Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-
Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
@sundogplanets Does Cliff have any relatives that can pick him up?
-
Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
Really weird that I believe the US invented Roundabouts then abandoned them.
In the UK they also work when people follow the signs and road markings. Which stupid people cannot do.
-
@Arapalla @sundogplanets I miss perked coffee. It’s nowhere to be found these days. Can’t even buy a proper perking pot.
-
Really weird that I believe the US invented Roundabouts then abandoned them.
In the UK they also work when people follow the signs and road markings. Which stupid people cannot do.
@simonzerafa @sundogplanets
The French decided to copy roundabouts from the English, but insisted on keeping their "priorité à droite" rule, so vehicles already on the roundabout had to give way to people coming onto it. Not sure how long this lasted, but they eventually decided forcing the people coming onto the roundabout to give way might be a good idea. -
@simonzerafa @sundogplanets
The French decided to copy roundabouts from the English, but insisted on keeping their "priorité à droite" rule, so vehicles already on the roundabout had to give way to people coming onto it. Not sure how long this lasted, but they eventually decided forcing the people coming onto the roundabout to give way might be a good idea.Yep, that's probably not good for traffic flow.
Adding traffic lights to a roundabout is a tacit admittion that it's not working as a roundabout. It needs to be a junction

️ -
@sundogplanets @at I’m impressed every time a European nails my ancestral “Massachusetts” on the first try.
@0xabad1dea @sundogplanets @at we have had decades of practice pronouncing Massachusetts correctly thanks to famous and dearly missed comedian Loriot who created a short funny story about a family dad trying to film his family on the moment of the arrival of a piano in the house which was a gift from his mother, a certain Berta Planikowsky from Massachusetts. As you can imagine the joke centered on the near impossibility for anyone to pronounce either last name or origin in front of a camera

-
Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
@sundogplanets
I like that the important sign warning about the danger of the cliff is held up with tape. -
Really weird that I believe the US invented Roundabouts then abandoned them.
In the UK they also work when people follow the signs and road markings. Which stupid people cannot do.
@simonzerafa @sundogplanets There's a lot of roundabouts in Austria, and a high number of stupid drivers too, but I haven't seen much stupidity in roundabouts except the occasional ignoring of right-of-way. It was found, however, that the center of the roundabout needs to have something to block the view or people might try to drive straight over it, leading to sculptures or mounds of earth nearly in each of them.
-
@simonzerafa @sundogplanets There's a lot of roundabouts in Austria, and a high number of stupid drivers too, but I haven't seen much stupidity in roundabouts except the occasional ignoring of right-of-way. It was found, however, that the center of the roundabout needs to have something to block the view or people might try to drive straight over it, leading to sculptures or mounds of earth nearly in each of them.
Yes, some UK roundabouts have decorative central islands. It gives the locals a point of reference and some artistic expression.
Mini roundabouts have central islands which are a suggestion only

️ -
Yes, some UK roundabouts have decorative central islands. It gives the locals a point of reference and some artistic expression.
Mini roundabouts have central islands which are a suggestion only

️@simonzerafa "mini rounabouts" are those that only consist of paint lines on a big patch of asphalt? We don't have them here, they're all "fully built" with curbs, and that's probably for the better...
-
Really weird that I believe the US invented Roundabouts then abandoned them.
In the UK they also work when people follow the signs and road markings. Which stupid people cannot do.
@simonzerafa @sundogplanets
I'm the past 10 years, many new traffic circles have been constructed in Michigan. Speaking anecdotally about the areas in which I often travel. There are probably many others than I've seen. I think they're a welcome addition to traffic flow control and are like a relative to the old "Michigan left". -
@simonzerafa "mini rounabouts" are those that only consist of paint lines on a big patch of asphalt? We don't have them here, they're all "fully built" with curbs, and that's probably for the better...
No, just a large blob of paint so no issues with driving straight over, as needed

-
Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
@sundogplanets Drip coffee exists here!
I worked in a building, an old telecommunications building, which had signs posted warning about asbestos. There we had a drip coffee maker and a microwave.
OH! And you'll sometimes find them in small town motels (though I think most of them have switched to the same 2 brands of instant coffee. One of them doesn't smell like urine so that's the better of the two).
-
Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
As another Canadian in NZ, while hiking the Routeburn track, our pretty young guide told us, when you get to the junction, take the lift.
-
@dmian Usually it's just joining in. Though there may be sections of society that don't hold with their kids being taught that foreign language
@RedRobyn
It doesn’t surprise me, though. In any case, I find waiatas extremely beautiful, and this in particular a specially lovely one. 
-
Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
@sundogplanets Somehow I can't see a sign like that and not think of one particular scene in The Young Ones.
-
@rdm @sundogplanets Ordinary sharks are bad enough, and now, helisharks?
@Daveosaurus @rdm @sundogplanets
I am glad I'm not the only one who thought that!
-
Observations from a Canadian visiting New Zealand:
-Making NZers say "Saskatchewan" is kind of hilarious
-Roundabouts work really really well when everyone is used to them
-Drip coffee apparently does not exist here (espresso-based coffee drinks only. Even at the one Dunkin Donuts I saw in a hideous mall I had to go inside in Auckland).
-NZ signs do not play around (see example below)
@sundogplanets I don't know if you know who Zorak is (from Space Ghost Coast to Coast) but his attempt to pronounce "Saskatchewan" lives rent-free in my head. ("Skas watch a wan or whatever.")
-
@0xabad1dea @sundogplanets @at we have had decades of practice pronouncing Massachusetts correctly thanks to famous and dearly missed comedian Loriot who created a short funny story about a family dad trying to film his family on the moment of the arrival of a piano in the house which was a gift from his mother, a certain Berta Planikowsky from Massachusetts. As you can imagine the joke centered on the near impossibility for anyone to pronounce either last name or origin in front of a camera

@schwestaline @0xabad1dea @sundogplanets @at The surname is Panislowski. In the context of this thread I believe this to be important. :op
-
@rdm @sundogplanets @davidtheeviloverlord
As I was warned by an Aussie in NZ...
In Australia, the wildlife is trying to kill you.
In New Zealand, the wildlife is fine, but New Zealand itself is trying to kill you. (earthquake, boiling mud, poisonous gas, landslide, flood...)
