Northern Germany: Meet the Germans Road Trip Part 1/4

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  • čas přidán 1. 09. 2022
  • By popular demand Rachel is hitting the road to discover the unique traditions, characteristics and culture that Germany's different regions have to offer. The first leg of the trip takes her up north to find out more about "Plattdeutsch," fishy dishes and a very particular tea ceremony.
    What else do you find unique about northern Germany?
    Follow Meet the Germans on Instagram: / dw_meetthegermans Watch more Meet the Germans videos here: bit.ly/MtG_CZcamsPlaylist
    CREDITS
    Report: Rachel Stewart, Kristina Reymann-Schneider
    Camera: Johanna Thiel
    Edit: Rachel Stewart
    ---------------------------------------------
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Komentáře • 474

  • @troychavez
    @troychavez Před rokem +398

    You know a great video is coming up when Rachel is the host.

  • @sayantandas127
    @sayantandas127 Před rokem +70

    As someone from Assam living in Germany, it was nice to know that Assam tea is so well known in a part of the world someone would generally not associate with tea drinking culture.

    • @waylondesnoyers4606
      @waylondesnoyers4606 Před rokem +2

      In Canada, Assam tea is also pretty popular! I wouldn't say we're a fully tea-drinking nor coffee-drinking culture but both are popular 😋 (I prefer tea).

  • @rrider3946
    @rrider3946 Před rokem +82

    Almost all German travel videos focus exclusivly on Bavaria and Berlin. Northern Germany is very rarely featured which is a shame. Who knew Germany had a rich tradition of seafood and was more than just 300 varities of sausage and bread. The scenery and weather reminded me of parts of the North American Atlantic coast.

    • @henningbartels6245
      @henningbartels6245 Před rokem +8

      The North Sea Coast on Sylt Island is very similar to Long Island. Yet, Northern Germany is more than just touristy pictures of the coast. Millions of Germans live in this region their lifes without seeing the beach and lighthouses on a daily basis.

    • @kaph123
      @kaph123 Před rokem +3

      My theory about this is, as most travel videos are from Americans, as follows: In the decades after WWII, the USA had their troops mainly in the south of Germany (and in Berlin). This shaped the picture of Germans as being "Bavaria-like" especially in the US and these connections lead to most American visiting mainly the south and getting to know all those places, but not so much parts from the north.

    • @LuckyvillageLife
      @LuckyvillageLife Před 7 měsíci

      Yoo from America we have Boorger and StarkBark gotta sayya much

  • @bibhab
    @bibhab Před rokem +47

    Watching from Assam....Never thought our state name would come up

    • @Toddel1234567
      @Toddel1234567 Před rokem +4

      Assam tea is highly valued here in northern Germany 🙂

    • @bibhab
      @bibhab Před rokem +1

      @@Toddel1234567 i want to be in germany

    • @Amazone17171
      @Amazone17171 Před měsícem +1

      @@Toddel1234567 Not only in northern Germany!🤨 Assam is the tastiest tea of all! A creamy, expressive, rich taste - not like Darjeeling! ☺(sorry)

  • @mirkoklein4561
    @mirkoklein4561 Před rokem +191

    This is the most accurate and loveliest short clip about my home region I have ever seen. It must have taken more than a week to visit all that places and get all that camera views - all for 10min of a YT clip in the end! Also the calm and relaxing atmosphere of that frisian tea ceremony was captured very well! Very Good job!

    • @RachelStewart04
      @RachelStewart04 Před rokem +19

      Thanks Mirko! We crammed it into 5 days 😅 and thoroughly enjoyed it.

    • @_Yannex
      @_Yannex Před rokem +4

      Totally agree, even if my Stralsund just was mentioned one lil time. Anyway, this is really what you can expect when you come to the north at all.

  • @sparrowgab
    @sparrowgab Před rokem +120

    I love every "Meet the Germans", but this one was awesome, really. I love the style ("back to the fish!"). I'm thrilled to see the next chapter of the road trip. Also, I think every single topic merits its own capsule: environment, leisure activities, food. The tea (which usually comes about with some sort of ritual) was a nice discovery. My german teacher came from Hamburg. She used to tell us about that northern coastline. Greetings to Rachel and the crew.

    • @dweuromaxx
      @dweuromaxx  Před rokem +4

      Thanks!

    • @vengaboys5420
      @vengaboys5420 Před rokem +1

      @@dweuromaxx Hi, will there be whipped cream and bikini in the next video?

  • @TimothySielbeck
    @TimothySielbeck Před rokem +14

    I was stationed in northern Germany 40 years ago. I have missed it, and the people, since the day I left. I hope to return one day to see Schleswig-Holstein where my paternal family is from.

    • @Andreas_Cologne
      @Andreas_Cologne Před rokem +1

      Were are you living?

    • @TimothySielbeck
      @TimothySielbeck Před rokem +2

      @@Andreas_Cologne Texas.

    • @dezafinado
      @dezafinado Před rokem +1

      @@TimothySielbeck Have you been to Fredericksburg? They speak Texas-Deutsch there.

    • @TimothySielbeck
      @TimothySielbeck Před rokem +3

      @@dezafinado Yes, many times. One of my favorite restaurants, Friedhelm's, is there. Very good food! When my parents moved to the New Braunfels area (another haven of Tex-Deutsch) the person they bought their property from spoke "German." We tried, and failed, to have conversations (after I got out of the Army) in German but I had extreme difficulty decifering his dialect combined with his accent. Imagine Slim Pickens speaking German that contains a smatering of Spanish and English. Some years later I met a young woman from Germany who was in Texas studying Tex-Deutsch for her doctorate. I mentioned this person I knew to her and she started to have uncontrolable giggles. She had already met him and described this person in a way that was exactly the opposite of the person that I knew (shy and reserved to the point of awkwardness as apposed to the large, outgoing rancher that I knew him to be). I guess she was more imtimidating than I was.

  • @MetDaan2912
    @MetDaan2912 Před rokem +35

    Being from the Netherlands, I can see many similarities between Northern Germany and the Netherlands.

    • @Andreas_Cologne
      @Andreas_Cologne Před rokem +3

      Yes, only the Pommesbuden are different.😄

    • @Slank141ify
      @Slank141ify Před rokem +3

      De Tungenslag/ Sproken sünd (meist) gliek!

    • @henner7371
      @henner7371 Před rokem +7

      You are right. We have been on a two days trip to the island of Texel last weekend. It is like visiting a neighboring Town. The main difference is the people's strange accent 😆( I'm a native Low German speaker ).

    • @hannofranz7973
      @hannofranz7973 Před rokem +6

      En de twee talen plattduits en nederlands zijn ook heel soortgelijk. Ik denk dat een conversatie in de twee talen zonder probleme goed klopt.

    • @pullingworld
      @pullingworld Před rokem +2

      @@hannofranz7973 is een beetje afhankelijk van de regio en de accent. Maar het werk normal toch wel...

  • @MrGunnar69
    @MrGunnar69 Před rokem +14

    Wow, more than 40 islands.
    We also eat "matjessill" and "lappskojs" in Sweden.

    • @christopherx7428
      @christopherx7428 Před rokem +2

      It reminds me of the guide I once had in Turkey, who was proud of the over 100 lakes they had. Hmmm, there are over 100.000 lakes in Sweden.... ;-)

  • @BarnOwl61
    @BarnOwl61 Před rokem +15

    This was fun. The northern part of Germany is not that well known, I think. The weather and dialect reminds me a lot of our Dutch weather and language. We, the Dutch were part of the Hansestadt network too.

    • @KitsuneHB
      @KitsuneHB Před rokem +5

      Sometimes it's easier for me to understand dutch people than bavarian people. And yes - our cultures got more similarities. I don't feel a bond to Bavaria or Baden-Württemberg. But to the Netherlands.

  • @Lia-uf1ir
    @Lia-uf1ir Před rokem +12

    Moin! As a German northerner (I'm from Lübeck), I love to finally see Meet the Germans do a video on my region!

  • @andreea.andreea
    @andreea.andreea Před rokem +59

    Liebe Rachel, please make longer videos, you have an engaging way to present places and traditions, everything is well documented and funny. I can't have enough of your videos🥰

    • @RachelStewart04
      @RachelStewart04 Před rokem +10

      Thanks so much! It would take me so long to cut longer videos 😆 but maybe I’ll give it a go some time.

  • @marcosborne6540
    @marcosborne6540 Před rokem +8

    Loved this episode as I cycled from Ijmuiden in Holland and back in the summer via Bremen and Hamburg to the Elbe Valley and ending up as far east as Wittenberge. Loved Bremen and Hamburg and the tranquility of the Elbe Valley, and, as you say, the countryside is flat and green. My first time in Northern Germany but not my last 😀

  • @HeartlandTuber
    @HeartlandTuber Před rokem +11

    We lived in Southern Germany in early 70s for a year, and that included a week in Berlin. It was not till 2015 That we got to visit Lubeck, Hamburg, and Oldenburg, our 50th anniversary trek. We stayed with a friend in Oldenburg, and the father of our friend drove us to the north coast, where got to experience the Wattenmeer and Fischbrötchen. These was sehr gute Reporatage von Rachel. She forgot to mention Germany's most popular tourist destination in Hamburg, though, Das Minaturwunderland. We spent a whole evening there! And got a copy of the brothers' book signed by both of them a few years after our visit!

  • @SaugotChowdhury
    @SaugotChowdhury Před rokem +9

    Wow my state's (Assam) tea is famous in Northern Germany.. 😬😁😍

  • @ThisIsBernd
    @ThisIsBernd Před rokem +9

    I am a Northerner (Bremen-born but roots on the East Frisian island of Spiekeroog) and tend to be sceptical about how Germany or esp. ''our' Northern region is often being presented in travel shows. But, I must agree to the words of some other commentators. Its a very accurate and yes, .. a very debonair presentation of the North. Great job! :-)
    My grandma on the island used to have a tea/cream spoon like the one presented @7:30. Immediately, memories of the sound by the big pendulum clock on the living room wall are popping up. This island is still car-free today.

    • @dweuromaxx
      @dweuromaxx  Před rokem +1

      Thank you so much for the compliment on our report 😁

  • @KitsuneHB
    @KitsuneHB Před rokem +48

    I'm from Bremen and I love Northern Germany. :) Visit the "Altes Land" when the apple trees are blooming or the Lüneburger Heide. Or take a hiking tour through the amazing wadden sea to an island like Neuwerk. But please do it with a guide when you do it for the first time and never heard of "Ebbe" and "Flut" - Nordsee ist Mordsee (North Sea is murdering sea). It can be very dangerous if you do this trip without any preparation or knowledge of the sea.

  • @mpmyprojects6687
    @mpmyprojects6687 Před rokem +10

    As a Leeraner living near Bremen my smile grew wider when I saw that MTG was visiting a much underrated part of Germany. Great video :) !

  • @jackkruese4258
    @jackkruese4258 Před rokem +26

    Well that was interesting, it’s always nice to see a new place about which one knew so little and I’ve always heard good things about Hamburg. Viele Grüße Aus England.

    • @DiJaZu
      @DiJaZu Před rokem +2

      As the saying is: if it's raining in London, umbrellas will be opened in Hamburg to stress the close relationship between London/UK and the trading city of Hamburg

  • @moddude101
    @moddude101 Před rokem +6

    I've pretty much only been to Bremen. That was 30 years ago. I need to go back and also see the rest of Germany.

  • @MartinCanada
    @MartinCanada Před rokem +5

    There they are! The famous Bremen Town Musicians to the left of Rachel. 6:59
    Some say that Germans are humour-free. But Rachel's Scottish manner (equal parts ironical & cheeky with a dash of the dour) suits me fine.
    Keep up the very good work.

  • @tammygant4216
    @tammygant4216 Před rokem +10

    I never knew about this part of Germany! Now I'm dying to visit just for a cup of tea!

    • @saba1030
      @saba1030 Před rokem +1

      @Tammy Gant
      Visit Bremen, the City of coffee and tea 😉

    • @ZerosWolf
      @ZerosWolf Před rokem

      You will always be welcome to come around and have some!

  • @stuartwoodburn2653
    @stuartwoodburn2653 Před rokem +7

    Great video, I can learn about where my wife comes from. She is from Stralsund which we go every year to visit her parents. Look forward to the road trip.😊

  • @SloMo2723
    @SloMo2723 Před rokem +9

    Greetings from California , I love this series! After living in Germany for almost 5 years as a young man, I feel like Germany is my second home. The German people were so friendly and welcoming to me words cannot describe the love I have for them. I've never been to this region of Germany and I'm trying to put together a trip with some German friends to this area. Watching this video only makes me want to go sooner. I cannot wait to go! Cheers everyone

    • @timbogoe8064
      @timbogoe8064 Před 8 měsíci

      Fun fact: there is a small village officially named Kalifornien on the coast of Schleswig-Holstein

    • @LuckyvillageLife
      @LuckyvillageLife Před 7 měsíci +1

      Yoo America y'all needa Boorger and StarkBark, Gotta sayya much, very Junkfood 😂😂🎉, I f*ckin love America yoo

  • @MsTimelady71
    @MsTimelady71 Před rokem +47

    Another fascinating journey in Germany with Rachel. That tea ceremony was interesting and I never knew Germany had so many islands. Hamburg is probably still a hidden gem to many foreigner as most go the Berlin to Munich route. But everyone I know who travels there, loves it. Can't wait for more and it's wonderful to have Meet the Germans back!

  • @Windona
    @Windona Před rokem +7

    I never knew about Frisians and tea. Plus I didn't know that North Germany had a different language, and not just different regional accents

  • @_BloodWork_
    @_BloodWork_ Před rokem +33

    I'm from Hamburg. When I was in New Zealand I cooked Labskaus for other Backpackers from all over the world and although it looks like Unicorn puke most of them liked it. One french guy even asked me for the recipe. Also, you forgot that beetroot and pickles are being mushed in as well (they are the best part of it and the beetroot gives it the pink colour). :D
    Other than that amazing video!

    • @ryansmilla
      @ryansmilla Před rokem +13

      Einhornkotze! 😂😂😂

    • @RachelStewart04
      @RachelStewart04 Před rokem +7

      😂 bringing Labskaus to the world well done!

    • @_BloodWork_
      @_BloodWork_ Před rokem +2

      @@RachelStewart04 We had a dinner where everyone cooked something from one's homeland. There were two other Germans as well but they were Bavarians so they did Spätzle and Kaiserschmarrn. 😁

    • @juttalio1664
      @juttalio1664 Před rokem +3

      In Bremen we don't mash in the beethroute. It's at the side. Here the pinkish color comes from the meet (Pökelfleisch). Bc I hate beethroute I love the way we do it in Bremen

    • @saba1030
      @saba1030 Před rokem

      ​@@juttalio1664 Moin 😉
      Exactly, no fish, no beet root. But fried eggs and sweet/sour cornichons with it.

  • @jounneejr8073
    @jounneejr8073 Před rokem +4

    The longer I live the more I discover that our way of life is german in Finland. We say moi (moin as a swedish speaking finn), we have matjes (as do the swedes) and of course Lutheranism, foods, songs etc. I like it, it's homely.

  • @johnraggett7147
    @johnraggett7147 Před rokem +7

    Rachel, thank you once again and greetings from Leipzig. During the Middle Ages, up to the 16th century, the Hanseatic League had it's own, self-governing dock, later known as the Steel Yard, to the west of London Bridge.

  • @LaureninGermany
    @LaureninGermany Před rokem +15

    The North is totally underrated. The most important thing is to take a bit of time when you visit. Not just to see everything, but to let it work on you. So that you too will understand why moin moin is rather chirpy…

  • @joebarrera334
    @joebarrera334 Před rokem +22

    Thank you for highlighting Plattdeutsch and a bit of Frisian culture! Top-shelf production quality as usual. Looking forward to the rest of your roadtrip!

  • @catkinsanctuary
    @catkinsanctuary Před rokem +7

    This was such a treat, thank you! My great grand parents came from Rendsburg.

  • @julianosvonskingrad7009
    @julianosvonskingrad7009 Před rokem +8

    I am coming from Ostholstein and I can approve this message.

  • @anglogerman2287
    @anglogerman2287 Před rokem +8

    The translation of Schluck as "gulp"" made me smile. I think "sip" might be more appropiate for a tea "ceremony" 😉

  • @andreasschulzebaing6443
    @andreasschulzebaing6443 Před rokem +7

    Great video! Fun fact about Labskaus, it is related to Scouse, the stew from Liverpool, which means that Liverpudlians are also known as scousers.

  • @Danburybeeches
    @Danburybeeches Před rokem +4

    I understand that the derivation (and these things are of course never 'certain') of the Liverpudlian term 'Scouse' comes from Labskaus (via Lobscouse, a translation) and is a result of Hansa trade between Northern Germany and the Liverpool area!

  • @volkerparis
    @volkerparis Před rokem +7

    We’ll done! I’m originally from Schleswig but live in France for 30 years. You might want to check out the UNESCO world heritage of the Vikings in Haithabu in one of your specials. Great memories.

  • @tschaytschay4555
    @tschaytschay4555 Před rokem +11

    I am from South Germany and I like the people in the North and the Tea and the sea and the weather but what I would miss about the south would be the food, the hills, bigger forests and snow, which we barely get here anymore, so my heart is always kind of torn. :D

  • @sunu84
    @sunu84 Před rokem +10

    LOVED this video. Im such in love with north germany, it is sooo more German ,traditional,pure, i LOVE IT!

  • @jamesdoyle5405
    @jamesdoyle5405 Před rokem +7

    I am glad to see Rachel taking a look at more than culture. Her Ausländerin view point appreciates what is unique and interesting in ways a native might miss. Good job Rachel and crew.!

  • @name_it
    @name_it Před rokem +5

    Oh, I've lived in Ostfriesland for about 6 months :))) It is so a funny and strange place, like no other I've seen. One thing, in particular, was seeing people in the middle of the road playing Bose*. it's their national sport :) Taking it so seriously :) throwing a ball and then measuring how far it will go. good place, with good people. A must visit for the summer holidays :)

  • @eastfrisianguy
    @eastfrisianguy Před rokem +3

    Wow, I am thrilled! Perfect video, thanks for that! I was born in Papenburg and grew up near Leer and lived with my grandparents for several years as a child. I speak relatively fluent Low German (although many in my age around mid-30s are sadly not able to speak it properly anymore), drank a lot of tea in my youth (but we mostly stirred the tea) and I unfortunately traded that for coffee - but I have a complete frisian tea set with all the details in the cupboard. Meanwhile I live even closer to the North Sea, in Friesland near Wilhelmshaven. Just one mile away from the coast.
    My mother moved to southeast Bavaria over ten years ago. I like to visit her once a year, but it still takes me days before I can begin to understand the Bavarian dialect, and as much as I love the mountains - as soon as I hear a "Moin" again as a greeting on the train north of Hanover, my heart swells. I am a "Nordlicht" (northern light) through and through.

  • @fotoeins
    @fotoeins Před rokem +2

    Thanks for this introduction; this is a great reminder about I should spend more time in Northern Germany. "Yes, more tea, please." ☕

  • @kfwoeltje
    @kfwoeltje Před rokem +1

    Great episode - can't wait for the rest of the road trip.

  • @timoleon2903
    @timoleon2903 Před rokem +1

    Rachel, I've really missed you videos and am glad that you have done one more. Hope, there will be more videos coming now. Thanks!

  • @ericderami
    @ericderami Před rokem +9

    I love Northern Germany. If I ever move from H it will likely be to HH! ;)
    I think I have offered to show you around Hannover in the past but for a legit topic, what about a History of music in Germany? Yeah we all know about Bach and Beethoven.....but did you know that modern methods of private music listening has roots in Hannover?! From Emile Berliner and the flat cut record played on the gramaphone to the first mass produced for sales CD (which was ABBA!) Not only home to The Scorpions but was a Europe hub for many record labels and top recording studios for many years!
    I am assuming one of the following parts will see you in Munich, I know you were recently there and met another youtuber!
    And as always, great content Rachel!!

  • @viktoriapritzl6169
    @viktoriapritzl6169 Před rokem +5

    Thank you for this amazing video! It included all my favourite places and things from Nothern Germany. Ostfriesland, Norderney, Labskaus and above all TEA. You captured the most important things and most importantly the spirit of the people.

  • @jessicak3377
    @jessicak3377 Před rokem

    Awesome, can't wait for the remaining parts!

  • @JohnThreeSixteen918
    @JohnThreeSixteen918 Před rokem

    Brilliant as usual Rachel...watched them all and need to re-watch them ...there is too much good stuff to absorb in one go.

  • @r.j.5089
    @r.j.5089 Před rokem +1

    Das mit dem Tee war super spannend und hatte ich noch nicht gewusst 💜 vielen Dank für das tolle Video.

  • @TEX360
    @TEX360 Před rokem +1

    A really good one. Thank you

  • @Tockz
    @Tockz Před rokem +6

    nice Übergangsjacke! I can see you really are a German :) Great video!

  • @krisjustin3884
    @krisjustin3884 Před rokem +6

    I love this video! Nicely paced with interesting footage and comments about northern Germany. My family came from there in the 1870’s and this video has helped me to understand some of them better. :) Many thanks! I love DW!

  • @Bellasie1
    @Bellasie1 Před rokem

    Very interesting! I love these short videos packed with information, and this road trip / regional series is particularly great.

  • @constantinoVino
    @constantinoVino Před rokem +5

    Great video Rachel, as always perfectly done. Hope you do soon about the Black Forest!!

  • @sharonneth4231
    @sharonneth4231 Před rokem +8

    I love these videos so very much!! As a person who loves everything German, these wonderful presentations give me a bird's eye view of the people and places to visit! Thank you DW for creating these programs! ❤👍

  • @billhanna2148
    @billhanna2148 Před rokem +2

    Thank you 🙏 again for your EXCELLENT work 🙏

  • @JennHolt
    @JennHolt Před rokem

    Das war fantastisch. You covered a lot of interesting facts, included a dialect (yay!) and lots and lots of beautiful scenery. Can't wait for the other 3 videos. Vielen Dank!

  • @thekejofglory
    @thekejofglory Před rokem +2

    This got me really excited! Rachel and seeing old beautiful towns--the best!

  • @Slank141ify
    @Slank141ify Před rokem +3

    Rachel! Weest heel bedankt dat du'e 'native' Noordüütschen, de Nedderdüütschen un Freesen nöömt un verkloort hest. Dat bedüüd uns bannig wat. Un denn dien söte Oort... Grööt

  • @brucequinn
    @brucequinn Před rokem +3

    Really nice. Also, the sudden shifts in camera angle are fun.

  • @KaushikDatye
    @KaushikDatye Před rokem +7

    Wow, day by day it's getting harder to pick one best video out of all Meet the Germans. I can't help but say, they are all best. This video actually made me more excited to visit the north. I've lived in Bodensee and Schwarzwald regions till now and have just begun exploring the real south. Now, there's even greater portion of North to be explored.
    P.S. Rachel, you forgot India while listing out the Tea Drinking Countries along with Turkey and Britain.

  • @CCCSN
    @CCCSN Před rokem

    Loved this video, spent my year abroad in 1993-1994 in Ostfriesland and love the north of Germany. Thank you for the happy memories, the Plattdeutsch and the tea! Great video, one that I will share with my students.

  • @craigdickens791
    @craigdickens791 Před rokem +3

    I learned a lot from this one... Thanks Rachel and DW 🇩🇪👍

  • @c.greystone9825
    @c.greystone9825 Před rokem +3

    Wish it’s longer like 35-40mins. But as always lovely entertaining DW documentaries! Keep up the great work.

  • @petros1372
    @petros1372 Před rokem +1

    Thank you Rachel for another interesting video!!

  • @aperturix
    @aperturix Před rokem +7

    Rachel's videos about Germany are as likeable as she is herself.

  • @baerlauchstal
    @baerlauchstal Před rokem +5

    I've wanted to try that East Frisian tea for years, ever since I first learned about it.

  • @typxxilps
    @typxxilps Před rokem +6

    Real great one about the northern part of Germany and its culture and history.
    Thanks a lot.

  • @BigBen212
    @BigBen212 Před rokem +8

    Rachel's videos are the best. Homesickness is real. Been in the US since 2005 but the first 27 years in Oldenburg and studied in Emden (studieren, wo andere Urlaub machen)

  • @ZerosWolf
    @ZerosWolf Před rokem

    I am very greatful for your channel to highlight the northern charm. I though I was seeing things in the beginning when Rachel spoke in front of the Leeraner Museumshafen, but I was glad it wasn't my imagination when you introduced our Teemuseum. I hope the team enjoyed their stay!

  • @INSTRUMANROBOT
    @INSTRUMANROBOT Před rokem +1

    Awesome and very informative video.. Thanks for making this! I have an HH number plate and I didn't have to change it after moving to Baden Württemberg which was nice

  • @happydog4929
    @happydog4929 Před 10 měsíci

    Love this, More please.

  • @JLKeener77
    @JLKeener77 Před rokem +2

    These “Meet the Germans” videos are so well done. I’ve enjoyed every episode. Vielen Dank!

  • @einfachnurleo7099
    @einfachnurleo7099 Před rokem +3

    Very good video. Personally I'd have added Sankt Peter Ording with one of the if not the largest beach in Europe. Also there are special kinds of sport like Strandsegeln (Beach sailing) and Boseln.

  • @vincescotian8083
    @vincescotian8083 Před rokem +3

    Enjoyed this a lot maybe a little bit more time on Food and Drink, I have heard Hamburg has many Steak places and always want to know more about local Bier types. I plan to travel there when I retire.

  • @michaelraphael4103
    @michaelraphael4103 Před 7 měsíci

    You can tell this was very well researched and planned. And very succinct 👌

  • @WISEveryday
    @WISEveryday Před rokem

    Thank you for doing this.

  • @shoal2242
    @shoal2242 Před rokem +3

    My all time crush rachel😍🥰🥰🥰😋that mixture of british-german accent makes it even better🥰😍💝💖

  • @muradhadiyev3317
    @muradhadiyev3317 Před rokem +21

    I love Germans and Germany ❤️🇩🇪 ❤️

  • @stevedrane2364
    @stevedrane2364 Před rokem

    Thank you . . Look forward to seeing more . . 👍

  • @edmundschlak5539
    @edmundschlak5539 Před rokem +1

    It’s good to see you back in action, Rachel!

  • @vaughndumas
    @vaughndumas Před rokem +1

    Zinnowitz is my favourite place. My mom was born there in ‘38; her father was the local Lutheran priest.

  • @cms8989
    @cms8989 Před rokem +1

    Great video! Just to add, if you find yourself in Northern Germany, you have to check out the Lüneburger Heide between Hamburg and Hannover as well!

  • @dreasbn
    @dreasbn Před rokem +1

    Wie immer absolut top

  • @Zuschauer9
    @Zuschauer9 Před rokem +4

    Lovely Video.
    You forgot "the real north" of Germany. Flensburg for example is awesome. With the story about rum and the harbour, the danish connection and of course the points you get for driving your car too fast. It was also the last Capital of the 3rd Reich before the second world war ends.
    The nature arround there like the Geltinger Birk is nice too.
    all the best

    • @RachelStewart04
      @RachelStewart04 Před rokem +1

      Would have loved to go right up to the top but just couldn’t squeeze it all in one trip 😣 but at least Flensburg got a shoutout in our episode about cars!

    • @Zuschauer9
      @Zuschauer9 Před rokem

      @@RachelStewart04 Thats true. Love your Videos. Keep on doing it. All the best.

  • @pkorobase
    @pkorobase Před rokem +4

    If you visit the north sea coast be sure to make a Wattwanderung (guided of course :)

  • @riker1701D
    @riker1701D Před rokem +2

    Phantastisch! Rachel hat mal wieder ein perfektes Video gemacht. Ich komme aus Nordwestdeutschland und über die A31 bin ich innerhalb von 2 Stunden in Norddeich und ich liebe Ostfriesland, obwohl ich weder Fisch esse noch Tee trinken. Eine steife Briese oben auf dem Deich bei Pilsum, das ist für mich Entspannung. Bin mal gespannt, wo die 2. Folge uns hinführen wird!

    • @riker1701D
      @riker1701D Před rokem

      @@hendrik8536 Kann ich durchaus verstehen! Um mein Münsterland wird sicher sich nicht berichtet, aber wenn man nur ca. 10min für ein Viertel von Deutschland hat, fallen viele Regionen weg. Cool wäre es aber, wenn Rachel sowas wie "Gernstl unterwegs" machen würde, nur auf Englisch.

  • @Gonzol7
    @Gonzol7 Před rokem +1

    Ganz ausgezeichnet, Frau Stewart! And I will add what there was not likely room for: Dieterich (how he spelled it) Buxtehude in Lübeck and the Beatles in Hamburg--terrific musical revolutionaries. But I wouldn't change a thing in your video--so polished.

  • @glitterysparkles2415
    @glitterysparkles2415 Před rokem

    Glad you're back

  • @jurgenrosenberg4748
    @jurgenrosenberg4748 Před rokem +2

    another well done Video from her.Still love her way of presentation .the best:an english lady enjoy tea ceremony in germany. Best regards from hannover lower saxony

  • @jopiaspieder1184
    @jopiaspieder1184 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for the history lesson

  • @edimarribeirodossantosjuni9829

    Very very good content, congrats from Brazil 🥰🇧🇷

  • @shigarumo2263
    @shigarumo2263 Před rokem +4

    And Usedom wasn't even mentioned. The 2nd biggest island of Germany, which has the longest sand beaches in Germany, with around 42km in distance.
    Also, in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, we have the "Ivenacker Eichen", where one of the Oaks is over 1000 years old. And don't forget the "Königsstuhl" on Rügen, where Casper David Friedrich painted his - at least for me - most famous painting in 1818.

  • @Andreas_Cologne
    @Andreas_Cologne Před rokem +7

    "Entgegen des Uhrzeigers, weil wir beim Teetrinken die Zeit anhalten möchten."👍👍👍

  • @Kowabrass
    @Kowabrass Před rokem +9

    While Low German is a minority language nowadays because it was pushed aside centuries ago, it was one of the major sources of Old English as well. Considering the many English terms that have their way into High German in recent years, it’s also a late victory for this practical uncomplicated language.

  • @butenbremer1965
    @butenbremer1965 Před rokem +3

    Rachel's finally back!!! 🙂

  • @jaapvandenbergh7430
    @jaapvandenbergh7430 Před rokem +2

    Wonderful! Jaap van den Bergh

  • @BerlinerFolker
    @BerlinerFolker Před rokem +3

    I grew up in Hamburg's north, went to school in Wyk auf Föhr and got to know the Wattenmeer, the Halligen (the tiny islands, often just metres above the high water mark. I even spoke Plattdeutsch, alas I only remember "Wat is de Clock?" (what is the time?)

  • @ruairicoburn8410
    @ruairicoburn8410 Před rokem

    Your episodes are excellent Rachel,Im Irish but I have a great interest in Germany so your episodes are great to watch.