In this episode, join me for a little day trip to the beach on my bike. I talk about how my outlook on the weather has changed since I’ve been living in Denmark. I try playing Padel for the first time. I get interviewed for the local news. Then I take some time to practice counting in Danish. Let’s discuss what makes the Danish number system so challenging to learn.

If you’re new to the channel, hi! I’m an American who just moved abroad from Atlanta, Georgia in the United States of America to Copenhagen, Denmark with my Swedish husband and two small dogs. Follow along with me as I discover all the wonderful things this Danish capital city has to offer. View this city from an expat’s point of view. I will be posting my new discoveries weekly here on YouTube every Sunday. Enjoy!

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MUSIC
Unavailable – Causmic
Longer Distance – Track Tribe

EQUIPMENT USED
Vlogging Camera
DJI Pocket 2

Editing Software
iMovie

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9 Comments

  1. Just remember, in a month or two you can look forward to 8 months of warmer wether, especially June/July/August we will have the long days (16-18 hrs) and for the most part 70-85 F

  2. Your pronunciation is very good. You speak slowly and clearly, keep doing that and it'll make it a lot easier to understand. Many of my co-workers that struggle with Danish is often because they speak too fast and stumble over the words. I always tell them when in doubt if a word is a 'en' or 'et' word, use 'en', as about 75% of words are of that type, so it's a decent chance you'll get it right. But don't worry too much about it, people will understand if you use the wrong one.

  3. About numbers. Did you know that all house numbers in Denmark start from Kongens Nytorv? So if you get lost in Copenhagen, you can follow the house numbers from highest to lowest and you end up at Kongens Nytorv, all roads apply.

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