Lol! We have hotdogs! Hot dogs and sausage sizzles are two different things 😂
@cascee
3 жыл бұрын
😂 the confusion is real!
@peytongomer2305
3 жыл бұрын
Yesss I was like uhhhh hot dogs are completely different!
@zoeheart-rose4810
3 жыл бұрын
Yeah I know
@yocho844
3 жыл бұрын
@@cascee no its not
@yocho844
3 жыл бұрын
its not that hard of a difference one has a Frankfurt and one has a snag and one uses a hot dog bun and uses white bread
@reinsnow
3 жыл бұрын
For elderly people riding buses that dont know their stop, I've seen them ask the driver when they get on and the driver will stop the bus at that stop and tell them it's time to get off.
@brendonrookes1151
3 жыл бұрын
and if not other passangers will be like you wanted to get off at james st right this is it most aussies are quite friendly
@fugawiaus
2 жыл бұрын
Most people also know the area and know exactly where they are.
@billking8843
2 жыл бұрын
Most Melbourne buses have a digital sign which tells you what stop is coming up. The driver and/ or other people on the bus will ensure elderly people and tourists get off at the right stop.
@Sandra-mw3yp
5 ай бұрын
What's so bad about that!?? I mean really. Just wait to YOU get to that age and you will be B---Itching how so many young ppl who have no sympathy. You just wait. Time comes up to bite you in the butt. Trust me.
@travelsolo2677
2 жыл бұрын
Hotdogs and Snags are two totally different things. Hotdogs are in buns where as a snag is Aussie slang for sausage. We love sausage sizzles, with grilled sausage in bread with onion and sauce 🇦🇺🇦🇺👍👍
@shaundouglas2057
3 жыл бұрын
As a Tasmanian we have a list of 15 weird things that mainlanders do, and at the top of that list is "they don´t marry their cousins."
@himbo754
2 жыл бұрын
And we only have one head, and five fingers per hand ...
@ffm595
2 жыл бұрын
Hahahaha very good, you guys have your own world down in Tassie
@vanessaabbas2309
2 жыл бұрын
Hahahahahaaaa! That's amazing
@aussiefirie
2 жыл бұрын
@@himbo754 technically we have 4 fingers and a thumb per hand
@petermcculloch4933
2 жыл бұрын
Are you saying, if I lived on the mainland, I would have to find a squeeze from outside of the family?
@BethGould
4 жыл бұрын
This is so funny to watch! I'm an Australian living in Vancouver right now and when I came here I was like why are they calling capiscums peppers 😂
@cascee
4 жыл бұрын
LOL!
@richarded21
2 жыл бұрын
Capsicum is the real name of the plant once again they have it wrong
@RyanLye1975
2 жыл бұрын
We really shouldn't laugh at Canadians & Americans. They don't have as good an education system as Australia. They automatically assume/nay insist they are automatically right ( and all other countries are wrong) because .. Uh.. well .. They can't bear to ponder the fact that they really are that backward after all in comparison to the rest of the world.
@matthewcharles5867
2 жыл бұрын
Capsicum is the scientific name for it.
@MDBowron
2 жыл бұрын
@@matthewcharles5867 capsicum is also the name of the nerve agent in peppers/capsicums/chillies which gives chillies their kick and spiciness
@jacobvardy
2 жыл бұрын
Capsicum/pepper: the food is from America, mainly around what's now Mexico. When Anglos encountered them they called them after the only other spicy food they knew. However, capsicum came to Australia by way of Italian food, so we use the Latin name.
@inodesnet
2 жыл бұрын
Capsicum is the botanical genus name which comes directly from latin and Greek. This includes all the capsicum nightshades. Depending on the amount of Capsaicin a given capsicum will be hot or not. Of course when Europeans first had hot capsicums (now referred to as chillies; an Aztec name), they called them peppers because they were hot like the common black pepper. So really most of the world uses capsicum to describe the basic capsicum (they should be more specific), and others incorrectly call them peppers despite the fact there is zero to no Capsaicin in them; the pepper tasting chemical for which it is called. On this I am afraid the North Americans and modern British have the word etymology all wrong and potentially the Australians (and the rest of the world) are more correct.
@JulieDeuxFois
4 жыл бұрын
Wherever you are in the world, when stepping into a bus that doesn't announce stops, you can kindly ask the driver as you get in to indicate when we reach your destination. I have been doing this for 15+ years and only once did a driver forget me, and I never got a refusal!
@AnnalieseMazzuchelli
2 жыл бұрын
In Melbourne our “late night shopping” days are Thursday AND Friday :)
@casmaaate3371
2 жыл бұрын
“A snag is pretty much a weiner in a piece of toast” 😂 I am dying at her confusion
@casmaaate3371
2 жыл бұрын
“Why would you want it in a piece of toast?” 😂
@markway8208
2 жыл бұрын
Everything you mentioned is easy to explain and once explained you would quickly come to realize it is all about ease, convenience, and the Australian lifestyle that over many generations have through trial and error come up with a balance between work and family time. That is why you see stores closed early but if they want to stay open they can but must pay a price for depriving a person of their family time same applies for Weekends (Saturday and Sundays), and public Holidays. Fun fact Canadian polymer banknotes are manufactured in Australia.
@marleybedford8628
3 жыл бұрын
The logic is, Australians recognise the landscape. We look out the window of the bus and recognise the area we live in and the scenery of the stop. Same with the trains and taxis/cabs. A sausage is a snag and hotdog is usually a long red frankfurter (Werner) on a long skinny, bread roll/bun with tomato sauce and mustard (maybe cheese). What I have heard one American call a hotdog was to Aussies a “dagwood dog.” It is a battered frankfurter on a stick dipped in tomato sauce.
@brendonrookes1151
3 жыл бұрын
stop ur making me hungry
@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367
2 жыл бұрын
In Canada Canadians apparently need instruction as to where they live 🤣🤣 seriously though this lady has no Idea.. Stop announcements are new in Canada too.. 20 years ago most drivers refused to do it or were not required... Its only the last 12 or 15 years its gotten common in North America.. Before that it was pretty hit a miss some cities required both stop announcement And the driver to stop at every stop even if there is nobody waiting.. This begN in the 60s but unions basically hamstrung it.. Was less successful in Canada but a couple of us cities are famous for it.. Just stopping at empty stops and shouting out the stop name 😂😂
@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367
2 жыл бұрын
In Australia American type boild hotdogs were mostly made with Swiss savaloy sausages
@marleybedford8628
2 жыл бұрын
@@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367 yep 👍
@marleybedford8628
2 жыл бұрын
@@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367 Thank you for your reply. It made me very happy reading it. Wishing you the best. Cheers
@davidparris7167
2 жыл бұрын
Walking in the rain barefoot is one of life's pleasures.
@planetdisco4821
2 жыл бұрын
I completely agree!
@Ruiimai
2 жыл бұрын
But the worms
@nukelie8920
3 жыл бұрын
The reason why the $1 & $2 is smaller and gold in colour is because we use to have $1 & $2 notes but they got removed as it was expensive to print, coins are cheaper to mass produce. Buses and trains in Sydney have banner type screen that tell you the next stop unlike QLD. Snags are short fat sausages (throw a snag on the bar-be) sausage sizzles are snags with onion, bbq sauce on buttered white bread, normally u can get this at Bunnings on the weekends & yes we have hot dogs here too. As for light switches yes that is the standard one but u can install big ones if you like or L.E.D touch type ones. Most people will wear bare feet if you live or holiday near a beach. Our toilets are more environmentally friendly as they use less water and we have a half flush for number 1’s, if you get splash back from atomic number 2’s try adding toilet paper after you wipe the seat before seating
@mrbillhilly343
3 жыл бұрын
As you noticed the wheelchair bays in the bus for "elderly & less mobile passengers"..... Well, all the elderly & blind do is they tell the bus driver where they need to go to & the bus driver will ensure they get to their destination. If they need to change buses, they'll radio the connecting bus, seen that happen a few times. Many older bus drivers know their way around, younger bus drivers just follow the GPS & nod their head. I'm in Newcastle, so heaps of elderly people here & they get helped out. Also, wheelchair passengers need to inform the bus driver so they're able to apply the ramp to exit the bus before the wheelchair passenger moves from their secured bay to exit. In Sydney, bus drivers are used to helping tourists, they hear the accent & they help them find their way around. When I was in Toronto, the staff at Union Station helped me get around, gave me maps & told me of all the good places the moment they heard my Aussie accent.
@cottawalla
3 жыл бұрын
Every Australian has a list of 15 weird things Queenslanders do. You'll go troppo yourself if you stay there long enough. No. Snags are sausages in general. A hotdog is what you know it as, a particular type of sausage we call a savaloy, in a long bun with the usual additions.
@shaundouglas2057
3 жыл бұрын
And every Tasmanian has 15 weird thing that mainlanders do, and the top of that list is "they don´t marry their cousins."
@himbo754
2 жыл бұрын
The pink "sausage" on a hot dog is called a "frankfurt" in Sydney, not a "saveloy" to the best of my knowledge. So maybe this is a term that varies around Australia, along with cozzies and "Devon".
@cottawalla
2 жыл бұрын
@@himbo754 saveloy was the term in my family, 1950s Melbourne with English and NZ parents. You're right though, frankfurter is now more common in Aus.
@markway8208
2 жыл бұрын
@@himbo754 You are right a Frankfurt and Saveloy are two completely different things, however, Frankfurts and Wieners are similar and are interchangeable to use for the making of Hotdogs.
@jacquelinesutherland4098
2 жыл бұрын
I think you thinking of a sav in barter
@peytongomer2305
3 жыл бұрын
Also we don’t really do tipping, so the coin thing isn’t really an issue.
@harlzAU
2 жыл бұрын
Nice one, always interesting hearing what others think. The no shoes thing is more to do with the climate than anything especially in the subtropics where you are. The toilet water is to do with the fact that water is scarce over much of Australia. A low level of water in the bowl means you there is just enough water to do the job. Incidentally, we invented the half-flush here as a water saver. When I first went to Canada, I was amazed how much water was in the toilet bowl. There was a partial blockage once and I was getting ready to run out as I thought it might overflow, haha!
@SirDilbere
3 жыл бұрын
Hotdogs and snags are two different things. Here in Australia, snags are lamb or beef sausages. Hotdogs, we call Saveloys. Both hotdogs and snags are made completely differently. A dagwood dog is a saveloy dipped in batter and deep fried and served dipped halfway into a large container of tomato sauce.
@dcmastermindfirst9418
2 жыл бұрын
A snag is just a made up slang term for a sausage in bread. It's just dinky dy terminology
@RyanLye1975
2 жыл бұрын
Or pork.
@jane6194
3 жыл бұрын
usually u ask the bus driver for help if u don't know where ur going. it's much more colloquial down under
@MDBowron
2 жыл бұрын
you need to go to the bus terminals to get bus or train timetables, which list the stops within them, or you can use the transit apps which have the stops on the app
@rogerp6903
3 жыл бұрын
Light switches in Canada and the US use to be small buttons and modeled after fixtures from the UK.Much of Aussie infrastructure has been adopted from the UK
@dcmastermindfirst9418
2 жыл бұрын
Pretty much every cultural part of Oz is from the UK. We are basically British but with beaches.
@RyanLye1975
3 жыл бұрын
Restaurants aren't even open at 5pm. They open about 5:30 - 6pm and close late, 11pm+
@scottyarthuraustralia7567
2 жыл бұрын
We have hot dogs in bun or rolls a snag in bread is a sausage on a slice of bread is called a sausage sizzle
@zoeinkerman969
3 жыл бұрын
People can tell where to get off because they look out the window? Lol
@MDBowron
2 жыл бұрын
some CAT buses, which are free buses in most of the cities in CBDs (Central Business Districts) have LEDs and automated systems but so do trains as well
@travelsolo2677
2 жыл бұрын
To go out for a cheeky drink usually means only one or two, say during lunch break or on the way home
@kevkoala
3 жыл бұрын
Queenslanders are just weird on their own (says a Victorian! :P ) Going barefoot must be a Gold Coast thing as here in Victoria the closest thing to being barefoot is wearing thongs...err...flip flops (the thongs that you wear on your feet, not the sort that females wear!)
@brendonrookes1151
3 жыл бұрын
its a nsw/ qld thing wearing bare feet
@himbo754
2 жыл бұрын
@@brendonrookes1151 Closer you get to the tropics, the more bare feet you will see.
@brendonrookes1151
2 жыл бұрын
@@himbo754 i live in qld its quite common
@sylviagerritsen7975
2 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@jacquelinesutherland4098
2 жыл бұрын
I think the barefoot thing Is an aussie thing not just a qld or new thing
@neddyladdy
2 жыл бұрын
We have this very new innovation on buses, we call them windows and they allow passengers to look where they are.
@Annikavideos2010
11 ай бұрын
hahaha agree...i am an old person - and we dont need stop announcements...we know where we are going. we have sense of direction.
@SirDilbere
3 жыл бұрын
Using cash is now a pleasure instead of plastic cards. The trick to using our coins is to use them in return to pay for your goods. If you think our coins are a pain, years ago we also had a one cent piece and a two cent piece. I go out with coins in my pocket and come home usually with less.
@digimei2143
3 жыл бұрын
I think i know why they call it capsicum . its actually a scientifical term for peppers/chili . its one of the ability of what makes the pepper spicy. but i might be wrong 😉 and its actually a bird food not for human consumption (nature wise)😉
@ange3489
3 жыл бұрын
A snag is a sausage. We also have hot dogs- a pink skinned processed sausage in a long roll
@theaaaa4180
4 жыл бұрын
Hi from SA! Haha we do have hotdogs (the American kind) but they are more common at junk food-y places or as like ..carnival food. It might be because you are in touristy areas that they put hotdog meat in bread but usually snags refer to smaller brown sausages that are commonly cooked at family bbqs and sausage sizzles and hence fit well in the easily accessible white bread slice B) I think the buses don't show the upcoming stops because, like you said, they only stop at major stops without request. Maybe they're just outdated 😁 I agree though, it would be handy to have an announcement system like they do on trains here :). You can get bus route pamphlets at major train stations though and I think respective states have government 'metro-mate' apps to make it all easier, but don't be afraid to ask the driver for assistance if you are lost (like I always do 😅). PS. The penalty rates on public holidays have been fought for and are there to sort-of make up for the fact people are working at all on those days I think 😅 employees aren't required to work on these days by law, but if they do they can get the extra pay or can arrange to 'swap' the day off for another one. When I was younger, everywhere but the IGA and McDonald's in my area would be closed on public holidays, but more and more businesses are staying open on those days for tha coin. I hope you're enjoying yourself here in spite of the shoeless bondi surfers 😂
@brendonrookes1151
3 жыл бұрын
i use to walk bare foot as a young fella im 30 now so iv upgraded to thongs easier on the feet
@andrewobrien605
2 жыл бұрын
Yep, queenslanders don't really care about shoes. It's not seen as a liability for stores as it is in north America. If you go further north, shirts can be optional also ( for the guys at least) down the street.
@solreaver83
2 жыл бұрын
Haha the hot dog thing was wrong on so many levels. We have hot dogs and just like you we have saussages but we also call saussages snags for short. And when you put it in bread (not toast) that's a saussage sizzle. A saussage size is not a hot dog. I don't know "you're alright", are you sure they aren't saying "yeah, alright?"
@nagammahill7886
3 жыл бұрын
Snags and hotdogs are different things in Australia.
@FalseFlagAmerican
3 жыл бұрын
A bus will stop without being hailed in Melbourne.
@lifeof_ran
4 жыл бұрын
Been watching all your vids of Australia to help plan my trip! Will be coming from Vancouver too! You should make a video on living expenses in Gold Coast vs Van.
@brendonrookes1151
3 жыл бұрын
god i wish we payed monthly i pay fortnightly and it gets priceeey
@markflint2629
2 жыл бұрын
God, don’t take her useless advice
@RyanLye1975
4 ай бұрын
The large grocery stores close at 9pm most days, 6pm on Sundays. Some IGAs close later
@britaahonen1489
3 жыл бұрын
So your clearly fine with it. Carts, pop music, is the cart attached to the pop music?
@sylviagerritsen7975
2 жыл бұрын
Having a coin jar at home and emptying your coins in regularly, helps you save for holidays. It’s a great system.
@tmh889
2 жыл бұрын
**Correction Snag= sausage. Sausage sanga= sausage in bread. We don’t put mustard on sausages. We put tomato sauce- other countries call it ketchup- or barbecue sauce, and maybe some fried onion. Sanga is also slang for sandwich. Most people like the taste of sausage sangas and the smell of them cooking. It’d be considered almost ‘unAustralian’ not to. Hot dog= frankfurt in a bread bun. These usually have tomato sauce and sometimes mustard. Taste is controversial. People either love them or the smell of them alone makes them gag!
@rolandoruiz7659
2 жыл бұрын
I don’t live in the Gold Coast but I do understand the thing about the bus stop. That sort of technology is really expensive so they just don’t implement it on buses. Trains yes. Buses no.and anyway on buses people tend to rely on looking out for streets or landmarks to know where they are.
@PaulMurrayCanberra
2 жыл бұрын
@4:00 This in going to make me sound old, but: elderly people know where to get of the bus by not having their noses jammed in their phones the entire time.
@amandast100
2 жыл бұрын
Hot dogs and snags are two different things….. Snag is a sausage in fresh bread, not toast. Hotdogs in Australia are like American hotdogs in a bun.
@nathr7375
2 жыл бұрын
Wait in the US/Canada you can't take your trolley throughout the whole shopping centre?
@cascee
2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, you cant take it throughout the mall. The trolley's belong to the grocery stores so you have to return them. Usually, you have to put in a quarter or a dollar in order to borrow them, this is to insure that you put them back. Its the only way to get your money back!
@jdb9388
3 жыл бұрын
"cheeky drink" 🤣🤣 omg i laughed at that one, the brits understand this playful term
@brendonrookes1151
3 жыл бұрын
maybe im geting old never heard it called a cheeky drink
@carolynrogers1510
2 жыл бұрын
Busses, I guess we look out the window and know where we are going. The trains and tram will announce stops but the busses have never been that automated. Just ask the driver to tell you when you get to your destination and he’ll try to remember but probably sail right on past.
@louisaklimentos7583
Жыл бұрын
Hot dogs is used in Australia too ! It is a bun with a Frankfurt . Snag is a sausage and on a bun . We have on our transit buses in Sydney have electronic signs telling you the next stop . Queensland must be behind . Our trains tells you the next stop . Restaurants are opened until 11 pm and cafe’s close between 5 and 6 pm . Sydney and Melbourne most people wear shoes . You seem like a lovely young lady . Enjoy your stay in OZ .
@kushking420
Жыл бұрын
Lol every city I've lived in Canada we call drug stores a "pharmacy", but I've always lived in ontario or quebec
@kennethbell6912
2 жыл бұрын
Snag means sausage. Buses make numerous stops in any suburb, in Sydney there’s a bus stop every 200m. When you pay out money use the coins don’t save them.
@kennethbell6912
2 жыл бұрын
Hotdogs are made with Frankfurts whereas Snags are beef sausages
@RyanLye1975
3 жыл бұрын
Snag = "Snagger" (sausage) We all know what a "Hotdog" is.
@MrBCorp
4 жыл бұрын
Personally I find it weird to refer to a sausage as anything other than a sausage. Yeah we put them in bread at a bbq (barbie), which we also refer to a sausage sizzle. The sausage in bread is a snag as you said. The American hot dog is something foreign to us. In Melbourne, there's new bus routes called Smart Bus and old bus routes (most of them). The new ones tell you the stop and everything. The old ones don't. They don't have the tracking capabilities. They also don't travel very direct routes, are not very frequent and start late and finish early. I have no idea why they haven't overhauled the old routes. Shopping cart = shopping trolley. Store = shop Some supermarkets have devices to their trolleys that lock the wheel (usually the front one, just one) when you pass a certain point. Because people would steal them and take them home and dump them. The first time I heard drug store, I was confused, because I thought drugs were illegal. Hearing it, even now, is weird to me. Oh well. Late night shopping in Melbourne is on Thursdays and Fridays. Open until 9pm. Sunday trading when I was little was illegal. There was one shop that used to open as a protest. He was repeatedly fined, hundreds of thousands of dollars. This was back in the 90's I think. For him, even though he was just a small shop, he stood on his principles. Through his campaign and a change in political leadership, the law was eventually changed. Now, no one even thinks about it. Late night shopping was unheard of. Shops in the CBD was as well. When my father was young, working in the CBD, there were no restaurants or anything. No one lived there even. Things are very different now. We say "how's it going". But we run the words together so it becomes, howsitgoin'. Can be very weird for non locals.
@cascee
4 жыл бұрын
Wow! Thanks for clearing it all up :D
@MrBCorp
4 жыл бұрын
@@cascee sorry I said the shopping trolley locks the front wheel. I meant the back. No worries, happy to talk :)
@PostImperfect
3 жыл бұрын
Penhalurick's? Was that it? I remember he sold cards to get around the trading rules :)
@markflint2629
2 жыл бұрын
A snag is not a hotdog we have both and they don’t usually served in toast, where have you been ?
@markdrennan5723
2 жыл бұрын
We certainly call hot dogs, hot dogs. A snag is slang for a sausage sandwich. Not on toast. Where did you get this information from.
@DK-ym6wh
2 жыл бұрын
i like how this isn't a typical 15 weird things .... interesting ! : )
@cascee
2 жыл бұрын
thanks for watching :)
@kerryhawkins-bond2522
3 жыл бұрын
I only wear shoes for work. . . Afterwards I set those puppies free. . . Unless I gotta got to the bottle shop
@brendonrookes1151
3 жыл бұрын
haha its the aussie way
@dcmastermindfirst9418
2 жыл бұрын
Capsicum is correct name for them. Peppers is just American slang. And a "snag" is just Australian slang for a sausage in a piece of bread. It is not an actual hotdog. And sausages are the correct term. Not "weiners"
@gabrielleann6098
2 жыл бұрын
We have hot dogs what you showed was a sausage sizzle and the word snag is just what we call a sausage
@terryjeisman7550
2 жыл бұрын
A snag is not a hot dog, its a sausage, a hot dot is a frankfurt.
@rolandoruiz7659
2 жыл бұрын
It’s not just QLD. The shoeless thing happens pretty much all around the country.
@triciawheatstone982
2 жыл бұрын
If you dont know your bus stop. Just ask the driver! Simples!
@rongt859
3 жыл бұрын
Ederly people grow up having to know what they are doing and plan ahead and use our brains
@matthall113
2 жыл бұрын
The light switches are small here i agree lol I just swipe my light switch with the palm of my hand on or off. No time for aiming with a finger 😜😅
@queenslanddiva
2 жыл бұрын
Surprise! This is Australia, not Canada. If everything was the same, why bother to leave? As far as we're concerned, you are the ones doing things strangely.
@baderlade
3 жыл бұрын
Bus stops aren't announced on Sydney buses and trains either. On new buses the PA system usually works for a couple of months but then breaks down and no one bothers to fix it. Australia is the land of lazy after all. Announcements are still working on the new Sydney metro trains though. Agree it's weird and neglectful. It's also sad there's no public discourse on how bad their public transport is.
@daveg2104
2 жыл бұрын
Sure, buses are a problem, but stops are announced on Sydney trains, and depending on the carriage type, displayed on screens. The oldest "K" sets do have audio information announcements, but it's been so long since I've ridden on one of them, I don't remember if they announce stations.
@RyanLye1975
3 жыл бұрын
The Gold Coast is a weird place anyway. As is Queensland.
@BlueSky-8888
2 жыл бұрын
Yeah its a sausage and you can buy hot dogs and buns at any grocery store, the picture you showed was a bbq sausage like what bunnings serve at there sausage sizzles on weekends
@gregorturner9421
2 жыл бұрын
you can also ask the bus driver, he will let you know when you need to get off.
@brendonrookes1151
3 жыл бұрын
its not toast its bread unless u ask them to cook the bread it isnt toast
@ZeBoy85
2 жыл бұрын
The coins and their sizes are to make it easy for blind people.
@garryjones2609
2 жыл бұрын
Australia is not weird. It's the people who come here are weird, expecting Australia to be the same as the country they just left.
@Preview43
7 ай бұрын
Hotdogs are the red ones full of mystery 'meat'. Snags are the brown ones full of beef or pork - hopefully.
@iggyblitz8739
2 жыл бұрын
OMG you can't be serious about the light.switches ?, Ha ha ha, I have big hands and never had a problem with them.
@PaulMurrayCanberra
2 жыл бұрын
@8:15, if you are on the Gold Coast, "boogie" does not mean dancing.
@solreaver83
2 жыл бұрын
Holiday surcharge is not the norm. Some places may choose to do it but I can't even remember the last time I went somewhere who did it.
@dillanditcham1413
2 жыл бұрын
Is it just me who thought just how rude she is. You don't just leave the trolleys to the side. There are trolley bays for you to return the trolley to in the carpark. The trolley collectors should only have to collect the trolleys from there but because people are rude and ignorant they have to collect it from all over the parking lot.
@RyanLye1975
2 жыл бұрын
Shops Do NOT close at 4pm. Or 5pm. But 6pm. There is.. a difference. Grocery stores close at 9pm. Chemists close at 7 pm. Or 8pm or 9pm. Or 10pm. Or later. Or are 24 hour.
@brontewcat
2 жыл бұрын
I think some of the things you are talking about are Queensland things. Shops, except supermarkets. do close between 5.30 to 6.00pm most
@Sean-me4fv
Жыл бұрын
Pepper is something you sprinkle on food to give it flavour. Salt and Pepper.
@mckaypaterson2519
2 жыл бұрын
This bus signage problem should be brought to the attention to the tourist authority or local state parliamentary member. It matters.
@RyanLye1975
4 ай бұрын
Many Bus stops deal with many different routes.
@arahantiusdetache5103
2 жыл бұрын
Snags are just sausages, snags on bread are sausages on bread and hot dogs are ....well... hot dogs. They're all different in Oz.
@keithmitchell3282
Жыл бұрын
snags are sausages or mystery bags ( because you dont know what is in them) and it's probably better if you dont
@RandomStuff-he7lu
2 жыл бұрын
The scientific name for "Bell Peppers" is Capsicum annuum so Australians are just more scientific.
@travelsolo2677
2 жыл бұрын
In Adelaide all supermarkets around me are open to 9pm except Sundays
@kerrydoutch5104
Жыл бұрын
Hotdogs are the same as your hotdogs. What you showed was a standard beef sausage in bread NOT toast probably bought from a fund raising "sausage sizzle". I also daresay that if youre a regular bus user you'll be familiar with the bus route and where you need to get off. Pretyy sure the bus company would have bus route maps.
@RaffaPed
2 жыл бұрын
Never waved a bus driver....ever. Buses stop when someone's waiting at the stop.
@madiflood
3 жыл бұрын
im sorry but the way she pronounces capsicum ur basically meant to skip u
@mikegord
2 жыл бұрын
Yes the Gold Coast is weird. An elderyl person on a public bus would know from useing the bus where they are on the route without the need for Google.
@brontewcat
2 жыл бұрын
Bus stops. You do need to pay attention. Firstly the buses going past are often going to different destinations. So you have to signal to the particular bus going to the destination that you want. It would be helpful to announce the stop on an sign as it is approaching, but this technology is fairly new. Buses have been around for 80 to 100 years and there was no technology to announce the stops until very recently. So I guess it has always been you have to know where you get off. No one has updated buses with the available technology.
@neddyladdy
2 жыл бұрын
Do want a lot of water in the toilet bowl for washing your feet or something ?
@7newscapitalizer
Жыл бұрын
You ask the driver how many stops until blah
@joepowell7025
Жыл бұрын
A snag is a sausage a hot dog is still a hot dog with a frankfurter
@kylegibson5933
2 жыл бұрын
Idk why people find wearing no shoes so weird and offensive, when in reality it's the most natural way for your joints bones and tendants to flex/work etc Different story thought if you're walking through mud/dog crap/water and spreading to through a shop or someones house or something.
@tomwareham7944
Жыл бұрын
As an elderly Australian with too much time on his hands I've taken to commenting on all the wierd fact videos put out by visitors to my wonderful country let me clarify a few of your misguided or incorrect facts 1,capsicum is the correct name for what you north Americans call peppers and i believe the English call them Bell peppers 2 a Hod dog in Australia is the same as in your country (best hot dog I ever had was in Canada) a snag is slang for sausage and what you described is a snag sandwich or commonly called a snag sanger, and I want one now . 3 its not required for you to flag down buses despite what the signs say . 4 peoplecwho use the bus system regularly know when to get off .those that don't should merelyask the driver when boarding. 5 chemist or pharmacy are the correctname according to the Oxford dictionary and as the English wrote the dictionary andcwe both come from english speaking countries that therefore is the corret term because as you said Drug store is a little misleading 6 supermarkets actually frown apon customers using their trolleys to shop all over shopping centres but don't really the problem because the customers wouldn't take any notice 7 shops do not close at 4 pm shops in shopping strips might close at 5 or 5-30 but shopping centres are open over 56hrs a week and supermarkets are open up to 90hrs a week as ive said before to people who have perpetuated this myth if you can't buy what you neebd in the offered hrs then you didn't need it bad enough 8 Howyagoin is short for , how are you going. No sillier than asking Whatsup,or whatshappnen 9 a sneeky drink and a boogy is just another way to say , yeah I'm up for a bit of fun 10 people have been going barefoot in Australia forever,not as prevalent nowadays especially since the introduction of flip flops or as we Aussies correctly call them Thongs I was chastised for going barefoot by my granddaughter for embarrassing her in front of her classmates when I picked her up from school ,she went quiet when I told her next time I'd front up barearsed . 11 we have a water shortage here in Australia incase you haven't noticed hence the use of a dual flushing system and less water ,ive never understood the fascination of Americans and Canadians who by their comments indicate that they must stand there staring at what they just evacuated disappear down the gurgeler, do you slap yourselves on the back saying that was a good one or I did that or goodby poowith pride and a hint of nostalgia 12 light switches Really? the switches everywhere ive been in Canada or the United States were some form similar to ours i grant that our wall sockets are different to yours, ours are so much safer with on off switches ,so that they are not continuously live and therefore dangerous 13 coin sizes I noticed on your coin comparison photo Canadian coins are very similar in size so I don't see the problem , but if it is a problem I am ready to commit right now into excepting all coins free of charge with the genuine intention of recycling them into Aussie beer and Prawns, I know I know it's a sacrifice on my part but I'm an Aussie and we Aussies are renown for, not only being exceptionally good looking and modest but also our selfless acts of kindness 14 you've noted that we pay a decent minimum wage here in Australia this is true hence what some people say are high prices , which if you take into account that there's no addon sales taxes to the posted price and that there's a conversion rate between the Australian dollar and the Canadian dollar at the time of writing your dollar is worth $1 10 to our dollar and 67c American to our dollar . So the pices should be looked at in this context . 15 as for holiday surcharges, the people who work outside the normal hrs deserve to be compensated for their labour and inconvenience and therefore it's only fitting that the cost of this is passed on, after I retired and unfortunately lost my wife to an early death I returned to work this time as a casual salesman it was a big comedown from my professional management career but I could earnjust as much in 20 hrs of stress free work as opposed to my previous 40+hrs of fulltime tension and need to perform positively all the time, I was able to volunteer for all the shifts that my fellow workers wanted off to enjoy their families it was awin win for everyone Anyway I didn't do it for the money I was well taken carevof in that regard , i did it for the company and friendship . Bonus observation. We all have differences , embrace them, adapt to them don't worry about things you have no contol over and enjoy to the fullest those things that you do and youll be a happier person for it
@thomasbradbury4576
2 жыл бұрын
She commented about someone with muddy bare feet. If that person had been wearing shoes would she have complained about the mud on their shoes?
@RyanLye1975
2 жыл бұрын
Earliest shop closes are usually 5:30pm or 6pm
@sylviagerritsen7975
2 жыл бұрын
Not in Perth WA - we’re still W aiting A while.
@RyanLye1975
2 жыл бұрын
@@sylviagerritsen7975 The only persons who use "Wait Awhile" are arrogant Eastern Staters ( who I earnestly encourage to F* off out of my state) or West Australians with inferiority complexes. I famously observed the wife of a British soldier ( on exchange with the SAS Campbell Barracks ) living on-base in a part of Perth she could only dream of living in, complaining that Perth ( at the time had a population of only 1 million) wasn't a 24 hour city like London ( you know that HUGE CAPITAL CITY OF ENGLAND .. FINANCIAL CAPITAL OF PLANET EARTH AND LARGEST CITY ( easily) in the entire British Isles. Arrogant shits are not only invited to leave, I will provide the boot to hurry you along. Perth shops do not close at 4pm. Or 5pm. Most shops close 5:30pm at earliest. If you are going to go with "alternative facts" , then have the decency to wear a red cap so we know you are one of the Deplorables.
@billking8843
2 жыл бұрын
Yeah nah, we have hotdogs. A pork sausage in a bun with mustard and/ or tomato sauce is a hot dog. A snag is normally a lamb sausage. A snag sanga is a sausage, which is often served with fried onions.
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