Berlin rent cap has really messed with the market. Many landlords prefering to make a loss than rent out at a lower price, meaning it's really difficult to find a place at the moment
As a german, I often watch these "This is Germany"-Videos mostly, because I want to say: "Nein, das ist nicht wahr!" (no, thats not true!). But I can't - This Video shows the most accurate review about living in Germany.
I'am german and there is one thing wrong in the video: i don't know any one living in a tiny house. That is a quite unusal thing. But everything else is true :-)
@@AberBitteMitSahne21 Jepp. I would very much like to, but the bureaucratic hurdles are not fun. It's not, like you can just park a tiny house anywhere you like and living in a Camper is basically not allowed at all. You have to have a residence in an actual building and bullshit like that.
@@AberBitteMitSahne21 Also ich werde mir in ca 5 Jahren ein Tiny House kaufen. Und gerade heute habe ich gelesen, daß ca. 30 km von mir eine Tiny House-Siedlung entstehen wird. Es gibt auch immer mehr Anbieter dieser Häuser in Deutschland.
cake forks are absolutely the most important things in my kitchen! eating cake with something else - with a teaspoon or a normal fork is like drinking fizzy cold drinks from a porcellain cup instead of a glass. it works but it feels just so wrong :D
Back until the 1930s cake used to be eaten with a knife and fork. Then the idea came up to make things easier and get rid of the knife by combining both tools into one. Zackfertig! The Kuchengabel was invented.
@@cg6511 Ooooh no! I beg to differ. During the course of the last decade we inherited a lot of cutlery from dying family members and guess what? We are now proud owners of cake forks AND cake knifes (in fact enough to feed a Bundeswehr division). Yep, Kuchenmesser. They obviously came never out of fashion after the war, but were part of the "better cutlery". "Sonntagsbesteck", anyone? ;) If I had to take a guess I would assume that they came out of fashion somewhere during the 70s as I never saw my parents or their friends owing them.
@@kaidrache2395 I honestly dunno how old your grandparents are, but if they are as old as mine they are from well before the war. ;) And you never know if they even kept this cutlery from their own parents or grandparents, so....i'm not an expert and wouldn't deny that there might have been some timewarps in certain regions regards the sale of cutlery, but nonetheless the cake fork has been invented in the 30s, which doesn't mean that there might not still have been people eating cake like it were a steak in the 50s or so... ;)
@@cg6511 It's actually hard to tell because I'm missing information from the family here. First and foremost - you are right regarding their date of birth. Both sets of grandparents were born between 1914 and 1923. I assumed that these knifes went out of fashion in the 70's, because I was born in 1974 and I cannot remember using or even seeing them ever at my own parents when I was a child. But back to the topic at hand. You are probably right when you guess the 50s, reason being is that both sets of grandparents had to flee in 1945 (eastern Prussia and Prussian Holland respectively) and according to all the information I have available, none of them carried more than a single suitcase. The sets of cutlery we inherited are pretty nice, but not made of gold or silver. Even worse, it's for 24 people and stored in a specially designed bag. So I doubt that they already had it when they had to flee, just because it's a waste of space and pretty heavy. As I said, this is mostly guesswork, but if I had to flee and couldn't pack a lot of things I would go with money, documents, jewellery and that kind of stuff, but not with "worthless" cutlery. The years from 1945 to 1955 were pretty rough on my grandparents, so we can safely assume that the cake knifes were bought somewhere around 1955 to 1970. But once again, this is all pure guesswork ;)
As a German having traveled quiet some places of the world I can express with great confidence that the greatest thing about our homes among others is the windows :)
@@amywalker7515 That's the Fins. We just don't cage our kids and don't persecute parents until they end in jail just for allowing their kids to make simple experiences at the respective ages them are ready to move on their own.
I notice that many german houses or apartments tend to have better ventilations compared to the Dutch, Italian, French or the English. The only other comparable ones would be the nordic.
I would like to return the favor to the netherlands. I love visiting Venlo and the ocean and I like the bikes all over the place! Sadly currently we are unable to drive there because of the pandemic, I am really looking forward again to have a nice 2 weeks at Egmond aan Zee in a vacation home to wind down and just enjoy the beach there.
I’m from the UK, I need to visit some of my neighbours because I love new cultures and sites and touring places. The last time I visited the Netherlands was just to go to De Efteling a while ago haha, but I want to visit the Netherlands next time to take it in more and see new places.
@@vonpfrentsch Jo WTF?? Did you smoke Smth? I said you need "no advertisement("bitte keine werbung" in English means "no advertisement") stickers on your mailbox, because its a typical thing Germans do (atleast where I live) to stop getting unnecessary advertisement in their mail every morning...
And don’t worry if you don’t remember your max. allowed noise level... your lovely german neighbor will remind it to you with a sweet: “HALLOOOOOOOOO?????!!!!!”
There are several types of "Hallo" you should know 😁 "Hallo?!" first strike "Halloooo?!" second strike "Hallooohoo?!" third strike - expect a police car within 15 minutes
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German living - you can‘t just spontaneously stop by your friends‘s house, you have to make an appointment with them 😂 all the other things are normal for Europe
And there is nothing wrong about that! People should let their friends know if they plan to come over. I do not live in Germany but this is the right thing to do.
Here I am, in the U.S., wearing my Birkenstock ‘house shoes’ (that I *never* wear outdoors). Even after 50 years here, I wouldn’t think of wearing street shoes in my home! 🤢 Good German habits stick.
If you keep your regular shoes on when you visit someone in their home, they might say something like : "Wir sind doch nicht auf der Flucht, kannst ruhig deine Schuhe ausziehen." (We aren't on the run, you can take your shoes off).
@@karolinkiehl4097 I love that! Some Americans feel insulted if asked to remove their shoes when visiting, but I have a strict ‘no shoes’ policy. Don’t want to remove your shoes? Then don’t come into my home! Simple. I keep clean slippers for guests, and shoe covers for plumbers, etc. And I keep a pair of slippers in my car, to use when *I* visit friends’, because wearing shoes in someone’s home is *rude!* 😉
To go along with the tiny cake forks, REALLY important: the „cake lifter“ (Tortenheber). You simply can‘t serve cake without one. Not like the flat American cake knives which will also get the piece of cake you just cut with it to the guest‘s plate, German „cake lifters“ are like trowels with a bend in the handle and you‘d never cut a piece of cake with one (that‘s crude).
Don't forget the Duschekabinewasserabzieher! Permanent feature of any German shower😂 even guests are expected to get the old wasserabzieher out after their shower! (Otherwise they can expect a stern telling off from their hosts)
If you’re referring to what we call a “squeegee” in America, then some people in USA have those for their showers, too. But maybe it’s not as common as Germany.
You missed 2 German things “Dachwohnung” (under the roof apartment) and also the shared “stair sweeping schedule!” Don’t miss your day to sweep or else! Ask me how I know! 🤔🤣
@@ananyagupta3917 not in every apartment complex sometimes professional cleaning services do it for you but it cost extra and is part of the rent, to avoid that people do it themself.
But many houses have a service for that. But yes you are resposible for it, so if it is snowing in the winter, you need to get up very early and clean the snow.
A lot of the things you mentioned, apply to Poland, too. Majority of people live in flats, nearly every flat has a balcony (usually excluding the ground floor flats), you do get an assigned basement space, with each flat having their closed off area, we do wear slippers/house shoes (we don't understand walking around the flat in shoes we were just walking in outside), square pillows, etc.... Haven't lived in Poland for nearly 10 years now, I keep forgetting how similar things are between a lot of different countries in Europe.
Rollshutters are not a German invention. They are more popular in tnhe hot parts of Europe.. French also use shutters but the old-fashion ones. RS are becoming more popular in North America.
@@nevazuchtaugsburg Nun, die Deutschen überfielen Polen, zerstörten und beraubten es. Sie haben sich einen Teil Polens angeeignet, und heute tun sie so, als wüssten sie nicht, worum es geht. Heute raubt ihr immer noch andere europäische Länder aus und denkt, ihr wärt besser. . . ich frage mich, warum? Um ehrlich zu sein, muss man sagen, wie es ist. Deutschland ist kein ehrliches Volk für mich.
Finland is very similar except the apartments are smaller and we leave the kitchens in place when we move. You missed out the main point,everything works as it should.
Finland is such a wonderful country. I feel like German cities are way overcrowded. Once I came to Finland (especially Rovaniemi and Lappenranta) I immediately felt home. The countryside is so extraordinarily beautiful and all the reindeer's who are not shy at all! I just love your country and would love to live there myself some day.
Drum ziehen seit Jahren viele Münchner nach Augsburg, was sich auf die Mieten hier nicht gerade positiv auswirkt. Habe einige Münchner Nachbarn hier in meinem Viertel nahe der Autobahn. Man ist auf der A8 oder mit der Bahn sehr schnell in München. Bin auch einige Jahre lang zur Arbeit nach München gependelt.
I’m in the US. My husband started making our bed years ago by that double bed cover method. I didn’t like it at first because it’s not magazine picture perfect, but I’ve come to like it, it’s very practical.
When I lived in Germany I rented a small apt. It was a 2nd floor apt, in the owners home He constantly complained about my water useage. Which was minimal. What he really was complaining about, was I took a shower every day. Evidently water was a bill he wanted kept at the lowest cost he could get. I had to leave that apt. I could not stand being that uncomfortable, where i lived.
@@MrGlendale111 In the owners home - I think the problem was that he made a contract with you for Warmiete inklusive Wasser - so he had no Zähler to count how much water YOU used. Normally if you rent you have the Kaltmiete (rent only for the flat, no water, heating, energy), and pay thoses extras depending on how much you actually consumed. He just wanted to keep your water use to a minimum, becuase that way he would not have lost money if you used more than he had calculated befor.
@@dasrazzul The rent included the water. So yes it was an agreement, and my main useage was a daily shower. I was gone all day at work, and I lived alone. So my water useage was very little. So it was that daily shower that bothered him. I lived in Kaiserslautern. Actually others in Germany told me they had similar problems, over water useage when renting Apts. It was a very small apt on his 2nd floor. I became a nervous wreck living there every time I turned the faucet on.
When eating cake the fork needs an edge and is only used for bite sized pieces. A real fork can be plunged into something and keep it in place with strength while you are cutting on the plate.
In U.S. you don't need fork and knife......you have fingers. And a tounge to lick afterwards.....kraftig.......and smear left overs into your paper napkin....hmmm.....ach ja....hoch lebe der unterschied
@@szokuspokus Berlin isn't german. When you want to see german culture go to small towns or villages. These big cities aren't anymore what they were in the past
n8flieger nah but Berlin looks and feels very Eastern European compared to the rest of Germany, which isn’t bad, I am half polish and I love going to Poland which has a very similar flair at times due to communism and cultural influennces of course.
Yes, not always the best idea, maybe, as a kitchen is often linked to a room's measurements... so moving with those shelves and surfaces is annoying and always requires some new investments then. Also a kitchen as a whole is a quite large investment for your first rented flat.... in WGs (the shared appartements) you usually keep the former renter's kitchen or look for a (partly) furnished appartment.
I was also surprised that this is supposed to be the norm. I'm from Germany and everyone I know didn't have to buy a kitchen or left it there if they bought a new one (The next renter paid some money for the kitchen)
@@EgoRaptorLPja, wie du sonstige Möbel verkaufen kannst, kannst du auch eine Küche an den Nachmieter verkaufen. Wenn du ihn überhaupt kennen lernst. Manchmal stellt der Vermieter auch eine. In der Regel nimmt man seine Küche mit und passt sie neu an. Meine hat 10.000 € gekostet vor 12 Jahren und ist zweimal mit umgezogen in meine dritte Wohnung jetzt. "Was nicht passt wird passend gemacht" Ehrlich gesagt fühle ich mich damit auch wohler zu wissen was hinter der Küche ist und nichts vom Vorbesitzer zu nutzen.
The apartment situation in Germany is INSANE!! We live in Colgone, and they simply ask for absurd amounts of many, for very small spaces. I don't understand how they let this get so far.
This is the result of zero interest monetary policy (European Central Bank, Draghi, Lagarde, whatever it takes, bazooka), asset price inflation and mass immigration. Not everyone has to pay the rent out of their own earnings.
@@imeldam1183 nope. This isthe result of cities giving a funk who buys property and so whole streets have been sold to foreign investors ...and are left empty!
@@Freiya2011 We have this too in London, it’s forcing Londoners out of their city. And we made the place interesting. Germany used to be very sensible with rent prices, what a shame it has gone this way
As for the small forks: When, for some reason, there are no small forks available, you often receive a small spoon instead of a big fork. It seems to be very important for some Germans that the cutlery is small ...
I'd say the most common type of house depends on where you live. If you live in a big city, it's mostly Mehrfamilienhäuser, but in little towns most people have an Einfamilienhaus.
@@jimmybaldbird3853 I know this is a year old but I disagree, my cousin had them at her home in Italy and you could barely notice they were there until they were down. And the parts you did notice fit the architecture style quite well
they are good, but they are pretty expensive, at least the aluminium ones they are double the price of PVC ones, which tend to deform more often from the heat / freeze cycle
I'm really amazed by your perfect pronunciation of the German language. I used to work in England for half a year and tried to teach my colleagues a few German words, but not the really difficult ones. Nobody managed to pronounce any of the words correctly. You must be very talented. Respect! 👍
Agreed! I've lived in California since 1987 (was 20 years old when I immigrated from Germany right after the Bundeswehrdienst). Many people can't tell that I'm German since I tried to wipe out that silly accent from the getgo. Btw how much practice does it take to lose the inability to pronounce the "th" properly, good grief? Yeah her German is outstanding, I'm guessing she has either a German mom or dad to speak German this fluently.
I take all this for granted these days but it was all a bit of a shock moving from the UK. Taking a fitted kitchen with you is odd. Ruhezeit in the middle of the day is an odd concept at first but can be a welcome break if somebody is refurbishing an apartment and you’re home during the day. I’ve heard that if you live in an Einfamilienhaus then you are responsible for clearing any snow that falls on the pavement directly in front if your house.
Sometimes even the street, you can be obliged to clear your (small) street. or Spielstr., and not just the pedestrian of snow and ice by the city or municipality code.
Even when you live in a Mehrfamilienhaus, sometimes landlords like to delegate the sweeping task either to the occupants of the apartment on the ground floor or have an actual "sweeping plan" posted that states on which days each tenant is responsible for sweeping the sidewalk. Often, this includes cleaning the common areas of the house, too
Legally, it’s the responsibility of the municipality, but they’re able to (and normally do) declare that to be the property owners job - who in turn does shift that job to their renters. With apartment buildings, it’s technically the same: the city declares the property owner to be in charge of clearing the walkway from snow and excessive leaves, and the owner(s) do decide if they do have their renters alternate turns (say: every x weeks) or spend the money on some professional janitor service to take care of “winter service”. Of course, landlords do recover those fees from renters as part of their rental fee. And, as a bonus tip: the final one (renter or owner of a home) paying for the fees for handymen, gardeners, janitors or the like can reclaim some percentage of their labour costs when filing your taxes.
Yeah, my aunt in Germany has this balcony door that works on the same principle as the Kippfenster. If you don't push the lever all the way down the door actually unhinges, or you might find yourself locked out on your balcony in the middle of winter.
I thought I broke the window the first time I opened it. I had already said "Tschüß" to my deposite when the landlord explained to me that German windows can be opened in two ways for "Frischluft" 😂 and I don't know where this lady is from but, where I live, houses don't have "Rollläden" 😅
@@mstaco509 I live near the border to the Netherlands and every house or apartment has these for every window. In the evening you let them down and in the morning up again. Older ones have to be rolled down or up manualy but the norm nowadays is having a switch for it. It´s cool to be able to make a room utterly dark in the middle of the day when you want to :D
One thing we found very German. Was the way we calculated the amount of heat we used in a multi-family house. There was a type of gauge on the radiator. It held some kind of gel/liquid that was measured. The more heat used the less was left in the gauge.
@@n8flieger948 Es bedeutet, dass es eine Liste gibt, wer wann mit der Säuberung des Treppenhauses dran ist und das passiert eben in einer rotierenden Reihenfolge.
I lived 10 years in Germany. When I married my German husband I moved into his bachelor apartment for two weeks until we moved to a bigger one. It was an “ Altbau” an old building literally, which is a pre-war builduing. The builduing had only 4 appartemnt one on each floor. It was a huge apartment with high ceiling wooden floors and big doors. But I was shocked to see that there werent even light bulbs or a sink in the bathroom or kitchen , there’s were only the electric cables coming out of the ceilings. The kitchen was an empty room so we had to buy a new whole kitchen and by that I mean the cabinets and sinks etc. I just saw the pipes on the wall. No closets, nothing. I lived out of my suitcases for three months until out wardrobes got delivered. Moving from Canada that was a tremendous shock for me. My husband was laughing and me in a good way, I was totally appalled that we needed to buy a new kitchen and batch rooms cabinets, sink and mirrors, etc he did a great job in explaining to me many things about his country. Either tenants sell their kitchen to next tenant or they take it with them. I’m now live in NY and we sold our gorgeous kitchen to the next tenant. I live there for 10’years. Germans don’t move from their flats very often. Interesting video. It reminded me a lot of my time there. It’s a lovely country.
Wenn ich umziehe finde ich es schön in die neue Wohnung beue und alte Dinge zu vereinen. Es muss aber nicht unbedingt das des Vormieters sein, so wie du geschockt warst eine leere Wohnung vorzufinden wäre ich es wohl eine Möblierte zu beziehen. Es hat ja auch den Vorteil dass man sich alles selbst nach Wunsch einrichten kann. Und wie war es beim Umzug Bach NY?
@@nevazuchtaugsburg Well that’s what I’m saying for me it was a shock , for you it’s normal. We come from different worlds. NY is amazing. I love my apartment. Modern, walk-in closets, more than one bathrooms, doorman, air conditioning in summer, I can’t complain. As a Montrealer, I’m glad to be back in this side of the pond, feeling like at home. Especially with the mentality and above all, the language.
its nice to know the concept of house shoes in Germany as this is something that is very common in Asian countries where you dont bring in your outside shoes into your home and store them somewhere near your house entrance and either walk indoors with out shoes or have designated home slippers.
@@taker800 I agree, I hate them so much 😭 I take my memory foam pillow with me whenever I stay at my friends' or family's place overnight because I literally cannot sleep on those lumpy sacks that have the audacity to call themselves pillows
My family migrated to Australia and I grew up there. The only thing I missed was the snow I remembered when living in Germany as a small child. My parents even took those lovely, cosy, square pillows and covers filled with feathers with them. There were only houses, no appartments, so the washing machine was always in the laundry at the end of the house, in a mostly wooden construction called "backout". The windows were horrible though, You had to slide them up to open them and could never be sure that they wouldn't come down again and behead you if you stuck your head out. But it wasn't an Australian habit to open the windows because of the flies. The front and back door had additional fly wire doors, the windows didn't. Well I suppose one can easily get used to different ways in different countries. As for cake forks, I've got some but hardly ever use them. They were just part of a set of cuttlery I bought at Ikea, a Swedish not German company. Australia was okay but I prefer living in Germany again and don't miss anything from Australia, especially not the snakes and goannas in our garden, red back and funnel web spiders under the roof and other creepy crawlies.
I have to say, your points about a very german home were oddly specific, yet super accurate. Even the damn pillow. My neck always hurts from sleeping on them, but I keep finding them at every house I sleep over. I hate these pillows.
The windows are pretty impressive and the lack of privacy between Einfamilienhäuser. When we are in our garden, our neighbours can see everything we do and viceversa.
@@colasalz2 In the US and UK, the windows mostly are slide windows (primarily horizontal, some vertical), so you only benefit from half the window opening for ventilation. Also, no tilt windows (Kippfenster).
@Ching Chong I have no idea. It's one of those particular traditional British home features, like open fire places or doors that hinge away from the corner. At least two of those architectural details have found their way across the Atlantic and are standard in the majority of US homes.
@@michaelakunz7679 de.statista.com/statistik/daten/studie/36495/umfrage/wohnflaeche-je-einwohner-in-deutschland-von-1989-bis-2004/ Da gibts verschiedene Statistiken auf dieser Seite. Diese hier zeigt z.B. das durchschnittlich pro Person 45m² Wohnfläche anfallen
A thing I have noticed a few times visiting Germany is the bathroom floor being slightly lower than the adjacent floor of the house/flat. This, to keep any flooding inside the bathroom. Never seen this outside Germany. Being a foreigner, I do not know how common is this practice, but would like to know!
I guess these are older houses, new ones have a flat floor. Up to the 1950s/ 60s a lot of households lacked even a washing machine, so washing your clothes was a mess and the water needed to stay in this room. If somebody asks, those were "the good old days" 😅
@@babelhuber3449 I would guess it's just the other way round actually and even a rather modern thing. With the rise of the concept to have barrier-free flats and especially bathrooms with walk-in showers (no more shower tubs etc in order to avoid having to step up into the shower and so on) it's simply essential that the bathroom floor is slightly tilted inwards. Otherwise you would ínevitably flood the whole apartment.
@@babelhuber3449 Well, there weren't even bathrooms, only toilets, in most houses built in the 50ies. And right, hardly anyone had a washing machine. There was a room in the cellar called Waschküche = laundry. There you would have a copper basin you could fill with water and heat it by making a fire underneath in a sort of oven. You would put your laundry into the basin and stir it, then rinse it in another tub. After you had finished your laundry, you would heat more water in the copper basin, fill it into the tub = Zinkwanne, and the whole family would take their weekly bath.
As a Canadian traveling through Germany I like to see how the Bachelor/ Studio unit look alike and the bathroom/balcony/living area ? any films? and the Lady spoke so fast and showed all in super speedy way! Cheers from Toronto! I love Berlin!
You can set the PLAYBACK speed ot 0.75 or .5.........or just stop it at certain points. Rachel does a great job of explaining and using the GERMAN words when necessary to make her point. SPOT ON!
As an immigrant, the most wonderful things I find about German homes: 1. Quality & Longevity of the buildings 2. The tilting/ swinging windows ❤️ The worst things: 1. Non fixed kitchens 2. The layout - usually, main door gets you into the kitchen instead of the living room.
@@dweuromaxx there’s a funny expression, a jaw dropping to the floor when brother showed to sister during their visiting Croatia the ways, cool, to open windows. They were from California. It was hilarious.
Address is the same format as Italy, same as for names on doorbells. Also rented houses are not always furnished (sinks are in there though!) and for the noise you're allowed to make and at what time 🙂
The pillow thing is spot on. I had a huge trouble to make people understand why I needed 2 pillows, the soft type found or one sturdy one. 6 yrs later they understood perfectly my requirements.
I even have two pairs of slippers (Pantoffeln/Hausschuhe). One pair for inside the house (my apartment and the basement), the other for outside the house (for instance when I bring out the Müll or pick up my mail).
I have the same - and I am British. I also use the outdoor pair to get things out of the car, take out rubbish etc: the indoor pair is used strictly for inside the house.
One of the first things I organised after moving to the UK was cake forks from Germany. My flatmates loved them. The Queen owns some as well by the way.
Great video, Rachel. Just one little thing: there are aspects where it's not so much a matter of Germany vs the rest of the world, but UK vs most other countries, e.g. the structure of an address: Germany follows the same structure as (nearly?) all the other European countries, while the UK follows the same pattern as (nearly?) all Anglophone countries. But this is a minor point. It's an excellent series, full of insights that ring true for anyone who has lived in Germany for a while! :-)
Maybe it'd be worth a video to address the general structure of German flats and houses compared to England or the US. One thing that always bugged me about American sitcoms was the fact that the front door always seems to lead directly into the living room. No hallway to hang up your jacket and put your shoes on a rack. Or the fact that today's standard American interior always has a slight "dated" aspect to Germans. The old "flick" light switches for example. Something you'd never see in German homes built after the end of the 60's.
@C J I visited the US and I noticed the same thing. In Germany there usually is a small hallway right behind the front door where you take off your coat and shoes. I think in part this is because in Germany it is generally seen as rude to bring your dirty shoes into someone's home so you need a place to put them. From my experience many Americans do not feel that way so that extra room isn't required.
Your point on American homes is IMO correct and the reason is that outside of a select few cities most Americans who live in houses built post-1950s enter and exit their homes primarily via the garage (car port). It's common to have a small "mudroom" or foyer with shoes and jackets etc next to the garage rather than the front door. Older houses are not like this because they weren't necessarily designed to have a garage and weren't so car centric - if they have a garage now it was added, and people usually park on the side or in back. But a modern American home puts the garage front & center and the only people who come in through the front door are guests.
Yeah, the same in the new house where my family lived in Australia. The front door led directly into the living room. The old house from the end of the 19th Century we lived in before had a hallway. It looked like the houses in the UK except for the verandah in front and a so called backout with the laundry at the back of the house. The toilet was not in the house but at the end of the backyard. There were many outdated things even in our new house, the light switches you mentioned, the strange electric plugs and sockets, the awkward windows you had to slide up, no cellar, no attic. But there was an open fire place in every room - something you really don't need in a hot country like Australia. I do prefer the practical standards in Germany.
In the Czech Republic (for those not good at geography, cough US people cough, the country bordering Germany in the East), it's same: - the house shoes - little forks - two duvets, square pillows - balcony as a prefered feature - wooden doors to (some) cellar units Other things are not so common here or aren't here at all.
Don't forget the "Mülltrennung" (Waste sorting) - it's a science in itself. Many Germans rinse plates before they put them in the dishwasher. And most cars have manual transmission because automatic transmission is widely distrusted.
Austrian/German housing compared to Ireland where I used to live for a while: rectangles are actually 90°; walls are vertical; doors close without a gap; floors are flat so that doors need not be an inch off the ground or would otherwise get stuck when opening them - and they are mounted in a way they stay in any angle you open them; air tight windows; gaps between cupboard doors are identical width top and bottom and edges and corners are flush; tubing and wiring is *inside* the walls only, one water tap for both hot and cold water... and I am talking about newly and professionally built housing here!
Hi there! I am a US American and have been living in Germany for wow, over 25 years! Most of that time in the eastern part of Saxony, so former east Germany. But also for some time in western Germany, and I’ve had friends from all over. I’ve seen basically everything that you mentioned. 🙂 One thing that really surprised me in Germany that you didn’t mention was spoons being served with cake! The small coffee spoons for stirring sugar into your coffee, like what we would consider baby spoons in the states, probably. I have experience cake forks as well, but more often it seems spoons with cake! I hadn’t thought about the names on the doorbells as being strange, but I guess maybe. I guess in the US I had so little experience with rental properties that I didn’t notice the difference! Lol. On homes in the states you also have a name on the door :-) One nice thing when you are hanging up pictures in your new home is that the electrical wires all go from any outlets or light switches directly up, so you know never to put it in the mail directly above an electrical socket or light switch. And to the left or right of that, you will never find a live electrical cord. Very practical. 😊👍🏼 I am fortunate to live in a region with very good tapwater, and I don’t do the bottled water thing. Even after living here so long, there are things that I just do my way. I’m also not as regular or thorough about airing the place out as most Germans would be, probably. Cleaning the communal stairwell, or your part of it, is another part of many rental agreements!
Noooo, Rachel! You're wrong about the square pillows! I hated them at first but now I can't sleep without one. Basically, you're sleeping on it wrong ;-) Just scrunch it up into a slight wedge with the thick bit at your head.
Felt pouches full of felt slippers for guests who forgot to bring their 'house shoes'. Not just separate duvets but separate mattresses and special bed frames (if that's the English word for Lattenrost - I don't even know anymore!) that can be adjusted to support the sleepers individual sleeping preferences. Water meters inside the flat. Mixer taps, or rather the complete lack of a separate hot and cold tap - which, in fairness is a good thing - especially in the bathroom. Thanks for all the great videos!!
I noticed all of this when i was working in both Düsseldorf then Vienna last year Rachel. I agree renting is expensive as i was looking to rent outside Vienna before being made redundant in February this year. So miss that way of life over in Europe as well as the public transport & the bakeries. Then again i am half swiss from the Graubunden so naturally am more comfortable in Europe. Tschüss und liebe gruße aus London.😊
I stay in Africa rather. Big space, big sky and where we do not think building with wood is better for the environment. Germans are disciplined, beautiful and friendly people non the less. I am partly of German heritage.
That's just a silly Stuttgardian issue or at max an issue of the evangelical parts of (Baden-)Württemberg (und ein Aussterbender noch dazu) but not something that would fit into a quick and dirty general overview about the country's manners as a whole. ;)
Cake forks are definitely not weird! Much nicer to eat your cake with a small fork than with a dinner fork. Available in England and Australia and probably elsewhere in Europe.
I agree and cafes who dont provide one receive my “look”. I received cake forks as a gift for winning a talent competition at school, as well as coffee spoons. OUr headmistress also taught us how to set a table, the full deal, and also an afternoon tea table. Greetings from Australia .
I like low noise environment and in that regard Germany would be my first choice on that level. The building where I lived was like a church, never heard any noise.
@@cookiekiller8563 Oh, where do you live? I lived in Landkreis FDB/AIC for about 10 years as it was closer to where I worked. And even in that village with a big cathedral there was no exceptional noise produced by the church bells.
We live in an "Einfamilienhaus" since 2010 over here in Germany, I came from Belgium and there were only some things that were different 👍 First we lived in a flat from 2008 to 2010 and it was common to have a list in which week you had to clean the stairwell ("Treppenhaus") an to sweep the sidewalk 😅🙈 And in winter you always had to shovel the snow in front of the house (but only one day, than it changed so you weren't the ONE to clean the sidewalk from snow for a whole week, but in our case it was Monday and Thursday 🤣🤷🏻♀️)
Jeder im Haus hat seine regelmäßigen Aufgaben. Deutsche sind fleißig und sparsam. Wer zusammen wohnt teilt sich auch die Pflege rund ums Haus. Außerdem ist Schneeräumen gesetzlich vorgeschrieben Räum-und Streupflicht 😅
I'm from Germany and live in England . I told my friends and colleagues about living in Germany 🤣🤣🤣🤣They couldn't believe it how different it is. I have to show them your video 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Zuerst,ich bin immer über dein perfektes Deutsch erstaunt. Du sprichst, akzentfrei, als wärst du Deutsche. 👍🏻 Zu dem Beitrag, er ist gut gelungen. Es stimmt wirklich, so viele Dinge sind typisch deutsch. Ohne Hausschuhe und Zollstock könnte ich nicht leben🤪. Wir sind schon ein komisches Volk. Man kann und darf uns gern haben 😊😉
@@Loren1389 ja, dass war auch mein erster Eindruck, als den Kanal zum ersten Mal angehört hatte. Hab echt Respekt dafür. Vor allem bei dem Aspekt, dass selbst viele deutsche die eigene Sprache und Grammatik nicht perfekt kennen. Mich eingeschlossen.
Also important: It's commonly called a "Zollstock" (inch stick), but it's actually a "Metermaß" (meter measure). There are no imperial units on it, only meters and centimeters. Also you use it to measure and don't poke stuff with it... ...hmm... ...aren't we strange...
How do these things compare to where you live? Any surprises?
Why are Germans so poor ?
Berlin rent cap has really messed with the market. Many landlords prefering to make a loss than rent out at a lower price, meaning it's really difficult to find a place at the moment
The whole Kitchen Rachel? WTH! 🤭 In America, maybe just Appliances . Thanks Rachel another great Vid 👍🤗
@@Yocarisfastlike They’re not.
@@Yocarisfastlike What is your definition of "poor"?
As a german, I often watch these "This is Germany"-Videos mostly, because I want to say: "Nein, das ist nicht wahr!" (no, thats not true!). But I can't - This Video shows the most
accurate review about living in Germany.
du auch?
I'am german and there is one thing wrong in the video: i don't know any one living in a tiny house. That is a quite unusal thing. But everything else is true :-)
@@AberBitteMitSahne21 You are right. I also thought the same.
@@AberBitteMitSahne21
Jepp. I would very much like to, but the bureaucratic hurdles are not fun. It's not, like you can just park a tiny house anywhere you like and living in a Camper is basically not allowed at all. You have to have a residence in an actual building and bullshit like that.
@@AberBitteMitSahne21 Also ich werde mir in ca 5 Jahren ein Tiny House kaufen. Und gerade heute habe ich gelesen, daß ca. 30 km von mir eine Tiny House-Siedlung entstehen wird. Es gibt auch immer mehr Anbieter dieser Häuser in Deutschland.
Me a German watching how Germans live: interesting
@Farb S xD
vor allem was soll dieser tiny hausscheiß. höre ich zum ersten mal. haben se versehentlich ein von der randgruppe befragt :D
@@Speed8reaker Wenn ich n Grundstück hätte würd ich mir eins holen. Günstig und minimalistisch
@@AgrestisAnima :D
@@Speed8reaker in meinem Umfeld sind tiny houses seit Jahren ein Thema.
cake forks are absolutely the most important things in my kitchen! eating cake with something else - with a teaspoon or a normal fork is like drinking fizzy cold drinks from a porcellain cup instead of a glass. it works but it feels just so wrong :D
😃
Back until the 1930s cake used to be eaten with a knife and fork. Then the idea came up to make things easier and get rid of the knife by combining both tools into one.
Zackfertig! The Kuchengabel was invented.
@@cg6511 Ooooh no! I beg to differ. During the course of the last decade we inherited a lot of cutlery from dying family members and guess what? We are now proud owners of cake forks AND cake knifes (in fact enough to feed a Bundeswehr division). Yep, Kuchenmesser. They obviously came never out of fashion after the war, but were part of the "better cutlery". "Sonntagsbesteck", anyone? ;) If I had to take a guess I would assume that they came out of fashion somewhere during the 70s as I never saw my parents or their friends owing them.
@@kaidrache2395 I honestly dunno how old your grandparents are, but if they are as old as mine they are from well before the war. ;) And you never know if they even kept this cutlery from their own parents or grandparents, so....i'm not an expert and wouldn't deny that there might have been some timewarps in certain regions regards the sale of cutlery, but nonetheless the cake fork has been invented in the 30s, which doesn't mean that there might not still have been people eating cake like it were a steak in the 50s or so... ;)
@@cg6511 It's actually hard to tell because I'm missing information from the family here. First and foremost - you are right regarding their date of birth. Both sets of grandparents were born between 1914 and 1923. I assumed that these knifes went out of fashion in the 70's, because I was born in 1974 and I cannot remember using or even seeing them ever at my own parents when I was a child. But back to the topic at hand. You are probably right when you guess the 50s, reason being is that both sets of grandparents had to flee in 1945 (eastern Prussia and Prussian Holland respectively) and according to all the information I have available, none of them carried more than a single suitcase. The sets of cutlery we inherited are pretty nice, but not made of gold or silver. Even worse, it's for 24 people and stored in a specially designed bag. So I doubt that they already had it when they had to flee, just because it's a waste of space and pretty heavy. As I said, this is mostly guesswork, but if I had to flee and couldn't pack a lot of things I would go with money, documents, jewellery and that kind of stuff, but not with "worthless" cutlery. The years from 1945 to 1955 were pretty rough on my grandparents, so we can safely assume that the cake knifes were bought somewhere around 1955 to 1970. But once again, this is all pure guesswork ;)
As a German having traveled quiet some places of the world I can express with great confidence that the greatest thing about our homes among others is the windows :)
Luft is a thing over there. 20 below zero and they've got their babies bundled up and outside in the baby pram.
@@amywalker7515 That's the Fins. We just don't cage our kids and don't persecute parents until they end in jail just for allowing their kids to make simple experiences at the respective ages them are ready to move on their own.
:))
And the bathrooms. With plugs and proper plumbing
I notice that many german houses or apartments tend to have better ventilations compared to the Dutch, Italian, French or the English.
The only other comparable ones would be the nordic.
I live in The Netherlands, and learning things about our neighbors is really nice, I love Germany and the German people.
I would like to return the favor to the netherlands. I love visiting Venlo and the ocean and I like the bikes all over the place! Sadly currently we are unable to drive there because of the pandemic, I am really looking forward again to have a nice 2 weeks at Egmond aan Zee in a vacation home to wind down and just enjoy the beach there.
Ich liebe Holland und die holländische Mentalität
I Love Dutch roads and infrastructure. Also your biking culture is just the best and makes Dutch cities much more pleasant and full of life 🇩🇪❤🇳🇱
oh i need to look up something similiar for the netherlands. love it there as well and super friendly people :-)
I’m from the UK, I need to visit some of my neighbours because I love new cultures and sites and touring places. The last time I visited the Netherlands was just to go to De Efteling a while ago haha, but I want to visit the Netherlands next time to take it in more and see new places.
There's always a corner full of Pfandflaschen
"How would you like to pay? In cash or by card?" - "In Pfandflaschen."
Bei mir nicht, habe keine Pfandflaschen mehr...
@@kessas.489 Which basically means that you don't buy any bottled beverages at all but only use a Soda Stream if any. ;)
Sodastream. Sparkels your own water.
@@michaelakunz7679 but if you only have hard shit, it only sparkles the calcium around ;)
Moved to germany last week! Can't even explain how much DW has helped me into my transition and got me prepared for Germany!
Willkommen bei uns! :D
@@johannesgulker8597 danke ! Dein Land ist wunderschön 😍
So glad we could be helpful :) and welcome!
Welcome! Please don't make too much noise on Sundays! :D
OK, I'm kidding.
dann wünschen wir dir Mal einen guten Start und herzlich willkommen :)
You also gotta bring your own "bitte keine werbung" stickers, or your mailbox will be full with advertisement papers every morning
So what? do you want the whole planet waste as much energy as the americans do? A flyer is a flyer too many in your mailbox.
@@vonpfrentsch yeah, thats why you need them in Germany, also everyone has them here
@@Mickey-wh4di Are you being sarcastic? We´ve only got one planet and every superfluuous printed item is one too many.
@@vonpfrentsch Jo WTF?? Did you smoke Smth? I said you need "no advertisement("bitte keine werbung" in English means "no advertisement") stickers on your mailbox, because its a typical thing Germans do (atleast where I live) to stop getting unnecessary advertisement in their mail every morning...
@@vonpfrentsch like your calling me sarcastic when I'm talking for exactly the same thing your arguing for?
And don’t worry if you don’t remember your max. allowed noise level... your lovely german neighbor will remind it to you with a sweet: “HALLOOOOOOOOO?????!!!!!”
Or the police will ring your bell
There are several types of "Hallo" you should know 😁
"Hallo?!" first strike
"Halloooo?!" second strike
"Hallooohoo?!" third strike - expect a police car within 15 minutes
I miss the phrase: "Es ist Mittagsruhe, verdammt nochmal!!!"
Or you will hear the scary thump of a broomstick against your floor.
@@frauleinbird Or the neighbor ring your bell, to tell you, that you're making to much noise
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Moved to Germany from California and fell in love with my tiny apartment! Love the German people!! All the best
My husband and I just moved to Germany from California too!
Stay safe you too.
@@WouldntULikeToKnow. Welcome! Please don't mind our idiots. They are not as bad as what you might be accustomed to 😅
Hopefully you abandoned the "liberal" bad political opinions that wrecked California
@@Rickuo US liberal = EU moderate. There are no real liberals in the US :D
German living - you can‘t just spontaneously stop by your friends‘s house, you have to make an appointment with them 😂 all the other things are normal for Europe
And there is nothing wrong about that! People should let their friends know if they plan to come over. I do not live in Germany but this is the right thing to do.
:))) the same its îs Holland :)) u need to call before to go in visot at Ur friends or parents even Austria
@@johnwick3846 :))))
I wish we were like this in Turkey
Because most of the times my flat isn't tidey and sometimes I'd be outside
That's pretty normal around the world I think.
Not just any old balcony: a south-facing one is preferable for a lot of us (unless you live somewhere really sunny like Freiburg)😂
I did originally have a scene on the balcony with a compass, checking the direction - will have to show that in the director's cut one day 😆
I really love my north facing balcony! You can use it throughout the summer without melting to death :)
@@m0llux yes... nowadays with all the climate change south-oriented flats can be a real pain.
@@RachelStewart04 really, that would have made the vedio better!
Yeah sunlight is important.
Here I am, in the U.S., wearing my Birkenstock ‘house shoes’ (that I *never* wear outdoors). Even after 50 years here, I wouldn’t think of wearing street shoes in my home! 🤢 Good German habits stick.
That's also something I learned to appreciate. It just creates the proper home feeling.
If you keep your regular shoes on when you visit someone in their home, they might say something like : "Wir sind doch nicht auf der Flucht, kannst ruhig deine Schuhe ausziehen." (We aren't on the run, you can take your shoes off).
@@karolinkiehl4097 I love that! Some Americans feel insulted if asked to remove their shoes when visiting, but I have a strict ‘no shoes’ policy. Don’t want to remove your shoes? Then don’t come into my home! Simple. I keep clean slippers for guests, and shoe covers for plumbers, etc. And I keep a pair of slippers in my car, to use when *I* visit friends’, because wearing shoes in someone’s home is *rude!* 😉
I dont know anyone who wears house shoes just wear sockets
@@karolinkiehl4097 we are straight to the point, shoes off plz. We don’t wear them in the house.
To go along with the tiny cake forks, REALLY important: the „cake lifter“ (Tortenheber). You simply can‘t serve cake without one. Not like the flat American cake knives which will also get the piece of cake you just cut with it to the guest‘s plate, German „cake lifters“ are like trowels with a bend in the handle and you‘d never cut a piece of cake with one (that‘s crude).
Me as a German: i stick my fork into the cake and lift it on my plate. Tada.
@@milchbrotchen2930 klappt das auch mit frischer Erdbeertorte? ;-)
@@LAE45 Schon, aber ziezerlweise. EIne Erdebeere nach der anderen! :-)
@Linda I beg to differ: There are "cake server(s) with blade" - from a famous company's shop.
@@paulsj9245 You're right, just found that. Goes to show you that we Germans are also out-dated/old-fashioned!
Don't forget the Duschekabinewasserabzieher! Permanent feature of any German shower😂 even guests are expected to get the old wasserabzieher out after their shower! (Otherwise they can expect a stern telling off from their hosts)
Definitely! You don't want to see mold, do you? :D
@@peterderpanda2922 it's not against mold. It's against the hard water stains than can build up on the glass
@@andreameyer-hubner1170 Oh, I use it on the wall tiles, since the ventilation is bad in our bathroom
Und nachher abwischen, sonst kalkt es.
If you’re referring to what we call a “squeegee” in America, then some people in USA have those for their showers, too. But maybe it’s not as common as Germany.
You missed 2 German things “Dachwohnung” (under the roof apartment) and also the shared “stair sweeping schedule!” Don’t miss your day to sweep or else! Ask me how I know! 🤔🤣
Is the sweeping thing a rule?
Klar, Hausordnung! :-)
@@ananyagupta3917 not in every apartment complex sometimes professional cleaning services do it for you but it cost extra and is part of the rent, to avoid that people do it themself.
I'm from Czechia and I can tell you, missing stair sweeping schedule is always the start of never-ending neighbour disputes :D
Kehrwoche
I heard that Germans, by law, must clear away snow that appears in front of their house.
Indeed, the walkway must be cleared from 6:00 - 22:00
And even if you rent this snow plowing service can be delegated to you. If you refuse to do it and someone slips, you are held accountable in court.
That's the same requirement for residents in some cities in the USA. Philadelphia, comes to mind.
But many houses have a service for that. But yes you are resposible for it, so if it is snowing in the winter, you need to get up very early and clean the snow.
in cities, snow plowing is a service provided by the city (you pay taxes - you get service!)
A lot of the things you mentioned, apply to Poland, too. Majority of people live in flats, nearly every flat has a balcony (usually excluding the ground floor flats), you do get an assigned basement space, with each flat having their closed off area, we do wear slippers/house shoes (we don't understand walking around the flat in shoes we were just walking in outside), square pillows, etc....
Haven't lived in Poland for nearly 10 years now, I keep forgetting how similar things are between a lot of different countries in Europe.
Rollshutters are not a German invention. They are more popular in tnhe hot parts of Europe.. French also use shutters but the old-fashion ones. RS are becoming more popular in North America.
Naja, Polen ist unser Nachbarland und war früher auch zur Hälfte deutsch. Auch die alten Bauwerke und Städte sind sich sehr ähnlich
@@nevazuchtaugsburg Nun, die Deutschen überfielen Polen, zerstörten und beraubten es.
Sie haben sich einen Teil Polens angeeignet, und heute tun sie so, als wüssten sie nicht, worum es geht.
Heute raubt ihr immer noch andere europäische Länder aus und denkt, ihr wärt besser. . . ich frage mich, warum?
Um ehrlich zu sein, muss man sagen, wie es ist.
Deutschland ist kein ehrliches Volk für mich.
Ah, the glorious Zollstock. We literally have one in every room of the house. Open a random drawer, there will be one of them
It‘s not a Zollstock. It‘s a Gliedermaßstab mit Zentimetereinteilung.
Wenn deutsch, dann aber so richtig 😂
Finland is very similar except the apartments are smaller and we leave the kitchens in place when we move. You missed out the main point,everything works as it should.
Finland is such a wonderful country. I feel like German cities are way overcrowded. Once I came to Finland (especially Rovaniemi and Lappenranta) I immediately felt home. The countryside is so extraordinarily beautiful and all the reindeer's who are not shy at all! I just love your country and would love to live there myself some day.
@@Tomatenmark-MarkA winter without any sunshine for months? Not for me.
@@mucsalto8377 doesn't have to. 😉😁
"alles in ordnung" otherwise folk really do get upset.
Beaurocracy, government officials and Deutsche Bahn would like a word
you forgot about the Kaffee for the Kuchen. one of my favorite things about living in Germany Kaffee und Kuchen
Hello, will you come to Germany often?
I really appreciate the Fliesentisch in the WG room.
Der Zentralrat der Rliesentischbesitzer ist empört!
The old, very 80s Fließentisch is one of the ugliest things on earth. The second one is unloved feet in awful Birkenstock sandals, ahaha!
Wow, ich mag wirklich, was du hier geschrieben hast
Leider nur ein Ein-Flieser.
Im schlimmsten Fall sogar nur Folie, die Holz Hocker gab es glaube oft als 3er Set.
@@kandelika2902 Get out of our Country! So redest du nicht mit uns mein Freund!
1:40 Alle Münchner haben bei den 17 € m² herzlich gelacht und dann geweint...
Was hat ein Schwabe in Berlin was ein Berliner nicht hat? - Ne Eigentumswohnung.
Drum ziehen seit Jahren viele Münchner nach Augsburg, was sich auf die Mieten hier nicht gerade positiv auswirkt. Habe einige Münchner Nachbarn hier in meinem Viertel nahe der Autobahn. Man ist auf der A8 oder mit der Bahn sehr schnell in München. Bin auch einige Jahre lang zur Arbeit nach München gependelt.
😂
ich aus Stuttgart hab den Kommentar gelesen gelacht, über Münchner die denken bei ihnen wärs teuer, meine mietkosten gesehen und dann geweint
@@magmalin Leider 😥😡😳
I’m in the US. My husband started making our bed years ago by that double bed cover method. I didn’t like it at first because it’s not magazine picture perfect, but I’ve come to like it, it’s very practical.
When I lived in Germany I rented a small apt. It was a 2nd floor apt, in the owners home He constantly complained about my water useage. Which was minimal. What he really was complaining about, was I took a shower every day. Evidently water was a bill he wanted kept at the lowest cost he could get. I had to leave that apt. I could not stand being that uncomfortable, where i lived.
I guess this is NOT a typical german- ist's totally normal to take a daily shower for most of the germans !
That Landlord was just a pig, the most ppl take a shower daily or more often.
@@ajrwilde14 I would say in his 60s.
@@MrGlendale111 In the owners home - I think the problem was that he made a contract with you for Warmiete inklusive Wasser - so he had no Zähler to count how much water YOU used. Normally if you rent you have the Kaltmiete (rent only for the flat, no water, heating, energy), and pay thoses extras depending on how much you actually consumed. He just wanted to keep your water use to a minimum, becuase that way he would not have lost money if you used more than he had calculated befor.
@@dasrazzul The rent included the water. So yes it was an agreement, and my main useage was a daily shower. I was gone all day at work, and I lived alone. So my water useage was very little. So it was that daily shower that bothered him. I lived in Kaiserslautern. Actually others in Germany told me they had similar problems, over water useage when renting Apts. It was a very small apt on his 2nd floor. I became a nervous wreck living there every time I turned the faucet on.
"If the cakes aren't mini, then why are the forks ?"
Im german and my my mind is blown..
German here too. I dont own tiny forks but eating cake with big forks just feels wrong.... Not wrong enough for me to buy tiny forks but still wrong.
Well it's not a mini fork. it's a cake fork....for cake. Makes sense to me.
@@HeyJuuu Ah yes. And cutting the Spaghetti I guess
When eating cake the fork needs an edge and is only used for bite sized pieces. A real fork can be plunged into something and keep it in place with strength while you are cutting on the plate.
In U.S. you don't need fork and knife......you have fingers. And a tounge to lick afterwards.....kraftig.......and smear left overs into your paper napkin....hmmm.....ach ja....hoch lebe der unterschied
This video made me realize that I have a very german house
Signed: an italian living in Italy
Same here in Poland :-)
Actually Berlin that I visited last year, thanks to blocks spread across the city, felt like Warsaw.
@@szokuspokus Berlin isn't german. When you want to see german culture go to small towns or villages. These big cities aren't anymore what they were in the past
@@Abcdefg25152 really? I‘d call that permanent motion, everything changes 😝 Grüße aus Berlin
Same in Bosnia!
n8flieger nah but Berlin looks and feels very Eastern European compared to the rest of Germany, which isn’t bad, I am half polish and I love going to Poland which has a very similar flair at times due to communism and cultural influennces of course.
It's so weird to watch it as a german person 😂 These are just normal things/ buildings 🤷♀️😂
Ja, aber echt interessant, dass so viele Dinge für andere "weird" sind :-)
I am living in Germany qnd i can say that this clip is 100% true...even with the small forks. We also have them
Great work as usual. Somehow I knew Rachel would be able to work beer into this video on German homes.
As a neighbour of Germany, I'm still amazed that you take your kitchen appliances with you when you move out. This is unimaginable for me.
Yes, not always the best idea, maybe, as a kitchen is often linked to a room's measurements... so moving with those shelves and surfaces is annoying and always requires some new investments then. Also a kitchen as a whole is a quite large investment for your first rented flat.... in WGs (the shared appartements) you usually keep the former renter's kitchen or look for a (partly) furnished appartment.
I was also surprised that this is supposed to be the norm. I'm from Germany and everyone I know didn't have to buy a kitchen or left it there if they bought a new one (The next renter paid some money for the kitchen)
In Quebec it's common to move out and in with stove and refrigerator
@@EgoRaptorLPja, wie du sonstige Möbel verkaufen kannst, kannst du auch eine Küche an den Nachmieter verkaufen. Wenn du ihn überhaupt kennen lernst. Manchmal stellt der Vermieter auch eine. In der Regel nimmt man seine Küche mit und passt sie neu an. Meine hat 10.000 € gekostet vor 12 Jahren und ist zweimal mit umgezogen in meine dritte Wohnung jetzt.
"Was nicht passt wird passend gemacht"
Ehrlich gesagt fühle ich mich damit auch wohler zu wissen was hinter der Küche ist und nichts vom Vorbesitzer zu nutzen.
Ja, die Kuchengabel ist schon sehr essenziell!😂
Nie besessen 😜
@@nidhoggvomwalde2280 Barbarisch. Du trinkst deinen Kaffee auch aus Gläsern.
Ich käme mir vor wie ein Tier wenn ich Omas Kuchen mit ner normalen Gabel essen sollte. Hallooooo......wir sind ja hier nicht bei armen Leuten
@@Fkp.777 recht hast du.. Da könnte man gleich ne Forke für nehmen. xD
Und natürlich gescheiter Kuchen oder Torte - als Deutsche sind wir ja nicht nur Weltmeister im Brotbacken ^^
German mam. I visited every two years from 1962. I love the german way of life greetings from england
The apartment situation in Germany is INSANE!! We live in Colgone, and they simply ask for absurd amounts of many, for very small spaces. I don't understand how they let this get so far.
This is the result of zero interest monetary policy (European Central Bank, Draghi, Lagarde, whatever it takes, bazooka), asset price inflation and mass immigration. Not everyone has to pay the rent out of their own earnings.
@@imeldam1183 nope. This isthe result of cities giving a funk who buys property and so whole streets have been sold to foreign investors ...and are left empty!
@@Freiya2011 We have this too in London, it’s forcing Londoners out of their city. And we made the place interesting. Germany used to be very sensible with rent prices, what a shame it has gone this way
@@Freiya2011 the same in Ireland. BANKSTERS robber everything...
As for the small forks: When, for some reason, there are no small forks available, you often receive a small spoon instead of a big fork. It seems to be very important for some Germans that the cutlery is small ...
I'd say the most common type of house depends on where you live. If you live in a big city, it's mostly Mehrfamilienhäuser, but in little towns most people have an Einfamilienhaus.
A thought popped in my head like it's been over 2 weeks and there hasn't been another video of meet the germans then this video popped in my feed.
@Gurdev Singh Only It's Rachel's telepathic powers...😉
I lived in Germany for a time as a kid and the Rolladens (blackout rolling shutters) are amazing. Wish they were commonplace in the U.S.!
They look tacky
@@jimmybaldbird3853 I know this is a year old but I disagree, my cousin had them at her home in Italy and you could barely notice they were there until they were down. And the parts you did notice fit the architecture style quite well
@@minecrafttroller1000 meh, they look cheap. I just buy the regular shades that are meant to block out sun. Looks much nicer.
they are good, but they are pretty expensive, at least the aluminium ones they are double the price of PVC ones, which tend to deform more often from the heat / freeze cycle
I'm really amazed by your perfect pronunciation of the German language. I used to work in England for half a year and tried to teach my colleagues a few German words, but not the really difficult ones. Nobody managed to pronounce any of the words correctly. You must be very talented. Respect! 👍
Agreed! I've lived in California since 1987 (was 20 years old when I immigrated from Germany right after the Bundeswehrdienst). Many people can't tell that I'm German since I tried to wipe out that silly accent from the getgo. Btw how much practice does it take to lose the inability to pronounce the "th" properly, good grief? Yeah her German is outstanding, I'm guessing she has either a German mom or dad to speak German this fluently.
That presenter is German...I thought, and checked linkdIn. Astonished she is a Brit 😮
@@kailarsich dachte auch sie ist Deutsche als Deutsche 😅
What a beautiful and cute black cat ❤️ Loved the idea that friends help each other with their move. That's really kind!
4:14 meow
I take all this for granted these days but it was all a bit of a shock moving from the UK.
Taking a fitted kitchen with you is odd.
Ruhezeit in the middle of the day is an odd concept at first but can be a welcome break if somebody is refurbishing an apartment and you’re home during the day.
I’ve heard that if you live in an Einfamilienhaus then you are responsible for clearing any snow that falls on the pavement directly in front if your house.
The snow thing is correct. ;)
Sometimes even the street, you can be obliged to clear your (small) street. or Spielstr., and not just the pedestrian of snow and ice by the city or municipality code.
Even when you live in a Mehrfamilienhaus, sometimes landlords like to delegate the sweeping task either to the occupants of the apartment on the ground floor or have an actual "sweeping plan" posted that states on which days each tenant is responsible for sweeping the sidewalk. Often, this includes cleaning the common areas of the house, too
To clear the snow is a responsibility of the owner/landlord. It may be delegated to renters by clause of the rental contract.
Legally, it’s the responsibility of the municipality, but they’re able to (and normally do) declare that to be the property owners job - who in turn does shift that job to their renters.
With apartment buildings, it’s technically the same: the city declares the property owner to be in charge of clearing the walkway from snow and excessive leaves, and the owner(s) do decide if they do have their renters alternate turns (say: every x weeks) or spend the money on some professional janitor service to take care of “winter service”. Of course, landlords do recover those fees from renters as part of their rental fee.
And, as a bonus tip: the final one (renter or owner of a home) paying for the fees for handymen, gardeners, janitors or the like can reclaim some percentage of their labour costs when filing your taxes.
Separate trash cans or bags for paper, metal, glass etc...
That doesn't exist everywhere?!
@@cookiekiller8563 No, we put everything in one trash bag.
@@cookiekiller8563 In civilized countries, yes of course! We are trying to NOT destroy thr Planet completly, aren't we??
@@isabelmartin40 yes, we are
@@cookiekiller8563 not necessarily. There are companies for recycling waste. Othervise, we are doing their job.
You forgot our windows. The ones with the „Kipp-Öffnung“. ;-) most german home thing ever. Even more than Birkenstock.
Also “Dachwohnung” under the roof apartments - which of course have these windows.
Yeah, my aunt in Germany has this balcony door that works on the same principle as the Kippfenster. If you don't push the lever all the way down the door actually unhinges, or you might find yourself locked out on your balcony in the middle of winter.
I thought I broke the window the first time I opened it. I had already said "Tschüß" to my deposite when the landlord explained to me that German windows can be opened in two ways for "Frischluft" 😂 and I don't know where this lady is from but, where I live, houses don't have "Rollläden" 😅
@@mstaco509 I live near the border to the Netherlands and every house or apartment has these for every window. In the evening you let them down and in the morning up again. Older ones have to be rolled down or up manualy but the norm nowadays is having a switch for it. It´s cool to be able to make a room utterly dark in the middle of the day when you want to :D
Must be great when we get summer heatwaves 😁 🥵
One thing we found very German. Was the way we calculated the amount of heat we used in a multi-family house. There was a type of gauge on the radiator. It held some kind of gel/liquid that was measured. The more heat used the less was left in the gauge.
Isn't there a solution to these problems?
This would be so cool with multiple countries.
Kip fenster.
Having a rota for people to clean the treppenhaus.
Ecksitzbank.
Hausschuhe.
being German, I have no idea what a „Rota“ is 🤔
@@n8flieger948 Es bedeutet, dass es eine Liste gibt, wer wann mit der Säuberung des Treppenhauses dran ist und das passiert eben in einer rotierenden Reihenfolge.
Rota for cleaning is very common in Schaben :)
Kehrwoche nennt sich das.
Rota= Kehrwoche. Und die ist heilig ! 🤣
A "Sitzpinkeln" sign is not out of place, especially in a WG.
I have one saying: even ladies can stay...
I think it has the same effect 😅
How true, how true!
I have a sign: "Pinkeln im Sitzen 0 EUR, Pinkeln im Stehen: Männer 20 EUR, Frauen 50 EUR"
I lived 10 years in Germany. When I married my German husband I moved into his bachelor apartment for two weeks until we moved to a bigger one. It was an “ Altbau” an old building literally, which is a pre-war builduing. The builduing had only 4 appartemnt one on each floor. It was a huge apartment with high ceiling wooden floors and big doors. But I was shocked to see that there werent even light bulbs or a sink in the bathroom or kitchen , there’s were only the electric cables coming out of the ceilings. The kitchen was an empty room so we had to buy a new whole kitchen and by that I mean the cabinets and sinks etc. I just saw the pipes on the wall. No closets, nothing. I lived out of my suitcases for three months until out wardrobes got delivered. Moving from Canada that was a tremendous shock for me. My husband was laughing and me in a good way, I was totally appalled that we needed to buy a new kitchen and batch rooms cabinets, sink and mirrors, etc he did a great job in explaining to me many things about his country. Either tenants sell their kitchen to next tenant or they take it with them. I’m now live in NY and we sold our gorgeous kitchen to the next tenant. I live there for 10’years. Germans don’t move from their flats very often. Interesting video. It reminded me a lot of my time there. It’s a lovely country.
Wenn ich umziehe finde ich es schön in die neue Wohnung beue und alte Dinge zu vereinen. Es muss aber nicht unbedingt das des Vormieters sein, so wie du geschockt warst eine leere Wohnung vorzufinden wäre ich es wohl eine Möblierte zu beziehen.
Es hat ja auch den Vorteil dass man sich alles selbst nach Wunsch einrichten kann.
Und wie war es beim Umzug Bach NY?
@@nevazuchtaugsburg Well that’s what I’m saying for me it was a shock , for you it’s normal. We come from different worlds. NY is amazing. I love my apartment. Modern, walk-in closets, more than one bathrooms, doorman, air conditioning in summer, I can’t complain. As a Montrealer, I’m glad to be back in this side of the pond, feeling like at home. Especially with the mentality and above all, the language.
I never thought there could be so much information, education, amusement and entertainment in 4 minutes! Had to subscribe right away!
its nice to know the concept of house shoes in Germany as this is something that is very common in Asian countries where you dont bring in your outside shoes into your home and store them somewhere near your house entrance and either walk indoors with out shoes or have designated home slippers.
Good coverage, hope this tips helps for new entrants hunting for houses at Germany!
My German house has everything on your list, including the folding ruler and the weird square pillows!
Those square pillows are the work of the devil! Not a fan of the small duvets either!
@@taker800 I agree, I hate them so much 😭 I take my memory foam pillow with me whenever I stay at my friends' or family's place overnight because I literally cannot sleep on those lumpy sacks that have the audacity to call themselves pillows
This Ruler is called
Zollstock
@@YukiTheOkami Actually it is called a "Gliedermaßstab" ;-)
@@taker800 I have a large duvet :) It's your choice what to buy and you can totaly get both.
This was a good reminder of my grandmother who immigrated to Australia back in the day . She always missed Germany 🇩🇪.
My family migrated to Australia and I grew up there. The only thing I missed was the snow I remembered when living in Germany as a small child. My parents even took those lovely, cosy, square pillows and covers filled with feathers with them. There were only houses, no appartments, so the washing machine was always in the laundry at the end of the house, in a mostly wooden construction called "backout". The windows were horrible though, You had to slide them up to open them and could never be sure that they wouldn't come down again and behead you if you stuck your head out. But it wasn't an Australian habit to open the windows because of the flies. The front and back door had additional fly wire doors, the windows didn't. Well I suppose one can easily get used to different ways in different countries. As for cake forks, I've got some but hardly ever use them. They were just part of a set of cuttlery I bought at Ikea, a Swedish not German company. Australia was okay but I prefer living in Germany again and don't miss anything from Australia, especially not the snakes and goannas in our garden, red back and funnel web spiders under the roof and other creepy crawlies.
I have to say, your points about a very german home were oddly specific, yet super accurate. Even the damn pillow. My neck always hurts from sleeping on them, but I keep finding them at every house I sleep over. I hate these pillows.
We need a whole video on the horrors of the German pillow tbh
@@dweuromaxx make it a short, 15s metal video called Nackenschmerz about a dude trying to get up in the morning. That'd be phenomenal.
haha when we moved in in our ap. in Nuremberg we found two pillows exactly like that, they are not so bad
The windows are pretty impressive and the lack of privacy between Einfamilienhäuser. When we are in our garden, our neighbours can see everything we do and viceversa.
well, when you have windows, you can look out, what is the difference to english homes her?
@@colasalz2 probably the fact that most windows can be opened completely. Not the norm in every country.
@@colasalz2 In the US and UK, the windows mostly are slide windows (primarily horizontal, some vertical), so you only benefit from half the window opening for ventilation.
Also, no tilt windows (Kippfenster).
Planting a hedge works wonders privacy-wise :P
@Ching Chong I have no idea. It's one of those particular traditional British home features, like open fire places or doors that hinge away from the corner.
At least two of those architectural details have found their way across the Atlantic and are standard in the majority of US homes.
90 quadratmeter im Durchschnitt für 2?! Pfft Munich has entered the chat xD
"Ja, so für 500€ kalt können wir Ihnen diese heruntergekommene Beaenkammer anbieten" - "OK, es wird dann doch eher Cottbus."
Die Quelle würde ich dazu auch gerne sehen...
In Munich you should expect 1000 euro cold for a 60m apartment in a medium neighbourhood 😭
@@michaelakunz7679 de.statista.com/statistik/daten/studie/36495/umfrage/wohnflaeche-je-einwohner-in-deutschland-von-1989-bis-2004/ Da gibts verschiedene Statistiken auf dieser Seite. Diese hier zeigt z.B. das durchschnittlich pro Person 45m² Wohnfläche anfallen
Ich hätte unsere Besenkammer für 250€ warm in Auxburg für arme Münchner anzubieten. 2 Minuten mit der Tram zum Hauptbahnhof.
A thing I have noticed a few times visiting Germany is the bathroom floor being slightly lower than the adjacent floor of the house/flat. This, to keep any flooding inside the bathroom. Never seen this outside Germany. Being a foreigner, I do not know how common is this practice, but would like to know!
I guess these are older houses, new ones have a flat floor.
Up to the 1950s/ 60s a lot of households lacked even a washing machine, so washing your clothes was a mess and the water needed to stay in this room.
If somebody asks, those were "the good old days" 😅
@@babelhuber3449 I would guess it's just the other way round actually and even a rather modern thing. With the rise of the concept to have barrier-free flats and especially bathrooms with walk-in showers (no more shower tubs etc in order to avoid having to step up into the shower and so on) it's simply essential that the bathroom floor is slightly tilted inwards. Otherwise you would ínevitably flood the whole apartment.
@@babelhuber3449 Well, there weren't even bathrooms, only toilets, in most houses built in the 50ies. And right, hardly anyone had a washing machine. There was a room in the cellar called Waschküche = laundry. There you would have a copper basin you could fill with water and heat it by making a fire underneath in a sort of oven. You would put your laundry into the basin and stir it, then rinse it in another tub. After you had finished your laundry, you would heat more water in the copper basin, fill it into the tub = Zinkwanne, and the whole family would take their weekly bath.
As a Canadian traveling through Germany I like to see how the Bachelor/ Studio unit look alike and the bathroom/balcony/living area ? any films? and the Lady spoke so fast and showed all in super speedy way! Cheers from Toronto! I love Berlin!
You can set the PLAYBACK speed ot 0.75 or .5.........or just stop it at certain points. Rachel does a great job of explaining and using the GERMAN words when necessary to make her point. SPOT ON!
So brief but so informative! Vielen Dank!
As an immigrant, the most wonderful things I find about German homes:
1. Quality & Longevity of the buildings
2. The tilting/ swinging windows ❤️
The worst things:
1. Non fixed kitchens
2. The layout - usually, main door gets you into the kitchen instead of the living room.
The tilted window seems to be a big love of foreigners!
@@dweuromaxx there’s a funny expression, a jaw dropping to the floor when brother showed to sister during their visiting Croatia the ways, cool, to open windows. They were from California. It was hilarious.
Address is the same format as Italy, same as for names on doorbells. Also rented houses are not always furnished (sinks are in there though!) and for the noise you're allowed to make and at what time 🙂
Those roller blinds have been the de facto standard here in Spain for over 5 decades.
The pillow thing is spot on. I had a huge trouble to make people understand why I needed 2 pillows, the soft type found or one sturdy one. 6 yrs later they understood perfectly my requirements.
Watching your videos as a german is a pure delight. Such small little nuances I never really bet an eye on, simply because I grew up learning them :-P
I even have two pairs of slippers (Pantoffeln/Hausschuhe). One pair for inside the house (my apartment and the basement), the other for outside the house (for instance when I bring out the Müll or pick up my mail).
I have the same - and I am British. I also use the outdoor pair to get things out of the car, take out rubbish etc: the indoor pair is used strictly for inside the house.
One of the first things I organised after moving to the UK was cake forks from Germany. My flatmates loved them.
The Queen owns some as well by the way.
That's because she has German ancestors (original name of Windsor-family: "Sachsen-Coburg und Gotha"). 😉
Isn't she descended from German lineage?
Great video, Rachel. Just one little thing: there are aspects where it's not so much a matter of Germany vs the rest of the world, but UK vs most other countries, e.g. the structure of an address: Germany follows the same structure as (nearly?) all the other European countries, while the UK follows the same pattern as (nearly?) all Anglophone countries. But this is a minor point. It's an excellent series, full of insights that ring true for anyone who has lived in Germany for a while! :-)
allow me a small point: all Anglophone countries follow the same UK-invented pattern. Britannia rules.
Always amazed at how much interesting information Rachel Stewart can condense into a highly entertaining few minutes!
@JOHN APPLEBY So, make sure you subscribe and never miss Rachel's Videos 😉 bit.ly/DWEuromaxx_Sub
1:44 Thanks for choosing the building I live in :D
I can definitely relate to the, "retro-looking wooden measuring sticks." :D
We have so many at home. Even in different sizes
As a rule, I like them too.
I would not let an American use the ruler- they have a talent for breaking them. Most have never seen one.
Maybe it'd be worth a video to address the general structure of German flats and houses compared to England or the US. One thing that always bugged me about American sitcoms was the fact that the front door always seems to lead directly into the living room. No hallway to hang up your jacket and put your shoes on a rack.
Or the fact that today's standard American interior always has a slight "dated" aspect to Germans. The old "flick" light switches for example. Something you'd never see in German homes built after the end of the 60's.
@C J I visited the US and I noticed the same thing. In Germany there usually is a small hallway right behind the front door where you take off your coat and shoes.
I think in part this is because in Germany it is generally seen as rude to bring your dirty shoes into someone's home so you need a place to put them. From my experience many Americans do not feel that way so that extra room isn't required.
@C J the "old "flick" light switches" are still used in the US, they look so old-fashioned, if you ask me
Your point on American homes is IMO correct and the reason is that outside of a select few cities most Americans who live in houses built post-1950s enter and exit their homes primarily via the garage (car port). It's common to have a small "mudroom" or foyer with shoes and jackets etc next to the garage rather than the front door. Older houses are not like this because they weren't necessarily designed to have a garage and weren't so car centric - if they have a garage now it was added, and people usually park on the side or in back. But a modern American home puts the garage front & center and the only people who come in through the front door are guests.
@C J Triggered?
Yeah, the same in the new house where my family lived in Australia. The front door led directly into the living room. The old house from the end of the 19th Century we lived in before had a hallway. It looked like the houses in the UK except for the verandah in front and a so called backout with the laundry at the back of the house. The toilet was not in the house but at the end of the backyard. There were many outdated things even in our new house, the light switches you mentioned, the strange electric plugs and sockets, the awkward windows you had to slide up, no cellar, no attic. But there was an open fire place in every room - something you really don't need in a hot country like Australia. I do prefer the practical standards in Germany.
In the Czech Republic (for those not good at geography, cough US people cough, the country bordering Germany in the East), it's same:
- the house shoes
- little forks
- two duvets, square pillows
- balcony as a prefered feature
- wooden doors to (some) cellar units
Other things are not so common here or aren't here at all.
Don't forget the "Mülltrennung" (Waste sorting) - it's a science in itself. Many Germans rinse plates before they put them in the dishwasher. And most cars have manual transmission because automatic transmission is widely distrusted.
Austrian/German housing compared to Ireland where I used to live for a while: rectangles are actually 90°; walls are vertical; doors close without a gap; floors are flat so that doors need not be an inch off the ground or would otherwise get stuck when opening them - and they are mounted in a way they stay in any angle you open them; air tight windows; gaps between cupboard doors are identical width top and bottom and edges and corners are flush; tubing and wiring is *inside* the walls only, one water tap for both hot and cold water...
and I am talking about newly and professionally built housing here!
Always really interesting videos many thanks 😊
Hilariously, quite a few people call this retro measuring thingy a "Zollstock" even though it's mostly metric :D
The official name is "Gliedermaßstab". Meaning segmented measuring stick.
Most off them have cm on one edge and inch on the other edge on both sides
In Austria we call it "Meterstab".
@@ifzwischendurch Same here in Bavaria
I don't get, why this is retro, what do you measure with, when building something?
the shutters seemed to be a continental thing, windows opening inwards and the multi catch exterior doors
I miss roladden. When I cleaned out my mom's apartment I found two rulers. I shipped them home with most of her furniture to the states.😊
Hi there! I am a US American and have been living in Germany for wow, over 25 years! Most of that time in the eastern part of Saxony, so former east Germany. But also for some time in western Germany, and I’ve had friends from all over.
I’ve seen basically everything that you mentioned. 🙂 One thing that really surprised me in Germany that you didn’t mention was spoons being served with cake! The small coffee spoons for stirring sugar into your coffee, like what we would consider baby spoons in the states, probably. I have experience cake forks as well, but more often it seems spoons with cake!
I hadn’t thought about the names on the doorbells as being strange, but I guess maybe. I guess in the US I had so little experience with rental properties that I didn’t notice the difference! Lol. On homes in the states you also have a name on the door :-)
One nice thing when you are hanging up pictures in your new home is that the electrical wires all go from any outlets or light switches directly up, so you know never to put it in the mail directly above an electrical socket or light switch. And to the left or right of that, you will never find a live electrical cord. Very practical. 😊👍🏼
I am fortunate to live in a region with very good tapwater, and I don’t do the bottled water thing. Even after living here so long, there are things that I just do my way. I’m also not as regular or thorough about airing the place out as most Germans would be, probably.
Cleaning the communal stairwell, or your part of it, is another part of many rental agreements!
Noooo, Rachel! You're wrong about the square pillows! I hated them at first but now I can't sleep without one. Basically, you're sleeping on it wrong ;-) Just scrunch it up into a slight wedge with the thick bit at your head.
It must be real feather's inside. Stuffed plastic pillow's are junk. 80 x 80cm pillows, 80% the Germans have.
kaltmiete to warmmiete..transition was good..
Kaltmiete - Oh wow, I can actually afford it!
+ Nebenkosten
= Warmmiete - Oh dear God
+ Electricity
+ Internet
= So much for my dreams
Thanks for appreciating that 😀
Interesting! A lot of these things are really similar in Italy - except the cake forks and two duvets!
Felt pouches full of felt slippers for guests who forgot to bring their 'house shoes'. Not just separate duvets but separate mattresses and special bed frames (if that's the English word for Lattenrost - I don't even know anymore!) that can be adjusted to support the sleepers individual sleeping preferences. Water meters inside the flat. Mixer taps, or rather the complete lack of a separate hot and cold tap - which, in fairness is a good thing - especially in the bathroom. Thanks for all the great videos!!
My husband and are are going to move to Germany next summer for 4 years so this was very helpful 👌🏼
This is only 1%
I noticed all of this when i was working in both Düsseldorf then Vienna last year Rachel.
I agree renting is expensive as i was looking to rent outside Vienna before being made redundant in February this year.
So miss that way of life over in Europe as well as the public transport & the bakeries.
Then again i am half swiss from the Graubunden so naturally am more comfortable in Europe.
Tschüss und liebe gruße aus London.😊
(voice of Al Murray)
'So what's your name, Squire?'
'Sean McErlean'
'Beautiful Swiss name'
@@shelbynamels973 ,well if you read the comment i said half swiss,the other half is Irish.
@@seanmcerlean 'Beautiful Swiss-Irish name, squire'.
@@shelbynamels973 thank you.
@@seanmcerlean Just out of curiosity, do you know who Al Murray is?
I stay in Africa rather. Big space, big sky and where we do not think building with wood is better for the environment.
Germans are disciplined, beautiful and friendly people non the less. I am partly of German heritage.
Which part of Africa mate
@@ikb8373 South Africa ofc
You didn't talk abaut "Kehrwoche"
That's just a silly Stuttgardian issue or at max an issue of the evangelical parts of (Baden-)Württemberg (und ein Aussterbender noch dazu) but not something that would fit into a quick and dirty general overview about the country's manners as a whole. ;)
And the general lack of parking space in every German city
@@Mickey-wh4di I think that is a good thing.
@@boldvankaalen3896 if it isn't caused by every family in the street owning two cars, then yes 😁
@@cg6511 we sadly have to do kehrwoche in Hessen too
Cake forks are definitely not weird! Much nicer to eat your cake with a small fork than with a dinner fork. Available in England and Australia and probably elsewhere in Europe.
I agree and cafes who dont provide one receive my “look”. I received cake forks as a gift for winning a talent competition at school, as well as coffee spoons. OUr headmistress also taught us how to set a table, the full deal, and also an afternoon tea table. Greetings from Australia .
I LOVE the food in Germany.... ESPECIALLY afternoon cake and coffee....
The bakery products , yummy
I like low noise environment and in that regard Germany would be my first choice on that level. The building where I lived was like a church, never heard any noise.
Small tip, don't live beside a church in Germany. Your neighbors might be silent but the church will never shut up
Yeah, ME too, sometimes i feel like i wanna kill one of my neighbour with 2 children yealing every minute! I can t stand noises!
@@cookiekiller8563 Not really. I live in a large Bavarian town - very catholic - but the church bells near my house only ring on Sundays.
@@magmalin woooooow I live in a small village, in Bavaria, and they ring so often. You are pretty lucky with that only on Sundays
@@cookiekiller8563 Oh, where do you live? I lived in Landkreis FDB/AIC for about 10 years as it was closer to where I worked. And even in that village with a big cathedral there was no exceptional noise produced by the church bells.
We live in an "Einfamilienhaus" since 2010 over here in Germany, I came from Belgium and there were only some things that were different 👍 First we lived in a flat from 2008 to 2010 and it was common to have a list in which week you had to clean the stairwell ("Treppenhaus") an to sweep the sidewalk 😅🙈
And in winter you always had to shovel the snow in front of the house (but only one day, than it changed so you weren't the ONE to clean the sidewalk from snow for a whole week, but in our case it was Monday and Thursday 🤣🤷🏻♀️)
Jeder im Haus hat seine regelmäßigen Aufgaben. Deutsche sind fleißig und sparsam. Wer zusammen wohnt teilt sich auch die Pflege rund ums Haus.
Außerdem ist Schneeräumen gesetzlich vorgeschrieben Räum-und Streupflicht 😅
I'm from Germany and live in England . I told my friends and colleagues about living in Germany 🤣🤣🤣🤣They couldn't believe it how different it is. I have to show them your video 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I am digging those roller blinds!! Great for Saturday sleeping in for a person sensitive to light
Subscribed. Fascinating channel. 🤔😊
Zuerst,ich bin immer über dein perfektes Deutsch erstaunt. Du sprichst, akzentfrei, als wärst du Deutsche. 👍🏻
Zu dem Beitrag, er ist gut gelungen. Es stimmt wirklich, so viele Dinge sind typisch deutsch. Ohne Hausschuhe und Zollstock könnte ich nicht leben🤪. Wir sind schon ein komisches Volk. Man kann und darf uns gern haben 😊😉
Krass, ich dachte sie wäre deutsche, hätte nicht gedacht sie wäre Britin...
@@Loren1389 ja, dass war auch mein erster Eindruck, als den Kanal zum ersten Mal angehört hatte. Hab echt Respekt dafür. Vor allem bei dem Aspekt, dass selbst viele deutsche die eigene Sprache und Grammatik nicht perfekt kennen. Mich eingeschlossen.
Mentioning the Zollstock proofs deep knowledge.😆
I didn't even know this wasn't a thing outside Germany...
Also important: It's commonly called a "Zollstock" (inch stick), but it's actually a "Metermaß" (meter measure). There are no imperial units on it, only meters and centimeters. Also you use it to measure and don't poke stuff with it... ...hmm... ...aren't we strange...
The noise rule is much needed here in Turkey 😂😂
Loved the video 😄❤
Well, sometimes the police is ringing the door bell, because u have been too loud after the nine o'clock pm. That is regulated by the german law...
@@nidhoggvomwalde2280 as long as the police is civil with me, I have no problem
@@nidhoggvomwalde2280 omg ,that's crazy ,no freedom
The retro looking wooden massuring sticks are actually called Zollstock. I prefer the Rollmeter.