Hello everyone, welcome. Here on my channel, I'm glad to share my life experiences with you. I am Chinese and spent 8 years studying and working in France. In 2022, I moved to Gothenburg, Sweden for work, and a year later, I returned to France.
Salut à tous, bienvenue ici où je partage mes expériences de vie. Je suis chinoise et j'ai vécu en France pendant 8 ans, entre études et travail. Après un an en Suède, me voilà de retour en Alsace. Retrouvez-moi également sur Instagram et TikTok pour partager encore plus de moments uniques.
Dear GD (Grand Daughter) (I'm 68 from Tamil Nadu, India), WHAT A NICE FILMING ! I trekked a lot on our Western Ghats during '90s. No doubt, you have a good eye....KEEP EXPLORING....ALL THE BEST...BYE..
Merci beaucoup pour votre magnifique vidéo sur Tours que je connais bien car mon fils y habite et J'ADORE !!! Vous avez vu beaucoup de belles choses ! C'est bien... Savez-vous que la Région de Touraine, Vallée des Rois vu le nombre de Châteaux, a été surnommée "LE JARDIN DE LA FRANCE" ? .
I have lived for some years in Gothenburg, and I've lived in some the areas you mentioned to avoid (Kviberg, close to Bergjsön), as well as some fancier places in the center, e.g., Majorna. I haven't been in situation where I felt as dangerous, but probably because I was male and single. But now that I have a family, the urge to get bigger places is more important than living in the city, hence the best for us is to get roomy places. If you have stable salary and have been working for some years, getting in the market to buy property is the fastest way to get your dream home here. Otherwise, you have to look a bit outskirt, outside the reach of tram lines. Some good areas that are still well-connected to Gothenburg with many buses and bigger-train aka pendeltåg/västtågen, are Ytterby, Kungälv, Kållered, Lerum as well as Jönsered. I totally recommend these areas.
Thank you for all this information on the castle, I plan to go there in spring. Are you an architect? I see you talk a bit about the style of the building. Nice work, keep going!
In a side room in the City Hall they have the most precise mechanical clock in the World: "The Olsen Clock", also with a lot of other functions, as the slowest moving mechanical part in the world (Guinness)! It shows the rotation axle of the Earth, making a turn every 25.000 years (It has room for 1500 years!)
It was started in the 1950ties and it looks its age, but it has lately been taken apart and made into a more modern version with present technology, so that it may last for many years to come. But it still looks original.
It was a great day. Really recommend the museum, it was nice to see, the entrance is actually pretty cheap and it is ideally situated in the city center if you want to grab a bite or a coffee on your way out !