I was thinking about that when I was dropping my 6 year old off at some hobbies earlier - it’s pretty much expected to have learned how to ride a bicycle before starting school, and it massively expands the area you can go to by yourself. When she went to school by bicycle she can easily make a detour via a shop to spend some pocket money before coming home, while by foot that’d be rather time consuming.
Quite a lot of friends from outside of Europe either can’t ride a bicycle, or were learning it as adult after moving here, though.
edit: the high number of replies mentioning “swimming” made me realize that I had that filed as a basic skill pretty much everybody has - probably due to swimming lessons being a mandatory part of school education here.
I’m Danish. Opening beer with a lighter or other things that aren’t technically a bottle opener.
Hold up - as a Canadian, this isn’t a skill everyone learns in/around high school??
What if you do it wrong and you make the lighter explode, taking a finger with it
This guy has around 60 YouTube episodes showing how to do it. Have fun!
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A few methods that come to mind
- put the side of the cap on the edge of a table and hit the top with your palm
- get a fork (or anything else), grab the bottle’s neck a bit under the cap, put the end of the fork just under it, the middle part on your fingers, push the other part down to open
- find a door, put the bottle cap inside the metal rimmed hole in the door frame that the latch sinks into (sorry, don’t know the word in English) and use it as a normal opener. Be quick as your beer might spill.
- get a screwdriver and a hammer, put the screwdriver to the middle of the cap and gently hit it with the hammer. The cap will slightly sink into the bottle and the sides will release their grip
(sorry, don’t know the word in English)
You got me thinking for a moment there but that thing’s called a mortise.
Perhaps the easiest (and most flashy) is a wooden table top. Wedge the cap onto the edge, and the smack it with your palm. This method is widely discouraged, especially on your host’s dining room table, as it usually takes a small chunk of wood off the edge and damages the table.
Like the Dutch, Germans have an impressive lexicon of commonly-known ways to open beer bottles without a bottle-opener.
Just do the same move on the 20 bottle plastic case you bough the beer in. The cases are sturdy and the breweries dont care for the scratches
I thought these were popular for pulling out the little stick to pack a joint with. Never seen anyone open a beer with them.
I’ve seen people open beers in a lot of different ways though. I had an alcoholic friend in my early 20s who could do it with anything. Even his teeth. He chipped his tooth once and stopped doing it with his teeth though, lol.
A bottle. As some Dutch person said in another comment, cigarette lighters, edges of tables and another bottle are popular options. Please don’t use your teeth. I have a nice, rounded tooth that I used to use for opening beers when I was younger - I was lucky I didn’t damage it more.
Bottles. It’s similar in The Netherlands, it’s a bit of a sport to open beer bottles with anything and everything, except dedicated bottle openers. Quite popular are Bic lighters, other beer bottles and the edges of tables.
Beer cans usually have pull tabs, they’re just soda cans with a different brand on it.
I’m American and this is how it was when I was in college and went to parties. I rarely, if ever opened a beer bottle with a bottle opener. My bic lighter was the most common tool, but as you said, learning how to improvise with whatever was on hand was key. It was a proud day when I found that the trucks on my longboard had a sweet spot for cracking beers open