So true! The humidity is yuck. I hate it. But Autumn in Aus is so lovely. I just love Autumn. The humidity is usually gone, but the days are warm to hot, and the evenings are cooler so that you can sleep. No one enjoys sleeping with 90% humidity and sweating throughout the night!
Yet there she was shamelessly throwing shade at us. I couldn’t agree with one thing she said about her ‘hate’ list. As in, she was totally wrong about everything! What a shame we can’t trespass her
Thankyou to Ryan Was, i appreciate your skepticism. I'm a 42 year old Aussie (Adelaide) with 2 half Korean children. i call bulls*** on 95% of what she said. The difference in weather. During summer we can have a whole week of 40 - 43 degrees celcius (104-110 Fahrenheit) . if you know bottleshops close at 10, then you will buy alcohol before then. Most Australians who act tough are usually the opposite. I think "Hardy" is a better explanation than "tough". She got heartbroken by a chad for sure. The fact that she mentions race as the first reason someone is rude shows her character. Australia is very multicultural. My half Korean children (16+) have experienced almost no racism.
She’s totally nuts. The shops stay open later than 5pm. Supermarkets are open until 10pm mon to fri and have done for decades. Chemists are open until 9pm, it’s just clothing and specialty stores that close at 5:30 pm and that’s fine because they sell non urgent items. Bunnings are open until 9 pm every night and they sell a wide range of items and hardware.
It does depend a bit on where you live. Many country-town shops can’t afford to pay staff to work too late. It isn’t as though customers will find more money to spend at later hours.
It depends what state you live in. In SA most shops close at 5:30 mon-fri except we usually have one day a week where shops are open til 9pm. Supermarkets and major stores are open anywhere from 7-9pm. On weekends pretty much everything closes at 5pm. Not a lot of chemists are open til 9pm either.
this chick is clueless, she has probably only ever been to Melbourne, Sydney or somewhere down south. she wouldn't be saying that is she had been up north haha
None of these liquor rules apply in Melbourne, this young lady is a bit of generalist, you'd think if she travelled so much she would know better, maybe she should travel around Australia too.
Adelaide has heat also. One heatwave summer I remember it was 40 days over 40. Couple of decades ago now but it is scorched into my psyche because I had no air conditioning and my room was upstairs so all summer I lay there spraying water into the air for the fan to blow on to me. But we’re wooses.? She sounds incredibly sheltered
She’s comparing the heat to Singapore? Singapore sits on the equator! She then says Australian heat is dry 😮 only if you’re in Perth or Adelaide. She sounds really up herself.
I lived in NW NSW and 45c to 47c was normal. During the last 'worst' Drought, I knew 7 and 8 year old kids who had never had a single drop of rain hit them ever. Dry as Fk
@@Sydneysider1310 I know.... Everyone knows Perth, Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. Big chunk in the middle that TH-camrs avoid but still seem to have an opinion on! Come out bush and say G'day.....
'It gets hot 'maybe up to 42.' Come way out west. How about up to 55? Every animal, including birds, are in or under trees, suffering the heat. It's too hot to drive on the roads, because the tar is melted and coats your tyres. And don't break down, because if you don't have a ton of water with you, you're in serious trouble. Don't leave your vehicle, you won't make it back. Now you can complain that it's too hot.
I worked at the Olympic Dam mine 600 km north of Adelaide in the desert. One summer we had 100 days above 40 and top of 47. These are shade temperatures and there is shade LOL. Outside temperatures are mid 50s. At the mine they issued special coolers to put round your neck. In the sun without water you can die in under 4 hours. The cities on east coast are much as she described. If she likes Singapore so much then perhaps she should go back there LOL.
Shops here (colesworth) are still open until 10pm, or 11pm thursday, as it's a farming and mining area, so to accommodate those workers/industries those stores are open late.
It gets hotter than she says. I was born in Sydney. I have also lived in Queensland half of my life & it gets even hotter here. She should get out of Sydney more then open her mouth about the weather. Australia is huge & the weather isn't the same across the whole country let alone at the same temperature everywhere. Plus different parts of Australia have different types of heat/humidity too. Where is she drinking??? I've been in bars/clubs drinking until the sun comes up!! The sun here does bite! It can be 2 degrees at 9am & you can feel the sun biting your skin... Yes it's happened to us before while we were mowing our huge property. We were in the dead of Winter so it was like 12 degrees in the middle of the day. We were outside for 3 hours, that night I went to have a shower & I was burnt. The rest of the family were burnt too 😂 Again where TF is she where everything shuts at 5pm??? I'm in a semi rural/rural part of Queensland & shops are open past 5pm. The reason why she's getting hate is because she's only going by the very few places she'd be visiting etc in a small area but talking about AUSTRALIA as a whole.
Anything over 80F is hot in Australia. All supermarkets are open to 9pm in Australia. Take away stores are open later. The sky is more blue here. The light is different. Same in South Africa. It is currently winter. Of course it's colder.
I don’t know about Qld but NSW has Thursday night shopping till 8 or 9pm. Supermarkets are open till 10pm. Some shops choose to be open a bit longer, such as some hairdressers, a few chemists, etc, depending on whether it’s worthwhile for the shop owners. We all want to go home after work because that our work-life balance we all need so much.
This chick lives in her own world. Inland, like Longreach, it gets hot enough in summer to melt the tar on the road, yet it feels far more comfortable than the humid coastal areas, even when the temperature is 10 degrees lower. I can’t imagine she’s spent much time out of Melbourne in Australia.
Exactly, the Pilbara and Kimberley regions of northern Western Australia can max out above 45 degrees right through summer. Not just on one day a year young lady!
They only have 2 seasons. dry and wet.. the wet lasts 6weeks and might rain a little. Might not. I lived in Hedland for a while and once saw temps reach 50°c in marble bar😅@@garryellis3085
I personally found a few of her concepts slightly contradictory (which makes me doubt people's sincerity). "It's not hot" but "we have a hot sun", "it's the cancer capital" but "the sky is beautiful" (the sun damages the eyes too). It might simply be that she didn't explain things well but it didn't make her sound good (along with sweeping stereotypes that might be limited to certain areas).
I remember going to a Walgreens in New York and when the checkout chick said “Have a nice day” I replied ‘you too’! She just about ran out and hugged me. She said ‘you must be Australian, you guys are always lovely to service people - thank you’! I was kinda shocked!
Hi Ryan, love your channel mate this women is a half wit i live in penrith and last summer in 12 week period we had 18 days over 40 degs and in spring we had 4 days over 40 also humidity is extreme until you are in wa which is a Mediterranean climate which is extremely hot and dry i would be happy to see this women stay over seas im disappointed and the white Australia comments
Hey Ryan, when you were checking temps in Darwin and Perth you realised it was winter here but I think you forgot the time difference and were checking early morning temps. Something to remember for future vids. Obviously would've been warmer in the arvo.
Also, the hole doesn't really have an edge. It's not as if there is a part over Antarctica that has depleted ozone and as soon as you cross the boundary, it's back to normal.
@@j.f.christ8421 Aside from effing up our lungs, asbestos really is pretty good. Aside from effing up the finite earth, a perpetual growth model really is pretty good. Aside from the lack of critical thinking, religion really is pretty good. Aside from the worst aspects, everything really is pretty good...
Evidently, this lady hasn't lived in coastal northern Australian cities like Cairns and Townsville, where the night-time temperatures barely drop and the humidity is feral 😅 And alcohol laws are state-based, so they vary a lot. My drinking days are over, though, so I really don't care 😅 As for shop opening hours, it's usually only the ones in small local shopping centres that close by 5 because they're owned by small business people who need to have a life! Larger shopping centres and malls often open later, as do supermarkets and pharmacies.
All states have different times for there stores closing. Supermarkets can stay open to 6-7pm, Saturdays nearly every thing except restaurants, pubs ECT shuts at 5pm, people want to actually go home or go out and enjoy the weekend. Sundays stores don't open till 11am so everyone gets a sleep in
South East Queensland has, in my opinion, the best temperature in Australia. Not too cold in winter, not too hot in summer. Not as humid as tropical Australia. No week long 40+C heatwaves. Yep it’s beautiful one day, perfect the next. 😀
It's not just northern Australia that gets really hot. Here in Adelaide, South Australia we often get temperatures in the low to mid 40°C in the summer. A few years ago our maximum hit 46.7°.
Thing I hate about the heat in Brisbane is the Humidity makes it a lot worse and I would always think Australia was hotter than most other countries but I've spent a couple of summer's in England and Europe as an Adult and most surprisingly very hot (just as hot)
Where I live in Hervey Bay QLD, our average summer temperature rarely gets higher than 33 degrees Celsius BUT our humidity levels are mostly between 80 and 100%… it’s not the heat but the humidity that’s stifling…
If LA is far away, you will never see our shores down under, just flew to DC for a wedding in Annapolis, stayed 6 days and flew home, had a great time!!
when you looked at the current temperature for Perth it looks like it was at nighttime, and it is Winter here. the daytime average for summer is what you need to look for. maximums ranging from 25 to 37 celsius
We understand why you haven't been to all corners of your Country, as it is even bigger than our own. 😂 Especially now you have a young family. As for temperatures/how hot it is, just like your nation, our weather varies depending on where you are situated. Her perspective is from the area she is from only, and that sounds like from Queensland which is a Northern State.. I'm from WA and Perth is known as the hottest City. We had 8 x 40 degree Celcius days this past summer, but we had 13 in 2021-2022. In 2023-2024, Perth's over 40 degree days were on January 13th at 40.7C, January 31st 41.9C, Feb 1st 42.6C, Feb 2nd, 40.4C, Feb 9th 42C, and Feb 10th at 42.3C. Keep in mind that Perth is in the South of the State. It gets hotter up North. They only have 2 seasons, known as Wet and Dry. We have the regular 4 seasons but in reverse of yours. On Jan 13th 2022 we recorded a temp of 50.7C or 123.26 degrees Fahrenheit at a town called Onslow up North. Damn that's hot. 🔥 As for being Wusses, just like every country we have all types of people from all corners of the world. We do have those who are scared of our critters, but more so we have a whole lot of people who just get in and get stuff done. We also like to help a mate in need. We don't mind having a chat, and most people are indeed friendly. They are all great qualities, but we still cannot boast because unless it is every single person, then we can always achieve more. I try to be kind, and do little things that would make someone else's day, like returning a trolley for a pregnant or young Mum or the elderly. Spread joy. We aren't guaranteed a long life, but we can try and make what we have worth it.
I met a Japanese family in Cairns on a very pleasant 28C day - I was in summer clothes, they were in winter clothes and still cold. I really think it depends on where you live in a country and what you are acclimatised to. You also need to factor in the effect pollution (as in Singapore) has on heat and things like humidity.
We don’t add an r to the end of Korea. The reason you thought you heard an r at the end, is because her mouth has to segue from “ Korea” to “as well”. It’s easier to add a hint of “r” between the two “a’s”. Ea-as becomes ea-ras. I studied phonetics in school and we learned about how people speak and the positions of our tongue as we navigate the thousands of combined syllables that make up the Australian accent.
@@Jeni10It’s not every human on earth. Every language uses linking consonants and will blur boundaries from word to word. However not every language uses a linking or intrusive ‘R’. It’s commonly used in non-rhotic varieties of English, along with linking ‘w’ sounds, but every language does it differently. Take the rules for ‘liason’ in French, where the last consonant of the preceding word attaches to the beginning of the next - provided it starts with a vowel, otherwise that last consonant isn’t realised. People around the world don’t just stick an ‘r’ between words to facilitate faster speech, there are dozens of languages that don’t have any rhotic or liquid consonants at all.
Had the warmest autumn for the last 30 years I have been living in Perth. We are now getting some heavy rain from tornado cyclone. Have a look at Bunbury tornado Perth get humid and sticky hot. But we also get the dry blistering 40c dry heat when the wind blow from the west. I remember going through week long 40+C living at Adelaide when we get wind from the north. That was hot even for someone who came from the tropics
Where 36C is a particularly hot summer's day, but we rarely have the killer humidity of the mainland - once you're out of the sun, you have immediate relief. But that UV is sneaky if you're of the white persuasion, even on a mild 12-18C day
Australia is a continent there's a wide range in temperatures both in summer and winter. If she's from Sydney, she probably lives near the coast and the sea breeze keeps it cool year round. If you live in western Sydney, 37 is basically every day. She obviously wasn't in Sydney during the summer of 2016/17. It was 38 degrees at 3am for a month solid, and 48 degrees in the middle of the day! Then if you live in QLD it's over 30 degrees with humidity for 6 months of the year, with winter a beautifully mild 21-26 degrees. If she's comparing Japan to Australia, you can't compare. My wife is Japanese, and I've spent a lot of time there. It's completely different. You can buy alcohol in vending machines there! There's a temple in Kyoto made of pure gold with very little security and fencing. If that was in Australia you'd have people out there melting it with bunsen burners! Lol! As for shops closing at 5pm, yes it sucks but we don't have the population of say the US or Japan. Our largest city is only half the population of Japan's 3rd largest city. Our entire country is 10 million less than Tokyo. Yes, compared to Japan, Australia's customer service is pathetic.
Shopping hours vary. In my suburb in Sydney, we have a variety of shops open until at least 9PM. And not just restaurants. And it isn't a particularly large shopping area, and we don't have a large mall.
48°C?? Oh Lord, have mercy. I may not be an Australian but I'm a super mega _wuss_ when it comes to heat. I already crumble and melt at 26°C. 😂 In Austria, the most intense heatwaves don't go over 38°C BUT we don't have ACs _anywhere_ in the country, aside from a few places. Not in homes, not in public transport, not in schools, not in most universities. Usually just in the supermarkets. ACs make _all_ the difference. In the beginning, it's kind of alright, but after a while (around July), summers get unbearable here. Austria is rich but terrified of technology. 🙄
After 6 years of living here and a further 8 years after building our home we had some form or reverse cycle air conditioning installed mainly for heating with the added benefit that it also cooled. Older home are still less likely to have A/C even today. NSW in Oz
@@SatieSatie We have reverse cycle air conditioning in our place in Sydney. Some people have theirs running a lot, but we don't use it too often. We mainly put it on for an hour or two (with the timer) when it is a hot night, so we can get to sleep. It is extremely rare for us to use it for heating. Generally, the further you get away from the coast, the hotter it gets, although even the coast gets very hot when there isn't a sea breeze blowing.
Hey Ryan, Talking of the sky ------ I notice it every time I fly from the Northern Hemisphere to the Southern Hemisphere the sky is ALWAYS clearer. The difference is just so surprising; the difference every time I fly it always stands out so much. The stars at night are always so much clearer as well. Its always great to be home but this sky clarity is a real thing. Cheers from Down Under
The shape of the earth changes to more elliptical in our summer so we are the closest to the sun. The sun in Oz is NOT the same as it is everywhere else.
Earth's orbit is almost circular. The variation is minor and has no noticeable effect on the weather. Put it this way, if you shrunk the Earth's orbit to the size of a 28" bicycle wheel, the eccentricity would be less than a layer of paint.
Not the shape of the earth, the shape of the earth's ORBIT. It is an ellipse, with one end further away from the sun than the other. Its furthest point is during July and its closest point is January (souther hemisphere summer). The difference in distance from the sun is about is about 5 million kilometres. Hence the level of UV is greater at the same latitude in summer in the southern hemisphere than it is in the northern.
@@j.f.christ8421 Correct. The seasons are caused by the tilt of the Earth's axis (23 deg from the vertical) relative to the orbit. See wikipedia for details : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axial_tilt
@@tacitdionysus3220 Earth averages 150 million km from the sun, +/1 2.5 million doesn't matter much. Oz is hot because most of it is like Death Valley, it's mostly desert plus no mountains to cause rain and so on.
Unlike the Northern Hemisphere Australia is closer to the sun during our Summer. Everything doesn't shut at 5pm. I live in a rural town, and nothing shuts at 5pm. A few specialist shops close at 5.30 but most close between 6pm and 10pm.
The problem I have with her talking about Australia is that you can't talk about all of Australia in a general sense because it's so vast. Summer in Hobart is not like Summer in Cairns or Darwin for example. Winters in Perth are not like Winters in Sydney. How people are in Western Australia is maybe not how people are in Victoria. There's so much wrong with her statements, but in the end it's her opinions I guess.
The last couple of years in S.A. has been pretty tame summer wise (knock on wood). We had a few 38-40 days, a couple of humid days and a heatwave for a bit there but nothing like around 4-5 years ago when it was like 38-42 for a couple weeks straight.
I was living in Coober Pedy which is between 4 deserts and when those deserts heat up Coober melts was there at 1:58 am and it was 51.8C Could not leave the dugout as it was like opening the oven door not the front door. What was the temp at 1:58pm when I could not leave the dugout? now for you whom do not know 125F is 51.66C Death valley USA is the hottest place in the world. Why because the whole world to Americans is America.
@@RHINO2310 I stayed in cpedy once and it was the middle of summer I had hitchhiked up there from the city just because and man was I happy to get underground. Oasis in a pounding hot 🥵 desert 🐪
Yes people do complain about it being hot a lot during summer, but when the temperatures rise above 35c (95f) on a really humid day then it's justified, because the humidity makes it feel a lot hotter. There have been a lot of temperature records broken in the last 10 years, with a local record being set at 47c (116.6f) a few years back where I live. The old record was 43c (109.4), however in a town nearby on the same day the temperature rose to 51c (123.8) which was also a new record for that town. However you will always get people who will claim that it hotter back in the old days, but I remember the old record for where I live only being 41c and that was set back in the late 70's, but I just remember it as being a really hot day. So peoples claims that it was hotter back in the old days are all based on anecdotal evidence.
I don’t know where in Oz she’s from but I remember 40 days over 40 degrees one heatwave summer in Adelaide. We don’t want her back if she can’t even research her topic. I’ve been in 52 degrees in cooper Pedy. Is she from Tasmania???
@@heartshapedisleI meant temperature wise for tassie. You guys get much cooler temperatures than any of the other states and territories. I’m not throwing shade at you I personally think TAS is beautiful and sometimes when it gets really hot here I wish I was there. Chill lol
It used to be around 46c (114.8f) in my classroom every summer up around Wallget and Wilcannia and the air con used to make a ' reassuring noise' but did bugger all. That was EVERY SUMMER. 🥵🌞 I also grew up in a jungle in PNG. Humidity sux but you know it rains about 3pm every day. The dusty, dry hatred of central woop woop where every fly in the desert is trying to drink the moisture out of your eyeballs. That gets old really quick
Hmmmm....... regarding the heat, she's way off. Also, having lived in Brisbane my whole life, I have to say I resent her saying that it '' hasn't got much going for it ''. OK, maybe 20 years ago, but not today. Mind you, the humidity here would kill a small dog, so be careful! LOL
If darwin is 66⁰ it would be in the middle if the night. Winter is beautiful in Darwin, sunrises around 7am and sets 7pm, so warm around 88⁰ in the days and virtually doesnt rain in the dry season
Nah on the shirt, it looks like pajamas! 🧐 Ryan, can I suggest you watch One Pack Wanderers from the US or Karstan & Maxine from Australia - both couples are exploring different parts of Australia! K&M travel the real outback with two small kids! 😁👍
Yes, I also watch One Pack Wanderers (Americans)and they are back in Australia. Mazda gave them a free brand new Ute to use for their travel around Australia this time. Amazing
This woman is very annoying. I'm not even through the video and she just seems like someone who complains a lot. Also the things she is saying is bad about Australia night just where she is.
LOL. Sitting in Canberra in winter where it's almost snowing and complaining about how hot it is. :P If you think Australia's hot, you've never travelled. Although she is talking from Brisbane where it's really humid AF, making it feel a lot hotter than it is. And yeah - the sky can be spectacularly blue. We don't put an R on the end of Korea, though some people insert one when it's followed by a word starting with a vowel. We do that sometimes. If you're stupid enough to buy water when it's free out of the tap, you deserve all you get. Unless you live in Adelaide. And yes, we have a real alcohol problem. 😞 She's right - it's a cultural thing. Plenty of shops stay open late, but remember that Australians get penalty pay rates for working late. Long may it be so.
I'm in Tassie and we can get shots after 12pm, and go into bars and clubs until close. And our shops usually close at 9 or 10, except Kmart which is open 24/7.
This should be her issue with the Gold Coast (sounds like where she is) not Australia. Nearly everything she said has nothing to do with Perth, where I'm at. Also, law of non contradiction?? Australia isn't hot, nek minit, the Sun is so hot! Yeah, that's where the heat comes from....
Only clothing and specialty shops close early, even then Kmart and target stay open until 7pm and we don’t have the population to cater for late night shopping every night. That why we have late night shopping once a week on a Thursday where the clothing and specialty shops stay open until late.
Ryan, she's from Queensland and they're different to other Australians. Opening hours in shops are not as restrictive in other states. It doesn't have to be hot for the sun to burn here.
Shops don’t open late because there isn’t enough trade make it worth wile. Laws say they can, but if outgoing costs are going to outweigh incoming sales, why would they stay open ? Supermarkets trade late, but very few other retailers do.
Hot WEEKS can last over 40 for a fair while. It's not just the odd day. The heat in Australia is diferent in different zones, but for the main it is NOT the humidity, it is a DRY heat that sizzles, you can take that more than a humid heat, but it 's pretty humid in Darwin or Cairns and some times Brisbane. But one of the hottest ever recorded temperatures EVER in the world was at Coolgardie in Western Australia and an Karatha, also in West Australia, don't let your cat get stuck in your car overnight or you will have fried cat in the morning!
Australia varies depending on where you live. Temperature wise humidity etc I’m from Sydney we have had bad summers, wet summers, cool summers. The worst was 47/48 deg and all the plants died. This summer stayed around 35 so not so bad. And yes it’s the humidity that gets you. I don’t know what planet she is from but she hasn’t spent any time in the city. Shops are open till 6 or 5.30 some are open till 9pm and Kmart is open 24 hours. Woolworths till 11.30pm 10pm on the weekends.
G'day Ryan, I think she is a whingeing pom (Brit). BTW your shirt is okay. Most summers we have had at least one week over 42C. Our Adelaide winter is 14C to 0C. My son lives in Cairns and the weather there is generally 33C and very humid every day.
This summer was hugely humid on the east coast. The top part of Australia is very humid and sticky! The very tip of Cape York is 10 degrees south so it's well into the tropics. Darwin is 33C during the day even in winter. Yes the sky is really really blue in Australia. Maybe it's because our air is cleaner then most other countries with Tasmania having the cleanest air in the world.
Yes in Australia the UV is so high that it’s unironically off the charts because it exceeds what the standard 0-11 UV chart has, I often get UV 12 or 13 which is so uncommon in other places in the world they just omit it from the charts
I think this video shows how much the areas of Australia differ! You cannot talk about the weather in Australia from one point of view… if you’re Australian you will know this! From city to city the weather varies… And yes, some Australians are obsessed with the weather and will talk about it all day!! In Melbourne we talk about it being too hot, too cold, too windy, too much rain… or not enough rain!!… and that can be all in one day 🤣
@@j.f.christ8421 I suppose 5 million kilometres or thereabouts, in the grand scale of things isn't very appreciable to some, nevertheless, it does tend to make a difference whether you appreciate it or not. There have been studies to suggest that the variance accounts for an increase in the intensity of solar rays amounting to roughly 7% during the perihelion in January.
@@hybridgoth Draw it as a scale model. The Sun will be a circle of 1.4mm. The average Earth orbit will be 150mm. Draw an ellipse 148x152mm. The Earth of course is a dot being about 0.012mm. That tiny little dot will wobble back & forth about 5mm, or a few percent. It really is "not much". Oz is hot because it's a hot flat desert. Building mountains in WA will fix a lot of things.
Oh yes! The sky! When I came home after being away for 12 months, the impact of our sky is incredible. It is clear, the colour is vivid and it seems like it is higher and just more of it (no idea how). It really is spectacular.
She don't know what she's talking about, we get temperatures, anything from 30 to 45, and it's mostly the humidity that we complain about.
yeah, the past 5 decembers and janurarys have been 45'+ for multiple weeks during those months otherwise it's been high 30s
Yep most of this has factual errors
She’s been to a few places in Australia and suddenly shes an expert 🙄
Absolutely.....we also get down to below zero....
Not sure where shes from 😊
So true! The humidity is yuck. I hate it. But Autumn in Aus is so lovely. I just love Autumn. The humidity is usually gone, but the days are warm to hot, and the evenings are cooler so that you can sleep. No one enjoys sleeping with 90% humidity and sweating throughout the night!
I was not surprised near the end of the video when she said she has NOT seen a lot of Australia .
Yep she’s totally clueless
Yet there she was shamelessly throwing shade at us. I couldn’t agree with one thing she said about her ‘hate’ list. As in, she was totally wrong about everything! What a shame we can’t trespass her
She's getting her experience off her chest before making the OF money maker surely. Look at that camera set up.
I thought the same thing!!!!
Thankyou to Ryan Was, i appreciate your skepticism. I'm a 42 year old Aussie (Adelaide) with 2 half Korean children. i call bulls*** on 95% of what she said. The difference in weather. During summer we can have a whole week of 40 - 43 degrees celcius (104-110 Fahrenheit) . if you know bottleshops close at 10, then you will buy alcohol before then. Most Australians who act tough are usually the opposite. I think "Hardy" is a better explanation than "tough". She got heartbroken by a chad for sure. The fact that she mentions race as the first reason someone is rude shows her character. Australia is very multicultural. My half Korean children (16+) have experienced almost no racism.
She annoyed me as soon as she said 'trash'. We say 'rubbish' or 'garbage' in Australia
Yeah using Americanisms is so aggravating.
I agree.
It depends. We do say trash too.
@@SnowyRVulpix Yes, in some context we might say 'trash' e.g. to trash someone's reputation.
These are the types of nuances I don't catch 😂
She’s totally nuts. The shops stay open later than 5pm. Supermarkets are open until 10pm mon to fri and have done for decades. Chemists are open until 9pm, it’s just clothing and specialty stores that close at 5:30 pm and that’s fine because they sell non urgent items. Bunnings are open until 9 pm every night and they sell a wide range of items and hardware.
My local Coles in Melbourne is open from 6AM to Midnight every day of the week. It used to be 24 hours before Covid.
It does depend a bit on where you live.
Many country-town shops can’t afford to pay staff to work too late. It isn’t as though customers will find more money to spend at later hours.
Aus only has 26,000,000 people in a place the same size as the US who has something like 300,000,000. She is a bit silly.
Longer hours will mean higher prices.
It depends what state you live in. In SA most shops close at 5:30 mon-fri except we usually have one day a week where shops are open til 9pm. Supermarkets and major stores are open anywhere from 7-9pm. On weekends pretty much everything closes at 5pm. Not a lot of chemists are open til 9pm either.
this chick is clueless, she has probably only ever been to Melbourne, Sydney or somewhere down south. she wouldn't be saying that is she had been up north haha
We had 47 in Ballarat about 10 years ago.😂😂😂
@@stephaniebell4272 i think some where hit 50 in austraila
@@R1fleman I wouldn’t be surprised if Coober Pedy got those sorts of temps
Lock out laws are from Sydney because drunk idiots would murder because in the crow in a drunken rage
I laughed when she said that. I'm in Melbourne, and I ALWAYS complain about the cold in winter. ( sometimes in autumn and spring as well.😂 )
None of these liquor rules apply in Melbourne, this young lady is a bit of generalist, you'd think if she travelled so much she would know better, maybe she should travel around Australia too.
She hasn't been to WA AND I DON'T THINK SHE HAS EXPERIENCED A PROPER AUSTRALIAN SUMMER
Ryan, why don't you show us around your hometown?
Great idea.
Yes, great idea 👌😃
yes, that would be great
Would definitely be cool if he did, make a nice change from reacting to others content if he made some of his own too.
Agree. I would love to see Indiana!
She’s just a whinger.
Btw it gets scorching hot in summer in Melbourne. Sometimes humid but nowhere near like NT, northern NSW & QLD.
Adelaide has heat also. One heatwave summer I remember it was 40 days over 40. Couple of decades ago now but it is scorched into my psyche because I had no air conditioning and my room was upstairs so all summer I lay there spraying water into the air for the fan to blow on to me. But we’re wooses.? She sounds incredibly sheltered
O oh Ryan's hooked...
NT doesnt get too hot temp wise but the humidity is something else. during the build up it used to be the murder capital.
Why did she come back? She also needs to drop the "like".
Sure of it!😂
She’s comparing the heat to Singapore? Singapore sits on the equator!
She then says Australian heat is dry 😮 only if you’re in Perth or Adelaide.
She sounds really up herself.
I lived in NW NSW and 45c to 47c was normal. During the last 'worst' Drought, I knew 7 and 8 year old kids who had never had a single drop of rain hit them ever. Dry as Fk
Perth gets really humid in March - and the last couple of years it’s gone on longer.
@@kevo6190 sure but I was referring to the cities. I agree a lot of regional and outback areas have dry heat.
Try far north Queensland humidity in summer, and she never got out much here lol
@@Sydneysider1310 I know.... Everyone knows Perth, Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. Big chunk in the middle that TH-camrs avoid but still seem to have an opinion on!
Come out bush and say G'day.....
I can see why she got a lot of dislikes.
Some people live for complaining. She annoyed me heaps.
'It gets hot 'maybe up to 42.' Come way out west. How about up to 55? Every animal, including birds, are in or under trees, suffering the heat. It's too hot to drive on the roads, because the tar is melted and coats your tyres. And don't break down, because if you don't have a ton of water with you, you're in serious trouble. Don't leave your vehicle, you won't make it back. Now you can complain that it's too hot.
I can, all these idiots are self important.
She's an airhead.
As soon as she said, “The sun is very hot”, I yelled “WUSS!!”
LOL
I worked at the Olympic Dam mine 600 km north of Adelaide in the desert. One summer we had 100 days above 40 and top of 47. These are shade temperatures and there is shade LOL. Outside temperatures are mid 50s. At the mine they issued special coolers to put round your neck. In the sun without water you can die in under 4 hours. The cities on east coast are much as she described. If she likes Singapore so much then perhaps she should go back there LOL.
Shops close at 5pm here because (as you've said Ryan) we don't live to work, we work to live.
True and we also don't have the population to make it worthwhile for the retailers
Shops here (colesworth) are still open until 10pm, or 11pm thursday, as it's a farming and mining area, so to accommodate those workers/industries those stores are open late.
This girl is a goose
😂😂😂
Drongo....‼️‼️
I assure you she's a woman, not a water fowl.
My grandmother used to use that expression. I love it.
It gets hotter than she says. I was born in Sydney. I have also lived in Queensland half of my life & it gets even hotter here. She should get out of Sydney more then open her mouth about the weather. Australia is huge & the weather isn't the same across the whole country let alone at the same temperature everywhere. Plus different parts of Australia have different types of heat/humidity too.
Where is she drinking??? I've been in bars/clubs drinking until the sun comes up!!
The sun here does bite! It can be 2 degrees at 9am & you can feel the sun biting your skin... Yes it's happened to us before while we were mowing our huge property. We were in the dead of Winter so it was like 12 degrees in the middle of the day. We were outside for 3 hours, that night I went to have a shower & I was burnt. The rest of the family were burnt too 😂
Again where TF is she where everything shuts at 5pm??? I'm in a semi rural/rural part of Queensland & shops are open past 5pm.
The reason why she's getting hate is because she's only going by the very few places she'd be visiting etc in a small area but talking about AUSTRALIA as a whole.
Maybe she moved back to the 70's as well. 9-5 on weekdays, 9-noon on Saturday and as for Sunday, well good with that.
Anything over 80F is hot in Australia. All supermarkets are open to 9pm in Australia. Take away stores are open later. The sky is more blue here. The light is different. Same in South Africa. It is currently winter. Of course it's colder.
Who cares what she thinks Australia is home and it's the best for me, cheers mate.
Don't forget to put your glass upside down on the bar after you have finished. Wooses. 😂
Perth and western Australia this year had a record heatwave 45°c for like two weeks straight. 😂😂😂😂
A place called Carnarvon reached 50°c
Yeah, she clearly hasn't lived anywhere else in Aus.
The azure blue sky over the blue ocean in Weatern Australia with a very dry heat is awesome.
Ohh man!! Thats a scorcher! What about the electricity bill when you put on the air con all day & night??
I'm in Perth there was not 2 weeks of 45!! I'll add 1 to Hannah's list Aussies love to exaggerate!!
I don’t know about Qld but NSW has Thursday night shopping till 8 or 9pm. Supermarkets are open till 10pm. Some shops choose to be open a bit longer, such as some hairdressers, a few chemists, etc, depending on whether it’s worthwhile for the shop owners. We all want to go home after work because that our work-life balance we all need so much.
Qld has Thursday night shopping too till 9 pm. Supermarkets are open till 9 pm every day except Sunday when they shut at 6 pm..
This chick lives in her own world. Inland, like Longreach, it gets hot enough in summer to melt the tar on the road, yet it feels far more comfortable than the humid coastal areas, even when the temperature is 10 degrees lower. I can’t imagine she’s spent much time out of Melbourne in Australia.
Most of the things she's saying apply in Sydney, not Australia...
Sydney's kinda overrated anyways... 😅
Exactly what I just said
Think she said she's in Qld
@@SalisburyKarateClub yeah & that's where I am.... Everything she said is 💩🐂😂😂
@@MadMaxine1979same, it’s more humidity that hits
I think this lady had her heart broken by an Australian Chad.😂
Dazza did her wrong... 💔 😢
A Robbo for sure!
A big part of the Aussie heat is the 100% humidity.
And a big part is dry, eg SA and a lot of WA for a start.
Yea.... shes never been to the pilbra.
Exactly, the Pilbara and Kimberley regions of northern Western Australia can max out above 45 degrees right through summer. Not just on one day a year young lady!
Hi Ant, I'm Cheryl, Chenins mum!! Fancy meeting you here?!! 😂❤😂
@@garryellis3085 The pilbara can max out at 50 degrees...
She has no idea. She is an annoying, don’t like to say this but I feel I would say go home. 🤬🤬🤬
They only have 2 seasons. dry and wet.. the wet lasts 6weeks and might rain a little. Might not. I lived in Hedland for a while and once saw temps reach 50°c in marble bar😅@@garryellis3085
I personally found a few of her concepts slightly contradictory (which makes me doubt people's sincerity). "It's not hot" but "we have a hot sun", "it's the cancer capital" but "the sky is beautiful" (the sun damages the eyes too). It might simply be that she didn't explain things well but it didn't make her sound good (along with sweeping stereotypes that might be limited to certain areas).
Having spent time in the US and other places in the world and yes the sky is more blue in Australia
I remember going to a Walgreens in New York and when the checkout chick said “Have a nice day” I replied ‘you too’! She just about ran out and hugged me. She said ‘you must be Australian, you guys are always lovely to service people - thank you’! I was kinda shocked!
Hi Ryan, love your channel mate this women is a half wit i live in penrith and last summer in 12 week period we had 18 days over 40 degs and in spring we had 4 days over 40 also humidity is extreme until you are in wa which is a Mediterranean climate which is extremely hot and dry i would be happy to see this women stay over seas im disappointed and the white Australia comments
It's really hot in Singapore all the time because it's high humidity, you can't compare, most of Australia is a dry heat
Yes, apparently it's very uncomfortable in Asia when the humidity is so high
This fool knows a heap of nothing...😂
I call BS...😊
Hey Ryan, when you were checking temps in Darwin and Perth you realised it was winter here but I think you forgot the time difference and were checking early morning temps. Something to remember for future vids. Obviously would've been warmer in the arvo.
I wish Brisbane was 33 every summer day . Don’t know where she pulled those temps
I've got an idea😂
It’s the combination of buttons & no collar. Lots of baby clothes (including onesies) have a similar style.
Can tell she's none Australian
Oops construction worker 😮
Nope tradie here in Australia 🇦🇺 😂😂😂
She's Australian but wants to show how travelled and "cultured" and "cosmopolitan " she is!😂
The hole in the Ozone layer does move. The atmosphere isn’t solid, so as the gases move, so does the hole. It also enlarges and shrinks.
Also, the hole doesn't really have an edge. It's not as if there is a part over Antarctica that has depleted ozone and as soon as you cross the boundary, it's back to normal.
Also the hole was bigger before we realised CFCs aren't the best thing since sliced bread
@@jwnomad Aside from effing up the ozone layer, CFCs really are pretty good.
@@j.f.christ8421 Aside from effing up our lungs, asbestos really is pretty good. Aside from effing up the finite earth, a perpetual growth model really is pretty good. Aside from the lack of critical thinking, religion really is pretty good. Aside from the worst aspects, everything really is pretty good...
@@jwnomad Well, someone's got a case of the Mondays, and it's not ever Monday!
Lol there are 'dry towns' in the outback where alcohol is completely not alllowed.
For some
We winge about humidity , temp not so much 😅
Evidently, this lady hasn't lived in coastal northern Australian cities like Cairns and Townsville, where the night-time temperatures barely drop and the humidity is feral 😅 And alcohol laws are state-based, so they vary a lot. My drinking days are over, though, so I really don't care 😅 As for shop opening hours, it's usually only the ones in small local shopping centres that close by 5 because they're owned by small business people who need to have a life! Larger shopping centres and malls often open later, as do supermarkets and pharmacies.
All states have different times for there stores closing. Supermarkets can stay open to 6-7pm, Saturdays nearly every thing except restaurants, pubs ECT shuts at 5pm, people want to actually go home or go out and enjoy the weekend. Sundays stores don't open till 11am so everyone gets a sleep in
South East Queensland has, in my opinion, the best temperature in Australia. Not too cold in winter, not too hot in summer. Not as humid as tropical Australia. No week long 40+C heatwaves. Yep it’s beautiful one day, perfect the next. 😀
Agree, and no crocs and stingers!
We do pronounce Korea and career the same. I hadn't noticed before. That's so funny.
You haven’t see blue skies till you see the sky colour in Perth WA xx
It's not just northern Australia that gets really hot. Here in Adelaide, South Australia we often get temperatures in the low to mid 40°C in the summer. A few years ago our maximum hit 46.7°.
Thing I hate about the heat in Brisbane is the Humidity makes it a lot worse and I would always think Australia was hotter than most other countries but I've spent a couple of summer's in England and Europe as an Adult and most surprisingly very hot (just as hot)
Where I live in Hervey Bay QLD, our average summer temperature rarely gets higher than 33 degrees Celsius BUT our humidity levels are mostly between 80 and 100%… it’s not the heat but the humidity that’s stifling…
If LA is far away, you will never see our shores down under, just flew to DC for a wedding in Annapolis, stayed 6 days and flew home, had a great time!!
Yep, we Aussies’ll do that: drive 600k for a weekend visit, no prob.
when you looked at the current temperature for Perth it looks like it was at nighttime, and it is Winter here. the daytime average for summer is what you need to look for. maximums ranging from 25 to 37 celsius
We understand why you haven't been to all corners of your Country, as it is even bigger than our own. 😂 Especially now you have a young family.
As for temperatures/how hot it is, just like your nation, our weather varies depending on where you are situated. Her perspective is from the area she is from only, and that sounds like from Queensland which is a Northern State.. I'm from WA and Perth is known as the hottest City. We had 8 x 40 degree Celcius days this past summer, but we had 13 in 2021-2022.
In 2023-2024, Perth's over 40 degree days were on January 13th at 40.7C, January 31st 41.9C, Feb 1st 42.6C, Feb 2nd, 40.4C, Feb 9th 42C, and Feb 10th at 42.3C. Keep in mind that Perth is in the South of the State. It gets hotter up North. They only have 2 seasons, known as Wet and Dry. We have the regular 4 seasons but in reverse of yours. On Jan 13th 2022 we recorded a temp of 50.7C or 123.26 degrees Fahrenheit at a town called Onslow up North. Damn that's hot. 🔥
As for being Wusses, just like every country we have all types of people from all corners of the world. We do have those who are scared of our critters, but more so we have a whole lot of people who just get in and get stuff done. We also like to help a mate in need. We don't mind having a chat, and most people are indeed friendly. They are all great qualities, but we still cannot boast because unless it is every single person, then we can always achieve more. I try to be kind, and do little things that would make someone else's day, like returning a trolley for a pregnant or young Mum or the elderly. Spread joy. We aren't guaranteed a long life, but we can try and make what we have worth it.
Is it just my little country town, or are Aussies more likely than not to return trolleys?
I met a Japanese family in Cairns on a very pleasant 28C day - I was in summer clothes, they were in winter clothes and still cold. I really think it depends on where you live in a country and what you are acclimatised to. You also need to factor in the effect pollution (as in Singapore) has on heat and things like humidity.
We don’t add an r to the end of Korea. The reason you thought you heard an r at the end, is because her mouth has to segue from “ Korea” to “as well”. It’s easier to add a hint of “r” between the two “a’s”. Ea-as becomes ea-ras. I studied phonetics in school and we learned about how people speak and the positions of our tongue as we navigate the thousands of combined syllables that make up the Australian accent.
He was just joking ;)
@@Fiona-zc6oz Even so, it’s still a fact about every human on earth, the mechanics of how we speak.
He accent has that modern , young Aussie twang plus she has lived O/S so he is hearing that
Lol
@@Jeni10It’s not every human on earth. Every language uses linking consonants and will blur boundaries from word to word.
However not every language uses a linking or intrusive ‘R’. It’s commonly used in non-rhotic varieties of English, along with linking ‘w’ sounds, but every language does it differently.
Take the rules for ‘liason’ in French, where the last consonant of the preceding word attaches to the beginning of the next - provided it starts with a vowel, otherwise that last consonant isn’t realised.
People
around the world don’t just stick an ‘r’ between words to facilitate faster speech, there are dozens of languages that don’t have any rhotic or liquid consonants at all.
Had the warmest autumn for the last 30 years I have been living in Perth. We are now getting some heavy rain from tornado cyclone. Have a look at Bunbury tornado
Perth get humid and sticky hot. But we also get the dry blistering 40c dry heat when the wind blow from the west.
I remember going through week long 40+C living at Adelaide when we get wind from the north. That was hot even for someone who came from the tropics
40c+ days are the norm. Unless u reside in Tassie.
Where 36C is a particularly hot summer's day, but we rarely have the killer humidity of the mainland - once you're out of the sun, you have immediate relief.
But that UV is sneaky if you're of the white persuasion, even on a mild 12-18C day
Or Canberra! Tasmania has no pollution layer, so the sun is really hot on your head in summer!
average Melbourne temp last summer was 25 degrees
Hey Ryan, grab a camera and show us what your town is like. Our sky is super blue and clear. The nights also have tons of stars 🤩
Australia is a continent there's a wide range in temperatures both in summer and winter. If she's from Sydney, she probably lives near the coast and the sea breeze keeps it cool year round. If you live in western Sydney, 37 is basically every day. She obviously wasn't in Sydney during the summer of 2016/17. It was 38 degrees at 3am for a month solid, and 48 degrees in the middle of the day! Then if you live in QLD it's over 30 degrees with humidity for 6 months of the year, with winter a beautifully mild 21-26 degrees. If she's comparing Japan to Australia, you can't compare. My wife is Japanese, and I've spent a lot of time there. It's completely different. You can buy alcohol in vending machines there! There's a temple in Kyoto made of pure gold with very little security and fencing. If that was in Australia you'd have people out there melting it with bunsen burners! Lol! As for shops closing at 5pm, yes it sucks but we don't have the population of say the US or Japan. Our largest city is only half the population of Japan's 3rd largest city. Our entire country is 10 million less than Tokyo. Yes, compared to Japan, Australia's customer service is pathetic.
Shopping hours vary. In my suburb in Sydney, we have a variety of shops open until at least 9PM. And not just restaurants. And it isn't a particularly large shopping area, and we don't have a large mall.
48°C?? Oh Lord, have mercy. I may not be an Australian but I'm a super mega _wuss_ when it comes to heat. I already crumble and melt at 26°C. 😂 In Austria, the most intense heatwaves don't go over 38°C BUT we don't have ACs _anywhere_ in the country, aside from a few places. Not in homes, not in public transport, not in schools, not in most universities. Usually just in the supermarkets. ACs make _all_ the difference.
In the beginning, it's kind of alright, but after a while (around July), summers get unbearable here. Austria is rich but terrified of technology. 🙄
After 6 years of living here and a further 8 years after building our home we had some form or reverse cycle air conditioning installed mainly for heating with the added benefit that it also cooled. Older home are still less likely to have A/C even today. NSW in Oz
@@SatieSatie We have reverse cycle air conditioning in our place in Sydney. Some people have theirs running a lot, but we don't use it too often. We mainly put it on for an hour or two (with the timer) when it is a hot night, so we can get to sleep. It is extremely rare for us to use it for heating. Generally, the further you get away from the coast, the hotter it gets, although even the coast gets very hot when there isn't a sea breeze blowing.
Hey Ryan, Talking of the sky ------ I notice it every time I fly from the Northern Hemisphere to the Southern Hemisphere the sky is ALWAYS clearer. The difference is just so surprising; the difference every time I fly it always stands out so much.
The stars at night are always so much clearer as well. Its always great to be home but this sky clarity is a real thing. Cheers from Down Under
The shape of the earth changes to more elliptical in our summer so we are the closest to the sun. The sun in Oz is NOT the same as it is everywhere else.
You mean orbit around the sun, right? 😉
Earth's orbit is almost circular. The variation is minor and has no noticeable effect on the weather. Put it this way, if you shrunk the Earth's orbit to the size of a 28" bicycle wheel, the eccentricity would be less than a layer of paint.
Not the shape of the earth, the shape of the earth's ORBIT. It is an ellipse, with one end further away from the sun than the other. Its furthest point is during July and its closest point is January (souther hemisphere summer). The difference in distance from the sun is about is about 5 million kilometres. Hence the level of UV is greater at the same latitude in summer in the southern hemisphere than it is in the northern.
@@j.f.christ8421 Correct. The seasons are caused by the tilt of the Earth's axis (23 deg from the vertical) relative to the orbit. See wikipedia for details : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axial_tilt
@@tacitdionysus3220 Earth averages 150 million km from the sun, +/1 2.5 million doesn't matter much. Oz is hot because most of it is like Death Valley, it's mostly desert plus no mountains to cause rain and so on.
Supermarkets in Australia are open all hours. Where I live Woolworths is open from 7 am to 10 pm.
Honestly.. shes just a bit wrong. 😅
Unlike the Northern Hemisphere Australia is closer to the sun during our Summer. Everything doesn't shut at 5pm. I live in a rural town, and nothing shuts at 5pm. A few specialist shops close at 5.30 but most close between 6pm and 10pm.
The problem I have with her talking about Australia is that you can't talk about all of Australia in a general sense because it's so vast. Summer in Hobart is not like Summer in Cairns or Darwin for example. Winters in Perth are not like Winters in Sydney. How people are in Western Australia is maybe not how people are in Victoria. There's so much wrong with her statements, but in the end it's her opinions I guess.
The last couple of years in S.A. has been pretty tame summer wise (knock on wood). We had a few 38-40 days, a couple of humid days and a heatwave for a bit there but nothing like around 4-5 years ago when it was like 38-42 for a couple weeks straight.
I was living in Coober Pedy which is between 4 deserts and when those deserts heat up Coober melts was there at 1:58 am and it was 51.8C Could not leave the dugout as it was like opening the oven door not the front door. What was the temp at 1:58pm when I could not leave the dugout? now for you whom do not know 125F is 51.66C Death valley USA is the hottest place in the world. Why because the whole world to Americans is America.
@@RHINO2310 I stayed in cpedy once and it was the middle of summer I had hitchhiked up there from the city just because and man was I happy to get underground. Oasis in a pounding hot 🥵 desert 🐪
Yes people do complain about it being hot a lot during summer, but when the temperatures rise above 35c (95f) on a really humid day then it's justified, because the humidity makes it feel a lot hotter.
There have been a lot of temperature records broken in the last 10 years, with a local record being set at 47c (116.6f) a few years back where I live. The old record was 43c (109.4), however in a town nearby on the same day the temperature rose to 51c (123.8) which was also a new record for that town.
However you will always get people who will claim that it hotter back in the old days, but I remember the old record for where I live only being 41c and that was set back in the late 70's, but I just remember it as being a really hot day. So peoples claims that it was hotter back in the old days are all based on anecdotal evidence.
I don’t know where in Oz she’s from but I remember 40 days over 40 degrees one heatwave summer in Adelaide. We don’t want her back if she can’t even research her topic. I’ve been in 52 degrees in cooper Pedy.
Is she from Tasmania???
She did say Queensland which makes what she is saying even more weird. It is true that Brisbane rarely reaches 40deg.
Knock off the Tassie jokes ok 😂
@@heartshapedisleI meant temperature wise for tassie. You guys get much cooler temperatures than any of the other states and territories. I’m not throwing shade at you I personally think TAS is beautiful and sometimes when it gets really hot here I wish I was there. Chill lol
@@Danielle-vs-thedead 😄 we are so used to people implying we are stupid.
@@heartshapedislepeople imply that you’re inbred not stupid, well that’s what I’ve always heard. Again, not me saying that. I’m a fan 😊
It used to be around 46c (114.8f) in my classroom every summer up around Wallget and Wilcannia and the air con used to make a ' reassuring noise' but did bugger all. That was EVERY SUMMER. 🥵🌞
I also grew up in a jungle in PNG. Humidity sux but you know it rains about 3pm every day.
The dusty, dry hatred of central woop woop where every fly in the desert is trying to drink the moisture out of your eyeballs. That gets old really quick
Hmmmm....... regarding the heat, she's way off. Also, having lived in Brisbane my whole life, I have to say I resent her saying that it '' hasn't got much going for it ''. OK, maybe 20 years ago, but not today. Mind you, the humidity here would kill a small dog, so be careful! LOL
If darwin is 66⁰ it would be in the middle if the night. Winter is beautiful in Darwin, sunrises around 7am and sets 7pm, so warm around 88⁰ in the days and virtually doesnt rain in the dry season
Nah on the shirt, it looks like pajamas! 🧐 Ryan, can I suggest you watch One Pack Wanderers from the US or Karstan & Maxine from Australia - both couples are exploring different parts of Australia! K&M travel the real outback with two small kids! 😁👍
Yes, I also watch One Pack Wanderers (Americans)and they are back in Australia. Mazda gave them a free brand new Ute to use for their travel around Australia this time. Amazing
@@dianen8962They are such a sweet couple and fun people, I hope they can eat and sleep better this time! They will be missing Blueberry though! 🤗
It's currently 48.56°F / 9.2 °C where I am in Emerald Victoria,Australia
and Pissing down with Rain at 4.38 pm local time lol
This woman is very annoying. I'm not even through the video and she just seems like someone who complains a lot. Also the things she is saying is bad about Australia night just where she is.
I live near the blue Mountains and Penrith is regularly the highest temp in the state. One year it was 47😮.
LOL. Sitting in Canberra in winter where it's almost snowing and complaining about how hot it is. :P If you think Australia's hot, you've never travelled. Although she is talking from Brisbane where it's really humid AF, making it feel a lot hotter than it is. And yeah - the sky can be spectacularly blue.
We don't put an R on the end of Korea, though some people insert one when it's followed by a word starting with a vowel. We do that sometimes.
If you're stupid enough to buy water when it's free out of the tap, you deserve all you get. Unless you live in Adelaide.
And yes, we have a real alcohol problem. 😞 She's right - it's a cultural thing.
Plenty of shops stay open late, but remember that Australians get penalty pay rates for working late. Long may it be so.
I'm in Tassie and we can get shots after 12pm, and go into bars and clubs until close. And our shops usually close at 9 or 10, except Kmart which is open 24/7.
This should be her issue with the Gold Coast (sounds like where she is) not Australia. Nearly everything she said has nothing to do with Perth, where I'm at. Also, law of non contradiction?? Australia isn't hot, nek minit, the Sun is so hot! Yeah, that's where the heat comes from....
Exactly.... & I lived on the Gold Coast until 4yrs ago. I don't believe she left her house very often to come up with the 🐂💩 things she said.
Only clothing and specialty shops close early, even then Kmart and target stay open until 7pm and we don’t have the population to cater for late night shopping every night. That why we have late night shopping once a week on a Thursday where the clothing and specialty shops stay open until late.
Ryan, she's from Queensland and they're different to other Australians. Opening hours in shops are not as restrictive in other states.
It doesn't have to be hot for the sun to burn here.
Hi Ryan, its winter here right now so temperatures are mild. Its the humidity that knocks you around, being so close to the equator.
Aussie here. 3:50 in and "wussy" was enough to make me decide I don't want to watch your video reacting to her. LOL. Keen for the next one though.
Yep I cant watch either sadly
Shops don’t open late because there isn’t enough trade make it worth wile. Laws say they can, but if outgoing costs are going to outweigh incoming sales, why would they stay open ? Supermarkets trade late, but very few other retailers do.
Ryan the shirt looks cool, no worries. Cheers from Sydney, AU.
Hot WEEKS can last over 40 for a fair while. It's not just the odd day. The heat in Australia is diferent in different zones, but for the main it is NOT the humidity, it is a DRY heat that sizzles, you can take that more than a humid heat, but it 's pretty humid in Darwin or Cairns and some times Brisbane. But one of the hottest ever recorded temperatures EVER in the world was at Coolgardie in Western Australia and an Karatha, also in West Australia, don't let your cat get stuck in your car overnight or you will have fried cat in the morning!
What generalisations she makes
Australia varies depending on where you live. Temperature wise humidity etc I’m from Sydney we have had bad summers, wet summers, cool summers. The worst was 47/48 deg and all the plants died. This summer stayed around 35 so not so bad. And yes it’s the humidity that gets you. I don’t know what planet she is from but she hasn’t spent any time in the city. Shops are open till 6 or 5.30 some are open till 9pm and Kmart is open 24 hours. Woolworths till 11.30pm 10pm on the weekends.
G'day Ryan, I think she is a whingeing pom (Brit). BTW your shirt is okay. Most summers we have had at least one week over 42C. Our Adelaide winter is 14C to 0C. My son lives in Cairns and the weather there is generally 33C and very humid every day.
No, she is Aussie but her accent has modified from living O/S
Half.of what she said was positive. Why are Australians so hypersensitive? Kind of proves her point about wussiness doesn't it.
This summer was hugely humid on the east coast.
The top part of Australia is very humid and sticky! The very tip of Cape York is 10 degrees south so it's well into the tropics. Darwin is 33C during the day even in winter.
Yes the sky is really really blue in Australia. Maybe it's because our air is cleaner then most other countries with Tasmania having the cleanest air in the world.
😂😂Wow Ryan mate did she just complain about how hot the sun is, must be a whinging Aussie 😂
Yep what a wuss 😅
Supermarkets are open to 9pm in major cities and suburbs, not so much in regional areas
looks like she's sitting in a closed room with her aircon on LOL
Yes in Australia the UV is so high that it’s unironically off the charts because it exceeds what the standard 0-11 UV chart has, I often get UV 12 or 13 which is so uncommon in other places in the world they just omit it from the charts
She is in Queensland !! tropical and sub tropical weather HOT and highest skin cancer rates in the world
I think this video shows how much the areas of Australia differ! You cannot talk about the weather in Australia from one point of view… if you’re Australian you will know this! From city to city the weather varies…
And yes, some Australians are obsessed with the weather and will talk about it all day!! In Melbourne we talk about it being too hot, too cold, too windy, too much rain… or not enough rain!!… and that can be all in one day 🤣
Earths orbit around the sun is eliptical and as a result the earth is considerably closer to the sun during the southern hemispheres summer months.
And the tilt in the Earth's axis makes the part of the globe where Australia is even closer to the sun in summer.
The orbit is practically circular, it makes no appreciable difference.
@@j.f.christ8421 I suppose 5 million kilometres or thereabouts, in the grand scale of things isn't very appreciable to some, nevertheless, it does tend to make a difference whether you appreciate it or not.
There have been studies to suggest that the variance accounts for an increase in the intensity of solar rays amounting to roughly 7% during the perihelion in January.
@@hybridgoth Draw it as a scale model.
The Sun will be a circle of 1.4mm.
The average Earth orbit will be 150mm. Draw an ellipse 148x152mm.
The Earth of course is a dot being about 0.012mm. That tiny little dot will wobble back & forth about 5mm, or a few percent. It really is "not much". Oz is hot because it's a hot flat desert. Building mountains in WA will fix a lot of things.
Oh yes! The sky! When I came home after being away for 12 months, the impact of our sky is incredible. It is clear, the colour is vivid and it seems like it is higher and just more of it (no idea how). It really is spectacular.
In Queensland at least Coles and Woolworths in suburbia stay open till 9 Monday to Saturday and close at 6 on Sundays. It has been that way for years
And Bunnings
And IGA, Drakes, Spar, and other small or independent grocers outside of the capital cities..
My local Coles in Melbourne is open from 6AM to Midnight every day of the week.
Saying it is hot in Australia is like saying all America is hot and humid because you’ve been to Florida
Never been to Perth!!! I rest my case. NFI
I’m a Brit who’s lived in Oz for 35 years and the thing that gets me about the sky is that it’s BIG….really, really BIG!