My
First Impression about Canada
(draft 1)
I am still not familiar with too many sides and aspects of
life in Canada, but I would like to share my first impressions about Canada.
I moved to Canada from Ukraine on September in 2015 so I am
still new settler in the country. Here, in Canada, I live in a small village
Burns Lake in the beautiful British Columbia with population over 2,000 people.
Our city is located between two bigger cities such as Prince George in the East
and Prince Rupert in the West. My husband and I drove through this destination
from West to East and from East to West many times, so all my impressions are
based on what I saw, heard, read, or was dealing with on that destination.
Let’s start!
·
I was impressed of huge distances!! 200-300km for local people it’s like to go
around the corner.
·
So a car here is a vehicle and not a luxury,
whereas in Ukraine it is still a luxury.
·
Multiculturalism-a huge amount of people of
different nationalities which live peacefully.
·
Politeness and friendless.
·
I cannot understand why the cashiers and sellers
in a store who see me first time ask me: ”How are you”? Are they really
interested to know how I am? Should I tell them about all my problems?
·
Tolerance-everyone is quietly waiting in a
queue, no one is trying to slip first.
·
The weather changes three-four times a day, so
very often I can see people in shorts and flip-flop in the middle of winter.
·
There is a very well developed infrastructure
for people with disabilities- from reserved wheelchairs to specially equipped
buses.
·
Celebrating of Halloween. It seems Halloween is
very popular here as New Year or Ester in Ukraine and people spend a lot of
money for that. For example, in Ukraine nobody celebrates Halloween, because it
is associated with monsters.
·
Canada has the imperial system of measurement
while in Ukraine there is the metric system. So when someone does ask me how is
my height on feet I say “I don’t know”. If I have to buy potatoes, for example
10 LB bag, I have to converse to kilograms, or when I bake I use the conversion
table from Celsius to Fahrenheit.
·
A large number of orthodox churches of different
streams. Even our small village with 2,000 people has approximately 15
churches!
·
Volunteering is something that exists long time
in Canada and many people are involved on that and do this job with a pleasure,
whereas in Ukraine this is at a primary stage.
·
Canadians like so much their smaller brothers, I
mean dogs and cats. And I have never seen any homeless or stray animals.
·
Here is a very strong financial support for own
community. The different companies, firms, private people donate money for
their local community.
·
Here is easy I can return any unsuitable or
defective thing during two minutes without any problem within 14, 30 days or
three months of purchase with original receipt. While in Ukraine it is almost
impossible. For returning I have to
write an application addressed to the main manager, explain the reason of
returning, and attach a copy of the passport. Then, after the conclusion of
expertise, if I am lucky, they will return money in three months.
·
Any alcohol in Canada I can buy only in the
specialized shops which controlled by the state. In Ukraine I can buy an
alcohol in any shops.
·
The sales taxes on most goods and services which
are not included in prices make me confused. By the way, sales taxes in British
Columbia are 7% PST (Provincial Sales Tax) and 5% GST (Good and Services Tax) what
in total is 12%. In my opinion it is confusing situation, when I liked a dress
by posted price $100, but in total I would pay 12% more because of taxes. For
example, in Ukraine all taxes (20%) already are included in price and everybody
knows how much has to pay without confusion. The posted price is final.
·
Here no one criticizes anyone for appearance:
piercing, tattoo, green hair…. Nobody cares!
·
There are a lot of fat people, especially the
young generation.
·
According my observations all Canada drinks a coffee!
And as soon as the break has begun the most of people go to Tim Horton to pick
up the coffee.
·
It seems the traditional Canadian Maple Syrup is
in every house like a sushi in Japan or pasta in Italy. Even I have it!
·
For me was strange to know, that I don’t have to
include in resume any information about my age, marital status, photo. In
Ukraine a situation is opposite. The photo, age, and marital status are
required, otherwise the resume is not acceptable.
·
As I know here is not the employment history,
while in Ukraine it is very important document.
·
Here all important documents such as PR Card,
driver license, insurance card and etc. I can receive by mail, what is
conveniently and save our time.
·
I can get any information not leaving the house
and not wasting my time just with a phone call or using official sites of
companies, firms or government departments by internet.
·
I saw many times as a Hardware store was closed
but the fertilizer for flowers, the soil, the melting salt was seating outside
next to the store and nobody was stealing this.
And I thought, probably, there is not the crime in this area.
·
I was disappointed when I couldn’t find some food
here which I had in Ukraine and I miss so much: bread, roasted brown buckwheat,
different kind of salty fish, halva, cottage cheese, and whey. Or it seemed
that the name of food was the same, but the quality here is lower.
·
One thing that cannot be compared with Canada is
its nature: endless forests, mighty mountains, fascinating lakes, and wonderful
wildlife.
These were my first impressions
about Canada, people, situations. Some of them are funny, some are interesting,
some are sad. But despite this my main goal here is accept that, take the best
of it and become a part of Canadian society.
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