How daycare in Germany is politically treated (especially in the former western part and even more in the more conservative south of Germany), is something that really makes me angry. While it has become better since there is a legal claim against your municipality to provide daycare, the situation is still awful. The scarcity of daycare capacity, along with short hours (and the shortage of daycare worker as result of a structural underpayment in the field) and a general gender pay gap is the kind of political prevention of gender equality that families in Germany still are dealing with. There is still this idea of conservative "Wahlfreiheit" - being able to stay at home for your children - while in many cases there really is not a Wahlfreiheit, but instead one parent - and very rarely the father - is forced to stay at home due to inadequate political interest in providing the necessary daycare infrastructure. And all of that during a period of alleged "Fachkräftemangel". If you say, you don't understand how families can have two full-time working parents and have a young child, the answer is: they don't and this is how Germany shows its antiquated grimace. Sorry for the emotional rant, but this is lack of important infrastructure is a subversive part of our structural culture wars against equality in this country.
@mortuos557
Жыл бұрын
that's the problem of demographic change. if this happened during the boomers era, politicians would've been raked for it. but boomers are still the most powerful demographic and they aren't hit by that problem themselves. so the majority doesn't care. isn't their issue after all.
@starryk79
Жыл бұрын
well if the personnel from the Kita wasn't lying all other parents that had their child in that group did take their kids home earlier so it's a bit of a hen egg problem. It doesn't make sense to have one kid staying there alone for 90 minutes. So i can understand the Kita responding that way. Not sure i would want kids to be in daycare from 8 to 6. It's just too little time to spend with the parents per day and that can't good for the relationship.
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
We feel very fortunate to be in a financial/work position where I can have the flexibility to be able to not work a full 8-5... but I know that for many families (especially immigrants) this just isn't possible. Once you tack on the added complication of not having family close by - it really makes the lack of full-time care quite difficult. I know in our Kita, when it is pick-up time at least half of the other adults there are grandparents.
@patrickhanft
Жыл бұрын
@@starryk79 but this is a structural thing, not a single Kita issue. You see, if "full daycare" means 8am to 4pm that also means that you are not able to work full-time anyway. If you are already forced to do part-time, what difference does it make if you are working 25 hours instead of 32 hours? If you also then start to calculate and see how much it might cost more to have your child cared for until 4pm instead of 2:30pm, I assume that for many parents it is an easy decision not to create the "necessary demand", while they might actually decide very well differently and for a true full-time option, if it would be easy and affordable. Again, it is a question of political importance in a time, where we as a country actually should not afford to not have every well educated skilled professional who wants to work being able to work. Instead we still have high Kita fees as if daycare would be some kind of luxury instead of basic social infrastructure.
@CS-ox9hn
Жыл бұрын
There is no gender pay gap. And it’s not the woman staying at home - but the parent with the lower income. Nobody forces a woman to marry a man with a higher income. And feel free to found a private daycare company - if the need for it is there - people will use your services.
@NormanF62
Жыл бұрын
In seventeen years of living in small towns, the one freedom I’ve enjoyed is I’ve never had to lock the door while running errands in town. The absence of crime has been a blessing and I can expect my stuff to be there when I return. Safe and walkable and the views make all worth it! I don’t miss the big city.
@KitsuneHB
Жыл бұрын
Well, some thieves broked into my parents house - two times. The house is on the country side. So yes, there is crime.
@indrinita
Жыл бұрын
@@ronnie3561 😂 I was totally thinking this! There’s no way as a Canadian of colour living in Germany that I’d give up everything I can have living in a city (including safety btw - this matters for people of colour and the countryside’s way more dangerous for us) to live in the country. You couldn’t pay me to do it.
@RealConstructor
Жыл бұрын
Thieves are looking for opportunities, you give them one. And the insurance won’t cover your stolen items if you leave the door unlocked. My insurance company won’t even pay for stolen items if I won’t have decent (two stars) hinges and locks. My premium will be lower if I install three star hinges and locks. In my country there was a program on TV (maybe a decade ago) where professional thieves would brake into real homes, without the owners knowing, and show how fast it all goes. Sometimes they really need only 15 to 30sec to get into a house, mostly with the backdoor unlocked, a not so decent lock, or a small window on the first floor left open. They’re out again in one to three minutes, taking a lot of valuables. Afterwards the program confronts the owner (give back the valuables of course) and shows them the footage. And repair any damage. People don’t realize it can happen to them. But it can. For real.
@meinsee
Жыл бұрын
@@indrinita Sad to hear that. One of my friends is PoC. She and her family have no problems to live here in germany. Good luck.
@CabinFever52
Жыл бұрын
When I think of living in the cities in the USA and compare them to Vienna, AT, it is like night and day. As a female, I feel comfortable walking my small dog at any hour of the night or day. If I were still in my 20s or 30s, I might not feel the same, but I still see dozens of lone young women walking home here at night. Also, when I think of how anything you leave outside in urban USA is very likely to be stolen or vandalized, while here in Austria, you will find that people pick things up for people that they have dropped to keep it safer and easier to find, let alone not touching other property that doesn't belong to them. In the states, there is such a gap between people who have enough to live and those who don't and the numbers for the latter are growing, mostly due to corporate greed taking over. I hate seeing how it is reaching its grubby little paws into Europe.
@JohnMckeown-dl2cl
Жыл бұрын
When I lived in Germany I lived in a small village/town. I loved it!! I was the only American in my neighborhood and yes I did stand out from the "locals". I wanted to blend in and understand the local cultural traditions and differences. In many ways it was very similar to living in a small town in America. I have lived in both and except for the language and the fact many traditions date back way further than those in the US much was the same. Fasching (or Carnival or Mardi Gras) is different, but fun and interesting. Germans are very fun and interesting people, but you notice that they can be a bit "standoffish" at first, but once they feel comfortable with you, you have friends for life. One thing you mentioned , Christmas, is one of those things that are very different. They don't normally decorate outside like we do (loved your reference to the Griswalds) and we put up our tree the day after Thanksgiving where they traditionally put theirs up on Christmas Eve. I would not trade my small town Germany experience for anything and I wish you good luck with yours.
@marie9814
Жыл бұрын
I live in a smaller town. On the paper it says about 50-60k inhabitants. This town was hit by the flood in July 2021 and what I loved is how everybody just stood together after that time., helping each other out, giving comfort and so on. What I don't like is public transportation. I don't have a car and I have to rely on the bus, but during the day it comes once per hour, in the moring and afternoon twice per hour. I hvae to schedule my grocery shopping around the departure and arrival of the bus schedule.
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
Public infrastructure was on the top of our list when we were looking at smaller villages to move to. Although to move within the city you're going to be limited to bus/car/bike - which sounds similar to yours - we did appreciate that there is a regional train that runs twice and hour between our town and Freiburg. It has come in handy multiple times when we have visitors since they can still move around without needing us to taxi them places.
@patrickhanft
Жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton you are really lucky to have great transit in a rural area. One of the things Baden-Württemberg really does better than most of the other Flächenländer.
@seanthiar
Жыл бұрын
@@patrickhanft I don't think it has to do with BW. It has do with your choice. I live in a rural area and my choice where I wanted to live was greatly affected by the availability of public transport and that I have at least one grocery store nearby. There are other rural areas I could have chosen with bad public transport and no grocery store nearby, but that was a no for me. I don't need a grocer and public transport nearby at the moment, but I have a chronic disease that can mean I can't use my car anymore. And if I know I'm dependent on public transport I don't understand why someone chose to live where public transport is bad.
@speedyf40
Жыл бұрын
It's amazing to hear about your experience moving to a small town in Germany. Two years ago my family moved from Ann Arbor to Blomberg NRW. We have had many of the same experiences you're talking about. If you're ever in the area, you're more than welcome to stop by and see how we are living and how we have adapted. I would write more, but I have to get ready for one of the many Schützenfest 😂🎉🍻
@mariaforzisi
Жыл бұрын
I'm an American from NY married to a German. We use to live in Esslingen where his family lives, but when the opportunity to buy our own house came about we moved. I must say, we love our small town there are only 300 people living here. We have a house with lots of land. We moved here 7 years ago. We bought our house and love our neighborhood with 5 houses on our street. Our doctor is our neighbor. We did not have a problem finding a doctor as you are having. One of our neighbors told us about the three doctors in the area and we got in right a way. I had to get use to the quietness of the night but since moving here it has been peaceful.
@neeadevil4840
Жыл бұрын
300 People I would more say thats Village, and you have a Doctor next Door you got Lucky. I know that in the USA Villages are not as much of a thing but I like my rural 500 People but steadily growing Village.
@JudyCZ
Жыл бұрын
I appreciate that you're calling yourselves "immigrants" and not "expats". ❤️
@stuborn-complaining-german
Жыл бұрын
I can totally confirm the buerocracy stuff. I grew up in a small village, but lived in Munich for the last 15 years before moving back out into the country. In Munich I needed appointments, draw a number, spend hours waiting, aso. at the right office for whatever I needed. Here in the 1500 people town I just walk into town hall, talk to one of the 4 very nice ladies there and tell them what I need. I will get super friendly and competent help instantly.
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
SAME. The nicest people, excellent service, and a much more laid back atmosphere.
@xander9460
Жыл бұрын
11:25 This is a result of the more dense urban planning. It allows for more... social/public spaces or as "not just bikes" puts it, 3rd places. A little cafe on the corner, a small shop around the bend. All walkable. It breathes life into a neighborhood. Something that's rather impossible in the sprawling, car depended suburbs of the USA. Pick your favorite though. Because generally you'll live in an appartement or a smaller home in tradeoff. Different advantages. Edit: the relevant video is: "The great places erased by suburbia" (the third place)
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
LOVE not just bikes. Such a great channel. The walkability and just general safety of walking/cycling/pedestrian infrastructure is something we really, really love about living in Germany.
@karinland8533
Жыл бұрын
That sort of planing is not new to Germany, though
@Gazer75
Жыл бұрын
Doesn't always work though. Maybe in generations. They actually restricted street parking in town here and and built parking buildings which are rather expensive and inconvenient. Several shops eventually left town to expand and built their own just outside with a parking lot free of charge. Some moved to the shopping mall in town which has free parking for up to 2 hours or something. They also wanted to make a street one way to widen the sidewalks, but I believe the shop owners protested. The grocery shops with the highest turnover are the ones outside the town with plenty of free parking.
@thiloreichelt4199
Жыл бұрын
In Germany, there is still partially a cultural expection that a mom stays at home after birth and starts to work part-time when the children reach school age. That does not describe reality, but that fiction is uphelp fiercely by more conservative people. Rural areas are simply more conservative.
@meinich5488
Жыл бұрын
May be, southern Germany in rural regions are very conservative, in the north nobody expect you to stay at home as Mum Not even in rural villages.
@CS-ox9hn
Жыл бұрын
It’s a class thing. The lower classes need the mothers working, for the middle class it’s a status symbol. The rich people simply take care of the children. No going to work shortly after childbirth. Look up the statistics.
@edithputhy4948
Жыл бұрын
@@meinich5488 it's more of a West/East thing, childcare was way more accessible in the DDR
@wolfi7106
Ай бұрын
These rural areas are total green and conservative
@Bladel1965
Жыл бұрын
I appreciate that you’re trying to protect your privacy and don’t want to share where you’re living. Only “knowing” you from your (great) video’s it takes me less than 5 minutes to find the street you’re living in. Of course, I’m not going to share that here, but be aware what you post on the internet if you value your privacy. Keep up the good work!
@michaelbukowski7297
Жыл бұрын
We lived in Schaffhausen near Weil der Stadt for three years while I was stationed near Stuttgart. We loved the small town experience in Germany.
@LythaWausW
Жыл бұрын
Our neighbors call our house Las Vegas at Christmas and I'm pretty conservative - nothing blinking, nothing moving, no characters, just lots of colored lights on the bushes and barn. They were sad when we were in America this Christmas, "your property will be so dark." : )
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
I would say it was pretty much the same at our house too. We just did white lights and garland. Outlined the balcony, the fence line and then a big garland with lights all the way around our entry portico to the front door. By American standards, pretty tame. But next year Jonathan says he wants to figure out how to get up onto the roof and mount a dancing Santa. 😂
@Warentester
Жыл бұрын
Coloured lights... That's where you went Las Vegas Style. Germans will use mostly warm white - and sometimes icy white lights. Coloured lights are seen as tacky.
@LythaWausW
Жыл бұрын
@@Warentester I didn't say multicolored lights - those are reserved for the tree: )
@conniebruckner8190
Жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton 😵😲😬
@LythaWausW
Жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton You have a kid, and kids love that! As a kid I was fascinated with my grandparents' life-sized lit-up Nativity scene, plastic characters with light bulbs inside. I have never seen this in Germany, though Germans will have a Nativity in their homes of course. I have searched and searched cuz I really want a life-size glowing Nativity in my yard, but no luck so far.
@peterparanoid9635
Жыл бұрын
Pro tip concerning the Hausarzt: Make an appointment in order to get a second opinion on a health related issue. Many doctors will allow this. Next time you need an appointment, you can relate to the first one and tell them, you are not a new patient, they already have your file. 😊
@julezhu1893
Жыл бұрын
Spent the first 25 years of my life in one of the wealthiest neighbourhoods in my city. Lovely upper-middle-class neighbourhood with a slight village feel to it. Growing up I never realised how few foreigners/migrants lived in my neighbourhood. It only became apparent when my non-German husband moved in and people started giving us strange looks or asking whether my family was running some sort of charity. Now the two of us live in a mixed neighbourhood with a fairly large migrant population. It's not as green, clean and proper as our old neighbourhood but infrastructure wise it's super convenient and no more strange looks (also, we save €€€ on rent)
@Cupcakiiiii
Жыл бұрын
Finding a Kita is soo hard in Germany but concerning the opening hours it actually has gotten a lot better already in many towns. I grew up in a small to medium sized town and while when I was a kid everything shut down at 2 or 4 the Kitas are now usually open until 6, some even until 7. I think in Germany it's not the norm that both parents work full time as we have many rights to work a part time job, stay home for a couple of years after birth etc.
@ralfklonowski3740
Жыл бұрын
I was born and raised in the Ruhr district and have spent almost all my life here. The Ruhr is a sprawling conglomerate of about 4-5 million people, but it feels much smaller. This is partly due to the fact that instead of one city center we have about a dozen of them, suburban hubs not counted, as the area is divided into a number of independant cities. Additionaly many of the worker's quarters, wich were often centered around a coal mine, used to have a strong sense of community and solidarity. Down below, your life depended on your collegue having your back and vice versa. This culture is slowly disappearing due to the economic changes of the last decades, but still resonates in the way people treat each other.
@PeterBuwen
Жыл бұрын
If I may give you a hint: in the city you consume, but in the village you participate. Make sure that you get involved somewhere in the village community, in an association, even if it is in church work, for example. You will see that this is the turbo gear for integration. To say this: I subcribed here about one year ago and I really like your channel.
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
Totally agree. It is clear that the locals really love their city and are really welcoming to new families. When we lived in Freiburg our jobs/University were our "connection" and was the way we met new people - but here it will be important to get involved in another organization.
@christophhanke6627
Жыл бұрын
100%. My parents moved from lower saxony to NRW and even after 25 years of Living in this small town (10k), we still feel only half-integrated just because we had no interest in doing church work or joining a 'Schützenverein'. We did sports and went to school here. So this is even true for germans from different regions xD
@PeterBuwen
Жыл бұрын
@@christophhanke6627 Well, you had no interest in church or Schützenverein. Your interests were on your own. So it's no wonder you stayed a stranger. We got integrated after some months because we were interested in the villages interests.🙂
@christophhanke6627
Жыл бұрын
@@PeterBuwen the funny thing about this is that we actually found a lot of friends this way. ^^ Because a chunk of the people that moved here also weren't Fans of Schützenvereine or german folk music groups and they got in contact with us. So basically we forged friendships with people from different Parts of germany who all shared their common non-interest in these village-activities (except for joining sports clubs) xD
@schadelharry4048
Жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton Villages don't make it hard for foreigners, because often times they are "recruited", if they are friendly. This requires a good village-life, but Corona and multiculturalism killed a lot of domestic culture in the South of Germany. Unlike the small villages in the US, as I know them, in Germany these villages are basically organized pretty centrally among competing branches of sport, singers or carneval etc. So, it is more important to know either side and stick to one side, as it will be questioned, if you go to rivals instead. Also, in small villages it is more hard to get new deep friendships, because the inhabitants all have them pretty much settled and organized. And it's important to know, that friendships in Germany are anything but superficial. Icebreakers are mostly children and community work. The city has more neutral fields and is more fast-paced.
@manuel0578
Жыл бұрын
I guess what many Ausländers don’t know is that for many Behörden you don’t need to go to the one that’s closest to you. Like here we have about a dozen Bürgerbüros. I can go to any one them, I don’t need to go to the one in my district which might have long wait times for appointments. Same if you want to register your car: you can register it anywhere. Same for the Standesamt: you can go to any Standesamt in the country if your local one has long wait times.
@philipptielmann
Жыл бұрын
in rural southern Germany the stay at home mom is still the norm. that’s sad (I guess) but true. also small towns are often really old (my hometown is more than a 1000 years old, even though it’s just a tiny village) and people traditionally never move away (over generations), so the traditions become very unique. it’s pretty cool you get to experience that!
@all_in_for_JESUS
Жыл бұрын
Its sad when Moms stay at home? Why?
@philipptielmann
Жыл бұрын
@@all_in_for_JESUS it’s not sad at all. it’s sad if they have to because the infrastructure gives them no other choice.
@susanaaragorn8606
Жыл бұрын
It is sad when they have no choice
@LunaticDesire
Жыл бұрын
@@all_in_for_JESUS They should have a choice. I know that's hard to understand for some religious people.
@emperortomoto
Жыл бұрын
Based on the information shared and my personal experience here in Germany, it is evident that kindergartens often have earlier closing times due to the fact that many children do not stay for a full day. This can be attributed to the preference of many mothers to work part-time and actively participate in their children's upbringing. I agree that the availability and affordability of childcare facilities should be improved. It is unfortunate that raising a child is often threted as a costly hobby rather than a fundamental aspect of life and society.
@roaxeskhadil
Жыл бұрын
Cool thumbnail. American Gothic ....
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
Thanks! 😉 Seemed like a fun culture reference.
@ThePixel1983
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, except... wasn't that a farmer and his daughter?
@ThePixel1983
Жыл бұрын
Wikipedia DE says "depending on interpretation", Wikipedia EN says "often mistaken for his wife".
@roaxeskhadil
Жыл бұрын
@@ThePixel1983 And, really, does it matter? It's a cultural reference, not a 1:1 reproduction. And it doesn't need to be. The Grant Wood painting is iconic piece of art, and immediately recognizable in the thumbnail, so "great work", nothing else needs saying.
@kellymcbright5456
Жыл бұрын
Doctors hesitate to start business in the countryside since it is less profitable than in the cities. Health insurance pays per capita of treated patients. And it demands to visit disabled patients at home. Travelling between those patients takes lots of time outside the cities. And that travelling is paid significantly less than treatment. It is more or less not more than a refund for the mobility expenses. Thus, employed physicians prefer to wait for a position in the cities to become free instead of opening a non-profitable countryside office. Though it is possible immediately and there are even subsidies.
@JohannesMorcos
Жыл бұрын
I am a pharmacist in the US and I am thinking of moving to Germany (or another European country). I am hoping that you read this comment and make a video or a series of videos on a "walkthrough" of how to move to Germany and establish a job and a home. Here are some ideas that I have been looking at and wanting to find some information on, but they are pretty scattered across the internet. 1. I have an American passport so, I can just go to Germany and visit (notwithstanding the new visiting/screening laws...?). I heard that there are german courses in different cities throughout Germany that can teach you pretty good German in a matter of 12 weeks (3 months) (30-40 hours a week), that cost from 600 to 3000 euros. How true is that, and where are they? well, that's my plan for the first three months. 2. during these three months, I can go to different universities or some german pharmacy board to try and get my pharmacy license based on my pharmacy degree in the US. 3. maybe I can try to land a job as a pharmacy technician which would have a lower barrier to entry. 4. in order to get my German pharmacy license, I am sure that I am going to need to take some german language test (as my degree is from a non-german country) and then take the actual pharmacy test or maybe some law test as well. I understand that Germany like most European countries have two different pharmacy degrees (retail vs inpatient), so I am going to have to make a decision on that. 5. I am assuming this is going to take a while, a year, maybe, if not more. Meanwhile, how difficult it is to find a job as an American with an American passport (after the first initial three months, hoping that I would know basic german by then), as a waiter for example until I am able to get a pharmacy technician license or eventually getting my pharmacy license. what steps are needed as far as a work visa? am I able to get a work visa while living in Germany or do I have to leave Germany and apply through a US embassy? 6. On a work visa, would I be able to go to university to study some other stuff, or would it be better to get a student visa and then work (part-time)? Basically, work visa vs a student visa. 7. I have a home here in the US. so let's say I am able to establish myself in Germany and I plan on selling my US home, you can talk to us about the nightmare of moving your money after selling a significant asset like a home from the US to Germany and buy a home in Germany without triggering all kinds of money laundering alarms. and what would be the most effective way to transfer funds. 8. American taxes. as an American living abroad you still have to file taxes. german banks make a point of telling the IRS about your funds if you open your german bank account using an American passport. or maybe you had to circumvent that step, so for your "safety" you don't have to make a video about that if you don't want to. 9. how to get in touch with other expats in Germany? what cities are more welcoming and supportive of expats (germans supporting expats, and expats supporting expats)? Basically, give us a guide (a tree-like) of how a professional, a doctor, an engineer, a programmer, an artist, or anyone with some kind of degree would be able to make a transition from the US to Germany. A tree guide as in, you have an option a and an option b, under option a, you have options a1, a2, a3, a4 under option b you have options b1, b2, under options a1 you have a1.1 and a1.2, and so forth. make it as extensive as you would like. Finally, this is special for me. I currently hold two passports, Americana and Egyptian. and I am sorta hoping to come to Germany and switch careers to medicine (med school) and take advantage of german (approx.) free education.
@Gazer75
Жыл бұрын
I take small town life over city life any day. Here in Norway a city of 250k would actually be around the 2nd or 3rd largest in the country :) I'm in a small(ish) town with about 6-7k people and around 15k total in the municipality. One day in Bergen for me is more than enough. Way to much noise pollution. We have several grocery stores, to many if you ask me. Sports equipment stores. Most car brands have a shops here. Several places to eat with different types of cuisine. Two ski resorts. After the equivalent of high school you do have to go a city though.
@marie9814
Жыл бұрын
Oh Yes, and one thing I've wanted to share is my experience with KiTa. So I live in NRW, when my daughter started daycare (almost 10,5 years ago now) the majority of the kids were picked up at 12 / noon before lunch. (about 50% I guess), from the remaining kids I think about 80% were picked up after lunch (2 p.m.) and there were only a few left who stayed up until 4 p.m. so the KiTa was open until 4.30 p.m. but when I picked up my daughter (and later son) at 4.15 p.m. most of the time they were the last ones to be there, It changes throughout the years. Kita opened at 7 am and closed at 4.30 pm. when I visited my sister in Leipzig, Saxony; I was blown away when she could get her kid at 6 p.m.There are not only differences between the U..S. and Germany and Small town vs big town but also eastern Germany vs western Germany, although I hate the destinction after all these years. But in teh former GDR it was way more common for women to return to work after only a short maternal leave (I went to daycare at 12 weeeks old) and this is still a reason for better opening hours for daycare.
@n3kro3d59
Жыл бұрын
Hey Guys, actually i living in Kappel (Freiburg) with my Family. We have two Little Boys which are growing up also in a smaller Part of Freiburg. My wife and me also are grown up in Kappel. Funny to say, we both have a lot of great memories about our childhood! When i was a Little Boy i helped the local Farmer with his cows. He also let me Drive his old tractor. I will Never forget that! Your Kids will have a beautiful childhood with alot of Natur and other Great expirence around them. Maybe our ways will Cross someday in Freiburg. Because we „Freiburger Bobbele“ are always saying: „Freiburg ist ein Dorf“, in the meaning you will always meet some Friends when you are in town.
@Felipe.N.Martins
Жыл бұрын
My wife and I had a similar experience: a few years ago we moved from a city of 1.5 million people in Brazil to a town of 60k-ish in the Netherlands. We are also old 😛, so we are loving it! Well, it helps that it is just a half hour drive (20min by train) to the city where the university is located. Anyway, I’ve been watching your videos for a while and it’s been quite interesting to notice the similarities in cultural “shock” experiences. Your videos about the differences in American and German life are great!
@jarnobot
Жыл бұрын
You've been in Bart de Pau's videos, haven't you? You and your wife seem like great people :)
@Felipe.N.Martins
Жыл бұрын
@@jarnobot Yes, my wife and I are in many of his videos! Small world. ;-)
@Quotenwagnerianer
Жыл бұрын
Should come of no surprise that the Ausländerbehörde is faster in a small town in the middle of the Black Forest. There are probably only you two and about 3 other people who are foreigners and need to go there. ;) That's also why they are so kind and friendly. They love that they get something to do, when you show up. ;)
@paulwaldner1693
Жыл бұрын
We are expatriates who have lived in the small city of Bad Homburg since 1987. Our point of reference was suburban Long Island. We love the small city life experience here in Germany which we believe has no analogue in the US. The benefits of the sustainability of life, the walkability, the feeling of community, the work-leisure balance, the sense of place and the cultural anchors of place combined with the social supports of German life are something hard for us to make our American friends and family understand. We lived in a house with a yard in a small suburban feeling village connected to Bad Homburg while our children grew into adulthood, but now I enjoy life directly in the old town here right in the middle of this city of about 50,000 people on the bordering Frankfurt and the Taunus “Mountains” (a Hessen version of the Black Forest with its own Feldberg).
@nohandlebarmtb
Жыл бұрын
You are not expats, you are inmigrants
@chkoha6462
Жыл бұрын
Oh hello dear neighbour;) Greetings from Kirdorf
@yippie6862
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for telling us about this awesome magical small town in Germany that we will never get to experience because we'll never know the name. lol ;) Seriously though, glad you found a nice location.
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
hahaha yeahhhhh its best we not give TOO much away 😉 But thank you, we really love it.
@tobyk.4911
Жыл бұрын
so it's basically the Bielefeld of the south - a legendary town that might or may not really exist? ;-)
@paulm.sweazey336
Жыл бұрын
I had previously commented about how much I appreciate your technical/educational/tutorial videos, but I worried about missing videos like this one. I'll stop worrying now. Thanks so much, from a Gringo living in one of those small villages. The yearly Fasching parade passes right past our house, and neighbors gather with us in our driveway each time. I treasure these events, and the chance to see so many celebrating silliness. The same paraders from three villages conduct three parades on three consecutive days, just to make sure that each villages has its own big, noisy, joyous event. Love thy neighbor
@kolli7150
Жыл бұрын
Well, if you are wondering why the gender pay gap is still that high in Germany - the Kita situation is your answer... it's not possible for both parents to work full time. And as the mother will naturally stop following her carrier because of pregnancy issues, breastfeeding the child etc. the father's income will rise and the mother's will stagnate so that it doesn't make sense on a economic point of few for fathers to get a (long) parental leave. After you have finally found a Kita for your child, the mother cannot even go back to working full time because the opening hours are made for moms who stay at home or are working part time. And I can really understand your culture shock because I have it as well being born to Eastern Germans and being raised in the new Bundesländer in the 90ies when you could still benefit from the much more thought through Kita system of the former GDR that was adapted to normal work hours and even night shifts. Right now I am looking for Kitas as well for my first child. I am still living in a big city but as we both are working in a medical profession, the Kitas with extended opening hours are still very limited... And look how much of consequences this has: One reason for nurses to go into job leasing work is because they have more flexible work hours (to care for their children, especially if you are a single parent) and will get paid more than nurses with a normal work contract.... that puts so much unnecessary financial pressure on the health care system as well. And ultimately, among other reasons people are leaving their health care profession. I completely agree - another Stadt vs land culture shock is the terrible Bürgerservice in bigger cities compared to smaller ones. I think it's an unspoken fact that the wildest feasts are in the smallest towns and villages. 😂 Apart from that, good for you that your are feeling so welcomed and at home 👍
@lotharschepers2240
Жыл бұрын
Please dont blame it on me, but IT was your Thumbnail and youre Family conctions to east Frisia that reminds me of a north German icon named "Jan and Libett" an figure that came into my mind while you we're joking around of now Bering old. I would advise to Look " Jan and Libett" Up at Google or ask youre Family from east frishia about it.
@wernerruf7761
Жыл бұрын
Pony Express?! What are you talking about? Snail Express!!!
@LarsPW
Жыл бұрын
KiTa-places for children are a limited ressource in Germany. The main reason is a lack of qualified staff and one reason for this situation might be some discrimination of men in the world of child nurses. Available staff can choose where to work, but it is a rather low paid occupation.
@DaNiePred
Жыл бұрын
That sounds interesting. The issues you are talking about (lack of Kindergarden places for childs, lack of Doctors taking new patients), completely apply to the city I live in...but that city is Mainz, size wise comparable to Freiburg. Where in the smaller cities and villages around Mainz these issues are way less than in Mainz...so it looks like it is just opposite to Freiburg and your Blackforest town.
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
Ah that is super interesting!
@aricarol18
Жыл бұрын
I loved this video!! 8 months ago I moved to a small village 50 min away from Hamburg (830 people as of 2008 latest data) and I had the same worries/concern as you guys but surprisingly I have met already three people that speak fluent English and my right next door neighbor speaks English, Spanish, and German which happen to be my three languages as well. Anyways, the experience has been amazing and I have a Kita less than 3 min walking from my house.. Additionally, right now I am starting my PhD and I have a 9 month old baby. So, it would be cool if you can make a video about how your PhD experience in Germany was and how you dealt with Jack during this time (did you get maternity leave, how did you do with Jack sick days and so on), how the University dynamic is compared to private industry, and your family dynamic. That would be cool and also it would be interesting to see the contrast with a PhD position while being a mom in the US. Keep it up guys, I love your content!!
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
AH yeah the time with Jack and the PhD was quite the juggling act. When I was pregnant with him I found out I was awarded a pretty prestigious 1 year research grant (that would begin one month before his due date). After speaking to them, I learned that legally - they are required to give me Mutterschutz but not Elternzeit. And since this was a 1 year grant, they couldn't transfer it to another academic/fiscal year. So the "compromise" that we found was to hire on a Tagesmutter 2.5 days a week. She worked for us privately and came directly to our house. This was great since I was still breastfeeding so I could be close by when it was 'snack time', but then I could also get dedicated time to work on my research.... but it was pricey. Basically the majority of the money I got in "income" from this grant went towards the Tagesmutter. But it was either do that and make meaningful progress towards my project - or forfeit the grant all together.
@madlenexner7524
Жыл бұрын
We moved from bug city in UK to small village in Germany in 2003 for very similar reasons to yourselves. The children had a wonderful childhood here. Quite possibly, as we get older, a bigger town would again be better, but we took roots here and are reluctant to leave….at least for now 😊
@Kristina_S-O
Жыл бұрын
I had to laugh when reading this statement! When we moved from Hamburg to a small village, my husband and I dreamt of returning to the city once the kids had moved out. Well, the kids are legally adults now, I am way in my 50s, I still love Hamburg, but I cannot even imagine to exist without a garden and seeing the horizon every day.
@nordwestbeiwest1899
Жыл бұрын
Nun ich lebe im Nordwesten Deutschlands auf dem Lande und liebe die Ruhe die meiner Seele und Körper gut tut , auch die grüne saftige Wald und Wiesenlandschaft gefällt mir vor meiner Haustür . Das Dorfleben ist intensiver und ehrlicher und auch wenn man eine Freundschaft zu einem Zeit bedarf , es wird anders also persönlicher und enger .Will das nicht mehr missen denn was ganz entscheidend ist das man wissen muß um Anschluss zu Menschen haben will , muß man in einen Verein eintreten wie die Feuerwehr , Fußball , Schützen , Landfrauen u.s.w. .Wenn diese Hürde geschafft ist stehen einem fast alle Türen zu den Menschen offen auch wenn du Hilfe benötigst . Ach es ist schön hier in Deutschland ........😉😊
@wordsmithgmxch
Жыл бұрын
As for difficulties with Kita schedules: In Hamburg, we found a lady with a nice house and spacious garden who took in 4-6 kids for day care and offered the required flexibility. Dunno about the cost; it's been a while. So ask around or check out the message boards in super markets, etc. and see what pops up.
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
We are considering it for the newest little one. It doesn't look likely that we will be able to get childcare at a city organization until at least 1 year old. It would be great to even just have him in a playgroup for two half days at a Tagesmutter if possible. We had a Tagesmutter in our home when Jack was little (again, just 2 days a week) so I could finish my PhD. Without family around, I really think the Tagesmutter helped greatly with Jack's acclimation to new people.
@erikbuhre
Жыл бұрын
Just some minor notes about your experience. First of the GP situation is the same in every one of the more rural areas of Germany. It has to do withe the fact that not a lot of practitioners want to work there and that the number of available "Kassensitze", the licenses to be able to bill the national health insurers, is based on census data from, I believe the early 90s. That's especially apparent when you try to get an appointment for any mental issues. Second, i believe a lot of the positives you experienced have to do with the fact that you're American. I can guarantee it would have been much different if you're from a Middle Eastern country, for example.
@ElevenEvilExes
Жыл бұрын
please don't do fireworks. they're horrible for animals.
@charlotteschriener8739
Жыл бұрын
Dear Black Forest Family! It's always a Sunday treat to watch your latest video with a fresh cup of coffee. Small town life is great and terrible at the same time, isn't it? I moved from the big city to a nearby small town 8 years ago and I can totally relate toall of your struggles. It's great that you as immigrants mostly have such good experiences. Unfortunately, this does not apply to all immigrants. Many are treated like crap by both authorities and neighbors. You are a model immigrant family that is welcome anywhere. White, well educated, financially independent, German speaking and does not upset a culture with new customs and religious beliefs. Immigrants who do not meet these requirements are viewed with even more suspicion in rural areas than in large cities. Not all that glitters is gold in Germany either. We still have a lot to learn when it comes to openness and tolerance.
@shieldtom
Жыл бұрын
I am relieved to hear that we are not the only ones with a culture shock after leaving the "big" city. We are also immigrants, lived at home in a big university center with about 500k population, moved to Germany (Ba-Wü) 7 years ago to a smaller "big" city with about 140k population. That was our first shock, but somehow that was obvious being from another country. Last year we decided to move out of town to a quiet neighbourhood. Our problems to solve were rather logistical, because the nearest supermarket is about 3km away, no more running to the shop when you forgot something, public transportation is rather rare and not very reliable. But hey, one can not have everything and we are happy where we are right now.
@mina_en_suiza
Жыл бұрын
I have always been a city-person, having lived in Berlin, Córdoba (Argentina), Buenos Aires and London. So, when we moved first to a small town and later (for being able to buy a house) to a village in Switzerland was a huge change in lifestyle, with some similarities and some differences. As foreigners with two kids (which were born here) we were also on our own, without a family network to help. The fact that every village, town and region has its own unique culture is certainly similar to your Black Forest experience, though "High Culture" is not Switzerland's strongest area. It exists in the cities like Zurich or Geneva, but compared to our previous cities (especially London), well... What I really came to appreciate, was nature: Having a creek to splash with the kids in summer, a hill for sledging in winter and a forest for camp fires all year round, all within walking distance, is just amazing. Day care is private and rather easy to find, but ridiculously expensive (think 120 Franks = €/$ per full day per kid. Full time gets you above 2000 a month - *cough*). Kindergarten (from age 4 or 5, depending on the canton) is mandatory and free, and the state always provides a space. Public administration in Switzerland is extremely smooth and efficient, everywhere, as is public transport, which even reaches the smallest villages. The toughest part, though, was making local friends. It's relatively easy, if you join local associations, like the firefighters or sport clubs, but that's not really my cup of tea. In the end, we made most of our friends through work and through the kids (playgrounds). Swiss, not too many, mostly Latin Americans and Germans, but at least some.
@LucaSitan
Жыл бұрын
The thing about Carnival is so true! Germans are intensely tribal people, even more so because 3 generations at least haven't been able to express national pride (due to history...) So you don't get the equivalent of "I'm an American!" here. It's literally down to the village you were born in and people can get quite offended if you get their region of origin wrong 😂A lot of that has to do with religious history, There was a long time when one village was catholic and the next one protestant, so the kids weren't even allowed to play with each other. And of course any Sportvereine are in intense competition!
@jom.6075
Жыл бұрын
Welcome to reality in German life! Thanks so much to describe the daily struggles and pleasures!
@pilotarix
Жыл бұрын
Very nice video and an interesting comparison. Here is a little bit of our experience in the US. We are a German Family of three living in central Pennsylvania for more than 14 years. We are both working, but only one of us is working full-time. Our son is eight and attends a smaller private school after a year of homeschooling during COVID. The place we live is certainly not remote; close to the capital Harrisburg and rather busy during the summer months due to the well-known amusement park. It's funny that we face somewhat similar problems. Our KiTa opened earlier and stayed open longer than the German KiTa, but there were so many days on which they had closed or closed on short notice that we were struggling many times to find ways to care for our kid while we were working. As you guys, we don't have family here, so we are entirely dependent on a nanny and occasionally friends. After a year of homeschooling and the transition to a private school, we were hoping for a little bit more stable situation. Unfortunately, that did not come to fruition. We still struggle with the many days the school calls off, sometimes on very short notice. Just recently, one of us had to bring our son to work because, on short notice, we could not find support. However, we are very lucky that I can sometimes work from home or just go to work an hour later. Schools, also the public schools, start relatively late, 8:30. By that time, both of us have to be at work for almost 2 hours. So we have a nanny that comes to our house every morning to make sure our son gets on the school bus on time and safely. During the second year of COVID, we had to pay up to 35$ per hour for a nanny. Sound like a lot? It is, but we wanted a reliable and safe person, so that's what we had to pay. We often wish we had our family close to us, but other than that, we feel that central PA is home for us even though your pictures from the black forest caused some mild homesickness.
@ofipete
Жыл бұрын
Sorry, I don’t mean to be offensive and it’s not particular to you but I must say that English spoken by so many Americans nowadays often sounds so mundane. Ever noticed how especially „like“, „you know, I mean like…“ or „I’m like“ is so overused? Simply by speaking a little more slowly with short pauses, you can give yourself enough time to compose a complete sentence without using such filler words. I just miss the more sophisticated diction I learned in school in the 1960s. Apart from that your videos are well founded and absolutely informative.
@Cz-De-Lifestyle
Жыл бұрын
Duh thats how normal folks talk. This aint a recital for Presidential speech , sorry to offend but some Germans are so damn so judgemental.
@thomasschmidt8544
Жыл бұрын
A Geman here who spent a year in the States as a teenager and has a history of interest in cultural differences. I've been following your channel for only a week now, and there is so much in your videos I relate to. The academic (in a good way) approach to cultural and policy differences, breaking it down to what it actually means for one's everyday life. The end of this vid just killed it for me: We moved to a small town about a year ago, and just as you said: Kids change everything. So, now 2 weeks in without a new video, I am imagining you realize just how different having 2 kids is from having 1 kid, and as much as I am hoping for as many regular videos as you used to create, I am also hoping that you go slowly on social media and continue to absolutely prioritize your kids over your followers. Or rather: that you find the unique balance of everything that is best for the four of you. Ihr seid eine wundervolle Bereicherung für so viele kulturell interessierte Menschen und macht die Welt mit euren Videos ein großes Stück lebenswerter. Vielen, vielen Dank!
@PeterBuwen
Жыл бұрын
Look, I am a german who was growing up in a small village. But when I was 16, 17, 18, 20 I preferred to spend my time in the big city. There was more going on. And of course as I got older I moved to the city and then I lived in the city for 30 years. A few years ago my wife persuaded me to move back to the country and since then we have lived in a small village with 200 inhabitants. The nearest towns are 10 km away. To my surprise, I had to realize that living in the country also represents a massive improvement in the quality of life. I would not have thought that before. But EVERYTHING is better here, people are friendlier, life is more relaxed. I'm glad my wife convinced me to come here.
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
We also very much enjoyed living in Freiburg when we first moved here. It is so vibrant, fun, and there's no shortage of things to do on a Friday or Saturday night. And as much as we LOVED the city (we lived in Altstadt), we started searching for something slower and quieter once Jack arrived. As you say, there really is a nice quality of life in a smaller village.
@lagringa7518
Жыл бұрын
Was raised in a small town in N.California and since then wherever I've roamed, because I do like to roam... whether in Wales, France or Italy and now Mexico, I have ALWAYS chosen to live in smaller towns.... because they're real/authentic, (less frenetic or touristy) people are friendlier, it's always greener with space to breathe and yes the bureaucracy is usually much less exhausting, + they're so much better for kids too. Never was much of a party girl even in college... so small town life has suited me to a T for 70+ years. So enjoy, I of course think you've made a wonderful choice! 😉
@kenardturner7173
Жыл бұрын
I like your take on the American Gothic painting by Grant Wood. F.Y.I. the painting depicts a Midwest father with his daughter, not his wife. It's a common misconception. I thought it was his wife until did some research. It's a mural you see a lot of in Iowa at various visitors centers/rest areas as you travel through Iowa. Supposedly from the Eldon, Iowa area.
@chf528
Жыл бұрын
the dentist and the sister of G.Wood were modelling as farmers 😅 In Germany only old guys, who in the end 70ies often visited the movie "Rocky Horror Picture Show" could know this picture. In the USA it had quite a popcultural influence.
@marido5021
Жыл бұрын
We've lived in Bavaria for the last 10 years and just had our daughter. We think that it's time to settle down after moving every three years to provide a stable environment. We decided for a small town in Brandenburg. This will be quite an adjustment but we plan on integrating there by joining a sports club or a Krabbelgruppe. In contrast to Bavaria there are almost no kindergarten spots or doctors but the opening hours of shops, doctors or the kindergarten are so much longer.
@liosscip
Жыл бұрын
Wow, moving from bavaria to brandenburg is a culture shock even for a germans. Must be something to adjust ^^
@indrinita
Жыл бұрын
I’m glad you feel so welcomed in this small community, but as a Canadian of colour living in Germany for a decade, I have to sadly say that almost no other (non-white) immigrants would get such a welcome or sense of openness from their neighbours. That’s just a fact about small town Germany or rural areas in Germany in general. I wouldn’t even feel safe living in some rural areas of Germany in fact, and I’ve spoken to lots of other people of colour (including Germans of colour) who feel as I do. On top of that, solidarity between people of colour is very low in Germany because each “outsider community” or person perceived as a foreigner wants to be seen as “one of the good ones” by white Germans, so sometimes they are just looking for opportunities to throw other foreigners under the bus so they can been seen as one of the exceptions and “good ones”. For this reason, I have to stick to cities in Germany, especially in the east. People are horrendous otherwise. It’s a weird dynamic but a reality I can’t deny.
@conniebruckner8190
Жыл бұрын
So sorry to read about your experience, indrinita; I've heard similar from USA expats of colour here in Vienna, who explicitly moved here, because they felt better in a city than in a small town. It'll take more famous actors, singers, fußball players of a second generation or children of "mixed couples" to get small/closed mentalities more used to the idea that we are all people, no matter what tone of skin is.
@indrinita
Жыл бұрын
@@conniebruckner8190 I honestly don't know if it'll make a difference if there are more prominent poc in the public eye in Europe because unfortunately I've found that the stubborn kind of racism that exists in Europe will take much more than that to combat. They truly believe in weird colonial ideas here unconsciously - like white Europeans are "superior" to everyone else, and on top of that, they don't believe racism is a problem or that some people are racialized at all. They actually truly believe racism is only a problem in the US and refuse to acknowledge how racist they are, all the way up to their institutions. In the cities, it's not as bad, but it's still there.
@tonykyle2655
Жыл бұрын
My wife wanted to get her PhD in a specific field. She has a Masters of Information (aka Library Science is the old name) and was going for Bio-Informatics I believe. I got a job here. She goes to register and finds out in the few months it took us to move and for the new semester to start her program was de-certified and no longer offered. My job turned in to THAT job, the one from what some say is a very HOT place where you don't want to spend eternity. Where we came from though has changed so much we do not want to return there though we have fond memories of what the place was like before it transformed.
@Herr_Damit
Жыл бұрын
Grew up in a vilage of around 10.000(including the two other small villages around ) and I had to bike to the next town of around 15-20.000 every weekend to drink with friends. Went to the next big city to study and I really like the anonymity you have in the crowd. You have to greet everyone in villages and they all know about the local drunks( my dad) so I really did appreciaty not having to interact with random people on the street. I still agressively greet everyone I know, I got a lot of strange looks from the people when I just moved in, but some (older) people really appreciate the interaction, so I think there is a balance to be struck.
@cptjfk
Жыл бұрын
I actually turned my stove off to write this 😆🤔. I am German, born near Bonn/Cologne, now living in Bavaria with my Austrian wife.... When I moved here I Was looking for Mountains, glaciers and snow. And what did I find? Took me 10 years to connect. Here you are and you will stay a "Zugreister" - close to a legal alien. But the more time I spent here, the happier and luckier I was. I live in Weitnau. That's at the southernmost Bavarian/württembergischen Grenze. I think this would be your ideal holiday region ❤❤❤
@sfhill3076
Жыл бұрын
We spent nearly 3 years living in a small town in western Germany and loved every minute of it. Access to the countryside just out your door was phenomenal. While not the bike riders that you are, we loved being able to ride our bikes on many paved or gravel trails through the farm land near our home (and occasionally on quiet country roads). The concept of private property is so different in Germany. Plus, as you mentioned, we loved the small town festivals where nearly everyone in the town attends the event and you get to meet more of your neighbors. We made life-long friends with our German neighbors and have already visited them once since we returned to the US in 2021. We will return to visit Germany in the future and will always make time to visit our former home and the friends we made there. We are enjoying your videos, especially those about your cultural experiences in our adopted second home!
@eagle1de227
Жыл бұрын
Don't laugh: the "westernmost border" of the black forest has been defined by court a few years ago (some brewery trademark thingy) as beginning east of the Autobahn A5. so sorry to contradict you but Freiburg is very well IN the black forest. (nevertheless got your point) I live in a community of 3500 people and its quite nice. I also lived in a more million people city and it also had its advantages. And so i can answer this question very clearly: ... it depends ...
@bendjohans3863
Жыл бұрын
freiburg beats berlin in any possible way life quality related
@udomann9271
Жыл бұрын
Life in a smaller town is more convenient to me at least, there might be people which are better off in a big town, but I am personally not such a one. For carnival: that is different in every region in Germany, the kind of celebrate carnival is totally different in the region of Mainz/Wiesbaden in Rheinland-Pfalz and again totally different in the region of Cologne/Düsseldorf and of course, where you live now in Baden-Württemberg ("The Ländle"), especially in the region of the black forest there they celebrate the "Alemannische Fasenacht", again totally different with different origin, to tell the stories behind, why they celebrate carnival here and there different, this would fill some books. And in the big rest of Germany the don't celebrate carnival at all ore only exceptional.
@robertzander9723
Жыл бұрын
With the times of the kindergarten and daycare, that's quite common in the west and the south of Germany it survived from the very conservative 50s and 60s especially with the church having a big meaning around there. There it's not so popular that a woman lives an independent life and just likes to work, my aunt and parents of one of my best friends made that experience as well coming from east Berlin. In a lot of regions at your part of Germany, there is a time line until a woman can have fun and then has to care for the house and the family and the rest belongs to the beloved husband. Part time is all mother can achieve. It would be nice to get introduced to the exotic restaurants of Freiburg /Schwarzwald Region😁 Unfortunately the infrastructure is getting worst and worst every year on countryside of Germany and that has a lot to do with the only car society. Young people can't go anywhere without a car and that forces a lot to leave and that's probably the beginning of areas to die, because without social connections other things will leave as well. Something the social society in so many regions has still not in mind. I tried to live in smaller towns a couple of times and it just didn't work for me, now I'm really happy to live in a big city like Vienna, because I just love museums, art, theaters, concerts and other events just far to much. Thanks for the video.
@AmericasGotGermans
Жыл бұрын
I memeber that it was so hard to find a kita spot in Cologne. I'm not kidding, I started calling and applying for daycares as soon as I tested positive! I called the first place and they asked me if it will be a boy or a girl because they try to mix the groups 50/50. I was 10 weeks pregnant😳AND, YES! I can totally understand your point about the short hours and I appreciate that we would have the option to find a place with much longer hours in Boston! Another great video❤
@cinnamoon1455
Жыл бұрын
What I love about smaller towns is the sense of community, neighbours helping each other out, looking out for each other, noticing if something is amiss, etc. Also, I can totally confirm that smaller towns hereabouts have far less bureaucracy. I used to live quite close to your area (close to Bad Säckingen on the Swiss side in a tiny village). And right when I decided to move away in a month's time, ended my renting contract, I got a notice from the town office that my living permit was ending and had to be renewed. So I called them and told them that I would move away in a month's time anyway and how I could best solve this. Her answer? Consider it done, no need to come by, we'll just post you your paperwork and you don't need to take any further action. No fees either. I was pretty much flabbergasted. 😂
@S_Black
Жыл бұрын
Missing doctors is an issue everywhere. In general it's more about doctors retiring and not finding new ones to take over. And for lot of doctors it pays better to move to a bigger city. Probably less work too. Smaller villages have problems finding anyone at all
@phoenix-xu9xj
Жыл бұрын
Here in U.K. situation is becoming desperate.
@m.h.6470
Жыл бұрын
If you just moved into town, you have to say this to the local doctors. They HAVE TO take new residents. It is mandatory.
@conniebruckner8190
Жыл бұрын
Finding affordable AND flexible child care is difficult in Austria also, and many places outside of cities close early, just like yours. Many working parents do rely on family and child-minders to cover the missing hours. I think that if pay was commensurate, more young people would train to be pre-school teachers. With no family close by, it was so important to get to know our neighbours and other parents at the kindergarten to sometimes share child-minding for those just-in-case moments. Also being active in the local parish helped a bit. We live at the edge of Vienna at the rim of the Vienna Woods. Takes us about 35-40 minutes by public transport/bike to get downtown, which has its advantages. It used to be a village that was incorporated into the city limits and still has a bit of that character. It is also cooler here in the summer, more trees. :-) We also had difficulties finding a new GP when our doctor retired. Then that doc retired a few years later. We hear the same from many of our age-cohorts.
@patriciavogel2318
Жыл бұрын
I live in a small town in Missouri and I don't really like it. It is very small and I don't really have any friends. Most of the people here call themselves hillbillys and are proud of the fact that they are uneducated. I'm in my 70s and would give anything to live in a small village in Germany. I taught myself German and am at, around a B1. If I had the money I would move there tomorrow, especially since I have no one here. Maybe in my next life. I wanted to ask you what your Ph.D. was in. I love going to school and have my masters in Nursing.
@HalfEye79
Жыл бұрын
When I was in elementary school, our family moved within the city. But the first part was rather inside the town, where I had to cross a big road to school each day. The destination was a new part of town near the city limits, where playing outside was much easier. Well for the most part, there were fields, but a forest isn't far away. But the nicest thing is, that most of the times you can't even hear the cars on the not so distant road.
@trueamnisias
Жыл бұрын
I'm from a village in Bavaria, where you find the same cultural diversity with every little town or village having it's own take on traditions like the Viehscheid or Christmas. I think the difference you noted between US and Germany in that respect is that these traditions have grown over many hundreds of years and had time to differentiate when people were much less mobile than nowadays, so each town is a little microcosm. And mostly that's a plus, particularly if you are the age you are now, although at times it can be a little irritating that everybody knows your business and you have less anonymity than in a big city. But it also means that there is more support, less crime, a better quality of life and more nature and outdoor activities.
@yvonnekuhn9592
Жыл бұрын
With the short Kita hours, it's an issue in the former West Germany. In the former East Germany the Kitas and the day care at elementary schools are open from 6 AM to 5 or sometimes 6 PM. Doesn't matter if it's a small place or a bigger city.
@lorep7412
Жыл бұрын
Same in Eastern Europe, it is normal.
@Cz-De-Lifestyle
Жыл бұрын
We live right across the border of Germany near Cheb, Czech Republic. Its the pretty much the same lifestyle you described, except its a true village of just 800 ppl. 2 things really sux tho. Trying to get service for what for home repairs, plumbing ,electrical,etc...they dont come fast like the big cities in North American , like within hours or a day tops. More like days and even weeks sometimes. They're super flaky as hell, and now inflation times, they want a lot of money for not doing much really. Ive seen quotes 200 usd for just changing 2 electrical sockets, thats a lot of money here. Folks only make 1000 Eur /month on average.They dont really wanna come unless its gonna like 400-500 usd/ per job minimum. So we pretty much take it upon ourselves now and start to learn to diy everything , be self sufficient most of the time. And yes doctors,dentist, specialist , we had had to drive at least 30km in the beginning to one. Even tho we have insurance but no one was taking new patients, so we have to ER in the next big city's hospital to see doctors / specialist. How do we deal with this? You got to learn how to bribe your way. I dont mean literally every time, just needs lil bit finesse. It doesnt have to be money all the time. You scratch my back, Ill scratch yours, favours for favours, what can we do to make it work for both of us?They dont really give a crap about us , but they certainly understand money, pros and cons, of what can benefits them. I was fortunate my wife does speack Czech and German, thats how we been operating , and we're slowly working our way in through the system. Its just a matter of finding out who's who and whos willing to play ball.
@peterkoller3761
Жыл бұрын
The night life you lost is going out - the night life you found is: baby crying at 2 in the morning. ;)
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
TRUE. 😂😂😂
@awijntje14
Жыл бұрын
Loved this update and happy to see that you are adjusting to "smallsville" Germany,..one step at a time.. We are planning our next holiday and are looking into the black forest area and after all these great stories we are really looking forward to seeing it for ourselves. We moved from The Hague to a smaller town near Rotterdam and some of the issues you mention are the same here (day care spots, number of doctors etc) but we definitely enjoy the community of a smaller town more than the "anonymity" we had in the larger city (we hardly knew our neighbours there).
@SaschaBielicke
Жыл бұрын
You talked about your first christmas in Germany. May I ask you if you took the "german way" with giving the presents on 24th oder did you stick to the 1st christmas morning?
@Andarus
5 ай бұрын
Freiburg is NOT a Small Town. With 230k Population its one of the biggest cities in BW.
@TypeAshton
5 ай бұрын
As shared in the video, we do not live in Freiburg.
@simmeseins6845
3 ай бұрын
But where? Ebringen or Sölden would be my guess (Schneeburg seen in the vid)
@meinsee
Жыл бұрын
In 1993 I went to Konstanz to go to the University. After studying I stayed because the city has so much to offer. The most important thing is the lake Bodensee. In summer one can go swimming everywhere in the town. You allways feel like in hollyday. The people are happy and friendly. About 20.000 of 80.000 inhabitants are students. Interntional too. Nature is everywhere. Biking, sailing, skiing... is easy to do. There is a theater, a philharmony, a Therme and lots of culture, restaurants and bars. It is great for younger people as well as for families and old ones. Only one thing is difficult. Everything is expensive. This is because Konstanz is direktly at the border to swiss. To rent a flat is like in Munich. I love this city.
@forestmanzpedia
Жыл бұрын
I have been living in a village since 2008 and village life is peaceful. I get often told by people who live in big cities since birth that our village looks paradise. We have many basic things a resident needs. We also have a Kindergarten for example. Problem however, public transport is awful. It's so awful, it makes me think our authorities in our counties smoke weed in their offices. When I did my Abitur I went to a school which is 20km away from my village, but it's in a different county. I went there because they had IT and Mediatechnik as subjects for the final exams to pass Abitur. Do you know what's ridiculous about it? The different county I went to school ordered a bus from MY COUNTY and made a contract to pick up students from my county and students along the to way to that town in the different county. What's so stupid about it is the fact if you finish school in the afternoon the bus does not bring you back to your place in your county while that bus drives literally past the bus stations on the way back to the bus depot. Instead, the bus driver will instruct all remaining passengers to exit the bus in a village 9km from your home county and then he drives back to your county while driving past the next bus stations in that county you are supposed to go home back to. I wasn't the only one who experienced this. It turned out authorities didn't instruct our bus company from our county to let remaining students out in their home county because the authorities were the ones who made the contract and the bus company follows the contract. It's so ridiculous, it puts students whose parents live in welfare in a vulnerable situation where the family can't afford a car. To get around it, the student must be atleast severely handicapped to have the right to get a free taxi ride payed by authorities. It is so unfair because I was that person in that situation where my parents couldn't get me a car or pick me up so I was forced to drive to that bus station in the different county even during rain and later exit there in the afternoon only to drive back home. Okay, what I explained you is the worst type of lacking public transport. I want to mention more things. Since I live in a village the main town is just 5km away. What is so ridiculous there is no way to drive with a bus outside of school times to the town. It's so ridiculous you need take the school bus. What's even more worse is on Friday you can't take a bus to my home village in the afternoon because apparently our authorities thought were would be no student going back home in the afternoon on Friday to my home village, which is absolutely stupid. Because of terrible public transport people are forced to have a car. Living in a city, it's a different story. Used to live in Essen and the public transport is amazing. Just hop in a bus, go shopping, take the next bus to get back home. But living in a village? No. Goodness, what the hell are our authorities doing?
@janjanshen4504
Жыл бұрын
The best way to integrate in a small town/village is to join the lokal volunteer firefighter or the lokal soccer(Football) club.
@wora1111
Жыл бұрын
Small towns in Germany can be very different. I spent most of my life in small towns around Karlsruhe. That is significant because Karlsruhe has an excellent and very dense public transport network (KVV). The place I grew up, was 40 km from Karlsruhe and small enough to reach everything by bike, study time in Karlsruhe allowed me to walk to university and later work (and child raising) brought us back to one of the many village around Karlsruhe, most of which are connected by Straßenbahn (every twenty minutes during daytime) to the city center. In my village the Strassenbahn has 7 Stops (village grew along one street), so it is useful inside our town as well. Before watching your videos I always considered this to be a typical German 'suburbia' but the quality/quantity of public transport is definitely above average compared to most of the other comments I read here. But to be honest, availability of public transportation was one of the reasons we picked this place 30 years ago.
@mothoco
Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Freudenstadt and back then I thought it was boering. And in fact there wasn't even a direct train connection, neithter to STuttgart nor Karlsruhe nor anywhere further than 40 km. Looking back now I really loved the time and things I was able to do. All the parties we had as teenagers somewhere in some hut in the woods... :-D Thank you for sharing your thoughts and appreciating Germany that much!
@dutchman7623
Жыл бұрын
Carnaval is a festivity in which every village, town, or city wants to distinguish themselves from others. And if they do not have something special, they will invent and promote it. It's there to celebrate your local identity, with local colors, local ways, local parades.
@Traumglanz
Жыл бұрын
Wait till you find out how active the local clubs are and how much activities those offer. "Vereinsleben" is a staple of German small town life. Your kids gonna love it, actually I think Jack might in be soon in the right age to get involved with those clubs / Vereine.
@svenbauer7178
Жыл бұрын
Maybe some interesting perspective for you: I am German and we decided to build our house in a small town called Herzogenaurach. One of the reasons why we choose it (apart from its proximity to larger cities like Nuremberg and Erlangen) was the fact that, for a small German town, it feels quite international! The place hosts the headquarters of three international corporations (Adidas and Puma everybody knows, Schaeffler I guess Jonathan might know). With that, people from all parts of the world live here, including Americans and Brits but also Indians and others. Granted, most of them are families (the youngsters live in Erlangen or Nuremberg) but it adds some "international flavour" to our everyday life. Like for instance the young Indian software guy buying eggs from the old Franconian farmers lady on the market on a Saturday morning. Both trying to bring out their best in the respective others language - I find this charming. In that sense, I guess, this is YOUR gift that you are bringing to your new home town! Take care! BTW: I always wonder if you are often expected to be German in written conversations because Jonathan Schottler would be the most normal of German names...??
@xXRistoXx
8 ай бұрын
Ein neues Haus bauen in Herzogenaurach, hast du geerbt oder im Lotto gewonnen? Die Immobilienpreise in Herzogenaurach sind mit die höchsten in ganz Mittelfranken. Deswegen wohnen die meisten obwohl sie bei Schaeffler, Adidas oder Puma arbeiten, auch ehr zur Miete in Erlangen, Nürnberg oder Fürth. Für das Geld was du in Herzogenaurach für eine Eigentumswohnung zahlst, kannst du dir woanders ein Haus kaufen......
@svenbauer7178
8 ай бұрын
@@xXRistoXx Weder noch, wir haben vor mehr als 10 Jahren gebaut und zu dem Zeitpunkt ergab sich die glückliche Konstellation dass nach der Finanzkrise 2008 die Zinsen relativ niedrig aber die Preise noch nicht so extrem hoch waren wie heute. Wie das in den letzten Jahren funktioniert ist mir auch völlig unklar. Wahrscheinlich tatsächlich nur wenn du erbst oder erfolgreicher Unternehmer bist.
@xXRistoXx
8 ай бұрын
@@svenbauer7178 Ja, die Leute welche heutzutage dort bauen haben groß geerbt und oder sind halt einfach reich.
@beatrixwillius
Жыл бұрын
Currently, I live in the speckgürtel of Mainz. Next week is the start of construction for our new house in a little hamlet in Hunsrück (mountains? hills?) with a population of 150. I already had to call the mayor 2 times. I would never have done that in my current town. Hopefully, we won't have as much problems as finding a doctor.
@SFoX-On-Air
Жыл бұрын
I'm really glad that you have settled in so well in Germany. However, the thing with the doctors doesn't surprise me. Because we have been undergoing a change for about 10 years now. Previously, mainly farmers and older people lived in the small villages and suburbs. 1 stationery store, 1 supermarket, 1 bank that everyone has to use, etc. There was little going on and little need for more. But recently, all the wealthy people have been moving to the countryside. On the one hand, because rents and purchase prices were cheap compared to the city at that time. On the other hand, because it simply became a trend. For city dwellers, life in small villages has become a vacation spot. Relax, unwind, do yoga in the morning... And now people say that if you're poor, you rent in the city, but if you're rich, you live in a suburb or in the countryside. And that's why the infrastructure in your new home couldn't keep up with the influx of city-fleeing rich people. Unfortunately, this has also led to many quaint, cozy villages turning into huge new developments in Germany. I originally come from a small town between Geldern and Krefeld in the Lower Rhine region. The village had 7,000 inhabitants at that time. And I hated my parents for forcing me to grow up there. There were no nightclubs, no big shopping malls, no child-friendly or youth-friendly events (those city festivals that you love so much are only popular with young people because you can drink a lot there. For children, only Carnival is relevant, and that is only once a year). There was nothing. Only something we called "Scheunenfete" which means "barn party" in English. And that meant: a farmer plays techno music in a barn and everyone drinks until they can't anymore. Then the police come (ofc we dont have our own police, they must come from the neigbohr city) and you have to explain to your parents in a drunken state what you did. I would have preferred to grow up in the midst of life instead of in a sleepy village "where the fox and the hare say good night to one another" (German proverb for "It can't get any more boring").
@Sonntagsfan
Жыл бұрын
I am German and enjoy watching your American perspective on Germany. But I have to add, that the lack of Kita spots is a problem all over Germany in the moment. Often it is even worse in places that loose population, although there are less kids. Because the main problem is that they don´t find staff for the Kita. The same it is with the doctors, or even worse. Because in smaller towns and villages you have many old people who frequently need medical help. But the doctors are mostly located in more populated areas, where they find more private patients, from whome they get more money for their treatment. The point that Kitas close so early can be explained with the fact that you don´t find many mothers with young children that work full time in Germany, especially in smaller communities. Often one parent, usually the mother, stays at home completely in the first years after the birth. Later, when the kids frequently go to kindergarten, she goes back to work, but works only 50% or 75%. Mostly they don´t work full time again, until the kids are teenagers, often mothers never work full time again.
@nataliagagner1431
Жыл бұрын
I am not planning to move to Germany but I did move from Russia to USA( I have been living in USA now for 15 years). Oh how I remember my first years here! Your stories brought me to tears! I am secretly hoping one day we will move to Europe! Thank you for your videos!
@emperortomoto
Жыл бұрын
Based on the information shared and my personal experience here in Germany, it is evident that kindergartens often have earlier closing times due to the fact that many children do not stay for a full day. This can be attributed to the preference of many mothers to work part-time and actively participate in their children's upbringing. I agree that the availability and affordability of childcare facilities should be improved. It is unfortunate that raising a child is often threted as a costly hobby rather than a fundamental aspect of life and society.
@uliwehner
Жыл бұрын
i have a good bit of experience with living in smaller cities. The village i was born in had 600+ people in it. The next city was 11km away. 50k population. next larger city is another 35km away at 100k or so. my first year of school i was in a 2 room zwergschule. 1st-4th and 5th-9th grade. 2nd year i went to a Grossgemeinde school. that required a schoolbus may be 4km. then we moved to the city. my gymnasium had over 2000 students. 8 parallel classes, like 5a to 5h. for university i moved to a small town built around the university, 20k population. great public transport (close to the black forest). Then i moved to the US. now i live outside of Atlanta, in Georgia's most populous county. roughly a million population, the town itself is small. NO PUBLIC transport. Public transport = cars. but i live on 2 acres in the woods. no trough traffic. people walk around the neighborhood, very laid back. 4 lane divided highway is less than half a mile from my house.... Georgia's biggest mall is 5 minutes by car. traffic never stops. Luckily we both work from home now. To me the sweet spot is a city of about 50k i think. just big enough to have a few movie theaters, proper shopping, public transport, good size schools, a university, hospital, etc. My old german hometown has all of that.
@pfalzgraf7527
Жыл бұрын
No surprises for me in your video! Es ist wunderbar zu hören, dass ihr euch zuhause fühlt und angekommen seid! As someone who was born in Stuttgart but my parents moved to a small village when I was 2 years old (350 inhabitants at that time, now we are around 450 - which makes for an average growth of about 2.13 inhabitants per year) and who has lived here almost all my life, I know exactly what a small community has to offer. Of course I've lived in cities for a few years going to university, spent a bit of time abroad and stuff, but I always returned to my Swabian home for visits and have now been living in this same village for the last 10 or so years straight. In this place (very protestant, very small village), the fire brigade (Freiwillige Feuerwehr that you talked about in a video, if I remember correctly) plays a H U G E role! And, of course, everyone who wants to participate in community life can. It is not uncommon in any place in Germany that your doctors (general or specialists) are not too close to your home. Until a few years ago my dentist was 50 km away. Hearing you talk about KiTa not going all day ... well, that's the difference betwen a literal KiTa (Kinder-Tagesstätte) vs. a Kindergarten. Most are now having to switch to being a KiTa. But it is difficult because of a lack of personnel. Living in a region where Fasching/Fasnet/Karneval is almost non-existent (traditionally protestant), I can still tell you that yes, there are fascinating differences! And if you compare the Allamanische Fasnet to the organized Karneval that you have in more northern parts of Germany (Mainz/Köln/Düsseldorf) it gets even more confusing. (btw: have you ever heard of the "Morgenstreich" in Basel? It's relatively close to your place, and still upcoming) Anyway, I had a smile of recognition on my face, almost through the whole video. What keeps me here? What do I like? I love going out of the house and be in the middle of either a forest or a huge open grass space within 20 minutes of walking (or riding a bike). I actually moved back "home" after the village got fast internet. I can work from here since then. And I live within a community that I know and that knows me. It is not too rural here: Within 20 minutes by car I'm in a small town where I get everything I need in terms of shops and culture, and I can get to Stuttgart via the Autobahn within 45 minutes, or even by public transport (bus and S-Bahn) within 70 minutes. And I love the view I have from some nearby hills.
@mummamarsh1180
Жыл бұрын
Gday BFF family, so lovely to see you both again. Hope your pregnancy is going well and you are keeping energised. Living in a cohesive, safe , engaged and inclusive community is so important to one’s happiness and wellbeing particularly when you have a young family and also when you are a senior citizen. This is why I love living where I live, because of all of these elements. It’s safe, cohesive, engaging, inclusive and welcoming. Their are huge open spaces, parklands with sporting facilities, schools, kindergartens, shops, public transport health services that are all within a short distance from where I live. I never take any of this for granted and feel so thankful everyday to be a part of my community. I hope your new community will also provide your family with a positive experience. Best wishes
@TypeAshton
Жыл бұрын
Hi there! Thanks so much. Many of the perks of your community are also what attracted us to live in ours. SUCH a great thing to live in a pedestrian area that has a lot of free, and open community services and amentities.
@indiramichaelahealey5156
Жыл бұрын
It's great to hear that you found such a nice neighborhood. The reasons why you moved to a smaller town are understandable. Most Germans think the same way. Young people usually like the big cities because of all the opportunities to go out and have fun. But families usually tend to move to smaller towns/the country so that their kids can play outside safely. The KITA hours are defenitely a problem for parents who both want to work full time or single parents who need to work full time. Germans usually work full time and safe up money before they have kids. When they have small kids most mothers work part time only to spend more time with their kids, if they can afford it. Mostly one and a half salaries are enough for a decent life. Most elimentary schools nowerdays offer "Offene Ganztagsbetreuung" until 3 or 4 p.m. so mothers then can work more if they want to. Finding a new doctor is really hard in Germany, especially in small towns and even more in the country.
@farid.2972
Жыл бұрын
On the 19th March there is another big event in the Elztal. On this sunday evening we do the so called "Schiebeschlage" in many different towns.
@kathilisi3019
Жыл бұрын
I live in a smaller town half an hour by train from Vienna, Austria. I actually grew up in Vienna and quite liked city life, but the area I grew up in which had lots of parks and nice safe spaces for kids had become too expensive for my husband and I to afford a kid-friendly apartment in. So we bought a house and garden in a nearby smaller town, which was cheaper and nicer, the only downsides being the longer commute to work and less active cultural and social life. I really love living here, and we're lucky in that the town has all the amenities you could wish for, except for a hospital. There's several schools to choose from, several doctors, several grocery stores and a small shopping center with non-food stores. There's a (private) castle which has opened its gardens to the public, a public outdoor swimming pool which is open from May to October, and in the past years the town has become extremely bike-friendly, you'd love it! There's cycle paths everywhere, a free bike-repair spot outside the city hall (with tools and a pump affixed to a bike-rack by chains) and a covered bike parking area next to the train station. Your town and community sounds really lovely! Was it truly the first time they tried an American-style Halloween for Jack's sake? Halloween has become somewhat popular in our area due to American movies, and a lot of families participate in trick-or-treating by now. The trick is to figure out which doorbells you're allowed to ring and which houses to avoid. We have an unofficial system in our town that everyone who wants to signal that it's okay to ring their doorbell places a clearly visible lit jack-o-lantern in their garden or near their door on Halloween, and the houses that aren't decorated for the holiday are off limits. This can mean quite a long walk for kids, as it's often just one or two houses per street that are participating. But it's also fun to look for the pumpkins, kind of like an Easter egg hunt!
@th.a
Жыл бұрын
Of cause a smaller town is to be preferred. I'm living in a smaller town in proximity of a large city. It is located south of Munich approximately 15 km from the city centre. You are immediately out in the nature ( Mountain Biking 😉) while still heaving access to all cultural offers (concerts, theatres, sport events, shopping mall, night life etc.) a big city has to offer. So ya, from my point of views you made the right move.
@markdodel1706
Жыл бұрын
It is amazing how very different each area and even cities within an area are in Germany. My daughter lived in Cologne for several years, loved it most of that time except for Karneval (drunken crowds throwing hard candy at people and demanding people be smiling all the time) and New Years (People firing off real fireworks on street corners). She moved to Mannheim 3 years ago and it is less busy but still impresses us rural Americans when we visit with all the shopping, restaurants and great transportation.The Mannheimer celebrate holidays differently and many only speak a version of German that most other Germans can't understand. We were supposed to visit the Black Forest area 3 years ago but COVID put a stop to that trip. I love watching your videos and we will definitely get to visit your area of Germany on one of our many trips to Germany.
@thorstenbrandt6256
Жыл бұрын
I'm born and raised in Hamburg, Germany, a really green city in tiself with all the parks and the Alster etc. and you need heavy maschinery to get me out of here. When you visited Hamburg you saw more of the inner city with its older buildings. My area was rebuild around 1950 to build fast and cheap living space after the war. They used the english garden-city modell as a blueprint, so there is muuuch more green here than in the inner city. With public transportation I'm at the town hall in about twenty minutes, and in the outher direction it takes the same time to get out in the fields. Using my bike would take a little bit longer, but there is a route almost completely through parks and at little streams from my home up to Hamburg habour.
@BioBioLove
Жыл бұрын
Regarding bridging the gap for childcare I have a suggestion that doesn’t involve grandparents or cost a fortune. I hire (properly via mini job) a university student in my city and pay her the normal minimum wage (per her request). It works perfectly, she gets the money she needs, I get the care I need, government gets the taxes, and I put the whole thing in my taxes so I get a break. You can do the same with the whole hire a grandma thing.
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