1: Winter in Denmark is cold and lasts for a long time, and there is almost no summer. From June to July, you should wear a coat when you go out, otherwise you will be shivering with cold, and you don't need to buy an air-conditioning fan at home, which can save electricity. It takes courage to go to the seaside. The water temperature is only 15 degrees. Swimming is a test for people.
2. Danes are very religious in life. They pray almost three times a day. Even if you are busy during the day and have no time to do it, you should make up for it when you go home at night. It is a habit not to brush your teeth and wash your face every morning, but to wash your hands and pray first. On weekends, I will take my family to church nearby.
Danish women hold up half the sky. After giving birth, most of them will choose to continue working instead of being housewives at home. Women can also earn money to support their families. Walking down the street, it is not surprising to see Danish men taking care of their children. If you have a job, you can also put your children in a child care institution. Generally speaking, the elderly in Denmark will not help with their grandchildren.
The cost of owning a car in Denmark is relatively high. Just buying a car has to pay high taxes, as well as various tolls and parking fees. The people who can drive Mercedes-Benz BMW there are definitely rich people. Due to the high cost of car use, many Danes like to travel by bike, and almost everyone has one.
5. Danes have high requirements for living environment and high awareness of environmental protection, and will not easily create garbage, which also reduces the burden of Danish cleaners. Garbage generated at home will be strictly classified. Vegetable waste will be put in one bag and meat waste will be put in another bag. After being recycled by the cleaner, it can be directly treated according to the type.
6. Subway stations in Denmark are divided into paper tickets and monthly tickets. There will be a bigger discount if you buy a monthly ticket. You can stop at the designated area and transfer to any station. However, it is a little different from China. There is no fence in the subway station. Passengers can punch in directly after getting on the subway. Then the problem is coming. Some people can get on the bus without punching in, which is entirely their own initiative, but there are flight attendants on the subway who will check the tickets at any time. If you are caught not punching in the subway, you will be severely punished.
7. When buying drinks in Danish supermarkets, you usually collect money by bottle, which is environmental protection on the one hand and resource recovery on the other. There is that kind of recycling machine on the street. As long as the empty bottle is put in, the machine will spit out coins. The amount of recycling is related to the size of empty bottles.
8. Danes have no pressure at work. They only work six hours a day at most, leave after work and rarely stay to work overtime. They have five weeks paid vacation a year, so they can enjoy life. They think that work is for living, and they can work better if they have enough holidays to relax themselves.
Everyone who goes to Denmark has the habit of tipping, but it is completely voluntary. Even if you don't tip, you won't be looked down upon. It's better this way, unlike some places where tips are forcibly added to the bill, which is difficult to accept.
10: Danes don't like living in tall buildings. They find it inconvenient to live on the high floor and the security is even worse. Even in the residential areas of some big cities, most floors are only 3~5 stories high. Living there is like living in a big country.