American takes a sneak peak inside a Typical Small German Village

Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to a German village!
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Пікірлер: 765

  • @gudrunasche9124
    @gudrunasche91244 ай бұрын

    It is not a typical german village, it is a bavarian village.

  • @userhessenone1469

    @userhessenone1469

    4 ай бұрын

    yes, a big one

  • @olgahein4384

    @olgahein4384

    4 ай бұрын

    @@userhessenone1469 In the area of southern Baden-Württemberg aka the Black Forest it looks very much the same though.

  • @philippprime6844

    @philippprime6844

    4 ай бұрын

    @@olgahein4384 Badenwurtembergians, Bavarians ... it's very much the same. The only difference is that some are stingy and others are constantly drunk.

  • @user-oc3nd2jh7g

    @user-oc3nd2jh7g

    4 ай бұрын

    Liar, take your comments elsewhere @@philippprime6844

  • @Nitramrec

    @Nitramrec

    4 ай бұрын

    @@olgahein4384 Yes. But not in the more northern states. And there is a lot of northern area ...

  • @notyourbusiness1626
    @notyourbusiness16264 ай бұрын

    Those houses aren't made out of wood, it's just the paneling of the facade for aesthetic reasons. Also those really big houses are usually multiple-family houses. So basically separated into apartments, but not exactly like an apartment complexe.

  • @smalltime0

    @smalltime0

    4 ай бұрын

    Plattenbau, with laminate flooring on the outside wall.

  • @Nemockzans

    @Nemockzans

    4 ай бұрын

    From the look of it the 'big house' would be for about 4 families. There are a lot of houses build out of wood in Germany but they are up to a standard where you would have a hard time getting a hole in any wall with your bare hands now would a hurricane be a real danger beyond damages on the roof and windows

  • @bollomator

    @bollomator

    4 ай бұрын

    Nonsense. The framing or skeleton is oak! The gaps a filled with depends on the age , either bricks or clay mixed with hay. They can be hundreds of year old

  • @hardlerp2340

    @hardlerp2340

    4 ай бұрын

    @@bollomator they are talking about that 10 years old kindergarten,

  • @HappyBeezerStudios

    @HappyBeezerStudios

    4 ай бұрын

    @@bollomatorfor old houses, yes. But not every house is old. There are many build in the last 70-ish years to replace the ruins.

  • @LaurenMarie32300
    @LaurenMarie323004 ай бұрын

    Never thought my vlogs for home would make it into a reaction video! I’ve learned a lot since making that video and know much of what I said was inaccurate…but take it as primary evidence of what little info I had absorbed from my host parents. I’m actually living in Germany now - but this time up North 😊

  • @thurindot7384

    @thurindot7384

    4 ай бұрын

    Welcome to the North. Where we actually speak german. :)

  • @NeverMind439

    @NeverMind439

    4 ай бұрын

    @@thurindot7384 So wrong on so many levels 🤪😝😂

  • @Pseudomonasa

    @Pseudomonasa

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@NeverMind439 if it's around Hannover (aNd ThAt iS nORtH GeRMaNy!) it is actually the standard dialect "high German"

  • @muncangel5993

    @muncangel5993

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Pseudomonasa It´s not NORTH, it´s in the middle ;-), Hamburg und Bremen are NORTH

  • @muncangel5993

    @muncangel5993

    3 ай бұрын

    @@thurindot7384 BS...hahahaha ;-)

  • @Ultraporing
    @Ultraporing4 ай бұрын

    The Houses are not made of wood. Those are just normal brick / concrete walls covered in wood paneling for aesthetics.

  • @tosa2522

    @tosa2522

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes, and the insulation is located between the brickwork and the timber cladding.

  • @UVCMD

    @UVCMD

    4 ай бұрын

    And even if they were made of wood... if you are not a karate pro, you are still unlikely to punch a hole into the wall.

  • @mariadamedecoeur

    @mariadamedecoeur

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@UVCMD3ew😂😂😂

  • @thetaleteller4692

    @thetaleteller4692

    4 ай бұрын

    Also mentioning those houses are build to last at least 60 years, if maintained well easily 100 years.

  • @75Tades

    @75Tades

    4 ай бұрын

    Mr. Miyagi would make it 😄@@UVCMD

  • @Vaati1992
    @Vaati19924 ай бұрын

    Germans love balconies. Even many affordable appartments for rent have them. In fact balconies are so common here that a common phrase to describe taking time off and staying at home is "Urlaub auf Balkonien" (literally vacation on Balconia, trying to turn the word balcony into something that sounds more like a country name)

  • @jolandafrijlink6103

    @jolandafrijlink6103

    4 ай бұрын

    That is what we say in the netherlands too 😁

  • @smalltime0

    @smalltime0

    4 ай бұрын

    The apartment I rented in an ex-DDR Wohnblock in Leipzig had a decent sized balcony, large enough that I could sit comfortably, read a book and grill using one of those one time use grills you get in Rewe/Kaufland or whatever. The balcony was roomier than the Kitchen tbh (although that obviously had the washing machine in it).

  • @johansilwouden3403

    @johansilwouden3403

    4 ай бұрын

    In the Netherlands we also say that we spend our vacation in "Rundumhausen", literally "around your house" a very posh and elegant way of saying that you took a vacation, or a staycation, because you did not have money or time to travel abroad. Like when you had to do a lot of home improvement.

  • @Sekire1

    @Sekire1

    4 ай бұрын

    @@johansilwouden3403 love the word staycation :D

  • @bierschiss3562

    @bierschiss3562

    4 ай бұрын

    Some people even go to "Fuerteveranda" or "Terrassos" :D

  • @NuEM78
    @NuEM784 ай бұрын

    I wouldn‘t say this is a typical German village. Not because there is something wrong with the village but because there is no typical German village. (Building) culture in Germany is very regional, so this village may be very typical for its region but for me it might as well be in a different country. You can (with some experience) reliably tell in which part of Germany you are just by looking at the buildings.

  • @bastik.3011

    @bastik.3011

    4 ай бұрын

    Yeah as a Bavarian this villaged looked very normal but when i visited my friends in NRW it looks different and if i visit my other family in Niedersachsen it looks completely unique again

  • @smalltime0

    @smalltime0

    4 ай бұрын

    If it looks like the building was made by concrete being poured into a mould, you're in an Ex-DDR state. Then you just need to learn regional differences. The biggest difference is practical, the higher states typically have houses with pitched roofs, because of the snowfall.

  • @caccioman

    @caccioman

    4 ай бұрын

    True ❤

  • @onnasenshi7739

    @onnasenshi7739

    4 ай бұрын

    I can't hear it anymore "typically German" Bavaria is just as typically German as Schleswig Holstein or Lower Saxony

  • @thorstenh.5588
    @thorstenh.55884 ай бұрын

    Dont forget that this village is in southern germany. The buildings and the whole villages in western-, central-, east- and northern germany are (very) different.

  • @user-oc3nd2jh7g

    @user-oc3nd2jh7g

    4 ай бұрын

    Villages in other areas are very beautiful as well. I lived in several places. Just don't wanna go in most of the Cities, they were bombed to pieces in WW2 and no time for aesthetics and charm when it was time to rebuild. And also these days whatever is being built has lost it's charm and uniqueness most of the time.

  • @thies7831

    @thies7831

    4 ай бұрын

    @@user-oc3nd2jh7g They might look "beautiful", however, living there can be a curse to some house owners. Heritage protection often doesn't allow to fix ancient building problems such as sloping floors as long as they are safe with the beams having been anchored to the exterior structures. As a result, some rooms could be sloping off by 450 mm or 1 1/2 feet. Fitting built in furniture level for the doors and draws working correctly is having the entire room looking extremely odd.

  • @hanskeller2636
    @hanskeller26364 ай бұрын

    There was one mistake in the video. Germans do not burn wood due to the reason that the central heating is not sufficient. They burn wood because they like the smell and the special heat. But the main reason is that wood is cheaper in comparison to oil and gas. That's why

  • @Ironman-mg3ud

    @Ironman-mg3ud

    2 ай бұрын

    right, they have a fire burner often in addition to a gas or oil central heating but wood is not really cheaper

  • @DaGuys470
    @DaGuys4704 ай бұрын

    _Slow regional train drives by_ Ryan: "Woah, that thing is flying"

  • @stefanwolosin550

    @stefanwolosin550

    3 ай бұрын

    What will Ryan say if he sees an ICE passing by

  • @Crushonius

    @Crushonius

    3 ай бұрын

    @@stefanwolosin550 or when he sees people who are racing an ICE on the autobahn with their car

  • @user-zn6ym9gw3j

    @user-zn6ym9gw3j

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@Crushonius The ICE will certainly win. If you take The S-Bahn from Potsdam to Berlin, The tracks are parallel to the Avus. The S-Bahn is only slightly slower and the regional train is fester than The cars.

  • @denizirisozbey1760
    @denizirisozbey17604 ай бұрын

    These houses are made for ex. 4 families. The ones on the second floor have balconies. Downstairs they have a garden.

  • @K__a__M__I

    @K__a__M__I

    4 ай бұрын

    and under the roof they have a Hitzeschlag.

  • @Carol_65

    @Carol_65

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@K__a__M__I😂

  • @docinho3206

    @docinho3206

    4 ай бұрын

    Kan confirm growing up right below a badly insulated roof @@K__a__M__I

  • @Waver1997
    @Waver19974 ай бұрын

    Hey! That's my Village! It's "Wildpoldsried" (can be also seen at 9:55), also known in that area as "Das Energiedorf" (the energy-village). We produce much more electric energy with renewable ways than we consume. It has roughly 2.6k people living there. If you wanna know more about that village, feel free to ask :) (Also, cool to see my village reacted to by people far far away :D)

  • @blumenmus

    @blumenmus

    3 ай бұрын

    Ich dachte mir beim Thumbnail schon, dass ich die Straße kenne und zack, Wildpolsried 😂 Ich hab echt mit allem gerechnet, aber nicht mit einem allgäuer Nachbardorf

  • @arnikakiani8014
    @arnikakiani80144 ай бұрын

    This is a rural, southern village. Older houses are quite big because they probably included space for storing hay/straw/etc. and also a portion that housed some cows or other lifestock. And that may still be the case. The original living quarters were probably not all that huge. As to the "wooden" public buildings - that´s probably wood cladding over stone walls.

  • @schrodingerskatze4308

    @schrodingerskatze4308

    4 ай бұрын

    They are also bigger because more people lived in them. People had more children, and I also think that it was more common that your grandparents or maybe an aunt or uncle would live with you there. At least that's what my parents and grandparents told me.

  • @arnikakiani8014

    @arnikakiani8014

    4 ай бұрын

    @@schrodingerskatze4308 Very true, I live in a house built for several generations. In an agricultural community, there would also be quarters for the hired helpers (Knechte-/Mägdezimmer). On the other hand, a lot more people tended to sleep in one room or even one bed than we would find okay nowadays.

  • @NadineFolger

    @NadineFolger

    4 ай бұрын

    Most of those houses have been built hundreds of years ago when they have been part of a farm and people and life stock stayed in the same building - especially during the cold winters. They have been renovated, split up into apartments... This is a village from the south of Germany. It looks quite different where I live.

  • @manub.3847

    @manub.3847

    4 ай бұрын

    @@schrodingerskatze4308 Depending on the region and rural tradition, several generations live/have lived in such houses. In my more distant family circle, I know of at least 5 of these situations in which the houses were later converted so that the family lives in one house, but in separate areas (= their own apartment). Typically grandparents, children, grandchildren and sometimes great-grandparents lived under the same roof. Often, when the great-grandparents/grandparent generation died, the houses were rebuilt in the 1970s/1980s. Sometimes because no other house could be built on their own land, sometimes because a renovation was cheaper than a new house.

  • @BlauImHerzen
    @BlauImHerzen4 ай бұрын

    *The kindergarten is solidly built of stone, the insulation of the building was covered with wood to give the building a nice, warm look.*

  • @THomasHH
    @THomasHH4 ай бұрын

    Don’t mistake the German term Haus for the English/American term for House. It’s more a building if more than one person/family lives in it. We do have the term Gebäude for building, but we often use Haus for it as well.

  • @psylia1
    @psylia14 ай бұрын

    This is actually a Village in southern germany. Northern Germany is totally different looking. The vibe is so, so different from North to South.

  • @jeannedarc511
    @jeannedarc5114 ай бұрын

    The super Big houses with balconies are usually old houses from when a Family had 7 kids and they are often Transformed into apartments. So the people living on the first floor have a balcony instead of a patio 😄

  • @k.elh.8097

    @k.elh.8097

    4 ай бұрын

    Not only did families often have more children in the past, but up to 4 or 5 generations often lived together in one house

  • @deliatedeschi
    @deliatedeschi4 ай бұрын

    On houses/ windows- This house is pretty new. We started building "low- energy houses" which also means that windows showing north are smaller, whereas those pointing south are significantly bigger to catch sunlight better. Also the size of a house rarely tells you how many people are living in. It could be one family or two apartments in each floor for example. You can find that out by the postal boxes and doorbell buttons in front of the house.

  • @Kivas_Fajo
    @Kivas_Fajo4 ай бұрын

    Not only are our shingles heavy duty clay ones, they are also interlocked and wired/screwed down on the wooden beams. They go nowhere, unless the storm has 250+ kph winds.

  • @Herzschreiber
    @Herzschreiber4 ай бұрын

    We are not heating our houses with wood, but lots of houses have an open fireplace or a modern woodburner with a glass front or so. Just for the ambient. Not for heating the entire house. And some Germans own a little private forest, so their access to wood is relatively easy. And yes, one can purchase wood in small or huge amounts. In rural aereas with a lot of forests around there is often a sawmill where you can order it. Being charged for the weight of your garbage is not common, but there are towns and villages doing it that way. If it is the case, the garbage containers usually have a lock so nobody else than you can put something in it to ease the own container. The windows "up here" where she lives are windows of an attic. There are very different styles of windows sitting in/on a roof, this is one of them.

  • @SatieSatie

    @SatieSatie

    4 ай бұрын

    Off topic but: I _hate_ the idea of "private forests". Just hate it. Forests should belong to everyone. Not only to those who can pay. My sister's in-laws also own a piece of a forest and it makes me kind of angry.

  • @Yo_Hahn

    @Yo_Hahn

    4 ай бұрын

    @@SatieSatie We dont have normal "forests" anymore. Nearly every forest is a wood plantation just for profit. You have the right to enter every forest if you want, so what do you want more?

  • @bastik.3011

    @bastik.3011

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@SatieSatiei mean they are owning one just means you can cut wood. I dont think its even possible to keep people from going into your forest

  • @hornstein12

    @hornstein12

    4 ай бұрын

    @@SatieSatie then you have to hate owning land aswell, otherwise that doesnt make any sense.

  • @SatieSatie

    @SatieSatie

    4 ай бұрын

    @@hornstein12 I 100% knew that someone would come up with this question lol. Owning a place where you live isn't questionable as there's an existential need behind it; but owning land, forests, beaches is.

  • @Warentester
    @Warentester4 ай бұрын

    Wood fire is purely for atmosphere reasons or maybe as an add-on heating on particularly cold days. You wouldn't be allowed to heat your house purely with wood due to the particle emissions (an exception here are specialised wood pellet heaters burning compressed woodwaste from sawmills).

  • @kbittorf335

    @kbittorf335

    4 ай бұрын

    The newer wood burning appliances in the US have at least 2 stages of combustion. The primary combustion is of course the wood burning then as the temperature rises the upper level of the firebox has air tubes that ignite the gases coming from the lower fire reducing emissions. Standing outdoors and looking at the chimney you will not see any visible smoke. A 3rd stage is adding a catalytic combuster between the 2nd stage and chimney outlet. Wood pellet heaters are common as well and one can also purchase compressed wood waste blocks to use as well. Wood energy is of course much more prevalent in the rural areas here as well.

  • @cylab

    @cylab

    4 ай бұрын

    Actually you can burn wood for heating. In rural areas its quite common to have central heating driven by burning wood logs in combination with some other burner using gas or oil regulation is getting more strict, though and I dont know the situation for new installations

  • @Taorakis
    @Taorakis4 ай бұрын

    Another thing to keep in mind when you say "these houses are huge" is that usually there is more than one family living in one of those houses. 2 Story Houses can have 4 Families in there, or occupants in general. Depending on how it's designed. This also works because the wwalls are usually way more noise dampening than in American Houses, so you don't hear your neighbors, unless they are quite loud.

  • @satsumamoon

    @satsumamoon

    4 ай бұрын

    We.have.neighbours on two sides and below. We hear sneezing, pissing, washing machines and of course anythin g with more noise. From two we hear footsteps.

  • @Taorakis

    @Taorakis

    3 ай бұрын

    @@satsumamoon yepp, that can happen too of course.

  • @Guenner8685
    @Guenner86854 ай бұрын

    You don't get wood delivered, you make it yourself😉 Maybe some people get it delivered. But I grew up in such a small town and what we did is, you buy already chopped trees from the forest. Then you drive to the forest, you saw the tree in small parts, take it home and the you chopp it into the small pieces you see stacked there.

  • @uztre6789

    @uztre6789

    4 ай бұрын

    That's great that you did that and of course people do that but yes, there are companies that sell pre-chopped wood and yes most people who use that get them delivered

  • @caccioman

    @caccioman

    4 ай бұрын

    In the countryside, you usually do it yourself or get it (delivered) from a neighbor who has access to excess fire wood (farmer or else)

  • @thies7831

    @thies7831

    4 ай бұрын

    Can't do THAT anymore. Even a small branch on the ground is a biotope for some forest dweller. In Victoria, Australia, an ingenious parent saved a campfire round at a Cub scout gathering by building a reusable log stack with flickering LEDs and accompanying sound effects. The kids had to wear thick jackets on that winter night, tuning their brain to feeling "extremely hot" in that situation. Following such a success, tent campers in Victoria are now requested to take a porta potty along as the government has figured out, that such a move will save money on building toilets and gain income on fines, created by caught offenders.

  • @HenryLoenwind
    @HenryLoenwind4 ай бұрын

    About the dish: Germany lies quite far to the north from an American point of view---most of it matches up with Canada. That means that dishes aimed at geostationary satellites (i.e. those over the equator) are angled relatively flatly to the south. As such, putting them onto a south-facing wall works well and is less effort than putting them onto a roof.

  • @PsychedeliKompot

    @PsychedeliKompot

    4 ай бұрын

    They're also far easier to access and maintain this way.

  • @stef987
    @stef9874 ай бұрын

    7:59 no, it's just big containers to throw bottles and other glass containers in. You have to sort the glass by colour, that's why it's multiple containers. Machines that give you money back probably won't be outside and in most cases will be inside a grocery store.

  • @thies7831

    @thies7831

    4 ай бұрын

    Those machines receiving bottles for recycling are run by electricity generated by environmentally sources, while an invisible aged pensioner is sitting in the backroom, giving that concoction a stern boot when playing up, instead of handling those goods in direct human contact over a counter. Such a method is strictly avoided these days as in the past simple chatter over that process lead to political discussions, ending at times into protest marches to government offices over controversial topics.

  • @olli1068
    @olli10684 ай бұрын

    "why is there a stop sign and why is it in English" is the most American question I've heard in a while. Assuming that something is English just because this word also exists in English is at least stupid. The stop sign is actually the only traffic sign that is almost identical in most countries - mainly because it's most dangerous if drivers don't know it. The "stop" with one "p" is not a German word (in German it would be "stopp"), but it is in serveral other European languages, not only English!

  • @andican1967

    @andican1967

    4 ай бұрын

    there is a driving school (Fahrschule) in that building

  • @thies7831

    @thies7831

    4 ай бұрын

    STOP was written with one "p" in the past, however, as 75% of the next generation failed getting educated, the "older" 25% had to adapt to this new "Pigeon-German". Germany no longer is the country of "Dichter und Denker" (Poets and Ponderers), but "nicht ganz dichten Denker" (not very tight Thinkers). However, despite the international design, in Victoria, Australia, a Chinese tourist ignored that sign, resulting in a crash with a fatality. The defence lawyer pleaded on negligence by the authorities as no Chinese translation was added underneath the word STOP, knowing well, that a lot of Chinese tourists are using that road ...

  • @walterjoshuapannbacker1571
    @walterjoshuapannbacker15714 ай бұрын

    This is quite a large "village", almost a small town, and it's Bavarian - villages are very different in other regions. When I say "village", I usually mean small settlements of single-family rural houses and farms.

  • @Attirbful
    @Attirbful4 ай бұрын

    it sounds to me as though she is an AuPair in Germany. I was an AuPair in the U.S. loooong before KZread even existed. Had it existed then, I would have made videos of my experiences and uploaded them so family and friends can share in it, too. I was left to write letters, send photographs, and, once in a while record a tape…

  • @hinekde
    @hinekde4 ай бұрын

    The Kindergarten and elementary school are not made of wood. In recent years there has only been a trend to install wooden slats in front of the (stone/concrete) wall as a facade of some buildings.

  • @reinhard8053

    @reinhard8053

    4 ай бұрын

    In my city there are/were money grants for buildings if you have a certain amount of wood used. So we have some wooden slats at the sides of the house where my appartement was.

  • @thies7831

    @thies7831

    4 ай бұрын

    For preventing the building to burn down after having used wood, the rest of the structure is made up of asbestos concrete and lead paint, purchased extremely cheap in some underdeveloped countries, often installed by workers, originating from such locations. The savings will buffer the cost of using real wood on the outside.

  • @kipchickensout
    @kipchickensout4 ай бұрын

    typical maybe, average I wouldn't say, looks quite southern

  • @melaniewolf5855

    @melaniewolf5855

    4 ай бұрын

    Should be Bavaria, looks like Oberbayern or Niederbayern...

  • @simonl.6338

    @simonl.6338

    4 ай бұрын

    I know he has seen other cities and towns aswell but I think he should watch a video like this where someone is walking through a more northern town like Flensburg or even Göttingen or something. It's entirely different and I think he'd enjoy it

  • @kipchickensout

    @kipchickensout

    4 ай бұрын

    @@simonl.6338 Yup

  • @lollipop2900
    @lollipop29004 ай бұрын

    The wood panelling is not just for aesthetics: wood is a fantastic insulator, so many upper floors have extra wooden panels attached to the brick/concrete walls. Southern Bavaria is a mountainous region; winters are (or used to be) quite severe. About 5 years ago we had a huge long lasting freeze that lasted about two weeks. Temperatures during the day were at -25, nights were at -30. All the water pipes on our upper floors froze. Our house was originally meant to have wood paneling on the upper floors 😮

  • @swealer
    @swealer4 ай бұрын

    To the playground. I dont know how thats handled in the US but because the playground is on a public space or for public use, it does need to meet some standards and gets checked and certifyed by officials from a.e. TüV or similar instituts😊 Edit: and the houses arent made out of concrete... Thats plain and simple brick and mortar houses

  • @thies7831

    @thies7831

    4 ай бұрын

    That's above ground. However, the Nuclear War bunkers underneath are made of thick concrete walls. The same did apply to the subway stations some villages installed in the 1970s on advice that planning for the future it is smart having all necessary infrastructure built then before expanding becoming a large city. No roads will have to be ripped up again or houses removed. German Town planning at its best.

  • @tomfrank9447
    @tomfrank94474 ай бұрын

    I don't know if the German towns are that different from the Austrian (we are Neighbours)ones, but the architectural styles are similar so I assume that people live in similar conditions in Austria. The chapel in the church courtyard was usually attached to a cemetery and was actually not a chapel but the funeral hall. These large houses are usually created because several families often lived in them, but they were all related to each other. They mostly came from farmhouses. The current farmer used most of the house, his parents had their own part with their own entrance and their parents also lived in their own part. Sometimes they also run a small guesthouse with a few rooms, depending on how attractive the area is for tourists. This wooden facade is mostly just an illusion. Behind it there is usually a brick building but sometimes there are actually concrete walls. The wood that you see in front of the houses was cut and stacked by the owners themselves with elbow grease; the wood is more likely to be delivered in urban areas. Wood is cheap, especially if you have a small forest. Gas is quite expensive in Europe because it has to be imported. In Europe, everything is recycled. Glass and paper are valuable raw materials from which glass and paper are made again. Of course, in Europe you also pay to have your trash picked up. However, there are collection points where you can take around one vehicle load per day and not have to pay. The roof tiles you see are actually quite heavy. This is the reason why our roofs tend to stay where they belong during storms.

  • @PropperNaughtyGeezer
    @PropperNaughtyGeezer4 ай бұрын

    3:18 " this is very unusual." This is typical residential area. 5:03 These are former farms or estates, modernized and converted into residential buildings. 13:15 This is a new house. They are now installing this small windows because of the energy efficiency. This will be the north side. On the south side then again use larger windows and allow sunlight to warm up the interior.

  • @nordwestbeiwest1899
    @nordwestbeiwest18994 ай бұрын

    This needs to be set straight: Germans don't heat with logs because that's a luxury and very expensive. They heat with wood pellets, pressed wood residues in special heating systems with tanks full of these wood pellets.

  • @NadineFolger

    @NadineFolger

    4 ай бұрын

    I guess gas heating is more common than wooden pellets.

  • @max.power89

    @max.power89

    4 ай бұрын

    Logs are more likely to be used for heating in rural areas by people who also have forests.

  • @olgahein4384

    @olgahein4384

    4 ай бұрын

    @@max.power89 Correct about the rural areas, not so much about 'having' forests. Most people i know (including my parents) who own a house and a fireplace just 'rent' a piece of forest land where they can gather wood. My parents live in the Black Forest, and evergreens are shallow rooted and are thrown over all the time anyway. They rarely have to do anything else than collect it from the ground. They have some obligations though, like cleaning the ground from debris too, keeping the young trees safe etc. There's also a limit to how much wood they can take, but they never maxed it out. They rent from the village that owns those woods. According to my dad it was always cheaper that way, compared to paying heating bills even from 20 years ago. The fireplace would warm the whole house very quickly and it stayed warm for half a day after the fire was out (hurray to modern bricks). And you don't even need as much wood, if it's dried outside for a few years.

  • @caccioman

    @caccioman

    4 ай бұрын

    I have a wood stove in my kitchen (and overall central - oil - heating in the house, which was built in the 70ies). The wood stove works on wood (logs, twigs) or coal (pellets, bricks). 20 years ago my parents would still regularly use the wood stove for cooking and basic heating of the kitchen (so the central heating wasn’t needed in the kitchen/had less to heat up). Would be still nifty to do that, but sadly I am too lazy to use it… 😅

  • @caccioman

    @caccioman

    4 ай бұрын

    Older people still might use their wooden stoves and (also) heat with wood (logs)

  • @mapau9750
    @mapau97504 ай бұрын

    The larger houses usually contain 2 or 3 separate apartments. That would explain the balconies: that those residents have access to air and sunbathing while those in the first floor have the front and backyard.

  • @michaausleipzig
    @michaausleipzig4 ай бұрын

    It's very bavarian actually. The architecture and design don't look the same in other parts of Germany. Also it seems like the people living there are ... quite well off. That's also of course not the case everywhere. Ah, she was nice enough to walk past the road sign with the village name on it while filming. Of course never heard of it before but yeah ... deeeeep in southern Bavaria... Ooh, nice train towards the end. I'm a train driver myself, that was a DB class 612 diesel multiple unit. They were introduced about 25 years ago so they're quite outdated by now and are used for regional services on non-electrified routes. And it wasn't going very fast, Ryan. Not at all... 😅😉

  • @alexandrorocca7142
    @alexandrorocca71424 ай бұрын

    There's no such thing as bad weather, only the wrong clothing.

  • @DaxRaider
    @DaxRaider4 ай бұрын

    these houses are NOT out of wood ... there is something called a "facade" :) we make nice wood paneling on it for it to look nice also the flying train is a slow regional train that doesnt go very fast :) like half speed of a fast train or less

  • @patrickmuller7334
    @patrickmuller73344 ай бұрын

    About the wood, I'm pretty confident that's just wood paneling over stone walls, to make the buildings warmer and more inviting.

  • @monkeyboy275bobo8
    @monkeyboy275bobo84 ай бұрын

    How the firewood gets delivered depends on how you want it and who you know. Where i am from its usually privat people who get asked by the forest ranger to cut down the bad trees and keep the wood in exchange. So you would just ask those people if they want to sell. My father usually cuts the trees into 1m logs first to bring them back home, then you split them and leave them to dry (which you see in the video). You then have to cut it into a lenth that actually fits into your oven (usually 25cm/33cm). So really you can buy it at any step of that process. It just depends if you want to work more or pay more. Most people dont have a tractor or woodsplitter but a circular saw is rather common so the split 1m logs you see in the video are quiet populare to buy.

  • @alexanderbraun1087
    @alexanderbraun10874 ай бұрын

    Garbage cans are available in different sizes. Private households can decide which bin they need and then have to pay the costs for the waste in addition to a basic fee. Prices for residual waste range from €50 (35 liters) to €320 (240 liters). At least thats the costs for my location.

  • @anitapenkert389

    @anitapenkert389

    3 ай бұрын

    In my region you are not free to decide. The bin size is defined by the household size (number or registered persons). You cannot choose a smaller one (we tried). And if you don't separate the garbage you can get fined.

  • @Maisiewuppp
    @Maisiewuppp4 ай бұрын

    Re. Your comment on window placement: American houses are designed to ‘sit up and beg’ on the street (impress others, having oversized double height porticos, multiple pointless gables spoiling the roof line for example). German houses are made for function and efficiency.

  • @reinhard8053

    @reinhard8053

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes. My house has only the back to the street with a few small windows. But that is also a question of direction. You put the nice part with the windows to the south.

  • @thies7831

    @thies7831

    4 ай бұрын

    In Braunschweig, Lower Saxony (in the North of Germany), older houses are having the entrance in the back of the building, sporting no front doors to the street. No idea about the origin of that feature.

  • @darmokVtS
    @darmokVtS4 ай бұрын

    Well "typical village" is as in many cases not a thing if we talk the entire Germany due to the usual regional diversity in culture. It's a typical small town in a rather touristy rural bavarian region.

  • @philippprime6844

    @philippprime6844

    4 ай бұрын

    It's not even a town

  • @MichaEl-rh1kv
    @MichaEl-rh1kv4 ай бұрын

    At the very first picture you see typical southern German architecture (e.g. the church and the wide gable front of the houses), the roof shape is typical Alpine, so presumably Bavaria. 2:24 Many modern playgrounds are actually constructed only after embedding the local children in the design process. 2:37 Typical village church with the cemetery around it - the chapel is the funeral parlor. 2:58 This "alpine" style with the massively wooden-framed balconies is typical for newer residential areas in Bavaria, consisting mainly of detached and semi-detached houses. 3:45 Typical teacher's cars. 😄 5:11 The one with the greenish shutters looks like an old farmhouse (which would not have concrete walls, rather brick and wood under the white plaster). The other one on the left is either built following the pattern of the neighborhood regarding dimensions or maybe got a more modern looking exterior during a complete makeover. 6:14 The yellow one could be an old school house built at the end of the 19th century. 6:48 In those rural Bavarian regions they have many forests and in the villages many houses are still heated by wood firing ovens (sometimes central ovens following the "Grundofen" thermal storage principle), and some may have a natural gas connection or oil heating, but still maintain additionally a open fireplace or a tile oven in the living room. 8:44 There are different billing methods for waste. In most municipalities every household will have 3 to 4 different cans for waste: one for paper, one for plastic and mixed packaging materials, one for residual waste and sometimes an optional one for compostable waste. (Flats within the same house can share a bigger garbage can.) You pay nothing for paper and the plastic packaging, but for residual waste, and in many places the garbage truck will weigh the waste before emptying the can, which is identified by an inbuilt RFID tag. Since you don't pay for the plastic packaging, some incentive for recycling is given, but not for avoiding packaging waste. 13:09 Looks like the street side is facing North, so it has only a few small windows. The big windows will be on the other side, overlooking the landscape.

  • @thies7831

    @thies7831

    4 ай бұрын

    Even some country cemeteries are having limited tenure on them. After 25 years either relatives or the council (for prominent local people) are buying that plot again or the remains are getting removed, crushed down and buried in some mass grave in a corner for selling that vacant spot to future village residents. Family History is preserved in Registry Books, kept by the Church for those wanting to trace the past.

  • @sekborg5757
    @sekborg57574 ай бұрын

    Heating is a very interesting topic nowadays in Germany. Most houses heat with natural gas, some older houses still use oil for heating, in some rare cases u can even find houses that have a heating system that only use hard coal. Most modern houses heat via geothermal energy or an air source heat pump in combination with solar energy. Some houses use a fireplace too, but mostly for aesthetic reasons. It's in the same price range as other heating methods and it looks nice and comfy. 99.9% of peopele with a fireplace do not heat their house primarely with it.

  • @TheShowdown16
    @TheShowdown164 ай бұрын

    While a number of german homes rely on wood as a primary source of heat many more than that have an additional fireplace because it's nice.

  • @SilkeJuppenlatz
    @SilkeJuppenlatz4 ай бұрын

    Bear in mind that it isn't normally 1 family living in those houses. It's usually several families in those houses, which will be apartments inside.

  • @conbertbenneck49
    @conbertbenneck494 ай бұрын

    German houses aren't built like American "stick houses". They have cinder block outside walls; poured concrete floors; and roofs are covered with red terracotta tiles. The larger houses you looked at probably had four apartments. Builders might build apartment blocks, but private houses are designed by an architect, who design your house to your specifications. I have never seen American-style builder's special row houses in Germany. Older German houses probably have a "Kachelofen", that is wood fired, for heat. The wood in the woodpile comes from downed trees in the local woods, that are removed; cut to length and used for heating. A farm house will only have small living spaces, since it houses the stables and the hay loft all under one roof.

  • @mpmyprojects6687
    @mpmyprojects66874 ай бұрын

    07:10 In most houses or buildings, the heating system is most likely perfectly sufficient and runs on natural gas or oil. The reason for heating with wood can vary. But gas is quite expensive, and if you can get wood cheaply (from a friend or someone who owns a piece of forest etc.), wood heating is the better choice and in most cases just an additional heating source. However, if you have to rely on buying wood on the market, the price goes up to a point where gas is cheaper. Another reason is that people like the coziness of a wood-burning fireplace and therefore install a fireplace.

  • @johndaly9472
    @johndaly94724 ай бұрын

    The villages usually have a couple of farmers that also have some forest. You usually get your wood from them. You can also buy it in other places like the baumarkt (hardware store) or even some gas stations. But the prices are insane for large amounts if you don’t get it from somebody that has a forest. The people from the strassenmeisterei (road maintenance) and some other jobs get to take down trees or parts of them and have access to wood that way. They might share with friends or family. A lot of this is also part of the informal economy in a lot of places.

  • @caccioman

    @caccioman

    4 ай бұрын

    Vetternwirtschaft 😂

  • @johndaly9472

    @johndaly9472

    4 ай бұрын

    und schwarzarbeit, ist halt standard am land@@caccioman

  • @879cc
    @879cc4 ай бұрын

    Looks like a south german village, in the north we often have clinker facades, also my house 😊 Wood for heating is in most cases only in addition, mainly we heat with natural gas or the modern houses offen with electric powered heat pumps and often they use photovoltaik current.

  • @OrkarIsberEstar
    @OrkarIsberEstar4 ай бұрын

    As austrian (Tyrolean) i was very surprised to see that seattle and surrounding villages / nature looks insanely close to where i live (Reutte) in Tyrol/Austria. Our lake is smaller our river too, our cioties as well ofc, we have more mountains but overall it looks eerily similiar, from vegitation to panorama etc.

  • @drsnova7313

    @drsnova7313

    4 ай бұрын

    That's really not unusual. Architectural preferences (or requirements) don't stop at national borders. Here in the west of Germany, going to either France or Belgium shows very similar styles along both sides of the border.

  • @SatieSatie

    @SatieSatie

    4 ай бұрын

    Oberallgäu (where this village is located in) borders on Tyrol. :)

  • @paulbeneder9337

    @paulbeneder9337

    4 ай бұрын

    The village in the video is about 55km / a 40 minute car ride from Reutte, so it’s not too far. Architecture will change when the landscape allows bigger agricultural structures, you will find some Vierkanthöfe when you move towards the flatter topography in upper Austria.

  • @OrkarIsberEstar

    @OrkarIsberEstar

    4 ай бұрын

    @@SatieSatie haha indeed, i used to go to the fencing club in Füssen, its just across the Fernpass

  • @alexschmidt5302

    @alexschmidt5302

    4 ай бұрын

    Eben. Das ist auch nicht typisch deutsch sondern typisch bayerisch. Nord-, West- und Ostdeutschland scheint für Amerikaner nicht zu existieren.

  • @helenewei4232
    @helenewei42324 ай бұрын

    The train is a slow , short regional train, connecting only 2-3 towns. They are way slower than the ice or the trains that go bigger distances. And they even slow down when they cross villages

  • @peterhoz
    @peterhoz4 ай бұрын

    When the tractor passed her, you'll see a yellow sign. That is the town name, also it marks the town boundary. And because all towns are a 50kph speed limit (approx 30mph) by default, it is the signal for that speed limit to start. Like many European countries, the only time you see a speed limit sign is where the default is not in use. Eg a 30kph near a school, or a 60kph in a town, or an 80kph in the countryside rather than the default 100. They generally have signage at the international border advising the defaults for the nation. Generally towns (50), highways (90 or 100), and freeways (130). Except in Germany where the freeway default is no limit, which was a surprise when I left the airport car park in Frankfurt and was on the freeway (Autobahn) within 2 minutes. It was only when I noticed that the GPS speed sign disappeared, then a BWM raced past, that I realised oh wow Autobahn!

  • @BlauImHerzen
    @BlauImHerzen4 ай бұрын

    1 roof tile weighs approx. 4 kg, 16 tiles per square meter x the roof area is the weight. For example, a 125 m2 roof weighs around 8,000 kg

  • @sjutton17
    @sjutton174 ай бұрын

    Hi Im from Germany and I moved almost three years ago into a different town, but I found a video from the village that I lived before. It's called: "Rothenkirchen, Fahrt durch den Ort"

  • @moreInkOre
    @moreInkOre4 ай бұрын

    Loved seeing you being so excited about this video. xD Makes the video so much more enjoyable to watch. (Also LOL at the: "OMG, is that a wagon!?") I must say I am getting pretty excited to move to a pretty small town soon again, because that's what I am drawn to. And yes, most of those "big" houses are for more than one family. It's pretty common I'd say. It's a nice mix of multiple family dwelling houses and single family houses over at my small town - but we also have some of the bigger apartment buildings.

  • @thies7831

    @thies7831

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes, it is a wagon (or station wagon in some countries). Germans are DIY champions, not expecting everything served up to them like in the USA. Therefore, saving delivery fees, that type of car is the ideal one for collecting goods at one's expenses. In small villages people have to travel longer distances to a lower priced supermarket, resulting in shopping once a month, loading up the car well on that trip.

  • @Magistrella
    @Magistrella4 ай бұрын

    6:35 Well, yes we have wood delivery people xD BUT Here in Germany the maximum moisture content of burning wood is regulated to reduce emissions and particle content in the smoke. If your wood is above a certain % you'll be fined. It takes 2-3 years on the outside to reach the desired level of dehydration. i.e. you'll always have enough wood around for 2-3 years at least. Usually in different stages from big, while drying, to small pieces ready for stoves. Some buildings are equipped with whole log burners. These buildings usually are fully dependent on wood for warm water and heating. They usually can be found in big agricultural buildings. Our neighbor for example keeps part of their barn heated and their house. Including all the water necessary for their animals and 4 families living there.

  • @bumbumquietsch
    @bumbumquietsch4 ай бұрын

    Most houses have central heating by gas or oil, but an additional wood-fired oven.

  • @seorsamaclately4294
    @seorsamaclately42944 ай бұрын

    The pay for waste disposal can vary from county to county. In one you may pay per weight, in another it's a set rate.

  • @torstenkersten8566
    @torstenkersten85664 ай бұрын

    not charged per weight for trash. Ones limitation is the size of the bin that you pay for and which is picked up in a regular interval. Smaller bin cost less money. The public accessible containers take up glas, paper and batteries. Did you see the fire stations roof was completely covered with solar cells? Then, the membership in the most fire brigades is a voluntary service. Small villages do not have professional fire fighters and do their service on a voluntary base.

  • @rushinroulette4636
    @rushinroulette46364 ай бұрын

    Many house owners with such large wood storages have a forest partition where they can shop and split wood from. These storages are used to dry the wood until it can be used. Yes, we do have wood delivery services, but they usually cost more money depending on when you order. The best quality and most satisfying is the wood you get early on in the day, also known as the morning wood.

  • @ulie1960

    @ulie1960

    4 ай бұрын

    🙂 LOL 🙂 yes the morning wood is the best...... would love to know if Ryan gets this one...

  • @Gandhiweasel
    @Gandhiweasel4 ай бұрын

    Hello Ryan, this Wood IS selfmake..They have a own Little Forest and Cut the the trees hinself and stuff..And this have to be enough for a hole Winter season...The squaremeter IS called a "Ster" in German.;)

  • @GoelerLP
    @GoelerLP4 ай бұрын

    Wow, it's crazy seeing you react to a video about a town in my area. The familiar names on the road signs. I have moved out of Germany a few years ago, so it was refreshing seeing familiar architecture.

  • @enoiladoe
    @enoiladoe4 ай бұрын

    Based on front equipment the tractor was on snow plowing duty.

  • @carolinesch.
    @carolinesch.4 ай бұрын

    These houses are usually older houses that where a part of a farm, bigger land, have a Business and the family living in the levels above and usually multiple generations. We have some here where I live that have been converted into mulitple Family houses or bigger offices. Of example one has a store at the ground level and then above with that big balkone they made it into a lawoffice

  • @NavySeal2k
    @NavySeal2k4 ай бұрын

    The windows being spaced equally comes from the 16" the spars of the wood frame are spaced. That's why the windows are 32" or 48" also, so they all look the same. At our Brick houses you can place a window wherever you like and you can have any measurement you like. And yes, we love our roof windows! ;)

  • @DerSchredder-0900
    @DerSchredder-09004 ай бұрын

    There aren't many "wood-delivery-guys". Most people I know, that heat with wood stoves (actually my family too), get their wood theirselves. Sometimes you own a piece of forest or you can sort of rent a area where you are allowed to take the wood out (thats often done to protect the forest and the small plants in it). That is of course a lot of work, but it's also much cheaper than buy it from someone...

  • @killaknight12
    @killaknight124 ай бұрын

    Many of the bigger houses are built for 2-3 families or the upper floor is reserved for 2-3 children until they move out and then the flat could be rented. Also housing is kinda expensive now so most people living in modern big houses are either comparatively wealthy or they did a ton of work themselves with the help of friends who got the knowhow, but even then you need a decent income.

  • @subbbass
    @subbbass4 ай бұрын

    this is Bavaria, southern germany. It's not everywhere like this. In big houses normally live more than 1 family but of course in rural areas people have more space than in cities. Some of these houses may be new, some more than 100 or 200 years old.

  • @ThorDyrden
    @ThorDyrden4 ай бұрын

    recycling glas is very common. The containers are for gree, brown and white glass - and all bottles or glasses (e.g. from cooking-oils, honey, ... ), which are not directly refilled via the Pfand-System are collected there, broken and melted to produce new glas (that's why they are sorted by color), And our household-waste is not paid by weight, but more or less by volume. So your houshold orders a different sized carbage can, which is emptied twice a month - so this is your waste-volume limit for half a month. If you produce more waste you need a bigger, more expensive can. In deed - when you sort out plastic-packaging (yellow-can or sack), paper (usually a blue can) and all the glass... the remaining waste is the smalles can in a household usually.

  • @erraldstyler
    @erraldstyler4 ай бұрын

    many small villages have a lot of big houses, because building ground was cheap and like 40 years ago, people could actually afford to build big houses. You are basically taxed on your waste. You pay a flat fee to the county and they provide you with the containers. If you need bigger containers, you get charged more.

  • @nik-roshansirak3398
    @nik-roshansirak33984 ай бұрын

    6:50 - same here, but some people like their wood oven inside, because a life fire inside your living room, ist just the second coziest thing on earth, the only thing, that is even cozier, is if you add at least one or several purring cats to it... 😂😻😹

  • @metamoneko147
    @metamoneko1479 күн бұрын

    She should say that most of the shown houses are probably for more than one family as you can guess by the door bells or the balcony’s on those huge buildings and in Bavaria family’s tend to stay closer at least our Bavarian family half does. So most houses are shared 🤗

  • @Herrolas
    @Herrolas4 ай бұрын

    11:43 max speed is 80km/h on unprotected countryside with a village nearby to reduce noise emission. These short distance local trains (stops are often just 5 minutes apart) are especially designed to be less noisy. they are diesel-electric driven (not like a hybrid with batterys, they can switch), im living 20 minutes away from downtown Dortmund and here some of these trains use the overhead power lines and some use their diesel engines.

  • @stinjefunf5319
    @stinjefunf53194 ай бұрын

    Architecture heavily depends on the region in Germany. These big houses with long balconies and paintings on the walls are typical for southern Germany and german-speaking alpine regions. In northern Germany, especially in lower Saxony, you will see a lot of brick houses, some of which have roofs made of some type of grass ("Reetdach"). In Schleswig-Holstein, the northern most state, there are even some scandinavian style houses made of colourfully painted wood. In the middle of Germany you can find a lot of half-timbered houses. I am sure there are even more regional architecture styles, but these are the ones I know.

  • @Pseudomonasa

    @Pseudomonasa

    4 ай бұрын

    My town is in the south of lower Saxony and is 1100 years old. Old town still looks like middle age 😅

  • @maireweber
    @maireweber4 ай бұрын

    Our rural fire stations serve lots of farms and smaller villages in the area, it's still densely populated by American standards. Rural firefighters deal mostly with stuff like car crashes or fallen trees on the country roads, cows who fell and got stuck somewhere and flooded basements when all the creeks coming down the mountains overflow at the same time. That's still a lot of work each station has to cover.

  • @NoZoDE
    @NoZoDE4 ай бұрын

    12:12 There are definetly closer paths to railways. For example there is a bike path connecting my village with another village closeby. Because of n adjacent Hydroplant (just a small Laufwasserkraftwerk) the bike path has to raise up and be next to the railway. There you are at max 1.5m away from trains which even seem to be faster than the one shown here. No railing, just a small, overgrown curb between you and the train.

  • @Gaston413
    @Gaston4134 ай бұрын

    7:59 Most villages have those places with public containers for recyclling paper/cardboard and white/green/brown glas. Recycling companies have a contract with the municipality and collect these raw materials free of charge for citizens. Often there are boxes for clothing and shoes in good condition too. The residual waste that is collected from the home is charged according to the volume of the garbage can and the frequency of collection, but the price varies slightly throughout Germany. Here, too, waste companies have contracts with local authorities through annual tenders. The collection of "green dot" waste, which mainly consists of packaging waste, is free of charge for citizen. You get that extra bin with your residual waste garbage can, which is mandatory for home owners or tennants. The expenses for collection and disposal or recycling are already paid by the manufacturers to the "green dot" system, who have to take care of disposal and recycling. However, there should be no illusions about recycling. Recycling is expensive and much of the material that is difficult to recycle is still incinerated. It's actually not much different to you, except that we separate a lot more reusable and recyclable waste into different systems before it goes into the general waste garbage can.

  • @Aaron-zg7jz
    @Aaron-zg7jz4 ай бұрын

    The windows on the roof are surprise .. ,,roofwindows". Very common in Germany because almost every household here has a 2nd floor wich is placed under the roof so you dont get that much daylight but with these this problem is solved.

  • @manfredoxygen6771
    @manfredoxygen67714 ай бұрын

    That was in Wildpoldsried a small villigige in Oberallgäu Bavaria. 2600 inhabitants. And we build windows were we need them to have a nice room.

  • @yugopolis861
    @yugopolis8614 ай бұрын

    The tv antenas are on the side to be protected from the wind and rain. Which makes sense, with hills all around it might be quite windy at times

  • @uliwehner
    @uliwehner4 ай бұрын

    2 items: this is not a typical german village, this is a typical bavarian village. this is why you see the traditional balcony, the long overhang of the roof so you can walk around your house under cover. Also why they have good access to firewood. many people own enough land to have enough firewood to go around. item 2: you were wondering about the need for windows in the roof, as you are literally sitting in a room under the roof without windows....

  • @janab.648
    @janab.6484 ай бұрын

    The propane tank looking thinks she showed were for recycling glas. Clear, brown and green clad have their own container. And you are nor charged in wight (that is when you personally bring it to the recycling yard) but for the volume. You pay for the Volume your recycling bin has. If you need less or more volume you contact the recycling company to get you one with more or less capacity and your bill will go up or down accordingly. If your bin is full you have to get it to the recycling yard and there you have to pay extra to depose of it there. As for the windows that is because the rooms are planed first and then the windows are placed in accordance with the rooms.

  • @martinrupprecht9853
    @martinrupprecht98534 ай бұрын

    Hello Ryan, I really enjoy your reaction videos! In some older videos, you did marvel at the german window blinds called "Rolladen". In this vid ( 5:15 ) you can see the old-fashioned predecessor of the Rolladen, called "Schlagladen": the green flaps on both sides of the windows. The pictured house has some of them in the closed position, so you can figure out how they are used!

  • @FelixFuchsHase1105

    @FelixFuchsHase1105

    4 ай бұрын

    Witzig. Wieder was dazugelernt: Hab das Wort Schlagladen noch nie gehört oder gelesen, soweit ich weiß. Ins Englische übersetzt könnte man ja fast "Fight Club" sagen. ;)

  • @thies7831

    @thies7831

    4 ай бұрын

    @@FelixFuchsHase1105The old word for Taxi in Germany was "Droschke". The Austrians might still use it. However, there is the German verb "dreschen", describing the ancient activity of separating wheat from the chaff by belting a pile of that product with a stick. If somebody is getting hit by a stick, the German verb does expand to "verdreschen". Some foreigners seeing the sign incorporating the word "Droschke" assumed it being a warning for a hotspot where people could get beaten up. Naming it as "Taxi" solved that misunderstanding. At the very same time the classic looking black exterior paint was changed to antique white, keeping the interior cooler.

  • @McGhinch
    @McGhinch4 ай бұрын

    7:25 or 8:01 This are recycling material collection containers. They seem to be for glass and we roughly separate also by glass color, green, white, and brown. They don't pay you back the deposit. When you buy containers with a deposit you bring them back to the store -- could be a different store that also sells the same container.

  • @SatieSatie

    @SatieSatie

    4 ай бұрын

    I'm sooo glad it got recently changed in Austria/Vienna - we don't have to separate glass by color anymore.

  • @DeaTHLorD861
    @DeaTHLorD8614 ай бұрын

    The placement of the windows is calculated for optimal light flooding. The placement is of course really not random 😄

  • @SolarisUrbinoFan
    @SolarisUrbinoFan3 ай бұрын

    That train has tilting technique to go faster on curvy tracks (up to 160kph), one of my favourite train units.

  • @biloaffe
    @biloaffe4 ай бұрын

    9:35 These roof tiles are made of clay, but there are also other materials, e.g. concrete, slate, plastic, etc.

  • @XMLXL
    @XMLXL4 ай бұрын

    i like that you are one of the few who actually do reaction content i mean your reaction is 3x the original video keep it up

  • @biloaffe
    @biloaffe4 ай бұрын

    8:03 This is a waste glass container, this glass goes into the recycling cycle. The deposit machines are only available in supermarkets.

  • 28 күн бұрын

    Regarding the windows, this is the north side of the house, that´s why you don´t see a lot of windows there, you got the large windows on the other three sides where the most sunlight is during the day and the walls on the north can be used to place large furniture inside.

  • @HibikiKano
    @HibikiKano4 ай бұрын

    On random placed windows: If the houses are made with thick walls and insulation, then even double or tripple glazed windows are still a area of heat loss. If you have rooms that don't need windows like a storage closet, the utilities room etc, then generally they dont get a window so you can have more windows in those rooms where you spend your time. Or just sace energy if you want to be frugal. Also in many European houses utilities, like furnices, boilers, heat pumps, solar panel batteries, and the master controlls for them are not in the garage with your car, but have their own room. On wood houses. We do have them now, but they are very differently designed to yours, usually even more massively built than brick houses. Very modern with modern "structure wood", technology on that field is adcvancing quite rapidly so expect more wooden european houses. I see some modern schools build with "Structural composite lumber" and "mass timber" in Slovenia. But so far the main brake on that is various national construction code on the height of timber structures. You can see some amazing wooden skyscrapers in Sweden now.

  • @TheDomAdventures
    @TheDomAdventures4 ай бұрын

    Regarding Heating: We obviously have gas/oil or some other kind of heating. But an old-school wood burning stove is simply cool an cozy, and lot of older houses have them anyways so you might as well use them. As for the "logistics" behind the firewood, you simply go and buy some , and mostly saw, chop and store it yourself. There will of course be forestry companies selling ready-made, dried firewood but that would be more expensive than simply buying a tree trunk sawn into handy 1-meter pieces and then chopping it up yourself.

  • @stef987
    @stef9874 ай бұрын

    It's kind of interesting to me, too, because the architecture is very different from where I live (except for the modern houses, they seem to be the same everywhere). I wouldn't say it's a "small" village, though, as they still do have a lot of stuff you won't find in a village that's actually small. But maybe it depends on your own interpretation of "small". She also calls it a "town", though, which shows me she might not really think of it as an actual small village, either.

  • @stef987

    @stef987

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@dn3087The village I live in has about 700 residents, only a chapel instead of a proper church, no school, no kindergarten, no shops, apart from a gas station. There's also a restaurant. Both gas station and restaurant of course are frequented by people from the entire area rather than just people living in the village. There are some small businesses, of course including farmers. No bank. I'm glad at least it's not that far from actual civilication (busses also are available probably exceptionally frequent even. It's still best to own a car).🙃 That's what I'd personally call an actual small village.

  • @bastik.3011

    @bastik.3011

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@stef987eh its Bavaria every shithole has a church 😅 i mean i live in a small town with arround 5000 people amd we have 3 churches all in 5 min walking distance from each other. The old Catholic, New Catholic and Protestant Church

  • @stef987

    @stef987

    4 ай бұрын

    @@bastik.3011 That's extreme.😄 I'm in Northern Germany, but I can't think of any other village nearby that doesn't have a proper church, usually just a single one, though. Having only a chapel definitely indicates that the place really is small, even for Northern German standards.🙃

  • @bastik.3011

    @bastik.3011

    4 ай бұрын

    @@stef987 yeah the next two towns have also 3 each 😅

  • @HanneleKorpela391
    @HanneleKorpela3913 ай бұрын

    In Finland, many malls have a recyckling stations underground, where parking lot is. So it's easy take with you when go to bigger supermarket buy grocerys.

  • @martinhuhn7813
    @martinhuhn78134 ай бұрын

    Well, there was a lot in there, which you could rightfully label as a typical german village, but a lot was rather typical bavarian. In other parts of the country, you will find some vastly different characteristics. In Hessen, for example, you are more likely to find a lot of attached houses out of timberwork (with timber frames, not completely wooden buildings, those are very rare everywhere). That is only one more example. But it was interesting, to see an American react to rural Germany at all, because that is a facette, which is largely overlooked, even though there is as much (if not more) history, local uniqueness, culture and insight into the country as a whole to make there, as in the cities on which the whole focus is usually on.

  • @MirkoC407
    @MirkoC4074 ай бұрын

    The building with the signs on the wall is according to Google Maps a driving school. I already thought so when I saw it. It is quite normal for them to have traffic signs or traffic lights on the wall or in the window as eye catchers.

  • @sabrinas.9758
    @sabrinas.97584 ай бұрын

    Greetings from Germany! I'll try to respond to a few of your comments in more detail. The stop sign on the house wall is not labeled in English. Stop means exactly the same thing in English and German. We spell it the same way and the pronunciation is almost the same. The playground is actually pretty normal. That's how most of them are designed. The houses with balconies in the settlement are relatively large, that's true. But these are apartment buildings. In houses of this size there are usually 4 apartments in one house, sometimes even 6, which are usually rented out. The kindergarten is covered in wood for decoration only. Below is the thick stone or concrete wall that is typical of the German architectural style. You can actually have the firewood delivered here ready for use, but it is very expensive. Most people get it themselves and chop it up. But not everyone has a fireplace. I estimate perhaps 30% of households and if there is one then only in addition to the central heating available in every house. Nobody here heats their entire house exclusively with wood. Here too, gas and oil heating are the most common. Even if our government would like to change that right now. Even better yesterday. Satellite dishes are sometimes on the walls, sometimes on the roofs. Both are nothing unusual. So, I hope you can start with that. My English isn't really good, so I had to use Google Translate. So please send complaints to Google 😅

  • @Svarsmannen

    @Svarsmannen

    4 ай бұрын

    Wobei "stopp" seit einer Rechtschreibreform im Deutschen mit zwei p geschrieben wird, auf Stopschildern aber weiterhin mit nur einem P, um internationale Verkehrsteilnehmer nicht zu verwirren - oder so ähnlich. 😅

  • @offydannerson8049
    @offydannerson80494 ай бұрын

    As stated by others, this is a typical rural Bavarian village. These old looking houses were mostly farms in the former days and have kept their style - that's why they are so big. Many of them have several apartments in them, so there live more than just one family or couple. Also, many of the people own some forest and have the trees chopped. Afterwards they will just make fire wood on their own, or buy some from their neighbor. There is not much of a real delivery business, it's just neighbors selling some stuff or trading. It's funny, because at the thumbnail I could already see that this is the village Wilpoldsried which is half an hour drive from my home. Makes me oddly proud.