Lol, no, but our farmland is not as good as that underneath the streets and buildings of Toronto! Also, Saskatchewan is home to "Palliser's Triangle", an area of land which Palliser, the surveyor, declared a wasteland. What's happening there these days? A wheat farm!
@@fletchro789 because of diefenbaker lake only. A man made reservoir. Our water also tastes like pool water because of how much it needs to be treated to be “drinkable.”
geography question: first country you cross , other than the US, travelling south from Detroit. most say Mexico, Cuba, et Al. I reckon you know the correct answer.
I think I made an error: I think the fact I meant was: If you draw a horizontal line from the Southern most tip of Canada, there are more Americans living above that line than Canadians.
@@marksallows113 that’s true I live in Macomb county 12 mile (19km) north of Detroit on 12 mile road I have to drive south to Canada to cross ambassador bridge
exactly! its also why they sound so much like us (minus things like “oat/out and been/ben) the UP accent is basically stereotypical Canadian accent too
@@kalpic11I always thought people from those states such as Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan sounded more Canadian in their accent. I'm on the east coast btw.
Rll isn't a bad source of information but he does some wild assumptions every now and then and they're most of the time very wrong. When watching rll you need to take what he's saying with a pinch of salt
The best farmland is not in Ontario. It's in Alberta and Saskatchewan. Also the reason why so many Canadians live around the great lakes is not because of the Canadian shield. It's because Ontario is what was once considered Upper Canada and it's where the British colonized after the war with France. It was also where loyalists from the American war of Independence went to when the U.S won their independence. Treaties with native peoples and an expansion westward along rail lines is why most Canadian cities across the country are close to the U.S border
Also saying that it’s because of the Canadian shield isn’t wrong either, who tf want to live up north in the shield when it’s extremely challenging to build basic road and infrastructure. Also for the person looking for source… we learn that in History class. Just google it.
As someone who lives in Mid Michigan. I can tell you it gets cold where I live and it gets real bad up north. I can only imagine what it feels like in Arctic Canada.
I lived on Baffin Island for a few months. That is right next to Greenland above Quebec. I hocked up a loogie one morning and it froze before it hit the ground.
Me too and I farm. They tell us that Ukraine is the breadbasket of the world that's a huge lie. Canada grows lots of wheat lots of rye and mostly canola. And we both know that Windsor is packed.
It's warm this year. So warm that some of the ski centers couldn't even make enough snow. You can certainly see climate change at work over the past few decades. Toronto will essentially be without snow in the winter in 20 years.
in short Canada is like : the more north you go, the colder it gets, the higher your chances of freezing to death the more south you go, the warmer it gets Nice video
It is also more expensive to built houses, roads and other infrastructure that can support life. I saw a video of somewhere in the US, where they didn't even know how to handle a "blizzard" of a few inches of snow, roads closes, no one coming for the fallen tree branches etc.
Not really, in fact the aspen parkland region and pallisers triangle which spands across Alberta, saskatchewan, and Manitoba, has some of the most fertile soil on the planet called chernozem soil which is rich in natural fertilizers like phosphorus, and this is due to the Canadian Shield, the large freshwater resources of lake Winnipeg and manitoba as well as the large amounts of marshes within the region help nourish the soil very well. In fact, about 80% of Canadas total agricultural output comes from these three provinces combined, which makes it the main breadbasket of Canada. This is also the reason why cities like Saskatoon, Regina, Edmonton, and Winnipeg have larger populations than that of some of the states like north and South Dakota along with Idaho and Montana.
The Fraser Delta and St Lawrence Lowlands are better. In Alberta I have 4" of topsoil, 120 day frost free period, 17" of total precipitation of which only half falls during the growing season, 12% hail zone but some people have 22%. Only in the last 20 years is wheat viable, only fall rye can survive over winter on a regular basis.
Your welcome Nelya , we are indeed great neighbors and your cousins in the north who will be there for you when you need us most and you will indeed need us one day to have your backs to feed you and support you in times of trouble ❤🇨🇦👊🙏
Right? Look how garbage it can be in the world, just for the sheer good luck of having bad neighbours! We ARE so lucky to be together. Let’s keep it up. ❤
Way more North too. Cascadia Megaregion, 3rd livable city globally is Calgary. Home to the Oil Industry Nationally. Reason for it's success and uncoming development much like the Gulf of Mexico is for The U.S and other places.
A massive percentage of the world's food grains are grown on the Prairies ( southern halves of Alberta and Saskatchewan) plus a good portion of southern Manitoba.
@@macjalac5845 there are parts of the Canadian Shield (eg. central Ontario and parts of Québec immediately north of the St. Lawrence Valley) that would be mild enough to support agriculture... it's just that the soils aren't suited for it. Some of the Hudson Bay lowlands of northern Ontario would probably become suitable in a warmer world, but the problem is that sea level rise might flood that area before it becomes warm enough. The Canadian Shield is one reason why Canada doesn't stand to gain as much from global warming as Russia. Although northwestern Russia is similar (Baltic Shield), there's no analogous feature in Siberia. Once the climate becomes suitable for agriculture, the Siberian land will be ready. Southern Siberia is already like the Canadian prairies climate-wise, and there's extensive agriculture there already; average temperatures in Novosibirsk are not too different from Saskatoon (and Astana in neighboring Kazakhstan is similar to Regina).
Those Prairie farmlands are much better farmland than southern Ontario….. you can easily see this for yourself by eating Alberta beef and Ontario beef…. And as far as crops…. Sask grains are far better tasting than anything grown in Ontario. Yer basically smoking crack even trying to compare. As well the people are better too.
You've never been to Quebec have you. Hey can I get a bag of chips. I'm from Manitoba. Them: Sortez de mon magasin, vous ne parlez pas français ! I'll never forget that. What a fuxking bitch.
Metro Vancouver is close to the American/Canadian Border. I have been living in Vancouver for 17 years and I am still close to the border and my friend cross the border for church in Langley. :)
I live in Toronto and it is a tad crowded here lol. Once you drive even 30 mins outside the city, the farmlands are beautiful. I drove to Orillia last year (2.5 hours north of Toronto) and it was so amazing and open. Lake Ontario is amazing in the summer but a lot of people head to Lake Simkoe because it's huge. Went to Kawartha Lakes for my sister's wedding back in 2017. Beautiful beautiful places
I live in Toronto as well. Been to NYC and lived in Mexico city for a month. Mexico city is by far the most crowded city I've ever been to, but honestly crowded is crowded and i also agree that toronto is to crowded. Going to Muskoka and algonquin is absolutely the best in the summer.
Algonquin park .. very bad for Toronto people ! Brrr very cold, lots of man eating bears , vicious moose, bad food & water .!!! Stay away ! We are good. Try Friendly affordable Lake Simcoe or Lake Huron. Algonquin park bad. HURON GOOD 👍🏼
Toronto is farther south than Bend Oregon. I went on a trip to Toronto a few years ago and I remember that confused me greatly when I figured that out haha
That's wild lol. Never pieced that together despite working across Oregon for years, let alone being in Washington now. For me Canada's always been B.C. though, so they're always my northern neighbors.
We leave that border alone because of our support for England and sort-of France. Otherwise, there's way more potential there than thirty eight million people need.
@@lawtraf8008 PM was not elected with a majority. And policies/interests in southern Ontario / Quebec do not function well across a country so large. That's why provinces are supposed to manage certain things but Ottawa can't stay in their lane and like to micromanage and interfere in provincial affairs. This is why Canadians outside of this area largely dislike this area. The irritation over this would go away if Ottawa would stay in its lane.
A lot of the Ontario farmland isn’t even farmland anymore. It’s all subdivisions and suburbs now. People are moving from places like Toronto and other big cities to SW Ontario and buying up the land, and building houses. There used to be huge farms around here, and now it’s all neighbourhoods and sporadic small farms. The only big farms that are left are either corn, and soy bean fields, or massive greenhouse complexes that are growing marijuana. I live in Windsor, and if you look southeast, you can see the glow from the lights from the greenhouses in Leamington over 40 miles away. It even made the Detroit news because people were wondering where the glow was coming from.
Great video, greetings from Hereford, AZ, the most beautiful city of the Wild West! We have great weather, lakes, rodeos nearby, bird watching, and the Coronafo trail!
My dad was from south Detroit (just across the bridge in Ontario. Every once in a while we’ll make jokes about how Americans can’t handle the cold. Then he likes to remind me that ALL OF MICHIGAN was north of him growing up.
We love the USA so much that after we won the war of 1812 we let you keep your country. Now I'm not saying us Canadians are smart because if the USA won that war Canada would no longer exist. Canada has a long history of winning wars and giving up land cause we felt sorry for the losers.
@@StephenCarmona Emergencies act was a year ago, in for 6 days also was unlikely to pass in Canada's Senate here,so it was withdrawn. so ,just ancient news ,also mandates all lifted,even for travel ,for months &months now, or a year or more ..
I learned this over a decade ago and anytime someone brings a Canada it’s so hard to not bring up this fun fact lol that majority of Canadians live below the American border🤓… and then everyone just looks at you like you’re crazy and then you actually whip out google maps and explain it lol.
@@CaioFran I'm old. Once upon a time it did. Then, in 1980, Republicans and people who fancied themselves 'libertarians' embarked on a campaign to undo the legacy of the New Deal and the belief in society as a collective enterprise for the good of all of us. Faith in civic cooperation, instead of dog-eat-dog, selfish materialism. But I'm suspicious of anyone writing in Russian, where that belief hasn't existed since AT LEAST the time when Trotsky fled to Mexico, and more likely, since Chekhov died.
@@wolfiethedog76 I hadn't wanted to get political, but to tell the truth, Wolfie, I'm with you. Since at least Barry Goldwater (but especially since Reagan), their object has been to dismantle the legacy of the New Deal. That's a model that's based on a belief that society is a cooperative enterprise -- based on civic cooperation, that is, rather than selfishness and suspicion. Maybe the image we have of Canadians is because they seem to get the idea of friendliness and compassion.
YOU LEFT OUT WINDSOR, ONTARIO My favorite Canadian city, where the drinking age is 18; and they don't check ✔️ I used to enjoy the trip South to Canada when I worked in Detroit and lived on a park below the Windsor bridge.
I'm from Windsor, and it's actually south of Detroit. Most people haven't heard of Windsor because Canada seems to end at London for most Canadians, lol. They seem to think we are Americanized. This channel didn't mention it, and we are the most southern city.
Correction: Americans settled next to us after we did, they fought each other and then loyalist came up here and are still trying to ruin everything to this day.
Canadian here, and although it's been 5 years since high school history class I do believe the reason so many people live so far south is due to politics, history, and trade. The Canadian Shield has got nothing to do with it. 1. Politics & History: The best farmland in Canada is actually in the prairie provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. But these lands weren't part of Canada and open to most colonizers for settling and farming until 1905. This, combined with harsher climate and the isolation/lack of many essential services like the post and medicine meant population growth not only had a late start but grew slower too. 2. Trade: the cities in the Great Lakes region has access to and could easily trade with American industries in the region (and which each other) because, well, the lakes. Ships were and continue to be super efficient means of transporting mass amounts of goods. I believe the Great Lakes region of the states was once a great hub of manufacturing and mining (maybe it still is idk) so of course Canadian businesses would want a piece of that. And where the money goes, population naturally follows. The same is true for the St. Lawrence river! It runs from one of the Great Lakes, through Ontario and Quebec, all the way to the ocean. Having access to the ocean was important for the same reason the Great Lakes were so important for industry and trade. So, southern Ontario and Quebec as always been a population centre from day one and had the industries and jobs to keep those populations. This meant that as the country grew, the population of this region always grew faster than the rest of the country. Fast forward a 100 years to today, and voilá, we have this weird situation where 75% of the population live below the 49th parallel.
Wow I never knew that, that's so interesting Down under most of our land is too arid for farmland and so we cling to our coasts. I've always found Canadians to be similar to Australians and for me this is just another similarity. I've also had friends from those Canadian cities and I never really knew how close they were together or how close they were to U.S cities.
@@tsm688 I’ve seen the conditions of these “reservations” and what happens when they protest Canadian control over their resources… give the land back to the actual people of Canada
@@mhern2558 From the sound of it, I genuinely doubt you have seen a modern reservation... I worked for several, for many years, and learned a few things about how they work. Number one, they are self-owned and self-managed, which often means, despots. Unless the chief is a saint, he'll be the only one on reserve with a car newer than 30 years old. I've seen one or two prosperous reserves, but mostly they're pretty poor. Number two, they have a lot of advantages in law. They get money and they don't pay certain taxes and are exempt from certain laws. Some reserves make an absolute killing growing tax-free tobacco. The indian casino is a stereotype for a reason. They have hunting rights in any season, and can sell those to visitors, and even keep the meat. One reserve had oil and the foresight to not sell away mineral rights. Number three, there's factors which make it difficult for anyone to **leave** the reserve. They some lose treaty rights, and there's a cultural expectation for a bunch of people to support each other. Which works out about as well as you might think it would in a culture chronically addicted to alcohol and drugs. Anyway, leaving the reserve alone is basically unheard of unless they're thrown out. Last, there's a huge disconnect between reserve and government, they don't cooperate with each other. Government build schools -- modern schools, for the reserve to use themselves -- which the reserve doesn't spend the money to keep staffed. Government projects build houses, which get torn down for firewood since it takes frickin' years for the paperwork to go through to dig up gas lines on reserve land. etc. Basically, a textbook version of what happens when you blindly throw resources at a problem. Problems eat up the money and nothing changes. They get more for their tax money than we do, and are free to do what they want, but continue to have many problems which we don't have the rights to meddle with. With the combination of a good leader and good communication on their part, some reserves have been successful.
What a fucking shame. They have second largest swathe of land behind Orcland 🇷🇺 those people live in such a tiny area and enjoy it,while they don’t give independence to any countries bruh,if anyone tries to take these big uninhabited islands the size of germany they’ll send their ships like they did over a small island between them and Denmark (Hans Island) well,can’t say nothing else. At least Toronto is okay. And Quebec
There’s a spot on a friend’s mountain property that only a wire fence separated Canada. I once put my foot under the fence and said: hey, I have one foot in Canada and one in Washington.
It’s actually crazy I live in the middle of Saskatchewan in a small city; The Battlefords, and there’s no people here. Even comparing the Prairie population centres of Airdrie-Calgary and Edmonton which are empty compared to the highly populated mega regions of Oshawa-Toronto-Hamilton-Nigeria Falls is insane! I’d love to see my small city grow to even 100,000k, just so we can have more shopping options.
"Best farm land in all of Canada"
BC, Alberta, and Saskatchewan: Are we jokes to you?
It's not just hockey player's who wants to go there.
You got that right!! Beautiful country and I am glad I got the chance to visit.
What about Friendly Manitoba !?
Lol, no, but our farmland is not as good as that underneath the streets and buildings of Toronto! Also, Saskatchewan is home to "Palliser's Triangle", an area of land which Palliser, the surveyor, declared a wasteland. What's happening there these days? A wheat farm!
@@fletchro789 because of diefenbaker lake only. A man made reservoir. Our water also tastes like pool water because of how much it needs to be treated to be “drinkable.”
There are more Americans living north of Canadians than there are Canadians living north of Americans, because of this.
😵💫
A curved earth will confuse u
I mean Canada is already north of the USA 🤦🏾♂️
@@Ajibolaa Not all of it.
What!!?
All my OR nurses in Detroit were Canadian! Very Good people
And now we have a huge shortage. Could we borrow some back? LMAO
Some of them are hot too....🇨🇦😍Greetings from 48209....#southwestDetroit
@@randy7068 They are rightfully ours. They are Canadian.
@@randy7068 lets just become one country there is no need to have competition between canada and the us
@Dreamy redits true but the things holding canadians back is joining the us and not having free healthcare and strict gun control
I've always had a giggle when I tell people I'm in a Canadian city South of Detroit.
geography question:
first country you cross , other than the US, travelling south from Detroit.
most say Mexico, Cuba, et Al.
I reckon you know the correct answer.
@@pearl-pf6xz of course, it's Canada!
Do you know Jesus is a messenger of God
@@ytc257yes bro why bring religious comments into a non-relogious comment.
@@ytc257Ye
As a Canadian, why do I feel like we know a hell of a lot more about the U.S.A then they know about us. 😅🤨
Patrice O’Neal had a hilarious line about it on a standup routine.
It's true because the American school system sucks and because America is much more significant than Canada. It's 38 million vs 331 million.
This is less true today because of the internet. But you are right, Americans on the whole LOVE Canada but don’t know muvh about it.
Because you do
@@marielasalle5039 As it should be; familiarity breeds contempt.
Fun fact: This means that more Americans live above that line than Canadians do!
Alaskans: Causally going outside with a T-shirt and shorts in a snow storm
Detroit is north of Canada
Google it
I think I made an error: I think the fact I meant was: If you draw a horizontal line from the Southern most tip of Canada, there are more Americans living above that line than Canadians.
@@marksallows113 that’s true I live in Macomb county 12 mile (19km) north of Detroit on 12 mile road I have to drive south to Canada to cross ambassador bridge
@@TheAmericanCatholic I live in Windsor, ON !
“Best farmland in all of Canada” AB & SK seething rn
Lol! Yeah, they're the bread basket of Canada.
Soil wise lower Ontario has far superior dirt ab and sk just have way more!😂
Lol sask has to irrigate like crazy from man made reservoirs. Nobody is seething here
@@jenniferduffin2091 Ah... that's an important point.
@@johnnyyouse5038 That makes sense!
As a Michigander this told me that 50% of Canada’s population is closer to me than 90% of the US population. Crazy 😮
Being from Michigan makes you better than 90% of the United states.
exactly! its also why they sound so much like us (minus things like “oat/out and been/ben) the UP accent is basically stereotypical Canadian accent too
@@kalpic11I always thought people from those states such as Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan sounded more Canadian in their accent. I'm on the east coast btw.
Obviously you're not
School: why do you always act like you are better than me!
Reedschultz:
RealLifeLore:
We are😂
On God frfr
Ok
Rll isn't a bad source of information but he does some wild assumptions every now and then and they're most of the time very wrong. When watching rll you need to take what he's saying with a pinch of salt
@Grebo very true I usually use his videos more for entertainment than information
Infographich show and oversimplified: we are
I’ve already learned more geography from this channel than schools
That's very concerning
In school we dont learn that much of Geography!🇬🇷
Yeah lol
I hope you're not Canadian 😂
Where do you Go to school? Ohio?
The best farmland is not in Ontario. It's in Alberta and Saskatchewan.
Also the reason why so many Canadians live around the great lakes is not because of the Canadian shield. It's because Ontario is what was once considered Upper Canada and it's where the British colonized after the war with France.
It was also where loyalists from the American war of Independence went to when the U.S won their independence. Treaties with native peoples and an expansion westward along rail lines is why most Canadian cities across the country are close to the U.S border
Ty
Idk about that one chief lemme see some links
Also saying that it’s because of the Canadian shield isn’t wrong either, who tf want to live up north in the shield when it’s extremely challenging to build basic road and infrastructure. Also for the person looking for source… we learn that in History class. Just google it.
God bless you. I didn’t want to have to explain all these to someone that just put out a false 10s video. ❤
@@madman10340 the source is every Canadian history textbook and 14 years of school classes. This should be common knowledge for any Canadian
As someone who lives in Mid Michigan. I can tell you it gets cold where I live and it gets real bad up north. I can only imagine what it feels like in Arctic Canada.
I lived on Baffin Island for a few months. That is right next to Greenland above Quebec. I hocked up a loogie one morning and it froze before it hit the ground.
Me too and I farm. They tell us that Ukraine is the breadbasket of the world that's a huge lie. Canada grows lots of wheat lots of rye and mostly canola. And we both know that Windsor is packed.
@@mikeemmons1079 😂 I hear ya. I’m in Northern Ontario and there’s no dang way I’m going any further North!
Michigan gets worse winters than western Canada.
It's warm this year. So warm that some of the ski centers couldn't even make enough snow. You can certainly see climate change at work over the past few decades.
Toronto will essentially be without snow in the winter in 20 years.
in short
Canada is like :
the more north you go, the colder it gets, the higher your chances of freezing to death
the more south you go, the warmer it gets
Nice video
It is also more expensive to built houses, roads and other infrastructure that can support life.
I saw a video of somewhere in the US, where they didn't even know how to handle a "blizzard" of a few inches of snow, roads closes, no one coming for the fallen tree branches etc.
@@aksmex2576rookie numbers. that's an average day in the second half of a Canadian year
Yeah no shit sherlock
And also due to parts of canada being in the upper hemisphere, the northern parts recieves less sunlight.
That makes so perfect sense.
“Best farmland in all of Canada”
Saskatchewan: *literally a giant wheat field*
Ontario has the most fertile farmland in the country, but there isnt a lot of it here
Not really, in fact the aspen parkland region and pallisers triangle which spands across Alberta, saskatchewan, and Manitoba, has some of the most fertile soil on the planet called chernozem soil which is rich in natural fertilizers like phosphorus, and this is due to the Canadian Shield, the large freshwater resources of lake Winnipeg and manitoba as well as the large amounts of marshes within the region help nourish the soil very well. In fact, about 80% of Canadas total agricultural output comes from these three provinces combined, which makes it the main breadbasket of Canada. This is also the reason why cities like Saskatoon, Regina, Edmonton, and Winnipeg have larger populations than that of some of the states like north and South Dakota along with Idaho and Montana.
My moms from Saskatchewan
The farmland in the prairies is the best farmland in Canada.
Nah, the farmland in Haldimand-Norfolk is the best!
The Fraser Delta and St Lawrence Lowlands are better. In Alberta I have 4" of topsoil, 120 day frost free period, 17" of total precipitation of which only half falls during the growing season, 12% hail zone but some people have 22%. Only in the last 20 years is wheat viable, only fall rye can survive over winter on a regular basis.
? ontario has the best farmland, there just isnt much of it to go around
Canada: "We're going to put all our cities in the only place where we can farm."
Holland: "I like your style"
Except that statement about being good farm land is bullshit! It’s really difficult to plant crops on granite.IE:THE CANADIAN SHIELD
Lots of farming in the region he said you can't
@@MrMattnis1 ?
@@MrMattnis1 the part he said was above where they are.
The best farmland in the whole country is said to be underneath the streets and buildings of Toronto!
Wow I never knew this. That's alot of people in such a "small" area compared to how huge Canada is.
1 third of Canada is covered in snow and only natives live there extremely cold and midnight the sun is up too
USA population:360 million. Canadian population:37 million
Not that many. The whole of Canada is about the same population of California.
The US is similar too. 80% of Americans live east of the 100th meridian.
@@aranisles8292 We have almost four million more here in California. ✌️🇺🇸🇨🇦✌️
Our neighbors ❤. Thank you Lord for a great neighbors.
Black fly season in Ontario late April - early July is murder …
Your welcome Nelya , we are indeed great neighbors and your cousins in the north who will be there for you when you need us most and you will indeed need us one day to have your backs to feed you and support you in times of trouble ❤🇨🇦👊🙏
Right? Look how garbage it can be in the world, just for the sheer good luck of having bad neighbours! We ARE so lucky to be together. Let’s keep it up. ❤
They are not that great. Really just a bunch of Socialist Trash. Lockdowns, Mandates, and no Free Speech.
Gay
Oh wow. I live in Spokane. I had no idea there are Canadians who live south of me. How interesting! Thx! 🤗
Yeah, actually HALF of all Canadians live south of you. Very interesting.
They're actually more east from Spokane
Way more North too. Cascadia Megaregion, 3rd livable city globally is Calgary. Home to the Oil Industry Nationally. Reason for it's success and uncoming development much like the Gulf of Mexico is for The U.S and other places.
A massive percentage of the world's food grains are grown on the Prairies ( southern halves of Alberta and Saskatchewan) plus a good portion of southern Manitoba.
True. this population pattern has nothing to do with agriculture. It has more to do with climate.
@@macjalac5845 there are parts of the Canadian Shield (eg. central Ontario and parts of Québec immediately north of the St. Lawrence Valley) that would be mild enough to support agriculture... it's just that the soils aren't suited for it. Some of the Hudson Bay lowlands of northern Ontario would probably become suitable in a warmer world, but the problem is that sea level rise might flood that area before it becomes warm enough.
The Canadian Shield is one reason why Canada doesn't stand to gain as much from global warming as Russia. Although northwestern Russia is similar (Baltic Shield), there's no analogous feature in Siberia. Once the climate becomes suitable for agriculture, the Siberian land will be ready. Southern Siberia is already like the Canadian prairies climate-wise, and there's extensive agriculture there already; average temperatures in Novosibirsk are not too different from Saskatoon (and Astana in neighboring Kazakhstan is similar to Regina).
@@macjalac5845 good climate are good for agriculture
Those Prairie farmlands are much better farmland than southern Ontario….. you can easily see this for yourself by eating Alberta beef and Ontario beef…. And as far as crops…. Sask grains are far better tasting than anything grown in Ontario. Yer basically smoking crack even trying to compare.
As well the people are better too.
Bizarre conversation no? Crack?
Fun fact: The city of Detroit is the only city in the Lower 48 states that has a Canadian city (Windsor) to the south of it.
Actually its directly east of Detroit.
@@ddvette no south is accurate, I live in Windsor
@@ddvette Actually, it's directly south.
@@donaldcake1 can you hear the gunshots from across the border?
@@jumpvelocity3953 I live in warren Michigan on 12 mile 4 miles from Detroit and I can’t hear gunshots.
It was worth the editing time. The end result was freaking awesome! Very good work. We like stuff like this.
except most of the info is false. the western provinces are the bread basket of Canada not ontario.
@logan holmberg are you mentally ill or something?
Yes now lets just work on the grammar
Glad to be living more North!
No wonder theyre so nice theyre all neighbors!
... viva le border towns ...
Being a neighbour does not mean their nice
@@RetroRift. your name is terrorist 😆
Canadians despise America.
You've never been to Quebec have you.
Hey can I get a bag of chips. I'm from Manitoba.
Them:
Sortez de mon magasin, vous ne parlez pas français !
I'll never forget that. What a fuxking bitch.
I always thought that folks from Minnesota sounded more Canadian than the majority of Canadians 🤣
Fr like my fam is from mn and my dad sounds more Canadian then Canadians but anyways WhY yOu BuLlY mE
Live in rural Minnesota I don’t have the stereotypical accent depends where you are for example Duluth
Not all but yeah you’re not wrong 😂
@@RedactedAnonymous10 but me and my dad are from red a
Lake mn
You bet ya
Bro taught me more geography in 60 seconds than my geography teacher did in 4 years
@user-ox9pz2xm5n you have not witnessed serbian education
shows the quality of American teachers
@@csnide6702and a map
@@mariopuzo4509 love that screen name..... 👍
Correction: you never paid attention in school
Metro Vancouver is close to the American/Canadian Border. I have been living in Vancouver for 17 years and I am still close to the border and my friend cross the border for church in Langley. :)
I live in Toronto and it is a tad crowded here lol. Once you drive even 30 mins outside the city, the farmlands are beautiful. I drove to Orillia last year (2.5 hours north of Toronto) and it was so amazing and open.
Lake Ontario is amazing in the summer but a lot of people head to Lake Simkoe because it's huge. Went to Kawartha Lakes for my sister's wedding back in 2017. Beautiful beautiful places
Its not as bad as you think. If you visited nyc, you can appreciate downtown
I live in Toronto as well. Been to NYC and lived in Mexico city for a month. Mexico city is by far the most crowded city I've ever been to, but honestly crowded is crowded and i also agree that toronto is to crowded. Going to Muskoka and algonquin is absolutely the best in the summer.
Lake Simcoe is also much cleaner than lake Ontario I swim in simcoe when I can L Ontario you couldn't pay me to go in it.
@@vaughnplata964 I've stopped swimming in L Ontario quite the number of years ago so I get ya
Algonquin park .. very bad for Toronto people ! Brrr very cold, lots of man eating bears , vicious moose, bad food & water .!!! Stay away ! We are good. Try Friendly affordable Lake Simcoe or Lake Huron. Algonquin park bad. HURON GOOD 👍🏼
Toronto is farther south than Bend Oregon. I went on a trip to Toronto a few years ago and I remember that confused me greatly when I figured that out haha
That's wild lol. Never pieced that together despite working across Oregon for years, let alone being in Washington now. For me Canada's always been B.C. though, so they're always my northern neighbors.
More precisely, Point Pelee National Park in Ontario is further south than California's northern border.
There's definitely great farmland in Southern Ontario, but there is also plenty of farming on the Canadian Shield North of that line.
He copied real life lord 🙁
lore*😊
@@Yousonhop73868 you know you can edit a comment
Took forever to edit but just zoomed on google earth and added a few city names :P
🤣🤣🤣
He copied RealLifeLores video 😕
You don’t understand how long it takes to edit videos, especially shorts
@@BipperYT i'd say normal length vids are harder 😂 you know, they're longer & all that
@@BipperYT well, not that long haha. I study that shit
The longest un guarded un contested border in the world. We really don’t mind it because culture and law abiding Canadians are greater than 90%.
We leave that border alone because of our support for England and sort-of France. Otherwise, there's way more potential there than thirty eight million people need.
Yeah. We know. And the people in that tiny southern sliver take great pleasure in telling the rest of the country how to live their lives.
yup
Hey, Toronto is the cente of the universe..
Nope..
why dont yall just join the us
I mean majority lives there so obviously they are going to dictate how the country is run. You expect the minority to decide for the majority ?
@@lawtraf8008 PM was not elected with a majority. And policies/interests in southern Ontario / Quebec do not function well across a country so large. That's why provinces are supposed to manage certain things but Ottawa can't stay in their lane and like to micromanage and interfere in provincial affairs. This is why Canadians outside of this area largely dislike this area. The irritation over this would go away if Ottawa would stay in its lane.
I love that continent a lot and I hope to see more of it before I leave this world
i live in the canadian shield and half of my property is bare rock. you can only dig down a couple of feet before you get to bedrock.
Hello from Canada 👋
I live 5-6 hours from the Canadian border.
hi
✌️🇺🇸🇨🇦✌️😘
Best farmland in Canada
Prairies: Am I a joke to you?
we do good wheat. other places do better fruit and vegetables.
What confuses me is how BC got left out. They're basically Canada's california
A lot of the Ontario farmland isn’t even farmland anymore. It’s all subdivisions and suburbs now. People are moving from places like Toronto and other big cities to SW Ontario and buying up the land, and building houses. There used to be huge farms around here, and now it’s all neighbourhoods and sporadic small farms. The only big farms that are left are either corn, and soy bean fields, or massive greenhouse complexes that are growing marijuana. I live in Windsor, and if you look southeast, you can see the glow from the lights from the greenhouses in Leamington over 40 miles away. It even made the Detroit news because people were wondering where the glow was coming from.
LOVE YOU CANADIANS...GREAT PEOPLE...GREAT NEIGHBORS...You brought our hostages home safe and sound...BLESS YOU CANADA!
Are you from Denmark??
They also helped US hostages in Iran in the 70’s
Thank you, and you're welcome
@@dissidentart5603Argo 🙏🏾
@@chacedrinkwalter3346 ... see how polite they are ...
Thank you for your Awesome presentation 👏🏽👏🏽🏆🌹🕊
I like the show Alone, where people have to survive in the wilderness, and it's filmed in upper Canada. Beautiful place.
That’s very cool! See you at 100k reed😊
My theory is that canadians try to get near _ohio_ so they could see what's about the memes 💀💀
That’s actually a plausible theory 🤨
@@albaraqahtani 💀
They should be trying to get as far away from Ohio as possible. Yall don't wanna be near here when it happens...
True we like going to ohio
Damn bro you got the whole squad laughing 😐
Great video learnt soooo much
Love from Montreal im there right now on vacation
Hello from Vancouver
Hello from San Francisco California 🌁🌉🌁🏖
HI VANCOUVER! I'M FROM NEW WESTMINTER!
Haha I mean New Westminster!
@@agbobier2657 noise
@@TheOnlyOneStanding8079 cool
When you fly from Boston to Seattle at night, you can see this really well.
Great, informative video. Ty! I didn't know this!
Hi from Edmonton 😊
Hi Alex~
Hah!
I went to Alex Taylor Elementary School once
settled in Edmonton.
Small, small World??!!
Underrated af editing
God bless Canada!
You forgot Vancouver Island. Plenty of good farmland around the southern tip (Saanich peninsula); and its below the parallel.
Yall Canadians are awsome. Coming from an American.
An American who can't spell... 😑
Huh???? I don't think I spelled anything wrong?
@@Isaiah134 you forget an e and an apostrophe.
Oh yeah my bad thx✌️
I rather live in the US
I feel like this is becoming common knowledge now that I've seen upwards of a dozen creators inform me of this exact same line.
I guess that would make them repeaters not creators.
and its wrong.
It's the first time that I've seen this information
Great video, greetings from Hereford, AZ, the most beautiful city of the Wild West! We have great weather, lakes, rodeos nearby, bird watching, and the Coronafo trail!
Only Coldest Winter King City of Canada which is Located in Norther Canada. Beautiful City (Edmonton)
My dad was from south Detroit (just across the bridge in Ontario. Every once in a while we’ll make jokes about how Americans can’t handle the cold. Then he likes to remind me that ALL OF MICHIGAN was north of him growing up.
I remember going to pelee park in Windsor Ontario and looking over to Detroit.
that’s okay though the little brother always likes to poke nothing wrong with it 😁
@AG: MeToo! Recall the sardine migration/bakes our family enjoyed! Good times back then.
Not all...
@@efisgpr like 90% of it…
As an American I like to think this is because Canadians just love living closer to us, even though it’s not true lol. Love Canada 🇨🇦
My daughter and son in law went to the U.S and Canada. They liked the U.S But said Canada was absolutely awesome. Apparently Canada was the Highlight.
The 1 million in Nova Scotia being left out
We'll most of maritimers are on crack, meth and/or booze while hitting wellfare/EI so they dont really matter actually.
I love ur channel, keep up the good work❤
Really good job man
The Canadians love the US so much, they came closer to us.
A lot of Canadians do look down on the U.S..
A lot of Canadians we’re originally British loyalists who left the 13 colonies so in other words Toronto is full of traitors 😊
@@TheLastMarch2.0 And a lot of Americans look down on Canada
We love the USA so much that after we won the war of 1812 we let you keep your country. Now I'm not saying us Canadians are smart because if the USA won that war Canada would no longer exist. Canada has a long history of winning wars and giving up land cause we felt sorry for the losers.
@@stewrapid many people forget or don't know how strong Canada is especially in wars
Ty for acknowledging my state!
Couldn't ask for a better neighbor.
Thanks Eh! 🙂
Tyrannical government... No thanks.
The people who live outside the 49th parallel zone are solid.
@@StephenCarmona Emergencies act was a year ago, in for 6 days also was unlikely to pass in Canada's Senate here,so it was withdrawn. so ,just ancient news ,also mandates all lifted,even for travel ,for months &months now, or a year or more ..
that delicious guilt jab at the end, chefs kiss
I learned this over a decade ago and anytime someone brings a Canada it’s so hard to not bring up this fun fact lol that majority of Canadians live below the American border🤓… and then everyone just looks at you like you’re crazy and then you actually whip out google maps and explain it lol.
OK ,give me the rest non inhabited lands to claim to be my kingdom.
This video quality is amazing!
Lots of excellent farm land in western & central Canada.
Alberta is the best province to live too.
And, ironically, 70% of American kindness, politeness, and generosity has migrated north of the Canadian border.
not true. And all the ugly ones are the liberal loonies out there. Trying to segregate everything alive.
Has migrated? It never existed bro
@@CaioFran
I'm old. Once upon a time it did. Then, in 1980, Republicans and people who fancied themselves 'libertarians' embarked on a campaign to undo the legacy of the New Deal and the belief in society as a collective enterprise for the good of all of us. Faith in civic cooperation, instead of dog-eat-dog, selfish materialism.
But I'm suspicious of anyone writing in Russian, where that belief hasn't existed since AT LEAST the time when Trotsky fled to Mexico, and more likely, since Chekhov died.
@@rickrose5377 Republicans have ruined this country with greed, misinformation and fear mongering.
@@wolfiethedog76
I hadn't wanted to get political, but to tell the truth, Wolfie, I'm with you. Since at least Barry Goldwater (but especially since Reagan), their object has been to dismantle the legacy of the New Deal. That's a model that's based on a belief that society is a cooperative enterprise -- based on civic cooperation, that is, rather than selfishness and suspicion.
Maybe the image we have of Canadians is because they seem to get the idea of friendliness and compassion.
YOU LEFT OUT WINDSOR, ONTARIO
My favorite Canadian city, where the drinking age is 18; and they don't check ✔️
I used to enjoy the trip South to Canada when I worked in Detroit and lived on a park below the Windsor bridge.
Lies it’s not 18
Drinking age in Ontario is 19
I recently moved above the 50% line and onto the Canadian Shield and holy hell is produce expensive now lol.
Our loving brothers up North!
More Americans live above the lowest point of Canada than Canadians
That's insane! I grew up on the Canadian border & i had no idea it was this extreme. Gotta go tell my sis now!
I'm from Windsor, and it's actually south of Detroit. Most people haven't heard of Windsor because Canada seems to end at London for most Canadians, lol. They seem to think we are Americanized. This channel didn't mention it, and we are the most southern city.
Thank you for sharing this information!✨️
Don't get too attached to the information in this video, most of it is wildly inaccurate
And this is why Big Foot is Canadian.
I feel sorry for those Canadians. They wanted to stay away from Americans but couldn't
Aren’t they like American since they live in north america
Canada 🇨🇦 and USA 🇺🇸 are brothers
Correction: Americans settled next to us after we did, they fought each other and then loyalist came up here and are still trying to ruin everything to this day.
I feel sorry because they live in Canada. Been there done that, not going to go back
@@Marko-pg8msWhat? North Americans*
"why is most of the population of Canada so close to America?"
Keep your friends close and your enemies closer even if they are both
Name one country you would prefer to have next door. FYI Canada's worst enemy is Canada.
Canadian here, and although it's been 5 years since high school history class I do believe the reason so many people live so far south is due to politics, history, and trade. The Canadian Shield has got nothing to do with it.
1. Politics & History: The best farmland in Canada is actually in the prairie provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. But these lands weren't part of Canada and open to most colonizers for settling and farming until 1905. This, combined with harsher climate and the isolation/lack of many essential services like the post and medicine meant population growth not only had a late start but grew slower too.
2. Trade: the cities in the Great Lakes region has access to and could easily trade with American industries in the region (and which each other) because, well, the lakes. Ships were and continue to be super efficient means of transporting mass amounts of goods. I believe the Great Lakes region of the states was once a great hub of manufacturing and mining (maybe it still is idk) so of course Canadian businesses would want a piece of that. And where the money goes, population naturally follows.
The same is true for the St. Lawrence river! It runs from one of the Great Lakes, through Ontario and Quebec, all the way to the ocean. Having access to the ocean was important for the same reason the Great Lakes were so important for industry and trade.
So, southern Ontario and Quebec as always been a population centre from day one and had the industries and jobs to keep those populations. This meant that as the country grew, the population of this region always grew faster than the rest of the country. Fast forward a 100 years to today, and voilá, we have this weird situation where 75% of the population live below the 49th parallel.
I live in Edmonton so I’m far from the red line
It's the most northern city with over a million people in the world
@@AM-mu2kv not in the world, just in north america
@@atlashistorical you're right it's St petersburg
French Canada is the best Canada of them all. Now I know why they just need one road.
Otherwise known as Quebec. And by the way, Quebecers are not Canadian but Quebecois.
Bro forgot to mention that the north part is a winter desert with no trees but wild bears
great fishing in the tundra .
As a Canadian, I agree. I live in Laval, the island next to Montreal.
"The great lakes are an amazing source of fresh water"
Bruh.
They are
Vancouver has left the chat
google vancouver population
that’s because the fraser river valley is a tiny bit of land that not only has a small amount of people in it but also is above the 49th parallel
Also, what about Calgary, Edmonton and Winnipeg? All of them have a lot more people than Vancouver does.
@@MotorwayGaming2018 1. vancouver metro area has about 2.5 million ppl, largest in western canada by far, 2. those are isolated cities
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Wow I never knew that, that's so interesting
Down under most of our land is too arid for farmland and so we cling to our coasts. I've always found Canadians to be similar to Australians and for me this is just another similarity.
I've also had friends from those Canadian cities and I never really knew how close they were together or how close they were to U.S cities.
If it took you forever to edit a 30 second video, you're in the wrong business.
Came here for this, nasal breathing teenager trying to act like he didn't recycle this content
i mean if i spend 7 hours on a video, i think that’s worth the 24,000 hours of watchtime this video brought my channel 😂
@@NanaJerome is nasal breathing an insult?
@@NanaJeromeI’ll take a “nasal breather” over a computer generated voice any day.
Then why do they need so much land?!! Give it back to the indigenous people of Canada
We do in fact have first nations reservations all over the place. Just giving them land, unfortunately, has solved few of their problems.
@@tsm688 I’ve seen the conditions of these “reservations” and what happens when they protest Canadian control over their resources… give the land back to the actual people of Canada
@@mhern2558 From the sound of it, I genuinely doubt you have seen a modern reservation... I worked for several, for many years, and learned a few things about how they work.
Number one, they are self-owned and self-managed, which often means, despots. Unless the chief is a saint, he'll be the only one on reserve with a car newer than 30 years old. I've seen one or two prosperous reserves, but mostly they're pretty poor.
Number two, they have a lot of advantages in law. They get money and they don't pay certain taxes and are exempt from certain laws. Some reserves make an absolute killing growing tax-free tobacco. The indian casino is a stereotype for a reason. They have hunting rights in any season, and can sell those to visitors, and even keep the meat. One reserve had oil and the foresight to not sell away mineral rights.
Number three, there's factors which make it difficult for anyone to **leave** the reserve. They some lose treaty rights, and there's a cultural expectation for a bunch of people to support each other. Which works out about as well as you might think it would in a culture chronically addicted to alcohol and drugs. Anyway, leaving the reserve alone is basically unheard of unless they're thrown out.
Last, there's a huge disconnect between reserve and government, they don't cooperate with each other. Government build schools -- modern schools, for the reserve to use themselves -- which the reserve doesn't spend the money to keep staffed. Government projects build houses, which get torn down for firewood since it takes frickin' years for the paperwork to go through to dig up gas lines on reserve land. etc.
Basically, a textbook version of what happens when you blindly throw resources at a problem. Problems eat up the money and nothing changes. They get more for their tax money than we do, and are free to do what they want, but continue to have many problems which we don't have the rights to meddle with.
With the combination of a good leader and good communication on their part, some reserves have been successful.
money I guess
why the American government doesn’t give back the native Americans land?
You forgot to include all the Canadians living in Arizona. At least for the winter. 🤗🖖
What a fucking shame. They have second largest swathe of land behind Orcland 🇷🇺 those people live in such a tiny area and enjoy it,while they don’t give independence to any countries bruh,if anyone tries to take these big uninhabited islands the size of germany they’ll send their ships like they did over a small island between them and Denmark (Hans Island) well,can’t say nothing else. At least Toronto is okay. And Quebec
In Canada we worry less about guns from either a police officer or random person. But recent years it got worse
The Waffle House has found its new host.
The Waffle House has found itself a new host
The Waffle House has found its new host
The Waffle House has found its new host.
The Waffle House has found it’s new host.
My husband's grandfather owned quite a few acres in farmland in Canada, he was Canadian. And his farm was in that little 50% area that they showed.
quit asking for people to subscribe. your content is great, there’s no need to ask and it diminishes it. (always skip that part)
Really interesting video. Great idea.
There’s a spot on a friend’s mountain property that only a wire fence separated Canada. I once put my foot under the fence and said: hey, I have one foot in Canada and one in Washington.
It’s actually crazy I live in the middle of Saskatchewan in a small city; The Battlefords, and there’s no people here. Even comparing the Prairie population centres of Airdrie-Calgary and Edmonton which are empty compared to the highly populated mega regions of Oshawa-Toronto-Hamilton-Nigeria Falls is insane! I’d love to see my small city grow to even 100,000k, just so we can have more shopping options.
People don’t realise 50% of all Canadians live under my homestate of WA and only 30% live above and 20% live at the same longitude 💀💀💀
It's almost like we're neighbouring countries, I couldn't believe our borders were so close 🤯
Places like Buffalo and Minnesota sometimes have huge blizzards while there’s not even a snow flake where I live
This was very informative. Thanks for making it!
Go to the upper peninsula of michigan and you will realize how many canadians live just barely in the U.S