Slovakians chill out lads. Does everyone just piss off on holiday for 6 weeks?
TNTkip on
US: flat line
radio_cycling on
Brits need to just chill out
theErasmusStudent on
A bit difficult to read I would have used alternting colors, or just different color, for each country
Morg0t on
Germany is really spread out, is there a reason for that?
Yetyhunter on
So go in September to avoid crowds and scorching 40* temperatures, got it.
FroobingtonSanchez on
Funny to see the May school holidays for the Netherlands in this graph
Wondering_Electron on
UK has no bump in the summer because our summers are indifferent to the rest of the year, lol.
AirportCreep on
Having a holiday outside the peak weeks can be so boring unless you’re going abroad. All your buddies are working whilst you’re left to fend for yourself. Also most of the big events like festivals are all crammed inbetween late June and early August.
birkeskov on
I don’t understand the graph, 10 percent seems improbably low for Denmark. You should also see a larger absence in weeks 7/8, 42 and at Christmas.
12 commenti
source:
Created by Sebastian Gräff
@theeuropeancorrespondent, instagram
Slovakians chill out lads. Does everyone just piss off on holiday for 6 weeks?
US: flat line
Brits need to just chill out
A bit difficult to read I would have used alternting colors, or just different color, for each country
Germany is really spread out, is there a reason for that?
So go in September to avoid crowds and scorching 40* temperatures, got it.
Funny to see the May school holidays for the Netherlands in this graph
UK has no bump in the summer because our summers are indifferent to the rest of the year, lol.
Having a holiday outside the peak weeks can be so boring unless you’re going abroad. All your buddies are working whilst you’re left to fend for yourself. Also most of the big events like festivals are all crammed inbetween late June and early August.
I don’t understand the graph, 10 percent seems improbably low for Denmark. You should also see a larger absence in weeks 7/8, 42 and at Christmas.
So many elephant-eating anacondas.