Bicycle Anecdotes From Amsterdam

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  • čas přidán 23. 10. 2013
  • Here we present our final -- and most informative -- Streetfilm from Amsterdam. It provides a nice cross-section of commentary on life in the City of Bikes. If you'd like to skip directly to a certain section, use this table of contents:
    0:17 Rejecting the Automobile
    2:15 A bike system that works for everyone
    4:05 There's a science to what looks like "bicycle chaos"
    5:55 Coming to The Netherlands from the United States
    7:33 Dutch Bicycle Culture
    Make sure you check out our other Streetfilms from Amsterdam: No Amsterdam is Not "Swamped" By Bikes, Amsterdam Draws Bike Boxes to Organize Bike Parking, and Some Things You Might See While In Amsterdam.
    I still find it amazing that a five-year-old in Amsterdam can ride straighter and with more confidence than the average American adult!

Komentáře • 671

  • @isabellahodge4162
    @isabellahodge4162 Před 3 lety +60

    I am a fairly experienced cyclist here in Scotland but the first time cycling in Amsterdam nearly gave me a panic attack. No signals, very few stop signs, the trams (which cyclists get out of the way of) and hordes and hordes of cyclists flitting around in a seemingly random way. By day three though I'd ditched my helmet and somehow got plugged into the cycling gestalt, I moved with the fish shoal rather than swam against it. So good.

    • @gregnixon1296
      @gregnixon1296 Před 3 lety

      In all these videos, it looks like the rush hour traffic jam is traded for a rush hour bike jam…finding a place for the bike, staying warm or dry in inclement weather, lifting your bike to stow it away, etc. For people with health problems, how do they get about?

    • @eddy6833
      @eddy6833 Před 3 lety +1

      @@gregnixon1296 Dear Greg. Take a look at this (old) video. czcams.com/video/xSGx3HSjKDo/video.html

    • @mdsign001
      @mdsign001 Před rokem +7

      "... and somehow got plugged into the cycling gestalt."
      I don't think I've ever seen "gestalt" used in a CZcams comment before ... You deserve a reward for that!

    • @mdsign001
      @mdsign001 Před rokem +6

      @@gregnixon1296 they get around with mobility scooters, tri-cycles, wheelchairs, little electric cars (25km/h) that are aloud in city centers, public transport, taxi's and believe it or not ... cars.
      How do they get around where you live?

    • @jakub.kubicek
      @jakub.kubicek Před rokem +2

      @@mdsign001 They don't is my best guess :(

  • @crazymulgogi
    @crazymulgogi Před 3 lety +22

    This is not just engineering or design, it's democracy. People didn't want cars to keep killing so many people and they stood up and did something about it.

  • @doublextreme360
    @doublextreme360 Před 4 lety +117

    My favourite memory of Amsterdam was accidentally running a red light and a car that was turning waited for me! At home they would have either honked or I would be a pancake!

    • @Simonsvids
      @Simonsvids Před 4 lety +25

      Amsterdam is also a very cosmopolitan city and packed with tourists and foreigners, so they are prepared to expect the unexpected.

    • @Markuden
      @Markuden Před 4 lety +32

      the secret is that every dutch driver probably has more biking hours in their life than drive hours.

    • @mittchellmittchell1162
      @mittchellmittchell1162 Před 4 lety +10

      Here thy will/would call you a pancake (pannekoek)

    • @zpacer88
      @zpacer88 Před 3 lety +6

      its controlled chaos over here, we run reds all the time there is a learning curve to the negotiations of when it is less frowned upon lets say, its not a cyclist vs car experience comparable to other places in the world it is just another person on a bike.
      There is bad and good etiquette ofc and never running a red is fine too but when there are no cars or its clear u can go safely as incoming traffic is 8 sec + away people behind u might sigh silently at the inefficiency xD.
      Also just raising your hand a bit in an aah my bad gesture is such an example or showing cars with a gesture they don't need to give and can just keep their momentum going or noticing others not sure of your direction making them slow down unnecessary roundabouts are a good example for where it happens frequently.
      its more of a common sense thing then a i have the right to be here bleh :D

    • @allws9683
      @allws9683 Před 2 lety +8

      He may have manners as well, but part of the story is that, when in a collision with a bike, a vehicle owner can only claim max 50% of damage on the cyclist's insurance, even when the cyclist is at fault ! Dutch Road Law states that car drivers have an extra responsibility towards more vulnerable road users like bikers and pedestrians ..

  • @bruin4937
    @bruin4937 Před 4 lety +47

    We visited Amsterdam last year, my wife and I rode everywhere on rented bikes, and it was an absolute blast to ride among all the locals, to use the bike for grocery shopping, sightseeing, going out for meals, etc. It was really amazing to see just how prominent bicycling is in the NL, how the bicycle is so integrated into the fabric of that society, and how natural it all seems and appears; people wearing business dresses and suits commuting to/from work, parents cycling with one or two children in a cart in front of the bike, and the age range of cyclists was huge - plenty of young kids, plenty of young and middle-aged adults, and many seniors - almost everyone.

  • @ProtectingSilence
    @ProtectingSilence Před 9 lety +162

    4:10 girl taking off her jacket while on the bike, really sums up Dutch cycling!

    • @TheMerkat55
      @TheMerkat55 Před 6 lety +2

      This is even a better example of Dutch cycling skills. czcams.com/video/PZgox_NiwP0/video.html

    • @timewasting3372
      @timewasting3372 Před 6 lety +3

      I didn't even noticed that ...

    • @buymore6288
      @buymore6288 Před 5 lety +9

      I rode on my bicycle about 20km everyday to school and back and i did it without using my hands many times except when i had to stop for some traffic lights.

    • @Prrrrrrrrrrrt
      @Prrrrrrrrrrrt Před 5 lety +5

      Im dutch I brought my bag from my back to my hands and put a bottle in it and then put it back

    • @TheJenniferKK
      @TheJenniferKK Před 5 lety +4

      Haha... True. Lately I've been watching these videos while cycling. Peanuts ;)

  • @DiRtYLaWs2007
    @DiRtYLaWs2007 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Having just returned from a week cycling in The Netherlands I can confirm what a liberating experience it actually is. I only got a brief taste of it but I can’t wait to get back. I’d live there if I could 🇳🇱

  • @Maguramishi
    @Maguramishi Před rokem +6

    I love how the little kid on his little bike, accompanied by his father, looks right and left to ensure there's no traffic when he's crossing the road at 9:51

    • @ambiarock590
      @ambiarock590 Před rokem

      That kid has quite the ride, he's gonna be shredding the fietspadden very soon lol

  • @jhombergh
    @jhombergh Před 8 lety +191

    Riding a bike as a Dutchman (or woman) is not a matter of "driving" .... it is like walking....you ride your bike as if you were walking, ......just with wheels and pedals.....

    • @RedKnight-fn6jr
      @RedKnight-fn6jr Před 5 lety +6

      That's the way it should be - Cyclists in Ireland and the UK need to take note!

    • @bloopblooper490
      @bloopblooper490 Před 4 lety +2

      @@RedKnight-fn6jr the negative comments always come from England, why is that?

    • @MonarNL
      @MonarNL Před 3 lety +2

      @@bloopblooper490 that was not a negatieve comment lol. Learn proper english before replying.

    • @RosesAndIvy
      @RosesAndIvy Před 3 lety

      @@jbird4478 That makes sense. Most Dutch people are even able to ride a bike without holding the handlebars, steering the bike using just their legs. This definitely requires a sense of balance and feeling where the bike is going, to adjust if necessary.

    • @Learner945
      @Learner945 Před 2 lety

      It used to be like that till I was 15 years old in India. Now, even kids are riding motor bikes. It has become a prestige to own a motor bike than riding a bicycle. We enjoyed our childhood

  • @ganginfr4923
    @ganginfr4923 Před 3 lety +30

    Are we not gonna talk about the fact this woman had an _entire stove top oven_ in her bakfiets???

    • @wimahlers
      @wimahlers Před 3 lety +8

      So what? That is where a bakfiets (=cargo bicycle) is for.

    • @AEvers
      @AEvers Před 3 lety +1

      A few days ago I saw a man with egg trays under his arm while bikinh

    • @MrJx4000
      @MrJx4000 Před 3 lety +2

      At 8:06 I thought you were kidding!

    • @yvobroekhoven972
      @yvobroekhoven972 Před 2 lety

      I've moved all my stuff several times (and helped others to move as well) on a 1950's bakfiets (cargo bicycle). Not a big deal...

  • @mikeskor6230
    @mikeskor6230 Před 4 lety +46

    I love this. I'm so proud of the Dutch for making this happen.

    • @elizabethnilsson1815
      @elizabethnilsson1815 Před 2 lety

      America build a BRIDGE for bike and walk in PORTLAND. RATHER NICE BRIDGE.

  • @automajstorijediy
    @automajstorijediy Před 2 lety +5

    people look so healthy,kind,and happy...and they are

  • @CESAREBORTH
    @CESAREBORTH Před 10 lety +60

    Loved the STIPO planner quote: "You are much more in touch with humanity".

  • @chrispewpew
    @chrispewpew Před 10 lety +136

    As a NYC Bicyclist, I want to visit Amsterdam, this heaven of a bike community :O

    • @hansy3
      @hansy3 Před 4 lety +8

      Chris P NO! You will be dissapointed. There is no community, it just IS. Nobody cares if you ride a bike or if you shaved the right part of your skull. It’s just a tool. It’s a function of society, not a fucking statement. Stay in NYC. Go to the Ned for other things.

    • @triplerainbow6269
      @triplerainbow6269 Před 4 lety +28

      @@hansy3 He's giving a compliment and you rudely fly off the handle about shaved heads and cycling as a statement which I don't see anywhere in his comment. It's amazing how so many people saw his comment as positive and you chose to see the negative. Says a lot about you.

    • @johanwittens7712
      @johanwittens7712 Před 4 lety +15

      @@triplerainbow6269 to be fair he said "bike community" which sort of does imply this group of people seperate from the rest doing their thing "fighting against the main stream". It probably wasn't intended this way, but I can see how someone interprets it that way and gets annoyed. Because he has a point: it isn't a community, it isn't just Amsterdam. The entire country of the Netherlands, and people of every age and every walk of life bike every day. It is a mode of transport as common as cars or walking. It is so ingrained in every day life it's dead normal. And on top of that it isn't just Amsterdam that is this way, but the entire country. Every Dutch city, village,... has biking infra. The country is crisscrossed by bike highways. The entire country is biking friendly.
      The biking "community" he speaks of is just main stream Dutch culture. Even in north Belgium where I live, biking is common and a normal everyday thing. So seeing someone comment about ema "biking community" seems a bit weird from a northern European perspective as here (in most parts of n-eu) biking is just a normal, everyday, commonplace part of life. Personal example: Part of my primary school years, my entire high school years and university years I spent biking to and from school/uni. I still don't have a driver's licence to this day. Biking and public transport are just so normal here. Cars are too. But we have the freedom of not having to have one...

    • @triplerainbow6269
      @triplerainbow6269 Před 4 lety +8

      I understand but different people have different culture. For Americans we do not live in such a society where cycling infrastructure is everywhere. He is speaking from his perspective. I just thought his response was completely uncalled for and rude when someone was trying to be nice.

    • @johanwittens7712
      @johanwittens7712 Před 4 lety +16

      @@triplerainbow6269 Well that's another part of Dutch culture. They're very direct, don't mess about, and don't embellish things that they say... You find it insulting and rude, to a neighbouring Belgian like me that's just a Dutch person being very Dutch... 😁

  • @engrmichaelcarranza
    @engrmichaelcarranza Před 3 lety +10

    Manila City and the whole Philippines can learn a lot from Amsterdam, The Netherlands!

  • @HansVerburg
    @HansVerburg Před 4 lety +7

    Stepping into a car changes a lot of nice friendly people into aggressive, impatient Hyena's having their safe car-capsule around them. On a bike you stay that nice and friendly person because you don't want to get into a fight. You just want to get to work safely, just like the person next to you. This makes the rest of your day much better, but also, on a larger scale the overall atmosphere in your community.

    • @ric84
      @ric84 Před 4 lety +1

      "You just want to get to work safely"
      Tell that to the 9 out of 10 suicidal cyclists that have never heard of a blind spot and divebomb us out of nowhere in our little 10 ton trucks. All while we're trying to do our job manouvering around pedestrians and other trucks in the cramped medival hellhole that is the inner city of maastricht.
      I get that trucks are guests in these places, but ffs some (read=loads) of people have no sense of self-preservation seeing how they would rather squeeze past two trucks that have to fold in their mirrors just to pass eachother than wait the 20 seconds it takes for us to manouver.

  • @Markus2829
    @Markus2829 Před 8 lety +47

    Super Beispiel wie man die Lebensqualität verbessern kann und gleichzeitig den CO2 Ausstoss verringert!.
    Ich kann mich noch gut erinnern wie es in den 70igern ausgesehen hat,YEAH Amsterdam,aus Bern Schweiz

  • @kaijessen
    @kaijessen Před 4 lety +16

    In May I took my Brompton to Amsterdam, rode the bike from the airport to the hotel. Four days of the most fun bike riding in a long time.
    I also rode from The Hague to Amsterdam along the North sea and from Utrecht to Amsterdam along the river Vecht, both I highly recommend.
    But the cycling in Amsterdam made me smile, it was such an inspirational trip.

  • @heididelatierra-yoga
    @heididelatierra-yoga Před 4 lety +30

    Oh my goodness, this video is so heart-warming!! I was born in Colorado, sold my car in 2013 and have been on a bike ever since, but also moved to Mexico... so I am flowing on a bike in traffic. I love it, everyone flows together really nicely, little by little there is more and more emphasis on bike culture and less on cars and motos.!!

    • @elizabethnilsson1815
      @elizabethnilsson1815 Před 2 lety

      Exactly so don't give up and hope all will improve.

    • @LK-pc4sq
      @LK-pc4sq Před rokem +1

      curios where in mexico? can you work and make a better living vs cost of living?

    • @p.m.8316
      @p.m.8316 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Playa del Carmen is a nice place in Mexico to ride a bike.

  • @jameshay884
    @jameshay884 Před 3 lety +11

    God, what a wonderful culture. Plus, good cheese and pancakes. But building better cities for people, using their brains and their hearts. No wonder people there are well-adjusted to life, and seem happy. They actually are happy.

  • @effyleven
    @effyleven Před 6 lety +4

    Now, THAT impressed me!
    What particularly?
    The young woman with the cooker (USA, read cookstove.) 8:05 .Not that there was a cooker on a bike, or even that it was a young woman handling it.. but that she was so darned nonchalant about It!

  • @tannawannavannabittannawan7138

    I enjoy hearing about the history and transformation in Amsterdam and Copenhagen in regards to cycling. This conversion from autos to bicycle is so amazing and interesting. Many cities around the world can learn from this. 🚲

  • @jhcfight
    @jhcfight Před 8 lety +20

    It's not true that the Dutch don't notice their unique bike culture. In fact they are proud of it!

    • @mourlyvold7655
      @mourlyvold7655 Před 3 lety +4

      True that. But to be fair, that only really took off after we noticed the admiration bestowed upon our bike culture, didn't it? We just happily went along with it... 😉
      Before (been riding for over 55 years) I never gave it much more thought than tying my shoe laces, to be honest.
      (sorry, I just noticed the date of your comment. Oops)

  •  Před 9 lety +281

    uncle Sam doesn't like this video! It is a danger for the petrodollar system!

  • @thaturts
    @thaturts Před 9 lety +48

    pascal should be riding on the inside, protected by his father....as most Dutch fathers would do ;-)

    • @fabianyee
      @fabianyee Před 4 lety +16

      It's probably more for the video, we won't see him if he was riding inside.

    • @smurfiennes
      @smurfiennes Před 4 lety +5

      Fabian Yee riding on the inside, means Pascal should cycle on the right side of his father. It’s safer for little kids, since they would be protected by their parent’s body/bike if there’s a collision with a car or other motorized vehicle. Besides, it’s to guard the kid not to cycle outside the bike lane.

    • @B-Meister
      @B-Meister Před 4 lety +1

      @@smurfiennes Yeah, I'm guessing they also meant that. Just that when the kid would be cycling on the right, our view of him would be obstructed (partly) by the dad cycling to his left.

    • @RDJ2
      @RDJ2 Před 3 lety +1

      Very true. Children and dogs always go on the inside.

    • @Plons0Nard
      @Plons0Nard Před 3 lety +1

      Pascal considered this a better camera angle. 👍🤝🇳🇱

  • @rientsdijkstra4266
    @rientsdijkstra4266 Před 7 lety +63

    Actually the signal is often a "signal" at a all... What happens is that you see a cyclist coming at you, and both make a very slight adjustment to stance or direction which is enough of a "signal" for both riders to know what the other is going to do, with experienced bike riders (like all Dutch) it does not even take a concious effort, you just know...

    • @JasperJanssen
      @JasperJanssen Před 4 lety +16

      And very occasionally you’ll misread one another and one or both of you has to hit the anchors. It happens, but it’s not a huge deal.

    • @Snowshowslow
      @Snowshowslow Před 4 lety +6

      Yes, leaning in, looking in a direction, making room to make the turn by moving a little to the other side. It's the subtle signs we know to read, but I do get that if you don't speak that "language", cycling in Dutch cities, especially in Amsterdam or the Utrecht CS to the Uithof part, can be quite scary and appear chaotic.

    • @rientsdijkstra4266
      @rientsdijkstra4266 Před 4 lety

      @@Snowshowslow not to Most Dutch cyclists (the elderly may be an exception)

    • @Snowshowslow
      @Snowshowslow Před 4 lety

      @@rientsdijkstra4266 I think you'll find I said that to people who don't speak that language, it's scary. That obviously excludes most experienced Dutch cyclists.

    • @rientsdijkstra4266
      @rientsdijkstra4266 Před 4 lety

      @@Snowshowslow Ok, thats true: for the truely inexperienced cyclist it can be a scary experience... , but one can learn it quickly

  • @danielpedersen1688
    @danielpedersen1688 Před rokem +1

    This is so true, watching this from my perspective someone that lives in Copenhagen, it's exactly the same here. I started riding my bike when i was 6 years old and i'm 28 now so it's been 22 years of me knowing how to ride a bike and i do it everyday as it's too expensive to own a car and unnecessary as parking is so expensive here too. U just have to follow the flow of the traffic just do whatever the person ahead of u is doing, if u follow what they do while u go on your route then u will be just fine. I love my bike wouldn't trade it for anything else!!!

  • @marcelmoulin3335
    @marcelmoulin3335 Před 3 lety +1

    Albeit a Dutchman, I grew up in Palo Alto. At age 29, I made my way to the UK. Since March 2019, I have lived in retirement in Middelburg. Each day, I walk or cycle. No longer having a car, I feel completely liberated. The pronounced lack of vehicular traffic makes Middelburg's town centre utterly delightful and inviting. The walking and cycling culture could be replicated elsewhere (in the US and UK); however, people would need to affect a cultural shift away from the automobile. The result? Their towns and cities would become quiet, manageable, and attractive. Americans and Brits would become healthy and happy!

  • @thedutchman01
    @thedutchman01 Před 4 lety +3

    One tip for foreigners.
    At the end. You see that guy letting his 5 year old ride on the outside... Never do that. You should always be the one on the outside.
    I'm sure it was just done for the purposes of getting a good camera shot or something. But in general, that's a rule you want to follow.

    • @StreetfilmsCommunity
      @StreetfilmsCommunity  Před 4 lety +1

      Since I was riding on the outside we considered that was acceptable. To capture the shot, otherwise he would be hidden behind dad and better for me to be positioned there instead of making them ride further in the street. So you are correct.

  • @roberthermans6357
    @roberthermans6357 Před 4 lety +6

    What a lovely film! And so much information presented in a relaxed way

  • @SS-wm1wy
    @SS-wm1wy Před 8 lety +34

    I liked a lot seeing all these people cycling. It was so less noisy, less congested. I come from India but live in North America. India is moving towards car culture with hardly any space for all those cars or traffic coutseys. India used to have cycling culture too 3-4 decades back. North America has sprawl concept. Everything is so far off that I can't think of doing that without my car, but also due to my lack of effort n will to cycle and lack of dedicated cycling lanes throughout the cities.
    I am amazed how much space can be saved, pollution decreased, have a physically active lifestyle while doing chores rather than wasting an hour or two running on treadmill when I can cyle to the store or work. Kudos to the Dutch.

    • @ElGrandeBanana
      @ElGrandeBanana Před 8 lety +4

      +Mayank Sharma The Netherlands went trough the same process as India during the 1970's, moving towards a car culture from a bike culture, and then trough some activist groups we decided to do it differently, which brings us to today. All that to say: I think India still has a chance to become cycling focused. Especially in smaller cities, this can be achieved by popular movements and activism. Especialy from an equity point of view, I think this would be good for India, so that the rich don't push the people who can't afford a car out of the public streets. The city belongs to everyone, after all.

    • @bredfortbingley1079
      @bredfortbingley1079 Před 7 lety

      ElGrandeBanana ;not entirely true see pictures and films of the beginning of the 20th century and you'll see a lot of bikers.
      Always has been like that !!!

    • @pedrosanchocatalan92
      @pedrosanchocatalan92 Před 5 lety

      anyplace is better than india with it's garbage society

    • @AnkitGupta-yx8ms
      @AnkitGupta-yx8ms Před 5 lety +2

      I can completely understand how u feel cuz, I live in india, in Mumbai to be precise and the name is enough! In India, the respect u get on the roads is directly proportional to the size of your vehicle, so we cyclists get mocked always...I ride my cycle to college everyday for like16 km and gotta say that I reach faster than my dad (in car) but the thing is it's sooooooo unsafe! I've got hit by cars multiple times as they want to show cyclists that they are poor, but yeah, fuck them cuz I've got cycle that's worth 1.2 lac that's like almost 1700$. And I'm sure those obese bastards will regret on day driving cars..I hope those diabetic leeches die soon!😂😂😂

    • @johanwittens7712
      @johanwittens7712 Před 5 lety +1

      People driving the car to the gym. Kind of like people smoking outside the hospital doors... :D

  • @abbaby555
    @abbaby555 Před 6 lety

    Awesome film! Should be featured on PBS all around the USA. Thanks for sharing

  • @agneswansink5933
    @agneswansink5933 Před 5 lety +4

    loved watching it and made me sad a little with memories

  • @coopsida
    @coopsida Před 5 lety +6

    I love Amsterdam. I dream of riding my electric bike around museumplien when I’m stuck in Houston Texas gridlock traffic.

  • @bhairu9
    @bhairu9 Před 4 lety +16

    Bicycle Amsterdam is beautiful. Ha, how I wish the authorities in London would follow the example.

    • @jayamber4448
      @jayamber4448 Před 4 lety

      In London, the authorities acknowledge cycling and openly make efforts to make it easier. It's not like Amsterdam, but it's ten times better than everywhere else in the UK.

    • @donder91
      @donder91 Před 3 lety

      It's interesting, because if you just copy the infrastructure from NL to UK, it would fail completely. Dutch infrastructure is dependent on mutual respect between cyclists and car drivers. So in the UK it would have to be build up slowly, with initially worse designs than we have here, but better than they are now.
      Roundabouts with cyclist priority for example would be a disaster there. As drivers just don't want to give priority to cyclists. So initially, you'd have to build crossings with lights and such.

    • @mourlyvold7655
      @mourlyvold7655 Před 3 lety +2

      @@donder91 It's the 'chicken and egg' story once again.
      You're probably right about british driver's attitudes. But the mutual respect between the parties in the Netherlands is largely due to the fact that all (I dare say) motorists are cyclists first and foremost, born and raised. And without the infrastructure they wouldn't be, not to such an extent.
      (and large numbers of cyclists have a driver's licence, that helps)
      I've never been much impressed by attitudes towards cyclists in Spain. But still somehow Sevilla, a city where no one ever cycled, just rapidly implemented their biking infrastructure and that proved to be nothing short of revolutionary.
      Thousands and thousands of people are biking, safely. Have a look:
      czcams.com/video/rz20rAJ7oIg/video.html
      It can be done faster than expected...
      Bye.

  • @johndevan22
    @johndevan22 Před rokem +1

    I could just watch this video over and over again love it so much

  • @BlueEyesBrittany
    @BlueEyesBrittany Před 4 lety +2

    Amsterdam looks like a nice place to go with the waterways (very nice) and cycling roads. A great place to spend some time .... especially for those who like rivers and canals and cycling .. and a healthier and nicer kind of living ...; not too rushy, not too polluted

  • @VipassanaRunner
    @VipassanaRunner Před 6 lety

    wow wonderful. People in there are very clever and smart. Loving you guys. How lovely place for everyone.

  • @davidwinter2337
    @davidwinter2337 Před 9 lety +8

    I loved the video ! makes me sad when I look at the poor cycle network here in Glasgow and the surrounding areas. The out dated fast narrow busy roads make cycling a dangerous daily battle. Hopefully one day the people might change for a pro cycling culture but can not see the generally car dependent people changing any time soon. Love Amsterdam ! would love to live there one day.

  • @xtrariter
    @xtrariter Před 6 lety +1

    Amazing and admirable!

  • @simonburton505
    @simonburton505 Před 3 lety

    Simply stunning !!

  • @TheoGregoire
    @TheoGregoire Před 7 lety +4

    Wonderful video.

  • @nvwest
    @nvwest Před 3 lety +3

    6:40 nice one with the man in suit with a children’s seat at the front

  • @SM4616
    @SM4616 Před 4 lety +3

    I love it
    Every day I ride one of my bikes
    Transporter From 1920
    Or my 1910 race bike
    For longer distance my off-road ebike
    Love it
    Feels so free

  • @billybangbang9180
    @billybangbang9180 Před 7 lety +2

    God, what a wonderful idea!

  • @hatbpto5180
    @hatbpto5180 Před 3 lety +2

    Like at our roller skating rink, everyone has a sense of where the other skaters are going. It seems like chaos (which makes it fun) but collisions are rare. After going for a while your peripheral vision seems to improve. Sometimes I feel like I could even see behind me.

  • @yellowlightingbolt
    @yellowlightingbolt Před 4 lety +1

    That is so true. There is order, there is beauty in that chaos...and everyone has excellent spatial awareness a byproduct to cycle since you are almost a toddler I guess.

  • @willemh3319
    @willemh3319 Před 2 lety +1

    even i'm just 20 minutes away from a'dam i feel good to watch this vid

  • @brunobartu
    @brunobartu Před 9 lety +10

    excelent!

  • @Lisarata
    @Lisarata Před 10 lety +3

    I really respect the Netherlands for choosing bikes. It was a great solution for you. I have started riding bikes more. In the US right now we are going to have to work on coordinating our views and it's going to take a lot to get us to make this big a change. We love our cars, plus, the places we want to go around town are maybe five miles apart, so we'll have to change our sense of distance. I don't want to change that, but I sense that we could really learn to love life on bikes!

  • @Mikolaj_u
    @Mikolaj_u Před 6 lety +1

    Going there in a week. Can't wait!

  • @stephenjeffreys4219
    @stephenjeffreys4219 Před 5 lety

    Great vid - thanks!

  • @TheMerkat55
    @TheMerkat55 Před 6 lety +3

    In some comment on a bicycle video I read this: "Birds have to fly. Fish have to swim. The Dutch have to ride their bike." Flying is the nature of birds. Swimming is the nature of fishes. And cycling is the nature of the Dutch. That's how ingrained it is.

    • @Simonsvids
      @Simonsvids Před 4 lety

      Good job us Brits invented the modern chain driven bicycle and pneumatic tires for them then ;)

    • @mariadebake5483
      @mariadebake5483 Před 3 lety

      @@Simonsvids And we are eternally grateful to you for it!

  • @ArnettaC
    @ArnettaC Před 8 lety +30

    No offence to these Americans living here, like the beardy guy mr. Cutler it is I believe, but a Dutch person, born and raised on a bike would never ever let a child of 5 years or so (on such a tiny bike) cycle on the side where the cars are driving (on the outside as we call it, but the child must be on the inside (de "binnenkant" as we call it) so you as a father can protect the child from the cars and other traffic. That's what's making riding a bike in Amsterdam more and more difficult these days, because a lot of people, like for example tourists, come and cycle here and are not used to these unwritten rules.

    • @StreetfilmsCommunity
      @StreetfilmsCommunity  Před 8 lety +34

      +ArnettaC he was actually riding between his dad and the curb, but I couldn't get a good shot so he let him ride on the outside for a bit since of course I WAS ON THE OUTSIDE! So he was indeed protected by an adult.

    • @OriginalPuro
      @OriginalPuro Před 7 lety +3

      Maybe you should write them down.. :o

    • @czar123
      @czar123 Před 7 lety +3

      I have to agree with ArnetteC. The first thing that struck my eye was the very little kid was taking the outside lane so to say. Believe me, all other dutch people notice such a huge mistake right-away. It all might seem as a bit of choas, but there are a lot of unwritten rules. One of them is that the parent will always protect his little child from the car traffic. Think of it, big people on big bikes are far easier to be seen by the car driver than a tiny kid on a mini-bike. Even car drivers can get very angry about that because you put them in a position that they might hit your child.

    • @Bloom5000
      @Bloom5000 Před 6 lety

      What are the unwritten rules?

    • @trillinflossin412
      @trillinflossin412 Před 6 lety +4

      The kid was on the outside, still inside another adult cameraman, for 5 seconds at the end for a promo shot and you guys claim its a huge mistake.

  • @danutatokarska7428
    @danutatokarska7428 Před 4 lety

    Bardzo ładne nagranie i cudowny Amsterdam

  • @2011zurich
    @2011zurich Před 4 lety +43

    Didn't spot any overweight cyclists there...

    • @thedutchman01
      @thedutchman01 Před 3 lety +6

      @Roosje Keizer No... We exist.

    • @EJ386
      @EJ386 Před 3 lety +8

      We exist indeed. To be fair cycling is "easier" then walking, takes less effort to go the same distance. So I am at times lazy and take my bike...

    • @georgesbv1
      @georgesbv1 Před 3 lety

      but not everyone uses a bike, let's be honest.

  • @tomhermens7698
    @tomhermens7698 Před 4 lety

    Very Good!!!!!

  • @rodrigosouto9502
    @rodrigosouto9502 Před 4 lety

    Very nice!

  • @TTTzzzz
    @TTTzzzz Před 4 lety

    Little kids on bikes warm my heart.

  • @krysteencaepmon5225
    @krysteencaepmon5225 Před 5 lety +6

    I wish North America was more cycle friendly. My husband and I decided this year we will cycle everywhere in our city, and each bought a bike (just about $100 bikes, we don’t need anything crazy), and it’s shocking at how “ignored” cyclist are here. Completely disregarded by cars, or any other motor vehicle. 🙄

    • @22airgun
      @22airgun Před 2 lety

      I just bought one of those bikes and had it shipped over here and it was $1,500 😬😬😬.

  • @taunteratwill1787
    @taunteratwill1787 Před 4 lety +5

    I've been to various cities in the Netherlands, this vid makes it look like this bike thing is just Amsterdam, it isn't ! Almost every major city over there is like this. :-))

    • @taunteratwill1787
      @taunteratwill1787 Před 4 lety +1

      @@eiypo Yes it is, you just don't understand what i wrote.

  • @TomasBeing
    @TomasBeing Před 7 lety +1

    This is great!

  • @lovinthumper
    @lovinthumper Před 5 lety +4

    I am getting jealous. What I would do to work here. Or better make it like this everywhere!!!!

    • @bicyclemanNL
      @bicyclemanNL Před 5 lety

      In a word commitment. If it a choice people don’t change.

  • @Jaydon05
    @Jaydon05 Před 6 lety +1

    Great vid welldone!

  • @paulschmidtke425
    @paulschmidtke425 Před 4 lety +4

    Love Amsterdam

  • @clairetwinny
    @clairetwinny Před rokem +1

    The last time I cycled in Amsterdam was on a borrowed bike which was too big for me. It was terrifying! Not because of the cyclists but because of the bike's brakes - give me both brakes on the handlebars every time! I had never realised that I back-pedal slightly to coast - try that on a Dutch bike and you crash to a halt.

  • @jdee4215
    @jdee4215 Před 4 lety +1

    Great wish the UK was like this,.

  • @elizabethnilsson1815
    @elizabethnilsson1815 Před 2 lety +1

    I loved little Pascal in this video.

  • @williamvan909
    @williamvan909 Před 3 lety

    all i can say is out standing this is the way to go biking to work and where you wait to go no tickets for speeding.... lol lo..... two thumps up.. need more of these in our country yes go for bikes USA not cars .... better health for you all ... amen

  • @TheRealMeowMeowShow
    @TheRealMeowMeowShow Před 5 lety

    Amazing I live in Amsterdam and didn't know these facts, nice! The cars are not going so fast unless they have blue license plates. I pass through that intersection almost everyday.

    • @TheRealMeowMeowShow
      @TheRealMeowMeowShow Před 5 lety +1

      @John Yeah I agree I was going make a vlog about it but don't want the Uber Mafia after me xD hahah

  • @floricadumaoficial
    @floricadumaoficial Před 8 lety +1

    great city for all bikers !!!

  • @unaffiliatedwealth1798
    @unaffiliatedwealth1798 Před 2 lety +2

    The "Likes" have it. Biking it is!

  • @mabiadamascenodamasceno2649

    Parabéns gente bonita de Amisterdam.😎😍🚴🚴🚴🚴👏👏🚴👏🚴👏🚴👏🚴

  • @tjeremiah9747
    @tjeremiah9747 Před 5 lety +3

    The only thing they lack is the concept of yielding at pedestrian crossings

  • @sagistars
    @sagistars Před 10 lety +4

    I love you amsterdam!!

  • @saranbhatia8809
    @saranbhatia8809 Před rokem

    Way forward!

  • @jamesvanderhoorn1117
    @jamesvanderhoorn1117 Před 5 lety

    I learned a lot about anticipation those six month or so when the brakes on my bike weren't working and the handlebar had got unstuck. An interesting experience. The drawback was that there was little room left for daydreaming or philosophizing while riding.

    • @aliaguerin1266
      @aliaguerin1266 Před 5 lety

      You can do that in the countryside for hours not in a city:)

    • @KryzMasta
      @KryzMasta Před 5 lety +1

      James van der Hoorn That must have been awful. Not as awful as going through the trouble of having it fixed of course, but still. :D

    • @Simonsvids
      @Simonsvids Před 4 lety

      @@KryzMasta Haha so true its not as if Amsterdam is short of bicycle repair shops!

  • @MsHantubelau
    @MsHantubelau Před 3 lety

    Power of the people!

  • @braindump1446
    @braindump1446 Před rokem

    It's poetry in motion.

  • @Eitner100
    @Eitner100 Před 4 lety

    In Leeuwarden in the north of The Netherlands the system was developed way further. Many junctions have no indications anymore, not for crossing cars, people or bicycles. You have to think before you undertake any action and.......those driving cars are always held responsible in case an accident happens. That makes you think 10 times before you start crossing that junction.

  • @SamMariassouce
    @SamMariassouce Před 5 lety +7

    Thank you for this video. We need to reverse climate change. This is definetly one of the solutions.

    • @smurfiennes
      @smurfiennes Před 4 lety +2

      Sam Mariassouce nothing to do with climate change, Shell is Dutch

    • @dimrrider9133
      @dimrrider9133 Před 3 lety

      @tubetardism 20/20 hes right im Dutch and Shell is Dutch

  • @Me97202
    @Me97202 Před 2 lety +2

    I keep imagining that every single bicycle is a single car instead. That would be horrible.

  • @Anakianaj
    @Anakianaj Před 4 lety +5

    1:50 - A speed-meter for the boat 😂 another item on the list of "things you only see in Amsterdam"

    • @leandrog2785
      @leandrog2785 Před rokem

      Why is there a flashing sad face? And what is the speedmeter for?

  • @sulabhawadmare9125
    @sulabhawadmare9125 Před 3 lety

    Very. Much good system 🤗

  • @marin4311
    @marin4311 Před 3 lety +3

    Thumbs up to the Dutch people!

  • @shfashfa
    @shfashfa Před 9 lety +1

    Amazing, make another video please

  • @HonestHuck777
    @HonestHuck777 Před 4 lety +2

    Cool....my kinda town. I sold my vehicle this January (2020) and I loved my car.....but I had a Retro Ladies bicycle that I rarely used and I was lazy driving everywhere and overweight. I sold my vehicle so that I have no other option to exercise every day to get anywhere. Town is only about a 15-20 minute walk, but because i'm overweight walking is uncomfortable plus I love cycling anyways. I love it and it's normal again, just like when I was young and only stopped cycling when I started working and when NZ brought in law to wear a helmet.
    I sometimes wear a helmet, mostly I don't - as many people in nz are quite relaxed about helmet use but I would advise for children to still wear helmets because we have a lot of arsehole vehicle drivers still. I would love my town to become a Bicycle Town. Masterton, Wairarapa, New Zealand.

  • @raskalthefirst
    @raskalthefirst Před 8 lety +10

    When I was still in secondary school I used to read my books while cycling to school...
    Later after I discovered that other Dutch thing I was rolling (and obviously smoking) while I was cycling my mountainbike....

  • @johnsimonwijaya
    @johnsimonwijaya Před 6 lety +6

    this is the REAL CITY.
    real place for normal human living.

    • @adotholland22
      @adotholland22 Před 4 lety

      normal. hahaha amsterdam full drug en sex toerist,,jou call that normal

    • @Jaydon05
      @Jaydon05 Před 4 lety +1

      @@adotholland22 That's just a little part of Amsterdam! And an even less part of the Netherlands! Toerist!

  • @DamienAlexander
    @DamienAlexander Před 4 lety +2

    I'm born and raised in Amsterdam and I'm moving to Texas soon, can't wait to drive a big pickup! So exciting.

    • @danielmeijer3348
      @danielmeijer3348 Před 4 lety

      Hahaha. Can’t wait to get fat as well? JK, I would like to work/live in the states as well for some period of time. Why did you choose Texas?

    • @brozius
      @brozius Před 3 lety

      @@danielmeijer3348 Yea he's from Amsterdam, he's probably a jealous American pretending to be Dutch.

    • @mourlyvold7655
      @mourlyvold7655 Před 3 lety

      @@brozius Come on guys, does a different point of view always have to trigger assumption and insult? Not my favourite part of dutch culture.

    • @brozius
      @brozius Před 3 lety

      @@mourlyvold7655 Kinda strange that you only talk about Dutch people being triggered, I guess you completely ignore the people from the US that are triggered even more than the Dutch people.
      Looks to me you are a selective reader.

    • @mourlyvold7655
      @mourlyvold7655 Před 3 lety

      @@brozius No, I just stumbled upon your post and had my say, is that a problem?
      Will I have to go and reply to every reaction on CZcams to prove to you that I'm impartial? A daunting task if you ask me.
      For your reassurance: I actually do react in many ways to many people of many nationalities. Perhaps just have a look at my comments under this video? That should suffice to find out if I really only react critically to dutch people. There is a fine example of a 'triggered american' here (as you seem to relish that idea) that could tell you about it.
      Just ask him politely, will you?
      In this case I reacted to one of my countrymen (I take it, at least, that you are dutch).
      I just somehow felt it concerned me, being dutch myself and all. You didn't represent my country in the best of ways, I thought. So I was compelled to react. That happens...
      So feel free to (as you stated) guess all you want, Sir.
      I assure you it is not me who is a selective reader. I'm afraid it's you.
      Fijne avond nog. Peace.

  • @LeafHuntress
    @LeafHuntress Před 5 lety +2

    If i'm not mistaken, at 8:39 it's Thierry Baudet. He's now a MP for the (most?) far-right party elected to the house of commons in The Netherlands, the Forum for Democracy. This goes to show, that EVERYBODY cycles in The Netherlands. Left, centre & right.

    • @peterwassink
      @peterwassink Před 5 lety +2

      He vaguely looks like him but...you are mistaken.

  • @jay-self-appointedpromotor8309

    Definitely my new favourite Dutch-bicycle video :-)
    Love the part in the video called "There's a science to what looks like "bicycle chaos"" at 4:07.
    Especially the part at 5:05 where this American man tells: ".. it does look like chaos, but in the end it all works... everybody does what they're supposed to do. Actually when you see something nót working here, then I would say, 9 out of 10 times it's because it's a tourist on a bike." hahaha. True!
    What Marc van Woudenberg says about culture and subculture at 8:48.. perfect explanation. Love it.
    Finally, 5-year old Pascal at the end of the video.. cute!

  • @petervanderkruk8346
    @petervanderkruk8346 Před 4 lety +1

    Always have your children cycle in front of you. It gives you much better (vocal) control over their actions.

  • @Peter_Scheen
    @Peter_Scheen Před 3 lety

    I once had my jacket flung over my shoulder holding it with one hand, a car passed me too close and hit my other elbow with his mirror (slightly, not hard we both were at a traffic light, him driving slow) It took me of balance and I fell against the car slightly. But before he was totally passed me and I would have fallen to the road, I shifted my balance a bit, and was upright again. We both simply went our way as if nothing happened.

  • @jasperH3611
    @jasperH3611 Před 3 lety +1

    5:18 yes it often are tourists or people that are just not well adjusted to how biking works here, often they stand out a lot

  • @ThatBigHorsey
    @ThatBigHorsey Před 10 lety +15

    I live in Los Angeles, where I think the only way they could become any more hostile to bicyclists is to award points for running them down.
    It is extremely dangerous to attempt to ride a bicycle here, and at every turn there is hostility toward riders. It is sad and depressing to see cars recklessly zooming past a parent who is carrying a child in a bicycle seat.

  • @deskelly9313
    @deskelly9313 Před 4 lety

    A beautiful thing

  • @willneverforgets3341
    @willneverforgets3341 Před 5 lety +5

    Nice video. The most important lesson is that NL wasn't always like it is now, that it was like everywhere today, full of cars. Change is possible!!. Well done Dutch people!!!! Min 5:16 I've done that crossing many times! Nice ride! I've done the suitcase pulling from a bike... Yes I also think it's so natural to ride a bike in NL, that nobody thinks of it as being special. It's just their everyday life.

    • @edkroketje1
      @edkroketje1 Před 5 lety +1

      My father also brought home the christmas tree on his bike.
      I have also done the suitcase thing and also having a second bike at the hand.
      Heck, when my mother was young when she went to school and the other person bike broke she would have that person on the back while also holding that bike.

  • @alejandrayalanbowman367

    Fabulous. Now how do we get the idea across in other countries?

  • @drew031127
    @drew031127 Před 5 lety +2

    One can only dream that the US could become more like this. Unfortunately there are a lot of marketing dollars spent on promoting "car culture". In the US you're not a real man if you don't own a 5,000lb clown truck.

    • @aliaguerin1266
      @aliaguerin1266 Před 5 lety

      Most cyclists in the Netherlands have cars, but only used for longer distances. In the Innercities its not wise to use a car because parking is almost not possible or you have to buy a parkingspace. Or pay a shitload of money for parking.

    • @aliaguerin1266
      @aliaguerin1266 Před 5 lety

      And not being a man because you dont own a car, wel our men come on there own bikes to get a drink or other outing.

  • @CitizenShane
    @CitizenShane Před 4 lety +4

    If the weather in Amsterdam wasn't shite I'd move there tomorrow!

    • @barvdw
      @barvdw Před 3 lety +1

      Weather isn't that bad, it's rarely too hot or too cold, it rains not nearly as much as people think (and if you wait 5-10' it might stop, or you dress accordingly).. it's windy, though.