The UK Changed My Mind! | Canada vs. UK Reverse Culture Shock

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I recently went back to Canada and experienced some major reverse culture shocks!

Toronto is BORING? | Brit Reacts To Toronto!

BRIT REACTS TO CANADA!

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#reversecultureshock #canadavsuk

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I live in London and had no problem walking around Toronto, l loved it 😀👍

thamesmead
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Travel changes one's perspective. I'm British born, raised in Britain the first 11 years, lived in Canada the next 20, went back to Britain as an adult, and now live in Canada again. The experience has made me appreciate things about each country I took for granted when I lived there.

GoWestYoungMan
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There are two main reasons so many of our roads are so twisty: most of them were first laid down long before roadbuilding machinery; if they didn't start out as a rough track, they had to be cut by hand with pick and shovel, so they tend to follow the contours of the landscape, which made them easier to build, and was easier for horse-drawn vehicles. Secondly, they often follow property boundaries which go back to mediaeval or even Roman times. It's easy when you just have to bulldoze a straight line across a prairie!

davidjones
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It is really annoying when waiting staff keep interrupting diners. If I need some help, I will ask for it.

archiebald
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A sign that you are becoming more British is at around 6:48 when you refer to the season as "Autumn" rather than "Fall". Several times in fact...and this was even when referring to Canada! Anyhow, another very interesting video from you Megan. I can totally relate to you about distances. The flip side of that is that here in the UK, folks will think it's a long way if you tell them you are driving somewhere more than around 45 mins away. Back in greater Vancouver it would take me longer than that just to get from home to the Canada / USA border before continuing on to Seattle...or even the Oregon Coast. Oh and welcome back to Blighty to you both. Almost forgot...and I don't want to come across as a bellend! 🇬🇧🇨🇦

ibs
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We tip bar staff in Scotland. You buy a round, you tell the bar person to have one for themself. They stick the price of the cheapest drink with alcohol in the tip jar. Or if you're up north, they just pour it, and drink it right there.

pspence
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That was a nice comparison and is a good cultural update regarding these countries.

parkash
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Alberta here. Calgary (nic name Little Toronto.) 20 % tip is too high.
In the very high end restaurants the waitress, pooled their tips and split them up with the bus boys and dishwashers every few months or at the end of the tourist season. Made out like bandits. Really great in Banff and Jasper. Straight roads? You haven't seen straight until you drive some prairie.
Your experiences are mostly Toronto culture shock. We all know Toronto is a thing unto itself so not Canadian culture shock . The centre of the universe. Ask anybody from Toronto.

MrBonners
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Why should servers get tipped ..but not bus drivers …nurses …firemen

-MLE
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Lots to consider in this video. I find compared to the states, the server-guest interaction in Canada is just right. And it's true no-one complains about the tipping culture cause of the big bucks to be made! But I had a UK friend come and he was bothered by the tipping of the barmaid! Yet you're not expected to tip when you go for coffee. 🤔 Also great points on the fall, the roads can curve if you go into the mountains as I learned this year when driving in both the rockies and the laurentians but yeah not quite like Europe! And of course the drinking outside but Quebec's a little more chill on that.

studhamdan
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Yep. We tip 20%! I have been enjoying the VIA lately from London to home. Thank Colonel Talbolt.. abrit for those straight roads. One and one quarter mile! I always find twisty roads weird. Great video.

margaretstephens-flynnstaf
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In the UK, if you look at notices on the street furniture you might see signs stating that drinking alcohol is not allowed in that particular area.

davidberesford
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I do not believe the tax thing is actually because it's harder to put tax on the price label due to local taxes. The tax is calculated in store, for each item, by the store. It would make NO difference in difficulty to them to calculate that BEFORE printing the price labels for the items/shelves, as opposed to afterward.

Not having the actual payable price on an item means that it's much less possible to calculate your price as you go, and gets people accustomed to the price at the till being an unknown/more than expected. This is very likely to encourage people to spend more overall, as strict budgeting down to an exact price is almost impossible.

All advertising could still be done nationally with the pre-tax price, with only a '+tax' added at the end. People would get it, it's still easier than adding tax on later. I really think shops want it this way so that people will spend more.

mortisrat
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Having spent time in Canada 6 months at batus sufflied drove to vancover it took 30hrs but the upside was i got to see black bears in the wild and had a great time in Vancouver also visited Calgary and medicine hat

petew
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Motorways in GB are “deliberately designed” to have minor twists and turns built into the carriageways - the reason for this, some motorways might have been built over what was an existing roadway, where the original foundations might have had a few little bends along the highway etc and it would not be possible to alter it much -

but with the decision of building new M ways, the civil and roadwork engineers, rather than planning routes from A to B and C etc as completely straight lanes of the motorway, they considered the rule of always incorporating slight bends into the highways, as it would be safer and a good way of ensuring the driver would be concentrating on studying the road layout whilst driving, as it would be all to easy to just “nod off” at the wheel if a driver was just having to move the car forward and not having to look ahead and having to be aware of when there would be a need to turn the steering wheel!

weedle
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I am a Brit and I have been to Canada three times - twice on east side and once BC.I advise anyone thinking about it to go and see its natural beauty. For me it was mesmerising the large look of everything valleys, rivers, lakes are all super-sized compared to the UK. The wilds of BC are breathtaking but the city life of the east of Canada, is like any other city really in any other country. Including the UK. LONDON UK, is well catered for and has plenty to see, and far more people than Ottawa or Montreal. For me the strength of Canada is its wilds not particularly its cities although Vancouver is beautiful it is part of BC where the wilds are and is attractive for a base.
I hate the tipping culture as for me everyone should have a wage that reflects your employment and the price of the meal should cover it. Too much of Canada is US culture.

robharrisU
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After a meal out, I always round it up to the next tenner, i.e. £82 meal -£90paid.
as a gardener and forester, your autumnal experience shows you don't visit the countryside during Autumn. Visit an arboretum and open your

gjclark
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I am from Scotland and have always tipped 10-15% and my family and friends all do. I see lots of videos from North Americans talking about tipping culture. Many in UK and Euro countries tip. Its just not something that is seen as 'compulsory' as North America and is a choice

mahonie
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i live in scotland and i have always tipped in a restaurant and how much depends on service/meal, and tipping the bartender is essential especially if you are drinking in the same pub/bar all night or have a regular pub/bar you go to as it always helps you to be able to jump the queue and get served first. And nothing is worse than standing at the bar for 15min+ waiting to get served by the end of the night that could be more than an hour waiting for drinks and not drinking with friends ... scotland also has these dumb laws of no drinking alcohol on the streets but it has saved a few lives by not having a bottle smashed over a head

HootMaRoot
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I think tipping in %ages is wierd. I used to BF ina little Vietnamese cafe, rhe prices were so low that a 20% tip was my minimum but when eating at an expensive restaurant 10% seems inappropritly high.

michaelmoreton