American Reacts to Mind-Blowing Facts About Canada (Part 1)
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- Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
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As an American I have realized there are so many more differences between Canada and the United States then I ever imagined. Today I am very excited to learn about 40 mind blowing facts about Canada. If you enjoyed the video feel free to leave a comment, like, or subscribe for more!
I've lived in Canada, born and raised, my entire life, never have I heard Hang a Larry or Hang a Roger...
N9ne of us have! It's bullshit made up by the maker of the video that Tyler is reviewing!
Actually, 'hang a Larry' and 'hang a Roger' are just older terms that are probably very regional. I have heard of them before, but it was from one of the older adults when I was a kid. I forget the origin, but it had to do with avoiding the confusion caused by the dual definition of the word 'right'.
I say them, frequently 😂
As a Canadian, I have never heard of anyone being arrested for their smell lol
I’ve smelled some people that should have been.
But seriously I think he had a medical condition so I would just hold my breath while ringing him up and as soon as he left the store I would spray windex on the counter to cover the smell
ha I once took a tai chi class here
and my instructor reeked. It was brutal. I guess he either didn't notice it himself or thought it made him more "manly" ..lol Finally in the summer, I spoke to another instructor and asked them to address the issue. case solved...phew.... lol
@@lovetobecolouring2and he didn’t get arrested 😂
I can't believe the video showed Jagmeet Singh when talking about "indians". jfc. 🤣
Never heard of this. Well, a public transit bus driver kicked off a hobo guy because his garbage bag stunk. Baaad. Maybe there's some truth here
I love being Canadian ❤
If you can’t smell bad in Canada, then you better never be in a grade 6 classroom in April. That should be illegal. I am a teacher and believe me that is one of the most offensive smells you could ever smell!😂 The discussion of the use of deodorant and daily hygiene is a regular occurrence.
Smelling bad and no spitting are very old laws that were just never updated. And quite frankly I hope they never are.
as if dealing with kids isn't stressful enough lol
@@Trygvar13I heard that there's an old law in Calgary that states after you've been released from jail you're given a horse to ride out of town. I'd get arrested for that. Lol
I would love to know who enforces that law, and who has been to jail for said offence. BTW - wouldn't deodorant still be classified as an odorant if it has a scent?
Cheryl I might be able to do you one better. I am a high school teacher and when the football players pull on their gear and start parading around the hallways with their cleats and unwashed jerseys, the smell is so rank I truly feel nauseous! And yet they seem to be oblivious of the effects of their own odour.
I'm Canadian and I've never heard of the smelling bad law, or the hang a larry/roger. The Canadian shield is much of the reason that so many people live close to the US border, because without exploding the Canadian Shield you can't build on it, and its so big, there is no area to grow vegetation.
Thats why you take a bus load of BCers with you. You well always have a load of vegetables with you
53 Canadian here and I never heard Hang a larry/roger.
Thats because you are just a kid@@Trygvar13
I heard the Larry/Roger thing about 35 years ago in a small town. But it is definitely obscure.
Larry and Randy is common where I’m from (the interior of BC). Depends on where you live
I sent like 2 litres of maple syrup to a ex-pat friend in New Zealand, and that shipment actually represented like 1.5% of New Zealand's maple syrup imports that year :)
Do not tell the British army, they well get jealous.
loll
😂 ❤
"So what do you do for fun?"
"Well, one of my hobbies is finding ways to single handedly throw off statistics for entire countries."
Next year, send 12 litre, or 9% their yearly import.
The smelling bad thing is rarely enforced as far as I know. They SHOULD outlaw perfume and stuff like Axe.
It only applies to cases where the smell is likely to cause harm or damage property, and only in public places. I get that offensive odours can cause harm to people, but I never heard of them damaging property (at that point you should go to jail).
@@johnp5990 The thing Tyler is reviewing is just a random RUclips thing. The kind of garbage everyone puts out to fill up space on their channel. So they make stuff up. And that's what Tyler is reviewing here. The smell thing is just bullshit that video's maker made up. You can't make or enforce a law like that.
In the early 80s there was a release of literally tons of sulphur dioxide gas from a sour gas well that blew out here in Alberta. It smelled like rotten eggs really badly for days! It made thousands of people ill and caused a lot of monetary damage, but there were no charges laid relating to the smell. There are very few things indeed that can be compared to that incident. It affected all of middle Alberta and parts of Sask + BC.
The very idea is ridiculous. There are several charges that might be laid at certain times like that 1 here, but again, not specifically to smell.
@@johnp5990like the auto detailer that "funked up" Seinfeld's car in that one episode, and the smell was sticking to everyone that sat in it! Lololol
Agree on the perfume bathers' stench.
The "Indians" depicted in #19 is actually our indigenous peoples, not those who immigrated from India.
Yeah I didn't get that. Someone should better correct him!
lol he jsut did correct him. DERP@@JeanStAubin-nl9uo
This is a recent correction though. It came up when I was in school in the 90's. You are very correct though that we now refer to them as Aboriginals or Indigenous Peoples.
@@LadyVineXIII Agreed. I was really pointing out that the people shown in the video were ethnically East Indian. I also totally understand that this is also on the original video, and not something Tyler created.
@@LadyVineXIII Legally, Indian is still a common legal term. Honestly, most care about their specific nation name and argue which 'group name' when discussing multiple nations even within nations. The terminology is ironically used for settlers and outsiders as they have their own terminology in their own languages.
Not only is there a rainforest, but also a desert in British Columbia... and glaciers!
Also deserts in Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
@@jacquelinesavoie9749 And lots of beautiful freshwater lakes!!
It's amazing the diversity of habitats we have in each province. Ontario even has a rare prairie biome, while the Territories hold some of the most remote and breathtaking wilderness in the world. You really can't go wrong for sights, no matter which province or territory you chose.
Our border, the world's longest, is also completely undefended militarily. So it also is the World's longest undefended border.
No worries about illegal aliens there.
We come in peace! I love being Canadian 🇨🇦
Bag milk is sold in Ontario & Quebec and parts of Maritimes. With Ontario being 40% of the population and Quebec being about 25% I believe that saying 75% of Canadians is close to accurate.
Well that would only be the case if ALL residents of Ontario & Quebec and the Maritimes drink cows milk and also milk from bags.
No where near every resident of those provinces use plastic bags. As an Ontario resident myself, I can confidently say that a large portion of Ontarians do not use plastic milk bags. There’s a large portion that do, but there is no way that it is more than 70%. Cartons and plastic jugs are used so much around here
Sold doesn't mean used, look next time at the grocery store and compare shelf-space Bag milk is far cheaper and most people are trying NOT to waste money. .@@branthemuffin5872
Know I agree with you as totals wouldn't happen in reality, fake milk & cartons & jugs must make up 20% of the sales anyway.@@MyghtyMykey
I’m a BC resident and I remember my mom buying plastic bags of milk back in the 70’s & 80’s but I do not see them anywhere anymore and for many years now.
a "rain forest" is not necessarily a "tropical rain forest"
Temperate Rain Forest in the West..
Boreal Rain Forest in this case :)
@@aNomadicSasquatch No. The Boreal Forest is a COMPLETELY different thing. The rain forest is as far west as you can go on the coast. And the Boreal Forest is made up of entirely different organisms. It's pretty much right on the Precambrian Sheild which crosses over the north of BC, the Prairies, Ontario, and Quebec, and the south of the Territories and Nunavut. It's a dry forest and covers a very cold area. Too cold to have rain year round as the Rain Forest does.
I've visited one of the coastal rainforests in British Columbia. It's really something else, they have you walk up on boardwalks so not to damage the mosses and other delicate plant life, also so your shoes don't get wet. It seems like a completely different part of the planet, it's magical
I used to live in Vancouver until my family moved back to Newfoundland. I really fucking miss the temperate rainforest climate.
Fun facts: When you go to a (cabane à sucre) sugar shack, some show how mapple syrup is made and how it was made back in the day. The ratio of maple tree sap to boil to make syrup is 40:1 so 40 gallons of sap to make 1 gallon syrup. It can be boilled even longer to make a thicker syrup which we put on snow to make a taffy, truly one of the best reasons to visit Canada / a sugar shack.
I don't think 75% of Canadian buy milk bags, it's not everywhere in Canada and it's not the most popular size to buy. I usually buy 4L, I actually bought a 4L of milk 4days ago, at 10$ for my lactose free milk it's cheaper than 5.50$ to 6.50$ for a 2L carton.
THE letters goes to a special building in downtown Montreal and the spectacular thing is no matther in what language it is, someone will respond even if they have to find someone.
Back in B.C. I tried to make an asian inspired beef soup, I went to the asian market, I couldn't find frozen Vietnamese beef balls so I bought some frozen beef balls next to the frozen fish balls. When I was making the soup my mom look at the beef balls package (not a pun) and when I started eat the soup she asked me if I knew what I ate, I said "yes a beef ball". She laughed and said "(Ce sont des amourettes) Those are prairie oysters, they are beeefff ... balls and not beef balls". The tastes is not bad it's beefy, it's the texture which is off putting, not totally firm like meat balls but firmer than firm tofu. I left them there after knowing what I ate and why the texture was weird.
The 75% of Canadians thing... I believe it. Milk is sold in bags in both Ontario and Quebec, the most populated provences in Canada.
@@danberube1700 I'm pretty sure 75% of Canadian has used bagged milk but I don't think 75% of Canadian uses bagged milk and here is my reasoning. In the milk aisle of most stores I go to the top row is for small carton milk, coffee cream, cooking cream and whip cream, the 2nd row is for a mix of carton 1L milk and 2L milk, the 3rd row is for carton 2L and at the bottom there's the bagged 4L milk. If 75% of Canadian uses bagged milk wouldn't it take more space in the milk aisle than the carton 2L???
Illegal to smell bad? I in my 50+ years, have NEVER heard that in my life.
We looked it up, and it's actually about stink bombs, not people.
The guy who made this video is clearly NOT Canadian - he mispronounces many things, and gets lots of facts wrong.
The way the bot said Alberta was cringy.
it's an AI (computer generated artificial voice) I absolutely detest AI. Its up to us, real people , to not encourage them.... lol (
He is not claiming to be a Canadian! He clearly states that he's an American learning about and reacting to facts about Canada.
I'm talking about the video Tyler is reviewing.@@corinaking2052
@@corinaking2052 I don't think you understood the comment.
Fun Canadian fact is how many Canadians where watching this video at the same time! Was it because of the video, or was it because of Tyler! He does make it fun to watch his videos.
Why the picture of Jagmeet Singh when talking about native Indians? The country was NOT populated with people from India before the Europeans came.
Same with showing an alpine forest when talking about Maple Syrup....Stock footage failures are common with these generic videos.
Is this the kind of fails we are going to get with AI videos? Obviously the robot doesn't know we have long ago stopped saying native Indian.
It's quite true on that. Jagmeet Singh is not an indeguous person but a person who was born in Scarborough whose parents were from India.
Jagmeet Singh is a Canadian of Indian decent. He was born in Scarborough.
😂🤣😂
I'm surprised that Caribou and Bison haven't made their appearance in these videos yet. Like reindeer, elk and moose, they're all related to deer. Also, I didn't know about Roger and Larry, but we do say "clicks" instead of kilometers when giving driving directions, so it doesn't surprise me.
Funny, right after he mispronounced 'eh', the video showed a coniferous forest when talking about maple syrup, which, of course, comes from deciduous maple trees.
RE: Letters to Santa Claus - children from around the world can write to Santa at: Santa Claus North Pole Canada HOH OHO. Santa's elves (Canada Post workers) answers the letters.
The Great Bear Rainforest! My Tribe is located there. When I went to visit my ancestral land I had no idea there was a grizzly bear sanctuary located amongst my native peoples. Of course it just so happens I am terrified of grizzlies 😂
Anyone that is not terrified of grizzlies has never come face to face with one!
@@bmorg7244 Not many have, they don't want to meet you unless they are injured and need an easy meal. I have never met one and am still terrified of them.
I think you may be interested in this. The Deadliest Rockslide in North America - The Frank Rockslide of 1903
That would be a good one to check out. There are a few neat things around that area.
That poor horse
Marmots are a type of large ground squirrel of the rodent family, so related closely to groundhogs and also somewhat related to beavers.
And they'll steal your food just like a raccoon.
There was also a Canadian country music group called Prairie Oyster. You might want to look up their music!
The us/Canada border is the longest undefended border in history anywhere, ever.
Canada has a postal code instead of a zip code. Ours has letters and numbers not just numbers. Eg. N8W 3S4. (Letter, number, letter, number, letter, number). So Santa’s postal code is H0H 0H0. HO HO HO. The North Pole IS located in Canada, so Santa is Canadian. When Canadian children write to Santa they write: Santa Claus , the North Pole, H0H 0H0.
Letters are then replied to by volunteers of the Canadian postal service (on behalf of Santa who gets very busy so they help him), and every single child who writes to Santa gets a return letter from Santa telling them he got their letter, telling them to be good, and he will try his best, he usually tells them a bit about getting ready for Christmas, the elves and the reindeer and Mrs. Claus. It is extremely exciting to get the letter.
I highly recommend going to Gros Morne National Park. It was one of the most beautiful places I have ever hiked in my life. My husband and I visited Newfoundland for our 25th anniversary and visited Gros Morne. We saw a moose while we were hiking the trail, although we didn’t go to the top because it was rainy and it was quite misty at the top. We didn’t want to get stuck at the top if it took us too long. Wow! Just wow! Also, if you love hiking you must visit Newfoundland; it has over 300 hiking and walking trails with many along the gorgeous coastline. One side note, we may see whales in the ocean while you are walking some trails, it’s that amazing! If you can visit Newfoundland…go!
Jasper National park also talked in the video is nice, the last time i was there was in the 90's i was a teen tho. maybe 14 or 15.
@cherylmaclean4349 Agreed! Curious, what did you think of the people? Friendly?
Aren't all Canadians friendly?@@Damien_Clarke
Having travelled Canada from Nfld to Vancouver Island 3 times by car both ways and 3 times one way... I have seen the most amazing scenery.... but Gros Morn National Park was beyond breathtaking.... I have never forgotten this barely known
park it stands out in my mind like Jasper and Banff... but first! BTW...there are no ugly parts of Canada just some will appeal more than others. (I am not talking cities here. there are some ugly parts there sadly)
@@Damien_Clarke Canadians are very friendly everywhere for the most part...but you cannot beat Newfoundland for hospitality and the sheer joy they carry with them and extend to all they meet. If you don't like 'Newfies' you would have to be a pretty miserable person..... or dead! (jmo)
15,500 of the 25,000 polar bears worldwide are found in Churchill, Manitoba, Canada.🇨🇦
There is a reason why there is such a thing as the Fossil Trail in Canada. Due to the Canadian Shield, many of the current dinosaurs we know of where found in Canada. There are 32 important fossil sites from Manitoba, all the way west to BC.
And he does not mean my ex girlfriends mother
@@joeydepalmer4457🤣😂🤣
Another one is Drumheller, Alberta...you can actually dig for small dinosaur bones but are not allowed to keep them. There is a huge museum there with dinos erected. A new dinosaur was unearthed not that long ago at blackmud creek near the capital of city of Emonton. It is called Edmontonsaurs.🦕
Is that not the mayor of edmonton?@@ruthkletke
yep!!!!
They need to enforce that "smelling bad" law in Toronto, especially on the TTC(public transit/subway system) during morning and evening rush hours when they're PACKED! Whew! Apparently daily bathing isn't for everybody, and in the Summer....please!!!☠😱🤮
Maybe it's not a coincidence that Toronto is one of the most ethnically diverse cities in the world. With very large populations of people coming from the 3rd world
You should have a look at the TransCanada Trail. It is a project that runs east-west and north to the Arctic. Think it exceeds 16,000 km(about 10k miles).
Great idea. I sponsored two miles of the TCT near Calgary back when it first started. Still got the certificates somewhere. 🙂
I would live to take that trip but man oh man it's expensive.
@@cheraygannon5765 The TCT is a walking/hiking trail. It doesn't cost anything. Not sure what expense you're referring to.
@@Dimcle getting there, buying gear, places to sleep. Not everyone lives close to the trail
You heard about the Canadian Shield in the video about why so many Canadians live in the southern part of Ontario-because growing food to support local communities isn’t possible on the shield.
The greenbelt in Niagara falls,Ontario grows 82% of Canadas food
The reason we say eh pronounced A is because canada is spelled C eh N eh D eh...lol
Not all rain forests are tropical. Did you miss the "temperate" adjective? (Yes.) That's why they exist in BC -- and Washington, and Oregon....
Also, not all deserts are warm with sand. That's why there are deserts in Siberia and Northern Canada.
@jayclue8581 Ashcroft is the only real desert in Canada
@@jayclue8581 But it's a dry cold 🤣😂
@@personincognito3989 A desert is any dry, baren area of land that is waterless and lacks vegetation. Canada's north is a desert. It doesn't have to have sand. People just think of deserts as something like Egypt.
@@jayclue8581 Antarctica is a desert.
The canadian shield is cool, it's mostly black/greyish rocks that are in layers like shale. Very solid with great views and surrounded by forest. Have walked barefoot on it while camping has a smooth, cold texture to it
Reindeer (rangifer tarandus) in Canada and the rest of Northern America is called Caribou. They have just started to split the species in 6 different groups, from Canada to Northern Europe and Siberia. Osborn's Caribou seems to be the biggest one. (see on Wikipedia)
The Wapiti (cervus canadensis), or Elk, is one of the biggest deer. Wapiti is a Cree word.
Moose (Elk in Eurasia) is the largest and heaviest deer.
AAAnnnd, we have 3 subspecies of White Tailed deer - the one we have in my region is the Northern White-Tailed, the largest, darkest and prettiest. 🙂
Here’s another interesting one James Bond was inspired by a real person who happens to be a Canadian Sir William Samuel Stephenson
He was from Winnipeg.
@@noadlor yes in Canada
I read the book about him- A Man Called Intrepid. If I remember correctly, the book was made into a movie with Alec Guiness?
@@mayloo2137 yes
My ancestors turned in their graves when the narrator said "was populated by Indians" OMG
- a Metis
As a Canadian I have never heard that smelling bad or having something that smells bad is illegal. Guess a lot of people in my family should be charged for smelly feet 🤷♀️ Also never heard of hang a larry or hang a roger.
Nor have I, and trust me, I've had my ripe days lol
It's bullshit made up by the maker of the video that Tyler is reviewing!
Yes you can walk on the mantle, no it's not hot! Lol we have an ancient mountain range, the long rang mountains. Due to uplift they grew way taller than the Himalayas today. 5 glaciations completely leveled them while they were uplifting until the crust was pushed off and all that was left is the mantle layer from below. 15:18 no, we dont say that
I’m 26 currently, born and raised in Canada. I’ve lived in three different provinces. (Vancouver British Columbia, Manitoba and Saskatchewan) I can hand on heart say I have never seen milk in a bag in my life.
I thought that was just a Quebec thing.
@@JeanStAubin-nl9uo Nope!! Ont to atlantic Canada
Bagged milk was phasing out of the west before you were born.
We'll call it an Eastern thing. I agree that I did not see it in my trip out West. There are definite pros and cons to the Bags vs Jugs.
Look at the population distribution across Canada, and you'll quickly see how Ontario and Quebec dominate Canadian national statistics. They also have the most political sway due to sheer population.
because On adn QC and NL existed before any other province lol
@@bonbonvegabon NFL DIDN'T join CANADA UNTIL 1949 After the 2ND WORLD WAR. You'd Need to Think of Nova Scotia/ New Brunswick, Then Quebec/Ontario. At the Time ALSO KNOWN AS Upper Canada(Ontario)/ Lower Canada (QUEBEC). I STRONGLY THINK You Ned to reread Your History About This Country.
Lol. ‘What it is not even the original toe!’ Hilarious reaction Tyler. I haven’t heard of this either! I wouldn’t drink that.. How do they get the toes?????! Lol.. Oh Dawson Creek, you guys!!
I always thought the USA was a little more similar to Canada 🍁 but I have learned a lot by watching your videos. Of course I knew obvious differences, but there are way more differences than I imagined. I feel like you could come up and fit in quite nicely. You should plan a trip and RUclips it. ‘Is Tyler going to pour his first glass of milk from a bag today??! ‘ lol Etc.
Anyway, I really enjoy your channel. Keep up the great work 👍 p.s hang a Larry? That has got to be regional. Hang a right or left is what you hear.
Yep, we have a rainforest in BC, but also a desert in Saskatchewan!! 😁 It's called: The Great Sandhills.......
Prairie oysters are surprisingly good! During the Calgary stampede Bottlescrew Bills (a Calgary bar) has a prairie oyster festival and they sell lots…usually deep fried with a spicy ketchup and then, some even in our famous Caesar! Generally they are cut smaller than the ones in the video
For Christ's sake Tyler,I know you must be a city boy. But for your information, the deer family in North America includes mule deer, white-tail deer, elk (aka wapiti), caribou and moose.
lol no deer in Newfoundland lol only moose and caribou
7:45 I believe it is a law in Churchill to leave you doors unlocked on cars. It’s worth a look up.
Saying Canadian say EH is like saying all Americans say Ya'll at the end of ever sentence
When in fact Americans say Huh at the end of their sentences
We do for sure say Huh. But being in Wisconsin I would never, ever say Ya'll. @@janiece8439
Alaska and Washington aslo have rain forests... though not TROPICAL tainforests
In the north you just do what’s customary. In Labrador you can’t put a lock on your cabin, in case someone is lost and needs shelter.
"North Pole, Canada, H0H0H0" just goes to a special postal canter in Montreal, where people send responses to children all over the world, there are some documentaries about it, you can look it up for one of your next videos, it is pretty interesting.
Winnipeg gets them too. There are postal workers that volunteer to answer them. If I recall, you don't need to put postage on letters to Santa.
And there is a town in USA called North Pole. People send their Christmas cards there to get that name stamped on them.
@@noadlorwell postal codes starting in H are all in Montreal... If then they redirect somewhere I don't know how much it expanded
@@TrimutiusToo They use that postal code because it says ho ho ho. I believe there are volunteers in every major post office across Canada. I know they've been doing it here in Winnipeg for a very long time.
@@noadlor no i mean that automatically it gets sent to montreal due to sorting but yeah they probably redistribute it now
I was in a nice restaurant, enjoying a nice dinner, then the king of B.O. sat on the other side of the dinning room. People were literally choking and my gf almost threw up. He refused to leave so they called the cops. By the time they got there more than half the customers left mid meal.
Moose are less common in the mountains, not really the terrain they like, they love the marshy areas around lakes, that’s why we call them “swamp donkeys”.
There is a difference between a tropical rainforest and a temperate rainforest, like we have in Canada. Cooler temperatures, different plant and animal life, but still a lot of rain per year!
60% of the world’s polar bears are in Canada and yes, most of them congregate at Churchill, Manitoba.
I lived in Alberta for 10 years in my army days. Prarie oysters are delicious. Chewy but tastey.
I'm Canadian and at least half of these things I never heard of before in my 48 years of living there.
Gotta remember that Ontario has the highest population and we do have the milk in bags here, probably why the percentage is high.
The Canadian shield is huge, it covers most of the province of Québec.
More of part two. This from a Canadian. You had me lol for sure
somebody better fact check that robot
The Larry and Roger thing I've never heard of that and I'm 54 and Canadian
the UNESCO park in Newfoundland that is called "Gros Morne" (French) which means "large and without any sharp edges" and we pronounce it "grow - morn" not "gross morn" - any reference to French expressions or French canadian fact is mosty wrong
There's a rain forest in Washington state too, just not a tropical rain forest.
I live in canada and never have i heard about smelling bad is illegal in public places or even milk bags which i think is just in Ontario
The Maple leaf on our flag kinda explains the syrup thing...cant remember the last time I locked my car!?
This is all new to me too.where in world say about people smelling never have I heard of this.Vonnie.from Newfoundland Canada.
You should check out the Canada Heritage Moments, it was a series of commercials 1 minute long highlightig interesting Canadian history
You also have to have a maple tree to get maple syrup. A sugar maple tree is a type of hardwood tree. It is also a very good heating fuel.
And you make syrup by boiling the sap. It takes about 30 litres of sap to boil downand make 1 litre of maple sap. And boiling the sap is the only way to get it.
Maple sap only runs in the spring when the overnight temperature drops below freezing and rises above during the day when the sap runs. It is a narrow window of opportunity usually lasting only a few weeks at most.
I would question the 75% of Canadians using milk from a bag, he is probably taking the population of Ontario and Quebec and determining that all of them buy milk in bags, we also have other options.
Clearly this guy didn't do much research, you are correct EH is pronounced A.
I have the original news paper clipping. The guy that flew over Calgary wanted to gain access into the Calgary Stampede. He was 2000 feet up into the clouds. He passed planes that flew by. When he landed he was arrested and charged for public endangerment.
I believe Canada is staking ownership to Santa for North America at least, and maybe central and southern America because we all believe his home is at the North Pole (and for Us all, I think we have the closest land mass to it). But I think a couple or so other countries claim it that to.
As the video noted its more cost effective to buy milk in bags. A bag of milk contains 3 smaller bags, has a total of 4 L, and costs around $5.50. A 2L carton of milk costs around the same price for half the quantity, whereas a 4L jug of milk costs upwards to $7.50.
We don't have bagged milk in Western Canada. It was introduced in the 70's in British Columbia but never caught on.
@@personincognito3989
Some spots in Western Canada does have it, however its so rare it might as well be considered not existing in the west. With that said Western Canada only makes up between 20% to 25% of the population and thus the minority in the bagged milk availability picture. 70% to 75% of the population is in Central and Eastern Canada, with around 35% of Canada's population being in Ontario and around 22% of Canada's population being in Quebec.
So, I'm not a geologist, but an avid rockhound. When that ai voice said that the Canadian Shield is "over 500 million years old", that just means 500million yrs ago was when the Cambrian started. I live on the north shore of Lake Superior, and frequently deal with rocks well over a billion yrs old, and one of my favourite collecting sites is nearly 3 billion. There aren't complex fossils in rocks that old, because there weren't complex life forms. But there are stromatolites. Canada and Australia go back & forth with who has the oldest rocks. I think Australia has it right now, but Canada is so largely unexplored that I don't doubt we'll find something older still. These oldest rock candidates are over 4 billion yrs, or almost 8x older than anything Cambrian. "Precambrian" is most of Earth's history, in the Hadean and Archean, and just used to basically say "so old there's no visible fossils to relative date them".
15:20 I am a 40 year old Canadian that has lived in 4 provinces and travelled Canada thoroughly.
I have never head of this before, ever.
it's just two provinces I believe ( yes with a large pop) that drink milk from bags, here in Alberta, we do not.
When my grandsons were sufficiently young to still believe in Father Christmas, pre school days, they did as their dad had done, and as I did. They addressed their letters to Father Christmas at his home in Lappland. And these boys live in Canada!! 😂🎅
Did you get a letter back from Father Christmas from Lapland?
@@noadlor reaching back 70 yrs to when I was three, I recall no letter, but my mom told me the stuffed dog which I found at the foot of my bed on Christmas morning was a Lapponian Shepherd dog left me by Father Christmas. I named him Jock, and he lasted well, until his head was bitten off by my real dog, Timmy, when I was about six. It seems Rhodesian Ridgebacks don't like gifts left their master by old, fat, bearded men wearing riding boots and a red suit. Who knew?! 🤦♂️🎅🐕
Not only do we share the longest border in the world, we share the longest undefended border in the world. We is bros. We don't always get along, but we know how to hang together when times get tough.
We(in British Columbia) haven't had milk in bags since the late 1970's.
lol BC only makes up 10% of Canadas population lol ON adn QC makes up 67%
As a Canadian there are a few things in this video that surprised even me lol. I have NEVER heard about how "being smelly" was illegal - I've met more than a few people over the years that should have been in jail! And the "hang a Larry or hang a Roger"? That's a new one to me, I'd never heard anyone say that before. Must be a regional thing.
alberta also has the small tourist town of Vulcan -- yes named for the aliens found in Star Trek ... it even has a to scale statue of the OG Enterprise as well as a statue of Leonard Nimoy with a plaque signed buy him with his palm print in the traditional 'Vulcan" greeting at the statues base
For the prairies oyster, they are not bull's testicules but calf testicles. The dish of deep fried calf testicules is also known in most cattle raising states of the US under different names such as cowboy oyster or rocky mountains oyster and even in other cattle raising countries such as Brazil and Argentina. The dish was originally created to use that part of the young animals they castrated to get them fatter as they grow older. This enhance the quantity and tenderness of the meat.
Dig deeper into the Canadian Shield. (It’s solid rock, you can’t) 😜 This will explain why Canadian’s live where they do within our massive country. It’s not just about living as far south as possible to stay warm. It’s also about where thriving agriculture is possible.
The Dawson City Sour Toe thing seems like it should be something from a horror movie.
Having lived in Canada over 60 years, "hang a Larry" and "hang a Roger" may be a limited regional thing, or something from the distant past. It's not something I've ever heard anyone say, and I've lived in various parts of Canada.
Pretty sure the narrator is some sort of voice software, hence the mispronunciation of "eh".
Me too. 63 years, never heard of hang a Larry/Roger.
Look up the how Santa got a phone number, it's pretty cute and has to do with a full page newspaper ad and NORAD.
Ya, I heard about them and then forgot them.😂
It must be the pot.😂❤🇨🇦
Where on earth did this video originate? When he talked about Maple Syrup he showed video from the Rockies. Sugar maples only grow in the east….Ontario, Quebec etc. Milk in bags is not sold anywhere but maybe 3 or 4 provinces, and what was with the eh!
Of course Santa Claus is Canadian. He lives at the North Pole! Letters sent with the postal code HOH OHO automatically goes to Canada Post, and get answered by CP workers.
I knew someone who was multilingual who was employed along with others during the Christmas rush by Canada Post to answer letters to Santa from around the world. This was a few decades ago and I am unsure whether or not this continues today.
OMG I laughed so hard! The gummies kicked in at the perfect time. So fun! 😂
If you think the donations of toes to that bar is bad... check what people leave to The Icelandic Phallological Museum
Ontario has most of the population, so I believe the bagged milk thing. There’s another province or two that uses them but idr.
On and all atlantic provinces
“Prairie Oysters”, that’s just nuts.
As an amateur radio enthusiast, I often assure my American friends over the airwaves that I'll put in a good word for them with Santa.
I'm as shocked as u Tyler about these mind blowing facts ( at least some of em) , and I'm Canadian !! Luv ur vids bro!!!!❤
It’s 75% only because Ontario has the vast majority of people that live there. As far as I know bag milk is only an Ontario thing. People in the rest of Canada keep milk in cartons.
Here in Manitoba they tried to introduce bag milk back in the late 70’s and was rightfully rejected. We had one summer when bag milk and the little plastic jug was a thing 😂
Milk bags are also sold in Quebec and I think in some of the Maritime provinces
@@nono86753 ya I thought maybe they were. I vaguely remember hearing that somewhere thx 😊
I haven't seen bagged milk in Alberta since sometime in the 80s.
Yes, here in Québec, bagged milk is common and found in like almost grocery stores. Mostly families will buy them
I like your videos the positive side of Canada, thanks Tyler
The bag milk thing was maybe 75% many years ago but these days it’s mostly plastic jugs or cartons. In Alberta we did have bagged milk when I was a kid
Only a few provinces in Canada use bagged milk but because Ontario is so highly populated, the percentage of the people who use the bagged milk is higher.
Might get Toe Jam in your drink 😂😂😂😂