Düsseldorf - Germany 🇩🇪 - Full Series
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 พ.ค. 2024
- My next trip took me to Düsseldorf, Germany. Join me on this short getaway of 3 nights at Düsseldorf. This weekend a few things where going on, Saint Martin day, Christmas market, the carnival started, and of course the trains got delayed, the most german thing that can happen to you nowadays!
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Germany is a Western European country with a landscape of forests, rivers, mountain ranges and North Sea beaches. It has over 2 millennia of history. Berlin, its capital, is home to art and nightlife scenes, the Brandenburg Gate and many sites relating to WWII. Munich is known for its Oktoberfest and beer halls, including the 16th-century Hofbräuhaus. Frankfurt, with its skyscrapers, houses the European Central Bank.
Düsseldorf is a city in western Germany known for its fashion industry and art scene. It's divided by the Rhine River, with its Altstadt (Old Town) on the east bank and modern commercial areas to the west. In the Altstadt, St. Lambertus Church and Schlossturm (Castle Tower) both date to the 13th century. Streets such as Königsallee and Schadowstrasse are lined with boutique shops.
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Episodes:
00:00 - Day 1 - Departing to Düsseldorf
03:49 - Day 2 - St. Martin's Day & Christmas Market
10:21 - Day 3 - Carnival started
20:21 - Day 4 - Departing to the Netherlands
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#saintmartins #christmasmarket #carnival #düsseldorf #germany #travel #vlog
Germany has been the slowest Western European country to let go of cash transactions and move to cards. The reason some places will only take a card if you spend at least €10 or €20 is not to avoid taxes, but because the banks that issue those cards charge transaction fees. So if the transaction is for a very small amount, the fee makes it so that the merchant makes nothing or not much after paying it. It used to be that way in the US too, and very occasionally I still see the policy in use, usually at very small independent vendors. But most companies have just decided that they’d rather have your business than have you walk away, (or worse, get angry), because you want to buy something there but have no cash, just a card. Also, the pandemic moved things even more towards cards here (US), b/c everyone was going in the “touchless” direction. So now, even places that you always previously knew you’d have to have cash to enjoy, like little church festivals for example, even they have mostly adapted to having card readers at each booth.
Sehr gut. Ich mag es
It was a short but nice trip! Thank you for sharing
Great video i love düsseldorf ❤it is my favorite city to be in.
It’s a great city!
Nice video
Thanks
@@LucasKov Welcome
How are you
I like bentobox next i go there, i will eat there
Welcome in the Pakistan😊
🙈
@@arnodobler1096 🤩🤗
@@arnodobler1096 How are you dear friend