Trends

Debates, discussions, news articles, cultural differences stories and everyday life blah blah.

On The Road

Follow me in China, in Central and in South America, in Australia, in South-East Asia or in Europe. Enjoy the pictures and some crazy travel stories!

Immigration

How to immigrate to Canada, how to apply for Canadian citizenship, and how to tackle the challenges newcomers face.

Just Blogging

Blog contests, memes, interviews, photography hunts, random facts… Let’s connect, share some blogging fun and some little snippets of life.

The Saturday Series

The ten post Saturday series: how to immigrate to Canada, how to find a job, interviews with immigrants… and more!

Home » Canadian Life

Stuffs Canadians Don't Like (Part 1)

Written by on March 1, 2010 – 12:06 pm28 Comments | 336 Read this
Canadian Cookies at the Byward Market

Cana­dian Cook­ies at the Byward Market

Every­body knows that Cana­di­ans are peace­ful and polite peo­ple. Yet, I noticed my fel­low cit­i­zens can be quite annoyed by a few things… that are Cana­dian in essence.

Dis­claimer: this post is to be read with your morning/ after­noon cof­fee. It is not meant to be taken lit­er­ally. I know some Cana­di­ans are going to dis­agree (but I’m sure they will apol­o­gize about disagreeing).

So, in the spirit of Stuffs Cana­di­ans Like and Stuffs Cana­di­ans Like (Part 2), here the list of Stuffs Cana­di­ans Don’t Like.

Peo­ple who loi­ter: the first time I vis­ited a Tim Hor­tons, I noticed this sign on the wall that read: “please, no loi­ter­ing”. I stared at it for ten good min­utes (basi­cally wait­ing for my extra hot cof­fee to be drink­able). I had no clue what it meant. I had never seen the word “loi­ter­ing” before and I think my mind made a funny con­nec­tion with “lit­ter­ing”. But in fact, these no-so-friendly signs are meant to keep peo­ple from hang­ing out around a busi­ness if they aren’t there to do busi­ness. So gulp your junk food down and leave. Even bet­ter: don’t come in, just order from the win­dow of your car and drive away. Gosh, these North Amer­i­cans are so efficient!

Hav­ing too much snow/ too lit­tle snow: the world is appar­ently laugh­ing at us because there wasn’t much snow in Van­cou­ver dur­ing the Olympic Games. “Canada’s mild cli­mate leaves Win­ter Olympics short of snow” said the Guardian, the British news­pa­per. “Still no snow!” said another news­pa­per. Or “Van­cou­ver Forced to Import Snow to Win­ter Olympics” — and that’s when the rest of the world started laugh­ing. Indeed, this win­ter has been very mild so far through­out the coun­try. Now, just look at win­ter 2007-08: “Cold­est win­ter in 15 years”, “A Never-Ending Win­ter”, “Record snow fall for win­ter 2007–2008″… you got it, that win­ter, we had way too much snow. It’s hard to keep Cana­di­ans happy: too lit­tle snow and the coun­try may lose its infor­mal title of “win­ter­land”, too much snow and Cana­di­ans are all feed­ing to Florida. Few are con­tent with the weather in this country.

Being mis­taken for Amer­i­can (or being called a “Cana­dian” for some Québe­cers): the story goes that Cana­di­ans sew Cana­dian flags on their back­pack to avoid being mis­taken for Amer­i­cans (arguably, Amer­i­cans some­times also put the Cana­dian flag on their back­pack just to get peo­ple to think they’re not Amer­i­can). Most Cana­di­ans defend their cul­ture fiercely and hate to be mis­taken for Amer­i­can just because they hap­pen to speak Eng­lish, watch a hun­dred of US chan­nels and live by the bor­der. Inci­den­tally, don’t call a Que­be­cer a Cana­dian: some may throw maple syrup at your face and “tabernac’” you. Sure, they carry a Cana­dian pass­port… just don’t remind them.

Their cell phone com­pa­nies: cell phone plans in Canada are high­way rob­bery. You sign up for three years (three years!) and you get to pay for pretty much every­thing: incom­ing calls, check­ing your voice­mail, hav­ing a voice­mail, call dis­play… heck, there are even monthly fees to access the 911 ser­vice! I hated cell phone com­pa­nies in Europe but I hate them even more in Canada. And trust me, I’m not the only one!

Crit­i­cism on the lack of secu­rity mea­sures along Canada’s side of bor­der with the USA: accord­ing to Wash­ing­ton, any­time a ter­ror­ism enter the USA, it’s through Canada. Don’t ask me how, don’t ask me why. Appar­ently, Canada bor­der offi­cers wave every­body through (not quite my expe­ri­ence but any­way…), say­ing “have a good trip, eh”. Now, when US bor­der secu­rity gets tougher, Cana­di­ans usu­ally have no choice but to fol­low suit. For instance, any­one cross­ing the bor­der by land must now show a pass­port. And guess what hap­pens? Amer­i­cans com­plain! “Oh, but I used to get in with just my birth certificate/ my dri­ver license / a let­ter from Uncle Sam!”It’s only Canada and I’m only going there for a short visit, do I really need to apply for a pass­port?”. Go fig­ure. Mean­while, cross­ing the bor­der these days can be a pain in the ass.

How about you? As Cana­di­ans, what annoys you? And what are the stuffs peo­ple don’t like in your coun­try?

Related arti­cles:

  1. Stuffs Cana­di­ans Don’t Like (Part II)
  2. Stuffs Cana­di­ans Like (Part 2)
  3. Stuff Cana­di­ans Like (Part 1)
  4. Not Win­ter Already…
  5. Snow, Snow, Snow… And More Snow

Tagged with:

28 Comments »

  • Tony H. says:

    In Eng­lish, the word for a per­son from Que­bec is Que­becker. You have to have the k in there, oth­er­wise it would be pro­nounced Quebeser! Yes, of course many peo­ple spell it with­out the k, and most of them aren’t going to change their minds… But check an English-Canadian dic­tio­nary, and the k is there. Again, in Eng­lish, if you want to spec­ify that some­one is a Que­becker of French-speaking back­ground, you would prob­a­bly use the French word and call them a Québecois[e]. When I was a kid in the 1960s (in Toronto), we Eng­lish speak­ers always pro­nounced Que­bec as kwe­bek, but that’s changed, and now I’d say that most Eng­lish speak­ing Cana­di­ans pro­nounce it some­where between kebek and kébek. But we don’t nor­mally write the accent in English.

    Regard­less, I’ve never thought of any of these words as bear­ing any ani­mos­ity at all.

  • Max Coutinho says:

    Hello again,

    As I read this post there was only one thing I could do: LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL.…
    This post is utterly funny!! It really is…

    I already knew that Cana­di­ans dis­like being con­founded with Amer­i­cans. Peo­ple do not realise that the Cana­dian accent is slightly dif­fer­ent than the Amer­i­can, and then diplo­matic mishaps occur *nod­ding*. It is like when Amer­i­cans think that Por­tu­gal and Spain are the same…*nodding*.

    About cell-phones: Por­tu­gal, now, has a tight (read: cool) cell-phone service…so I can’t com­plain any longer.

    Cana­di­ans do not annoy me. What stuff about Por­tu­gal annoys peo­ple? The fact that there are no proper signs (in the streets, roads, high­ways etc). I could offer you my vision of what annoys me about Portugal…but I already do that from times to times in my blog lol *nodding*.

    Cheers
    .-= Max Coutinho´s last blog ..The Miss­ing Link Between Cre­ation & Evo­lu­tion? =-.

  • barbara says:

    Hi Zhu,

    I like these type of series very much !!

    I would NEVER delib­er­ately treat a Cana­dian like if he/her was like a copy of an Amer­i­can ! The US and Canada each have their dis­tinct His­tory and Cul­ture. I’am a US cit­i­zen. I have vis­ited Canada twice and each time I felt good there.

    Bises à toi, Zhu ;)

  • Seb says:

    Wow, as bad as the cell phone com­pany oli­garchy is here in the US and how badly they milk the Amer­i­can con­sumer, it sounds that they are even worse in Canada.
    .-= Seb´s last blog ..Mon petit deje­uner. =-.

  • expatraveler says:

    Oh these are funny. I’m not sure some things annoy me, but the stu­pid ques­tions American’s ask can be sooooo darn funny… What’s a Loonie or a Toonie for instance! Do you have inter­net up here? Do you live in an igloo? Do you drive on a paved road? Does it ever not snow where you live? Those are the ques­tions that I shake my head and can’t believe they are asked up here.… Go fig­ure. Some woman in Alabama once asked how long it took to ride the bus to Switzerland???

    Hmm — that depends on which Grey­hound takes you under the ocean right?
    .-= expatraveler´s last blog ..Werid Weather =-.

1 Pingbacks »

Leave a comment!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

All comments are welcomed!

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get yours, head to Gravatar.