Living Colorado! I am a Real Estate Agent, but I also love the outdoors. Living in Colorado means you have everything at your doorstep. While I definitely show you how to buy and sell homes in Colorado, I also want to show you my weekend warrior Outdoor Living lifestyle that is very Colorado!
Welcome to the RU-vid Channel of Colorado Real Estate Group building your future with real estate. Be a home owner, buy, sell and build wealth with real estate here in Colorado Springs. If you have questions about real estate outside Colorado Springs, please ask us regardless, if we dont know the answer we'll find someone who does. The same goes for out of state viewers. Ask us and we'll get you in touch with someone who can provide answers. We look forward to meeting you! Find me on all social media platforms under @yourCOShouse and follow me there - message me with any questions
Hi. Your video-making is very good. Your content ideas are very good. If you give me permission, I will share some information with you to increase the channel. You get lots of subscribe and views, best regards Thank you
I am originally from Kassel and immigrated to Canada when I was very young. My mother always cooked very german food which I so appreciated. I love to cook german food as my family and my husband's family seem to enjoy it. One has to admit that german food is very hardy and substantial. I wish there were some great German cookbooks, I only seem to find Dr. Oetker which are pretty simple.
@debbiemccaffery4358 Hi Debbie, unfortunately, the book is not available anymore. It was hyperlocal for the students of the local (house keeping school)
I am pretty sure it is. If all fails you can make it yourself. You basically infuse sugar with vanilla. Mom swears by vanilla sugar but I am not sure why you can't do sugar and separately vanilla 😀
My Mom used the bacon grease she had from frying the bacon. Added the vinegar to it. My mother in law never put bacon in it. I prefer bacon in it, but I always liked her salad, too. She put oil and vinegar and a little sugar.
Bei den Rezepten hab ich kein Problem, nur bei Geschichten wirds schwierig. I came to the US in 1995, and my Oma would write everything in Old German Schreibschrift. That was hard, but I figured it out. Unfortunately, she died at 67 long before I was old enough to ask her questions about the war.
@@vonpfrentsch ja das ist schade aber Goethe und Schiller ist fuer Viele in regulaerer Druckschrift schwer in zu lesen... Das ganze in altdeutsch zu Machen ist Dann doppelt schwer
I have heard opposite stories of German POWs in US Army run camps after the war ended. never enough food with some prisoners forced to eat grass cos of their hunger. I heard this from my German GF relaying the experiences of her father when a pow at the age of 17 in 1945 and 1946. When he returned home to the Ruhrgebiet he was so skinny from being starved by US troops, his mom stripped him and boiled all his clothes to kill the lice. His mom a little woman of 5'0" and would sneak into US Food Dumps to steal food for her family, this was known as 'hamstering', punishment if caught was to be shot on sight. This little woman, a gutsy woman, never got caught. I honour your memory Ooma Erdmann of Castrop Rauxel Germany
@@yourCOShouse I would like to hear about Oma Buehler and her wartime experiences. I only know of some of the experiences of Oma Erdmann from my then GF. She passed away before I met my GF. Her father passed away 6 months before I met her. My GFs father was 16 and consctripted into the Army near the end of the war. My GF has told me some stories of his experiences. Including what life was like in the US ryn POW camps after the war. I would loved to have met both and asked them about their experiences. I suspect there were lots of Omas in Germany who held their families together before and after the men came home (though many did not). This discussion between you and I has sparked an idea. I would love to see someone do a documentary on the German Omas who rose to the occasion and became providers to their families til the men came home, had recovered and could find a job to provide. Tough ladies, but I am sure they maintained their femininity where they could.
@@keithad6485 Look up "Truemmerfrauen" (losely translated rubble women) that should give you some more insight as well. I was 13 when my Oma passed away. All my relatives didnt talk about much, but there was definitely drama. My family, like many others, were urban farmers (lol oxymoron I know, but that's what you did ), and thus poor to begin with, put a war on top of that and it becomes a generational trauma. Doesnt matter what nationality you are, war is awful.
@@yourCOShouse Thank you for the info, I will look that up. Your vid and our exchanges has sparked my interest in this little talked about aspect of Germany in WW2. I agree war is truly awful. No one wins. Both sides suffer. I served as a soldier for two decades, and looking back, I am truly thankful that I was never called upon to serve in any conflict, war or peacekeeping. I would have done so and willingly but now glad this never presented it ugly face. So thankful. Having said that, I have great respect for anyone who lived through a war, either as a combatant or civilian. I feel for the people in Ukraine who are trying to keep their normal day to day lives going.
Those americans are all dead and gone, and so is that lifestyle. The US wont even take care of their own people today, let alone anybody else. Staying loyal to america for that reason is like joining the french army because of Napoleons accomplishments, it has zero bearing on the modern-day.
My uncle said that towards the end the Germans were surrendering to them by so many at a time that they would have to disarm them and ask them to travel alone to an area that had more allied forces that could handle them. He said he was 19 and most of the Germans were same age as him or younger.
A WWII veteran who was a church member was tasked with guarding German POWs and told me that the Germans cried when they were given coffee and doughnuts before breakfast. Many were emaciated and on the brink of starvation. Being captured by the Americans saved their lives. RIP Larry 😢
Why did the US troops fight in Korea? Whatever your answer is, I'm sure it doesn't cover why my father tried to enlist. My father was safely tucked away in the University where he was beyond the reach of the draft. His friend Dicky wasn't as fortunate. My dad decided to enlist so that Dicky wouldn't have to go to war alone. A lot of guys in the trenches stay in the trenches, not for FDR or whoever the leader is, not for mom and apple pie, most stay in the trenches for their buddy in the next foxhole. Combine that with the 17 year old had the choice of being put against the wall and shot or picking up a rifle and following orders. I realize that in the comfort of your living room, you just know you would have made a different choice. But that's fantasy land. In the same situation, there is a 99.999% chance you would pick up the rifle as well.
@papasmurf9146 yes, I agree, when you are fighting you are fighting to stay alive or to keep.your buddy alive and all the other points you are making. What happened with Dickey and your Dad?
I am 1/2 Italian and have made "cutlets" for mand years. Very good but not Schnitzel. Loved Schnitzel since I first had it in Germany. Will be trying your recipes in the near future.
these type of homes in Colorado take a person back to the 1970's- Vasquez & Berger Days of Colorado when everyone got a great sized lot and a quality home .. bringing back food memories of a fair purchase....😅
It's just the last of the 1031 exchanges before the market crashes. Baby boomers are buying their last properties just watch what happens next year when all the 1031s run out
yeah -- im leaving the springs - live in a 410 house but the springs doesnt justify the prices of houses- you CAN NOT get 2000 sq ft in 4 to 5 more like 1200 to 1300