Yes! I spent years trying to find a blog that would help me imagine myself in places I'd never experienced, and I figured, be the change you want to see, haha. So glad you're here!
@@InMyHead1996 Eau de Cologne was invented in the city. Purportedly, to mask the pong of the pilgrims swarming to the shrine of the three wise men and to the relics of St. Ursula and her 10000 virgins. Despite the story being apocryphal, the "Eau de Cologne" was first manufactured by Johann Farina in Cologne at the beginning of the 18th century. The firm still exists as "Farina gegenüber dem Jülichsplatz" (Farina opposite the Jülich Square), together with the rival "4711", so named because the house in Glockengasse, which it was manufactured in, received this number during the Napoleonic occupation.
Excellent video! It's worth noting though, Kolsch isn't traditionally served in the large tankard. Typically it's served in narrow, tall 200ml glasses that are regularly replaced as you finish them until you place your coaster on top of you glass as a signal to the wait staff to stop serving you.
Cologne cathedral hosts the largest free swinging bell in the world (at 5:48 ), fat Peter, and the shrine of the Three Kings, sadly not talked about or shown in this video...but even if not religious, ya should see both of it at least once in a lifetime. Btw, you cannot only hear the tone of that bell through ear protection when standing next to it,...you feel it in your guts, literally !
Suggestion, Michael… before doing a travelogue, learn how to pronounce local names… for example, Heumarkt Square is pronounced Hoi-markt in German. And Neuschwanstein Castle is pronounced Noi-schwanstein. Enjoy your travels!
Suggestions noted! I agree that it's important to research how to pronounce things properly beforehand so I will definitely make a point to do that in the future 🙂
I really like your videos and want to add a fact, that I have seen in no videos about the cologne cathedrals at all. This big church was needed in the ancient cologne because it is the home of the bones of the Three Wise Men (since the year of 1164) who first praised Jesus. Because tenth of thousand people wanted to visit the bones, Cologne decided in 1248 to build a new cathedral to handle the amount of visitors. No video shows the amazing shrine which was build by a goldsmith between 1190-1225 with more than a thousand gems and was the reason for this huge building. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrine_of_the_Three_Kings)
I greatly appreciate your focus on the 5 senses--feels like I finally found a traveler on TH-cam that speaks my language!
Yes! I spent years trying to find a blog that would help me imagine myself in places I'd never experienced, and I figured, be the change you want to see, haha. So glad you're here!
Love Cologne ❤ that chocolate factory 😍😍😍
It's a really cool city! And yes indeed - hard to love a good chocolate fountain, am I right?
@@asenseoftravel your 1000000000000 percent right 😍😂
Going to try my luck with a future in this area. I'm looking forward to it and hopefully I will make this my new home.
تحية طيبة لك اخي الكريم فيديو سياحي تقافي رائع جدا بالتوفيق والسداد 💐💐🤲👍🌹🇲🇦
Thank you for watching!
Whatever kind of beer you show in your clip - it is no Kölsch. Kölsch is served in a slender 0,2 l glas.
I am moving to Cologne and I loved your format, it is different from a normal vlog. It was really interesting
Thank you! Cologne is an awesome city, wishing you the best of luck on your move
Looks like a beautiful place! Sucks that it doesn't actually smell like cologne 🤣
@@InMyHead1996 Eau de Cologne was invented in the city. Purportedly, to mask the pong of the pilgrims swarming to the shrine of the three wise men and to the relics of St. Ursula and her 10000 virgins. Despite the story being apocryphal, the "Eau de Cologne" was first manufactured by Johann Farina in Cologne at the beginning of the 18th century. The firm still exists as "Farina gegenüber dem Jülichsplatz" (Farina opposite the Jülich Square), together with the rival "4711", so named because the house in Glockengasse, which it was manufactured in, received this number during the Napoleonic occupation.
Excellent video! It's worth noting though, Kolsch isn't traditionally served in the large tankard. Typically it's served in narrow, tall 200ml glasses that are regularly replaced as you finish them until you place your coaster on top of you glass as a signal to the wait staff to stop serving you.
Interesting! Is this typical with most beer in Germany, or is this a Cologne tradition?
@@asenseoftravel The narrow glasses of beer are just typical for Cologne.
meine geliebte Stadt Köln
Thanks for your kind words about my hometown, although I am not a fan of the carnival.
you slayed this
Great video!
Thank you! I'm glad you liked it
Cologne cathedral hosts the largest free swinging bell in the world (at 5:48 ), fat Peter, and the shrine of the Three Kings, sadly not talked about or shown in this video...but even if not religious, ya should see both of it at least once in a lifetime. Btw, you cannot only hear the tone of that bell through ear protection when standing next to it,...you feel it in your guts, literally !
im moving to cologne so this helped a lot thank you, Michael!!!
Thank you! Jealous of your move! Where are you moving to Cologne from?
Nice video man. You are sooo underrated, keep up the good work! I’m moving to cologne in August and I liked this a lot
Appreciate it! Good luck on your move to Cologne. It's a great city for sure
SO no art galleries?
Unfortunately my time in Cologne was on business, so I wasn't able to dive in quite as much as I'd have liked! Next time for sure
Hi! Just on foot?
Hey! Yes, all on foot. Cologne is super compact!
nice censoring at 9:05
Suggestion, Michael… before doing a travelogue, learn how to pronounce local names… for example, Heumarkt Square is pronounced Hoi-markt in German. And Neuschwanstein Castle is pronounced Noi-schwanstein. Enjoy your travels!
Suggestions noted! I agree that it's important to research how to pronounce things properly beforehand so I will definitely make a point to do that in the future 🙂
Great! It gives all your other well-researched commentary more credibility.
just ur beer pics are wrong....
I really like your videos and want to add a fact, that I have seen in no videos about the cologne cathedrals at all. This big church was needed in the ancient cologne because it is the home of the bones of the Three Wise Men (since the year of 1164) who first praised Jesus. Because tenth of thousand people wanted to visit the bones, Cologne decided in 1248 to build a new cathedral to handle the amount of visitors. No video shows the amazing shrine which was build by a goldsmith between 1190-1225 with more than a thousand gems and was the reason for this huge building. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrine_of_the_Three_Kings)