What country's stuf...
 

  You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

[Closed] What country's stuff do you like?

93 Posts
74 Users
0 Reactions
207 Views
Posts: 4607
Free Member
Topic starter
 

What I mean, of course, is: what "foreign" country's traditional cuisine/music/dancing/language interests you in particular, and why?

Make it a country to which you have no ethnic or ancestral connection aside from just liking it. You probably have a few, but limit yourself to one.

I love Mexico. I love its form of Spanish, its music, and its food. I used to travel there regularly growing up, and did a course in Mexico City in my 20s. Although I haven't been back since the 1990s, the smell of corn or an Aztec motif still makes me wistful.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 4:44 pm
Posts: 11402
Free Member
 

Italian food and drink


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 4:55 pm
Posts: 7423
Free Member
 

greece. lovely islands, food and people.  go there once or twice a year.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 4:55 pm
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

I love France and the French. More than anything I admire their surly resolutely anti-american 'just **** off' attitude to the service ethic. It takes a certain gallic audacity to look like they're really going out of their way to do you a favour, and virtually spit at you while you're in the alps and they're charging you 50 Euros for a slice of pizza and a small beer.

I love the South of France and being able to walk into any supermarket and buy really cheap but gorgeous local meats and cheese, and freshly baked bread, and just the general pace of life. The best steak I ever ate was at a little cafe outside St Tropez, served in a Roquefort sauce, and it was about ten Euros

And I bloody love effortless French Pop like this that just couldn't be anything other than French

When I was a kid my dad spent a lot of time in France and told me that basically, the French just have life sussed. He was bang on!


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 4:56 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Scandinavian, Spanish women 🙋‍♀️💃💃💃

Japanese Sushi, God I just love sushi.. and Sake.

Danish toast, loganberry and meat combos, dill with everything. Scandinavian food in general for normal eating,

French wine, particularly Bordeaux.. because they make the best wine eva.. French cheese, French way of cooking meats, Bouillabaisse, fish in general.

Spanish olives, cheese, cured meats.

Argentinian steaks.. super rare.

Could be here all night with this one...🤷‍♂️🍷🍷🍷🍷


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 4:58 pm
Posts: 33325
Full Member
 

Japanese food, design, art, architecture... Music, not so much.

Bits and bobs from Scandinavia, America and Canada, mostly music, but outdoor gear, architecture, food, drink.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 5:15 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Italy ...style means everything .

Love the cuisine ..and one of my mates is a mafia Don ..lol


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 5:21 pm
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

Nothing specific really.  I mean I'm a big fan of Scandinavia, but tbh their food or music doesn't do much for me.  I love Scandinavian clothes and gear though, and houses.  I probably watch most TV and listen to most music from the US more than any other foreign country.

For food, it's got to be India.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 5:25 pm
Posts: 13330
Full Member
 

France.

I admire their arrogance and disdain for anything or anyone not French.

I like their food and drink.

I like their art.

I like their pace of life and attitude to work.

But mostly, it's their attitude I love.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 5:26 pm
 DezB
Posts: 54367
Free Member
 

Am at the moment listening to Suuns, a band from Canada. Does that count? Canada has always appealed to me as a place to live too, ever since I did a school “project” as a nipper.

Went there on holiday a couple of years ago and it didn’t let me down.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 5:31 pm
Posts: 17209
Full Member
 

France. Everything.

California. Weather, space, outdoor lifestyle, friendliness.

Italy. Food.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 5:41 pm
Posts: 4954
Free Member
 

Norway for the attitude.

French for the quality of life and climate.

American for positive attitude.

Canada for being America lite and the Rockies.

Germany for the order.

Polish people for the get it done attitude.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 5:46 pm
Posts: 10474
Free Member
 

Most of the Caribbean.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 6:02 pm
Posts: 19434
Free Member
 

In no order.

Food wise:  Persian, Indian, Thai and Chinese ... the rest of world cuisine is bland by comparison, except burger, fish & chips of course.

Country:  All the same if you are not well off.

People:  All the same if you can communicate with them.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 6:07 pm
Posts: 18073
Free Member
 

Germany. Things run to time, the toilets are the classiest room in a building, people on foot or on bikes aren't second rate citizens, people are helpful without being cheesy, nobody hassles me. I like the music, the films, the literature - thought has gone into them, the message isn't so superficial it seems stupid and naive.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 7:25 pm
Posts: 726
Full Member
 

Italy for the food, wine and style.

France for the attitude. (My wife maintains I muse have been a Parisian waiter in a previous life).

Germany for the utilitarian humanity.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 7:41 pm
 Drac
Posts: 50352
 

So many to choose from love all kinds of food from many countries.

Don Lol? Not exactly scary.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 8:00 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

True Drac ..he is of Scicillian heritage though and seems to import a lot of talcuum powder ...


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 8:16 pm
 si77
Posts: 635
Full Member
 

Can't believe no-one's said Belgian beer yet!

So this.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 8:56 pm
Posts: 4607
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Can’t believe no-one’s said Belgian beer yet!

I would have, but I said only one country choice. I love Belgium though, and think it's probably one of the most under-rated places on the Continent. The Ardennes region is especially beautiful, but so are many of the towns across the country. And the beer... oh, the beer!


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 9:27 pm
Posts: 7857
Full Member
 

Spain for the food.

Sweden for everything else. Suspect I'd feel the same about Norway, Denmark, Iceland and (maybe) Finland if I'd visited them.

I feel quite 'northern' generally (but not in the parochial UK sense).


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 9:32 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Japan for food, architecture, design, instruments and engineering.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 9:41 pm
Posts: 2661
Free Member
 

Holland, mainly for the pies.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 9:47 pm
Posts: 5139
Full Member
 

france: the Loire is just ace, and Burgundy is the best wine in the world

Italy is great, I love Germans too

Actually I can't think of any country that I didn't like, just a few kn08heads that are easily avoidable


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 11:11 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

France. Everything.

Yup; 100% agree.


 
Posted : 15/03/2018 11:16 pm
Posts: 21016
Full Member
 

Tough one.

Ireland for the people, ****stan for the scenery, India for the food and France for everything else.

Just one?

France.

Actually I can’t think of any country that I didn’t like, just a few kn08heads that are easily avoidable

True.

I've never been anywhere I didn't like, apart from Bacup.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 12:09 am
Posts: 1442
Free Member
 

France for how they treat their royalty

Belgium for the availability of good horse steak and their cycling fans.

Italy for their wine

Poland/Ukraine/Georgia for their concrete brutalist architecture

Denmark for their furniture.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 12:46 am
Posts: 10567
Full Member
 

UK. Top country. We're lucky to be British.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 12:56 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Any particular country within the UK ?


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 2:23 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Yup, most places, most food, and most people.

Whilst being a devout europhile, I do have a liking for some aspects of Americana also. Southern cuisine is amazing, and they’re not all gun totin’ Trumpers. Scenery by and large is fantastic.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 2:25 am
 rone
Posts: 9325
Full Member
 

USA for landscape, scale,space, food, cycling and breaking and justifying all their stereotypes. (I met a guy over breakfast from Texas who made a sincere joke about Jesus and Guns whilst having the best breakfast in the world.)

Iceland for being so wild.

Japan for being so different.

New Zealand just for being the furthest I will ever go.

France (southern) for having everything that the UK doesn't.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 6:37 am
Posts: 13554
Free Member
 

Ireland for me. I love the accent, the fact that there’s music everywhere, real guiness, Irish Whiskey and the general friendliness. I was in Dublin earlier this week and 19:30 in the pub was like the friendliest English pub at 03:00.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 6:45 am
Posts: 44146
Full Member
 

Heaven is where the police are British, the cooks are French, the
mechanics German, the lovers Italian and it's all organised by the
Swiss. Hell is where the chefs are British, the mechanics French, the
lover's Swiss, the police German and it's all organised by the Italians.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 6:59 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Sweden - for the lovely people, attitude to work, sense of humour, lack of litter, nice food

Greece- for the people, the language, the old rembetika (blues) music, the food, the islands, the weather...... I must get back there for a holiday!


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 7:28 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

why is everyone so into Sweden?  I live here and it isn't that great!

As Britain is foreign to me now, I miss the sense of humour and I think the culture , especially the music, is something to be immensely proud of.   Although every needs to stop moaning and rushing around

@Vickypea, the sense of humour?  ärligt talat?


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 8:04 am
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Spain ,I've been lucky to have had a Spanish uncle so slightly biased. The food , wine ,the weather &countryside ,even their lager & brandy! The cycling isn't bad there either.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 8:11 am
 MSP
Posts: 15473
Free Member
 

As Britain is foreign to me now, I miss the sense of humour and I think the culture , especially the music, is something to be immensely proud of. Although every needs to stop moaning and rushing around

I wholeheartedly agree with that. Here in Germany I love the summer, sitting outside bars in the town square watching the girls go by (usually students in hotpants). I think it is similar throughout most of the continent, but the med countries turn it into peacocking, whereas in Germany it is much more relaxed.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 8:20 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I'm lucky enough to have visited all of the regions of the world with work and though I've not been able to immerse myself in the culture of all the countries I've been to I usually come back to Europe as being, on balance, the best region in the world. The climate is nice, you get proper seasons, real culture. If I had to pick any one European country I'd probably settle on France. It seems to have everything....beautiful countryside: gorges, lakes, mountains, rivers, beaches etc., excellent food, culture and not too big. Though many other European nations run it close, but I think France is the only one that has everything in one country (could be wrong).

But for people, I think the Thai people in my experience seem  to be they friendliest and with the best outlook of any other nation. Just really nice people, no aggression or airs or graces about them.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 9:00 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

U.S.A

Cheese Burgers

The Simpsons

WWF

Fries

Monster Trucks

Vanilla Ice


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 9:04 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

to everything already said about France, I will add this: philosophy is compulsory in schools. That doesn't mean that kids learn what Plato said, and/or why Diogenes opposed it - it means that they learn how to question, engage, consider, confront and elucidate; to ask 'why?'; it means they learn to be philosophical. Is it any great surprise that they typically show the English so much disdain?


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 9:05 am
Posts: 22922
Full Member
 

Any particular country within the UK ?

No need to choose in this context. The UK is a 'country'. The nations that make up the UK are 'countries' also. But unlike the UK they're not Sovereign States. But, for clarity The UK is also a Nation.

Anyway. Sweden for trousers and chisels.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 9:55 am
Posts: 10340
Free Member
 

Three_Fish

to everything already said about France, I will add this: philosophy is compulsory in schools. That doesn’t mean that kids learn what Plato said, and/or why Diogenes opposed it – it means that they learn how to question, engage, consider, confront and elucidate; to ask ‘why?’; it means they learn to be philosophical. Is it any great surprise that they typically show the English so much disdain?

But how are they supposed to revise for the tests or rank it from 9-0? :confused:


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 11:55 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

to everything already said about France, I will add this: philosophy is compulsory in schools. That doesn’t mean that kids learn what Plato said, and/or why Diogenes opposed it – it means that they learn how to question, engage, consider, confront and elucidate; to ask ‘why?’; it means they learn to be philosophical. Is it any great surprise that they typically show the English so much disdain?

My building currently has about 50 Parisian ERASMUS students living in it, they are the biggest bunch of entitled bellends I have ever met. More so than any Spanish, German, Italian students etc that I have met. They are disliked by the rest of the Europeans living in the building and there are a number of French young professionals and students in the building, who go out of their way to disassociate themselves from France.

I'm not sure what to make of it really, but I don't regard the French to be anymore introspective than the English. If they were, I don't think they'd be so supportive of the FN or banning Burqas. The British have managed to avoid a descent into Nazism despite Brexit. I think a lot of what they consider to be critical thinking, is tied in with their feelings of French Exceptionalism.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 12:02 pm
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

Canada for being America lite

You could only say that if you reeeally didn't understand those two countries.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 12:35 pm
Posts: 8318
Full Member
 

Lot of love for the xenophobic French isn't there! Surely if the **** you attitude to anyone else is so appealing you'd have Israel at the top of your lists. 🙂


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 12:45 pm
Posts: 22922
Full Member
 

But how are they supposed to revise for the tests or rank it from 9-0? :confused:


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 1:00 pm
Posts: 3184
Full Member
 

Parisian are disliked by the rest of French people.

Philosophie ? Hated it, managed 4/20 average in the classroom and same at baccalauréat.

Dont think I learnt anything.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 1:04 pm
Posts: 4892
Full Member
 

I like lots of things and it's funny how countries differ so much. I like the odd things

Italian food when I worked at the UN in Rome the food was the highlight (and the parking etiquette which was hilariously entertaining)

I like how the French actually stop on Sunday and how they say Bonjour to everybody including children

I like how the Dutch think it's okay to say something rude if it's your best interests

I like how brilliant German's are at most things unless it's fashion or food and then somehow the brain just doesn't compute.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 1:18 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Generally, out of Europe, I'm fond of Germany the most. They've spent a good deal of time being self-critical since the war, their cities were clean when I went, they were incredibly friendly, I love their beer and the architecture of their old small cities. The women are hot, the beer halls are cool....the various Beer festivals look a blast. The media seems incredibly sensible, aimed at more educated individuals and well reasoned. I'm quite fond of their Green party and political system.

In fact, I find that the remarkable civility of at least Western Germany makes the abuses of the war and the potential for what are decent nations on the whole, to be led down dark paths, all the more sobering.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 1:30 pm
Posts: 4607
Free Member
Topic starter
 

unless it’s fashion or food 

I beg to differ on the food front. I can think of nothing nicer than standing outside mit einer Bratwurst und Brötchen und einem Weißbeer.

I should add that I agree with the comments about Germany, immediately above, but couldn't say so myself, as the rule I set out in the OP said no ethic connections to the country allowed. Ich bin ein Russlanddeutscher.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 1:40 pm
Posts: 13601
Free Member
 

Japaaaaan!


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 2:17 pm
 Nico
Posts: 4
Free Member
 

why is everyone so into Sweden? I live here and it isn’t that great!

Because they don't and can just go with the archetype.

Make it a country to which you have no ethnic or ancestral connection aside from just liking it. You probably have a few, but limit yourself to one.

You wasted your time typing that, OP!

I have some connection to France, so that's out. I'm dithering between Japan (which I only know by reputation), Germany (from the Germans I've met - really easy to get along with) and Greece (for the landscape).

Hmmm. Greece.


 
Posted : 16/03/2018 3:43 pm
Posts: 17779
Full Member
 

I agree Germany is brilliant but I'm not allowed to choose it due to the rules! So Austria then - a bit fascist but lovely scenery.


 
Posted : 17/03/2018 8:10 am
Posts: 97
Free Member
 

The Germany and Germans I have experienced have been ace. But if critical on fashion and food then surely music should be included? Any country that includes David Hasslhoff as one of their more popular recording artists must be having a collective   brain fart


 
Posted : 17/03/2018 9:00 am
Posts: 12993
Free Member
 

Really surprised at the love for the Vaterland, sorry, Germany....

I'm assuming those that are praising out haven't lived there for any length of time.

Been here for ten years and am getting royally genervt about the place.

The passive aggressive attitude of the Kleinburger who take it upon themselves to try and teach their fellow citizens. Just three examples since Thursday: Being told off for crossing against a red man by some old lady despite the fact there was no traffic; shouted at and given the finger for walking along a shared path by a cyclistn; and cycling down a Fahrradstraße (a road for bikes) some Arschloch who drove his car at my friend blocking despite it being her right of way (his reason being she didn't have lights, which was a moot point seeing as it was 5pm).

The blind adherence to "The Rules" is sad. In other countries, the UK, France, Italy, Spain, there are laws, but the population tends to live first by a set of moral codes and if something isn't upsetting the general flow of life they can let it pass. In Germany on the other hand, the moral code is the law. Laws are to be obeyed.

I've lost count of the number of times we've been threatened with the police for riding in the hills on public land.

Germans are also generally so risk adverse. Anything that is a bit alternative or out of the ordinary is dismissed as a "no-go".

So many people define themselves, or get their feeling of personal worth, through the job and qualifications they have.

The school system sucks. So much pressure on kids at 9-10 years of age to perform well... Their performance deciding what school they will end up at. And the schools start at 8:30 meaning the trains and buses are full of noisy little sprogs in the morning. And in top of that all finishes at 1pm... I mog koane kinder ned....!

There are nice aspects, obviously... Biergarten in summer. Some hearty foods. The Autobahns.

But there is generally a lack of flair and dynamism. A lack of friendly small talk. And the language is einfach Scheisse.


 
Posted : 17/03/2018 9:40 am
Posts: 12993
Free Member
 

And as an add on.... I vouch for Italy.

Good food. Good wine. Beautiful scenery. Happy people.

A laid back attitude to life. Total chaos, but somehow everything works and life continues.

A lackadaisical attitude to rules and parking.


 
Posted : 17/03/2018 9:44 am
Posts: 97
Free Member
 

Alpin - yeah but the women eh 😉

Funny I used to find heaps I liked about the UK and then I moved here and you know what - I found plenty of things I don't like as well. Think living somewhere removes the rose tints somewhat


 
Posted : 17/03/2018 11:21 am
Posts: 4111
Free Member
 

I love everything about France, apart from the French!


 
Posted : 17/03/2018 1:00 pm
Posts: 17779
Full Member
 

Here's a thought. We could move all the French we don't like (the fascists, xenophobes, Parisians, etc.) over here to join our lot then the rest of us can move over to France to join the nice ones and stay in Europe.


 
Posted : 17/03/2018 10:35 pm
Posts: 5720
Full Member
 

For me it has to be Norway and their propensity for tunnel building. Far and away the best tunnel builders in the world. Fed up with driving 70 miles to get around a mountain? Just drive a tunnel straight through it. 🙂 Where else would a community decide that opencast quarrying is is a blot on the landscape so instead it digs a 6-loop spiral tunnel from the bottom to the top of a hill next to the town to get stone for local works while simultaneously creating a tourist attraction. Barking but brilliant. I will never understand why the UK has never made more use of tunnels to ease congestion and to solve NIMBY issues.


 
Posted : 18/03/2018 12:46 am
Posts: 806
Free Member
 

For me it's pretty much Italy on all fronts - food, beer, riding, weather, well prioritised life (family, downtime, having fun as opposed to rat race living). Downsides - their cars and their women are both amazing when they're good, a nightmare when they aren't (ex Alfa owner, part Italian Mrs) 😂😂😂


 
Posted : 18/03/2018 8:12 am
Posts: 14410
Free Member
 

For balance, France gave us this man:


 
Posted : 18/03/2018 10:21 am
 colp
Posts: 3322
Full Member
 

Hey Alpin,

i love following German drivers down a windy road. They absolutely will not cross the central white line to straighten a bend, even when you can see the road is clear for hundreds of metres. The Austrians are the same.

Also slamming on the brakes at any kind of downhill.


 
Posted : 18/03/2018 11:30 am
Posts: 12993
Free Member
 

Exactly  colp  . .... There are rules!


 
Posted : 18/03/2018 12:59 pm
Posts: 18073
Free Member
 

Substitue "UK" for Germany in your post, Alpin, it reads the same.

Where else do identical houses have £50 000 price differnce because they are in different school catchments and parents are obsessed by which school their kids will go to at 11.

Look at the number of threads on this forum with people reporting bad driving to the police, people with high hedges to the local authorities, people with badly parked cars to... the spirit of Vichy France and Stasi informers lives on in little England and STW land.

The Spanish don't threaten to call the police, they call the police and then you might get two of the four forces rock up together. And you can argue with the German police, I extricated a group of school kids accused of smoking dope from two Bullys full of German cops but got loaded into a Spanish police wagon at gun point for refusing to go to the hospital after after Madame fell off her bike unaided and just wanted a taxi back to France (but some interfering **** called the police).

Try riding your bike down one of the legal-to-go-the-wrong-way-for-bikes streets in my local centre ville and see how far you get before being run off the road by a taxi driver.

There's good and bad everywhere, if you don't like Germany anymore move on, they'll be other things to annoy you and other things to please. Everywhere has its up and downs, just find somewhere where you're happy. If you don't mind abiding by their silly and not so silly rules there aren't many more civilised places to be than Germany. Just don't even think of moving to the UK.

*disclaimer, if there were any smiles on this site I might have added a few*


 
Posted : 18/03/2018 4:22 pm
Posts: 321
Free Member
 

ITALY!

Food, drink, cars, bike stuff, the attitude.  Who gives a sh1t if it’s efficient/works well...just look at it!!

Love the real Italian restaurant in our village, good espresso, Alfa’s, Campag

They have their priorites right!


 
Posted : 18/03/2018 8:09 pm
Posts: 12993
Free Member
 

Agreed, edukator.... There's always good and bad  But the number of penibel kleinburger that I've encountered here (and in Austria) far outweighs the number that I've encountered in the rest of my 35 years .....

Where else do identical houses have £50 000 price differnce because they are in different school catchments and parents are obsessed by which school their kids will go to at 11.

On this case you are wrong ... There are plenty of schools in each catchment area. Is your kid going to go to gymnasium, real or Hauptschule? Or, in other words is your kid going to work on the supermarket, on a building site or get the chance to go to uni? The school system sucks big and I know many a school teacher and not one of them thinks the system is fair nor ideal...


 
Posted : 19/03/2018 12:38 am
 sbob
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

India for me.

Stunning countryside, exquisite food, lovely people, awesome music, vibrant fashions, epic MTBing, the list just goes on.

My glasses are rose tinted from having only visited the south, but it is one of the only countries I would relocate to.


 
Posted : 19/03/2018 2:18 am
Posts: 18073
Free Member
 

I organised an exchange with a German school for five years so spent a week a year in the system put up by German teachers. I agree with all you say, Alpin. But I was also a teacher in the UK where I worked in schools that were just as good or bad as the best or worst German schools. And the prize for unfairness goes to the UK with the difference between say Eaton and mid-city housing estates being greater than in the German system.


 
Posted : 19/03/2018 6:24 am
Posts: 350
Free Member
 

I like the fact that in NZ and Australia you get paid fortnightly instead of monthly


 
Posted : 19/03/2018 9:17 am
Posts: 17366
Full Member
 

Queensland, Australia.

Brilliant place, but gradually being Melbournised...


 
Posted : 24/06/2018 1:30 pm
Posts: 9539
Free Member
 

Europe as being, on balance, the best region in the world. The climate is nice,

Perhaps you could elaborate on what the European climate is like?. What an utterly odd thing to say.


 
Posted : 24/06/2018 2:24 pm
Posts: 33325
Full Member
 

Hell is where the chefs are British,

Its worth pointing out that it’s now 2018, not 1968, British chefs and restaurants are vastly different these days, mainly because Britain is much more multicultural now, and there are so many different types of cuisine available and tastes have changed to accommodate variety and experiences of different things.


 
Posted : 24/06/2018 2:44 pm
Posts: 15068
Full Member
 

I couldn't pick a favorite, honestly, there are so many, to say one is better just says to me, you're not experienced enough 🙂


 
Posted : 24/06/2018 3:01 pm
Posts: 9539
Free Member
 

like the fact that in NZ and Australia you get paid fortnightly instead of monthly

How cool is that. They must be totally loaded getting paid twice as often. Awesumz. 😃


 
Posted : 24/06/2018 3:37 pm
Posts: 3488
Free Member
 

France. Yup they seem to have most things in the right order (driving is a bit dodge though) and a more realistic attitude to life. For the most part less petty with fewer little Hitler's, overzealous jobsworth's and small minded dickheads this country is plagued with.

Yeah I've heard off road cycling in Austria and Germany is much worse for dickheads than here!

The Spanish seem much more relaxed about parking and motoring in general (not giving way being the norm, you know where you stand!) and don't seem to suffer parkageddon, as is much feared in Britain.

Anyway bring back birch no?


 
Posted : 24/06/2018 3:55 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I like Finland's rubbish/recycling rooms. I mean the rooms you get underneath a block of flats. Whilst they fill up, none of the bins ever get to overflowing, meaning you don't get bags of unsorted rubbish left next to the overly full bins. People manage to put the right thing in the right bin rather than just throwing their mixed recyclables/landfill waste into whichever bin is nearest to the door. The rooms are clean and don't smell, even the bio waste bin is fairly non offensive.

The rest of Finland wasn't for me but the rubbish/recycling rooms were a sight to behold!


 
Posted : 24/06/2018 3:58 pm
 CHB
Posts: 3226
Full Member
 

Europe generally is the best place on Earth for food. I mean I love Asian food, Thai, India, Sri Lanka, Chinese and Japanese, but the sheer variety of landscapes and cultures in Europe generates a variety of different foods in such a small area of the planet. Add in the wine and beer selection and it's a clincher. I actually don't want to pick a favourite as that would mean choosing between Moule Frittes in Hasselt, Pizza in Naples and amazing steak pies in Callander. It's all good (apart from Dutch knock off copies of Feta and Peperoni) and I love the variety.


 
Posted : 24/06/2018 4:58 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Food -

South america - chilli con carne. Honestly my favourite meal of all time.

Eastern europe - buckwheat (they eat it in almost every meal, it's what makes russian so strong and imposing) curd cheese, beetrout soup and Cepelinai.

North america - best junk food ever.

Scenery -

I live in NI. Nuff said. Norway a close second.

Culture -

All of the Nordic countries. China has some amazing history but all cultural values have been destroyed.


 
Posted : 24/06/2018 5:14 pm
Posts: 3171
Free Member
 

Norway for Pepperkaker and Germany for Pumpernickel.


 
Posted : 24/06/2018 7:40 pm
Page 1 / 2

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!