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  3. What in your country/area is totally normal but visitors get excited for?

What in your country/area is totally normal but visitors get excited for?

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  • donantoniomagino@europe.pubD [email protected]

    „If you are thirsty

    Go to Wiekevorst.

    There, you have a little dog

    That pisses into your little mouth.”

    (no drinking water)

    C This user is from outside of this forum
    C This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote on last edited by
    #448

    Wow, here everyone would try to pretend that the iconic statue isn't weird and inappropriate. There, they put up a damn poem about it.

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    • S [email protected]

      Do rich people in Greece import sandstone?

      C This user is from outside of this forum
      C This user is from outside of this forum
      [email protected]
      wrote on last edited by [email protected]
      #449

      Good question!

      I would guess not widely, just because rich people get around, and standards of luxury are more interconnected than that.

      In the past, you have things like spices being worth their weight in gold in Europe, and cheap in India. Or how the Inuit prized wood because it didn't grow anywhere they lived. Aluminum was a luxury metal originally, and there's stories about Napoleon using it for cutlery as a step up from silver.

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      • regrettable_incident@lemmy.worldR [email protected]

        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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        wrote on last edited by [email protected]
        #450

        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.worldR 1 Reply Last reply
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        • C [email protected]

          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.worldR This user is from outside of this forum
          regrettable_incident@lemmy.worldR This user is from outside of this forum
          [email protected]
          wrote on last edited by
          #451

          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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          • regrettable_incident@lemmy.worldR [email protected]

            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.

            C This user is from outside of this forum
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            wrote on last edited by
            #452

            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.

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            • P [email protected]

              Living in the Black Forest is sometimes fun.

              First of all people admire the "mountains". While yes, the Black Forest is not quite flat and especially in winter it is often underestimated (we have avalanches and occasionally people die in them) it's not like they are that step and high.
              At least from my perspective - I grew up in the actual alps. It would be totally different If I grew up in the Netherlands.
              (And again: The nature is nice and we have wild wolves, Lynx and s few other rare animals here)

              The other thing people totally get excited about is "Black forest cake".
              But.. It has nothing to do with the Forest... it's just a reference to its looks and was invented hundreds of kilometres away. While you can get a decent one here by now, it's still funny.

              So...what is the most original thing you can get here? It's the thing the tourists think that they are all produced overseas.
              The cuckoo clock.
              Not kidding, while a shitload of them are cheap china trash, you can actually get nice ones for a reasonable price that were still built here. (And some really really nice ones that look modern and stylish as well. I need one of those one day,but they are ridiculously expensive)

              Other than that: Old buildings. My last apartment had some walls that were built at a time Australia wasn't discovered by Europeans yet. My kids friend lives in a house that is 800 years old - and always belonged to the same family. The hill the local kids go tobogganing in winter very likely was already used in that capacity 2500 years ago as some archeological sites have shown.

              Even my current house is 80 years old and that sometimes sounds absolutely ridiculous to friends overseas.

              S This user is from outside of this forum
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              wrote on last edited by
              #453

              The hill the local kids go tobogganing in winter very likely was already used in that capacity 2500 years ago as some archeological sites have shown.

              No doubt by the fossilized remains of kids that perished on the slope by hitting the trees at the bottom.

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              • Y [email protected]

                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.

                justas@sh.itjust.worksJ This user is from outside of this forum
                justas@sh.itjust.worksJ This user is from outside of this forum
                [email protected]
                wrote on last edited by
                #454

                You go to some tiny, dying town and it has 700 years of history, often 1000+ years of proof of habitation before that and a majestic church that is a work of art on its own.

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                • Q [email protected]

                  Lakes. My small city has 330 lakes. There are more lakes in Canada than the rest of the world combined.

                  M This user is from outside of this forum
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                  wrote last edited by [email protected]
                  #455

                  Sudbury, Ontario?

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                  • M [email protected]

                    Sudbury, Ontario?

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                    wrote last edited by
                    #456

                    Yup. Geographically not north, but we get labelled north anyway.

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                    • Q [email protected]

                      Yup. Geographically not north, but we get labelled north anyway.

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                      wrote last edited by [email protected]
                      #457

                      Sudbury is my closest costco location. Lol

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