GERMAN Reacts to Sounds you only hear in America

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In this video a

I do America Reaction, some call it Reaction US, Reaction USA. I love to get to know the USA, My videos arent British Reaction or Brit reacts videos. I am also very interested in the usa military reaction as well as us military reaction. I have a passion for us sports reaction, like nfl reaction or nba reaction. I am not brit reacts to america. I do European reacts videos. I also do reaction to america and reaction to us and reaction to usa videos. In this video we cover

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Usually the noise at stop lights are for the blind.

jolenewitzel
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The sounds of large broods of cicadas is something I don't believe you have in Germany. They are incredibly loud just as individuals. There are always cicadas singing in the evening in Summer. Their song becomes coordinated in patterns, so one group in a tree will sing, then another, and from all around. It's the best summer white noise to fall sleep if you open windows.

andromedaspark
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One of the most beautiful haunting bird sounds in America is the Loon.

jasonk
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My nights are filled with the sound of cicadas, tree frogs, and crickets, occasionally broke up by the occasional owl.
My days are filled with the sound of poorly maintained vehicles speeding along the road next to my house.

TheDrexxus
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*Foreign people hide in the basement whenever the sirens go off. Native midwesterners look outside to see if it's a really bad one, or if it's anywhere close by, 99% of the time it isn't, and we go back to doing what we were doing.

gabesolomon
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That bright red bird is a male cardinal, quite talkative but not nearly as vocal as a blue jay. We get crickets in & around the house pretty much all year in most of the US, but it's the locusts (cicadas) in the daytime & the katydids at night that really are loud in the southern & middle states from spring into late autumn.

teressareeves
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I love the sound of rain on the roof to go to sleep.

celestecarrera
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We run fans all year long, helps me sleep!

davidshowmaker
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Mourning Doves are haunting, too. Love hearing them.

rescuelover
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What I hear in Arizona just about every night starting around 11 PM is packs of coyotes howling and yipping. It's very reminiscent of the "old west". I actually love it.

However, since I have sleep apnea, I also run a CPAP machine all night when I'm in bed. Very great "white noise". Totally covers up the sounds of drunks in the hot tub at my other place in the city.

BTinSF
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I was frightened by the tornado sirens as a child, but my mom would always tell me not to be scared because Nana was sitting in her kitchen with her church candles and praying. Oh, okay. So I was never afraid of them again! I never felt the need to hide my head in the pillows on the sofa anymore. Talk about the power of prayer...and nanas. Thank you Nana! I didn't find out until years later, that they were freaking my mom out as well, because she grew up with them being air raid sirens. Mom was a MASTER at not transferring her fears onto us.

maryjoyspohrer
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I live in Florida and pedestrians legally always have the right-of-way no matter what. That doesn't mean you won't get run over anyway though. Managing crosswalks is absolutely necessary. Plus, the sounds assist visually impaired people get around.

steampunkpotato
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Mockingbirds live in the South, East of the Rockies. They imitate other birds’ songs and if you whistle a simple tune in their presence, they might pick it up. Truly among the coolest birds in the world.

JanBear
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I can’t sleep without my fan. I have it on 24/7 all year long.

chelcybryant
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I live near a creek in Oregon. From April to October, you can hear the Pacific Tree Frogs "quak-quak". They like to call together, so it gets gradually louder and louder until it suddenly stops.
My favorite bird in this area is Steller's jays. They are so smart and cute.

andybearchan
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I live in the very center o f the US. Treefrogs is what I would miss hearing the most. We have thousands of them around our home. I too live near the woods, and I love nothing more than a "quiet" night of reading with the background singing of the frogs and crickets. I am a little sad every year at the onset of winter marking the end of the frogs until spring again. That is how I know spring has really set in, the sound of the frogs returns.

GrapeApe
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When we get out of winter here in my part of New York and the weather begins to warm up for spring time I always love hearing when the Spring Peepers come out for the season. Hearing them in a big group at night is lovely. The same goes for the crickets as well but crickets are usually out all summer long. As far as birds go we get robins in our yard as well as chickadee's. You can't see the chickadee's very easily because they're very small birds but you can hear them. There is also a small family of mourning doves that come back every summer.

One of the fire stations in the area also sets off an air-raid siren everyday at 12:00 mostly for telling people the time of day has hit 12:00. But here in town you mostly hear church bells instead when the time has hit 12:00. Because the land in my area is also very open you can hear the freight train rumbling down the tracks as it passes through the next town over which just so happens to be six miles away. It's not as obvious to hear during the day because you can mostly hear cars and big trucks. But if you listen carefully it's easy to pick up on. It's even easier to hear at night when going to bed because no one is out traveling.

Slane
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Years ago, I got to travel to Nicaragua. I'm from San Diego. I knew that there would be chickens and roosters running around wild, similar to how most places have pigeons everywhere. I didn't know, the Roosters, are never, ever quiet. They don't just crow when the sun rises. They crow at 2:00 am, noon, midnight, when nothing is happening, when there is a lot happening. It's kind of like the non-stop talker of the animal kingdom. You just have to learn to sleep through it, or learn to function on minimal sleep.

moreanimals
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Surprised he didnt mention the Screech Owl. Literally sounds like a woman is being murdered.

Cipher
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Here in Kentucky we sometimes have the sound of woodpeckers during the summer days.

But I grew up in the So. California desert and went to sleep to the sound of crickets, coyotes and occasionally bobcats. The coyotes howled (like very young wolves) and the bobcats snarled (like angry cats).

In the summer it was the cicadas - insects that shed their skins on trees. That was a sound like a jet engine screaming. It drove visitors crazy, but for me it was just a part of the background noise.

The last noise we became accustomed to was loud BOOMs. We were on a flyway from Edwards Air Force Base and they were still experimenting with breaking the sound barrier. (Yep - I'm an old gray wolf - 80 yrs old).

wolfynautious