Not sure if anyone mentioned this yet, but the general etiquette for who has the right of way on narrow trails in the mountains is that the people going uphill have the right of way. This is usually because they have less of an overview of the trail and often have a tempo going which is important for them to keep up. Sometimes the person going uphill would like to stop for a rest, but the person going downhill should absolutely stop and move out of the way to let the person going uphill go by first.
I moved to Switzerland a few months ago and your video is very helpful and purrrfect! So far I think I have established that the border between "Grüezi" and "Grüessech" is somewhere between Interlaken and Thun on the one side, and Luzern on the other. The research continues. It involves visiting beautiful places and enjoying magnificent vistas, it's hard work, but someone's got to do it.
Hello, I am happy you enjoy the videos! Yeah youre about right, there is a lot of different ways to say Grüezi 😄 enjoy your time here and thanks for watching!
I love your channel. And I love Switzerland. ❤️ I was there for 2 weeks a year ago, and it was the most beautiful place I’ve ever seen. My family came from Switzerland to America in the 1800’s, so it felt like coming home. Thank you!
Thank you. Talking about public transportation, it's a shame that Swiss people have not been taught how to behave properly in public transport vehicles, except for the noise and eating habits you mentioned in the video. They often walk on both sides of the platform and stairs at the same time (as opposed to right or left side marching in most countries), occupy seats and stroller-dedicated places with their backpacks and baggage, won't help mothers with strollers get off the vehicle (sometimes they even block the door exit), they don't step off the vehicle to let people get off more easily, don't take off their backpacks in crowded bus/metro premises, skip the line and get on a vehicle before you etc. It sounds like a paradox, but no one has apparently taught them how to be more considerate and, without specific rules, it's a chaos (do they need rules for everything or aren't they just trained to use common sense?).
Hallo Greg, sehr schöns Video - merci viu mau! I chume eigentlech vo Bärn, bi aber vor nes paar Jahr nach Dütschland zoge. Ds Büsi isch mega härzig gsi, dört ufem Zuun 🥰 - Mach wiiter so!
Hello, your channel is great, very useful, i am very glad i found it. Thank you. Last year i visit kanton Wallis for a week, an amazing place ♥. Different kanton, different dialekt. I would like in foreign country use some local words…i used hope it was correct : greetings-morge (in the morning), during the day: hallo, thank you: merci, in restaurant: eis bier bitte, es grosses bier 😄. Say goodbye: schöne tag. Are these words normal in kanton Wallis ?
Thanks for watching my videos 🙏 yes it sounds good to me, you will be understood lik this 😄 just never say Grüezi there, it implies to them that youre from Zurich and they hate this idea 😄
Hi Gregg, can you provide me some banks that don't charge when drawing cash from their ATMS pls? Just asking because you mentioned that you still like cash there. My bank does not charge for drawing cash anywhere in the world but I know that there are banks do charge if it's a foreign debit card.
Not sure if anyone mentioned this yet, but the general etiquette for who has the right of way on narrow trails in the mountains is that the people going uphill have the right of way. This is usually because they have less of an overview of the trail and often have a tempo going which is important for them to keep up. Sometimes the person going uphill would like to stop for a rest, but the person going downhill should absolutely stop and move out of the way to let the person going uphill go by first.
I moved to Switzerland a few months ago and your video is very helpful and purrrfect! So far I think I have established that the border between "Grüezi" and "Grüessech" is somewhere between Interlaken and Thun on the one side, and Luzern on the other. The research continues. It involves visiting beautiful places and enjoying magnificent vistas, it's hard work, but someone's got to do it.
Hello, I am happy you enjoy the videos! Yeah youre about right, there is a lot of different ways to say Grüezi 😄 enjoy your time here and thanks for watching!
Funny.. exactly when you said "with companie" the cat poped -up. :-)
He was a paid actor 😄
Hoi Greg! Great tips 👍Merci!
Your cat is sooo cute! Your cat enjoy the good weather 😊
I love cat ❤🐈
Thank you for watching! 😃
I love your channel. And I love Switzerland. ❤️ I was there for 2 weeks a year ago, and it was the most beautiful place I’ve ever seen. My family came from Switzerland to America in the 1800’s, so it felt like coming home. Thank you!
I am super happy you enjoy my content!! Also it‘s great you felt that way!!
Waawuu really useful info5 thanks for sharing Greg
You are amazing ! I love each single video.
Thank you so much! 😊😊
Thank you. Talking about public transportation, it's a shame that Swiss people have not been taught how to behave properly in public transport vehicles, except for the noise and eating habits you mentioned in the video. They often walk on both sides of the platform and stairs at the same time (as opposed to right or left side marching in most countries), occupy seats and stroller-dedicated places with their backpacks and baggage, won't help mothers with strollers get off the vehicle (sometimes they even block the door exit), they don't step off the vehicle to let people get off more easily, don't take off their backpacks in crowded bus/metro premises, skip the line and get on a vehicle before you etc. It sounds like a paradox, but no one has apparently taught them how to be more considerate and, without specific rules, it's a chaos (do they need rules for everything or aren't they just trained to use common sense?).
Hallo Greg, sehr schöns Video - merci viu mau! I chume eigentlech vo Bärn, bi aber vor nes paar Jahr nach Dütschland zoge. Ds Büsi isch mega härzig gsi, dört ufem Zuun 🥰 - Mach wiiter so!
Hey Vanessa! Freut mi, dass i dem video chli heimat findsch 😄 Hoffe chan no es paar video mache, wo der gfallet! 😊
Another excellent video from Greg. Merci, und danke
Thanks for watching!
I really enjoyed this video. Very informative. Hope to see more of this type of video.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for the feedback! I will make more of these kind of videos 👌😄
Thank you 🙏🏼
Bro ❤
Hello, your channel is great, very useful, i am very glad i found it. Thank you. Last year i visit kanton Wallis for a week, an amazing place ♥. Different kanton, different dialekt. I would like in foreign country use some local words…i used hope it was correct : greetings-morge (in the morning), during the day: hallo, thank you: merci, in restaurant: eis bier bitte, es grosses bier 😄. Say goodbye: schöne tag. Are these words normal in kanton Wallis ?
Thanks for watching my videos 🙏 yes it sounds good to me, you will be understood lik this 😄 just never say Grüezi there, it implies to them that youre from Zurich and they hate this idea 😄
@@SwitzerlandInsider thank you. Have a great day to Switzerland 😉
Hi Gregg, can you provide me some banks that don't charge when drawing cash from their ATMS pls? Just asking because you mentioned that you still like cash there. My bank does not charge for drawing cash anywhere in the world but I know that there are banks do charge if it's a foreign debit card.
Your talking cat is hilarious!!
Yeah, I will stick to Hello!
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
❤
I thought the german way of greeting was Hallo...
You can also say that, but in Swiss German there are more variations
@@SwitzerlandInsider oh I c...that was Swiss German.... danke fur clarifying
Screaming on top of their lungs....I know which country they are from 😂😂😂