Hello everyone, please let us know in the comments, what to not do in your city 🙂🏠 I you enjoy our work please support us with a like and subscribe🎉 See you next week 😊
Guys - in today's world - this contribution comes as a surprise. You both - are working at a professional level as social media people - contributing value - based on facts and direct feedback from other people - who all tell it as it is without having a hidden agenda. All the points that they did bring up are totally correct. None of them seem to have a hidden agenda. It takes talent to pick people you interview to avoid that you end up with a totally distorted picture depending on which area and what type of people you choose to talk to. Your interview took place in open air - not linked to traffic hubs like airports and railway stations where people are under stress. Relaxing and enjoying a nice day makes it easier, to be frank and tell it how you really feel. And you are blessed to have a videographer on your side who is as good as it gets. And this time - you threw him a few curve balls with the lighting and he did cope with it like a champ. Perfect - according to Swiss Standards, nothing is perfect - there is always room for improvement. But this time - you hit the nail on the head. 10-10-! Bravo - bravissimo. In the Opera - the three of you would bring the house down. I never ever said this about any of the videos on TH-cam - but you deserve it. Go Pro people.
Hello 👋 Wow thanks a lot for your comment! This is probably the kindest and most generous comment we ever got for our TH-cam work ⭐️😊 We appreciate it so much and are very happy that you enjoy our work! ❤️ Thanks also for sharing positivivity, sometimes I feel this gets lots in the nowadays world! Have a wonderful week💯🎉
WT* !... We DO eat sausages with tons of mustard, lol. But oh well, I come from the French speaking part of the country. 😅And concerning raclette, here in Valais/Wallis (the native land of raclette !!), we primarily put black pepper on it... (and paprika if you are Swiss German... or if you like it). The only thing that can make you loose a friend is if you add ketchup on Swiss stuff 😁😁
That’s a misunderstanding with the sausage and the mustard! You can eat your sausage everywhere in Switzerland with mustard (as much as you want) except for the city of St. Gallen. In St. Gallen they have their sausage called “Olma-Bratwurst” that must be eaten without mustard, but you won’t lose any friends. In Zurich we go to the “Sternen Grill” at the Bellevue place and we enjoy our sausage with mustard and fresh crispy bread there.
In Orange County California, do not ride the Metrolink train without a ticket. The fine is $1500.00 USD for not having a ticket. The tickets are available at automated vending machines or on an app and cost between $20.00 and $50.00 USD depending on distance traveled. It makes the 100 CHF fine in Switzerland look cheap.
Don‘t call the carneval of Basel „Carneval“ or worse „Fasching“. It’s called Fasnacht (not “Fasenacht” either!!!). It’s the fifth season of the year. The “pin” they sell to finance it, it’s a “Blaggedde”, not a “Abzeichen” and not a “pin” either. Yes, you should buy it, if you want to visit the Fasnacht. There are no fines but you risk being “gschtopft” (filled with “confetti” and yes, they are called “Räppli“, not „confetti“… )
Urinating in a public place, even when it is secluded and the police catch you, you will get a fine. However, many years ago my father did it and did not pay the fine, because he showed the police officer his "Schiffer Patent" (schiffen = urinating) NB: Schiffer Patent = Motorboat License. Ha, ha, ha
I just spent a week in Zürich to see if I'd like to move there some day. It was awesome! Beautiful city and surrounding. Sunset on top of Uetliberg / Felsenegg was unreal. Do you have any advice on how to find a job? (Administrative / financial)
Word of mouth. Find somebody who works already there. And above all - Swiss companies expect you to tell them what you can bring to the party. What can you do for them? Whether you like to move to Switzerland - they don't pay you for that. Conclusion: Research the company - find out what talents they need and match this with your qualifications. Nothing is more attractive than an applicant who comes with "an offer to help" and not "begging for "being paid" because he likes Switzerland. The other route is - to find a company in your home country that has a subsidiary in Switzerland. Specially if you come from a country that does need employees who speak the language of the Mother Company and are familiar how business is done back home. They are acting as both, employees and ambassadors of the Home Office - and in the past - it was much easier to get a visa under such conditions.
Hahaha! That, "to not confuse Switzerland with Sweden" is totally accurate! Although, as a Swede, it's the opposite! I've heard it several times, especially when traveling to the US...! 😅 So, 🇨🇭 is NOT 🇸🇪 😂
Hey so I’m a Swiss citizen but I live in another country, I’m a mixed kid. I don’t speak any European languages, just English. I was wondering whether it’s possible to study in a University that has courses in English and learn German as a seperate subject?
I think it's so funny yo watch youre videos the accent of claudia en english It a little bit not understanding maybe because she have this accent but it's so good to watch Youre videos and know such a beauty information thank you 😌
Also the idea about only putting paprika on RACLETTE is totally weird and wrong my Swiss family puts all kinds of things on Raclette: red pepper, raclette spice, cumin, black pepper, dill, etc
In the Swiss German areas don't assume that the clothing makes the person Someone in jeans could easily be a billionaire In the French areas it can be the opposite
You got that wrong ! Only St Galler Bratwurst you should not eat with Mustard(in St Gallen, on other places the St Gallers don't see it 😂) all other Bratwurst... every Wurst/sausage) everybody eats with Mustard or Ketchup.
A tourist trap I recently experienced was about Swiss railway (SBB) who tend to indiscriminately fine passengers who activated the Swiss pass just a little bit late with excessive fine. I was handed a 158 CHF fine ticket by the ticket controller without even asking me any question (e.g. if it was I first time). According to SSB website such a high fine should be for repeated offenders. Later, I found out the abusive habit of SBB ticket controllers from many internet groups and decided to make an in-person trip to the SBB office to complain (as the SBB tel line is always engaged). The funny thing was the staff in SBB office after hearing my case immediately and apologetically reduced my fine to 30 CHF. Instead of having time to sight-seeing, I spend a lot of my time in Switzerland complaining to SBB. This not only wasted a lot of my time but leave a really bad taste in my mouth. So watch out for this abusive action from SBB. Take care.
“don’t say Hallo to Swiss people because sometimes they get offended..” at first i thought she meant not to greet people ‘cause they don’t like it.. shocked :)
She probably referred to the fact that „Hallo“ and even more „Tschüss“ are considered informal or even impolite, when you don‘t know the other person. The appropriate Greetings would be „Grüezi“, „Griessäch“, „Guet Tag“ etc… and „Uff Wiederluege“, „Uff Wiederseh“, „Adieu“ etc… depending on the region and the local dialect. This is quite challenging for Germans, because „Hallo“ and „Tschüss“ are used ubiquitously there. And, as she mentioned, mispronouncing the Swiss greeting mostly causes amusement, but sometimes is also seen as offensive (when done by Germans).
Avoid using public transportation as much as possible. A case for which I had tested positive (February 2023) for a variant of covid-19 and also influenza. Laying ill in bed for 14 days while vacationing in Lausanne ~ not fun 🤒
@@ramonsuter7435 Also, what if I may ask (without being attacked) is the current status involving panhandlers in Lausanne? On my last *"bad luck"* visit last February (2023) I seen many Gypsy-like homeless panhandlers begging for money in and around old town and at metro train stations. Another surprise was being awaken at 0730 hrs (7:30am) by the sound of a gardener using a *gasoline-powered leaf blower.* On a previous visit to Switzerland back in 2019 I didn't see any of these things. Please note; these events ~ My getting seriously ill. My hearing and seeing a gas leaf blower being used. My seeing homeless people begging for money - I had only seen in Lausanne. Maybe I just had bad luck on this 2023 Suisse vacation visit (?)
@@arzoo468 I'm sorry, I agree with you about the effectiveness of Swiss public transport. I was very frustrated and angry when I had written my comment back more than 1 year ago. A sudden illness while I was vacationing in Switzerland forced me to miss an important event which I had prepaid, and that the organization holding the event refused to refund me the ticket purchase. Yes I do agree, the public transport in Switzerland is the best in the 🌍only after Germany 😉
Don't be too direct and too straight forward interacting with swiss people, they have kind of a indirect behaviour and will communicate in a more indirect way. Furthermore don't speak too loud being in public places, people tend to speak quieter and softer than in Germany or Italy.
You think we should do a video about that topic? We can try to interview in one video only people with Muslim background, but that will be quite difficult, because there are not that many and the people also need to agree to be interviewed with us 😃👍 But yes we are taking note and maybe can do a video in that regard in the future 😃🙌 Have a great week!
One thing - when in Switzerland - people address each other and speak to each other in a friendly and polite manner. English is probably not your mother tongue. One reason more that you have to be careful how you use a language. I want - is more of a "command" than a desire to do or have something done. I often hear foreigners in a Swiss Restaurant telling the waiter - I want a coffee and then I want sugar with it. I hope you hear the nuance between - "would like" or "please bring me" or anything other but want. And "merci" works in all languages to show your gratitude for a service you received.
Hello everyone,
please let us know in the comments, what to not do in your city 🙂🏠
I you enjoy our work please support us with a like and subscribe🎉 See you next week 😊
Guys - in today's world - this contribution comes as a surprise. You both - are working at a professional level as social media people - contributing value - based on facts and direct feedback from other people - who all tell it as it is without having a hidden agenda. All the points that they did bring up are totally correct. None of them seem to have a hidden agenda. It takes talent to pick people you interview to avoid that you end up with a totally distorted picture depending on which area and what type of people you choose to talk to. Your interview took place in open air - not linked to traffic hubs like airports and railway stations where people are under stress. Relaxing and enjoying a nice day makes it easier, to be frank and tell it how you really feel.
And you are blessed to have a videographer on your side who is as good as it gets. And this time - you threw him a few curve balls with the lighting and he did cope with it like a champ. Perfect - according to Swiss Standards, nothing is perfect - there is always room for improvement. But this time - you hit the nail on the head. 10-10-! Bravo - bravissimo. In the Opera - the three of you would bring the house down. I never ever said this about any of the videos on TH-cam - but you deserve it. Go Pro people.
Hello 👋 Wow thanks a lot for your comment! This is probably the kindest and most generous comment we ever got for our TH-cam work ⭐️😊 We appreciate it so much and are very happy that you enjoy our work! ❤️ Thanks also for sharing positivivity, sometimes I feel this gets lots in the nowadays world! Have a wonderful week💯🎉
As a visitor, do not talk loudly on trains and don’t forget to bring cash when shopping. Some shops do not accept credit/debit cards!
Thanks for sharing your comment!
WT* !... We DO eat sausages with tons of mustard, lol. But oh well, I come from the French speaking part of the country. 😅And concerning raclette, here in Valais/Wallis (the native land of raclette !!), we primarily put black pepper on it... (and paprika if you are Swiss German... or if you like it). The only thing that can make you loose a friend is if you add ketchup on Swiss stuff 😁😁
And that might be the italian culture coming from the south :D
You guys are awesome. I am originally form Afghanistan and recently moved to Switzerland. Your videos help me A LOT!
Thanks so much for your comment and support!! 😊
Very nice video, I enjoyed it very much, it's helpful and funny.
Thank you and please keep ist up😁🔥
Thank you very very much, Leo!! 🧡
Nice video, as always. I also experienced Raclette always comes with paprika on top of it during my trips to Switzerland.
Thanks for sharing your experience with us!
Maybe in the Swiss German area. In Valais/Wallis (the native land of raclette !) we put black pepper. 😉
wow, You interview my friend Diego jajaj !! Great double base player! Good tips guys!
Thanks a lot for your comment, Escri! What a coincidence!
Funny video! I hope to see more coming soon!
Very soon!
Another great video
thank you
Glad you enjoyed it❤
That’s a misunderstanding with the sausage and the mustard! You can eat your sausage everywhere in Switzerland with mustard (as much as you want) except for the city of St. Gallen. In St. Gallen they have their sausage called “Olma-Bratwurst” that must be eaten without mustard, but you won’t lose any friends. In Zurich we go to the “Sternen Grill” at the Bellevue place and we enjoy our sausage with mustard and fresh crispy bread there.
In Orange County California, do not ride the Metrolink train without a ticket. The fine is $1500.00 USD for not having a ticket. The tickets are available at automated vending machines or on an app and cost between $20.00 and $50.00 USD depending on distance traveled. It makes the 100 CHF fine in Switzerland look cheap.
Wow what an expensive fine!! Better to buy the ticket 😊
Hey I enjoy looking at the views it's my kinner life style god bless u all and stay safe
Hi. Education information video I like it thank you so much make this video🌟👌🌟👌 🖐🖐
My guy at 4:30 should know the real way of eating raclette is with potatoes and black pepper.
Debate open 🙂 haha
Very funny video i like your all videos brother support from India ❤❤❤
Thank you so much 😀 🎈
love from Pakistan, would love to visit Switzerland one day!
Kind regards from Zurich!! Best of luck in visiting Switzerland one day!! ⭐️
Don‘t call the carneval of Basel „Carneval“ or worse „Fasching“. It’s called Fasnacht (not “Fasenacht” either!!!). It’s the fifth season of the year. The “pin” they sell to finance it, it’s a “Blaggedde”, not a “Abzeichen” and not a “pin” either. Yes, you should buy it, if you want to visit the Fasnacht. There are no fines but you risk being “gschtopft” (filled with “confetti” and yes, they are called “Räppli“, not „confetti“… )
Interesting, I never went to a city that has more public toilets than Zurich! 😅
Yes!! There are so many!! 😊
I think the person was talking about street parade
Same here...therez no dearth of public wc
"You will lose your swiss friends.... but that's alright" 🤣🤣
😂
Yeah not a big deal apparently 😂😂
Urinating in a public place, even when it is secluded and the police catch you, you will get a fine. However, many years ago my father did it and did not pay the fine, because he showed the police officer his "Schiffer Patent" (schiffen = urinating) NB: Schiffer Patent = Motorboat License. Ha, ha, ha
Haha thanks for sharing your story! 😄😄
I just spent a week in Zürich to see if I'd like to move there some day. It was awesome! Beautiful city and surrounding. Sunset on top of Uetliberg / Felsenegg was unreal.
Do you have any advice on how to find a job? (Administrative / financial)
Hi!! Thanks a lot for your comment. We recommend you our video titled “How to find a job in Zurich.” Best of luck!! ⭐️
Word of mouth. Find somebody who works already there. And above all - Swiss companies expect you to tell them what you can bring to the party. What can you do for them? Whether you like to move to Switzerland - they don't pay you for that.
Conclusion: Research the company - find out what talents they need and match this with your qualifications. Nothing is more attractive than an applicant who comes with "an offer to help" and not "begging for "being paid" because he likes Switzerland.
The other route is - to find a company in your home country that has a subsidiary in Switzerland. Specially if you come from a country that does need employees who speak the language of the Mother Company and are familiar how business is done back home. They are acting as both, employees and ambassadors of the Home Office - and in the past - it was much easier to get a visa under such conditions.
never speed in a car 4 Kph over and you will get fined also never jump traffic lights . .2 seconds past a red light 120chf fine
Don’t recycle your bottles on Sunday’s! And use the Zurich-Sacke for your trash! That’s a no go here
Thanks for your comment 😃👍
Hey there thanks so much for sharing your experience and point of view!
Hearing you say "dude" was a laugh riot 🤣
Hahaha! That, "to not confuse Switzerland with Sweden" is totally accurate! Although, as a Swede, it's the opposite! I've heard it several times, especially when traveling to the US...! 😅 So, 🇨🇭 is NOT 🇸🇪 😂
Hey so I’m a Swiss citizen but I live in another country, I’m a mixed kid. I don’t speak any European languages, just English. I was wondering whether it’s possible to study in a University that has courses in English and learn German as a seperate subject?
It is! Usually more Masters degrees than Bachelors are held in english tho
I would summarize it by one sentence: don’t be an asshole
Worldwide rule 🧡
Super funny video!
Thanks so much!! 🧡 Happy you liked it!!
hahaha I love sausage with mustard 😄😄
Haha 😂
I think it's so funny yo watch youre videos the accent of claudia en english It a little bit not understanding maybe because she have this accent but it's so good to watch Youre videos and know such a beauty information thank you 😌
Thank you! 😃
Also the idea about only putting paprika on RACLETTE is totally weird and wrong my Swiss family puts all kinds of things on Raclette: red pepper, raclette spice, cumin, black pepper, dill, etc
In the Swiss German areas don't assume that the clothing makes the person
Someone in jeans could easily be a billionaire
In the French areas it can be the opposite
Why ?
French swiss people love to dress up
Nr. 1: Not tell them they are slow and stupid
Thanks for sharing your not to do 😊😀
Hey there thanks a lot for your comment!
You got that wrong ! Only St Galler Bratwurst you should not eat with Mustard(in St Gallen, on other places the St Gallers don't see it 😂) all other Bratwurst... every Wurst/sausage) everybody eats with Mustard or Ketchup.
Don’t flush the toilet after 9pm! It is ILLEGAL.
Getting a speeding ticket 😅
Ups 😬😂
I understand that haha, it can get expensive quickly 😄
1:03 wait saying “hello” or “hallo” is offensive ?? What in the world? 🤔
DON'T BE LATE
Hahah thanks for your comment ⭐️😄
really NEVER be late
A tourist trap I recently experienced was about Swiss railway (SBB) who tend to indiscriminately fine passengers who activated the Swiss pass just a little bit late with excessive fine. I was handed a 158 CHF fine ticket by the ticket controller without even asking me any question (e.g. if it was I first time). According to SSB website such a high fine should be for repeated offenders. Later, I found out the abusive habit of SBB ticket controllers from many internet groups and decided to make an in-person trip to the SBB office to complain (as the SBB tel line is always engaged). The funny thing was the staff in SBB office after hearing my case immediately and apologetically reduced my fine to 30 CHF. Instead of having time to sight-seeing, I spend a lot of my time in Switzerland complaining to SBB. This not only wasted a lot of my time but leave a really bad taste in my mouth. So watch out for this abusive action from SBB. Take care.
I am from Thailand , Do you like Thailand ? Welcome to Bangkok Thailand
Hey there, thanks a lot for your comment :-) We have never been to Thailand.
Hello
well Belgian Chocolate isnt better!
“don’t say Hallo to Swiss people because sometimes they get offended..” at first i thought she meant not to greet people ‘cause they don’t like it.. shocked :)
Haha 😆
What's wrong with saying hallo???
She probably referred to the fact that „Hallo“ and even more „Tschüss“ are considered informal or even impolite, when you don‘t know the other person. The appropriate Greetings would be „Grüezi“, „Griessäch“, „Guet Tag“ etc… and „Uff Wiederluege“, „Uff Wiederseh“, „Adieu“ etc… depending on the region and the local dialect. This is quite challenging for Germans, because „Hallo“ and „Tschüss“ are used ubiquitously there. And, as she mentioned, mispronouncing the Swiss greeting mostly causes amusement, but sometimes is also seen as offensive (when done by Germans).
@@danielschwendinger8382So basically you can’t win. Hallo is wrong. But Gruëzi, without a Swiss accent, is also wrong.
@@hippodinoreserve6090 You can always use the formal German „Guten Tag“.
so when you're rich you just start looking for problems in other places
just a reminder that you're interviewing people, not the camera... 👁👁
Hello thanks for your comment, we are also talking with you indirectly through the video 👍👋
*Promosm* 💘
Thanks for your comment!
Xdddddd
Thanks for your comment💯
@@claudiaandjan
Avoid using public transportation as much as possible. A case for which I had tested positive (February 2023) for a variant of covid-19 and also influenza. Laying ill in bed for 14 days while vacationing in Lausanne ~ not fun 🤒
That has nothing to do with public transport. I use it daily, everyone uses it at least weekly. You just had bad luck
@@ramonsuter7435 Also, what if I may ask (without being attacked) is the current status involving panhandlers in Lausanne? On my last *"bad luck"* visit last February (2023) I seen many Gypsy-like homeless panhandlers begging for money in and around old town and at metro train stations. Another surprise was being awaken at 0730 hrs (7:30am) by the sound of a gardener using a *gasoline-powered leaf blower.* On a previous visit to Switzerland back in 2019 I didn't see any of these things.
Please note; these events ~ My getting seriously ill. My hearing and seeing a gas leaf blower being used. My seeing homeless people begging for money - I had only seen in Lausanne. Maybe I just had bad luck on this 2023 Suisse vacation visit (?)
Public transport in Switzerland is the best in the 🌎
@@arzoo468 I'm sorry, I agree with you about the effectiveness of Swiss public transport. I was very frustrated and angry when I had written my comment back more than 1 year ago. A sudden illness while I was vacationing in Switzerland forced me to miss an important event which I had prepaid, and that the organization holding the event refused to refund me the ticket purchase.
Yes I do agree, the public transport in Switzerland is the best in the 🌍only after Germany 😉
dont say "hello" what!? i have never heard of that. not true
Don't be too direct and too straight forward interacting with swiss people, they have kind of a indirect behaviour and will communicate in a more indirect way. Furthermore don't speak too loud being in public places, people tend to speak quieter and softer than in Germany or Italy.
Thank you very much for sharing this information!! 😊
They’re not Germans after all! They’re Swiss!
Hi thank you for the video, i wan't to do video about Muslim people in Switzerland if you wan't and thank you
Hello I do not understand your comment. Could you elaborate a bit on it?
@@claudiaandjan video about Arab and Muslim Community
You think we should do a video about that topic? We can try to interview in one video only people with Muslim background, but that will be quite difficult, because there are not that many and the people also need to agree to be interviewed with us 😃👍 But yes we are taking note and maybe can do a video in that regard in the future 😃🙌 Have a great week!
@@claudiaandjan thanks 🙏
One thing - when in Switzerland - people address each other and speak to each other in a friendly and polite manner. English is probably not your mother tongue. One reason more that you have to be careful how you use a language.
I want - is more of a "command" than a desire to do or have something done. I often hear foreigners in a Swiss Restaurant telling the waiter - I want a coffee and then I want sugar with it. I hope you hear the nuance between - "would like" or "please bring me" or anything other but want. And "merci" works in all languages to show your gratitude for a service you received.