Note: That piece of toast is my partner’s (born and bred 4th gen Australian). He has that amount of vegemite every single day. And yes, he licked the knife :P 🎬 MORE VIDEOS LIKE THIS - 8 Reasons Why I Love Living in Australia - th-cam.com/video/hpkkIy27Lsk/w-d-xo.html - STRANGE AUSTRALIAN LAWS! Surprising things that are forbidden in Australia - th-cam.com/video/Lxy77eMMkts/w-d-xo.html - Testing an Aussie's Australian Slang - th-cam.com/video/HuXc0zm7kYU/w-d-xo.html - 17 Things TOURISTS SHOULD KNOW BEFORE Visiting Australia - th-cam.com/video/lY08CI30qcU/w-d-xo.html - Pros & Cons of Moving to Australia - th-cam.com/video/-MDcPI8R2SQ/w-d-xo.html&lc=UgzLwQy0w6TNO5Y-hlF4AaABAg - Is Sydney Worth it? - th-cam.com/video/BcbKBaDE03M/w-d-xo.html - Australian healthcare system - th-cam.com/video/LAx0YQkqyHw/w-d-xo.html - 9 Must Watch Australian Films and TV Shows - th-cam.com/video/uB-3jFXbCYU/w-d-xo.html - 10 Things to Know Before Moving to Australia - th-cam.com/video/3TxjAfT6DkY/w-d-xo.html - Top 9 Most Amazing Places Around Melbourne - th-cam.com/video/Ag-msCmo80s/w-d-xo.html - How to Buy a Car in Australia - th-cam.com/video/DEwtYYtsKhI/w-d-xo.html - Is it really worth studying in Australia? - th-cam.com/video/57JcqDzZ0ME/w-d-xo.html - 7 Tips for Getting a Job in Australia without experience - th-cam.com/video/1TB9xtk-D1c/w-d-xo.html - Australian School System and Costs - th-cam.com/video/eqRrgImT1Os/w-d-xo.html
The toilet thing originated because traditionally the toilet was an outhouse somewhere in the backyard. As it moved inside, they still preferred it to be separate from the main bathroom, likely for the reasons you described. I’m probably not alone in saying I definitely prefer my toilet seperate to my bathroom.
@@mikehall3074Closing the lid before flushing greatly reduces splash back. My problem with a separate room is that there is often not a sink in it. That means I may have to touch door handles with dirty hands. I don't like it.
You didn't mention that Australian schools also usually have swimming lessons which are often compulsory. Many drowning victims in Australia were born overseas or come from different cultures. Swimming is a huge part of Australian culture and it's really important to know how.
That's something that didn't necessarily catch my attention, because in my country many schools have this as well (we had a pool in my school and swimming lessons were compulsory throughout primary and part of secondary school). But it is true that perhaps not all countries have that, so good point, thanks!
It's very sad. Almost every month in the summer there's a drowning where immigrants or visitors from countries where beach swimming is not part of the culture get into difficulties and drown. We try to educate them with TV adverts and multi-lingual signs at beaches, but, somehow, the message doesn't get through. If you're visiting an ocean beach, only go into the water between the flags on a patrolled beach. Learn how to handle a rip and learn how to recognise a rip.
@@livingsimplyaustraliaAnother thing, my kids in Brisbane don’t take that heavy bags to school that you showed in the video. I always ask my kids that why there is nothing in your bags except 2-3 notebooks with lunchbag and water bottle.
The bottle shops being separate from grocery stores is not to limit alcohol consumption. It’s because supermarkets employ minors, who are not legally allowed to sell alcohol. Also the customers in bottle shops are sometimes already drunk and we don’t want drunk people in grocery stores.
I moved to OZ in my thirties (one of the best decisions of my life) and was surprised by many of these things as well. One I absolutely appreciate is the health system with the GP. Not only this doctor can refer you to the proper specialist, not the one you think you need, but they know your full medical history. Having a GP you trust is priceless.
GPs are often covered by public (payed for by government taxes) insurance, so they don't cost anything. Specialists are more often private if you want immediate visit, but you can wait for public access. People will criticise our public health care, and I can understand the criticisms, but having the free option is life saving for most people. I think there is a lot of confusion around our health care, especially from people in the USA, but what we call "private" health care is just what Americans have while our "public" system is the one our taxes pay for which isn't as good, but it has saved my life from collapsed lung, and my brothers from twisted bowel, my dads from bowel cancer, so I appreciate having the public option.
@trybunt GPs are only fully covered if you have a Health Care Card, which not everyone can access due to various bureaucratic hurdles. Many people fall through the cracks of the system because of this. Those in rural areas often have to go through hospitals and public health triaging, leading to long waits and worsening health conditions before they get the necessary care. It’s far from ideal for many Australians.
I was born in Australia and live on a property and even though i have a resident mob of roos on my property i still get excited everytime I see them. I love how unique all our wildlife is
Me too! We have a large property of over 300 hectares. The Roo's and about 40 wild ducks attend every day while about a hundred mixed wild birds attend for their twice-daily feed courteously provided by my brother. It is quite expensive, but it is a daily delight to see them visit.
That's how much Vegemite I'd use in a year - and I have it nearly every day. Try it with the thinnest of thinnest coverings. The mistake most foreigners make is they think it's like Nutella. And once they tried it layer upon layer it put them off forever.
@@AussieWinterhow do you get weevils in a wet product? If you put all your dry pantry products in the freezer for a minimum 1day,when you bring it home - you'll never ever have weevils
It is better to have the toilet separate. You should NEVER have the toothbrush in the same room as your toilet. Plus, if someone wants to take a long bubble bath… others can still go to the loo.
@@kayew79 Yes, -I- know. But there are many people (especially males) don’t do it. Better to keep the storage of tooth brushes out of the same space as the toilet. Having a separate toilets from the bathroom is a good idea. For many reasons, toothbrushes being just one of them.
@kayew79 You still have all that turd air hovering around, gaseous poo particles are attaching themselves to every bristle of your brush while nature takes its course
You know, for hundreds of years toilets were in the same room as the sink and tub. I have never heard of massive death or sickness because toilets were in the same room. I too prefer that the toilet/bidet be in a water closet closed off area, but jeez, this is crazy paranoid.
I am born and raised Aussie who will always call Australia home. I love all things Aussie; our weather, things, especially our unique, colourful, loud and sometimes weird and often deadly wildlife. We live in a NSW Central West country town, and have the pleasure of Crimson and Eastern Rosellas, King and Superb parrots, Galahs, Corellas, Sulphur Crested Cockatoos, kookaburras, various finches, Blue Wrens, Willy Wagtails, Magpie Larks (Peewees), Magpies, Wattle Birds, and hawkes - to name a few of the birds. We also get occasional roos, wallabies, hares, foxes and brown snakes.
I'm an Aussie and I STILL get excited when I see a kangaroo in the wild, and I love all our amazing birds too. It's such a thrill when you see one of the less common ones like a Crimson Rosella or Eastern Rosella or King Parrot.
When it comes to the King Parrot, try holding some sunflower seeds or bread in your hand - you'll find yourself covered in them. My wife and I own a cabin in the Victorian high country and we're hand feeding them all the time.
OH how I wish! I'm here in suburban Sydney, blessed to live overlooking a golf course which is connected to a reserve and the King Parrots are a fairly rare sight. We've been here 23 years so I'm so happy that they are still around, along with the occasional Crimson Rosellas and Eastern Rosellas. We've got a birdbath, so I might try putting seeds there, so thanks for the input! @@bradwilliams1691
We’ve been getting heaps of King Parrots, Crimson Rosellas and Rainbow Lorikeets. We even have a mating pair of Bower Birds. But I’m still holding out for the local Kookaburra to grace us with his presence.
The great thing about having a GP, is that it’s one doctor who keeps track of all your different ailments and treatments from specialists and can spot links between them and find a common cause. Often finding the source of the many seemingly separate ailments and treating that instead of multiple symptoms. It’s also helpful seeing one person who you’ve met in person multiple times who knows your health history. It makes it easier to open up about more sensitive subjects and often times results in them asking different and better questions they might not have if they didn’t have a personal rapport with the patient.
Oh how I wish that were true. I've been with the one doctor for 24 years and now when I mention a new symptom he simply says 'Don't worry about it.' He really closed most of his business down after covid and just doesn't have time to see people properly anymore. I can't seem to find another doctor in my area that I'm confident in, especially now that I'm unable to drive, very wobbly on my feet and need a walking frame to get around. But the idea of one GP over a long period of time who coordinates all your supports is still a good one.
That is NO longer true as patients records are on a Government database and can be accessed by any medical practitioner and Hospital in the Country. Brazil had that System decades before AUSTRALIA adopted such a system Brazil also had a National Health Care Card long before AUSTRALIA introduced the MEDICARE Card
also a nice little earner for the GP's considering you need a new referral for the specialist you are already seeing every 12 months from your GP...Hmmm...why ?
I'm an Aussie and I just want to say this is the best weird things about Australia video I have seen. It was educational, informative and enjoyable. Thank you!!
The positivity was a breath of fresh air as well 🥰. So many videos like this can come across with a bit of a negative light so I really appreciated that 🙌👏!
I believe there was another unique aspect to the Australian way that was shown in this video but not commented on. At many AFL stadiums after the game is over you can take your footy onto the ground with your family and friends and have a kick of your footy for about 30 minutes. You can see scenes of this in the video.
There is just so much "US vs UK" content these days, and I was wondering "Does anyone compare other countries than those two?" Delighted to see this quite at random.
Australians don't just put their hard rubbish on the side of the road like she has said. Once every year as a general rule the local councils have a rubbish collection for large items. Residents place their rubbish outside by the side of the road for the council to collect. This is often large items that cannot be put in the weekly bin collection. People often throw out, chairs, lounge suites and tables, fridges and other large items. They are placed outside a few days before the council is due to collect them. Often some people will drive around and take good things before the council arrives. They will fix these good things and sell them. Basically, Australians don't just throw things on the sides of the road. These are arranged yearly council rubbish collections.
Once a year is not a 'general rule'. Where do you live? In WA it's 4 times a year but many council have 'verge valet' where you ring them up and get them to come and pick your stuff up (at anytime.. just book it and doable online as well).
@@smackhead You are probably correct. However that is not really the point. The point I am making is that Australians do not just dump rubbish out on the road for no reason. They put it there for councils to collect it during organised rubbish collections periods, which like you have said may be yearly or 2, 3 or even 4 times a year. They are council organised so they will vary all across Australia depending on which of the few hundred or thousand council areas a person lives in. In my area on the east coast it is just once a year.
@@bpw8139 you and @smackhead are both correct , some council have predetermined dates for collection per year , others you can book at any time. My council here in NSW allows us 6 bookings a year and if we book on Sunday they pick up Tuesday
I once put an old fridge out for hard rubbish, and by law, we have to remove the door first (for kids' safety - they get in and can't get out, and suffocate). Went back in to get the door and by the time that hit the nature strip (grass verge), the main fridge had already gone. Also put out an old TV, and on the next trip out, an old guy was asking if I had the remote for the TV. I live in provincial Victoria, and we don't have a periodic hard rubbish collection - we have to go to a Transfer Station (landfill, tip) and pay to dump stuff.
There is a council in the Sydney area where it’s residents can have 12 council cleanups a year. This reduces illegal dumping of hard rubbish which costs councils a lot more to collect and remove.
In Australia a grocery store needs to have a licence to sell alcohol, this also means they have to hire only workers who are 18 years or over. To compensate for this, most grocery stores separate their liquor into a separate store to one side, this store often has a separate name too, but is owned by the grocery store
It does vary a bit state by state in Australia. As you say, very often the bottle shop is adjacent to the supermarket but I think I've seen film of supermarkets in Victoria with alcohol sections. Now I'm beginning to doubt myself and I'm wondering if I'm thinking about something I've seen overseas... And if they're worried about the age of the sales assistants, at least in Australia that's a bit inconsistent. You are only allowed to smoke tobacco (which is sold in supermarkets, albeit in a hidden-away fashion) if you are over 18, so there's one product that is age restricted being sold in a regular supermarket, whereas another product is not.
I wish wheelie bags were around back when I was in high school, the books were a killer. I think we only had the old style school bags with one strap, no backpacks.
A small correction- GPs are specialists in general practice. They have the post nominal of FRACGP. Some GPs are specialist trainees similar to other specialist trainees.
Rubbish. GP's are just that - GP's, there is no such thing as "specialist in General Practice" - you're literally making things up. Very few, if any are specialists. A specialist earns a heap more than a GP and thus wouldn't waste their time working as a GP for less money. All specialists are qualified as GP's as that's how they start before specialising.
@@matthewnirenberg: My GP 😊is a specialist in skin disease, geriatrics and something else I can't 😢remember. Most of the other docs in the practice have some form of extra training. He also does minor surgeries in the surgery Really convenient.
My SIL was a cardiologist in europe. When she moved here she had to study again for her medical degree to become a GP. In Australia to become a cardiologist, you must first become a qualified medical practitioner and then specialise in cardiology.
@@juliewoodman2439 LOL, more like a "diploma" in dermatology and geriatrics. Geriatric is a sub-specialty of the physician training. It's akin to Physician Assistant vs. Doctor
@@matthewnirenberg As a Doctor I can tell you that you don't know what youre talking about when you say "All specialists are qualified as GP's as that's how they start before specialising." Nope, completely and underly wrong. To become a GP specialist you need to do an additional 3 years of training to earn fellowship with the college of GPs. To become any other specialist you need to do fellowship training with a different college to obtain fellowship with that specialist college.
Your comment regarding how safe it is to go see an Aussie Rukes match, compared to going to see a soccer match, made me proud to be an Aussie. Thank you for pointing that out 🙂
We also have compulsory swimming lessons in most schools & if we have a home pool it must be fully fenced. These measures have saved thousands of lives, mostly children, since being introduced, in the 1970s ☺️ when I see home pools overseas I never see a fence 😓
In the US, at least California and Massachusetts require fences around swimming pools, with locking gates. (This kind of law is probably at the state level)
Geez the ‘shut the gate, teach your kids to swim it’s great and learn how to resuscitate’ ‘kids alive do the five’ is something else ingrained in my brain.
@mbuhtz I believe the fence law only requires there is a fence to prevent other properties from accessing the pool. Which means people fence the entire yard, not just the pool. Small children living in those homes can easily walk up to and into the pool without any barrier, because the fenced area is the entire property.
@@SJ-ty5vxnot quite. We had the yard fenced off but we also had to have self closing security screen sliding doors with the latch at roughly adult head height and we weren't allowed to have a doggie door. So we still had to prevent outside access for children. The idea being that if a child was going outside they can't get out themselves and an adult would have to go with them or at least be aware that they are out there.the self closing sliding doors had a fair bit of resistance on them as well, so a child would struggle to push them open, not to mention the noise it makes as it opens (intentional in the design so you can hear when it being opened)
I think a house warming party is a throwback, to a time when your friends and neighbours had physically helped you build your home. When on completion you gave a party to feed them, say thank you and lit the fire for the first time. You also offered your help and future labour, for when they would build their next house.
Can we all just get over the whole Vegemite thing? It’s generally an acquired taste. We’ve all seen non Aussies making faces when they try it for the first time😂
They never cease to piss me off. Especially magpies. Dont know why they’re a protected species, they seem to protect themselves just fine and then some. I should be the one protected from them!
Interesting fact, Vegemite was invented by I think, an Australian chemist, as a vitamin b12 supplement especially for children growing up to counteract deficiency and related diseases that were evident in the 1920s. Widespread Vitamin supplements, in the form of tablets, only became common in the latter part of the 20th century .
I think the fact that it has B vitamins was just a lucky coincidence. During WW1, food (and everything else) was rationed and then after the war, the world suffered the great depression. The brewer's yeast was a waste product from the manufacture of beer, so Vegemite was made to eliminate the waste. "Waste not, want not"
Brewers yeast was considered a good source of vitamin B12 for vegetarians but fresh brewers yeast contains no B12. B12 only comes from the bacteria that infects the brewers yeast.
I really enjoyed your video. I've seen other content creators (one in particular that I'm thinking of) that spend the entire time whinging about the differences, whereas you were pointing out in a respectful way how you find some things strange and unusual as a newcomer to our country. Thank you so much. In Australia we have a term (less used now) about the "whinging Pom". That being a person from England in particular, but probably anyone from the UK, who complains about all things Aussie. This other content creator happens to be English by birth, so it's probably testament to your Argentinian upbringing that you have a more global outlook and I really appreciate that. Small interesting fact that you didn't raise in your video, that a lot of Aussies don't know, is that Aussie Rules was first created to keep cricket players fit in the off season. This is why it's played on an oval field. Anyway, great video, again, I can't think you enough for the respectful tone.
So good to found such a refreshing video about Australia. No negative observations, no politics, no racism, no gender violence, no trashing of men, no put-downs about our culture. Thank you! I really enjoyed hearing about your experiences.
One of the biggest changes I have seen in my life (I am 38, and grew up in Australia) is the decline in our drinking culture. Twenty years ago, young people went out and got so drunk. Really, really drunk. Very similar to the UK. However, it has changed a lot now. Of course a lot of people still go out, but it is nothing like it was. Young people are quite sensible now. Something that might interest you, I have been learning Russian for about a decade now, and one of the most popular channels on Russian-language TH-cam is a Russian woman who lives in Sydney and goes around collecting stuff from hard rubbish. She takes her camera and documents everything she finds. The Russians in the comments think we throw away stuff that is better than they can afford and really cannot believe it. She often finds really good stuff. When I was at university, I lived in a share-house and we got our couch from the side of the road :D
Often, the stuff is put out with the hope someone will take it and put it to good use - Instead of it going to the tip. If you get partnered up and have to combine houses, something has to give.
My son earned his first pocket money by collecting parts of computers, fixing them and selling working computers on online auctions. He was 12 when he started, 19 years later he still works in IT
The backpacks are especially designed to balance the weight and protect their spines, but a lot of kids don’t put them on and just lug them around by one strap! The younger kids often wear them properly because their parents put them on before they leave home.
@@BasilPunton Young kids don’t need to carry much so they’re not the issue. When I was in school, we had Globite school cases that were solid and of suitable size.
@@BasilPunton As A South African we also use Backpacks but they only tend to become big and heavy in High School though, not all schools have lockers and those that do have lockers the kids have to rent them from the schools. It just took a bit of proper planning on what subjects to pack for for that particular day. I always chose backpacks that had multiple dividers inside not like the backpacks that looks like a laptop backpack. The dividers allowed me to arrange my books as per the day schedule so I never really had to consult my daily time tab le to see what classes I had for the day. The only Subject that had multiple big files was the days when I had Art History as that was 3 file binders full of paperwork, the other two subjects with big files were History and Biblical Study History(I was a bit of a history nerd when was younger so all my studies had to do with history) Yet today I work in retail do some 3D modeling and lifelong PC GAMER. But yeah as a young child a big backpack was least of my worries up untill high school
Great video, but as an Aussie school teacher I can tell you that those big pack packs kids wear to school usually only have a lunchbox, drink bottle and maybe 1 book inside. Usually very light. Especially for the little kids 😃
my guess is it's more like: lunchbox, water, one book, two or three exercise books, spare clothes (hat, jumper etc) and either a laptop/tablet or at least one textbook, depending on what kind of school it is. in the early 2010s when I was in high school, my bag weighed 15-20kg every day, and even once we got laptops and most of our textbooks were digital, the laptop and charger weighed as much as a textbook so it didn't bring the weight down that much!
@@stephanieyee9784 they're not empty, a modern lunchbox takes up a surprising amount of space. it's also supposed to save the parents money, to only have to buy one backpack for the whole 7 years of primary school, instead of a small one for the first 3 years and a big one for the last 4 years.
Many years ago, a friend of mine built my first 3 computers from parts from other computers from the hard rubbish collections 🙂 He also helped out other friends with fixing up appliances (fridges, washing machines, dryers)
What an interesting perspective. As an Aussie who’s lived elsewhere for 15 years it’s endlessly yfascinating to hear others experiences of being an immigrant. Thankyou and bless.
Well if people slather it on like peanut butter as shown in the video they deserve everything they get if they put all of that in their mouth. That would be like pouring a glass of soy sauce and drinking it. Soy sauce is good, when used properly and so is Vegemite.
Love it on thick, within reason, slightly less than in the video. In saying that, I also will 'eat' it with a spoon, but it's more like letting it dissolve, happens rather quickly. I cook a lot of Asian meals, Soy Sauce is kindle of a staple for me (funnily, vegemite is a good substitute if disaster strikes), the saltiness doesn't really get to me.
I started liking vegemite late. Used just a thin spread, then needed more, and more, and more. Now I can lay it on like nutella and think it is great. Also have to tell you about my youngest son. When he was about 18 months old he liked vegemite so much that a 1 kg jar would only last a month, and sometimes we would catch him walking around with the open jar under one arm (18 months old remember) and a teaspoon in the other eating it straight. Sent shivers down my spine, but he *never* got sick.
This was interesting because I learned about Australia and Argentina. GPs, separate toilets and alcohol sold in separate shops are all common here in South Africa too. I've never seen a child with a wheel-bag, but it makes so much sense.
the bag is not quite correct - they are for high school / teenagers. Primary school kids bags are very light weight and usually only contain a lunchbox, drink bottle, a hat and maybe a book that they are practising to read at home
@@vanessagoddess1 That's what I remember from when I was little. I live across the road from a primary school in Cape Town. I don't usually pay attention to the children (apart from driving safely!) but I'll have a look at whether they all have the same kinds of bags and what they are. I assume with wealthier schools becoming more digital, there should be less to carry around in general. The worst was at uni having to carry textbooks that shouldn't be legal to have to pick up, nevermind lug between classes!
Loved this video! It’s always fun to learn about the unexpected things that make life in a different country so interesting. Australia seems to have its own unique charm, and your video captures it perfectly. Looking forward to more of your discoveries.
I'm from Melbourne, I have always thought definitely that backpacks of that size must impede spinal development and they have been known to cause teenagers back issues! The wheely bags are far superior
Did you know it’s very expensive to migrate here. I knew a British couple it cost them thousands and thousands plus they had to have a sponsor put up five grand at the time. And also have their own pension money. I guess it’s different if your seeking asylum.
@@splashpit I see what you did there🙂 As an emergency service volunteer myself, I often encounter new Australians and visitors who are astounded by how much we rely on volunteers.
@@michellemicallef3250 Well my Vegemite label says “Store in a cool dry place.” Here’s a quote from the Vegemite website FAQ: How do I store VEGEMITE? VEGEMITE is a shelf stable product and once opened can be stored in the cupboard or pantry right up until the best before date.
Never used the fridge for it. Similarly tomato / BBQ sauce. Just in the pantry out of the heat. Same with eggs cos, unlike the US, we don't wash them so their natural shell and membrane does the job. On the rare occasions I buy eggs from Woolies/Coles (and not Aldi) I do use the fridge cos they have and I don't want the condensation weakening the membrane.
At schools, us Australians can't use wheelie bags as there are many places that aren't very accessible for that, and often, the bags aren't actually that full, they're just somewhat big, plus they're generally cheaper and more accessible than wheelie bags. Hope that helps! -Also too bad I have scoliosis from wearing a bag wrong when I was older, but it's easier than carrying a bunch of books in my arms- XD
We are an island (albeit a Big one, as well as being a Small Continent) everyone swims, swim between the flags is rule 1. That foreigners seem to fail, and a lot of places have a sea pool, it fills at high tide with fresh seawater and is a safe swim for little kids. Our beaches are soft sand (hot on a sunny day) and you can take your towel or chair to sit, swim, have a family picnic...
Yes, Vegemite has always been a light spread across the toast, The heavy spread is often used as a practical joke for people that have never tried it. I was born and still live in Australia and I still love seeing our wild life. Once when I was out gold detecting, paying attention only to the ground in front of me, When a large rock that i was standing next to, got up and hopped away. Scared the daylights out of me, id come across a snoozing Roo and disturbed its slumber. I hope you enjoy your time here, Cheers!
A fair few people I know prefer a heavy spread or - god forbid - mixing it with other spreads. My mum's ex (ex for other reasons, not this, though I wouldn't blame her for breaking up with him over this travesty, tbh) liked it with tomato sauce, peanut butter and ... sardines. Yeahhhh. No thanks. In comparison, my brother's enjoyment of it slathered on is pretty tame and normal. XD
I recently visited my daughter and her family in the suburbs of Newcastle. I like the separate toilet but wish they also had a small sink in that room too. I love the outdoorsy culture. I brought home some Vegemite and am trying to like it lol. The beaches are amazing and I admire the family values. I think it's great that my three Aussie grandkids have to wear sunhats. I left a piece of my heart there in Australia.♥
You cracked me up with the "Lemon Face" comment on Vegemite. FYI you can buy alcohol in supermarkets in Canberra where I live. The separate bottle shops is not to limit consumption but it can't be sold by minors under 18 so cannot be taken through the checkout where Woolies and Coles employ juniors.
the school bags may be large but they're often not heavy. It's mostly a lunch box and a thermos. Because we mostly don't have a "school lunch" so much, there's often a canteen you can buy something from, but mostly for kids it's a packed lunch.
Alcohol selling is licensed and regulated very seriously indeed . For example you can only find so many "bottle shops" as we often call them, within a specific radius. Other reasons looked at before you can obtain a licence is the exact location like are they next to a school, kindergarten or church? And YES, the locals can fight against you obtaining a licensed premises. I live near a suburb called Greenvale in Melbourne Vic where any kind of alcohol is banned. Yes it's weird, I know but that's us . Like us or leave us
We had lockers in high school and they were free. Back in those days we carried "ports" or briefcases to school as backpacks were only for the hikers and the Armed Forces. No small child should have to lug those heavy backpacks around. Especially Primary and Infants school kids. They don't have a lot of big school tomes just their exercise books, pencil cases, rulers and lunch boxes. Oh sorry, and their laptops or whatever.
When I was in Prep school we had “No hat no play.” In Secondary School we each had a locker. The books you weren’t using would go in the locker and you could swap your books around during the school day depending on what subjects you had.
My school still hadn't let go of the belief that Left Handed children, were to be made unable to use their Left Hands. We were made to sit in the Sun for any reason. Definitely no hats🤗😁
@@mikehall3074 One of my mother’s cousins was born left handed. When at school they would tie his left hand to the back of the chair so he had to write right handed. In the end he could write both right and left. When he played cricket he would bowl right handed but batted left handed and when he played golf he played left handed.
Sorry to say, most schools do not have lockers - well not the public ones when I went to school. I'm almost 37 now. Unless its changed, its always been bags..
Liquor laws are not federally controlled, they vary from state to state. For instance in NSW, Costco sell liquor in a separate section of the store, but in ACT the alcohol is inside the grocery section. Some states in the US have similar laws.
COSTCO not Costco Learn to pay attention to detail Make sure the brain sees exactly what the eyes are looking at. and learn that all CORPORATE Legal names are always written in the ALL CAPS iteration Only a living soul has the name in Mixed Case Letters. That being ' The given name ' - Given by the parents -- and a Family Name that associates one with the particular family. The Given Name and Family Name is NOT the same as the FIRST NAME LAST NAME/SURNAME [ They sound the same but are NOT Legally the same ] Now for your homework write an essay explaining the difference - and the Legal reasoning behind it. The Laws date back to the year 1302 - and were codified into WESTMINSTER Law in 1666 - during the False Flag Attack that was the Great Fire of London. Note that all the Laws were written in French and pure Latin.
In the ACT, all Coles and Woolies have stopped selling grog in the main section. Aldi, Supabarn and small, suburban supermarkets like IGA still do it, but the 2 main grocery chains have their separate Liquorland and BWS chains for every shop. They all stopped doing this about five years ago. Maybe they were losing too much stock via theft, or it looked a bit cheap selling nice wine on a big supermarket shelf? I don't know, I'm making guesses, probably wrong ones.
General Practice is a speciality on its own. Registrars must complete a structured course and pass exams to become a GP. You don't graduate from medical school as a GP. AFL is based on Gaelic football.
I'm an australian - born and raised here. I still get excited any time I see a Kangaroo, a Koala, a Kookaburra, Echidna, etc. I don't know what it is, but it gets me all warm and fuzzy every time haha
My son lived in a share house (Brisbane) with a German. Their refrigerator broke down and the German student looked up the Council website to see where the next hard rubbish collection was. They went to the suburb and scored 2 small refrigerators that worked.
About the backpacks, from what I've seen, they're designed big so kids can grow into them and still use them in older year levels. Parents dont want to keep buying schoolbags and I used the same one nearly all of Primary school and even into the start of Secondary. I remember when there was a real focus on school students and backpack issues. Schools, media and everything went all into showing how the design of the backpacks are made to protect students spines by balancing the weight, but the main issue was how they were worn. (I remember so many skits about it) School and my parents drilled into me ✨the✨ways✨of✨wearing✨the✨schoolbag✨ To wear both straps on my shoulders; that the straps shouldn't be long enough so that the bag sags; that I should lean at a 45-degree angle when standing; and my bag should be not more than 10% of my body weight... that last part I didn't stick to as I went further into highschool. Also little kids carry literally nothing in there. My kid brother has his lunchbox, bottle, hat, pieces of lunchtime tanbark currency and a couple paper crafts he did during the day. When I was in my final year of school he would pick my bag up and say I'm carrying bricks. Then he would put his bag on his back and joke that his bag wasn't there and didn't exist at all. He was in Year 5 at the time. Now I'm in uni where I believe my computer bag will give me back problems and I miss the functionality of schoolbags :( 😿
My boys from about grades 3 - 6 have had extremely heavy bags. In fact, they can't fit everything into their (uniform) backpacks, so they carry another bag of items. Is this the norm? Probably not. They just HAVE to carry drawing stuff & other bits & pieces with them just in case they get bored! 🤦♀️
@@AussieWinter I don't know about other schools, but at my kids primary school all they had in their bags for 3 - 6 was ipad, lunch box, drink bottle, hat, reader bag & I put sun screen in as well. Everything else was left at school in their lockers. Only time they carried another bag was for swimming and sometimes their library bag if they borrowed a big book lol.
@drakkondarkblood6638 -so lucky to have lockers in primary school, I've never heard of any schools doing that. It would be a messy nightmare with my kids, though.
@@AussieWinterheheh yeah it's really good, they're not lockers like you have in secondary school, it's more shelving, the shelving that have individual squares with a tub in each square for a kid, but works great.
As an Australian born and raised, I must admit I was expecting a video that was click bait and being negative. But I'll be the first to admit I was 100% wrong and your video was very accurate and fair, so thank you! I hope you continue to enjoy your stay in Australia with your partner!
Vegemite was re-named, for a short length of time, to “Parwill”. “If Ma might (Marmite)…then Pa will (Parwill)!” Yep. After slathering it on, lick the knife! Yum-eeee! 😋
I’m Australian and have been traveling Europe for 8 months. I quite enjoy being able to get some alcohol from supermarkets and not having to go to the bottle shop
The big grocery chains own alcohol chains and put bottle shops right next to the supermarket, even with doors directly from the checkout area into the side of bottle shop, with the bottle-o checkout at the front of their store. Personally, i like it that kids don't get to see adults buying alcohol, as we have enough of a problem-drinking culture here already. I don't know if kids even with parents are allowed to enter bottle shops, I can't recall ever seeing a kid in one.
@@sandramae987 yeah true, but they are still separate shops, You still have to go to the checkout twice. It just doesn’t have the same feel as Europe supermarkets.
here in canada the booze is starting to get more relaxed. when hard drugs are legalized, drinking is the least of our problems. greetings from vancouver bc.. \ i usually have a beer walking my husky
I'm Australian & on our many trips to Europe I must say I love having a beer while watching the misses wash herself with the bidet after a day out at the beach 😂😂😂
"Hard rubbish" is only when you've arranged with the local council to come and collect it. It's usually junk/rubbish that won't fit into the wheelie bin. If a piece of furniture etc is on the side of the road, it's there for people to take, not the council!
@LawrenceAkers in my council area we get 6 kerbside pick ups per year, and yes, the residents are supposed to ring the and book the pick up, a lot of people don't but the stuff still gets cleared up either by the council or by pile pickers... one of the local streets has 4 multi dwelling townhouse complexes so there is always stuff out the front of at least one or two of them...😏 🙃🐨🇦🇺
@@grandy2875 6!! That's really generous of your local council. I'm inner-city Melbourne and we get one around April and one in September, otherwise you need to organise for your hard waste to go to the tip yourself.
@@LawrenceAkersI'm on the NSW Central Coast, this has been a thing for at least 25 years up here, not exactly sure about other parts of the state, but I think they do similar...😊 We used to have to take bulk waste to the tip, but the fees got stupid exy, but some people don't have vehicles, or are elderly, plus people were dumping rubbish anywhere and everywhere. It works well, for the most part, but you still get those that just put their crap out and hope for the best. The Pile Pickers do a roaring trade though...😏
Australian homes often have a separate toilet from the rest of the bathroom for practical and functional reasons. This design allows for more efficient use of the bathroom, as one person can use the toilet while another uses the shower or sink.
I'm American and I used to have a bathroom like that the sinks were in one room and the toilet and shower were in the other and that kind of came in handy since they were in two separate rooms the mirror doesn't get fogged up after you shower
@@tomm7868 the sink or bathroom basin as we call them in australia shares with the bathroom some modern houses in australia have the toilet shared with the bathroom but some have the toilet on its own
I came to this country 60 years ago and I have never eaten vegemite. When my Australian wife gave vegemite to our children I told her that this was child abuse. After that she tried to avoid serving vegemite to the kids when I am around. Seeing a specialist cost at least 5 times as much as a GP. My GP bulk bills . The Medicare refund for a specialist fee is a percentage of what Medicare thinks the Specialist should charge. However no specialist just charges the Medicare fee but a lot more. Toilet? We have an ensuite for parents with basin , toilet and shower. The children use the bathroom which has a bathtub, shower, toilet und basin. Us adult can also use the bath tub when no one is in the bathroom. As for the bidet, in Australia most people have one or two showers per day. Bidet are used in countries where people do not shower everyday. For example in countries with colder climates. Bottle shops are essentially a way to prevent children seeing alcoholic drinks > Most bottle shop provide a bag to put single bottles in essentially so one can't see what is in the bag. I come from a country where there are no bottle shops and alcoholics drinks can be bought anywhere. A kid can go in a shop and pick up a bottle of alcoholic drink and say to the cashier mum or dad asked me to buy them a bottle of so and so. The cashier isn't going to query that. There is nothing to stop the kid going round the corner and having a swig or more from that bottle. I certainly drank some beer before reaching the legal age of adulthood. Any way It would be pretty boring if everything would be the same in every country. My approach a an immigrant was I adopt all the positives in the new country and try to avoid what I consider the negatives. in AUS I have never used a poker machine and I never read a Murdoch paper.
It should be noted that hard rubbish only happens once or twice a year designated dates. But it differs from suburb to suburb. You can't just dump your hard rubbish on the sidewalk at any time of the year or you can get fined. It's a wonderful thing though. A great form of recycling in a sense as well
You're right about the heavy schoolbags. I walked 30 min to and from high school for 5 years (back when high school in Qld started in Year 8). I already had back problems brewing due to a structural problem in my spine, and all that time lugging around a heavy bag didn't help!
I hear you! I too am from QLD. At 14yo because of the heaviness of my bag with all the textbooks i had and plus being 6'4, I was diagnosed with Kyphosis (the opposite curvature of scoliosis basically) and its gotten worse over the years. The diagnosing chiropractic dr said it was a direct result of simply carrying extremely heavy bags on my back 😮
I’m Australian and I agree with you about the school bags. To be honest, I think for the little ones, it’s mainly to fit in the monster lunchboxes they have nowadays. A lot of them are in the form of a cooler bag and they take up a lot of space. They certainly don’t get enough homework to warrant it. As for the toilets, that applies to older buildings. Buildings built from the 1980’s onward are likely to have a toilet like you described but also another one in the bathroom.
I think it’s weird houses in other countries have the toilet and bathroom together. Imagine someone deciding they wanna drop their kids off at the pool before you go to have a shower. I can see myself getting very fired up about that. Sculptures by the curb is a great Aussie pastime. You put the really good stuff at the bottom as the base of your sculpture, so if anyone wants it, they have to (as quietly as possible) remove the stacked items neatly, or run the risk of starting an argument with the artist.
But lots of houses in Australia have the toilet inside the bathroom - at least there are lots in Sydney. Ours did but we had 2 bathrooms (one had a shower cubicle, the other a bathtub)
@livingsimplyaustralia, just an interesting tidbit, if you did not know it: picking up other people's hard waste items from the kerb is considered an offence (at least in Victoria) and is considered theft. Still, people are collecting items in good condition and I don;t know anyone who was actually fined for that.
You're right about the bags. They are HEAVY. But those wheelie bags wouldnt work here either. Stairs and rough terrain, sometimes you have to go across a big field or up on a bus or.
No, you cannot go directly to a specialist. The first question you will be asked if you ring a specialist to make an appointment will be to ensure that you have a referral and to remind you that you must bring it with you when you arrive for your appointment. You will also be asked to arrive about 15 mins early for your first visit to fill out a few pages of information about your current medication, medical history etc.
Bidets are actually becoming quite popular in Australia now. I've had one for a few years now and it's great. They still are not common but more and more people are getting them installed.
well, we found the typical privileged elite who thinks theyre an average aussie. probably also on 180K and thinks they have an average income #ComeBackDownToEarthYuppie you know i'm right, cos the other comment is from a gold-digger
The amount of people only using paper is pretty gross to think about... But the bidet would be more popular if it couldn't be replaced by a $2 squirt bottle from Coles..... :)
I can explain the school bags! The idea is that you get one and it lasts you for most/half of your school life. They don’t tend to be heavy, just big. And they are pretty ergonomic with thick straps and spread the weight evenly.
As a born and raised Australian only highschool grade or higher is supposed to carry bags with all their books for the day in them with any exams or essays but in primary school they only take their books etc to school for the first day and they then fill their school desk tray and it stays there until the end of the year the only things they should be carrying is their lunch box and possibly sports gear
A few things are typical in Europe or some European countries as well. Fot instance, in the Netherlands a GP is also the first contact, he decides if a indication to see a specialist is necessary, but once you have that indication you can always return directly to the specialist for that particular indication. Also we have separate toilets, but often there is a toilet in the bathroom as well, so the average house has 2 toilets, but usually no bidets in a Dutch home. Another thing that is similar in the Netherlands is that most children learn to swim, once it was compulsory and organised by the schools but now you have to arrange swimming lessons for your children yourself, and most people do this because we have so many rivers, canals, lakes and let not forget the sea.
Many modern family homes have a toilet in the ensuite bathroom as well as another separate toilet, and another main bathroom without a toilet. So what she is describing is probably the norm only for older houses or apartments.
Huh? You've just described exactly what she described. A bathroom with no toilet, and a separate toilet. Simply with the addition of a second toilet in an ensuite.
Nippers, are juniors in a surf lifesaving club. ie junior surf life savers. When you see them, they are training to compete and to eventually become a surf lifesaver.
Thanks for the video. I’m Australian and have lived in beautiful Hawaii for a long time, but all the things you mentioned made me nostalgic and a bit homesick . As for Vegimite, yep, an Aussie has to have it. I buy it on Amazon at a super inflated price, but a piece of toast doesn’t taste right without it!😂 You are a lovely young woman, I hope you are enjoying Australia 😊
That wasn’t a monster it was just somebody whom had had Vegemite every day of their life. I would not recommend that amount be applied to a neophytes toast, however as someone who has consumed it everyday of my life since just after birth I thought the amount demonstrated in the video was quite reasonable. Lovely video explaining some of our many Ozzy foibles!
Specialists have waiting lists of months and months. There aren't enough specialists in the country to meet the demand now, but if we all started trying to make an appointment without being vetted first, there'd by 5 year waits.
Good video 👍 Australia is an amazingly diverse place of multiculturalism, we are blessed to live here and have people like yourself join us and make this an even better place. And yes I agree, Aussie rules is more loved in Victoria than other places such as NSW, in my opinion. The cricket is very popular across the country. In the 1980’s I felt like unofficially the Australian Cricket captain was the second most important person in the country after the PM. 😂
You put it so eloquently. Oz is a great place to live, and it is weird in some respects. Glad you landed here and have adjusted to life in Melbourne but there again, it is the best place in all of Oz for many reasons other than the weather. LOL.
@@666Buzzsaw Please list all the best cities that beat Melbourne ' by a long, long way ' and explain why for each one. You must have been in them for a decent amount of time to give validity to your argument. Otherwise I think you are talking horse-sh!t. !!!
An interesting take I'm glad you mostly just highlighted your observations without moral judgement or negative criticism unlike so many American bloggers who can't accept that things outside the US might be different All the Argentinians I have met have enjoyed their time here. Have to agree with comments here re too much vegemite.....just a smear only. Also, don't think that Melbourne = Australia. It doesn't. Frankly I would prefer almost anywhere else in Australia.
Just a note for non-Aussies - Vegemite is very, very strong....just a very thin scraping is enough on toast... then it tastes great! It should not be stored in the fridge...it needs to be at room temperature. Also, in winter, I sometimes make a hot drink from it. A heaped teaspoon in a mug with boiling water, well stirred....lovely!
With the alcohol, it all depends on which state in Australia. Aldi in Victoria sell alcohol in store. Visiting Queensland, we couldn’t understand why we couldn’t find alcohol in an Aldi store there. But, different states, different laws
It must be amazing to be able to see a specialist directly! I have a chronic illness and even though it isn't going away, I have to keep going back to my doctor and paying for new referrals to the same specialist I've seen for years and will need to keep seeing. It's so expensive and annoying! Great vid x
THat does not compute. Once you have been referred to a specialist, you then become their patient and SHOULD be able to see that specialist whenever you need to. You only need a new referral if you are either changing specialists or getting a referral for a different illness/concern that requires a different specialist.
@@francescathomas3502 It seems to be different for some fields than others. I have seen a dermatologist for ten years, but have to get a new referral every year. Other specialists I don't.
@@matthewnirenbergThat one disappointing fact hardly means that the whole country is a joke. Think yourself lucky you don't have to negotiate the US health system.
About the alchohol aswell. We have to be over 18 to sell it, also to drink it. With that, we have very strict laws with alcohol and who sells it, also you have to do an online course to be qualified to sell alcohol( RSA). So all this, we have young teenagers in their 1st job at 14 or 15, which will be a supermarket or fast food shop, they cant sell nor handle alcohol or cigarettes( supervisor or older person on service desk to sell cigs). So it makes sense to have another store specifically for alcohol selling.
Aussie Rules was invented, to keep Cricket players fit, during the wintertime. It compliments ballet-lessons, for cricketers and of course, it’s a team sport, unlike ballet. “Up There Cazaly!”
Vegemite Common problem is like shown in the video Example. (He is using enough for like 10-12 slices of toast in 1 go you are meant to use about pea to bean size amount per slice of toast butter should be made brown not black, Imagine putting 4 tablespoons of salt with your meal, same kind of mistake it will taste horrible)
Sorry, not correct about 7 yr olds carrying very large backpacks for school. All their books are left at school and they basically carry their lunch and a reader or library book. Only high school kids, from 12/13 yr old carry their books to and from school. They do get a locker at school, though.
Australia has the biggest average size houses in the world. So Australian can afford to have rooms for everything in their houses. The modern ones do have bidet in at least one of the bathrooms. Usually in the one associated with the main bedroom. The bidet is a French invention, to save water. (Until recently they bathed only once a week) So instead of having a bath or a shower they just wash themselves the stinky bits. In Australia the norm is having at least a shower a day. Most Australian shower before having breakfast and also when they arrive back home from work or study. So the bidet is not really a necessity. In a hot country such as Australia a shower with a telephone shower extension is all that you really need. But as the population gets older the bidet is becoming a desirable item as it is convinient. Now there are devices that can be added to the standard toilet bowl which do the functions of the bidet. So you can make your deposit and wash your rear on the same spot. An also there are toilet bowls with the bidet functions incorporated. So any house without a bidet can install one using the toilet bowl.
This is normal once someone has lived in another country for a few years 😃 If you move countries as an adult your accent will never completely change but you will take on some elements of your new country's accent. I lived in the UK for only two years and while my British friends would have said I still had an Australian accent, when I came home some of my Australian friends said I had a British accent. In truth I still had an Australian accent but some of my vowel sounds (mostly the O sound, like in "hope") had changed to a British pronunciation.
I think the biggest misconception in Oz is that our native animals form part of our daily lives. Its amazing to see them in the wild, yet its few and far between sightings. For example, Kangaroos dont jump down our main street, lol. Koala's are hard to spot in the trees.. you're more likely to see this in the outback but never seen in the cities. I loved watching your video 😊
Historically a lot of houses used to have “out houses” or outside toilets. My grandmother’s house was built in the 1940s and the toilet was outside. I wonder if this contributed to the separate toilet thing. But truely it does make sense when you think about it. A lot of houses will have one bathroom and separate toilet and then a smaller ensuite bathroom and toilet combined.
Nice video. I'm always surprised by things I come across having lived in other countries. Some make sense, some don't. But regarding house warming parties. It's not just an excuse to have a party. It actually stems from a medieval practice. When you got a new home, people would bring you firewood - so you could literally heat your house. And by having a gathering with friends and family, you start your life in that house with good vibes. This was believed to ward off bad spirits. So the practice continues as an excuse to have a party but also to celebrate a milestone in someone's life and share that joy with them so that they can hopefully have a good life in that house ❤
Note: That piece of toast is my partner’s (born and bred 4th gen Australian). He has that amount of vegemite every single day. And yes, he licked the knife :P
🎬 MORE VIDEOS LIKE THIS
- 8 Reasons Why I Love Living in Australia - th-cam.com/video/hpkkIy27Lsk/w-d-xo.html
- STRANGE AUSTRALIAN LAWS! Surprising things that are forbidden in Australia - th-cam.com/video/Lxy77eMMkts/w-d-xo.html
- Testing an Aussie's Australian Slang - th-cam.com/video/HuXc0zm7kYU/w-d-xo.html
- 17 Things TOURISTS SHOULD KNOW BEFORE Visiting Australia - th-cam.com/video/lY08CI30qcU/w-d-xo.html
- Pros & Cons of Moving to Australia - th-cam.com/video/-MDcPI8R2SQ/w-d-xo.html&lc=UgzLwQy0w6TNO5Y-hlF4AaABAg
- Is Sydney Worth it? - th-cam.com/video/BcbKBaDE03M/w-d-xo.html
- Australian healthcare system - th-cam.com/video/LAx0YQkqyHw/w-d-xo.html
- 9 Must Watch Australian Films and TV Shows - th-cam.com/video/uB-3jFXbCYU/w-d-xo.html
- 10 Things to Know Before Moving to Australia - th-cam.com/video/3TxjAfT6DkY/w-d-xo.html
- Top 9 Most Amazing Places Around Melbourne - th-cam.com/video/Ag-msCmo80s/w-d-xo.html
- How to Buy a Car in Australia - th-cam.com/video/DEwtYYtsKhI/w-d-xo.html
- Is it really worth studying in Australia? - th-cam.com/video/57JcqDzZ0ME/w-d-xo.html
- 7 Tips for Getting a Job in Australia without experience - th-cam.com/video/1TB9xtk-D1c/w-d-xo.html
- Australian School System and Costs - th-cam.com/video/eqRrgImT1Os/w-d-xo.html
You can find alcohol in supermarkets if you shop at ALDI.
@johnstirling6597 not in Qld though.
That much Vegemite 😱
@@AussieWinterEverything is different in Queensland. 🤓🤓
@@johnstirling6597 True! 🤣 We like to be different.
When Vegemite first came out it was called parwill which helped with the advertising. Marmite but Parwill
The toilet thing originated because traditionally the toilet was an outhouse somewhere in the backyard. As it moved inside, they still preferred it to be separate from the main bathroom, likely for the reasons you described.
I’m probably not alone in saying I definitely prefer my toilet seperate to my bathroom.
I agree. I find it more hygienic to have the toilet separate to the rest of the bathroom.
Yes and it prevents splashback on your toothbrushes🤢😁
@@mikehall3074Closing the lid before flushing greatly reduces splash back.
My problem with a separate room is that there is often not a sink in it. That means I may have to touch door handles with dirty hands. I don't like it.
It is gross but I always feel yucked out cleaning my teeth anywhere near the toilet too.@@mikehall3074
@@jonesnori you use both hands 😳
You didn't mention that Australian schools also usually have swimming lessons which are often compulsory. Many drowning victims in Australia were born overseas or come from different cultures. Swimming is a huge part of Australian culture and it's really important to know how.
That's something that didn't necessarily catch my attention, because in my country many schools have this as well (we had a pool in my school and swimming lessons were compulsory throughout primary and part of secondary school). But it is true that perhaps not all countries have that, so good point, thanks!
It's very sad. Almost every month in the summer there's a drowning where immigrants or visitors from countries where beach swimming is not part of the culture get into difficulties and drown. We try to educate them with TV adverts and multi-lingual signs at beaches, but, somehow, the message doesn't get through. If you're visiting an ocean beach, only go into the water between the flags on a patrolled beach. Learn how to handle a rip and learn how to recognise a rip.
@@livingsimplyaustraliaAnother thing, my kids in Brisbane don’t take that heavy bags to school that you showed in the video. I always ask my kids that why there is nothing in your bags except 2-3 notebooks with lunchbag and water bottle.
Not in Queensland, not uncommon for teenagers to drown there. WA has a brilliant compulsory programme
It's compulsory here in the UK too
The bottle shops being separate from grocery stores is not to limit alcohol consumption. It’s because supermarkets employ minors, who are not legally allowed to sell alcohol. Also the customers in bottle shops are sometimes already drunk and we don’t want drunk people in grocery stores.
The RSA rules should prevent bottle shops selling booze to people who are obviously intoxicated.
That worng in my tjeloo and shower in dame room get your feats right
@leighreganarblaster9852 are you drunk?😂
In the late 70's Either NSW or ACT had alcohol outlet in some stores. We used to say, Just nipping down to Tarshay for some Bodashay. 😁
@leighreganarblaster9852
Have you just been to the offy/bottle shop??😆
I moved to OZ in my thirties (one of the best decisions of my life) and was surprised by many of these things as well. One I absolutely appreciate is the health system with the GP. Not only this doctor can refer you to the proper specialist, not the one you think you need, but they know your full medical history. Having a GP you trust is priceless.
Also, the price of a specialist doctor is typically around $300-$400 per visit. Compare that to a GP cost of $100.
GPs are often covered by public (payed for by government taxes) insurance, so they don't cost anything. Specialists are more often private if you want immediate visit, but you can wait for public access.
People will criticise our public health care, and I can understand the criticisms, but having the free option is life saving for most people.
I think there is a lot of confusion around our health care, especially from people in the USA, but what we call "private" health care is just what Americans have while our "public" system is the one our taxes pay for which isn't as good, but it has saved my life from collapsed lung, and my brothers from twisted bowel, my dads from bowel cancer, so I appreciate having the public option.
I have found they are also gatekeepers, dismissive stingy with their referrals and preventing you from seeing the specialist.
@trybunt GPs are only fully covered if you have a Health Care Card, which not everyone can access due to various bureaucratic hurdles. Many people fall through the cracks of the system because of this.
Those in rural areas often have to go through hospitals and public health triaging, leading to long waits and worsening health conditions before they get the necessary care.
It’s far from ideal for many Australians.
I reckon it was THE best decision of your life
I was born in Australia and live on a property and even though i have a resident mob of roos on my property i still get excited everytime I see them. I love how unique all our wildlife is
Me too! We have a large property of over 300 hectares.
The Roo's and about 40 wild ducks attend every day while about a hundred mixed wild birds attend for their twice-daily feed courteously provided by my brother.
It is quite expensive, but it is a daily delight to see them visit.
I was born in Australia and live in the ACT...I see Kangaroo's at the Skatepark. LOL
Yeah i still get excited when i see funnel webs backstroking in my pool
I don't know what monster was putting that much Vegemite on a piece of toast, but that was enough for a family.
It was a lot, but he did have the butter to vegemite ratio correct, so no worries.
The way he lifted the knife at the end makes me think he licked the knife too.
That's how much Vegemite I'd use in a year - and I have it nearly every day. Try it with the thinnest of thinnest coverings. The mistake most foreigners make is they think it's like Nutella. And once they tried it layer upon layer it put them off forever.
One needs to put a quater teaspoon of vegemite on a slice of toast. That's all and you are in heaven.
@@Underratedcuttlefish Yep! I thought the same thing.
Most Aussies don't store Vegemite in the fridge, all it does is make it difficult to spread
True. Vegemite lives in the cupboard.
Not sure this is as universal as you think. WTFAQ on abc did a segment on it that is pretty funny.
@stephanieyee9784 mine used to live in the cupboard, until my sister told me she got weevils in hers! 🤢
@@AussieWinterhow do you get weevils in a wet product? If you put all your dry pantry products in the freezer for a minimum 1day,when you bring it home - you'll never ever have weevils
@@AussieWinter I'm calling BS on that one. You could store that stuff in the cupboard for 100 years and it would be fine.
It is better to have the toilet separate. You should NEVER have the toothbrush in the same room as your toilet. Plus, if someone wants to take a long bubble bath… others can still go to the loo.
You know toilets have lids for a good reason... just saying 😁
@@kayew79 Yes, -I- know. But there are many people (especially males) don’t do it. Better to keep the storage of tooth brushes out of the same space as the toilet. Having a separate toilets from the bathroom is a good idea. For many reasons, toothbrushes being just one of them.
@kayew79 You still have all that turd air hovering around, gaseous poo particles are attaching themselves to every bristle of your brush while nature takes its course
But a hand-wash basin by the loo should be a MUST
You know, for hundreds of years toilets were in the same room as the sink and tub. I have never heard of massive death or sickness because toilets were in the same room. I too prefer that the toilet/bidet be in a water closet closed off area, but jeez, this is crazy paranoid.
I am born and raised Aussie who will always call Australia home. I love all things Aussie; our weather, things, especially our unique, colourful, loud and sometimes weird and often deadly wildlife.
We live in a NSW Central West country town, and have the pleasure of Crimson and Eastern Rosellas, King and Superb parrots, Galahs, Corellas, Sulphur Crested Cockatoos, kookaburras, various finches, Blue Wrens, Willy Wagtails, Magpie Larks (Peewees), Magpies, Wattle Birds, and hawkes - to name a few of the birds. We also get occasional roos, wallabies, hares, foxes and brown snakes.
Near Dubbo or Bathurst perhaps?
I'm an Aussie and I STILL get excited when I see a kangaroo in the wild, and I love all our amazing birds too. It's such a thrill when you see one of the less common ones like a Crimson Rosella or Eastern Rosella or King Parrot.
When it comes to the King Parrot, try holding some sunflower seeds or bread in your hand - you'll find yourself covered in them. My wife and I own a cabin in the Victorian high country and we're hand feeding them all the time.
OH how I wish! I'm here in suburban Sydney, blessed to live overlooking a golf course which is connected to a reserve and the King Parrots are a fairly rare sight. We've been here 23 years so I'm so happy that they are still around, along with the occasional Crimson Rosellas and Eastern Rosellas. We've got a birdbath, so I might try putting seeds there, so thanks for the input! @@bradwilliams1691
So do I, it’s the best feeling seeing the Roos in paddocks ALIVE instead of dead on the side of the road.
Ditto. I still get a smile on my dial when I see a kookaburra! Seeing a kangaroo is gold.
We’ve been getting heaps of King Parrots, Crimson Rosellas and Rainbow Lorikeets. We even have a mating pair of Bower Birds. But I’m still holding out for the local Kookaburra to grace us with his presence.
The great thing about having a GP, is that it’s one doctor who keeps track of all your different ailments and treatments from specialists and can spot links between them and find a common cause. Often finding the source of the many seemingly separate ailments and treating that instead of multiple symptoms. It’s also helpful seeing one person who you’ve met in person multiple times who knows your health history. It makes it easier to open up about more sensitive subjects and often times results in them asking different and better questions they might not have if they didn’t have a personal rapport with the patient.
Oh how I wish that were true. I've been with the one doctor for 24 years and now when I mention a new symptom he simply says 'Don't worry about it.' He really closed most of his business down after covid and just doesn't have time to see people properly anymore. I can't seem to find another doctor in my area that I'm confident in, especially now that I'm unable to drive, very wobbly on my feet and need a walking frame to get around. But the idea of one GP over a long period of time who coordinates all your supports is still a good one.
That is NO longer true as patients records are on a Government database
and can be accessed by any medical practitioner and Hospital in the Country.
Brazil had that System decades before AUSTRALIA adopted such a system
Brazil also had a National Health Care Card long before AUSTRALIA introduced
the MEDICARE Card
also a nice little earner for the GP's considering you need a new referral for the specialist you are already seeing every 12 months from your GP...Hmmm...why ?
@@andrew_koala2974 Why have you capitalized some words?
@@acitizen.5276 My GP bulk bills. Great guy.
I'm an Aussie and I just want to say this is the best weird things about Australia video I have seen. It was educational, informative and enjoyable. Thank you!!
I too want to complent this lovely young lady WELL DONE!!!😁😁😁😁😁😁
Amen to that, brother.
The positivity was a breath of fresh air as well 🥰. So many videos like this can come across with a bit of a negative light so I really appreciated that 🙌👏!
Yep, far better than that "they drive on the wrong side of the road" crap. 😀🇦🇺
I believe there was another unique aspect to the Australian way that was shown in this video but not commented on. At many AFL stadiums after the game is over you can take your footy onto the ground with your family and friends and have a kick of your footy for about 30 minutes. You can see scenes of this in the video.
There is just so much "US vs UK" content these days, and I was wondering "Does anyone compare other countries than those two?" Delighted to see this quite at random.
Australians don't just put their hard rubbish on the side of the road like she has said. Once every year as a general rule the local councils have a rubbish collection for large items. Residents place their rubbish outside by the side of the road for the council to collect. This is often large items that cannot be put in the weekly bin collection. People often throw out, chairs, lounge suites and tables, fridges and other large items. They are placed outside a few days before the council is due to collect them. Often some people will drive around and take good things before the council arrives. They will fix these good things and sell them. Basically, Australians don't just throw things on the sides of the road. These are arranged yearly council rubbish collections.
Once a year is not a 'general rule'. Where do you live? In WA it's 4 times a year but many council have 'verge valet' where you ring them up and get them to come and pick your stuff up (at anytime.. just book it and doable online as well).
@@smackhead You are probably correct. However that is not really the point. The point I am making is that Australians do not just dump rubbish out on the road for no reason. They put it there for councils to collect it during organised rubbish collections periods, which like you have said may be yearly or 2, 3 or even 4 times a year. They are council organised so they will vary all across Australia depending on which of the few hundred or thousand council areas a person lives in. In my area on the east coast it is just once a year.
@@bpw8139 you and @smackhead are both correct , some council have predetermined dates for collection per year , others you can book at any time. My council here in NSW allows us 6 bookings a year and if we book on Sunday they pick up Tuesday
I once put an old fridge out for hard rubbish, and by law, we have to remove the door first (for kids' safety - they get in and can't get out, and suffocate). Went back in to get the door and by the time that hit the nature strip (grass verge), the main fridge had already gone. Also put out an old TV, and on the next trip out, an old guy was asking if I had the remote for the TV. I live in provincial Victoria, and we don't have a periodic hard rubbish collection - we have to go to a Transfer Station (landfill, tip) and pay to dump stuff.
There is a council in the Sydney area where it’s residents can have 12 council cleanups a year. This reduces illegal dumping of hard rubbish which costs councils a lot more to collect and remove.
In Australia a grocery store needs to have a licence to sell alcohol, this also means they have to hire only workers who are 18 years or over. To compensate for this, most grocery stores separate their liquor into a separate store to one side, this store often has a separate name too, but is owned by the grocery store
Some locations in the U.S. get around this by having "no alcohol" checkout lanes, where junior cashiers are allowed to work. It depends on state law.
It does vary a bit state by state in Australia. As you say, very often the bottle shop is adjacent to the supermarket but I think I've seen film of supermarkets in Victoria with alcohol sections. Now I'm beginning to doubt myself and I'm wondering if I'm thinking about something I've seen overseas...
And if they're worried about the age of the sales assistants, at least in Australia that's a bit inconsistent. You are only allowed to smoke tobacco (which is sold in supermarkets, albeit in a hidden-away fashion) if you are over 18, so there's one product that is age restricted being sold in a regular supermarket, whereas another product is not.
Aldi sells alcohol in store
@@direwolf4849 yep, which is one of the reasons I shop at Aldi!
Do those under 18 really need to work? Why not give the job to someone that has to pay bills.
Having a wheelie bag for school seems so strange to me, but I agree it’s a good idea. Especially for school kids carrying around books etc.
my granddaughters school has both backpacks and wheelie bags available for students it depends on the childs preference
I made my daughter use one in high school. Carrying the heavy textbooks is so bad for the back! Mine did damage when I was in high school. 😢
I wish wheelie bags were around back when I was in high school, the books were a killer. I think we only had the old style school bags with one strap, no backpacks.
@@AussieWinterYou probably wouldn't last as a brickie
Shame I didn't have a wheelie bag when I was at school.
A small correction- GPs are specialists in general practice. They have the post nominal of FRACGP. Some GPs are specialist trainees similar to other specialist trainees.
Rubbish. GP's are just that - GP's, there is no such thing as "specialist in General Practice" - you're literally making things up. Very few, if any are specialists. A specialist earns a heap more than a GP and thus wouldn't waste their time working as a GP for less money. All specialists are qualified as GP's as that's how they start before specialising.
@@matthewnirenberg: My GP 😊is a specialist in skin disease, geriatrics and something else I can't 😢remember. Most of the other docs in the practice have some form of extra training. He also does minor surgeries in the surgery
Really convenient.
My SIL was a cardiologist in europe. When she moved here she had to study again for her medical degree to become a GP. In Australia to become a cardiologist, you must first become a qualified medical practitioner and then specialise in cardiology.
@@juliewoodman2439
LOL, more like a "diploma" in dermatology and geriatrics. Geriatric is a sub-specialty of the physician training.
It's akin to Physician Assistant vs. Doctor
@@matthewnirenberg As a Doctor I can tell you that you don't know what youre talking about when you say "All specialists are qualified as GP's as that's how they start before specialising." Nope, completely and underly wrong. To become a GP specialist you need to do an additional 3 years of training to earn fellowship with the college of GPs. To become any other specialist you need to do fellowship training with a different college to obtain fellowship with that specialist college.
I’m an Aussie… this was a great video on what it is like for other cultures to live in our country… so well put together 👌🏻🇦🇺
Your comment regarding how safe it is to go see an Aussie Rukes match, compared to going to see a soccer match, made me proud to be an Aussie. Thank you for pointing that out 🙂
The photos you show of everyone running around the field are after the game has ended and the spectators are allowed on the field.
We also have compulsory swimming lessons in most schools & if we have a home pool it must be fully fenced. These measures have saved thousands of lives, mostly children, since being introduced, in the 1970s ☺️ when I see home pools overseas I never see a fence 😓
In the US, at least California and Massachusetts require fences around swimming pools, with locking gates. (This kind of law is probably at the state level)
Geez the ‘shut the gate, teach your kids to swim it’s great and learn how to resuscitate’ ‘kids alive do the five’ is something else ingrained in my brain.
@mbuhtz I believe the fence law only requires there is a fence to prevent other properties from accessing the pool. Which means people fence the entire yard, not just the pool. Small children living in those homes can easily walk up to and into the pool without any barrier, because the fenced area is the entire property.
@@SJ-ty5vxnot quite. We had the yard fenced off but we also had to have self closing security screen sliding doors with the latch at roughly adult head height and we weren't allowed to have a doggie door. So we still had to prevent outside access for children. The idea being that if a child was going outside they can't get out themselves and an adult would have to go with them or at least be aware that they are out there.the self closing sliding doors had a fair bit of resistance on them as well, so a child would struggle to push them open, not to mention the noise it makes as it opens (intentional in the design so you can hear when it being opened)
When trying Vegemite for the 1st time, spread it VERY lightly on your buttered toast. It's also good as a flavoring in stews/soups with red meat
Also gotta add, it works great in many vegetarian & vegan meals & soups/stews
Is also really good as one of the sides that is served with rice porridge.
I add it thickly spreaded on toast with no butter! Also on Saos like that!
Yeah it's pretty handy for soups and stews. Usually cook Asian meals, if disaster strikes and I'm out of Soy Sauce, it's not a bad substitute.
Toss your Vegemite for Marmite, it's way better.
I think a house warming party is a throwback, to a time when your friends and neighbours had physically helped you build your home. When on completion you gave a party to feed them, say thank you and lit the fire for the first time. You also offered your help and future labour, for when they would build their next house.
Can we all just get over the whole Vegemite thing? It’s generally an acquired taste. We’ve all seen non Aussies making faces when they try it for the first time😂
In North Africa in WW2, Aussie soldiers gave German POWs vegemite on toast. The Germans kept asking for more.
As an Aussie, I too am fascinated by our native animals. They never cease to make me pause, admire and care for all of them feathers fur and fin.
They never cease to piss me off. Especially magpies. Dont know why they’re a protected species, they seem to protect themselves just fine and then some. I should be the one protected from them!
If nobody else already said it, "Nipper" is old slang for a child, I think it comes from "Ankle biters" which is also slang for children.
Yeah, but it's also a pre-training system for our revered Life Savers
Screen scratchers and curtain climbers as well!
Or Grommets
Interesting fact, Vegemite was invented by I think, an Australian chemist, as a vitamin b12 supplement especially for children growing up to counteract deficiency and related diseases that were evident in the 1920s. Widespread Vitamin supplements, in the form of tablets, only became common in the latter part of the 20th century .
I think the fact that it has B vitamins was just a lucky coincidence. During WW1, food (and everything else) was rationed and then after the war, the world suffered the great depression. The brewer's yeast was a waste product from the manufacture of beer, so Vegemite was made to eliminate the waste. "Waste not, want not"
And it had to use the waste products from beer!
Brewers yeast was considered a good source of vitamin B12 for vegetarians but fresh brewers yeast contains no B12. B12 only comes from the bacteria that infects the brewers yeast.
Milo was also originally invented to combat mineral deficiencies in children during the great depression.
I'm 43yr old Sydney born & bred. I didn't know that about vegemite and milo, cheers for sharing
I really enjoyed your video. I've seen other content creators (one in particular that I'm thinking of) that spend the entire time whinging about the differences, whereas you were pointing out in a respectful way how you find some things strange and unusual as a newcomer to our country. Thank you so much.
In Australia we have a term (less used now) about the "whinging Pom". That being a person from England in particular, but probably anyone from the UK, who complains about all things Aussie. This other content creator happens to be English by birth, so it's probably testament to your Argentinian upbringing that you have a more global outlook and I really appreciate that.
Small interesting fact that you didn't raise in your video, that a lot of Aussies don't know, is that Aussie Rules was first created to keep cricket players fit in the off season. This is why it's played on an oval field.
Anyway, great video, again, I can't think you enough for the respectful tone.
So good to found such a refreshing video about Australia. No negative observations, no politics, no racism, no gender violence, no trashing of men, no put-downs about our culture.
Thank you! I really enjoyed hearing about your experiences.
One of the biggest changes I have seen in my life (I am 38, and grew up in Australia) is the decline in our drinking culture. Twenty years ago, young people went out and got so drunk. Really, really drunk. Very similar to the UK. However, it has changed a lot now. Of course a lot of people still go out, but it is nothing like it was. Young people are quite sensible now. Something that might interest you, I have been learning Russian for about a decade now, and one of the most popular channels on Russian-language TH-cam is a Russian woman who lives in Sydney and goes around collecting stuff from hard rubbish. She takes her camera and documents everything she finds. The Russians in the comments think we throw away stuff that is better than they can afford and really cannot believe it. She often finds really good stuff. When I was at university, I lived in a share-house and we got our couch from the side of the road :D
Often, the stuff is put out with the hope someone will take it and put it to good use - Instead of it going to the tip. If you get partnered up and have to combine houses, something has to give.
My son earned his first pocket money by collecting parts of computers, fixing them and selling working computers on online auctions. He was 12 when he started, 19 years later he still works in IT
The share house style furnished with hard rubbish furniture its called Share-house chic
The backpacks are especially designed to balance the weight and protect their spines, but a lot of kids don’t put them on and just lug them around by one strap! The younger kids often wear them properly because their parents put them on before they leave home.
The use of big backpacks and young children is stupid.
@@BasilPunton Young kids don’t need to carry much so they’re not the issue. When I was in school, we had Globite school cases that were solid and of suitable size.
@@BasilPunton As A South African we also use Backpacks but they only tend to become big and heavy in High School though, not all schools have lockers and those that do have lockers the kids have to rent them from the schools. It just took a bit of proper planning on what subjects to pack for for that particular day. I always chose backpacks that had multiple dividers inside not like the backpacks that looks like a laptop backpack. The dividers allowed me to arrange my books as per the day schedule so I never really had to consult my daily time tab le to see what classes I had for the day. The only Subject that had multiple big files was the days when I had Art History as that was 3 file binders full of paperwork, the other two subjects with big files were History and Biblical Study History(I was a bit of a history nerd when was younger so all my studies had to do with history) Yet today I work in retail do some 3D modeling and lifelong PC GAMER. But yeah as a young child a big backpack was least of my worries up untill high school
You can run a lot faster, as is so often Necessary, than you can with a suitcase on wheels.😁🙃
@@mikehall3074 Very much true lol
Great video, but as an Aussie school teacher I can tell you that those big pack packs kids wear to school usually only have a lunchbox, drink bottle and maybe 1 book inside. Usually very light. Especially for the little kids 😃
Apart from which - weight bearing in early years encourages calcium deposition in bones which protects against osteoporosis later in life
Maybe togs and towel, or library books. That’s all.
my guess is it's more like: lunchbox, water, one book, two or three exercise books, spare clothes (hat, jumper etc) and either a laptop/tablet or at least one textbook, depending on what kind of school it is.
in the early 2010s when I was in high school, my bag weighed 15-20kg every day, and even once we got laptops and most of our textbooks were digital, the laptop and charger weighed as much as a textbook so it didn't bring the weight down that much!
They should not have to carry those silly backpacks at all if it's mostly empty. It's ridiculous.
@@stephanieyee9784 they're not empty, a modern lunchbox takes up a surprising amount of space. it's also supposed to save the parents money, to only have to buy one backpack for the whole 7 years of primary school, instead of a small one for the first 3 years and a big one for the last 4 years.
Many years ago, a friend of mine built my first 3 computers from parts from other computers from the hard rubbish collections 🙂 He also helped out other friends with fixing up appliances (fridges, washing machines, dryers)
What an interesting perspective. As an Aussie who’s lived elsewhere for 15 years it’s endlessly yfascinating to hear others experiences of being an immigrant. Thankyou and bless.
Well if people slather it on like peanut butter as shown in the video they deserve everything they get if they put all of that in their mouth. That would be like pouring a glass of soy sauce and drinking it. Soy sauce is good, when used properly and so is Vegemite.
I know, like they just slather it all on like it's nutella. Even when I've said only a small amount, they still just pile it on.
Love it on thick, within reason, slightly less than in the video. In saying that, I also will 'eat' it with a spoon, but it's more like letting it dissolve, happens rather quickly. I cook a lot of Asian meals, Soy Sauce is kindle of a staple for me (funnily, vegemite is a good substitute if disaster strikes), the saltiness doesn't really get to me.
Exactly! It's not Nutella, don't assume it's gonna be like it!
Put as much or as little as you like. I hate the way the Vegemite police say what quantity should be used. There are NO rules
I started liking vegemite late. Used just a thin spread, then needed more, and more, and more. Now I can lay it on like nutella and think it is great. Also have to tell you about my youngest son. When he was about 18 months old he liked vegemite so much that a 1 kg jar would only last a month, and sometimes we would catch him walking around with the open jar under one arm (18 months old remember) and a teaspoon in the other eating it straight. Sent shivers down my spine, but he *never* got sick.
This was interesting because I learned about Australia and Argentina. GPs, separate toilets and alcohol sold in separate shops are all common here in South Africa too. I've never seen a child with a wheel-bag, but it makes so much sense.
the bag is not quite correct - they are for high school / teenagers. Primary school kids bags are very light weight and usually only contain a lunchbox, drink bottle, a hat and maybe a book that they are practising to read at home
@@vanessagoddess1 That's what I remember from when I was little. I live across the road from a primary school in Cape Town. I don't usually pay attention to the children (apart from driving safely!) but I'll have a look at whether they all have the same kinds of bags and what they are. I assume with wealthier schools becoming more digital, there should be less to carry around in general. The worst was at uni having to carry textbooks that shouldn't be legal to have to pick up, nevermind lug between classes!
there is alcohol sold at supermarkets.we buy some grog from Aldis
@@pietrobroughan960 Depends which state you're in.
Loved this video! It’s always fun to learn about the unexpected things that make life in a different country so interesting. Australia seems to have its own unique charm, and your video captures it perfectly. Looking forward to more of your discoveries.
I'm from Melbourne, I have always thought definitely that backpacks of that size must impede spinal development and they have been known to cause teenagers back issues! The wheely bags are far superior
As an Aussie, we love our uniqueness. Best country and that's why we have so many migrants wanting the same. Happy Australia Day 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺
I disagree with best country. Nz, UK,etc are great countries.
Did you know it’s very expensive to migrate here. I knew a British couple it cost them thousands and thousands plus they had to have a sponsor put up five grand at the time. And also have their own pension money. I guess it’s different if your seeking asylum.
@@cececece5459 New Zealand yes.
There’s no such thing as a best country, or city, or song, or film - indeed anything. It’s all about personal preference
Another thing that many visitors to Australia find surprising is the number of volunteers we have, especially in the fire and emergency services area.
Who volunteered that information
@@splashpit I see what you did there🙂
As an emergency service volunteer myself, I often encounter new Australians and visitors who are astounded by how much we rely on volunteers.
Volunteering for community events, schools, charity and, yes especially emergency services! I think it's a great part of Australian culture, mateship.
Totally agree - people volunteer for the most dangerous jobs - CFA, State Emergency Services, Life Savers - they deserve a lot of respect.
@@allancowley2254 Some of us can't do the dangerous jobs anymore so we volunteer at schools, hospitals etc.
Vegemite in the fridge? Never heard of that in my life! My Vegemite is always in the pantry, no problems.
We've been putting in the fridge all this time...but I think you are right. Just googled it, and apparently, it does go in the pantry!
Read the label. It says keep in fridge
@@michellemicallef3250 Well my Vegemite label says “Store in a cool dry place.” Here’s a quote from the Vegemite website FAQ:
How do I store VEGEMITE?
VEGEMITE is a shelf stable product and once opened can be stored in the cupboard or pantry right up until the best before date.
Never used the fridge for it. Similarly tomato / BBQ sauce. Just in the pantry out of the heat. Same with eggs cos, unlike the US, we don't wash them so their natural shell and membrane does the job. On the rare occasions I buy eggs from Woolies/Coles (and not Aldi) I do use the fridge cos they have and I don't want the condensation weakening the membrane.
The label says fridge. Same with all condiments. Growing up we kept them in the pantry but pretty sure that was wrong, no issues though.
At schools, us Australians can't use wheelie bags as there are many places that aren't very accessible for that, and often, the bags aren't actually that full, they're just somewhat big, plus they're generally cheaper and more accessible than wheelie bags. Hope that helps!
-Also too bad I have scoliosis from wearing a bag wrong when I was older, but it's easier than carrying a bunch of books in my arms- XD
Everyone's got some form of scoliosis.
We are an island (albeit a Big one, as well as being a Small Continent) everyone swims, swim between the flags is rule 1. That foreigners seem to fail, and a lot of places have a sea pool, it fills at high tide with fresh seawater and is a safe swim for little kids. Our beaches are soft sand (hot on a sunny day) and you can take your towel or chair to sit, swim, have a family picnic...
Yes, Vegemite has always been a light spread across the toast, The heavy spread is often used as a practical joke for people that have never tried it. I was born and still live in Australia and I still love seeing our wild life. Once when I was out gold detecting, paying attention only to the ground in front of me, When a large rock that i was standing next to, got up and hopped away. Scared the daylights out of me, id come across a snoozing Roo and disturbed its slumber. I hope you enjoy your time here, Cheers!
A fair few people I know prefer a heavy spread or - god forbid - mixing it with other spreads. My mum's ex (ex for other reasons, not this, though I wouldn't blame her for breaking up with him over this travesty, tbh) liked it with tomato sauce, peanut butter and ... sardines. Yeahhhh. No thanks. In comparison, my brother's enjoyment of it slathered on is pretty tame and normal. XD
I recently visited my daughter and her family in the suburbs of Newcastle. I like the separate toilet but wish they also had a small sink in that room too. I love the outdoorsy culture. I brought home some Vegemite and am trying to like it lol. The beaches are amazing and I admire the family values. I think it's great that my three Aussie grandkids have to wear sunhats. I left a piece of my heart there in Australia.♥
Modern new builds in the last few years do have a small sink in the toilet area - for selling purposes its called a 1/2 bath (bathroom).
Find a genuine Turkish well crusted pita bread maker...Generously butter it & sparingly spread vegemite- yum,
Typically the toilet's next to the laundry which has a sink
Australia loves ya mate!
You cracked me up with the "Lemon Face" comment on Vegemite.
FYI you can buy alcohol in supermarkets in Canberra where I live. The separate bottle shops is not to limit consumption but it can't be sold by minors under 18 so cannot be taken through the checkout where Woolies and Coles employ juniors.
Same in NSW
Yes, they sell alcohol inside Aldi supermarkets here in Melbourne. I've often wondered why Coles and Woolworths don't do the same.
the school bags may be large but they're often not heavy. It's mostly a lunch box and a thermos. Because we mostly don't have a "school lunch" so much, there's often a canteen you can buy something from, but mostly for kids it's a packed lunch.
Veggiemite lubrication
Alcohol selling is licensed and regulated very seriously indeed .
For example you can only find so many "bottle shops" as we often call them, within a specific radius.
Other reasons looked at before you can obtain a licence is the exact location like are they next to a school, kindergarten or church?
And YES, the locals can fight against you obtaining a licensed premises. I live near a suburb called Greenvale in Melbourne Vic where any kind of alcohol is banned.
Yes it's weird, I know but that's us . Like us or leave us
Your opinion about the heavy school bags is also what us mums are concerned about too. Schools don't supply lockers.
Backpacks if worn properly distribute the weight across several areas especially the hips.
I had lockers when i went to school
Some high schools have locker’s but it’s $50 each term
We had lockers in high school and they were free. Back in those days we carried "ports" or briefcases to school as backpacks were only for the hikers and the Armed Forces.
No small child should have to lug those heavy backpacks around. Especially Primary and Infants school kids. They don't have a lot of big school tomes just their exercise books, pencil cases, rulers and lunch boxes.
Oh sorry, and their laptops or whatever.
My high school had lockers. And in primary school there's not really anything valuable in your bag anyway (at least when i was there 10-15 years ago)
When I was in Prep school we had “No hat no play.” In Secondary School we each had a locker. The books you weren’t using would go in the locker and you could swap your books around during the school day depending on what subjects you had.
My primary school introduced no hat no sun rule around 1989/90.
My school still hadn't let go of the belief that Left Handed children, were to be made unable to use their Left Hands. We were made to sit in the Sun for any reason. Definitely no hats🤗😁
@@mikehall3074 One of my mother’s cousins was born left handed. When at school they would tie his left hand to the back of the chair so he had to write right handed. In the end he could write both right and left. When he played cricket he would bowl right handed but batted left handed and when he played golf he played left handed.
During PE, not sports day, when I was in high school class team sports were played shirts vs skins. Could you imagine that today 😮
Sorry to say, most schools do not have lockers - well not the public ones when I went to school. I'm almost 37 now. Unless its changed, its always been bags..
Liquor laws are not federally controlled, they vary from state to state. For instance in NSW, Costco sell liquor in a separate section of the store, but in ACT the alcohol is inside the grocery section. Some states in the US have similar laws.
And there is no alcohol sold at all in supermarkets in Qld
COSTCO not Costco
Learn to pay attention to detail
Make sure the brain sees exactly what the eyes are looking at.
and learn that all CORPORATE Legal names are always
written in the ALL CAPS iteration
Only a living soul has the name in Mixed Case Letters.
That being ' The given name ' - Given by the parents -- and
a Family Name that associates one with the particular family.
The Given Name and Family Name is NOT the same as the
FIRST NAME LAST NAME/SURNAME
[ They sound the same but are NOT Legally the same ]
Now for your homework write an essay explaining the difference -
and the Legal reasoning behind it.
The Laws date back to the year 1302 - and were codified into
WESTMINSTER Law in 1666 - during the False Flag Attack
that was the Great Fire of London.
Note that all the Laws were written in French and pure Latin.
In the ACT, all Coles and Woolies have stopped selling grog in the main section. Aldi, Supabarn and small, suburban supermarkets like IGA still do it, but the 2 main grocery chains have their separate Liquorland and BWS chains for every shop. They all stopped doing this about five years ago. Maybe they were losing too much stock via theft, or it looked a bit cheap selling nice wine on a big supermarket shelf? I don't know, I'm making guesses, probably wrong ones.
@@andrew_koala2974: nitpicking. Who cares?
In Victoria, different shops seem to have different rules. Aldi and IGA have liquor in store, whereas Woolworths and Coles don't. 🤷♀️
General Practice is a speciality on its own. Registrars must complete a structured course and pass exams to become a GP. You don't graduate from medical school as a GP.
AFL is based on Gaelic football.
I'm an australian - born and raised here. I still get excited any time I see a Kangaroo, a Koala, a Kookaburra, Echidna, etc. I don't know what it is, but it gets me all warm and fuzzy every time haha
My son lived in a share house (Brisbane) with a German. Their refrigerator broke down and the German student looked up the Council website to see where the next hard rubbish collection was. They went to the suburb and scored 2 small refrigerators that worked.
German efficiency at it's best :D
About the backpacks, from what I've seen, they're designed big so kids can grow into them and still use them in older year levels. Parents dont want to keep buying schoolbags and I used the same one nearly all of Primary school and even into the start of Secondary.
I remember when there was a real focus on school students and backpack issues. Schools, media and everything went all into showing how the design of the backpacks are made to protect students spines by balancing the weight, but the main issue was how they were worn. (I remember so many skits about it) School and my parents drilled into me ✨the✨ways✨of✨wearing✨the✨schoolbag✨
To wear both straps on my shoulders; that the straps shouldn't be long enough so that the bag sags; that I should lean at a 45-degree angle when standing; and my bag should be not more than 10% of my body weight... that last part I didn't stick to as I went further into highschool.
Also little kids carry literally nothing in there. My kid brother has his lunchbox, bottle, hat, pieces of lunchtime tanbark currency and a couple paper crafts he did during the day. When I was in my final year of school he would pick my bag up and say I'm carrying bricks. Then he would put his bag on his back and joke that his bag wasn't there and didn't exist at all. He was in Year 5 at the time.
Now I'm in uni where I believe my computer bag will give me back problems and I miss the functionality of schoolbags :( 😿
omg the tanbark currency, that's gold.
My boys from about grades 3 - 6 have had extremely heavy bags. In fact, they can't fit everything into their (uniform) backpacks, so they carry another bag of items.
Is this the norm? Probably not. They just HAVE to carry drawing stuff & other bits & pieces with them just in case they get bored! 🤦♀️
@@AussieWinter I don't know about other schools, but at my kids primary school all they had in their bags for 3 - 6 was ipad, lunch box, drink bottle, hat, reader bag & I put sun screen in as well. Everything else was left at school in their lockers. Only time they carried another bag was for swimming and sometimes their library bag if they borrowed a big book lol.
@drakkondarkblood6638 -so lucky to have lockers in primary school, I've never heard of any schools doing that. It would be a messy nightmare with my kids, though.
@@AussieWinterheheh yeah it's really good, they're not lockers like you have in secondary school, it's more shelving, the shelving that have individual squares with a tub in each square for a kid, but works great.
As an Australian born and raised, I must admit I was expecting a video that was click bait and being negative. But I'll be the first to admit I was 100% wrong and your video was very accurate and fair, so thank you! I hope you continue to enjoy your stay in Australia with your partner!
General Practice is a specialty and takes between 3-4 years to complete it.
GPs are specialists in General Practice.
Vegemite was re-named, for a short length of time, to “Parwill”. “If Ma might (Marmite)…then Pa will (Parwill)!” Yep. After slathering it on, lick the knife! Yum-eeee! 😋
I’m Australian and have been traveling Europe for 8 months. I quite enjoy being able to get some alcohol from supermarkets and not having to go to the bottle shop
The big grocery chains own alcohol chains and put bottle shops right next to the supermarket, even with doors directly from the checkout area into the side of bottle shop, with the bottle-o checkout at the front of their store. Personally, i like it that kids don't get to see adults buying alcohol, as we have enough of a problem-drinking culture here already. I don't know if kids even with parents are allowed to enter bottle shops, I can't recall ever seeing a kid in one.
@@sandramae987 yeah true, but they are still separate shops, You still have to go to the checkout twice. It just doesn’t have the same feel as Europe supermarkets.
here in canada the booze is starting to get more relaxed. when hard drugs are legalized, drinking is the least of our problems. greetings from vancouver bc.. \
i usually have a beer walking my husky
@@jugaloking69dope58 I love in Europe being able to grab a beer and relax on the beach to drink it. It’s about a $200 fine back home haha.
I'm Australian & on our many trips to Europe I must say I love having a beer while watching the misses wash herself with the bidet after a day out at the beach 😂😂😂
"Hard rubbish" is only when you've arranged with the local council to come and collect it. It's usually junk/rubbish that won't fit into the wheelie bin. If a piece of furniture etc is on the side of the road, it's there for people to take, not the council!
Councils will have two hard rubbish collection days a year. We don't do it otherwise.
Legally, no. But yes.
@LawrenceAkers in my council area we get 6 kerbside pick ups per year, and yes, the residents are supposed to ring the and book the pick up, a lot of people don't but the stuff still gets cleared up either by the council or by pile pickers... one of the local streets has 4 multi dwelling townhouse complexes so there is always stuff out the front of at least one or two of them...😏
🙃🐨🇦🇺
@@grandy2875 6!! That's really generous of your local council. I'm inner-city Melbourne and we get one around April and one in September, otherwise you need to organise for your hard waste to go to the tip yourself.
@@LawrenceAkersI'm on the NSW Central Coast, this has been a thing for at least 25 years up here, not exactly sure about other parts of the state, but I think they do similar...😊
We used to have to take bulk waste to the tip, but the fees got stupid exy, but some people don't have vehicles, or are elderly, plus people were dumping rubbish anywhere and everywhere.
It works well, for the most part, but you still get those that just put their crap out and hope for the best. The Pile Pickers do a roaring trade though...😏
Australian homes often have a separate toilet from the rest of the bathroom for practical and functional reasons. This design allows for more efficient use of the bathroom, as one person can use the toilet while another uses the shower or sink.
I'm American and I used to have a bathroom like that the sinks were in one room and the toilet and shower were in the other and that kind of came in handy since they were in two separate rooms the mirror doesn't get fogged up after you shower
@@robbiescheid4127 In Australia the sink is in the bathroom
Isn't that her exact script?
Separate toilet room is only practical if they incude sink as well, so you can wash your hands after use of toilet, otherwise is unhygienic
@@tomm7868 the sink or bathroom basin as we call them in australia shares with the bathroom some modern houses in australia have the toilet shared with the bathroom but some have the toilet on its own
I came to this country 60 years ago and I have never eaten vegemite. When my Australian wife gave vegemite to our children I told her that this was child abuse. After that she tried to avoid serving vegemite to the kids when I am around.
Seeing a specialist cost at least 5 times as much as a GP. My GP bulk bills . The Medicare refund for a specialist fee is a percentage of what Medicare thinks the Specialist should charge. However no specialist just charges the Medicare fee but a lot more.
Toilet? We have an ensuite for parents with basin , toilet and shower. The children use the bathroom which has a bathtub, shower, toilet und basin. Us adult can also use the bath tub when no one is in the bathroom.
As for the bidet, in Australia most people have one or two showers per day. Bidet are used in countries where people do not shower everyday. For example in countries with colder climates.
Bottle shops are essentially a way to prevent children seeing alcoholic drinks > Most bottle shop provide a bag to put single bottles in essentially so one can't see what is in the bag.
I come from a country where there are no bottle shops and alcoholics drinks can be bought anywhere. A kid can go in a shop and pick up a bottle of alcoholic drink and say to the cashier mum or dad asked me to buy them a bottle of so and so. The cashier isn't going to query that. There is nothing to stop the kid going round the corner and having a swig or more from that bottle.
I certainly drank some beer before reaching the legal age of adulthood.
Any way It would be pretty boring if everything would be the same in every country.
My approach a an immigrant was I adopt all the positives in the new country and try to avoid what I consider the negatives. in AUS I have never used a poker machine and I never read a Murdoch paper.
It should be noted that hard rubbish only happens once or twice a year designated dates. But it differs from suburb to suburb. You can't just dump your hard rubbish on the sidewalk at any time of the year or you can get fined. It's a wonderful thing though. A great form of recycling in a sense as well
You're right about the heavy schoolbags. I walked 30 min to and from high school for 5 years (back when high school in Qld started in Year 8). I already had back problems brewing due to a structural problem in my spine, and all that time lugging around a heavy bag didn't help!
I hear you! I too am from QLD. At 14yo because of the heaviness of my bag with all the textbooks i had and plus being 6'4, I was diagnosed with Kyphosis (the opposite curvature of scoliosis basically) and its gotten worse over the years. The diagnosing chiropractic dr said it was a direct result of simply carrying extremely heavy bags on my back 😮
I’m Australian and I agree with you about the school bags. To be honest, I think for the little ones, it’s mainly to fit in the monster lunchboxes they have nowadays. A lot of them are in the form of a cooler bag and they take up a lot of space. They certainly don’t get enough homework to warrant it. As for the toilets, that applies to older buildings. Buildings built from the 1980’s onward are likely to have a toilet like you described but also another one in the bathroom.
I think it’s weird houses in other countries have the toilet and bathroom together. Imagine someone deciding they wanna drop their kids off at the pool before you go to have a shower. I can see myself getting very fired up about that.
Sculptures by the curb is a great Aussie pastime. You put the really good stuff at the bottom as the base of your sculpture, so if anyone wants it, they have to (as quietly as possible) remove the stacked items neatly, or run the risk of starting an argument with the artist.
Drop your kids off at the pool haha, love it
But lots of houses in Australia have the toilet inside the bathroom - at least there are lots in Sydney. Ours did but we had 2 bathrooms (one had a shower cubicle, the other a bathtub)
@livingsimplyaustralia, just an interesting tidbit, if you did not know it: picking up other people's hard waste items from the kerb is considered an offence (at least in Victoria) and is considered theft. Still, people are collecting items in good condition and I don;t know anyone who was actually fined for that.
You're right about the bags. They are HEAVY. But those wheelie bags wouldnt work here either. Stairs and rough terrain, sometimes you have to go across a big field or up on a bus or.
You can go directly to a specialist in Australia, but if you do you'll be footing the entire bill. To get rebates you need a referral from a GP.
No the specialist legally cannot see you without a referral....you are talking out your arse.
@@ntal5859 Absolute rubbish. A simple google of "see specialist in australia no referral" will show it is your arse being talked out of by you.
@thisnthat3530 you have to go to your G.P. for a referral to a specialist. You just can't go to a specialist doctor.
No, you cannot go directly to a specialist. The first question you will be asked if you ring a specialist to make an appointment will be to ensure that you have a referral and to remind you that you must bring it with you when you arrive for your appointment. You will also be asked to arrive about 15 mins early for your first visit to fill out a few pages of information about your current medication, medical history etc.
@@thisnthat3530 you should both see a Proctologist about that 🤔
Exactly, that amount of Vegemite on a piece of toast would've been my weekly intake.
Bidets are actually becoming quite popular in Australia now. I've had one for a few years now and it's great. They still are not common but more and more people are getting them installed.
Hello there
well, we found the typical privileged elite who thinks theyre an average aussie.
probably also on 180K and thinks they have an average income
#ComeBackDownToEarthYuppie
you know i'm right, cos the other comment is from a gold-digger
For Australia, the driest inhabited continent on earth, the use of water-guzzling bidets needs to be banned.
Bidets became really popular during the Great Toilet Paper shortage during COVID lockdowns
The amount of people only using paper is pretty gross to think about...
But the bidet would be more popular if it couldn't be replaced by a $2 squirt bottle from Coles..... :)
I can explain the school bags! The idea is that you get one and it lasts you for most/half of your school life. They don’t tend to be heavy, just big. And they are pretty ergonomic with thick straps and spread the weight evenly.
As a born and raised Australian only highschool grade or higher is supposed to carry bags with all their books for the day in them with any exams or essays but in primary school they only take their books etc to school for the first day and they then fill their school desk tray and it stays there until the end of the year the only things they should be carrying is their lunch box and possibly sports gear
A few things are typical in Europe or some European countries as well.
Fot instance, in the Netherlands a GP is also the first contact, he decides if a indication to see a specialist is necessary, but once you have that indication you can always return directly to the specialist for that particular indication.
Also we have separate toilets, but often there is a toilet in the bathroom as well, so the average house has 2 toilets, but usually no bidets in a Dutch home.
Another thing that is similar in the Netherlands is that most children learn to swim, once it was compulsory and organised by the schools but now you have to arrange swimming lessons for your children yourself, and most people do this because we have so many rivers, canals, lakes and let not forget the sea.
I'm fairly new to Australia. This was a fascinating perspective. Thank you for making this video.
Many modern family homes have a toilet in the ensuite bathroom as well as another separate toilet, and another main bathroom without a toilet. So what she is describing is probably the norm only for older houses or apartments.
Huh? You've just described exactly what she described. A bathroom with no toilet, and a separate toilet. Simply with the addition of a second toilet in an ensuite.
My house, built in 2021 has an ensuite with shower and toilet, and a main bathroom with shower, bath and toilet. We chose it straight off the plan.
Nippers, are juniors in a surf lifesaving club. ie junior surf life savers. When you see them, they are training to compete and to eventually become a surf lifesaver.
The lack of a Bidet is due to water restrictions. Due to low rainfall use of water was precious in early settler days and that is the reason.
Thanks for the video. I’m Australian and have lived in beautiful Hawaii for a long time, but all the things you mentioned made me nostalgic and a bit homesick . As for Vegimite, yep, an Aussie has to have it. I buy it on Amazon at a super inflated price, but a piece of toast doesn’t taste right without it!😂 You are a lovely young woman, I hope you are enjoying Australia 😊
My grandson is 6 and his school bag is huge and heavy thank you for sharing that info on posture problems ❤
That wasn’t a monster it was just somebody whom had had Vegemite every day of their life. I would not recommend that amount be applied to a neophytes toast, however as someone who has consumed it everyday of my life since just after birth I thought the amount demonstrated in the video was quite reasonable. Lovely video explaining some of our many Ozzy foibles!
Specialists have waiting lists of months and months. There aren't enough specialists in the country to meet the demand now, but if we all started trying to make an appointment without being vetted first, there'd by 5 year waits.
Good video 👍
Australia is an amazingly diverse place of multiculturalism, we are blessed to live here and have people like yourself join us and make this an even better place.
And yes I agree, Aussie rules is more loved in Victoria than other places such as NSW, in my opinion. The cricket is very popular across the country. In the 1980’s I felt like unofficially the Australian Cricket captain was the second most important person in the country after the PM. 😂
Great video! I am new to Australia, finding out all these
You put it so eloquently. Oz is a great place to live, and it is weird in some respects. Glad you landed here and have adjusted to life in Melbourne but there again, it is the best place in all of Oz for many reasons other than the weather. LOL.
Our weather isn't that bad compared to other countries .Melbourne IS in a temperate climate.
@@barnowl. Yep, segura, absolutely.
Hahahaha you keep telling yourself that 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Melbourne is not the best place in the country by a long long way.
@@666Buzzsaw You are correct, but only if you are not from Melbourne. 😀. For me, I would not live anywhere else. 👍. Cheers.
@@666Buzzsaw Please list all the best cities that beat Melbourne ' by a long, long way ' and explain why for each one. You must have been in them for a decent amount of time to give validity to your argument. Otherwise I think you are talking horse-sh!t. !!!
An interesting take I'm glad you mostly just highlighted your observations without moral judgement or negative criticism unlike so many American bloggers who can't accept that things outside the US might be different All the Argentinians I have met have enjoyed their time here. Have to agree with comments here re too much vegemite.....just a smear only. Also, don't think that Melbourne = Australia. It doesn't. Frankly I would prefer almost anywhere else in Australia.
Frankly I would prefer NO WHERE ELSE in Australia, and I've been everywhere in Oz.
Just a note for non-Aussies - Vegemite is very, very strong....just a very thin scraping is enough on toast... then it tastes great! It should not be stored in the
fridge...it needs to be at room temperature. Also, in winter, I sometimes make a hot drink from it. A heaped teaspoon in a mug with boiling water, well stirred....lovely!
Bonox is even better! I hadn't had it since I was a teenager and recently rediscovered it.
With the alcohol, it all depends on which state in Australia. Aldi in Victoria sell alcohol in store. Visiting Queensland, we couldn’t understand why we couldn’t find alcohol in an Aldi store there. But, different states, different laws
It must be amazing to be able to see a specialist directly! I have a chronic illness and even though it isn't going away, I have to keep going back to my doctor and paying for new referrals to the same specialist I've seen for years and will need to keep seeing. It's so expensive and annoying! Great vid x
THat does not compute. Once you have been referred to a specialist, you then become their patient and SHOULD be able to see that specialist whenever you need to.
You only need a new referral if you are either changing specialists or getting a referral for a different illness/concern that requires a different specialist.
@@francescathomas3502 It seems to be different for some fields than others. I have seen a dermatologist for ten years, but have to get a new referral every year. Other specialists I don't.
@@francescathomas3502 Nope - referrals are only valid for either one month or one year (depending on the specialist) - Australia is a sad joke.
@@matthewnirenbergThat one disappointing fact hardly means that the whole country is a joke. Think yourself lucky you don't have to negotiate the US health system.
@@matthewnirenberg
How much does Medicare pay the specialist every time you see him/her versus you seeing the GP?
About the alchohol aswell. We have to be over 18 to sell it, also to drink it. With that, we have very strict laws with alcohol and who sells it, also you have to do an online course to be qualified to sell alcohol( RSA). So all this, we have young teenagers in their 1st job at 14 or 15, which will be a supermarket or fast food shop, they cant sell nor handle alcohol or cigarettes( supervisor or older person on service desk to sell cigs). So it makes sense to have another store specifically for alcohol selling.
QLD 16 year olds can work in pubs
it's the old saying one man's rubbish (trash) is another man's treasure
Aussie Rules was invented, to keep Cricket players fit, during the wintertime. It compliments ballet-lessons, for cricketers and of course, it’s a team sport, unlike ballet. “Up There Cazaly!”
Vegemite Common problem is like shown in the video Example.
(He is using enough for like 10-12 slices of toast in 1 go you are meant to use about pea to bean size amount per slice of toast butter should be made brown not black,
Imagine putting 4 tablespoons of salt with your meal, same kind of mistake it will taste horrible)
Sorry, not correct about 7 yr olds carrying very large backpacks for school. All their books are left at school and they basically carry their lunch and a reader or library book. Only high school kids, from 12/13 yr old carry their books to and from school. They do get a locker at school, though.
Australia has the biggest average size houses in the world. So Australian can afford to have rooms for everything in their houses.
The modern ones do have bidet in at least one of the bathrooms. Usually in the one associated with the main bedroom.
The bidet is a French invention, to save water. (Until recently they bathed only once a week)
So instead of having a bath or a shower they just wash themselves the stinky bits.
In Australia the norm is having at least a shower a day. Most Australian shower before having breakfast and also when they arrive back home from work or study.
So the bidet is not really a necessity.
In a hot country such as Australia a shower with a telephone shower extension is all that you really need.
But as the population gets older the bidet is becoming a desirable item as it is convinient.
Now there are devices that can be added to the standard toilet bowl which do the functions of the bidet.
So you can make your deposit and wash your rear on the same spot.
An also there are toilet bowls with the bidet functions incorporated.
So any house without a bidet can install one using the toilet bowl.
I really like the way our Aussie accent slips in when you are talking 😃😆🤣🥰totally cool as✅🌸
This is normal once someone has lived in another country for a few years 😃 If you move countries as an adult your accent will never completely change but you will take on some elements of your new country's accent. I lived in the UK for only two years and while my British friends would have said I still had an Australian accent, when I came home some of my Australian friends said I had a British accent. In truth I still had an Australian accent but some of my vowel sounds (mostly the O sound, like in "hope") had changed to a British pronunciation.
I think the biggest misconception in Oz is that our native animals form part of our daily lives. Its amazing to see them in the wild, yet its few and far between sightings. For example, Kangaroos dont jump down our main street, lol. Koala's are hard to spot in the trees.. you're more likely to see this in the outback but never seen in the cities. I loved watching your video 😊
Historically a lot of houses used to have “out houses” or outside toilets. My grandmother’s house was built in the 1940s and the toilet was outside. I wonder if this contributed to the separate toilet thing. But truely it does make sense when you think about it. A lot of houses will have one bathroom and separate toilet and then a smaller ensuite bathroom and toilet combined.
Nice video. I'm always surprised by things I come across having lived in other countries. Some make sense, some don't.
But regarding house warming parties. It's not just an excuse to have a party. It actually stems from a medieval practice. When you got a new home, people would bring you firewood - so you could literally heat your house. And by having a gathering with friends and family, you start your life in that house with good vibes. This was believed to ward off bad spirits. So the practice continues as an excuse to have a party but also to celebrate a milestone in someone's life and share that joy with them so that they can hopefully have a good life in that house ❤