I’ve only been abroad one time, and there were little gecko/lizard things everywhere, climbing up walls and scurrying across roads, and nobody cared. I was constantly fascinated but to the locals they’re just kinda there.

Bonus question to anyone who visited the UK - was there anything that fascinated you but I’d be taking for granted?

Pic unrelated.

  • PonyOfWar@pawb.social
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    The lack of a speed limit on our highways. Some people come here just to drive on a boring frigging highway.

    Bonus question to anyone who visited the UK - was there anything that fascinated you but I’d be taking for granted?

    Double decker buses maybe. I found them pretty cool compared to the boring buses we usually have here.

    Edit: Also, urban foxes. I saw foxes maybe three times in my life before going to London, where they’re basically seen as a nuisance.

    • derbolle@lemmy.world
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      no speed limit is annoying as fuck. there is absolute chaos on the autobahn because of it. everyone drives at different speeds and dangerous manouvres (like tailgating, driving 200 kmh on a full road or in the rain) are common occurances. i hate driving in germany. we are an idiot nation when it comes to driving and cars in general

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        Yeah, I could do without it. When it’s really empty, it can be nice to go 180 for a bit, but more often than not, it causes the kind of problems you mentioned.

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        For the people who need the adrenaline rush we could reduce the driving speed on the Autobahn but add something dangerous to the car. Maybe add a random chance for the airbag to activate or tires to explode.

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        So one fact that I like telling people in America and they dont fully understand: I have 2 speeding tickets in my life and both come from the autobahn

          • UrPartnerInCrime@sh.itjust.works
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            So only between cities is it without speed. Which I didnt know when I first got there. The next time I was just being dumb, showing off, and didnt notice

            The worst part is when you get a ticket, especially at night, they essentially flash bang you to get a clear picture of your face. So not only are you speeding but now your blind for a couple seconds.

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        it actually creates a lot of traffic jams too. The differences in speed and the goal to drive even faster produce hard braking moments which have a chain reaction. Especially in rush hour, where it matters, we really don’t get anywhere faster.

        We are stupid for not limiting speed

    • Pechente@feddit.org
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      Also, urban foxes. I saw foxes maybe three times in my life before going to London, where they’re basically seen as a nuisance.

      I didn’t know they were common in London but I also saw a fox when I was there. It just went through people‘s yards and stopped in the middle of the street to look at us.

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        Anecdotally I would say that London specifically, rather than the UK as a whole, has either an unusually high population of foxes or a unusually bold one. I’ve never seen so many out in the open as there

  • NeatNit@discuss.tchncs.de
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    When I visited the US I was excited to see squirrels running around. We don’t have squirrels where I’m from. We took pictures.

    It must have looked like we were excited to witness a cloud in the sky.

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      I saw my first chipmunk last week and I totally screamed oh shit there’s Alvin! in my heart.

      Don’t let your inner child die!

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        I still remember my first chipmunk encounter. I heard the little guys before I saw them and wondered “who the f is out here playing laser tag in the woods? ”

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            A squirrel in a public park near me climbed up on me to get to the peanuts I was holding, no fear. It was also absurdly obese.

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              It was also absurdly obese.

              Hey, just like many of our people! Yay, America!

              Those poor lil things… I feel sad for them. :(

            • happydoors@lemmy.world
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              Had the same experience in Ann Arbor, MI. The next day I learned they have a squirrel feeding club and a kid walked around in the morning with granola bars throwing them out to a circle of 20 chubby squirrels

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        We have grey squirrels in the UK, although they’re not native. They’re responsible for the decline in native red squirrels, you rarely see them now unless you go to particular areas.

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          Not only UK. As far as I know the same problem is spreading around all of mainland Europe. US squirrels have a better immune system and a more varied diet, they are also more aggressive and territorial. They are slowly replacing indigenous red squirrels.

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            Dammit. :( Us humans are so talented at selfishly fucking over indigenous populations and animals in general. Ugh.

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              In this case, it was just randomness. Some grey squirrels got randomly transported with cargo between North America and Europe and they found a good spot. There was no human intent behind it… (does it make it better?)

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          Ah, very cool. Maybe I’ll visit again once the current presidency ends. If that’s ever going to be the case.

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        and the german ones are really skittish too.

        Those i saw on the canadian campus just lay next to the side walk, chilling. Fat and grey

      • CatDogL0ver@lemmy.world
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        American squirrels can be aggressive. I was eating an apple one day and I kid you not, a squirrel jumped at me and took it from my hand.

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        I wonder where you visited! Grey squirrels are rare where I’m from in the US, 90% brown in midwest

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      I love when people see deer here in North America. You’d think they’re seeing a unicorn, when it’s just some plain ol’ mule deer.

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      Chipmunks did it for me. They look and act so much like cartoon critters I couldn’t believe what I was seeing.

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      When I visited Canada from the US, my extended family and I drove in separate cars, thereby arriving at separate times spread out over a few hours.

      Every group of us took basically the same picture when we arrived because we’d previously only seen brown squirrels and there was a solid, dark black one running around in the back yard.

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        My parents’ neighborhood is ALL black squirrels. I thought they were rare until they moved (only 30 minutes from where I group up) so I was quite surprised to see dozens in their yard

        • Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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          It’s funny what people notice. I have a friend who grew up in the American Southwest, and her wildlife culture shock when she moved away from there came from wild rabbits.
          The Southwest is populated by jackrabbits, so after they encountered an eastern cottontail, they were genuinely concerned some malady had befallen it to cause it to have such small ears. She thought maybe someone was torturing the local wildlife and cutting off its ears.

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      I love this and was about to post something similar because my family met a family from Australia at Disney World and the little girl was SO excited about the squirrels. It was adorable.

      I live in the Midwest, so squirrels are just always there.

      • AlligatorBlizzard@sh.itjust.works
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        Used to work at Disney World. Can confirm the squirrel amazement. (And I worked at Animal Kingdom, the squirrels occasionally got more attention than the actual zoo animals. Although the local ibises hanging out with the spoonbills were still cool.)

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      My wife is from the Philippines. Squirrels are a thing you have to visit the zoo the see.

    • Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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      Mirroring what others have said - at a nearby university that has (had? sigh) a large foreign student population, some folks actively feed the squirrels. For several weeks at the beginning of the school year, you could very easily spot new students by who was out taking photos and getting mobbed by these squirrels that are way, way too comfortable getting close to humans.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      I’d guess people from monkey countries feel the same way about them impressing us. They’re in similar niches and everything.

  • CurlyWurlies4All@slrpnk.net
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    These fellas

    On the flipside, when I was in Japan some old guy mocked me for taking a photo of a no littering sign.

  • MrFinnbean@lemmy.world
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    I was visiting my friends in centrall europe and one if them wanted to show me the local speciality. We travelled 45 minutes by car and other 45 minutes by foot to look teeny tiny swamp. It was line 4m² and It was protectect area. My friend was really proud to show it to me.

    I live in country where 26% of our landmass is swamps and wetlands…

    • CosmicTurtle0 [he/him]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      Honestly this needs to be more of things in the States. And the deposit cost needs to go up.

      If companies were forced to retake their garbage, we’d see far less pollution.

      • AlsaValderaan@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        It’s not just that, they wash and reuse the bottles (without melting them down or anything)! Amazing stuff.

        They’re finally starting to put more stuff in them here opposed to plastic bottles, and I’m so glad for it.

        • Dasus@lemmy.world
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          they wash and reuse the bottles (without melting them down or anything)

          Idk where you’re talking about, but in Finland… That used to be the system, and the bottles which were actually washable were far sturdier than what we have now. Now it’s all flimsy PET bottles which just get shredded and “recycled”.

          I used to work in a bottle room back when most deposits were glass bottles and sturdy plastics and only the cans got crushed not reused.

          I was the guy in the backroom piling the bottles from a huge conveyor belt (glass bottles) to be organised in pallets. Could manage like 7 beers bottles in one hand, but that was pushing it and the most effective speed was 3-4 bottles per hand per move.

          I liked the job but the employer was a massive cunt.

          • Tuukka R@sopuli.xyz
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            This was because PalPa, the company responsible for maintaining Finland’s recycling system was (and is) a corrupt heap of shit.

            It’s owned by the largest breweries and they used it for keeping smaller and foreign companies out if business. You couldn’t get a right to use Finnish bottles –> You had to pay a steep punishment tax for using non-recyclable bottles.

            They successfully argued that washing bottles from that many sources would be impossible to organize, so the EU required PalPa to start accepting crushable PET bottles, which are easy to produce without any active coöperation by PalPa.

            PalPa(…tine?) was hoping that they could still somehow block this from happening, so they framed the change as Evil EU forcing Finland to stop washing bottles. And when the PET bottles were indeed accepted in the end, they dismantled the whole bottle washing system in Finland so that they wouldn’t be held accountable for their lies.

            So, it’s the same thing that happened to our regional bus network (vakiovuorot), basically. And what’s currently happening to our railways.

            • Dasus@lemmy.world
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              So, it’s the same thing that happened to our regional bus network (vakiovuorot), basically. And what’s currently happening to our railways.

              Don’t forget healthcare and dental. Kids don’t get free dental anymore?

              • Tuukka R@sopuli.xyz
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                That’s not because of an organization trying to make Finland ignore the EU legislation using strategies that then cause us to run headlong against a wall, though.

                • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                  Oh yeah, that.

                  I love that we have nice systems, but I hate it we have so many people who are not willing to see any flaws in Finland.

      • Tuukka R@sopuli.xyz
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        In Finland the deposit for bottles of one litre or more have a deposit of 0,40 €.

        (And what many foreigners don’t understand is that we are not anti-recycling, so it’s not a problem that the deposit is inside the prices you see in the shop. So, if you see 1,59 € as the price of a bottle of lemonade, 1,59 € is what you pay. Many countries have a system where the deposit is added to the price so that people would think more negatively about it and they’d sell more of the bottles with the text “NO DEPOSIT!!” on them, so people coming from those countries are easily confused by not having to add anything to the prices in their heads.)

    • rmuk@feddit.uk
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      I’m in this picture and I don’t like it.

      But, yeah, seems like such an obviously good idea and it works so well. Why can’t we do that?

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    Bikes! I live in Copenhagen and they’re everywhere of course. I love seeing people at a big train station taking pics of cycle parking being overfull

    • TomMasz@piefed.social
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      At a train station in Amsterdam, there were so many bikes parked you couldn’t count them. And it wasn’t a major hub. I just stared in wonder.

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    The first time my cousins from FL visited Canada, it was July. They were surprised there was no snow. So, we took them over to the rec centre and they saw a small pile of snow out back. They were thrilled.

    It was dumped out of a Zamboni.

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      Grew up in Ontario and it was always fun as a kid to grab some of the shaved ice behind rec centres to throw at your friends when it was like 33C out

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      My aunt is a teacher at one of the poorer schools in LA. She says every once in a while they’ll arrange a plow to bring a load of snow down from the mountains and dump it in the parking lot for the kids to play in it for the afternoon until it melts

  • IphtashuFitz@lemmy.world
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    Leaves.

    Yes, tree leaves.

    Each fall when they start changing color flocks of tourists come up to gawk at them.

    • rmuk@feddit.uk
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      When I was a kid we hosted two Trinidadians as part of an exchange in the Autumn and they’d never seen the leaves falling - they were worried that all the trees were dying off. This isn’t a “stupid foreigner” gag, it was probably just the thing that shocked them the most. They loved the trains and the narrowboats.

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        I had a similar experience with an exchange student who visited in february. She very worriedly asked why our trees didn’t have any leaves and was amazed when I said that just happens in winter and they come back.

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        They probably have foliage that always stays green until it dies.
        So I can kinda understand where that sentiment is coming from.

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        One of the guys that came for our February wedding was truly alarmed at all the dead tress. I couldn’t figure out why he was saying that, but he was a tree guy so I went with it.

        10 years later I figured it out. He assumed none of the trees dropped leaves because Florida. Some do, some don’t, some stay yellow all winter and drop in the spring. It’s not even consistent within species.

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      We visited DC in the fall last year. It took us close to 2 hours to walk from the Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial statue because my wife was taking pictures of all the trees along the way.

    • hactar42@lemmy.ml
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      I just moved to New England and this will be my first fall here. My property is completely surrounded by 50’+ trees. I’m sure it will get old quick.

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      Man… I’m in east Tennessee.

      Folks just roll up to look at the leaves… and I’m like.

      Eh. Not much rain this year so they are pretty drab looking currently…

      But you still see tons of people taking photos on their phones that they’ll never look at again. Haha

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        Told a lady I had just moved here (NW Florida).

        “Oh honey you’ll love it here! We have four seasons; green, green, green and brown.”

  • Oscar Cunningham@lemmy.world
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    I grew up in Portsmouth, England. Some my friends would come to school from the Isle of Wight on the hovercraft service. We all thought the hovercraft was pretty cool, but I only recently found out that it’s the only commercially operated hovercraft in the whole world.

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    I moved to the midwest USA 15 years ago and I still can’t get over the trees screaming at me. It’s deafening but no one seems to care.

    The trees are silent where I come from

  • Quilotoa@lemmy.ca
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    Lakes. My small city has 330 lakes. There are more lakes in Canada than the rest of the world combined.

  • hactar42@lemmy.ml
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    To answer OP’s question, I’m American but spent a few years in the UK. Things that fascinated me included:

    • How green it is (being from Texas this was the first thing that stood out to me)
    • The shear amount of history that is just everywhere (I remember eat lunch at a park and reading a sign about how it was the site of a huge battle during the war of the roses)
    • Pubs (man I miss going to my local. We really don’t have 3rd places in the US anymore)
    • Grenfur@pawb.social
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      The history. Jesus fuck, it’s the history. I swear in the south we talk about things from the 1920s like that shit is ancient. Meanwhile in the UK you’re just casually staying at a hotel that was built in the 1600s.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      Yes, the amount of ancient history anywhere across the pond is fascinating. You’re walking in the same place as people from books and movies. I guess that we’re writing somewhere near the beginning of the local historical record is interesting in it’s own way, but there’s just not as much to say about it.

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        When I was a kid I got in the local library and looked at their copies of the maps of our city going back maybe 2000 years. A few things had been there that long, the high street and the cathedral, couple of other places. You could see how the town had grown, and sometimes contracted - it got hit hard a few times by plague, fire, and war. The maps didn’t go back further but the place had been occupied much longer, way before the Romans came.

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          Hmm, cathedral contemporaneous with the New Testament happening in the first place. Nimes?

          It could be Greece too, I guess. Or maybe you’re rounding up, there’s more options then.

          • Regrettable_incident@lemmy.world
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            Another option is I’m full of shit! I just looked it up, it is Worcester cathedral and was founded in 680. I think what I put in my comment was a childhood memory that I somehow never questioned.

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              That’s still pretty good, Europe was yet to really recover from the collapse of Rome at that point. I’ll just call it rounding up.

  • _stranger_@lemmy.world
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    I’m lucky enough that I see these little guys on a regular basis.

    The first time I went to London, the size of the Ravens caught me off guard. I couldn’t get enough of seeing those things. We only really see Grackles in South Texas that regularly and they’re half the size, so I’m sure I was the weird bird guy that day to many people.

  • Krudler@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    I live in the Canadian prairies.

    One time I was flyin’ down the highway and I noticed a man with car parked on the shoulder, staring out into a farmer’s field of flowering Canola.

    I stopped because I could think of no reason other than he’s had car trouble, and is staring off into the distance trying to figure out WTF he’s gonna do now.

    He explained to me that he wasn’t having car troubles, that he was on a visit from Hong Kong and it’s the first time he’s ever traveled outside. He told me that from the structure of the city and sky rise density, he’d basically never seen a patch of sky or open land. The biggest patch of sky that he’d ever seen would be about the size of a 2 packs of cigarettes held at arms length.

    Woah.

    And here we have the joke that the terrain is so flat and monotone that you can watch your dog run away for 7 hours.