Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
#31
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Joined: Nov 2003
Location: Formally Scotland. Now Bay of Quinte...Ontario
Posts: 2,466
#32
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
I went for a lovely one yesterday, thanks
depends entirely on the location, doesn't it. The trading estates of the A303 in Andover are much less attractive than the commercial buildings in Old Montreal, for example.
or, for example, like much or rural Britain. Utilities are buried in the area where I live here; they are not where my sister lives in the UK.
again, depends entirely on where you are. Roads round here are pretty good.
Kippers and smoked haddock both available in Supertsore hereabouts. Back bacon in many independent butchers/delis. Stones ginger wine in the LCBO. Fruit cake in the oven when OH feels like making it. Sure, good cheese is a little pricier, but there are many ills the Milk Marketing Board is responsible for - just ask a former dairy farmer who's been put out of business by the big industrial operations the MMB espouses. I'd rather have dearer cheese than fewer local dairies.
Not absence, but I'll give you there are fewer in the UK. On the other hand, you don't get fume-spewing Ford Transits to the same extent here.
that says more about the company you keep than about Canada in general
that's true, imx, although I have no view on how many are dangerously mentally ill.
Really? stats quoted here passim ad nauseam would disagree with you. Crime rates are broadly similar in Canada and the UK.
I don't get this one at all. Where have you experienced this in either the UK or Canada? Drunken stabbings with a knife recently bought for the purpose are not a fewture of Canadian life I'm familiar with even from news reports.
Now I've lost you again. Whose police are you indicating are thick and corrupt - and what is your evidence for either claim? I simply don't recognise this as a characterisation in either country.
this depends so much on the particular shop that it's just silly. I would prefer to be asked if I needed help, and be given the opportunity to decline assistance, than be left bewildered by an array of choices with nobody seemingly willing or able to assist.
I don't remember the last time I spent more than about 40 minutes on a weekly grocery shop. Maybe an hour, tops, if I go at a peak time and there's a big queue at the till. This is no different from my UK experience.
as a consumer of library services both here and in the UK I disagree with this. Library services (certainly in the three boroughs I have most recent UK experience of - Hounslow, Hammersmith & Fulham, and Salisbury) are comparable to those in Toronto or Oakville where I have more recent Canadian exposure).
Huh? Where is there no granola? This, like much or your post, is nonsense.
I know it's been said many times before and will probably be said many times again. Parts of Canada are better, or worse, than parts of the UK, in certain respects; vice versa in other respects. Your Canadian experience seems to have been very unpleasant compared to many on here. Whereabouts are you that you have no access to the countryside, smoked fish, reasonable supermarkets, honest coppers, or decent roads?
Pleasant commercial buildings, or at least not unpleasant to look it, not acres of ugly one storey warehouses.
Electric and phone lines buried underground instead of strung from poles like in a third world country.
Well maintained roads.
Cheap(er) food, wide choice, and better quality. Back bacon! Cheese that is affordable! Kippers. Smoked haddock. Fruit cake. Tunnocks teacakes. Candy shrimps. Potted shrimps. Ginger wine. Cheap alcohol.
Absence of gargantuan, fume spewing, pickup trucks.
Population with wide range of cultural references and vocabulary of more than 100 words.
Fewer homeless people, and fewer of them drunk or dangerously mentally ill.
Low crime rate.
No shops selling Bowie knives, opening late at night, so you can finish that fight after the pubs close.
An efficient, relatively intelligent, relatively uncorrupted police force.
Shop assistants who leave you alone to make your own choices.
Weekly shop that takes 1 hr, not 3, if you include the drive and walk round ginormous stores, and is relatively enjoyable experience, compared with exhausting dispiriting slog.
Libraries relatively crap compared with Canada.
No granola.
I know it's been said many times before and will probably be said many times again. Parts of Canada are better, or worse, than parts of the UK, in certain respects; vice versa in other respects. Your Canadian experience seems to have been very unpleasant compared to many on here. Whereabouts are you that you have no access to the countryside, smoked fish, reasonable supermarkets, honest coppers, or decent roads?
#33
Part Time Poster
Joined: Jan 2004
Location: Worcestershire
Posts: 4,219
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
There are cat's eyes on a number of roads in Grey County, Grey 14 for example, that's north of 89 and so very much in the snow belt. Perhaps the plough driver leaves a little ridge of snow up the middle of the road, perhaps he jumps our and uses a trowel to tidy around the cat's eyes, or perhaps ploughs and cat's eyes have been compatible for yonks.
They simply prefer to carsh and pay high insurance rates
#34
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
Oh, come on, dangling wires are the dominant architectural feature of urban Canada. You'd have to go to a shanty in Delhi or Brazil to find somewhere comparably untidy.
#35
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
Bloody hate the place, and this was the first time I've been there in three years and it was worse than I remember which takes some doing.
The traffic is appalling and I was rapidly getting stressed, there are too many people. I was standing outside the Bullring in Birmingham and I started to suffer from claustrophobia even though I was outside, all the people around me made me feel ill.
And really we have this subject of the TV over and over again, without question the TV is better here. No doubt remains in my mind on that topic.
The basic problem with the UK is that it is too crowded, streets and streets of tiny houses with too narrow streets overflowing with traffic and you get to pay 20% VAT, etc. for the privilege of living there.
Never moving back, ever. The only possible advantage of living there is that the NHS is somewhat better than AHCIP, and I'd rather die here than suffer a lingering death there.
Bizarrely I had some craving for Tesco sandwiches, cured myself of that delusion pretty quickly.
And for ages I've been saying that the food is better in the UK than it is here, think I've made a mistake on that score. I went into Waitrose and yeah there definitely is more esoteric stuff that you would never find here but for your average day-to-day shopping I don't think there is that much difference anymore. The main difference is you can go into Tesco Xtra and get everything (or rather suffer with their sausage rolls etc. which are mainly rolls and no sausage) in one go, whereas in Calgary you have to go to more than one shop. But in fairness Calgary is a city of a million people, rather than this huge metroplex in the UK of millions of people so you would expect that the food choice would be narrower.
I'm glad I went because before I was certain I had made the right decision, now I am absolutely certain that I did.
#36
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
I can generally find everything in Calgary, because there are so many British people here, but it can be a bit of a hunt sometimes. Also I've found since I've lived here the supermarkets have improved.
A lot of it is just getting the hang of knowing where to shop and what things are called, for example Fox's biscuits are sold under the President's Choice brand here at CSS/Loblaw's.
#37
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
Allowing, of course, for the reverse of overhead lines subjected to being brought down.
I did a little googling and I read that power outages happened more often with lines above ground, but they were of shorter duration than when the lines were underground.
Presumably because repairs can be made more quickily above ground.
#38
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
You know that you're in a minority of one, don't you? The BBC is better because it doesn't have adverts and because it shows the episodes of series in the order of the plot. You can have all the advert suppresion and episode reordering gadgets you want but these are clear advantages.
#40
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
The BBC is not better, and for one thing their budget has been cut massively and there are ever more repeats on. At the end of the day the BBC is some small subset of channels now. If you don't like ads just use DVR and FF through them, you still have to do that with 90% of UK channels anyway.
I think this is what is referred to as the "telescoping effect" by researchers, you remember things in the past by remembering all the good things and not all the bad things over an extended period of time. If in fact in the past UK TV ever was better than Canadian TV it isn't now.
The only things I thought were somewhat better than in Canada were some of the panel shows like Have I Got News For You and QI which admittedly are funnier than say, The Rick Mercer Report. But overall the TV was dire, I rarely watch movies but in the UK that was all I could find to watch with the exception of the aforementioned two shows and An Idiot Abroad which is on here albeit later on in the year.
I think this is what is referred to as the "telescoping effect" by researchers, you remember things in the past by remembering all the good things and not all the bad things over an extended period of time. If in fact in the past UK TV ever was better than Canadian TV it isn't now.
The only things I thought were somewhat better than in Canada were some of the panel shows like Have I Got News For You and QI which admittedly are funnier than say, The Rick Mercer Report. But overall the TV was dire, I rarely watch movies but in the UK that was all I could find to watch with the exception of the aforementioned two shows and An Idiot Abroad which is on here albeit later on in the year.
#41
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
The BBC is not better, and for one thing their budget has been cut massively and there are ever more repeats on. At the end of the day the BBC is some small subset of channels now. If you don't like ads just use DVR and FF through them, you still have to do that with 90% of UK channels anyway.
I think this is what is referred to as the "telescoping effect" by researchers, you remember things in the past by remembering all the good things and not all the bad things over an extended period of time. If in fact in the past UK TV ever was better than Canadian TV it isn't now.
The only things I thought were somewhat better than in Canada were some of the panel shows like Have I Got News For You and QI which admittedly are funnier than say, The Rick Mercer Report. But overall the TV was dire, I rarely watch movies but in the UK that was all I could find to watch with the exception of the aforementioned two shows and An Idiot Abroad which is on here albeit later on in the year.
I think this is what is referred to as the "telescoping effect" by researchers, you remember things in the past by remembering all the good things and not all the bad things over an extended period of time. If in fact in the past UK TV ever was better than Canadian TV it isn't now.
The only things I thought were somewhat better than in Canada were some of the panel shows like Have I Got News For You and QI which admittedly are funnier than say, The Rick Mercer Report. But overall the TV was dire, I rarely watch movies but in the UK that was all I could find to watch with the exception of the aforementioned two shows and An Idiot Abroad which is on here albeit later on in the year.
Away from the fact that more re-run movies are shown in Canada along with alot more adverts the news here is somewhat devoid of what is actually going on outside of the province.
It amazes me how little Canadien's know about political and world affairs of the last twenty years.
I do feel for you having to compare Calgary and Birmingham on both counts.
#42
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
I think this is what is referred to as the "telescoping effect" by researchers, you remember things in the past by remembering all the good things and not all the bad things over an extended period of time. If in fact in the past UK TV ever was better than Canadian TV it isn't now.
I gave up on Canadian TV years ago so, were I subject to the "telescoping effect", it would favour Canadian TV. Do Canadian channels all have advertisements? Are there channels in the UK that do not?
#43
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
Not really all that convinced by this TV comment. In Canada there are umteen movie channels and they generally just re-run a handful of movies such as Under Seige, Rocky and Top Gun.
Away from the fact that more re-run movies are shown in Canada along with alot more adverts the news here is somewhat devoid of what is actually going on outside of the province.
It amazes me how little Canadien's know about political and world affairs of the last twenty years.
I do feel for you having to compare Calgary and Birmingham on both counts.
Away from the fact that more re-run movies are shown in Canada along with alot more adverts the news here is somewhat devoid of what is actually going on outside of the province.
It amazes me how little Canadien's know about political and world affairs of the last twenty years.
I do feel for you having to compare Calgary and Birmingham on both counts.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1007029/
Last edited by Tangram; Oct 24th 2011 at 5:50 pm.
#44
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
Just returned from a 10 day dash around Scandinavia and Netherlands, with a brief weekend pit stop in the UK. Yes, it's more crowded/greener/the beers better/sunnier etc etc. But what really struck me was the apparent social and sartorial acceptability of wearing brown shoes with grey or black suits (and to mix languages) dress pants. When did that happen then?
#45
Re: Your observations when visiting UK from Canada !
Just returned from a 10 day dash around Scandinavia and Netherlands, with a brief weekend pit stop in the UK. Yes, it's more crowded/greener/the beers better/sunnier etc etc. But what really struck me was the apparent social and sartorial acceptability of wearing brown shoes with grey or black suits (and to mix languages) dress pants. When did that happen then?