of loneliness that followed us down the road. Actually, I love solitude, but not loneliness. I am never alone....
I moved from Nebraska to Texas when I was 17. Houston. Culture shock. I moved back to Nebraska 1993. Culture shock. At three am in the u-haul, the only song I could pick up
was "Puff The Magic Dragon" lol. My only thought was, Oh boy, here we go again! lol. My BIL welcomed me by saying "We have both kinds of music here, Country AND Western"
@@broncobra I actually Grew up with Stevie Ray Vaughn, and that not Country. I knew many of the local early Rock N Rollers. Texas is a large state with some very diverse music. I'm from Texas and I don't like Houston either. :)
@@monroetruss4737 I absolutely LOVED every minute I was in Texas. All my exes live in TX, lol. All one. It is one of the most beautiful States, with the most beautiful people.
I miss the weather, ungodly hot for 6 months, and rain for 6 months, lol. Trees green year 'round. I'm a solitude person myself. How cool is that? Your brush with
greatness Stevie Ray wow! Sounds like you have lived a blessed life.I live 45 miles from work, and I drove a early Bronco for 5 years. No top, no doors.Winter or summer.
Most times there was not another person on the highway. It was so soothing to look up in the air and see the milky way. It was exhilarating. Nothing like it in the world.
Just me and the universe. People must have thought I was batshit crazy? lol. Just me and the universe. Wouldn't trade those memories for anything. Take care.
@@broncobra -- I'm in the Houston area... I WISH we had rain for 6 months, maybe it would be cooler... Hot & humid for 10-11 months out of the year... I was in the UK for a month in the July to August range a few years ago and the temperature was like a "cold" winter day around here... Back home, it was 100F and 90+% humidity.... I definitely preferred the weather over there during the "summer", but I prefer my freedoms here in Texas...
@@CurmudgeonExtraordinaire Nebraska has good freedoms as well, my friend. As I said, I'm a solitude person. Sparse population.
Your joy and excitement are infectious. I caught myself smiling several times at being reminded of my own trips through Route 66. Cheers to you and safe travels!
She should go to the Walmart in Harrison Usa Where Niko went lol
The infection spread to me too, Her smiles infectious ! What i like most though i the genuine Joy she has meeting people. IT reminds me of what i need to be doing and not be so scared of, human interaction , doing things that actually make us human ( things common for folk to do not living in a modern world )
You make me love my country even more through your beautiful eyes. Thanks again. Happy travels.
Welcome to Texas from Dallas, Eva. My daughter, Charity, and I have enjoyed your videos from around the world and we look forward to seeing your impressions of the USA. My wife and I have many fond memories of our travels in Poland back in the 80’s and 90’s. Hearing your comments reminds us of the many wonderful people we met there. We love Texas, but if your route allows, be sure to drive through northern Arizona and southern Utah. In my opinion, it is some of the prettiest country on earth, and I have been a lot of places. May God give you a safe and prosperous journey!
I love and get a kick out of seeing your excitement and appreciation of simple Americana things. You have a humble loving heart that allows you to love and appreciate so openly and genuinely! Loving your journey alot, I'm so envious of you! You are headed to a place where I have worked for 7 yes and had become my second home. I'm a seafood processor. You liked the same cereal that I liked as a kid!
I enjoyed watching your vlog. I like that you brought up the positive things you have experienced in your journey. Thank you for sharing. May you have more wonderful experiences ahead! :)
I came to TX in 2018 (which also was my first time to be in the US) after I was recruited as an RN from the Philippines to work in a nice town of Kerrville. I lived in an RV park, and the people there are really kind. The owner of the park made sure that I was comfortable in my new environment, and my neighbors really looked after me. I came to the US with absolutely zero driving experience. But when I learned to drive, in three months' time I started my first road trip to Nebraska. That's when I truly realized how massive Texas (and the US) is! The people are so amazing. There is one thing that is hard not to notice - every stranger that I met is friendly, always ready to offer help whenever I needed one and kind especially in rural towns.
I have to say, my road trips in the US offered kind of a profound spiritual experience. I come from a country where a great number of the population claim being religious. But I have never experienced in my life having random strangers invite me to a moment of silence while they pray over me as I go along my journey. For this, I want every Texan (or American for that matter) to know how grateful I am for being here. :) This is such a great country!
You are so stinking adorable Eva! I love your channel. The traveling experiences we get to see along with you, so many beautiful places, the emotional realness that you share, and wisdom gained from your experiences. And you wax and reflect poetically. I love it! Great experiences with your content and YT channel! Blessings 💜 to you!
"Still water" - as a Texan, I knew what you meant, but I've never heard that before in my life. Enjoy your trip!
Dude same haha
"Still water?... ya mean whisky?"
@@SCUBAdfq LMAO sounds good to me.
So what the heck do you call it if it's not sparkling (carbonated) water????
@@davemac1197 water.
“Seeing nuance is our most underrated superpower” 🙏 Thank you for the video, Eva ☀️☀️❤️
?
Too true.
aww thank you Anastacia ❤️
@@evazubeck ...welcome to Texas...!!!
I'm just a bit east of your travel as you head north.
I don't know if you follow or know of this lady adventurerer... ruclips.net/user/ItchyBoots
She is doing much the same as you....she is crossing Mexico now headed to Alaska via motorcycle.
I enjoyed your Texas "impression"....I'm a child of the 50's born and raised in Texas and still here.
@@evazubeck yea,but why is thst all the tattoo?it,'s so ugly and repulsive . Do you really think it's a great honor ?
This was such a fun watch. I’m so glad you’re traveling across the USA. Looking forward to seeing more of your journey!
I have worked the length and breadth of Texas (from Nacogdoches to Pecos and Harlingen to Dalhart) and have rarely encountered unfriendly people. I love that beautiful smile and your enthusiastic attitude. You are right about Europe. We had to pull in the side mirrors of the Volkswagen to enter the parking lot
I loved this video! I've lived in Texas 3 different times all across the state and I really do miss Texas. It's refreshing to see someone take it in and see the fascination with rural Texas. And, for the great majority of Texas, you will find friendly, honest, and hard working people. Texans are really proud of their state.
nobody asked
Texans are really proud of their state but not the United States. texas you are a disappointment.
@@rmora1 no one asked
Welcome to America! May your travels be safe, trouble free, and adventurous~ Best wishes from Tennessee, now following and thank you for the great content!
It's Welcome to the USA. America is a continent, not a country. Please understand that. America is everything from Alaska to the Tierra del Fuego.
@@veritorossi Actually you're not really correct. The term "America" is applicable to neither the continent of "North America" or "South America". You can dig into some historical documentation to verify this - I did. Even prior to the formation of the United States the term "America", was the term applied specifically to the English holdings on the North American continent, and the people residing there were referred to as "Americans". In the English language the term "America" has never really been in use to describe "North America" or "South America". If you refer to South America or any portions of it as "America" you are not being specific enough. For South America the term "South America", or whatever specific country to which you refer should be used. The same is true for "North America" and the nations there - except the term "America" without the North/South prefix is a correct usage when referring to the political entity "The United States Of America", as it has retained this nomenclature from it's precursor - the English colonies that were here.
@@veritorossi I actually find it a little funny for me to get so pedantic about use of the term "America", considering half my ancestors lived on these continents prior to colonization by Europeans! Maybe I should instead say that using any of the European nomenclatures is incorrect, and that you all should be referring to North America as A'nó:wara tsi Kawè:note (Turtle Island)!!! 😁
@@veritorossi only 1% of the population gets irritated by the damn OBVIOUS! so AMERICA STAYS chickie, sorry your feelings got hurt! Nurture that wound Gen Z
I'm pretty sure she was born and raised in Florida
I have done few road trips in the USA and you captured my experience as a foreigner so well that I felt like being there all over again! those vast landscapes, empty - endless side roads, huge parking lots and shops (especially those gas station shops that are the size of a small supermarket back at home) , small forgotten motels and cute looking diners, countless RV's and drive through's everywhere, felt so exotic to me as well and it totally makes you feel like an extra in a huge movie set.. but meeting up with the locals was always the thing that dragged me back each time. It's amazing how many nice and generous people you can meet when you put your fears and embarrassment away and just go talking to them. I met so many great people on those trips and I'm sure you will have many more great experiences as well on your's! As someone who grew up in the 90s' as well, the part about the froot loops made me laugh so hard! It makes you realize that some nostalgic things are better stay like that! I wish you a safe and most joyful trip and waiting in an anticipation to see the next chapter of this cool journey :)
Be sure to be a good ambassador for the US. We get so much bad press around the world and it is just sensationalized negativity.
@@Golgi-Gyges As an Israeli I know exactly what you're talking about!
@@amitai3087 I'm certain
You are amazing! I just spent 2 months in Guatemala and had all of the same negative advise. I was gong to get robbed and killed, ripped of and kidnapped. Guatemalans were drug dealers and not to be trusted. Instead I met amazing people, honest, poor and rich, and consistently welcoming. Like you I followed my heart and once again it was so worthwhile. I am a 70 year old man from Canada and it holds true for me still. It is great to see such an adventurous young woman from Poland take on the stereotypes and meet the people with an open heart. Keep it up, you are an inspiration to all of those people frozen and desperate behind their desks. 🥰👍👍🙏
Love this SOOOO MUCH!!!! Americans don't appreciate what we have until we are reminded by amazing people like you about how not to take it for granted. Thank you, grrrl.
I remember the first time I went to a foreign country. I was in Wales, and everyone there was so shocked that I had never traveled to a foreign country before. They would take weekend trips to other countries all the time. I decided to pull out my phone and look at a map. We discovered that most of the countries they had been to were about the distance of me traveling a few states over in the US.
People often don’t realize how vast the US is. You can travel to another state, and it feels like you are in another continent.
Yes. That is true, it FEELS that.
It ISN'T right, but what does that matter.
Yes I wish I, and all Americans, traveled more, but many people in Europe don't realize how easy it is for them to travel to, well all of Europe! We are across the pond lol
I've driven across it three times. In one day my last trip, I went from high desert with snow on the ground and daytime temps in the low 20s to eastern woodland, torrential rain and highs in the 70s. It's amazing and never gets old.
The continental US is the same size as Western Europe. I don't think many Europeans actually realize that. The distance between Los Angeles and New York City is 1000 km FURTHER than the distance between London and Moscow!
@@anthonyz7000 Yeah, it’s the same way in China. I remember when I learned how many cuisines there are in China, and how our usual image of “Chinese food” is really just one of the cuisines. It’s like someone saying “American food” compared to the way we think of Southern food, Midwestern food, New England food, East Coast food, South West food, and West Coast food all being so different.
I saw you on a reaction video and just loved your vibe! So I figured I would subscribe and enjoy your content! We need more people like you in this world! People that don't agree with certain things but don't judge people for being who they are! Appreciate you.
I love your excitement in this episode! The culture varies from state to state similar to the differences between European countries. As an American living in the northeast of the country, Texas would feel like a foreign country to me! The food, the accents, the landscape will all change so much that you'll forget you're still in the same place. Enjoy!
You know now that I think of it the east seemed completely different for me when I visited.
@@user-bh8id7of7n There is a difference from western Pennsylvania and the eastern part of the state. Just like Northern or Southern California.
"Texas - It's like a whole other country" used to be the motto of Travel Texas.
I appreciate the open minded response to traveling anywhere but especially so as an American (and a black man no less). The US has a ton of problems, everywhere does, but there's so much good in the country and good people in spite of everything that's portrayed through the media and internet. I wish and hope there are folks like yourself that appreciate the US for the good things and that you can highlight them for the rest of the world.
Thanks for doing what you do. I'm glad the algorithm recommended your channel to me.
"Good" because you avoid certain issues that will turn the Dr. Jekylls into Mr. Hydes.
wow 🙏👍👍👍👍👍
Hi
How is your skin color relevant?
@@scintillam_dei Hello, troll!
Oh God…I was laughing SO hard, that I was crying. A can of beans the size of your head; people driving pickups without hauling anything; you can drive up for anything and live in your car. Welcome to the U.S.!! I hope you meet wonderful people. Americans, generally, love everyone. I was born in NYC and presently live in the forrest/mountains of Tennessee on a river, with my own 40-ft waterfall next to my cabin. So, it is a very varied country. Safe travels!
You're living in my dream home! 😁
" Americans generally love everyone lol. What America do you live in. Probably the most divided country sinc eit was founded and nothing has changed. The dollar is number one. You are an obvious troll .
Sounds like you have a good place
Seems like you’ve had the best of two worlds. NYC and Tennessee! Sounds very nice.
Yeah, she was like, they're not hauling anything! Well, not right now! Haha We can't all afford to have multiple vehicles and only drive the truck when we have a load. Lol
I moved to Texas recently and absolutely love it. Spent a year in Poland and I thought it was amazing. Got to see the sights from Krakow, to Warsaw, Gdansk, and even went up to Lithuania for a while. Absolutely beautiful country and amazing tough people.
Native Texan, here! Thank you for not making fun of us! We really are the friendliest people in the US, in my biased opinion anyway… 😉🤘❤️
No, we are. 😁
Texans are friendly but the most friendly goes to Oklahoma
_friendliest people in the US_
That really is true!
@@kettle_of_chris Thank you! I think so! Y’all’s weather is amazing though; except MD in the winter… We’re not built for that down here!
Native texan, here.. texas is terrible: ugly and hot
Your videos are so inspiring, Eva, but this one must be one of my favorites! Nowadays it's just so easy to just put people who have different views of the world in a box and never try to connect with them at all, so it was awesome to see how you found nothing but welcoming and friendly people along your way in Texas. So excited for the next videos! ❤
@Seymour Dix Yet you were prompted to comment.
@Seymour Dix Yes, please. Getting rid of the trolls would make youtube a better place.
This was by far one of the best mini docs I have ever seen! It was covered so well and so well explained from a view from a European. I will continue to watch other posts!!!
Seeing someone from so far away experiencing and praising my state brought a tear to my eye.
I'm so glad you were received and treated well and enjoyed yourself.
I had such a giggle watching this. I lived in Texas for three years, and when I first arrived, my initial impressions where exactly like yours - drive up everything 😂Texans are wonderful, they wear their heart on their sleeves, what you see is what you get. I miss the place dearly.
I love seeing the US through your eyes. I lived in Cali for a few years but now live in Canada. These videos made me feel a lot more comfortable going on my first solo road trip last week (Ottawa to Labrador) through super remote Canadian wilderness and roads and Quebec. Your enthusiasm for overlanding is inspiring.
I’m so happy to see you finally having fun here in the U.S. The border crossing stuff sucked for sure. I hope the rest of your adventure is just like this video.
I didn't know regular water was called "still water" 😂
Yes, the border is a total disaster because of our current president. Texas has it's hands tied on that one.
If only our government took the southern border as serious as they took this lone 120 pound white chick. 🤔
@@gabrielsteele5435 facts
@@gabrielsteele5435 Right?
I'm 74 and grew up in Indiana, and I felt the same enthusiastic way when traveling in the west. Old TV shows like Route 66 held were very exciting, and it being the pre-insterstate highways then, it was a road filled with intriguing roadside attractions. This vicarious view of your adventures bring me back to my own thrills, thank you!
Really love this. just stumbled upon this by chance. I'm a Texan around the same age and have explored all over Asia and nothing is quite like home for me! We are an extremely welcoming people!
Texas has everything! Great people, food and the most beautiful geographic locations! I know you had a destination but you could spend 3 months exploring Texas and not see it all❤️
So many times through this video I found myself smiling at your excitement; made my day. Hope the rest of your trip goes well!
I'm from the U.S. and I just the last year in Poland for work. I'm really enjoying your vlog I just found. It's funny the see the differences and familiarities between the two countries.
I'm a Texan, and I love this! You really understood what makes this place special. Now I need to watch your other videos, so I can learn about the people in other areas of the world. You're a rare treasure.
I am joining you Joshus !! I love these travel vlog's
Yeah, if she were to come over here to Jersey, I guarantee she'd hate America. Bad that Texas gets such a bad rap. Dealing with people from all over the south at my job, is a pleasure nearly all the time.
You Texans would be right at home in Queensland ! Even have a few longhorns !!!
@Lanie Feleski. So Leave!!
BTW...where in Jersey are you so miserable?
Lovely to see my home state through the eyes of a stranger. Welcome to Texas, I hope your time here was adventurous and fun. Thank you for giving us your time and a chance to show you what Texas life is all about. The people in this video are not folks I've met or even known, but at the same time I know them intimately because I grew up in rural north Texas. And these are the same type of people I grew up around. The same type of people who helped me learn and grown, and who made me the man I am today. Thank you for spending time with them.
If in your travels you make it through Fort Worth, be sure to try some Barbecue and some Tex-Mex food. I believe the best tacos in the world are made within the borders of our state, but that may just be pride talking.
Also, if you find yourself in Denton Texas, there's a little burger place called Brisket Burger. Easily the best burger I've ever eaten in my lifetime (50 years, to be exact).
Also also, sorry about the Froot Loops. Even when I had them as a kid , I thought they tasted of styrofoam. Disgusting mush.
Dude, you're right about the tacos. When I went to Colorado and ate their Mexican food, it was junk. The chips and salsa were those round nacho chips and Pace pecante sauce. The best tacos are right here in Texas. The tiny places, where there's just a fan blowing and old lady sitting there watching Mexican soap operas.
hell yeah man i live right near denton
Welcome Eva! Texas has been my home for 63 years and we’re happy to have you. I hope you have an amazing experience while you’re here!
would you welcome people of color with the same warmth?
@@manymany5076 what kind of question is that? Why wouldn’t I? Some people aren’t concerned about colors, you should try it.
@@manymany5076 wow. Seems like your projecting some hate that you have in your heart, hope you get the help you need! And hope you learn to love, bless your heart.
@@thatcookmoniii are people from Texas able to love Black people?
Im glad to see your enthusiasm. Im a transplant from mexico, and i share your thoughts. I dream of visiting an English or Irish pub and touring the countryside. Staying at a castle manor for a week would be novel. The next idea would be an Irish cottage getaway month.
It was really nice to see someone appreciate what we Americans take for granted, I hope you enjoyed your visit 🇺🇸
I just moved to Texas (San Antonio) this week and I totally agree. Texas are SOOOO friendly! All my new neighbors came out to say hello and made my family and I feel 100% welcomed. This video you did was very well done! Question for you @Eva zu Beck - what drone do you use to get your driving shots? Thanks!
Go to the eastside and let us know how “welcomed” you are.
Welcome to our beloved state, Texans are proud people and hold our state dear. Embrace the culture, and you will become a Texan yourself!
Ask your black to go with you and come back your experience.
@@joerichardson5752 My black?
@@joerichardson5752 come back your experience?
Seeing the world trough Eva's eyes is kinda like seing it through the eyes of a child and I love it. She's just so happy about these small things. It's contagious. :) Thanks Eva!
Ahaha I guess that’s a compliment 😆
@@evazubeck Yes, very much a compliment Eva
Agreed!! 💯👣❤️ #davesandersstepdaughter
@@evazubeck I was about to say something similar: you're so positive about everything and I absolutely love it! It's really contagious! Lots of love from Switzerland, I'm a huge fan of your channel 🥰
@@evazubeck Heck yeah, that's a compliment. I could've told you before that someone slowly turning vegan might not enjoy cereal made entirely out of sugar and unicorn farts. But how would a child know that the oven is hot? 🙃
Dzien dobry. I enjoying your vlog . It’s nice to see your perspective.
Great video! Glad you took the route through "middle America" as opposed to going through the big cities. You meet amazing people and see beautiful landscape through the rural areas.
nobody asked
The True USA.
Surprise, you can find those things in big cities also.
@@captaindaedalus1 nothing says "beautiful landscape" like a dull, soulless concrete jungle
@@joshcameron6014 I'm very sorry you can't find the beauty wherever you are. You must live in a miserable place.