American Reacts to 15 Pics That Prove Canada is Like No Other Country
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 12 ม.ค. 2025
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Most Americans don't understand how different Canada is from the United States. Today I want to check out these 15 pictures that prove Canada is like no other country. If you enjoyed the video feel free to leave a comment, like, or subscribe for more!
@4:04 the picture of the lady on the cigarette package dying is actually a picture of Barbara Tarbox, who died because of smoking, and during her last months of life she tried her best to spread the message of how terrible smoking is and how it ruined her life, caused her family so much pain because of her death. I am proud to say she really reached me. She got me to quit smoking, and I am still cigarette free many years later. Thank you for giving me my life back Barbara, you helped me and many others, you didn’t die in vain ❤
That's fantastic I wish I could quit, but it's my only Vice. I quit drinking, and smoking pot. It keeps me sane.
@ you definitely have to want to quit in order to quit. You could always exchange the smoking for something that you find enjoyable that is also healthy, like art or exercise, or a hobby ❤️🥰 because smoking not only shortens lifespans, it also takes up so much time during the day. When I first quit smoking I found myself bored because I didn’t have cigarettes to fill in the day during all of my boring moments. After a while I found enjoyable things to fill up that time- and nowadays I don’t know how I even found time to smoke before. I am happier now that I have more time every day to do things I enjoy and I have more time to get things accomplished that I need to get done💝
That is wonderful to read. Good for you for actually taking it seriously!
@@Venusandjupiteinunion6434 I also quit drinking and pot, but found smoking the hardest to quit. Tried for sooooo long with many failures. Then my breathing got bad and I had to face the facts. I use nicorette lozenges now. Wish I would have quit earlier because I have COPD now. Good luck, you can do it.
I think it also says that on the box too
The snow drift door is what you send your boss to let them know you'll be late.
If a snow storm is that bad the working area is close for days and days untill the snow is clear out. When this happen in my home town I just a kid so I did not about they close work but school was close. at that time and I'm 38 years old and about to be 39 year old. In my home town I do not remember exactly the exact age I was maybe 14 or 15 they where no more snow storm like this. At it is New brunswick
@SuperNickid Not if you work in a necessary field. Never have I ever had my workplace close due to snow.
@@SuperNickid Same here (Ontario) we haven't had a real winter in over 10 years.
@@JayeEllis true. The oil fields never close. Those guys work in all weather and conditions.
@ThePatrix1879 Yup, I imagine they are considered essential workers, as are many others.
I'm not sure about the rest of Canada but in Ontario you're not even allowed to display cigarettes in a store!
They must be out of sight and not advertised anywhere!
Same is true in BC
Same in Qc
Same in Alberta
Same in Manitoba
Saskatchewan too
My husband had a brain bleed, he was emergency flown on a medical plane to a hospital an hour flight away, had 9 hr brain surgery, 2 weeks stay in private room in the neuro ICU. And multiple follow up emergency room visits, Total cost $0.
Lucky him many Canadians don't get any health care I went in for gall stones came out missing a kidney cost me only a kidney ..it's nothing 😂
Well somewhat true 0 cost at the time to you but we all pay for everyone thru taxes but still better to help then to say no.
Glad to hear everything went smoothly!!
My granddaughter acquired a virus that behaved like polio. She went to BC Children’s Hospital where she was for weeks. Her parents were assigned mental Health care to deal with the stress, a social worker to help them navigate options available to them and more. My granddaughter got treatment for her medical needs and rehab services to help her learn to walk again (among other things). They were given no cost accommodations at Ronald McDonald House on the hospital grounds and ferry passes for my granddaughter to travel off Vancouver Island for follow-up treatment and back again. Like you, they paid zero dollars. I’m on a FB group for kids who also got the virus and ended up very sick. Many are in the USA and it is absolutely heartbreaking to hear about parents struggling to afford treatment, physio etc. It doesn’t compute in my Canadian brain.
@pattymc4726 but many Canadians don't get that
it's so dumb to me because they pay almost the same amount in insurance as we pay in taxes, but then they also have to pay on top of that! That's what they don't get!
I didn't have anything nearly as bad, but I have a history of pregnancy loss and high risk pregnancies. All of my prenatal care, D&C, genetic testing, a counselor to discuss my grief with, not only a regular OB but a high risk doctor, 3 c sections, 3 hospital stays, follow ups with a nurse who was also a lactation consultant... My total cost for that was whatever I paid in parking and about $120 for my 2nd because I chose to have a private room.
Canada is a very big country with many different climates. I’m on Vancouver Island where it isn’t uncommon to see your rose bushes with flowers on them mid winter. We get lots of rain and sometimes snow but a winter with no or very little snow is not uncommon. No one description of anything will apply to all of Canada. Except that it’s beautiful.
We lived in white Rock BC for a year. My mom and I drove my dad crazy to come back to Ontario.. To much rain in BC .. we liked our snow better in Ontario! lol . But BC is a beautiful province though.
We get lots and lots and lots and lots and lots and lots of rain and the wind storms but yes I do still have the odd flower in my garden.
It's not a squirrel in the picture; it's a chipmunk. On popular hiking trails, they will literally come out of the woodwork at the sound of someone opening trail mix.
Chipmunks are ground squirrels. What are also ground squirrels? (Richardson ground squirrels)? What they call gophers out here...
@@JohnHamilton-w4l wild animal conditioning. They are plenty smart enough to follow the food! 😊
Thought it was a prairie dog.
@@k1k2voyer - A chipmunk weighs 2- 5 oz. A gopher can weigh 2 lbs.
@susieq9801 oh, agreed, Theres a family in my alley here in Calgary but science classification has them both as ground squirrels. The calling them gopher thing has always cracked me up as growing up in Montreal and TO gophers were well, the big gophers! :)
Definitely don't ever cross a Canada Goose. They will beat you senseless...
and if you have ever been bitten it is a very painful pinch..and sometimes they hang on..
We are Canada and our cobra chickens are as intense as we are!
Canadian Goose Matador, why use one Cow/Bull, "I am the fearless Cobra Chicken, and I shall take you all on"
…and leave your body as a warning. You forgot to mention the incessant shitting.
I have hand fed many Canadian geese, my oldest son and I were in the middle of a flock of them one time. I also worked in a plant in Ontario that had geese that nested there every year, I always talked to them, would give them little treats and I was the only person that they would not bother during nesting season even though I heard many of the other workers complain about them being chased by them
The grass thing , it's fresh laid sod. Just roll out on top of soil and the little roots eventually take hold and grow into the soil. Didn't have a chance to grow yet. The door thing with snow is real , it drifts onto porches with the wind.
i came looking for this comment!
Artificial grass?
No. Its actually astro turf. Sod comes in patches.
@@dianebennett1433 Don't they have this in the US?
It's grass that is rolled up like a carpet but it's real. The one in the photo must have been laid very recently because eventually it will become part of the soil and will be un-separable.
Not everybody does it that way some people still grow their grass the usual way but that way makes it alot quicker to get it looking fully grown.
I am 53 years old and born and raised in Canada. I still stop and feel awe when I see the carpet of diamonds that is created when the sun shines on snow. I still ooooo when the air is calm and huge flakes are floating to the ground in perfect silence. I still stand in wonder when the freezing cold temperatures cause sun dogs and light spears in the sky. I feel peace when viewing a winter pastel sunset. Winter in Canada is amazingly beautiful.
@rhondahoughton790Canada Re: "Winter in Canada is amazingly beautiful "
I don't know which part of Canada to which you are referring, but it couldn't possibly be anywhere south of the 401 in Ontario after 1987. I grew up in Mississauga, Ontario, and I have seen the winters where we'd get anywhere from 10 days to 2 weeks of -25°C (not necessarily consecutively we're talking about Southern Ontario here) to not a single day of -20°C. I love 0°C - (-5°C) and snow - I CAN'T STAND 1 - 5°C and rain.
@ I am from the north eastern area of Saskatchewan. The winters here are bitterly cold and windy but the few peaceful sunny days are just make to be enjoyed in nature. The frost coating every branch of the trees and every blade of grass thurs the landscape into a black and white image just touched by the blush of the sunrise. The air is so still that you almost don’t want to breathe. There is a sense of waiting as no one wants to be the first to disturb the coating of frost. Then as the sun rises the winds begin and the world comes to life. It is an amazingly barren and cold place but the beauty will take your breathe away with you least expect it and make you pause in wonder.
@@Polytrout I am sorry you live in slush country. Here when the snow comes it stays and the wind builds sculptures. The cold will take your breath away but so will the sky.
No name products are actually really good in Canada.
Agree to disagree!
@@harveyabel1354 I agree with you. While less expensive, the quality just isn't there. I tried a few and gave up.
Yeah they have more flavor I find
I like some of these better depending on the item!
Depends which ones you get. Some are..... questionable at best
That is a pretty tame cigarette warning label, actually. They're typically *quite* graphic. The photos of the teeth and the blackened lungs are nightmare fuel.
I remember when I used to smoke in my 20s I would ask the cashier to specifically NOT get the one with the tongue cancer because it grossed me out so much... Which was the point. So glad I quit!
@@alicia.mckenny i figure I'll quit when I'm ready, and I don't appreciate being made almost sick to my stomach in the meantime.
Dont forget the utterly hilarious "limp d***" cigarette...
@@darthkronical3390The South American version is even funnier. Beside the limp ciggy is the silhouette of a man hunched over with his face in his hands. Utter devastation!! 😂
Guys! It still exists!
www.canada.ca/content/dam/hc-sc/images/services/smoking-tobacco/regulating-tobacco-vaping/tobacco/packaging-warnings/packaging/HW_onpackage_Cigarettes_EN_R1_10.jpg
I remember when i was little, on PEI in Canada, sometimes in winter the snow would be up to our roof. We would build little tunnels out through the front door, sometimes making little mazes and rooms with snow couches and tables. Then we would go upstairs, go out of our window onto the roof and sled down because it was drifted up level with the roof. It was awesome. We built stairs outside to get back up to the roof, too. We also used a hose in our yard and made a giant ice rink every winter. It was fun!
My dad was born and raised on PEI he said when he was a kid the snow banks would get so high they would step over powerlines on the way to school! Most of his side of the family still lives there, winters on the island are insane!
@@laceybugg3143 I live in Nova Scotia now, its so close but the winters are SO mild in comparison. I love it, i hate the cold now as an adult, haha. When i was a kid i swear i never even felt the cold, id go out in blizzards wearing socks and no shoes, a tshirt and shorts, with my mom yelling at me to come put more clothes on, lol.
I like to say Nova Scotia doesnt have winter, they have late fall that turns into early spring, haha. Compared to PEI
The good ole days before full on military climate control!!
In Muskoka, Ontario, I remember when the snow banks were as high as the hydro poles, once skiing in BC, it dumped over 6 feet of snow overnight we basically had hallways to get to the ski lifts… best skiing day EVER!
I drove from Vancouver to Whitehorse Yukon a few times in Winter and there’s nothing like driving on a road that has walls of snow on either side of the road
Cigarette warnings are not only legally required to cover 2/3 of the packaging, and quite graphic, but look closely at the filter. There's a warning on each smoke, too.
And no more coloured packaging. All packs are uniform in design now.
@Sherrilynn27 Oh yeah, thanks. I forgot, the remaining 1/3 of the pack must be plain and display only the brand name, no logos or proprietary information.
All the people I know that smoke ….smoke natives
But if it’s pot …
@barrywade3774 Not the same thing. Those packages have warnings, too.
The snow Storm you saw is called a blizzard. It’s when the wind is so strong it makes the snow swirl like that , which makes visibility really bad and driving - even walking- in it very difficult.
The hospital is a blessing, especially when you truly need it. People complain that it can take longer to get in for non-life-threatening procedures, but it’s a relief when you’re in dire need. My sister was in a terrible accident in early fall. She was in a coma for a couple of months, underwent several serious surgeries, and had constant attendance from brain and neurosurgeons. Late in November, she was discharged from the ICU and admitted to a rehabilitation center for physiotherapy since she needs to relearn to walk, talk, and so on. They anticipate that she may be able to return home by late January or early February if her progress continues at the same pace. The best part? The total cost is $0.00.
LAst year I had trouble breathing and went to emerg. They admitted me and I was in a bed within a half an hour. I had bad Pneumonia it turns out. Thank God for CAnada.
Hope she continues to recover!
My cousin spent 14hrs sitting in a wheelchair in a hallway waiting to see a doctor, who walked in and said, you're good to go home without realizing he still had the catheter in. I've personally sat in emergency for 8 hours with a bone deep cut only for the doctor to say "oh, it's been too long, we can't give you stitches" another cousin has been on a waiting list for a neurologist for seven years, hes supposed to see one every six months. Needless to say, Canadian health care is shite and I'd rather save my tax dollars and pay a private company
@@glicherful I agree, move to the U.S.!!
@@grounddove😂
Tyler!!! The woman on the smokes is named Barb Tarbox, a Canadian who spent her later years travelling to schools warning about the dangers of smoking. Definately a story to do a deep dive into.❤
I will forever have that name burned into my memory, having tar in it is just too perfect.
@@nathanwatt5545 - I have attended quite a few autopsies. I remember seeing tar dripping from peoples' lungs - disgusting. Nothing is more terrifying than seeing some poor dying soul with their hands reaching out literally trying to grab oxygen from the air. Will NEVER touch a cigarette!
Smoking is horrible for you, they literally shout it in people's faces with the advertising and labels and yet still are allowed to sell it...and idiots still buy them. Says a lot...
She was so outspoken.
People thought oh that won't happen to me and then when it happens
I love that like it is something you need to see
As a Canadian not living in Canada, I really appreciate these videos. It makes me feel closer to home.
I am Canadian and I loved this! I really appreciate your commenting humour!
Can people actually acknowledge that Canada is NOT a freezing cold place all year round. The summers get intensely hot and humid and many areas of Canada don't get very cold at all in winter.
To be clear about it the cattle have a reason to be scared of a canada goose. The power in their wing beats can easily break human bones (the humerus is the most common large bone broken in a canada goose attack). They can easily hurt even something as large as a cow, and the attack is sudden and unrelenting, so it's disconcerting in a huge way. A cow has only one thing to do in that flurry of wing blows and that is to flee.
The hair freezing contest made me think most American's have probably never heard of the "Polar Bear Dip" we do as a fundraiser in the winter 😆
For those who don't know, yes we Canadians like to take a plunge into freezing waters like in the lakes in the middle of the winter as a fundraiser idea for different charities lol.
In Halifax, we do it in the ocean. :D My father did the first Polar Bear Dip, wayyy back in the day.
😢That reminds me of high school. Where I went to school in Northern alberta, we had our high school next to a swimming pool,. Yes we really did , Coronation Park.
Not wanting to give out my location. I believe you can look that up. And we used to do gym class and because of the facility, swimming was part of our curriculum, of course. So you'd come out of the pool, and your hair would still be wet. On the walk back to class one day I reached out and touched my hair and literally snapped 3 inches of it off I was horrified.
Yea we are a little wacky aren't we. To prove we're tough I think, on New Year's Day.
Some Canadians do!
Polar bear dip is also very common in Scandinavian countries and Russia.
Hitchbot is a story onto itself worthy of its own episode. He only survived a few weeks in the USA. Same geese but here, they're nesting and protecting their young. By the time they fly south (like all Canadians) they're more mild tempered.
The thing is that geese not only protect other geese, but they also protect ducks and their young as well. I have seen geese and ducks on the banks of the Bow and Elbow Rivers in Calgary. AB, (Alberta) and if you come too close to either the geese and/or the ducks, they will attack, so keep a fair distance from the geese, unless you want to be attack by them.
17:46 This is why we love Canada Geese so much. It’s representative of Canada. This is our reaction when Trump says something about annexing Canada. We are small, but we are MIGHTY!
💯%!!!!!!!!!
And at the White House there is a battalion of Canada Geese keeping an eye on the place 🇨🇦
Canada is small? Huh...
@@DarkGodSeti Surely not in superficy but it's a small in number population.
@@DarkGodSeti Canada is the 2nd largest country in the world. Russia is first.
One thing about Canadian money that other countries don’t have is that printed on the edge of each bill is universal braille. It’s not real braille, but it’s braille made for the low vision and legally blind people. I’m blind and I know braille and it’s very different than the universal braille, however, whoever thought of that idea ought to be commended. We’re no fools and yes, we do have plastic money. I don’t like it particularly because it’s hard to fold in your wallet, however, you can’t tear it unless it’s usually counterfeit.🇨🇦🇨🇦
I’m just a typical, average Canadian. That storm was not common in Canada but it does happen. I loved your comment, “gateway to the underworld”. It made me giggle. I love your channel.
-10 or even -15 is a beautiful day and my daughter and i went to the park, rode the swings and went for a walk just 2 nights ago. It was pitch black at 6pm too. Ahhh fresh air and a nice break from the -30 we've been having!
Where I used to live 76-85 in winter you could see a few stars between 3:30 PM and 4:00 PM. 😏
@@dannygjkwhere do you live?
@@selenacordeiro1458 I'm in Ontario now but I lived in Lab. City for 9 years.
@@dannygjk oh, it’s warm here in Ontario compared to there! 🤣🤣 almost tropical lol
Speak for yourselves! Here on Vancouver Island it rarely ever even freezes in the winter...
Ah, Tyler - that goose isn't insane; it's a cobra chicken! 🤣
Lol
I call them thugs with wings
Re: Universal Healthcare. I know this video is just funny memes... But it is more than just about cost and price. Americans are already paying more. It is impossible to fully describe the sense of calm and belonging it makes to know you, or your neighbor will be looked after, regardless if they can afford it.
If it was universal, the whole universe would be able to use it. I wonder why it isn't called National healthcare huh...
@@DarkGodSeti because it's not; it's handled at a provincial level, but each province, and I presume territory, has it.
It all depends though. Not all diseases are covered by our healthcare in Canada and some ppl have to go to other countries to get treatment or operations because of nurse or bed shortages up here. Though on the whole our healthcare is better than the U.S. in general.
I don't think you live in Quebec because here the healthcare system has gone to hell in the past few years. Millions no longer have access to a regular doctor and emergency ward doctors refuse to help with prescription renewals. Private clinics are popping up everywhere and people have to pay out of pocket so NO, it isn't free and they don't look after you regardless if you can't afford it...because there are no doctors to replace all the doctors that are retiring. Diabetics don't have doctors anymore. Chronic pain patients don't have doctors anymore and other health conditions that need regular doctor care.
My family has had a multitude of treatments, services and surgeries. None came out of our personal pocket. Yes, we pay for it in taxes but never have any of us paid a bill for leaving a hospital for anything...
I've been living on the balmy West Coast for nearly 30 years, but I grew up in Alberta. Some of these pictures really brought back some memories. During really tough winters during my childhood, the snow drifted up to the eaves on the garage and one year completely buried my Dad's tractor. I moved to Edmonton when I grew up, and I remember riding on the trolley buses. When it was really cold, the poles that connected with the electrical wires would spark whenever they crossed a junction. I was also in Edmonton during the big tornado in 1987 that killed 26 people. That was some scary.
At least they have many winter days with sun streaming through their windows ! ☔️ 🌝 🌝
For whatever reason, we don't get snow on the east coast like we used to but when I was a kid in elementary school, we used to get tons of it. The narrow streets in our town had telephone poles running up and down the roadside and when the snowplow went through after a snowstorm, the snow would be piled up nearly to the wires. In fact, our school principal would make an announcement over the PA, saying that if we were going to be playing on the snowbanks, don't touch the wires!
I grew up in Northern BC in the 70’s . We would get so much snow, we could walk up on the roof and slide down with the crazy carpets. So much fun.❤
Crazy Carpets! Remember them fondly. It wasn't Christmas if you didn't get a new Crazy Carpet! Super Slider Snow Skates, on the other hand, were tempting fate, though. 🤣😂
I loved my super slider snow skates.❤️
When I was a kid in Ontario I remember us getting a snow door imprint from the snow drifts but once you broke through you were good. Not as bad as it looks. The hard part is not getting snow in the house and trying to prevent the dog from plowing into it. I live in New Brunswick now where we get much more snow in comparison to where I grew up but the snow drifts aren't as bad because of all the trees
This is why hardwood, tile, vinyl, and cushion floors are the best for porches. Laminate swells up and breaks when it gets wet.
I’m from NB too but live in PEI. Lots of snow drifts bc of the lack of trees and open fields during high winds.
NB used to get tons more snow like that before climate change ended it in the late 90s, hasnt been the same since
Moved to NB from Ontario in the mid 90s, even the the storms were nuts!
Sometimes the snow is packed too hard and too thick to simply break through. People have to tunnel.
12:00 Hitchbot was a social experiment to show humans are actually good by nature and traveled by people putting him in their vehicle and helping him across the country as fsr as they could
It had a nasty epilogue in the US.
Humans are good, except in the United States of America. This place is particularly evil...
Because people are not good by nature.
Geese don't quack, they honk. 😅
And hiss...
@candyswirlzpop Also true.
@@candyswirlzpopand leave green poop everywhere 😅
@@candyswirlzpopthat’s why some people call them cobra geese
exactly,,ducks quack..
We don't need all these great pics to prove Canada is different, we are in so many ways awesome. Stay strong Canada.
Thank you from this Canadian, I very much needed a laugh. Most of the hail storms cause a lot of damage to siding on houses, dents and broken windows in cars and homes. I've seen them as big as golf balls. I just loved the pics and all your comments. I accidentally came across this site and had fun commenting back.
Not to mention shingles
That hailstorm reminded me of my first day in Regina, Saskatchewan where a plow wind (basically a tornado) ripped through the area. Lots of wind and hail and we weren't certain if my parents' front window could withstand it. It did and there was no damage to the house but my uncle (an insurance claims adjuster at the time) spent the next 2 weeks in a neighboring community tallying up the damage. Canadian storms are no laughing joke, especially with hail that can get golf ball sized or larger.
The hitchbot thing was a social experiment about people's generosity and altruism. The idea was to take a picture of it, take it on a leg as far as someone was going, and then dropping it off for the next hopefully good Samaritan to continue the journey.
Canadian Geese aren't to be underestimated. I often joke that they best represent Canadians and not the beaver as these geese are fairly nice and gentle until given a reason not to be and then all hell breaks loose. 🙂
Sounds like you have experienced the geese in Wascana Park
@@MrBillmcminn Wascana Park, Beacon Hill Park, Algonquin Park... Many parks across Canada.
Calgary Alberta has seen hail damage, windows broken siding with holes punched into it. Personally I've never seen hail like that and hope I never do . I have seen pictures pictures of hail on roads that looks like snow.
@@MrBillmcminnah yes, where a flock will stand on the road and not move. Had a bunch do that last summer between U of R and Conexus Arts Centre🙄
Years ago we had a grapefruit-sized hailstone punch a whole in our roof. Our neighbour had 5 punch through.
I’m Canadian and I’m enjoying these, please keep it up!
I laughed my head off watching this and your comments, thanks
The snow at the door!!! Yes it happens. I remember climbing out our back window in order to start cleaning off the snow from our house etc.
@marievezina-oy6ch I've lived in southern Ontario, Canada near Toronto for many decades. I've never seen snow at any door to that height in my entire life. I could picture it happening farther north though.
Where? I am curious!!! I think the maritimes have had some really bad snow storm, but I personally have never seen it that bad!!!😮😮😮
@@Ann-sd6mwtry Winterpeg lol! 😂
@@mkrezanski6606no the prairies don’t get snow like that
When we were kids living in central Ontario (Georgian Bay/Lake Huron), I remember ONE stormy winter climbing out of the 2nd story bedroom window onto the crispy snow, sliding on our bellies over to the edge of the bank (the plows had been by) and down onto the street. Also, our front porch was fully covered in full length, thick icicles, completely solid, bumpy sheet of ice. We kids thought it was toooo amazing! 🇨🇦❤️
One of my brothers lives in Alberta. I live in southern Ontario. While we get hail, it’s nothing like what the Prairies get. One hail storm wrecked most of the aluminum siding on his house, dented his car quite badly and broke windows. There was several thousand dollars of damage done. Here in Ontario, I sometimes put my car in the garage and cover my plants during hailstorms. No comparison! 🙂
I am from Alberta and that hail can be big like golf balls. They hurt if you don't get cover for sure. Ive seen broken windshields and dents on cars because of it. Crazy! I live in BC now and I prefer the weather here. Lol
@@Jays_World I live in Alberta now. Just this past summer we had a storm like that - damage to siding, windows, cars, greenhouses, more…. Once, years ago, I got caught in one while working at a golf course. You should’ve seen us tearing on our little carts to get under cover! That storm had fatalities… not us, thankfully, but so much hail and rain fell: 3 inches in 45 minutes. Streets flooded, manhole covers lifted, and two kids fell in. One survived, another died. Scary and sad.
Keep exploring! It’s a pretty cool country. It’s also great to see someone on your side of the border interested in understanding this side of the border.
If you want to see more Canadian geese, and you have not yet seen this movie, get yourself a copy of Fly Away Home (1996) starring Jeff Daniels and Anna Paquin. The main Characters are a flock of Canadian geese, and the movie was filmed mostly in Canada as well. One of my all time favourite Canadian movies!!!
For the record, on the population map - The colours are red down the bottom which covers Toronto and the GTA as well as London, Windsor, and Hamilton.
Green along the St Lawrence River which covers Montreal and Quebec city. On the far left at the bottom is purple (not blue) and that covers the cities of Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Regina, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver and Victoria. All of which are down near the border with the USA. The rest of the country is yellow. That includes the provinces of PEI, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, Labrador, Northern parts of all the provinces as well as Yukon, NWT and Nunavut territories. The population of Canada is currently around 40 million. And each colour represents 1/4 of that - so 10 miillion for each colour.
Yes for sure…Fly Away Home is a really good, down-home movie! And it’s based on a true story!👍
@francescathomas3502 very heart warming story
@francescathomas3502 very heart warming story
I loved this movie as a kid ❤
@francescathomas3502 Still one of my favourite films. Absolutely heartwarming and charming. ❤️
About the snowed-in door : you see at the top that the snow is only a few inches thick, at the base it might be another thing, but it's mostly snow pressed against the door by the wind. it's not 6-foot of snow all the way to the street. Might very well be 2-3 feet though. This happened to me once, the problem you have is that the shovels are mostly in the shed...Used a hockey stick (I know, most canadian thing ever) to batter it down, waded trough the snow to the shed, cleared enough snow to open the door a few inches to grab a shovel in the shed, and then the real work began.... Only happened once in my life, but it was enough to keep a shovel by the door after that ! Things like that aren't common, but you get one or two very bad snowstorms every few years...
It can be thicker than that, but it does mean your door ended up in a snow drift. Those can easily be six feet thick though at chest height, even in southern Ontario
Snow drifts can be insane, especially out in the country. I've seen 20ft high drifts across the roads, particularly Christmas 2022 in Ontario. Several local roads were closed and our township declared a state of emergency.
The Customer Service people on Translink (subway in Vancouver BC) use hockey sticks to knock the ice off the tops of the trains at least over the doors.... works great!
And around 2-3 feet you probably want to be getting it off the roof so it doesn't build up too much weight.
In 1971 *named the storm of the century I went outside from the second floor window with a shovel to remove the snow. No joke the city was paralysed for days (no schooling..., yeah!). People got medication, food, etc by snowmobile delivery in the middle of the city.
Not all of Canada gets snow like that in winter but some places do. There are also areas, like the prairie provinces, that don't necessarily get a lot of snow, but it can be windy and the snow blows into drifts that can get quite high.
That is exactly it. Living in Regina here and a couple years ago on Christmas we had around waist high drifts but everywhere that wasn't near some sort of structure only had about 1 to1/4 of an inch.
I’m in Vancouver BC and we typically have green Christmases and winters in general. I hate it when I see silly overgeneralization because they feed these stereotypes which keep the rest of the world ignorant to the truth about our country.
On the prairies, when the wind is blowing for a long time and it’s below freezing at the same time, snow drifts aren’t the worst - the ice on the roads can be treacherous, winter tires or not.
@@JohnU1515same here. The drifts are usually in front of my garage door🙄
@Zlata1313 That's one of the worst spots for it to build up isn't it? Depending on the house/garage layout it most likely is the furthest spot from the yard so means you have that much more distance to shovel or blow the snow. Did you get a massive drift on Christmas Day in 2022 also?
For myself because the yard isn't an ideal place to put the snow and the driveway being able to fit 6 cars and also living at the end of a bay means I have to push and blow the snow from the garage, down the driveway, across the street, and into the middle of the bay, so about 120 feet in total.
The city never clears the snow in the bay either so I have to do the road in front of the house also so nobody gets stuck going around. Each heavy snowfall takes about 4 hours of clearing snow as a result of all of that. Edit* These two paragraphs are for non drifts and just a basic heavy snowfall.
i’m 65 years old, I’ve had 2 hernia surgeries, 2 complicated back surgeries, sinus surgery, 2 heart stents then open heart surgery for quadruple bypass. 2 carotid artery surgeries on both sides of my neck and head, plus of course numerous trips to doctors offices and vaccinations. Still kicking, 0$ paid except for some small premiums years ago. We did away with premiums a few years ago and the cost was downloaded to employers as a type of tax, so now we pay 0$.
As my wife and I are both business owners it was a bit of a surprise but not a big deal to take care of our brothers and sisters.
we can’t believe that you guys rejected Obama care, seems like a pretty good deal to us.
I'm Canadian 🇨🇦and I can attest that everything is true. I remember as a kid, opening the door and the snow accumulation was taller than me, at least 4-5 feet high. The geese scare the carp out me, I'll cross the street to get away, they're like ganstas, they stay together in packs 50-100. Not today satan, I'm crossing the road!! Jail I've seen as big as golfballs! That type of storm happens a lot specially in open field areas!
One time when I went out for Halloween, the snow was taller than me
"Winter in Toronto".... the rest of Canada has a chuckle.
It’s real!!! Snow can hide you on a good storm!🇨🇦
@@wendybarclay7908but Toronto’s winters tend to be milder than most in Canada
@@lauriespratt3972 Toronto gets winter twice a year, for a day each time lol
@@lauriespratt3972 We barely had winter in 2023 in Southern Ontario. Definitely very different from where my Mom grew up in Moose Jaw where they put chains on their tires in the winter. It's a BIG country, we have all of the biomes found on planet earth, from Rain Forest to Desert to Arctic Tundra. It truly is like no other country on earth, accept maybe Russia since they have so much land and diversity of climate. ;)
Edmonton chuckles at you naive lil sports
2:30 - the first thing you see is a door imprint in the snow. The second thing (a Canadian sees) is the gap in the snow at the top left. You can easily push through. The bottom might be deep but you're fine.
I'd guess chipmunk or prairie dog, the tail isn't full enough for a squirrel at the lake.
the grass was probably newly laid sod. it hadn't rooted yet.
Yeah, geese really don't care. Unless you ruffle their tail feathers... then then go full villain mode.
this happened in buffalo too awhile back... its never happened where i live in canada though which is very close to buffalo.
As for the Canadian geese , I have seen them make a full grown man cry and terrorized . They have a 5 foot wing
Span and can knock you down to ground a beat you with their wings ( and it’s not like be tickled with a feather duster
I lived where hailstorms are common in the summer, usually several of them every summer, and usually on some of the hottest days! So much hail would fall in just a few minutes that the ground would be completely white with inches of the stuff, and it might take hours for it all to melt on the north side of the house and/or in the shade, even though it was a hot summer's day. The hail was sometimes as big as golf balls, but no matter it's size from inside the house it always sounded like entire truckloads of rocks being dumped on the roof. And in some neighborhoods where the storm was the most fierce and/or hail the largest, windows on people's homes would be broken, siding would have huge holes punched into it, cars would be completely dented from one end to the other, and car windows would be smashed! The worst I personally experienced was having all of the windows screens on one side of the house torn to shreds, with dents and strike marks all over the siding and roof vents.
I've been hit by hailstones....those things hurt.
The grass photo, its sod. There are "grass farms" where once the field grows in, they use a machine to scrape the top layer of soil, grass intact, then roll it out on people's yards. Its a quick way to get grass after construction. Eventually it takes root. The yard in the photo is probably very freshly laid sod.
As a Canadian, I’ve been asked to be at work on time after an ‘end of the world’ looking snow/ice storm (i think to Toronto 2013 - and I worked in Whitby, over an hour away on the highway); I’ve worked in an emergency operations centre during ‘snowmaggedon’ in Newfoundland- that was a LOT - doors snowed in like the first image, and now the last few years in Soutyhern ontario we’ve had thunder &lighting storms accompanying snow and blizzard conditions, so that’s fresh! I was also in the Barrie Ontario Tornado of 1985 - so yeah, we get some profound weather up here.
And there’s there’s the RDF - rain drizzle and fog. Once in Vancouver I went 14 days without seeing the sun, ever, at all. On the 14th the day, sun broke through the clouds, just a little…. And then the clouds closed up again. And we had 9 more days of grey. It drizzled incessantly, for all 25 days. Weather here is varied, and often “dramatic” 😂.
I remember as a kid being in the car and the plowed street we were on had snow at least 8 feet high on either side of the road. Couldn’t see the houses on a residential street. Don’t get that much snow anymore. 🇨🇦
When we were kids (at least when I was a kid) the city didn't have snow blowers, so the snow was just plowed to the side of the road until spring when it melted. That's why the banks were so high. I also remember that we were always warned not to play on them because we could slide into the road accidentally, and not to dig into them because the plows might come by and not realize there were kids inside.
When they finally first did get the snowblowers, they just shot the snow onto people's front yards. god I'm old.
The banks seemed high...but I was only 3 feet high at the time lol
@@anneduff9294 they were great for making snow forts..
I remember when I was a kid in the mid-90s, we had a massive storm(in the prairies). My grandfather had to use the tractor to plow a path between our houses, the driveway, the lane, and a large portion of the fields so the cows could walk to their food/water. We had to dig the cows out with shovels(185-200), and I believe we lost 3-5 yearlings due to them being stranded away from the herd. The snow was so deep that my cousins and I dug tunnels all throughout the yards and made various forts in the center. Come spring, our parents kept finding toys, blankets, food, and even a school textbook as the snow melted. We spent hours outside and our parents could never find us as we made sure the tunnels were too small for them that they'd send the dog out with notes in his collar to tell us to come in. 😂
My brother, who is over a decade younger, never believed us as he's never seen that much snow in one place other than the mountains.
Snow storm of '77. So many stories and photographs come from that one.
For the 10th time...the geese are the exact same geese in the USA.....they fly to you in the winter and they fly home to Canada in the spring to have babies and they get aggressive when they are nesting
Why so are you so angry abt it though?
@@jeangenie5179 huh
@@jeangenie5179 a bit extreme to read anger into my response, but I have literally said it in response many many videos and I just said so. Carry on with your day ...all is well
Perhaps they come across as angry because they’re secretly a nesting Canada goose?
I'm with you on this one 'concern', no anger in your words just peace. ❤🇨🇦❤
It is a little chipmunk in the picture with the woman. My friend was in a wheelchair, and the little chipmunk would climb up and get peanuts from her. They are quite friendly. And yes, the hail storm is real, the doorway covered in snow is real etc. The doorway one I believe is snow but a lot of blowing snow built up. I have had half of that snow blown onto my door a few times. In winter, we are used to the cold. I go outside with just a sweater and sandals a lot. But, if there is a lot of snow, I will put boots on. You just grab whatever is handy, and then go outside to shovel etc. Even shovelling in the cold with just a sweater. No big deal. And our money is pretty. We just grab the colour we need, know what the amount of it is. Too bad the picture had Trudope in it from the House of Commons.
In Canada it is illegal to hit a goose with your car so in all cities you have to stop and wait if a gaggle of geese are crossing the road. You cannot even attempt to shoo them away because they will attack you if you try. When several (20 or more) decide to cross the road you can be trapped there for a half hour or longer because they don't waddle very fast and sometimes they change their mind part way and decide to go back to where they came from.
Canadian Geese aka: Demon Birds. Lol
The snow storms on the east side of Canada can be wild
Southeast NB, can confirm
So can the Miramichi. A good nor’easter will do the trick. The No Name foods and the store -labeled ones are the same product as the big name brands, made by the same company, not a different product,just a different label.
@ oh I know I was snow in at the hotel deux hospital after having my tonsils out in Chatham.
Definitely can confirm in moncton area haha and parts of ontario
It's like the prairies in that way. It's been snowing in Winterpeg and it looks like it has no intention of stopping any time soon.
Same geese, different times of year. When they're down there, they're just hanging out, up here they're guarding the kids.
good point..
The pic with a squirrel is actually a chipmunk.
Yea, I said that immediately, it's a chipmunk Tyler😅
You might be able to wash our money but put it in the dryer and it'll look like a raisin
One thing to keep in mind is many animals in the Canadian wild will have NEVER seen a human before. So many of them are curious instead of scared or threatening. This is why Bears can be so dangerous. Are you going to get a curious bear that just wants to chill with you or are you going to get an angry Bear that hates people? You never know. Stay away from Moose, wolves (duh), mountain goats, Geese (They have NO fear of us), otters, Lynx, Bears and Lions of the Mountain variety.
That blank piece of paper sure helps. I went to the hospital for a simple heart operation. I was in there for eight days and when I got out I had nothing but problems afterwards because they had to give me CPR during the operation and my spine was damaged. I talked to two guys in the US because they asked me about our healthcare system explained to them my situation And the guy that was totally against our system. Couldn’t believe what I went through and I had no bills. He said that would’ve devastated anybody in the US financially and agreed. Our system is a lot better than there’s they live in Wyoming.
Tyler, you really should come visit. My bet is that you could easily hitch rides and couch surf from Bonavista to Port Hardy and all points in between. Would make a great video series. :)
I have a spare room in Renfrew ON
@@Graciesmom-gp5ngI've got one in cottage country
The cigarettes started having that type of warning label in the 90's when I was in high school. They've increased visible restrictions on cigarette packaging since then. You can't have cigarettes on display (at least here in BC) they are all behind behind some sort of vision shield/door now. It feels like there is a lot less smoking seen in public because you can't smoke within 3 meters of doors or windows of business, in apartment buildings, and not supposed to smoke in parks. I feel like it did a good job of deterring the younger generations from smoking and that's probably a good thing.
Can't display them in Ontario either.
Nova Scotia, too. Most places have them in drawers under or behind the counter. And, some of them don't even have names anymore. The little Colts cigars now go by the name "M". That's it...just "M".
Cool, thanks for letting me know. I figured it probably was a Health Canada initiative, but things are different in provinces often, so I try not to assume it's the same everywhere.
Have you ever been in Canada? Are you aware that Washington, most of Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, most of South Dakota, Minnesota, most of Wisconsin, most of Michigan, parts of New York, Vermont, Maine, Alaska, and parts of Oregon and Wyoming are NORTH of the southern Canadian border? LOOK AT A MAP. Some people from the US have no knowledge of geography or history. I clearly remember one day a car with US license plates stopped in front of the farm I lived on which was about an hour drive from New York State. There was a sled on the roof of the car and they said they wanted to see an igloo and needed directions to Hudson Bay. It was the middle of July and over 100 degrees. I just pointed north and told them to keep on driving. It was only 2,000 or so miles away. The main problem I have with people from the US is that they have been taught that the US is the best country ever. Many have never been outside of the US and have no idea that there is a real world outside the borders, beautiful places to see, and that the US is NOT and never has been the best country ever. Educate yourselves.
I grew up in Niagara Falls, Canada and it was a common occurrence for tourists to ask, "Where is the snow?". From April to September.
Washington state borders Canada, Oregon does not.
@@SIChins No, it doesn't. But most of Oregon is north of the southern boarder of Canada. That was my point.
The snowed in door gives me such nostalgia 🥰 I grew up in Northern Manitoba but I’m in Southern Canada now and it’s like a different planet down here. I can’t imagine a childhood without having snow bank races on mounds that were up to a story high.
I remember us laughing about what the Americans would think if they found out we raced each other up snowbanks for fun. 😂
Tyler, I’ve had my thyroid, gallbladder, ovaries, and fallopian tubes all removed and I’ve never paid a cent. And yes, I am a Canadian.
I have brain surgery and a c-section and never paid a cent!!!
I just sprnt three months in hospital and rehab, the only bill i got was $90 for laundry services
Omg that much removed
@@melb8606 Can't believe they charged you laundry service while you were recovering. What a bunch of thieves. 😡
I’ve had 2 kidney transplants 11 surgeries. Paid nothing except taxis home
3 days in the hospital in Canada: you were in the waiting room for the first 71 hours.
Yes, some waits may well be long but if you were to face something life threatening you’d go to the front of the line. Best not to need emergency service on a holiday weekend. 😮😊
truth
Blame the premiers for misusing the federal health. transfer payments.
Those ERs are brutal for wait times. The only way you go to the front of the line is if you have a blood pressure 200 or over. Then they pump you full of blood thinners and constantly monitor you. Then you hear a warning bell go off. When you hear code blue you’re hoping it’s not you they are heading towards.
The beautiful pictures of Moraine Lake and the train coming around Morant's curve are both near Banff. Both are popular places for photographs!
Morraine mts was on the Old 20 dollar paper.
Funny though, the picture captures a Union Pacific engine, not so Canadian but he got the shot.
We have a great health care system. My daughter in law has been in ICU in hospital for 4 weeks and still be in the hospital for at least another month. No bills, all covered by health care.
Wishing her a fast recovery.
We have snow storms with high winds that cause those type snow drifts a few times a year in Newfoundland and newly laid sods (grass) and have high winds that would happen, some landscaping companies use pegs to secure sods stay in place during high winds.
" What is that? A street car?"
😂😂
* Me talking to my phone*
" Nope, that's a trolley" 😂😂
I didn't know Canada had trolleys. I've never actually seen one outside of photos of San Fransisco.
@SomeGuy_GRM they're not as cool as the ones in San Francisco and they don't run on cables. But they're still really cool 🤣🙂
@@SomeGuy_GRM
It's a street car.
It's in Toronto.
If you say trolley everyone will know you're a tourist or have been in a coma since the late 80's.
Street cars have steel wheels and run on rails embedded in the street, trolleys have rubber tires and run on regular streets albeit with overhead wires
@@SomeGuy_GRM I think Toronto is the only city in Canada that managed to keep them. They used to be in pretty much every city here though
I love watching your videos. It's funny to see your reactions to things that are so normal to us Canadians. 🇨🇦 🍁 🇨🇦 I was born and raised in Newfoundland, but I've been living in Alberta for many years. 😃
I just had my shingles, eves, deck, fence all repaired or replaced due to hail damage. Yes the winter can look beautiful from inside. I just came in from spending a hour clearing snow. Not so much fun.
17:28 I tried petting a Canada goose as a kid and instantly regretted it. It hissed at me and aggressively chased me around for a while. (I’m Canadian)
All the unpopulated areas of Canada are forested and that’s why we provide lumber to many countries that don’t have the space for forestry. US imports our lumber, which will cost you more with tariffs next year lol. It’s actually not funny ,we sympathize with our American neighbours. Love your videos btw, not many Americans are interested about learning about us
Take a trip across the country - the prairies are not forested. That's why they are called "the prairies". Good grief!
I hate to break it to you Jennifer but in Saskatchewan our prairie goes about half to two-thirds up from the southern border. Forest fires are definitely a huge thing here.
I live just north of the bend in the border of Alberta/BC and it's not prairie here. It's boreal forest.
A big chunk of Nunavut and the Arctic would like a word. 😂
In some places you can also get no name beer. Looks just like the cola can, but says beer instead
They also sold cigarettes at one time.
I know the noname cola isn't that great. I couldn't imagine how the beer tasted.😵💫
They have that beer in the states too.
noname eggs have a yellow yolk in the middle.
noname bananas are actually yellow.
The grass getting blown away is sod.
Rolls of grass that were installed on this guy's lawn.
Have you never seen sod before?
Not sod...artificial turf.
@@TheGrumpyCanuck that is what l thought bc it is very thin..
When is sod installed on sand? Around here, it is installed on top soil. I am legitimately asking because there may be more than one way to do things and there may be a reason for doing it differently.
The grass bit was just a dig at Saskatchewan. It’s so flat there and can be windy.
For the door picture with all the snow I recommend keeping a shovel inside and a few plastic containers and using it to put the snow in the bathtub 🛀 this way you can get out with out making to much of a mess
Just for you Americans that was a chipmunk in the photo
Food trained by tourists
Was it Chip or Dale?
@@stephenolan5539 it was alvin
@stephenolan5539 it didn't have a red nose so it must be chip
I've seen hail between tennis and baseball size once. It did a lot of damage. Under the yellow area the further north there is permafrost under a lot of it, which makes it hard to build in addittion to being inhospitable climate
Regarding the hail storm part - I'm not sure where the video is from, but this is why a large percentage of vehicles in Calgary have dents all over. Usually happens in some part of the city every year or two.
Hail storms are fairly common in Canada, and intense ones like this usually happen about once or twice a year, in certain parts of the country.
A few years ago many of the houses in my area had to have shingles and siding replaced due to hail damage, and many cars were ruined. People will often try to find trees to park under or try to cover their vehicle in some way.
Hail can indeed break windows, dent cars, ruin shingles and take divots out of the grass.
They can be 1/4” to tennis ball size.
We had a summer hail storm. I had to get the laundry in so I tossed on my helmet. There's dents and scratches on it from the hail.
Haven't seen that much snow where I live since I was a kid, but when it happened, our parents put us in snowsuits and tossed us into it and told us to go outside and play.
That wall of snow could either be tuesday in newfoundland with a typical snowfall or the snow couldve blown into the door by the wind
I have seen the "snow door" happen at my parents house.
They lived exposed to the ocean and that is caused by drifting caused by heavy winds. You don't go out on days like that.
The door imprint photo: that snow looks compressed which means high winds packed it together. This used to happen to the garage door at my parents’ house. The driveway formed a wind tunnel and extra snow would pack in there, much deeper than the actual amount of snow that fell. Eg. There might have been eighteen inches of snow packed at the garage door but only seven inches were on the front steps.
So many laughs this episode, love it, especially the hair freezing contest!😂😂❤️🤍❤️🇨🇦
great channel Tyler 👍 Don't ppl read the comments before commenting ? YES ITS A CHIPMUNK, YES IT A CANADA GOOSE nd YES ITS SOD
No need to snarl!!!
@lynnedavance5833 lol i put it in caps so ppl would see it..your the one thats yelling with the exclamations 🤫
15:49 The quarter section you thought was blue is purple. (I read a few comments and didn’t see anyone say this so if you got several comments like it already I apologize!
4:46 😂😂 That's the cousin of Geico. He's talking to her about her extended warranty on her car and how she can save 15% or more😂😂😂
"Remember, 15 minutes could save you 15% or more!" -Alvin
😂😂😂😂😂
@@Zyo117 also, Alvin "all you have to do is use my cousin Geico" 🤣
I've had the snow-door thing in Ontario, but it's not super common. I'd imagine that is something you could find in Minnesota from time to time.
A big snowdrift outside your door. You don’t see this too often in western Canada but you will find it in eastern Canada especially in the Maritimes. They get huge amounts of heavy wet snow. The picture on the cigarette box is quite normal. Also in Canada you cannot have cigarettes on display anywhere. They are kept in cupboards behind the checkout counter and you have to ask for them. Only people over 18 can buy them. No bill from our hospitals. And the hail storm. Those are pretty common in western Canada. Yes, they break house and car windows and this past summer they were so bad they literally ripped the siding off houses.
Haha. No Name had a marketing push this year and sold camp chairs, coolers, t-shirts and loads of other things all printed with just the plain name of the object! It’s hilarious and awesome.
Chipmunk, not a squirrel
EXACTLY and much cuter too!
Big ass chipmunk...its a gopher. They come up often looking for food as they're used to tourists!
I think every home owner in Canada has seen the snow at the door but it's pretty rare to go all the way up. My guess is that's from the east cost. Also, Houses mostly have two doors so only one is in the direction of the wind.
That was our house in Saskatchewan on the farm when I was a kid in the 50’s
Yes most houses have a storm Door.
Wrong. Not every home owner. There ARE regions in Canada where snow is rare, scant and short lasting. Please fact check.
I’ve lived in Montreal, Quebec, Longueui and Sherbrooke and I’ve never had more that a few invhes of snow AT the door…..
@ exactly. The door imprint in the snow could easily be in Michigan or something. Even Alaska or places in Europe. Why does it automatically need to be assumed as Canadian?
I love that Hitchbot made it across Canada just fine. They sent another to Germany, a country that has a brutal history and it does just fine They send one to America and in the city of brotherly love, Hitchbot is murdered and dismembered, yeah. Yes, our geese suck this much, even geese on the farm suck, very aggressive. Ducks are different story, so tame in comparison.
Here in Sask; we've had hail, f1 to f2 twisters, squalls, snow squalls, extreme heat and cold from temperatures up to 45°c (113°F) and as low as -50°c (-58°F). Its also quite common for us to still see rain in the winter seasons so it gets pretty slippery out here. Our highest reported windgusts have been roughly 115km/h and higher. The highest being 126km/h just this year in 2024. The door you see, as scary as it may seem is usually fixed by slamming the door a couple times to knock down the drifted snow. Chains and Canadian winter grade tires out here are a necessity. And even then its no promise you wont end up in the ditch if you dont know how to drift the ice; like many of the sask boys out here. None the less, if you offer them a dart or a texas mickey, they may teach you a thing or two about keeping 'er on the road. Canada aint for the faint of heart. If you want, consider us the colder brothers to the aussies down south. You gotta be tough to be out here. We wont tell you to your face we dont like you, infact we'll be quite pleasent and kind. Unless you make a fool of yourself or who youre hanging out with. In that case, the boys have no problem taking you out back and reminding you how to act. Winters are tough, but we're made of something tougher. You can always see buddy running outside in his shorts, watching his dog run away for the third day in a row. If we dont have a hut for the lake when we go ice fishing, we bring the shovels and make a Quinzhee. And if you stay out on the lake long enough, youll see the stars like youve never seen them before. Hell, maybe even the aurora borealis in its beautiful shade of teal. If you dont live here already, I can promise no matter where you go theres an adventure around every corner. No matter what youre doing. Funny thing about living in Sask, is with our terrain being mostly flat in the southern regions. Many forget exactly how beautiful our own backyard is. Crazy but beautiful, just like the people in it.
The lady on the smoke pack is a lady named Barb Tarbox. She campaigned against smoking when she was diagnosed with lung cancer at the age of 42 she passed away here in Edmonton maybe a year or so after the initial diagnosis.
5:07 that’s a chipmunk I think