American reacts to 'Northern Germany: Meet the Germans Road Trip Part 1/4'
Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to Northern Germany: Meet the Germans Road Trip Part 1/4
Original video: • Northern Germany: Meet...
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Ryan: "Wow! It's like Hawaii" Me, a Northern German: "It's absolutely nothing like Hawaii"
@lanabanana80
Жыл бұрын
Yeah if Hawaii had CRAZY weather 😂
@Mike8827
Жыл бұрын
Maybe toast Hawaii
@norwegianwood7564
Жыл бұрын
Of course it is like Hawaii- with a little bit of wind, rain and just a feeeeeew days without sun. 🤪
@melchiorvonsternberg844
Жыл бұрын
As a Southener, I sign up for this... Ihr armen Schweine. 3 Wochen früher Herbst und dafür zum Ausgleich, 3 Wochen später Frühling.
@dck030
Жыл бұрын
More like Hawaii toast
Speaking of "over the top". Having subtitles on, on a video that already has subtitles and is in your own language....that is subtitle overkill.
@vanessah5217
Жыл бұрын
Especially since the KZread generated ones are way worse than the in video ones 🙈 like yt doesn't always understand what people are saying and also makes quite a few spelling errors
@DanWorksTV
Жыл бұрын
only subtle
@Ray_Vun
Жыл бұрын
it was so distracting. but at least when the people were talking in german, the youtube subtitles went away and we only had the video's
@i86ij99
Жыл бұрын
and I activated my CC on top of his CC on top of the video's own subtitles, and I was utterly confused
@ingevonschneider5100
Жыл бұрын
Maybe he has ADHS.
As a northern German, I am always happy when someone talks about northern Germany
@morfrikel7472
Жыл бұрын
true, people are always looking at the south and forget about the beauty of the north
@DJone4one
Жыл бұрын
I'm from a northern coast and it's so beautiful.
@Harzer37520
Жыл бұрын
You can only get good Mettbrötchen in Thuringia and Lower Saxony. For most foreigners, Bavaria equals Germany
@hah-vj7hc
Жыл бұрын
Moin
@silkefunck1717
Жыл бұрын
I am from Husum but living in Southitaly
As a Northern German, I am shocked you didn't know we have beaches because it implies you didn't know we have a coastline
@danielertl
Жыл бұрын
I think he talked about the islands. Not the coast.
@leDespicable
Жыл бұрын
But, to be fair, not many Americans know that Germany has a coastline lol
@Quotenwagnerianer
Жыл бұрын
@@leDespicable That only solidifies the stereotype the U.S citizens never have looked at a map in their entire life.
@uliwehner
Жыл бұрын
a "coastline" alone does not make for a beach. think mountains and cliffs.
@Marina_-_-
Жыл бұрын
He meant Florida type beaches. And I think they all still think it's like a, tropical beach.
KZread: How many subtitles do you want? Ryan: YES!
@davdav3945
Жыл бұрын
🤭
@666LonesomeSailor
4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the lulz xD *gg
The proper Moin from Ryan was the most german think i ever had seen on this channel so far
@sandrap.3399
Жыл бұрын
Schickimicki too :-)
@theodorbutters141
Жыл бұрын
He's slowly becoming a german! Can;t wait for him to post vlogs form Germany in the future
@LemmyD_from_Germany
4 ай бұрын
That would be cool... To visit, see and get all these stuff in Germany that he has only seen in videos for years 😂
In the North we say "Moin". "Moin Moin" is already chitchatting. Or as we call it: Gesabbel. 😅
@rommit9613
Жыл бұрын
only tourists say "Moin Moin" 😊
@gaedingar9791
11 ай бұрын
If someone feels really chatty, its "Moinsen" here.
@MiaMerkur
4 ай бұрын
In some areas it is Moin in the day and Moin, Moin in the morning.
As a born and raised northern German, I'm all for the salt life
@Midaaas
Жыл бұрын
Ich hasse Fisch
@blubbTee
Жыл бұрын
@@MidaaasAlle? Sind oft sehr unterschiedlich.
@Midaaas
Жыл бұрын
@@blubbTee Hab lange keinen mehr probiert. Mach ich vielleicht bald mal :)
@schwammi
Жыл бұрын
@@Midaaas Was haben dir die armen Fische getan??
@Midaaas
Жыл бұрын
@@schwammi wie? was? Ich mag den Geschmack und den Geruch einfach nicht
If you rent a Strandkorb at the sea, you don't have to drag them across the beach. They are already there and the owners (typically hotels I think) only take them away if a storm is coming or at the end of the tourism and beach season in general end. I think I heard that they can be locked using flaps to close the bench part, so you actually have to pay to use them and I guess they also lock them for storms, too. But please double check this with Germans who actually live in the North and have firsthand experience
@svendevarennes520
Жыл бұрын
You can lock them and keep your stuff inside, there are compartments that one can open up. You can also pull the shade down and lay down on some of them (they recline) - it's useful if you want to keep your stuff safe or if you want privacy when dressing - they provide quite some cover when the shade is pulled down. But yeah, their purpose is as a windscreen - after bathing in the already quite cold Baltic, wind can chill you down quite quickly. This extends the bathing season beyond July-August
@anniebe4992
Жыл бұрын
far too heavy to drag them across the beach. You can pull out and push in the bench part and hence lock a wooden board in front of them in the evening. The next day you rent a new one (or the same if you want to) and only turn it to the desired direction 🥵 then chill 😌
For the rock sugar, it does take a long time to dissolve, and that is the point. You often only use one for more than a cup, and don't stir. Meaning you have different tastes as you drink the tea, more milky, less sweet, in the beginning, and then a sweeter part at the end, since the sugar dissolves at the bottom and stays.
@pklausspk
Жыл бұрын
It is said that drinking tea like this represents life. It's bitter most of the time but sweet when you get into paradise in the end.
@piiinkDeluxe
Жыл бұрын
@@pklausspk that's kinda sad, because it should be a bit sweet before death as well. 😅
@chrisw.menzel4714
Жыл бұрын
Also pouring the hot tea on the Kluntje makes it break into smaller pieces. That is the sound it makes. I love that you have tea with all the senses when you have it the East Frisian way.
@UntotesSchaf
Жыл бұрын
...and when it comes to it's end and it's to sweet, you'll add new tea to the cup.
As a northern german it's my duty to spread the word that Labskaus tastes way better then you may think when first looking at it 😌
@grimgolf79
11 ай бұрын
kann ich so nicht unterschreiben....😂
@Athalear
11 ай бұрын
@@grimgolf79 Jagut muss ja nicht, aber kommt manchmal auch noch darauf an wers kocht 😄
@themonstergummitier1844
9 ай бұрын
As an eastern german: I like it! 🙂
@shapeshifter1211
6 ай бұрын
When I moved from NRW to Bremen, my co-workers explained Labskaus like this: It's a sailors' food. And since many off those didn't still have all of their teeth, they prepared the food in a way you didn't need your teeth. If you come into stormy weather, the food doesn't roll from the plate, it stucks. If it's getting even more stormy and one has a week stomach, nobody notices, because on the way out it looks just like on the way in. Nevertheless, it tastes great and I like it.
@ForgeMoon
5 ай бұрын
Labskaus is totally a comfy food, just like Grünkohl :-)
I am so triggered by the double subtitles 😵 My eyes didn't know where to focus! How can you NOT automatically read those and just ignore them?
There are over 100 low german dialects, with some quite near to some english dialects like cockney english. Friends from London brought their Father with them to Germany on a Trip who mostly spoke cockney and he could walk up to the older people in our village and talk directly with them without much problems as their languages were so similar.
@harryhaller9386
11 ай бұрын
English is mainly an Anglo Saxon language.
I'm original from south-west Germany and i love the north very much. The sea, the flat green landscape and the beautiful hanseatic cities. And i love all the fresh fish.
@Dennis_1811
Жыл бұрын
A colleague from south Germany told me that he likes the north more, because it seems in the south the people are more like "get out of my way/leave me alone" (Ellenbogen-Mentalität).
@hans471
Жыл бұрын
@@Dennis_1811you are talking like that about us southern "Germaners"? Get out of my way! 😡
@LeroxYT
Жыл бұрын
@@Dennis_1811 isnt that more like berlin region/ big citys?
@TheOriginalDogLP
Жыл бұрын
@@Dennis_1811 haha what I feel its the opposite
If you insult the Mettbrötchen never step a foot into Germany for your own security 😂
@buciallstar
Жыл бұрын
Also Labskaus might look weird but it's absolutely delicious
@lbergen001
Жыл бұрын
Or the matjes hering...so delicious
@wizardm
Жыл бұрын
I'm German and I hate Mettbrötchen. It's digusting. Why should you eat raw pork?
@olli1068
Жыл бұрын
@@wizardm Think of all the energy you save when you eat it raw!
@olli1068
Жыл бұрын
Just yesterday I watched a video on another KZread channel where an American KZreadr, who had been reacting to a lot of German videos finally came here for some first-hand experience. He went to meet a German KZreadr and guess what he got served? Mettbrötchen. You have been warned!
10:58 I was on board with you right until you criticised the Mettbrötchen, that just broke my heart 💔😭 nearly ripped out all my hair after that one!
@ExtremeTeddy
Жыл бұрын
Lapskaus sieht aber auch echt wie ausgekotzt aus. Daran lässt sich nicht rütteln :D
@teotik8071
Жыл бұрын
@@ExtremeTeddy Das gezeigte Labskaus fand ich auch unansehnlich, freundlich gesagt. 🤐 Aber man kann es auch anders zubereiten, so dass die Optik nicht über Bord geht. 😂
@henner7371
Жыл бұрын
@@ExtremeTeddy it tastes much better than it looks like. He was not wrong to compare the Labskaus to Mettbrötchen, because it tastes awesome too.
@ExtremeTeddy
Жыл бұрын
@@henner7371 Oh ok, I didn't got that comparison. My understanding was that Labskaus is the worst so far to him.
@that-possum-guy3209
Жыл бұрын
@@ExtremeTeddy It's not like he's ever eaten either - he's judging based on his ideas of the foods rather than on their actual taste.
I'm from Hamburg which we declared ourselves "die schönste Stadt der Welt" (the most beautiful city in the world). Our regional dishes often look disgusting compared to other parts of Germany, but is just so tasty. I love making Labskaus myself. Franzbrötchen, Fischbrötchen and Mettbrötchen I'm not able to live without.
@pieceofbread5686
Жыл бұрын
Move over Döner, Fischbrötchen ist der beste Imbiss
@ole7236
Жыл бұрын
I'm a German from Northrhine-Westphalia and I really like Labskaus.
@eastfrisianguy
Жыл бұрын
Labskaus, bean stew, kale, pea soup ... all looks like already eaten and puked up, but sooo tasty 😂 In my opinion, the best (not homemade) Labskaus can be found at the Open Day at the naval base in Wilhelmshaven. 🤤
@LeroxYT
Жыл бұрын
Well i was in parts of Hamburg which looked not that great
@Hendricus56
Жыл бұрын
Hamburg schönste Stadt? Nah, ich würd sagen da schlägt Lübeck auch alle mal. Insbesondere weil es hier noch die Altstadt gibt (zumindest teilweise)
Moin from Hamburg. Happy to see that the Franzbrötchen made it in there. The "Labskaus" could also be described as pulled beef with potatomash and beetroots, and yes, it looks weird, but tastes good 😊
@marchurnik
Жыл бұрын
Please don't forget : Slightly salted young herring, pickled cucumber and a fried egg sunny side up. "Labskaus mit Schwanz" (with herring). If you combine the mashed potatoes with red beet / beetroot, you will get a very crasy colorful pink mash. Please try it - essy cooking and astonishing delicious.
@beldin2987
Жыл бұрын
I'm myself from Niedersachen now Bremen, but i always thought Labskaus is some Bavarian stuff just like Leberkäse. It somehow doesn't really sound northern 🤔
@Brazzelkanal
Жыл бұрын
@Marc Hurnik I'd prefer the pickled herring, Bismarckhering or Rollmops. :)
@whattheflyingfuck...
Жыл бұрын
@@beldin2987 ich kannte die Herleitung von lob's course, aber dass es laut Wiki fünf verschiede Herleitungsvarianten gibt wusste ich nicht 😄 //de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labskaus#Etymologie
@marchurnik
Жыл бұрын
Labskaus is a combination of ingredients you can storage longterm on a sailing ship.
Actually, I am from Leer in East Frisia. Altough the younger people don‘t do the tea-ceremony everyday anymore, it‘s quite a part of our culture and to be honest, nothing tastes more like home and childhood to me, like a cup of „Bünting“ or „Thiele“ with Kluntje and cream. I was really happy to see, that our ritual is also seen by other cultures, which are not from our region. Props go out to DW and to you, Ryan!🎉
@Sir2maZ
Ай бұрын
Me too. I instantly recognized the old town of Leer in the beginning of the Video and the boundaries of reality began to shake. But when they did that part about East Frisian tea culture in the tea-museum of Leer, the universe exploded :D
Him: "That's like a litre of tea a day!?" Me: "Ja, moin..."
@Moleman0815
Жыл бұрын
I'm not from the north but i also drink a liter of tea nearly every day, i don't drink coffee, so i need to drink something else which is warm and helps me getting up and also tea is delicious. :D
I'm very familiar with the east Frisian side of things because of family reasons and have to admit, this has been one of the better representations of the region and especially Leer. It's hard to find good videos on KZread to show to long distance friends and I haven't come around to making my own one, but this one at least shows some of the more interesting aspects without simply brushing over the fun facts or cultural aspects.
@nicoleotto1404
7 ай бұрын
LG aus leer ,Ostfriesland ❤
The purpose of a Strandkorb (literally "beach basket") is to shield you from the often quite strong wind on a more chilly day (of which we have many, northern Germany isn't Florida ;-) ), so you can still enjoy the sea air and maybe even get warmed up and tanned by the sun (when there is a gap in the clouds), without being cooled down and getting sandblasted by the winds. You don't drag them around with you, they are much too heavy for that, they stay on the beach and you can close and lock them when you leave.
@DaDunge
7 ай бұрын
they also sort or represent renting a part of the beach dont they?
@chrisrudolf9839
7 ай бұрын
@@DaDunge No, they don't. Renting a Strandkorb doesn't come with renting a private "territory" on the beach and acess to the beach also isn't usually tied to renting a Strandkorb. AFAIK, sea beaches are always public in Germany (other than e.g. in Italy, where sections of the beach are often private property and e.g. only accessible for the guests of a certain hotel). In some tourist regions, muncipalities charge a fee from non-residents for beach access (to help finace clean-up, lifeguard services in swimming areas, etc.), but that isn't tied to renting a Strandkorb.
Moin! Greetings from Hamburg! (: Finally a great video about our North, that made me very happy (:
"Plattdeutsch" and Dutch are very similar. People used to speak 'across borders'. My mother-in-law from Enschede (which is close to the border with Germany) transitioned fluently into the local dialect spoken on both sides of the border. My ancestor came from Germany around 1800 and he had no problem with the language because his version of Plattdeutsch was almost the same as the language spoken in the Netherlands at the time.
@ReginaRegenbogn
11 ай бұрын
I'm from the middle of Germany (although north of Kassel, so technically I'm from Northern Germany, too). Plattdeutsch is really hard for me to understand. However, I have moved to Bavaria 20 years ago and still am unable to understand my father-in-law if he talks to his son at their customary speed :D I get the gist of it, but their regional dialect has their own words which I just don't know (similar to other dialects in Germany; I've lived a few years around Tübingen and Stuttgart and sitting on a train with elderly people was a fantastic linguistic experience) Some dialects are like a completely different language, not just different pronunciation. Loving that, and I'm glad that there are efforts all around the country to preserve dialects.
@DaDunge
7 ай бұрын
Not as close as platt and frisian are.
@Sir2maZ
Ай бұрын
@@ReginaRegenbognSmall side note that Plattdeutsch is often mistaken as dialect but Low German (Niederdeutsch, in contrast to 'Hochdeutsch' defined by geographics) is an actual language with its own dialects. And it is in fact related to Dutch, Frisian, Danish and English (Anglo-Saxon) since they share the same Old Saxon roots. Low German is also spoken in parts of the US, Brazil, Paraguay and Russia through colonization and the Mennonite diaspora.
As someone raised in the north with the whole 'Ostfriesentee' culture, 1l a day is not that hard to beat. Most tea ceremony teapots have around 0,7l, but in my family (especially on garherings) we prepare the 1,5l teapots. My father drinks 3 of those every day, if I drink tea I get to about 2. We (at least in my family) only use the small cups for gatherings and special occasions though (also because they don't hold that much tea compared to a normal mug. Fun fact about the Kluntje (the piece of sugar): us kids loved snacking the remains of it when we had finished our cups of tea, but the adults didn't like that, because they often filled a second cup of tea that got sweetened enough with the rest of the Kluntje, so to them it was wasteful. We were only to eat it if it was our last cup of tea, or we drank one without sugar after
@UntotesSchaf
Жыл бұрын
Was the same for me. Now that I'm in the middle of my 30s I do it like adults. 😂 I grew up outside of East Frisia but raised by an East Frisian mother and still in Lower Saxony.
I loved this one! living in the province of Groningen , Netherlands next to Ost Friesland it is very familiar to us.
All the stereotypes about lighthouses, pirates and retired captains who don't talk much also exist about northern Germany, sometimes they even originated there. People often forget that the North Sea region has traditionally been kind of a cultural area on its own.
That was a very good albeit shorts representation of northern Germany. Me being from northern Germany (easy friesia) myself I'm speaking lower German but I was really baffled when we first moved there at the age of 6. Even school was in Lower German and I had to adapt very fast to understand what they were saying in school. One funny thing the didn't mention was, that people from the Netherlands living on the north coast also speak "lower German/Platt" and thus we are able to communicate easily across borders even when we do not speak Dutch and they don't speak German.
@tysej4
Жыл бұрын
It's the same with many of the Southern-most Danes as well ^^ Sadly that appears to be a trend the youth does not care for ;_;
It's nice to see you looking at other areas of Germany. Sometimes you get the feeling that Germany is only defined by Bavaria and the Oktoberfest. By the way, the sunniest region in Germany is on the Baltic Sea coast. 😉 1,917 hours of sunshine are counted here on average per year - more than in any other region. Best regards from the Hanseatic city of Greifswald.
@Moechtegernpilot1
10 ай бұрын
It’s quite sunny here directly at the coast
I‘m from Leer where that tea museum part of the video was filmed :D It‘s really cool to see your home town in one of your videos! About the candy sugar: You would drink as many cups of tea until the candy is dissolved. You don‘t wait for the sugar to dissolve until you drink the tea, you just drink it as hot as possible (because it‘s best when hot) and add new tea on the candy sugar 😊
@haukebruns8212
Жыл бұрын
Yes, I learnt from my grandma that I have to use one Kluntje for three cups of tea :) But to be honest, most people in east frisia nowadays stir their tea
@meikekro3926
Жыл бұрын
@@haukebruns8212 You’re right. Or they don’t use Kluntje or milk at all 😅
Finally you take a look at the most beautiful parts of Germany: HH & S-H!
What tf is this subtitle on top of the subtitle😭. Pls turn off the subtitles generated by KZread when the video is in English and has own subtitles.👍 Edit: This even lead to some misunderstanding of the stuff she said like "harbourport voices" -> "harbor porpoises" (excually).
That was nice to see my home town Lübeck in the video. It was also the home town of Thomas Mann the famous author who lived in California during WWII. The Frisian tea ceremony : I actually order my tea online from that area because it's so strong and delicious. The sugar lump dissolves slowly during several servings of tea in your cup. The Strandkorb ( beach chair) is very convenient because 1. you can turn it around for shade if you want, 2. you can alter it to a lying position, 3. it holds all your stuff and 4. you don't get sand all over you and in your clothes. In addition it provides you with some privacy when you change from bathing suit to dry clothes. You can rent it for a few hours, a day or - more cheaply - for one or more weeks. Some 'natives" rent one for the whole summer.
@whattheflyingfuck...
Жыл бұрын
(beach basket) add-on: ... and if it is windy but sunny you can snuggle up in its wind-shadow and enjoy the sun anyways
@grandmak.
Жыл бұрын
@@whattheflyingfuck... yeeees, and that's the best.
Good Video about Northern Germany. But to be honest, in the moment she mentioned sweets, I thought she would show Lübecker Marzipan. And I missed some more examples of Backsteingotik and other typical Northern German buildings and styles like Giebelhäuser or Reetdach.
I am from Lübeck, and its so cool to see you react to it ❤
Thank you for having an inlook into the nicest part of germany (imo)!
Greetings from Bremen! ;) "Labskaus" (Which is corned beef with mashed potatoes) is astoundingly good. There are regional differences though when it comes to the extra ingredients.. I eat it with Egg, Beet Root (from the glass) and pickles.. I don´t like fish in there. ;) It looks like dogfood, but it tastes great!
Ooooh i am born in Leer where they drank the tea 😊❤️
Kandiszucker, rock candy is well known in different german countries. In the Southwest, especially Palatinate , we use brown rock candy in mulled wine and tea too.
I always love your reaction, Germany is really a beautiful country with a lot of art and culture, rich history good food, and most importantly, the people
The "beach baskets" / Strandkörbe just stand around at the beach. At the "entrance" to the beach there is a small hut or just a guy in a chair who will give you a key to unlock one for a few bucks. You can rent them for a few hours, the whole day or even longer if you REALLY want that one spot every day.
@genossewurzelkobold3141
Жыл бұрын
The problem: it's expensive as hell
@LemmyD_from_Germany
4 ай бұрын
You can buy them for 300 Euros up to 2000 Euro for your garden. That ist quite common here in the north. Makes your garden look even fancy.
If you ever hapen to be in North Germany in June, make shure to come to Kiel. Kiel is the host of the 'Kieler Woche' the Kiel's week, the biggest sailing event in the world. And it's also a big folk festival with as many daily visitors as the Oktoberfest. But it's a lot more international. And Kiel is much smaler than Munich, so the whole city is partying and listening to dozends of local, national and international bands for free.
@1987Tatsu
Жыл бұрын
As a Kieler I can confirm this
@hendrikwiekenberg
Жыл бұрын
Yes, i'm born in Kiel too. And also stationed there for a few years as a navy-soldier. In the entrance area of the "Kieler Fjord" is the village "Laboe" with the naval memorial. As a tourist attraction, the last submarine of the wartime navy of the German Reich "U 995" lies there on the beach as a museum piece.
@larslacronimus3908
Жыл бұрын
nd zur Arbeit zu kommen ist eine Katastrophe -.-
This is so funny, i know dieke personally 😂 i didnt know he is in this documentary
Northern Germany is definitely a place to eat fish in, especially the port cities. One classic is the fish roll. Just a Weizenbrötchen with fish, usually cold, though cooked, or, in the case of Bismarckhering for instance, pickled. Oh yeah, and should you choose to buy one, hold it with both hands. Seagulls are agile, opportunistic, stronger than you think, and brave enough to try to steal your fish roll out of your hands if you let them.
"high" german is some sort of common german, it means that everybody understands what you want because you try to speak free of your regional dialekt. "low" german in that sense of "plattdeutsch" is like saying "low" german to other regional dialekts like sächsisch or bayrisch or saarländisch and so on
@DontPanick
Жыл бұрын
Why the quotes? It is called High German, actually Standard High German to be precise. And it is also called Low German. Those are the real names.
@holgerlinke98
Жыл бұрын
high and low are about the elevation. Standard german is just another mixed dialect that stems mostly from a higher elevated region.
@winterlinde5395
Жыл бұрын
@@DontPanickI think it’s called Hochdeutsch und Plattdeutsch.
@witthyhumpleton3514
Жыл бұрын
@@holgerlinke98 Not correct, but understandable why you would think so, because the terminology gets very confusing. Low German refers to the elevation, and there are so called "High German dialects" which are things like swabian or franconian, around the south. They are also named after the elevation, but then there is Standard High German, which doesn't refer to the elevation at all, but the standard dialect, this dialect originally came from the Saxon region in the 15th and 16th century, but later developed to be the hannoveranian dialect, you can guess where that one comes from. It gets confusing because one high german does refer to the elevation, while the other has nothing to do with it.
@deinauge7894
Жыл бұрын
Plattdeutsch or Niederdeutsch (literally low german) is the family of dialects in the flat northern parts of Germany. Southern dialects are called Oberdeutsch (literally "high" german - in the geographical sense). edit: what we call Hochdeutsch (literally high german) is NOT the same as Oberdeutsch, and is closer related to Platt and middle german ;-)
Great seeing you react to the roadtrip of meet the germans. This series gives a really nice impression of the german landscapes and different traditions around the country.
Love the weather love the flat landscape, Hamburg is a pearl and will never leave the north. Oh and the people are awesome and grumpy
Moin from Friesland! I grew up near Leer and speak Low German fluently. The "Kluntje" (rock sugar) will be re-used, normally you have to drink three cups of tea (and a middle sized Kluntje will normally last this long). A liter of tea was easily doable, two cups in the morning for breakfast, three cups in the afternoon, two cups in the evening ... so at my grandparents were even for me as a child seven to ten cups of tea relatively normal per day. I switched to coffee long ago - but I always have East Frisian tea at home and about twice a month I have to drink tea, somehow I miss it. I even have a fifty year old large East Frisian tea set, but it hasn't been used in my house yet 😂 During the video I thought "I normally don't eat fish that much!" and realized I was biting into a slice of tuna pizza and had fried fish ("Backfisch") two days ago. 😂😂 My mum lives in the southeast and everytime when I visit her I think like "Oh pls god, why do people talk SO MUCH here?! I hate smalltalk, I just want my quiet piece!" 🙈😨🤭 And often I thought about moving away, from the north towards Bavaria to my mother ... But when I have visited her for ten days and am greeted with "Moin!" again on the train behind Hanover, then I know: I will soon be home. You'll never get the "North German" out of me.
@pinkhope84
Жыл бұрын
Yep ich bin auch Norddeutsch durch und durch. Kann mir keinen anderen Teil von Deutschland vorstellen. Ich liebs hier einfach. Grüße aus Hamburg. Bin um Oldenburg aufgewachsen. Und fühle mich nur im Norden wohl.
This is one of the cool things of germany, you can start a trip in the north and travel to the south and everything will change. people, land and kulture
I really liked this. Rachel is a hell of a host, always enjoy her videos. Thanks for your reaction!
Thanks for the video, Ryan. I speak low German but lived 300 km south of the sea. The language area is quite large although low German is spoken mainly in the rural parts of Northern Germany.
I'm from Bremen and yes - "Moin Moin" is over the top! We speak when it's necessary. Something like "Moin." - "Moin." - "And?" - "Yes. Löppt." "*nods*" is a whole conversation. The East Frisian Islands are pretty. Not like Hawaii. :D But those without cars got such a nice air, lots of beaches and you can relax a lot! And sell your kidneys for food - their expensive. :D But worth a visit. I will be on holiday on one of them (Juist) in a month. "How can you drink a liter of tea a day?" - Me: *looking at my pot of tea on my desk* "Well, I just drink." Seriously - I drink tea every day.
Just one liter of tea per day? For me that's the normal pot of tea for breakfast, usually followed by another one whenever I feel like it.
@pinkhope84
Жыл бұрын
Schwarztee?
@jensgoerke3819
Жыл бұрын
@@pinkhope84 Preferably Darjeeling - much easier on the stomach than coffee.
@pinkhope84
Жыл бұрын
@@jensgoerke3819 i like ostfriesentee but mostly i drink peppermint tee. But thats like 2 cups per day. One Liter just in the Morning is alot 😅
@jensgoerke3819
Жыл бұрын
@@pinkhope84 I'm retired, so I have time for a relaxed breakfast. When I was working full time I drank one pot before lunch and one in the afternoon, plus half a liter of milk split between them.
@faultier1158
Жыл бұрын
I'm at about 1.5l of black tea per day.😅 Not connected to any meals though, but spread out over the day.
Before I quit eating meat "Labskaus" was one of my favorite foods. I ate it at least once a week 😄 But only from one particular brand 😁
I am from West Germany and I easily drink way more tea than 1 liter per day! I rarely drink water or other beverages, mostly tea throughout the day.... Also I love Lübeck so much and one of my favorite vacation memory from childhood was our Langeoog vacation!
Really excited for the rest of this series, I was suggesting these videos in December already and seeing you react to them now just made my day ! :)
Well how do you guys drink like a liter of soda a day? 😅
@steemlenn8797
Жыл бұрын
one cup at lunch. Okay, slightly exaggerated, McDonalds L size is only 887ml.
@emmakolz861
Жыл бұрын
@@steemlenn8797 only???!!!
High German is like standard German that is spoken by most of the people in Germany.
@marjanpel1563
Жыл бұрын
Haha, aber nicht in BaWü: Wir können alles. Außer Hochdeutsch! ;)
@misterfox3303
Жыл бұрын
@@marjanpel1563 since I'm from Saxony, I know this problem hahaha but I really like Schwäbisch!
@marjanpel1563
Жыл бұрын
@@misterfox3303 My husband is from Schwaben.
1:55 it was a REALLY GOOD "MOIN MOIN"!
6:10 "harbourport voices" was the google-translation you looked at. the original translation said "harbor porpoises" :D
Maybe watching James Bray during his first ever trip to Germany might be a nice reaction for you. He's got several videos released and more coming up. Keep up the good work! Describing a Strandkorb like a beach church pew made my day, that was a very funny description!
@pinkhope84
Жыл бұрын
I love seeing him exploring Germany. Eating his first Döner, it was fun to watch how much he enjoyed it. Or how scared he was at the Autobahn 😅😂
If I HAD to move and could choose between Hamburg and Berlin, I'd pick Hamburg at any time.
So for starters: you say moin, thats how you greet people ... if you like them you nod at them too ... and if you smile, that is widely considered as proposing. If you have a panic attack, you say "oha", if its really bad you might raise your voice a little while doing so ... and basically every bit of wind where the sheep still keep their curls, is NOT a storm, i repeat: NOT a storm.
Must see more about the North, is wonderfull. Greetings from Bremen 😊
I'm from northern Germany 😀 I live in "Brake" , we've got many beaches to visiting for free and the biggest river island of Germany
@teotik8071
Жыл бұрын
The biggest river island is 'Wilhelmsburg' a quarter of the borough Hamburg-Mitte where the river Elbe splits into northern and southern Elbe.
@henner7371
Жыл бұрын
@@teotik8071 Did you know the Wümme splits into a southern, middle and northern arm near Ottersberg and reunites after 15 km somewhere near Bremen-Borgfeld ? So there is technically a rel. big river island too.
@teotik8071
Жыл бұрын
@@henner7371 I did not know that. Possibly due to the fact that the part in between isn't considered to be an river island. But I would agree with you, technically it is an island. 😉
@henner7371
Жыл бұрын
@@teotik8071 same to Wilhelmsburg, I think just locals and some Northern Germans know that it is an river island.
@teotik8071
Жыл бұрын
@@henner7371 You're probably right with this assumption.
you should watch all the other parts please! oh and after that more on hamburg in my eyes thats one of the best cities in germany
@Blutwind
Жыл бұрын
As a born Bremer i am geneticaly forced to disagree
@michaelmedlinger6399
Жыл бұрын
Not “one of the best” - THE best!!
Franzbrötchen are AMAZING
I‘m from Luebeck! Its funny to see an american youtuber reacting to this
moin moin they say in Hamburg, and thats already a huge conversation for the other northerners, lol .... grts from a dutch cheesehead, happy to live in Bad Zwischenahn Lower Saxony....
As a northern german I am disappointed she didn't even mention the annual "Schützenfest", originating in the Emsland (Lower Saxony).
@LeroxYT
Жыл бұрын
But Schützenfest is celebrated all over Germany if im not mistakening
@pokerfaceslul
Жыл бұрын
@@LeroxYT yes, however it still had its origins up here and has some of its biggest festivals in the Emsland, while in bavaria for example, the Oktoberfest is more popular
@LeroxYT
Жыл бұрын
@@pokerfaceslul yeah thats true, here where i live we also have the Heideblütenfest
This road trip is really worth watching. Thank you for being so curious.
Moin, I am from lower Saxony, near Hamburg and it is so cool to recognize the places from the video. North Germany is a very beautiful area, I would say every small Village has its own charakter. Often people from other parts from Germany say, that North Germany is to flatt and boring. Yes, it is flat, but IT is not boring. I can recommend to visit Hamburg an Lübeck. Esspecially the port from Hamburg an the beaches near Lübeck are so nice.
Where are my northern German guys, saying that everything below Schleswig Holstein is no northern Germany at all, and everything below Hamburg is foreign land xD (No offend to anyone, it's just a running gag ;) )
I was born in the Rheinland, raised in Westfalen and now I live in Bremen (Bremerhaven). I feel really tired to all hte bavarian stuff, that tells people that this is germany. So this video about a littlebit from Norddeutschland was really refreshing and most likable. I happyliy looking forward to more stuff, thats not from bavaria.
We live fourty km away from the north Sea in East Frisia. My husband and i love eating fish in the fish restaurant there and then taking a relaxing walk on the beach.We then go to our favorite cafe on top of the dike, drink tea and coffee and enjoy the great view of the sea. Lovely Greetings fom East Frisia ☺💚☕🫖🍺🏖
would be great to see the whole series
07:15 As a German, I'm really glad they put subtitles at that part, because I could barely understand that guy Also, I love how you used the KZread Auto-Generated subtitles, when there were already subtitles in the video xD
@teotik8071
Жыл бұрын
I would have preferred if he used Danish subtitles because the English ones were already there. 😝
@dumdidum631
Жыл бұрын
I understood nearly everything he said. ^^
@jennyh4025
Жыл бұрын
Really? He was so easy to understand for me (grew up in NRW, about an hour from the Dutch border). The subtitles actually irritated me. 🤷♀️
I am very curious for Ryans reaction, when he learns about the Wattenmeer. 😂
@germanyhamburger5552
Жыл бұрын
He's a scammer
@ElwoodEBlues
11 ай бұрын
@@germanyhamburger5552was soll der Quatsch? Wieso schreibst du überall so einen dummen Kommentar hinein?
@germanyhamburger5552
11 ай бұрын
@@ElwoodEBlues weil da ein scammer war der andere betrügt und der gemeldet wurde, jetzt ist er weg.
@ElwoodEBlues
11 ай бұрын
@@germanyhamburger5552 achso ... dessen Kommentare wurden dann wohl auch gelöscht. Jetzt sieht es so aus, als hättest du anderen geantwortet.
@germanyhamburger5552
11 ай бұрын
@@ElwoodEBlues Egal, hauptsache der wurde gelöscht, der hat immer das gleiche Bild wie der KZreadr und fragt halt die Leute um spenden und das sie den privat anschreiben sollen. Viele wissen es aber einige auch nicht, habe mit Hayley Alexis schon darüber gesprochen und bei ihr sind auch solche fälle wo einige darauf reinfallen.
"harbourport voices" 🤣🤣🤣 She said "harbour porpoise", which are a whale species, that closely resembles dolphins.
on the topic of the weather here in northern germany. My brother used to say "summer is the best weak of the year"
There was only one thing today, that was slightly annoying: The double English subtitles added to the English audio😵💫- But I'm looking forward to the next Road Trip videos.🍿
I feel like Kiel is never mentioned anywhere in these videos. Even in this one where Northern Germany is the focus.
@user-xi6nk4xs4s
Жыл бұрын
At least it was in the spotlight with the 1972 Olympics :o)
The Platt is still very closely linked to English. Or rather middle English. It was derived from the lower Saxon (you know, like the German state of Niedersachsen/ lower Saxony). That's why the region in GB is called Anglo-Saxon. Because these lower Saxons traveled and traded all along the North and Baltic Sea coasts. At some time the Saxon Platt was considered THE trade language in most of Europe. This influenced the development of modern English massively. Now, with Platt NOT being spoken so regularly anymore it retained a lot of its older structure which is more closely related to English than to modern high German. High German is just the name for a regular German with as little dialect as possible to make communication among the incredibly varied regions of Germany more readily available. A Bavarian from a mountain village trying to communicate with a North German resident of one of the islands would have serious problems to understand each other if not for high German. If both spoke ONLY their dialect it would be similar to some speaking a thick Creole and someone from an Amish village trying to speak to each other in their respective dialects/languages. Btw: the Platt is strongly related to what the Amish and the Mennonites speak.
As a northern german, i can tell you, that we are called Fischköppe, what means Fishheads 😅 but we take this titele with a bit of proud too.😊
Lapskaus is delicious.
Labskaus tastes yummy 😋 If you are in Northern Germany, you have to taste it. It's so much better, than it seems 😊 Good idea to cook this weekend ☝️
At a born and raised northern German (in the south they call us „Fischkopp“ means „fishhead“) I love to see, that people in other countries see the multiple faces and cultures of germany. And not only Lederhosen and Sauerkraut, because especially the Lederhosen is only typical for the south of Germany. You are right, that Lapskaus doesn’t look very good, but it is that type of food, that you must taste before judge, I think. But also here in the North, there are many people that don’t like it. But I really think, that some special thing is missing.😅 There is one more typical german food named „Mettbrötchen“. 😂 I love it and really couldn’t live without it. You don’t have to drag the Strandkorb over the sand. They are placed all over the beach and there are different owners were you can rent it for a day.
The Strandkorb is for rent on a daily basis ( 7-14 Euro dep on which beach you rent it) . It is owned by a so called Strandkorbvermieter who has a permit to put the STrandkörbe onto the beach . This happens in the spring time and they stay there for the wholesummer until fall. - so only 2 movements a year ! It is protected by a wooden shield with a lock -you get the key when you rent it ... very common in Germany and many people also have such one on their garden or on the balcony . Costs between 1500 - 2.000 Euros each when you buy it for yourselve.
Hawai but like it would be in Antarctica…
@user-xi6nk4xs4s
Жыл бұрын
Well, not quit that cold ;o)
@Marina_-_-
Жыл бұрын
I am wondering how warm it gets and how cold the water is actually.
@user-xi6nk4xs4s
Жыл бұрын
@@Marina_-_- I guess the air temperature gets in the 30s C tops during the hottest days, usually with a nice wind cooling things down. The water up to 20 C near the beach? Will also depend on the location.
@JonasReichert1992
Жыл бұрын
@@user-xi6nk4xs4s Almost😂 (living close to the Coast)
@JonasReichert1992
Жыл бұрын
@@Marina_-_- And it often Rains.
The real WTF is that you have to pay to get onto some beaches
@winterlinde5395
Жыл бұрын
But what I like about our beaches is that there are no private areas where you can’t go at all.
@holgerlinke98
Жыл бұрын
what, where? I thought all beaches are freely accessible by law.
@winterlinde5395
Жыл бұрын
@@holgerlinke98 they are. But some municipalities raise Kurtaxe. A small fee that’s usually included in the cost for your hotelroom , for example. Inhabitants don’t have to pay at all. Guests who only come for the day pay at the beach. It’s used for cleaning the beaches and other necessities for tourists.
@holgerlinke98
Жыл бұрын
@@winterlinde5395 that's a completely different thing a fee to access the beach tho
Soooo another Northern German citizen here, born in Hamburg, raised in some small villages even more northern than Hamburg. You should totally check out the Kiwo (Kieler Woche) wich is the largest sailing festival ever. It takes place in Kiel a city directly located at the Baltic sea. It's actually right around the corner an gonna start this weekend already. Check it out!
Amateur philologist here. High German or Hochdeutsch originally meant the German variations spoken in the mountainous and high plateau regions. Low German or Plattdeutsch was spoken in the broad plains of the north. Due to literary influences, high German became the basis of the current standard German taught in schools and spoken by most of the Germans today. The naming had nothing to do with high society or anything like that.
high german is what the guys from Berlin speak you watch all the time. the ones who interview germans.its not really fancy,its bland and boring!
@cold_fire
Жыл бұрын
That's wrong. In Berlin is spoken with accent: Berliner Schnauze ... with "icke" and so on. High German is spoken only in schools. And maybe near Hannover.
@winterlinde5395
Жыл бұрын
Yes. The Easy German people aim to speak high German. Because that’s what their channel is about. To teach German. Berliners don’t speak high German but their dialect which people from other regions find rude. High German for Germany is what English is for the world. People in the Hannover region in Lower Saxony have it as their first language 😊
@hannofranz7973
Жыл бұрын
Berlin isn't the main reference for High German.
i am a proud bavarian and always thought "labskaus sounds so strange, it has to be good" and indeed it is great! you have to be a little brave to even try it, but it's definitely worth it!
I visited Annapolis once. It was cloudy and windy and I felt right at home.
I'm an old guy Raised in Bavaria till 1972 when I was 12 The "Hoch Deutsch" (High German) spoken in the North ...and Platt Deutsch (same) is fast and full of compound nouns which Southern Germans(Bavarians or Baden) laugh at Like a Boston talker in Mississippi I took a cab ride from Denmark to Germany in a German taxi. Told the Cabbie (in German) "I forgot how to speak German, but I still remember how to talk Bavarian" He laughed his ass off and almost wrecked Left him a good tip in Flensburg and got my rental to Munich
Yes, really the „Labskaus“ doesn‘t look very good, but it tastes very, very good ! I love it!
4:30 You don't normally drag the beach baskets around. You typically rent one for a couple of days, so you have a cosy place to spend your beach time in. They have a footrest, drawers to put your beach utensils in, and they can be locked over night.
"Moin" is the short form of "Moien dach", which means "good day". So it's not needed to say "Moin" twice, like you would not say 'good day good day' (that's kind of 'talking too much' here) 😁 Every native recognizes immediately that you're not from the region. ;))) Also, we "sing" the 'Moin'. Start with a higher "Mo..." and add an "...in" 5 semitones deeper. Trust me - Its a door-opener!
Moin, oh yes the weather in northern Germany. If you are riding a bike the wind is always against you. And we called rain often "moisture from above", is not as frustrating.