It says a lot about the guy that everyone was so friendly to him and allowing him to film them. He seems like a genuine nice person and really interested in other.
The guy speaking Urk’s says: I can tell you something about this boat, we have this boat for 12 years. We sail it to Amsterdam and we sail it to Vlieland. We had plans last year to sail to England but that sadly got canceled.
Been on Urk a lot for work on some of the inland cargo-vessels that come from there and it's like was said a few times in the video... They respect you if you work hard and /or deliver a good product and overall they're nice people and nobody tried to convert me to anything, maybe coz i'm from another old fishing village x called Scheveningen... What's really good, work done... customer satisfied.. payed in full immediately on 40 to 50K jobs/equipment...
A Staphorst might even beat Urk by a country mile in being conservative Charlie ;) BTW you can't live in Urk, you live on Urk it is an Island still though it's landlocked for a while already LOL
The Urkers dialect as far as I could understand, he does not pronounce/articulate well: He really had the boat for 12 years by now, it began in Amsterdam. He sailed with it to Friesland/ Vlieland (unsure). There was a plan for 4 years to sail it to England, but alas/ sadly that did not happen.
The part that wasn't translated (I'm not from Urk, but the dialect isn't that heavy): I can tell you something about the boat. This boat we have for 12 years. We use it to go to Amsterdam, we used it to go to Vlieland. Last year we wanted to go to England but it did not happen.
The dialects from the bible belt don't differ all that much from one another. My grandparents spoke Flakkees dialect among eachother and if you can understand that you can understand Urks too.
@@rovanderby759 as a spakenburger can confirm but thats because the dialect here has faded out a lot there is dictionary from Spakenburgs to Dutch and a lot is just words or certain (gezegdes) which is very normal for a dialect it isnt like the whole grammar changed. most sounds are just prolonged. i still say bikbal instead of stuiterbal...
Indeed im from belgium and understood it completely.. and there are dialects here in belgium I dont understand, so there are probably some dialects in the netherlands who differ much more from "standard dutch"
@flopjul3022 Springbal in belgium :-) never heard of bikbal though I would have guessed it was dialect for bitterbal 😂 because "bikken" is a dialect some of us use for eating 😅
Flevoland, not Flavoland. The "dialect" is perfectly understandable for any Dutch person. Kibbeling is the Dutch "fish and chips". My mother would have it every Thursday when the fishmonger set up business in the nearby parking lot.
Wikipedia: There are fewer than 30 confirmed patients known to suffer from this disease; 22 of them are from the Netherlands and 14 are from Urk.[3] Whilst previously an island in the Zuiderzee, in 1942 the land was reclaimed.[4] However, the residents still remained a closed community, and the centuries of isolation have led to a consequence in almost exclusive intermarriage. This has increased the risk of certain hereditary disorders such as Van Buchem's and has promoted several hereditary characteristics within Urk.
There is a certain beauty that the people are pretty much as you would expect, given the back story. You can watch this from Japan and realize that if you were born in an insular location, you would also have developed similar small-town traits, skewed towards your own country. What I mean is we really are one big family and not all that different. Credit to the guy filming.
5:50 really depends on the sea/road traffic and the bridge itself. the closest one to my home goes is between baarn and bunschoten which goes over the Eem(small river) and is about 20 meters long(the part that rises) in the cases of this bridge its one deck so it all goes to one side but you also have double deck where they have decks of about the same length going in either direction. in the summer it might take a long time for it to go down again due to more boats being active there due to fun trips with higher boats. while outside of the summer when it goes up you might only have one boat that goes past and it goes up less regularly. for a single boat i think about 2-3 minutes before the barriers are back up 25:00 the shot they have here is a Flügel, german(its a dutch drink tho) for chicken its very popular here in the Netherlands at parties
Kibbeling is acually a by product from the skandanvians. They used to catch Cod fish but trew away the heads. the Dutch fisherman in that area, bought up the heads and cleaned out the cheeks. The fried cheeks its the orginal kibbeling, now its also Cod filet, but that the history. nowadays dutch fisherman still fish and buy fish in Norway.
yeah if we had hills in urk they probably would have eyes. i had a friend at school that came from another very self isolated village, Bunschoten. and she had to test her partner, from the same vilage, to see if they were genetically compatible and have kids without any hereditary diseases. solely due to originated from an area with a small genepool. also got an aunt that comes straigh outta katwijk! that also has a population originating from just a few families. which would explain some of my nephews' moronic viewpoints. a small, marternal sided, genepool! also could explain the chronic moustache of said aunt....reason why i call her my uncle-aunt!
Samuel is cool! Have met him twice here in Amsterdam in TV studio. He is making cool video's and he even shook the King Willem-Alexander a hand on his birthday (april 27; Kingsday)Edit; well Charlie, i even didnt knew everything from Urk, allthough i have been there 3 times for a half day. I really like this to see! 🙏
And the drugs doesnt grow there or isnt being produced there! Only used there! Im born and raised in one of the most beautiful notorious city's of the Netherlands thats 'Kampen'! Its a 20 minutes drive away from Urk and for sure the place to know if u wanna know what the Netherlands is and or even more was a thousand years back!
The Wieringermeer was the first polder that was reclaimed from the Zuiderzee, and the land was added to the province of Noord Holland. Initially its creation was planned before building the Afsluitdijk, but the need for agricultural land changed the plans. In april 1945 the Germans blew up the dikes to prevent invasion by the allied forces. By the end of 1945 the inundation was already reversed, and reconstruction was done very quickly
Ik denk dat veel Nederlanders wel begrijpen wat de meneer zegt . Ik ben geboren in Haarlem en ben gewend aan Amsterdamse dialect. Nu woon ik al een tijdje in Amersfoort provincie Utrecht waar je ook meerderen dialecten worden gesproke omdat er verschillende dorpen om heen liggen zoals Nijkerk, Leusden, Hoevelaken en spakenburg. Boeren plaatsen met Vis, vee en groen teelt.
As the vast and convincing majority of The Netherlands is not involved in any religion, or they are atheist, it usually are the small fisherman communities or other rural communities in which religion plays a dominant role in daily life. When you're not from around but you're of good will and you're not aware of how the dominance of a religion or church may be locally one can easily get into conflict with offended locals. I mean when a lady wears a bikini and a typical beach dress and she wants to visit Urk on a Sunday like that....well a riot is guaranteed, since dressing like that on the day of Christ is offending to the max locally, while in other (non religious) coastal areas women dressed like that will not even be noticed since all women are dressed like that on any day of the week so also on Sundays. Now this example is a reason why the people of Urk and other Strong Religious Communities have that reputation of being disrespectful / even violent towards people for whom Sunday is like Saturday a weekend day off; so nothing special, although this way of dressing is a constitutional right every woman has all over The Netherlands, and jet rejected in Urk and comparable Strong Religious Communities. So atheists are therefor limited in where they can go and how they can dress and what they actually can do. Their Religion is so dominant that an other way of looking at things, a more liberal way for example, is resolute out of the question and so this rigid opinion could easily be explained as strongly dismissive and inaccessible. This by the way was reason number one for these strong believers to leave The Netherlands back in the day of the founding fathers and go seek Religious Freedom in the USA, which they actually still do in 2024 since these religious communities belong to the very minority groups of The Netherlands and they feel the Atheist pressure from outside their communities.
@dutchyjhome I'm from Urk and we've gotten kinda used to outsiders coming here on sundays when its warm to see the sights or chill on the beach. Some restaurants are open on sundays too for the tourism
The dialect is pretty easy to understand, at least for me. Im from Groningen so i understand Gronings, but i also understand Drenths, cause they are pretty close, and Urks really sounds a bit like Drenths in my opinion.
Its not a crazy dialect to be honest.. Im from belgium and understood it completely, if you are fluent in the language this shouldnt be a problem.. there are dialects here in belgium that i understand much less than this :-) so im pretty sure there are also mich harder dialects in dutch
marrying your full blood cousin was still common a few generations ago, this is a thing for many fishing villages. just look up the surnames in a community like Volendam (or Urk).
Eendracht maakt macht. Like anywhere else in the world - sometimes some of the people look down on others. For me it doesn't matter. We are all the Netherlands and the people from Urk are crazy hard workers. And they just as much part of the Netherlands as all the other towns and cities. Groeten uit Twente!
`Now i´m speaking in dialect. I can tell you something about this boat. We have this boat for 12 years and we go to Amsterdam, to Vlieland and we had plans to go London but that is not going to happen´ Translation of the Urker.
Flemish people have little problems understanding any dutch dialect even when they try really hard, except people from groningen and friesland but these people are hard to understand for anyone dutch. 😅
@@googleaccountuser3116 As a Fleming from Antwerp I have absolutely no problem understanding any Dutch dialect. Except for pure Frisian but that I do not consider Dutch, to me that's more a kind of Scandinavian type of Germanic language.
he roughly says "Nah now i'm speaking in dialect, i can tell you something about the boat ... this boat we really have already 12 years and we go with it to Amsterdam. we sail to vlieland, were planning for 4 years to sail to England but that is unfortunately canceled"
Work on the fishing ships is awfull, it is a week without sleep, because the caught fish is being processed all the time. You can snatch an hour or two of sleep at most. Then you have one day off to sleep and then it starts again. This fucks people up, especially the young people.
here it comes the translation from the sailer "so now i am talking in dialect and i can tell u something about the boat. this boat we have for 12 years en we started in Amsterdam we sail with it to Vlieland we where planing to sail to England for 4 years but sorry to say that that didn't happen" hope it helps
So the dude says: Ei at een krielkien mit gerespte kase op de ossebosse noa dat ie mit troanen ut uus uut vluug omdat z'n opoe em een nuuk onger de tafel verkocht adde. Now the real translation: Now, I'm speaking in dialect. I can tell you something about the boat again. We got this boat for 12 years and we take trips to Amsterdam, we sail to Vlieland, and we were planning to sail to England, but that's sadly canceled.
They have the boat for 12 years. They sailed all tge way to Scheveningen with it. 4 years ago they wanted to sail to England with it but the trip fall through and it never happened
I live in Emmeloord, right next to Urk. In 2019 we had the "slag om urk" which was just a bunch of Moroccan people from Emmeloord vs Urk people having beef. And with every kind of festival we have in Emmeloord there are always "Urkers" that want to fight. Also our cinema in Emmeloord has a lot of Urkers visiting because they dont have their own cinema and my friend who used to work in that cinema told me the Urkers are the worst customers.
For Dutch people it's not so hard. He said they've had the boat for 12 years and started in Amsterdam sailing to Ameland. They planned to go sail through England for 4 years but it didn't happen.
You can compare Urk and Staphorst to the bible belt in the US. Those bridges you find everywhere the highway crosses a big waterway. So i don't understand he never seen it before. Maybe he crossed them without realizing
The man speaking dialect is talking about his boat, places he took it to, and how he wanted to take it to England, but that didn't happen in the end. It's not even a very difficult dialect tbh, most words are the same but pronounced with more of a drawl. A few letters have a slightly different sound. Edit: I was just reminded that the following happened in Volendam, not Urk... left it here anyway as an example of why "youth of today" narratives very often have causes you know nothing about. I do believe every fishing village, which Urk and Volendam both are, have some very stressful stuff going on, what with that being a somewhat uncertain and dangerous way to make a living. But that fire was indeed somewhere else. End edit. Coke island is what happened after a horrific fire in a café called 't Hemeltje maimed a lot of the youth living there at the time. The cops had trouble dealing with those youths afterwards because burn wounds will often stay painful and whenever they tried to physically remove youngsters from wherever they were causing mayhem, the youngsters would cry out in pain. Many of them were also very depressed about losing friends in that fire and being maimed themselves. As a result, drug use became common. It would seem it stayed that way after that. The café where the fire happened was called 't Hemeltje. Meaning little heaven... Berenburg, the drink they mixed with cola, is a very well known Dutch jenever or gin.
Thank you for telling the story behind it ... unless you´ve walked in someone elses shoes , feel for the youngsters ´ve lived with cronic pain since 8th grade but that and I know how hard it is when every touch hurt must have felt more like hell.
Beerenburg is not really gin or jenever, it only has jenever as basis, but Be(e)renburg is too unique to put it away as gin or jenever. It would be the same as calling yoghurt a milk.
It is a pity that several commenters here (probably from the Randstad) think they have to criticize the places in the Netherlands where Christian values and customs are still honored. Bah!
so what vhe said was that he owned the boat for 12 years they even sale from urk to amsterdam it's just like normal american and a texas accent i guess. it is not that different everyone in the netherlands can understand them
@woutersplinter4981 the original inhabited island part is only about 10% of current Urk. With 22.000 people, multiple shop centres and ridiculous amount of churches you can safely call it a town
@@SlashProducts as I said, I grew up in a village, of 24.000... but nevertheless a village. Leeuwarden or Gouda for example is a town, eventhough we call it a "stad" in Dutch, is the English term city not fitting. Calling Urk a town is an insult to the beautiful towns of the Netherlands.
De taal is niet te verstaan zelfs voor een normaal sprekend nederland is het niet te verstaan ze zijn erg agressief ze gaan gelijk er op gelijk slaan of schelden, maar ze kunnen ook heel vriendelijk zijn dus dat nieuws is ook niet zo vriendelijk dus zelf ondervinding de serie die wordt uitgezonden is gewoon een spiegel dus in de werkelijkheid is het heel anders 😊
For the pronounciation of Flevoland, see it like this. Flay (like clay) -vo (like volVO) -land So Fle (flay/clay) vo (volVo) land Fle-vo-land Good luck to anyone trynna learn pronounciation👍
It says a lot about the guy that everyone was so friendly to him and allowing him to film them. He seems like a genuine nice person and really interested in other.
The guy speaking Urk’s says: I can tell you something about this boat, we have this boat for 12 years. We sail it to Amsterdam and we sail it to Vlieland. We had plans last year to sail to England but that sadly got canceled.
Been on Urk a lot for work on some of the inland cargo-vessels that come from there and it's like was said a few times in the video... They respect you if you work hard and /or deliver a good product and overall they're nice people and nobody tried to convert me to anything, maybe coz i'm from another old fishing village x
called Scheveningen... What's really good, work done... customer satisfied.. payed in full immediately on 40 to 50K jobs/equipment...
People in Urk still say they live "on" Urk, instead of "in" Urk.
A Staphorst might even beat Urk by a country mile in being conservative Charlie ;) BTW you can't live in Urk, you live on Urk it is an Island still though it's landlocked for a while already LOL
The Urkers dialect as far as I could understand, he does not pronounce/articulate well:
He really had the boat for 12 years by now, it began in Amsterdam. He sailed with it to Friesland/ Vlieland (unsure). There was a plan for 4 years to sail it to England, but alas/ sadly that did not happen.
Oh yes, they are véry religious!
The part that wasn't translated (I'm not from Urk, but the dialect isn't that heavy): I can tell you something about the boat. This boat we have for 12 years. We use it to go to Amsterdam, we used it to go to Vlieland. Last year we wanted to go to England but it did not happen.
The dialects from the bible belt don't differ all that much from one another. My grandparents spoke Flakkees dialect among eachother and if you can understand that you can understand Urks too.
@@rovanderby759 as a spakenburger can confirm but thats because the dialect here has faded out a lot there is dictionary from Spakenburgs to Dutch and a lot is just words or certain (gezegdes) which is very normal for a dialect it isnt like the whole grammar changed. most sounds are just prolonged. i still say bikbal instead of stuiterbal...
Indeed im from belgium and understood it completely.. and there are dialects here in belgium I dont understand, so there are probably some dialects in the netherlands who differ much more from "standard dutch"
@flopjul3022 Springbal in belgium :-) never heard of bikbal though I would have guessed it was dialect for bitterbal 😂 because "bikken" is a dialect some of us use for eating 😅
'Kibbeling' is pieces of deep-fried, battered cod (sometimes pollock) sprinkled with spices afterward.
It's delicious. We eat it all over the country. Just had some (Brabant)
In UK we have a type of fish called Kipper. I wonder if the words are related
@@tick999 No, we also have Kipper in the Netherlands. It's smoked herring.
@@daviddevos3518 must be those dam Frisians coming over here taking our women and forcing us to use their language
@@tick999 😂
Flevoland, not Flavoland. The "dialect" is perfectly understandable for any Dutch person. Kibbeling is the Dutch "fish and chips". My mother would have it every Thursday when the fishmonger set up business in the nearby parking lot.
The e is more pronounced as "a" as in say.
Kibbeling is chunks fried fish. Without chips though, although a perfect accompaniment.
Wikipedia: There are fewer than 30 confirmed patients known to suffer from this disease; 22 of them are from the Netherlands and 14 are from Urk.[3] Whilst previously an island in the Zuiderzee, in 1942 the land was reclaimed.[4] However, the residents still remained a closed community, and the centuries of isolation have led to a consequence in almost exclusive intermarriage. This has increased the risk of certain hereditary disorders such as Van Buchem's and has promoted several hereditary characteristics within Urk.
Urk is the dutch version of Alabama
10/10
yes
That was my first thought also😂
@@teringlijer4202 very original
together with the general bible belt
There is a certain beauty that the people are pretty much as you would expect, given the back story. You can watch this from Japan and realize that if you were born in an insular location, you would also have developed similar small-town traits, skewed towards your own country. What I mean is we really are one big family and not all that different. Credit to the guy filming.
5:50 really depends on the sea/road traffic and the bridge itself. the closest one to my home goes is between baarn and bunschoten which goes over the Eem(small river) and is about 20 meters long(the part that rises) in the cases of this bridge its one deck so it all goes to one side but you also have double deck where they have decks of about the same length going in either direction.
in the summer it might take a long time for it to go down again due to more boats being active there due to fun trips with higher boats. while outside of the summer when it goes up you might only have one boat that goes past and it goes up less regularly.
for a single boat i think about 2-3 minutes before the barriers are back up
25:00 the shot they have here is a Flügel, german(its a dutch drink tho) for chicken its very popular here in the Netherlands at parties
Kibbeling is acually a by product from the skandanvians. They used to catch Cod fish but trew away the heads. the Dutch fisherman in that area, bought up the heads and cleaned out the cheeks. The fried cheeks its the orginal kibbeling, now its also Cod filet, but that the history. nowadays dutch fisherman still fish and buy fish in Norway.
yeah if we had hills in urk they probably would have eyes.
i had a friend at school that came from another very self isolated village, Bunschoten.
and she had to test her partner, from the same vilage, to see if they were genetically compatible and have kids without any hereditary diseases. solely due to originated from an area with a small genepool.
also got an aunt that comes straigh outta katwijk!
that also has a population originating from just a few families.
which would explain some of my nephews' moronic viewpoints.
a small, marternal sided, genepool!
also could explain the chronic moustache of said aunt....reason why i call her my uncle-aunt!
I'm from Belgium, but I perfectly understood the guy, there are Dutch dialects that are much more incomprehensible.
Samuel is cool! Have met him twice here in Amsterdam in TV studio. He is making cool video's and he even shook the King Willem-Alexander a hand on his birthday (april 27; Kingsday)Edit; well Charlie, i even didnt knew everything from Urk, allthough i have been there 3 times for a half day. I really like this to see! 🙏
24 churches and 22.000 inhabitants, some churches have room for over 1000, 1500 people
Urk being "the most conservative village" is a matter of debate. But they are most certainly not all goody-two-shoes.
And the drugs doesnt grow there or isnt being produced there! Only used there! Im born and raised in one of the most beautiful notorious city's of the Netherlands thats 'Kampen'! Its a 20 minutes drive away from Urk and for sure the place to know if u wanna know what the Netherlands is and or even more was a thousand years back!
😂 Urk is btw not the most conservative but lets say its one off the most conservative places in the Netherlands!
The Wieringermeer was the first polder that was reclaimed from the Zuiderzee, and the land was added to the province of Noord Holland. Initially its creation was planned before building the Afsluitdijk, but the need for agricultural land changed the plans. In april 1945 the Germans blew up the dikes to prevent invasion by the allied forces. By the end of 1945 the inundation was already reversed, and reconstruction was done very quickly
Ik denk dat veel Nederlanders wel begrijpen wat de meneer zegt . Ik ben geboren in Haarlem en ben gewend aan Amsterdamse dialect. Nu woon ik al een tijdje in Amersfoort provincie Utrecht waar je ook meerderen dialecten worden gesproke omdat er verschillende dorpen om heen liggen zoals Nijkerk, Leusden, Hoevelaken en spakenburg. Boeren plaatsen met Vis, vee en groen teelt.
As the vast and convincing majority of The Netherlands is not involved in any religion, or they are atheist, it usually are the small fisherman communities or other rural communities in which religion plays a dominant role in daily life. When you're not from around but you're of good will and you're not aware of how the dominance of a religion or church may be locally one can easily get into conflict with offended locals. I mean when a lady wears a bikini and a typical beach dress and she wants to visit Urk on a Sunday like that....well a riot is guaranteed, since dressing like that on the day of Christ is offending to the max locally, while in other (non religious) coastal areas women dressed like that will not even be noticed since all women are dressed like that on any day of the week so also on Sundays.
Now this example is a reason why the people of Urk and other Strong Religious Communities have that reputation of being disrespectful / even violent towards people for whom Sunday is like Saturday a weekend day off; so nothing special, although this way of dressing is a constitutional right every woman has all over The Netherlands, and jet rejected in Urk and comparable Strong Religious Communities.
So atheists are therefor limited in where they can go and how they can dress and what they actually can do.
Their Religion is so dominant that an other way of looking at things, a more liberal way for example, is resolute out of the question and so this rigid opinion could easily be explained as strongly dismissive and inaccessible. This by the way was reason number one for these strong believers to leave The Netherlands back in the day of the founding fathers and go seek Religious Freedom in the USA, which they actually still do in 2024 since these religious communities belong to the very minority groups of The Netherlands and they feel the Atheist pressure from outside their communities.
@dutchyjhome I'm from Urk and we've gotten kinda used to outsiders coming here on sundays when its warm to see the sights or chill on the beach. Some restaurants are open on sundays too for the tourism
It's not that the water is lowerd because that is not the case, urk is ingepolderd. If the water was lowerd all the saltwater would flow in so.
The dialect is pretty easy to understand, at least for me. Im from Groningen so i understand Gronings, but i also understand Drenths, cause they are pretty close, and Urks really sounds a bit like Drenths in my opinion.
the pun is, Urk is still an island, but actually a really nice town
Its not a crazy dialect to be honest..
Im from belgium and understood it completely, if you are fluent in the language this shouldnt be a problem.. there are dialects here in belgium that i understand much less than this :-) so im pretty sure there are also mich harder dialects in dutch
For a Dutch person that dialect is very easy to follow.
marrying your full blood cousin was still common a few generations ago, this is a thing for many fishing villages.
just look up the surnames in a community like Volendam (or Urk).
Eendracht maakt macht. Like anywhere else in the world - sometimes some of the people look down on others. For me it doesn't matter. We are all the Netherlands and the people from Urk are crazy hard workers. And they just as much part of the Netherlands as all the other towns and cities. Groeten uit Twente!
`Now i´m speaking in dialect. I can tell you something about this boat. We have this boat for 12 years and we go to Amsterdam, to Vlieland and we had plans to go London but that is not going to happen´ Translation of the Urker.
Not londen, England he said
Flemish people have little problems understanding any dutch dialect even when they try really hard, except people from groningen and friesland but these people are hard to understand for anyone dutch. 😅
@@googleaccountuser3116 As a Fleming from Antwerp I have absolutely no problem understanding any Dutch dialect. Except for pure Frisian but that I do not consider Dutch, to me that's more a kind of Scandinavian type of Germanic language.
Bijna, hij zei dat ze begonnen in Amsterdam and zeilden naar Ameland, en dat ze plannen hadden 4 jaar door Engeland te zeilen maar dat ging niet door.
Urkers is a Low Saxon dialect, not Dutch
he roughly says "Nah now i'm speaking in dialect, i can tell you something about the boat ... this boat we really have already 12 years and we go with it to Amsterdam. we sail to vlieland, were planning for 4 years to sail to England but that is unfortunately canceled"
Work on the fishing ships is awfull, it is a week without sleep, because the caught fish is being processed all the time. You can snatch an hour or two of sleep at most. Then you have one day off to sleep and then it starts again. This fucks people up, especially the young people.
But it pays good.
Great reaction video ❤👍
here it comes the translation from the sailer "so now i am talking in dialect and i can tell u something about the boat. this boat we have for 12 years en we started in Amsterdam we sail with it to Vlieland we where planing to sail to England for 4 years but sorry to say that that didn't happen" hope it helps
City? I thought Urk was a inbreed village. Greetings from Volendam 🤣🤣🤣
Inbreed? And thats coming from a place where half the population is named "Tol"... 🙃
Volendam? Isn't volendam a super pro PVV town?
The dialect kinda resembles the Frisian language. A lot of similar words. ( Urk is not that far away )
So the dude says:
Ei at een krielkien mit gerespte kase op de ossebosse noa dat ie mit troanen ut uus uut vluug omdat z'n opoe em een nuuk onger de tafel verkocht adde.
Now the real translation:
Now, I'm speaking in dialect.
I can tell you something about the boat again.
We got this boat for 12 years and we take trips to Amsterdam, we sail to Vlieland, and we were planning to sail to England, but that's sadly canceled.
Yess like my dialect i from Groningen😂 He visitor Vlieland another Ireland
They have the boat for 12 years. They sailed all tge way to Scheveningen with it. 4 years ago they wanted to sail to England with it but the trip fall through and it never happened
I live in Emmeloord, right next to Urk. In 2019 we had the "slag om urk" which was just a bunch of Moroccan people from Emmeloord vs Urk people having beef. And with every kind of festival we have in Emmeloord there are always "Urkers" that want to fight. Also our cinema in Emmeloord has a lot of Urkers visiting because they dont have their own cinema and my friend who used to work in that cinema told me the Urkers are the worst customers.
For Dutch people it's not so hard.
He said they've had the boat for 12 years and started in Amsterdam sailing to Ameland.
They planned to go sail through England for 4 years but it didn't happen.
This video really Urks me, man...
You can compare Urk and Staphorst to the bible belt in the US.
Those bridges you find everywhere the highway crosses a big waterway. So i don't understand he never seen it before. Maybe he crossed them without realizing
hey bro,i'm drinking coffees in same bleu cup like yours lol
i can understand him,it sounds like my dialect,west flemish...
From Friesland I understand Urk's without problem, but it's still with dialect.
I don't know if it's the most conservative. But they are most definitely the biggest community being conservative openly
The man speaking dialect is talking about his boat, places he took it to, and how he wanted to take it to England, but that didn't happen in the end. It's not even a very difficult dialect tbh, most words are the same but pronounced with more of a drawl. A few letters have a slightly different sound.
Edit: I was just reminded that the following happened in Volendam, not Urk... left it here anyway as an example of why "youth of today" narratives very often have causes you know nothing about. I do believe every fishing village, which Urk and Volendam both are, have some very stressful stuff going on, what with that being a somewhat uncertain and dangerous way to make a living. But that fire was indeed somewhere else. End edit.
Coke island is what happened after a horrific fire in a café called 't Hemeltje maimed a lot of the youth living there at the time. The cops had trouble dealing with those youths afterwards because burn wounds will often stay painful and whenever they tried to physically remove youngsters from wherever they were causing mayhem, the youngsters would cry out in pain. Many of them were also very depressed about losing friends in that fire and being maimed themselves. As a result, drug use became common. It would seem it stayed that way after that.
The café where the fire happened was called 't Hemeltje. Meaning little heaven...
Berenburg, the drink they mixed with cola, is a very well known Dutch jenever or gin.
Thank you for telling the story behind it ... unless you´ve walked in someone elses shoes , feel for the youngsters ´ve lived with cronic pain since 8th grade but that and I know how hard it is when every touch hurt must have felt more like hell.
Jacqueline_Thijsen, ik snap niet zo goed wat je bedoelt, de brand in Het Hemeltje is in Volendam gebeurd. Niet in Urk.
@@estherkwakman2384Oei, je hebt gelijk... en ze liggen niet eens echt bij elkaar in de buurt... ik ga het aanpassen.
Beerenburg is not really gin or jenever, it only has jenever as basis, but Be(e)renburg is too unique to put it away as gin or jenever. It would be the same as calling yoghurt a milk.
And there's the Urker Maffia... Fish, coke: you name it, they got it 🤣😂🤣
21:40 some urk fisherman got caught fishing tons of dr8GS from large cargo vessels comming from south america.
It is a pity that several commenters here (probably from the Randstad) think they have to criticize the places in the Netherlands where Christian values and customs are still honored. Bah!
should we give Urk to Germany or make it another country😂❤?
so what vhe said was that he owned the boat for 12 years they even sale from urk to amsterdam it's just like normal american and a texas accent i guess.
it is not that different everyone in the netherlands can understand them
Ik kan HOORN DAT URK OOIT BIE OVERIESSEL HEURDE! ;-) (i can hear from the dialect that it was once part of the province overijssel)
sounds almost icelandic
Urk is NOT a city. It's a former island that now is attached to main land. There are far more conservertive places in the Netherlands than Urk.
Being from Rotterdam I can easily understand his accent
Urks accent is almost the same as the Gronings accent ✌️🇳🇱
That's because they are both a part of the Low Saxon language :D
Again about the Nederland is time for belgium like you promised
There are probably more weirdo's and extreme people to film in the Netherlands.
It is much the same as any dialect of any Noord Oost polder
sorry... but: Flevoland = Flay-fo-la-nt 😅
That is true there is a decies cald the urkerziekte du 2 the smal gene Pool
Urkish resembles a Belgian accent
I only understood that 4 years wanted to tour England and unfortunately that didn't happen.
and no im not for urk xd
Guys as a native Dutchman DON'T move here we don't have houses and we don't have the Space. The house prices are off the scale
As a Dutchman I want people that are here " temporary" to move out so I an have a house... Finally
I'm waiting for the moment the foreigners you blame are out and you realize it was capitalism all along.@@depressedutchman
We do have houses and space. Even at a normal prizes. But everybody wants to live in the Randstad.
@@ilonkagootjes858oh ja? Hier in Brabant zijn de wachtlijsten ook 10+ jaar en koop is als alleenstaande ook niet te doen..
We clearly dont have the space, or you want to destroy the cultural landscape of the netherlands that is left over also.
"City"
Wouldn't call Urk a city.. Not even a town. It's just a village on a former island.
It's a bit bigger than a village nowadays
@@SlashProducts I grew up in a village bigger than Urk, so still a village.
@woutersplinter4981 the original inhabited island part is only about 10% of current Urk. With 22.000 people, multiple shop centres and ridiculous amount of churches you can safely call it a town
@@SlashProducts as I said, I grew up in a village, of 24.000... but nevertheless a village. Leeuwarden or Gouda for example is a town, eventhough we call it a "stad" in Dutch, is the English term city not fitting. Calling Urk a town is an insult to the beautiful towns of the Netherlands.
It's not just Urk or Volendam. If you want to move to the Netherlands as a conservative, go and life in rural areas. I'm from Drenthe.
👎
I'm a conservative and live in the city. Nothing wrong with it - depending which city. Breda is wonderful.
She saying that 'Urk' was actually named 'Ork' and in dutch we call a 'killerwhale' a 'Orka'.
Fishers villages will be fishers villages. The same it said about many fishers villages. Urk is a very violent. Many people have too long toes.
Yeah go there with your hoodie.
I am from Limburg but I can easily understand exactly what he says that Urker guy.
Once spent like an hour there and that was already too long. Also people tried to convert me lol.
This is the most Dutch/cristian in Netherlands
Yes don’t go there
Bible Belt of the Netherlands
De taal is niet te verstaan zelfs voor een normaal sprekend nederland is het niet te verstaan ze zijn erg agressief ze gaan gelijk er op gelijk slaan of schelden, maar ze kunnen ook heel vriendelijk zijn dus dat nieuws is ook niet zo vriendelijk dus zelf ondervinding de serie die wordt uitgezonden is gewoon een spiegel dus in de werkelijkheid is het heel anders 😊
Urk is a right wing village
Yawn.
For the pronounciation of Flevoland, see it like this. Flay (like clay) -vo (like volVO) -land
So Fle (flay/clay) vo (volVo) land
Fle-vo-land
Good luck to anyone trynna learn pronounciation👍
6:15
KEEP TO THE RIGHT WHEN DRIVING SLOW @#$%@& TOURIST!
Ik vertstoa alles moar ik kom ok ut Utrech doa proaten we oak nog plat
Ik spreek echt geen woord plat ( kom uit eindhoven)
Maar dit is toch niet moeilijk om te verstoan