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What else is different in Canada? > The Arrogant Worms also see: The Foxy Beaver

Also, Canada sometimes seems like at least five different countries to me:
1. Vancouver, which sounds like Seattle and everyone says is beautiful. William Gibson lives there, I think.
2. Quebec, where people take French culture very seriously.
3. Newfoundland, which sounds remote and pretty,
4. Toronto, and
4. The cold, barren part.
Is the cold, barren part where Anne of Green Gables lived?
My one trip to Canada, when I was seven, was an awesome train trek across the entire continent.
My one trip to Canada, when I was seven, was an awesome train trek across the entire continent.


Dunkin Donuts is finally coming to Milwaukee.
I'd love to take a train across Canada. Did you have a little compartment, Sally? I want a little compartment.
Wendy's still going strong here.
We didn't have a little compartment, RA, but we had two sections of four that folded completely down and became queen size beds or somesuch (I was quite small so I might be embellishing). We slept, but it was public, drooly, train rocking sleep filled with really weird dreams.
I just had a little Good Times cheeseburger yesterday, yumtastic.
We didn't have a little compartment, RA, but we had two sections of four that folded completely down and became queen size beds or somesuch (I was quite small so I might be embellishing). We slept, but it was public, drooly, train rocking sleep filled with really weird dreams.
I just had a little Good Times cheeseburger yesterday, yumtastic.

More Canadiana for Sally:
1) They have many of the same brands, but with altered formulas. Cheerios and Grape Nuts both have far less sodium. Their Grape Nuts taste like cardboard (Zu would say ours do too, but I disagree). Also, their Pepto Bismol is a different formulation. If I remember correctly, it's kind of chunky.
2)They say "foolscap" instead of "scrap paper"
3)They say "pop" instead of "soda" - like midwesterners.
4)Poutine is cheese curds and gravy. You can have it over fries.
5)They say DRAM-a and PAST-a. I can't figure out why in Scott Pilgrim vs. The World, in one of the first scenes, Michael Cera - a Canadian actor in a film actually set in Toronto - said drah-ma instead of DRAM-a.
6)Toronto plays New York in movies a lot, but it's a lot cleaner so they have to dirty it up. Once a film crew dirtied up a street and then stopped for their lunch break. When they came back it had been cleaned up and they had to start all over again.
7) They aren't a melting pot; they are a mosaic.
8) I once saw a bus sign that said "Show A New Canadian What Canadians Are Made Of." Somebody had scrawled "Beer and Bacon," which made sense to me.

10)Football has a bigger field, more players, and a few other differences. It still sucks compared to rugby.
11) The Canadian rugby team is marginally better than the American.

We used to get milk in plastic bags back in the 60's & 70's. I haven't seen those in many years.
RA, you missed the prairies, unless that is what you were calling the cold barren part. Then there would be two cold barren parts - the prairies and the tundra.
We have foolscap which is a pad of 8-1/2 x 14 paper used for note taking, planning, writing, etc. We also have scrap paper.
Boxing Day is no longer a Stat holiday, though many employers (thanks to the unions) will observe it.
We have Smarties as well as M & M's. (When you eat your smarties, do you eat the red one last?)
Our beer is stronger than the United States.
We have universal health care. Everyone gets it regardless of whether or not they have an insurance plans. Insurance plans cover things like dental, massage therapists, medications, etc.
We have touques (knitted caps) and bannock (flat bread).
We rule when it comes to hockey!

From Wikipedia:
Bannock, also known as frybread or Indian bread,[9] is found throughout North American native cuisine, including that of the Inuit/Eskimo of Canada and Alaska, other Alaska Natives, the First Nations of the rest of Canada, the Native Americans in the United States and the Métis.[9][10]
As made by indigenous North Americans, bannock is generally prepared with white or whole wheat flour, baking powder and water, which are combined and kneaded (possibly with spices, dried fruits or other flavouring agents added) then fried in rendered fat, vegetable oil, or shortening, baked in an oven or cooked on a stick.[10]
A type of bannock, using available resources, such as flour made from roots, tree sap and leavening agents, may have been produced by indigenous North Americans prior to contact with outsiders.[10] Some sources indicate that bannock was unknown in North America until the 19th century when it was created by the Navajo who were incarcerated at Fort Sumner,[11] while others indicate that it came from a Scottish source.[9]
_ _ _ _ _
Whenever we go camping, we bring a bannock mix of white flour and baking powder. We add water till it's a soft dough, wrap it around a stick and bake it over the campfire. When cooked, we slather it with butter and strawberry jam.

Um, I think the dimes and pennies are the same size now. We get the occasional Canadian change mixed in, here, and it's the same sizes as ours.

Janice, I've had fry bread at pow wows and the Museum of the American Indian. I just hadn't heard that word before! Also, I haven't seen it used by non-native peopels, certainly not for camping. You learn something new every day!


You need a campfire, RA. And slather it with enough butter and strawberry jam to run down your hands. Left overs don't work, either. We tried that this summer. We thought it would make a good breakfast. NOT!
How could I forget Tim Horton's? It's a phenomenon! People will line up for a half hour just to get a cup of coffee. Anytime, you drive by a Tim Horton's, there are line ups right out into the street.


It's tastes like ass, and I think they lace their cups with herione."
Um, herione? Heroin? Heroine? Hermione? I'll just have a donut.
Mint Aero bars are good!

It's tastes like ass, and I think they lace their cups with herione."
Um, herione? Heroin? Heroine? Hermione? I'll just have a donut.
Mint Aero b..."
I never had a mint one. It's weird when a chocolate bar's main feature is air bubbles.
What is a glosette raisin? Is that like a raisinette?
Canadian, do you have sugar babies and/or sugar daddies?
Heheheheh, pogo. I went to the carnival and had a pogo.
sounds like you had a nice sesh on the bouncing stick. (shaddup ClarkPhilLarryJimRA)
What else is different up there? How about gas stations? Do they pump it for you?
Canadian, do you have sugar babies and/or sugar daddies?
Heheheheh, pogo. I went to the carnival and had a pogo.
sounds like you had a nice sesh on the bouncing stick. (shaddup ClarkPhilLarryJimRA)
What else is different up there? How about gas stations? Do they pump it for you?

Yes, but in a different thread. I think Gail the Australian was surprised that beer was available in supermarkets in the US, and I said not everywhere in the US, and then I said the Canada thing. Maybe in the beer thread?

Maybe Portland is secretly a community of Canadian spies planning an invasion.

Not any more. There are no more government owned liquor stores. They are all privately owned. We still do not sell liquor in grocery stores though.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asqWMK...
also see: We are the Beaver

Hey Barb, do you remember treblecharger (they later changed their name to NC-17)? Or the Ghandarvas? Or the Leslie Spit Tree-O? Or the Lowest of the Low?

..."
They lasted for years! Thirteen years, to be exact. I saw them a bunch times, once at a club and then at the Falcon Ridge Festival a few years in a row. They were hilarious live. So good at improvising songs and lyrics.
The bands I listed were the ones I loved that were playing in Toronto while I was in high school.

Thanks for the correction, Barb. I forgot that each province does have its own liquor laws. It was the Albertan government, not the Canadian government, that decided it was a governing body and not in business, so handed the liquor sales to the private sector.
Before ALCB handed the reigns over, we had a wine store in our small city too. They must be special. :)

We had a family friend who grew up in Quebec. In Quebec there are three years of high school, followed by a sort of junior-college ish thing or university.
The summer between his second and third years of high school, they moved to Manitoba, where there are four years of high school.
The summer between his third and fourth years of high school they moved to Ontario, where at the time (when I was in school) there were five years of high school.
His mother came home one day to find him on the phone with the library helpline. She asked him what he was trying to find out.
"Are there any provinces with six years of high school? Cause wherever that is, that's where my parents will want to move next."

Canada is Really Big
The Last Saskatchewan Pirate
I am not American

Canada is Really Big
The Last Saskatchewan Pirate
I am not American"
My sister loves the Arrogant Worms.

Utah legislators, are you listening??

I love Canada but the border guards at the Detroit-Windsor tunnel and the Ambassador Bridge are d'bags.

I now know that milk comes in bags and are popped into a blue pitcher everyone gets when they turn 16 from the president of Canada.
Canadians say "eh" to signify they are asking a question instead of raising their voice at the end of a phrase.
What else is different way up north?