Previous Welcome to /extraflags/, a lovely spin-off of /flag/ except its a general for users with extra flags to discuss flags, extra flags, and autistic activities while funposting. don't have extra flags? get extra flags :^)
>What are extra flags? Extra Flags is an open-source and non-malicious plugin that adds regional flags, like states and provinces, to the already existing national flags on Jow Forums, Jow Forums, /sp/, and Jow Forums, by storing users' post number along with the selected regional flags, and retrieving it from a database when a thread is loaded. You can add your region's flag by requesting it on the GitHub page.
What are you doing still up? Where are the yuropoors?
Ian Thompson
my sleep schedule is pretty fudged up atm, this happens pretty often for me unfortunately dunno where the euros are, guess they're just waking up/at work
Austin Bennett
I'm here, if you consider me as euro.
Ryan Gomez
bump
Samuel Scott
I was just about to head to bed, hence phoneposting. How's your day been? Did you just wake up?
Easton Clark
So far the day's been ok. I woke up some time ago. You?
Logan Lewis
It's 2:42 pm. I did nothing productive today.
Jackson Peterson
(((unknown sponsor))) uwu
Carson Stewart
PM? Not AM? That never happened ok
Liam Gutierrez
I meant am, of course. I am clearly too tired to type correctly, so bye until tomorrow.
>The red heraldic cross represents the "Christian motives and principles which governed the founders of the city," according to the city's official web site. The five emblems represent the ancestral presence of Indigenous peoples and the four main European ethnic groups that were settled in the city in the 19th century, and which are also represented on the Canadian Red Ensign. They are: >A white pine, representing the continual presence of First Nations Indigenous peoples, specifically using a central Haudenosaunee/Iroquois symbol. >A blue Fleur-de-lys, of the Royal House of Bourbon, representing the French. (The original coat of arms on which the flag is modelled had a beaver in place of the fleur-de-lys until 1936.) >A red Rose of Lancaster, representing the English. >A shamrock, representing the Irish. >A thistle, representing the Scottish. cool flag
Hudson Kelly
The city looks cool too >mfw i'm slowly turning into a ouiaboo
I've heard that Montreal is one of the chillest places in Canada, would be interested in visiting one day.
Luis Nelson
>ouiaboo what? how hard would it be to get job there without french?
Nicholas Harris
Study french, you fug
Christian Reyes
Yeah it really, I want to visit too. Montreal is actually one of the very few places I would leave Greece for permanently, even if they have snow in the roads in fucking April. Like weeaboo but for French culture etc. >how hard would it be to get job there without french? There are some places in the city were people speak English at home, and there is a Latino community as well so maybe just maybe you'd find a job
It made me think of the mermaids and other statues such as Neptune that they put on the front of ships, but I don't think that's the right side.
Parker Robinson
I couldn't find anything about it, what I found describing the symbolism of the flag is not mentioning the man
Ian Harris
hows alberta? job, climate and community wise
Nathaniel Sullivan
when im rich im gonna have my house topped off with copper roofing
David Davis
Looks like shit
Brayden Wilson
eyy you installed
Austin Green
What?
Connor Smith
Aren't you the user from wallonia that goslar was talking to the other day?
Brayden James
>job There is a plethora of jobs here apparently, but there is also a plethora of people applying for one job position at any time. And they are picky. Many employers at minimum wage places are nepotistic; they seem to only hire those of their own ethnicities. I see stores and restaurants where all employees are flips or pajeets, etc. If you're not educated in STEM, don't feel confident about getting a job here. >climate Half the year is snowy. It gets cold like -30°C in the dead of winter, then it gets hot like +30°C in the dead of summer. There are tornadoes. There are forest fires every year that cause an orange sky in the cities - picrel - and it feels awful to breathe in. It is somewhat dry too; some people get nosebleeds from the combination of cold and dry in the winter. >community Each community has one predominant ethnicity, as in ethnic minorities often self-segregate into specific communities. I live in a "family town" where there are a lot of children and teenagers growing up here. They can be a nuisance. One time a teenager on a fucking scooter stole my pepperoni sticks out of my hoodie's pouch.
Overall I don't like it and I miss the place where I grew up.
>If you're not educated in STEM, don't feel confident about getting a job here. i do have an engineering degree, but i need at least a year of experience working to be able to move to canada >climate does work/life stops during winter? >and it feels awful to breathe in. that might not be good for my ashtma >Overall I don't like it and I miss the place where I grew up. where?
>i do have an engineering degree Your engineering degree means nothing here. You have to study again to get an engineering degree that counts. >does work/life stops during winter? Not at all. There is no such thing as a snow day for either students or workers. Even in -30°C you are expected to come to work and you will probably get fired if you call your boss and say "I can't get there, I'm snowed in". >where? Nova Scotia - I grew up in a village on the Mainland near Cape Breton.
Angel Thompson
Optional
Gavin Adams
What's Canadian village life like? Also nice digits
Nathan Garcia
>You have to study again to get an engineering degree that counts. If this wasn't clear enough, what I meant is that foreign education often doesn't count here and you will probably have to get educated at the UofA or at NAIT in the same field.
My family had 10 acres of land and grew rhubarb, apples, etc. I spent a lot of time as a child exploring the woods. There was a lot of privacy considering that my house was surrounded by woods and a very long driveway; you could walk outside in the yard naked and no one would ever see it. We had a restaurant, church, convenience store, etc. but had to drive a bit away for shopping at bigger places or for going to school. A lot of seafood there too; relatives often gave us crabs and fish they fished up for free.