Тёмный

AMERICANS REACTS TOP 10 MOST BEAUTIFUL PLACES IN NORTHERN ENGLAND & REGRET THEIR LIFE DECISIONS 

TRIPPING THROUGH ADVENTURES
Подписаться 9 тыс.
Просмотров 228 тыс.
50% 1

AMERICAN COUPLE REACTS TO THE TOP 10 MOST BEAUTIFUL PLACES IN NORTHERN ENGLAND. THE UK IS FULL OF AMAZINGLY BEAUTIFUL SCENIC LOCATIONS LIKE, THE EDINBURGH CASTLE , THE WHITE WALLS OF DOVER, AND THE ISLE, THE ISLE OF SKY, SO MUCH SO THAT IF YOU WANT TO SEE THE BEST THINGS TO DO IN THE UK, OR THE BEST THINGS TO DO IN ENGLAND. YOU WILL NEED TO BREAK IT DOWN LIKE WE HAVE. SOME OF THE BEST CITIES IN ENGLAND AND LOCATIONS CAN BE FOUND RIGHT IN THE NORTH OF ENGLAND. SO ONE OF THE THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW BEFORE PLANNING YOUR TRIP TO LONDON IS ALL THE SCENIC TOWNS IN THE UK. LIKE ALL THE THINGS TO DO IN YORK , THE LAKE DISTRICT, AND DURAM . JOIN US AS WE REACT TO SOME OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL PLACES IN THE WORLD. #americanstry #reaction #uktravelguide #england
check out lifestyle Hals videos here
• 10 Most Beautiful Plac...
MORE REACTION VIDEOS CLICK HERE
• AMERICANS REACT & BLOW...
CHECK OUT LONDONS 1000 YEAR OLD MARKET
• AMERICANS REACT & BLOW...
HOW TO PLAN A TRIP TO THE UK YOURSELF
• Secrets Every American...
REMEMBER TO LIKE THE VIDEO AND CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE SO YOU STAY UP TO DATE ON NEW CONTENT
/ @trippingthroughadvent...
Hi, thanks for checking out #TRIPPINGTHROUGHADVENTURES our #familytravel #TRAVELvlog we are a Central Florida family who is always looking for new #adventures & #TODDLERACTIVITIES . From theme parks, beaches, historical sites, to food. We love seeing new places and trying new things! …..Which for our #KIDS…. Pretty much everything is new ☺️ Thank you for watching and if you have any questions about any the places we #travel, leave a comment and we will answer to the best of our knowledge! Thank you an as always like and subscribe!

Опубликовано:

 

21 сен 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 2,1 тыс.   
@clairebannister678
@clairebannister678 2 месяца назад
It's so annoying that the rest of the world thinks London is England. Thanks for seeing the real England 😊
@nails3394
@nails3394 2 месяца назад
London isnt even a piece of England...its its own place...Law...everything.
@memyselfandi36
@memyselfandi36 2 месяца назад
London City isn't part of the united kingdom ..own police and own laws hence the rich reside there
@Nutrient-Gold
@Nutrient-Gold Месяц назад
​​​@@nails3394poppycock. I think you're confusing the 'City of London' rather than 'London' itself. They are by-laws but the 'City of London' still comes under the jurisdiction of the common-law of the Land (UK Law).
@admiralbenbow5083
@admiralbenbow5083 29 дней назад
The `rest of the World` does not think London is England. Some idiots think that. Thats not the same.
@Maxine-c9o
@Maxine-c9o 27 дней назад
London is awful
@amty5000
@amty5000 3 месяца назад
I am a Scottish truck driver, the uk has the most diverse landscapes, i love the lake district. the yorkshire dales, the brecon beckons, the whole of Scotland, Oxford Cambridge, the list is endless, the beauty of the uk is second to none.
@sedekiman824
@sedekiman824 3 месяца назад
That is so true. In a relatively small island, the change in the landscape is incredible.
@Queenfloofles
@Queenfloofles 3 месяца назад
We are so lucky. The UK is beautiful. From the Scotish isles down to the White cliffs of Dover.
@Chatters64
@Chatters64 3 месяца назад
Tasmania shades it by a smidge😉
@CarolWoosey-ck2rg
@CarolWoosey-ck2rg 3 месяца назад
​@@Chatters64You'll wake up soon love! 😂
@ren-singing-baby-catcher
@ren-singing-baby-catcher 2 месяца назад
Yes! I love that you said 'the whole of Scotland'! We just don't have many ugly places, do we?!
@cristinamorenolamin3217
@cristinamorenolamin3217 2 месяца назад
I am from Perú, I have Navajo ancestry. The UK is the most beautiful island group on this planet. The Yorkshire dales when the weather is good is spectacularly beautiful. I married a Yorkshire man and settled over here where I am a neuro surgeon. It gets busy in the Summer months but it’s worth it. Try Harrogate it’s a beautiful Georgian town at the edge of the Yorkshire dales and you will enjoy its beautiful architecture. My homeland is amazing but here I feel at one with nature. I enjoy your channel.
@leighbishop6213
@leighbishop6213 2 месяца назад
Oh wow! Thank you for your work ❤️
@Roz-y2d
@Roz-y2d 2 месяца назад
So glad you love it, we do too. And thank you for looking after us.❤
@NickHunter
@NickHunter Месяц назад
Harrogate is geet fancy! Lovely place :)
@madhavoc1
@madhavoc1 19 дней назад
"Neuro Surgeon" ?? You must be REALLY BUSY in the UK .. 🤣🤣🤣
@jimmypimps2734
@jimmypimps2734 9 дней назад
wow you made me love Durham even more is like York but with banks
@MerrisWilliams
@MerrisWilliams 3 месяца назад
As a real American native American Choctaw nation at13 i moved to the uk and lived with my Welsh dad i had a great education and ive had great people as mates and family i love the uk
@Roz-y2d
@Roz-y2d 2 месяца назад
👍🏻
@iandodds3218
@iandodds3218 3 месяца назад
Born and raised in Durham City and now live in North Northumberland just outside of Bamburgh village can't think of a more beautiful place to live in, than north east england.
@HanChap2
@HanChap2 2 месяца назад
I LOVE Bamburgh! Gorgeous place! You are sooo lucky living there ❤️
@markrafferty3909
@markrafferty3909 2 месяца назад
You lucky man. Still live in Durham but Bamburgh is a beautiful place
@richardfarish3634
@richardfarish3634 2 месяца назад
Just came back from sea houses this very morning after going to see bamburgh castle and beaches there. Absolutely stunning.
@Markie_Smizzle
@Markie_Smizzle Месяц назад
Aye I'm still in Durham, I might escape one day 😂 It was a much nicer place before most of the shops closed
@claymor8241
@claymor8241 Месяц назад
Try Horden
@davidroberts1816
@davidroberts1816 3 месяца назад
In all honesty the Uk is predominantly beautiful every county has its own character
@tmac160
@tmac160 3 месяца назад
Born and raised in Durham. The north of England really is that beautiful. Just like so much of the UK. We're lucky.
@user-man-guinon80
@user-man-guinon80 3 месяца назад
Just beware and consider that the short distances can be traumatic to cover because of tight bendy roads, and traffic congestion. I've been to the US and you have the advantage of straight roads that go from a to b. But the UK is worth that frustration .
@karlwilli1316
@karlwilli1316 3 месяца назад
Great that you realise there is more to the UK than London. I am originally from Newcastle upon Tyne but live in Switzerland now. But love going back and when I show my Swiss friends photos from Northumberland, the beaches, the Lake District etc they can't believe how beautiful it is. And that is just the tip of it!!
@alistairbolden6340
@alistairbolden6340 3 месяца назад
Its not luck we are just much better at looking after countryside than every other nation. It takes a lot of people to put greed aside to maintain.
@saorsa5
@saorsa5 3 месяца назад
​@@karlwilli1316 Scottish never British nothing united about Britain is not country
@karengray662
@karengray662 3 месяца назад
Me too, and feel v lucky. So beautiful
@dominicbrecken1530
@dominicbrecken1530 3 месяца назад
It's lovely to hear positive things being said about England for a change
@rob5197
@rob5197 3 месяца назад
From Americans ? - - they would say that of every EU country
@DerekLangdon
@DerekLangdon 3 месяца назад
The problem with Britain is that England exists! That’s the truth! The English have always detested the native Brythonic/Gaels of these islands. The Welsh, Cornish, Scots and Irish will never be treated as their equals.
@MrsLynB
@MrsLynB 3 месяца назад
@@DerekLangdonabsolute rubbish! The people not government but the average person on the street loves Wales Scotland & Northern Ireland. I have 2 grandparents who are Irish. One Welsh & one Scottish! I was. It born in England. A lot of people like me. I love all of the UK.
@OriginalNiceButOdd
@OriginalNiceButOdd 3 месяца назад
Lots of positive things are said about the UK every day, in thousands upon thousands of RU-vid videos.
@user-pz5qz2jv8w
@user-pz5qz2jv8w 3 месяца назад
It's a beatiful country , & you don't have to drive too long to be at the coast (seaside as we like to call it ), theres so much history , so many castles , churches ,abbeys ,cathedrals ,breath taking views , countryside ,lakes ,England , Wales ,Scotland ,Northern irland especally on a summers day, the lake district , York , etc etc , ive been to lots of counteries & they are really nice but you cant beat the uk on a sunny day .
@deethompson3592
@deethompson3592 2 месяца назад
I'm a true "Yorkshire lass" - West Yorkshire . I've travelled the world but I have to say there's no place like home. I fully appreciate the natural beauty of the UK 🇬🇧 and the fact that we can swim in our waters in safety along with wondering through our woods and forests in relative safety too - We are so blessed in the uk 🇬🇧 Thank you for your appreciation and for not just focusing on the capital - London 🇬🇧🙏✨️❤️Nameste
@NickHunter
@NickHunter Месяц назад
Say hello to Batley nash' from me! :D
@admiralbenbow5083
@admiralbenbow5083 29 дней назад
We can swim in our waters in safety can we ??
@deethompson3592
@deethompson3592 29 дней назад
@@admiralbenbow5083 possibly not in Blackpool 🤭
@myrarowlands9216
@myrarowlands9216 Месяц назад
Yorkshire born and bred. God's own country. So proud to be from Yorkshire. Cheers you guys - respect...x 🇬🇧
@claymor8241
@claymor8241 12 дней назад
@@myrarowlands9216 Yorkshire born, Yorkshire bred, strong in t’arm, thick in t’head.
@myrarowlands9216
@myrarowlands9216 12 дней назад
@@claymor8241 Yorkshire born, Yorkshire bred, strong int arm, ACE IN BED ...
@claymor8241
@claymor8241 8 часов назад
@@myrarowlands9216 Maybe. I remember a Yorkshire lass telling me I was crap in bed. But how could she tell in two minutes?
@myrarowlands9216
@myrarowlands9216 7 часов назад
@@claymor8241 😂😂😂
@stephanlazarz1921
@stephanlazarz1921 3 месяца назад
Beautiful Britain, proud to be British.
@rob5197
@rob5197 3 месяца назад
Ever been to North West - - country side may look pristine not the case for towns
@CarolWoosey-ck2rg
@CarolWoosey-ck2rg 3 месяца назад
​@@rob5197like that in most places in mate
@margaretflounders8510
@margaretflounders8510 2 месяца назад
@@CarolWoosey-ck2rg Always one isn't there...
@painstruck01
@painstruck01 7 дней назад
@@stephanlazarz1921 I love Kazuo Ishiguro's description of England's mountains in The Remains Of The Day through the eyes of the butler who's forced to go on holiday. The mountains are big enough for an army to practice climbing mountains to be able to conquer foreign lands, but not so big as to be overly dramatic and ruin the view.
@painstruck01
@painstruck01 7 дней назад
The ruins they admire are why America was founded. They're the Catholic Abbeys torn down by the raging Protestant King, Henry the 8th. His daughter, the Virgin Queen, Elizabeth the First is who Virginia is named for. America was founded on the principles of the separation of Church and State (which the UK still doesn't have) so that no Christians would ever be oppressed again - by other Christians. Those ruined Abbeys are all over the country, in most towns and cities on various scales. The violent oppression and genocide is why America fought for its independence.
@olorin1.414
@olorin1.414 3 месяца назад
This royal throne of kings, this scepter’d isle, This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars, This other Eden, demi-paradise, This fortress built by Nature for herself Against infection and the hand of war, This happy breed of men, this little world, This precious stone set in the silver sea, Which serves it in the office of a wall Or as a moat defensive to a house, Against the envy of less happier lands, This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England. ❤ from Lancashire 🌹
@DerekLangdon
@DerekLangdon 3 месяца назад
Yes sir, the English continue to love themselves.
@MrsLynB
@MrsLynB 3 месяца назад
@@DerekLangdon this English woman loves Wales Scotland & Ireland as well! I love my country. Love my city. Love the UK 🇬🇧
@susantracey4486
@susantracey4486 3 месяца назад
No one ever finishes quoting that speech ´is now leased out……like to a tenement or pelting farm……Is now bound in with shame with inky blots and rotten parchment bonds that Englandthat was wont to conquer others hath made a shameful conquest of itself.
@silgen
@silgen 2 месяца назад
@@DerekLangdon And of course no other people, race or country would do this, eh? You'd never see a Scotsman who was proud to be Scots, eh?
@TonySpike
@TonySpike 2 месяца назад
​@@silgenYorkshire isnt nicknamed the peoples republic for nowt 😂
@chrisellis3797
@chrisellis3797 3 месяца назад
Just said goodbye to my Floridian friends last week. I live near Saltburn 18 miles North of Whitby. Took them to Whitby, York, Knaresborough, Staithes (Captain Cook trained there) and a country house up here too. They loved it
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 3 месяца назад
By the grace of God we will be there sooner rather than later lol 😂
@chrisellis3797
@chrisellis3797 3 месяца назад
Drove them around the North Yorkshire moors too to Grosmont, Pickering and Glaisdale. Pub up there dates to 1500 and the food is amazing. Its called The Lion and it's at Blakey Ridge, you'd need to drive though
@lawrenceglaister4364
@lawrenceglaister4364 3 месяца назад
​​​@@Trippingthroughadventures, if it's possible could you please stop talking when the commentary is on as he is telling you the history , just hit the pause button ty , as far as waterways go the waterways are generally not to clean at the moment due to the water companies not cleaning the water like they should and especially if there are rats in the water . Mountain wise there is one called Snowdon in north Wales , a big hill in the north west of England and lots in the north of Scotland otherwise we just classify everything as rolling hills 😂😂😂😂😂 , most are walkable but have the correct gear because the weather can change very quickly.
@MrCoxy38
@MrCoxy38 3 месяца назад
Visitors to Old Mother Shipton's Caves are often astounded by the seemingly magical process they witness, where everyday objects such as soft toys, hats, and bonnets are transformed into stone right before their eyes. This natural wonder is due to the petrifying well located near the caves, which has been a popular attraction since 1630. The well's water, rich in sulphate and carbonate, creates a unique phenomenon where items left in the well gradually become encased in a stone-like deposit, creating a fascinating spectacle for all who see it.
@chrisellis3797
@chrisellis3797 3 месяца назад
@@MrCoxy38 I was there last week in Knaresborough, the cave she lived in with the automated voice is nightmare fuel 🤣
@jordanb9915
@jordanb9915 3 месяца назад
Born and raised Manchester, now live Harrogate. North Yorkshire is stunning, York, Harrogate and the entire Yorkshire Dales are amazing. Must see on your next trips to the UK.
@HanChap2
@HanChap2 2 месяца назад
Shame visitors can no longer taste the Sulphur water from the tap behind the Pump Rooms Museum. I remember making my dad a cup of tea using that water, when I was little, thinking it was hilarious! My little 6 year old mind didn't register that he could smell the eggy stench before it went anywhere near his lips 🤦😂 He played along all the same, bless him.
@valcarlin2537
@valcarlin2537 2 месяца назад
@@jordanb9915 lots of places near Manchester too The peak district and the lakes for instance
@royboy6890
@royboy6890 2 месяца назад
Born and raised between Manchester and Liverpool and can say that there are many great places outside both cities when you get away from the metropolitan centre and even there you can find wonderful places that have been regenerated. As a mid Lancastrian hats off to both cities.
@georgehead6780
@georgehead6780 Месяц назад
Try Pembrokeshire…friendly, musical Wales..I am from mucky Teesside…
@diane9656
@diane9656 2 месяца назад
I'm a londoner, lived in Durham for 12 years then retired to The Lake District. We have the most diverse countyside in the UK. So proud to be British 🇬🇧 Keswick is pronounced Kes-ik by the way
@tashasgran
@tashasgran 3 месяца назад
The reason that we are so Green and peaceful is because of the amount of rain we have. Still, it is lovely.
@weejackrussell
@weejackrussell 3 месяца назад
Providing you are wearing the right clothes for the weather!
@susanvanderbilt358
@susanvanderbilt358 3 месяца назад
Today it was 200% rain.. seriously never seen so much🤣
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 3 месяца назад
@susanvanderbilt358 your percentage of rain match’s our temperature 😂🤣😂
@highpath4776
@highpath4776 3 месяца назад
Ireland has more...!
@helentaylor4911
@helentaylor4911 3 месяца назад
Was just going to write this lol
@viper7869
@viper7869 3 месяца назад
York is a million times better than what you have shown, from the vid you don't feel the atmosphere and the warmth of the people. I live ten miles outside of York and go in most weeks...its a very very safe city, no guns, no pick pockets it's lovely. I've been in and around the military for 50 years, lived everywhere and ended up in York...its a fantastic beautiful safe place to live and visit.
@johnwade1095
@johnwade1095 2 месяца назад
Britains least diverse city. Although I was driving in one time and saw a lad walking down the side of the road with a light machinegun. He was in uniform.
@vallewis8460
@vallewis8460 3 месяца назад
"that makes me homesick for somewhere that isn't my home " ..That made me cry . So glad you like our our island home
@johncummings9428
@johncummings9428 2 месяца назад
I'm from Hartlepool in the Northeast of England, but now live in Shropshire. You would love it here, Worcestershire, Herefordshire, Wales, lots of history, , castles stunning countryside and very rural. Visit Ironbridge, Ludlow, Thw Wrekin , supposedly where Tolkien got his idea for the lonely mountain, Shrewsbury etc.
@johnnyboy-f6v
@johnnyboy-f6v Месяц назад
FYI... This was about England. Wales is not in England.
@richardlowes3982
@richardlowes3982 14 дней назад
@@johncummings9428 Hartlepool…..nee wonder you went south !!
@nagillim7915
@nagillim7915 3 месяца назад
The mountains of the UK were once the northern tip of the Appalachians. When Pangaea broke up, we took the tip and North America took the rest. Then they were repeatedly covered over during the ice ages and eroded by glaciers. Its why many of the mountains have concave flanks where the glaciers once carved away the rock and why our valleys are wide and flat. If you could drain the coastlines of Scandinavia and reveal the bottoms of the fjords they'd look very similar to the mountains and valleys of the UK as they too were carved by glaciers during the ice ages.
@counterfeitclone
@counterfeitclone Месяц назад
​@@nagillim7915 North and south America at that point in time were connected to the west side of africa. Canada coming in over the top where Algeria is. Greenland was connected to Canada and sandwiched England inbetween greenland and Europe was UK. We weren't connected anywhere near the americas .
@RushfanUK
@RushfanUK 3 месяца назад
As a kid I grew up in Northumberland, I left to go to university and worked in a variety of locations including London and around the UK, I have been back in Northumberland for the last ten years and will not be leaving to live anywhere else, the county is an absolute gem from the high moors to the coast, small towns, history to the Romans and further back, castles, beautiful beaches, the great city of Newcastle and so much more, not least the people as well, if you want to travel we have a good airport and great railway links to the rest of the country. I am in my 60's and my bones will be buried in the soil of Northumberland.
@lesleymitcheson8439
@lesleymitcheson8439 3 месяца назад
I am born and bred in Northumberland and won’t live anywhere else
@jayveebloggs9057
@jayveebloggs9057 3 месяца назад
parents hired a cottage on beach at Lesbury Nr Craster in 1976... every day was about 80 degrees never forgot it
@gijgij4541
@gijgij4541 3 месяца назад
@@jayveebloggs9057 Ah, '76, I was fifteen: what a year...
@patmillar961
@patmillar961 3 месяца назад
@Rushfanuk. Also the northern people are known to be really friendly. I'm a Geordie still living in the city of my birth ... We've so much beauty a car drive away in all directions. Loved your comment 👍
@r1bew42
@r1bew42 3 месяца назад
@rushfanuk.......sshhhhhhh. Don't tell everyone. Countries best kept secret.
@frankdoyle9066
@frankdoyle9066 3 месяца назад
I live in North Yorkshire. Believe me it is this beautiful. I am privileged to live in this area. It is not only the beauty, the way of life is calm and laid back with everybody looking out for their friends.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 3 месяца назад
That is the way to live 😃
@paulinedixon3490
@paulinedixon3490 3 месяца назад
North Yorkshire is the only place I’d like to move to. Beautiful
@andrewmicklethwaite6807
@andrewmicklethwaite6807 3 месяца назад
I live in west Yorkshire it has some beautiful place but i would rather move up north
@Silentauditor974
@Silentauditor974 3 месяца назад
I live in Scarborough, about 20 miles south of Whitby. It’s only really when one watches this video that I can immediately think of 30 plus places within 10 miles that are truly stunning.
@carolinewillis602
@carolinewillis602 3 месяца назад
I was born n raised in York. I love living in Yorkshire tho my favourite holiday destination is the Lake District
@michaels640
@michaels640 3 месяца назад
I think we take it all for granted - always been there - but visitors’ videos are making me realise that we have stuff others don’t. I’m seeing it anew I think..
@royboy6890
@royboy6890 2 месяца назад
We do. As a 67 year old I remember my childhood days and the adventures we got up to in the 50s and 60s in these beautiful places all within a few minutes walk. The woods all with a stream running through were a marvellous place to play. The places are still there just not used like they used to be.
@Alice-hp6yb
@Alice-hp6yb 2 месяца назад
I’m lucky enough to live in the NE of England a mile from our gorgeous coastline. Seeing places I have been to so many times through new eyes really makes me appreciate what I can easily take for granted. Childhood holidays camping in the Lake District. I’m having a day out in Whitby this weekend and going on the steam train to Pickering. I’ve had holidays in the old fishermens cottages in Robin Hoods Bay. Last visit to Bamburgh Castle was at Christmas, beautifully decorated with the theme of Northumberland myths and legends. My university days were in York, ended up staying for 15 or so years before returning ‘home’. Walked past the minster every day coming to and from work at the National Trust Treasurer’s House. Can’t begin to scratch the surface of my so many fantastic memories of all of these places shown in the video 😊
@PoliticalprisonUK
@PoliticalprisonUK 2 месяца назад
Their is a hidden gem in Lancashire. It's called Rivington. Their is a castle by lakes. two Anglo Saxon barns you can have a meal at. The Chinese gardens the Pike and many beautiful walks . I have been to all the places you viewed. If you could pick just two places it has to be Bamburgh castle and Whitby.
@flumpah
@flumpah 3 месяца назад
I have lived in Northern England for 50+ years and I forgot just how beautiful this place is, thanks for the reminder !
@and_abelard
@and_abelard 3 месяца назад
As well as staying in Castles you can also go on Narrowboat holidays; not only do you get to drive them, but sleep onboard while you explore the canal network
@and_abelard
@and_abelard 3 месяца назад
More on castles: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-RXXDThkJ3Ew.htmlfeature=shared ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-E3x-n5vFAZ8.htmlfeature=shared ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dNQmS_Aeq64.htmlsi=hb-9H_gFNBQcG_lT
@HollyLyne
@HollyLyne 3 месяца назад
I was born and bred in North Yorkshire. I went to school in Knaresborough and had a job in York as a teen. We took many holidays in Whitby, Robin Hood's Bay etc, as well as the Lake District. It truly is the most beautiful place on earth.
@FullwellMill-w4k
@FullwellMill-w4k Месяц назад
@@HollyLyne gotta love that school kilt. 😜
@trishadams2427
@trishadams2427 Месяц назад
Hi from Cornwall UK, its beautiful here endless coastline and natural beauty. My first trip abroad was to Florida, very surreal huge as Cornwall is small. I loved seeing all the the different animals at seaworld. The Flamingoes and baby elephants were adorable, people so friendly . Loved it. ❤ I think most places have thier beauty each country unique. Thats the beauty of travel . Florida was spotlessly clean ❤❤❤
@raiseyourworld5324
@raiseyourworld5324 2 месяца назад
The Derbyshire Peak District and Dales you should look at, also so beautiful
@kevinwatterworth4604
@kevinwatterworth4604 3 месяца назад
Born in Yorkshire and lived here most of my life every bit of Yorkshire and the north of England is the most beautiful in the whole of England
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 3 месяца назад
It does look amazing, hopefully we can visit soon!
@speleokeir
@speleokeir 3 месяца назад
Cornwall, Devon, Dorset and Cumbria disagree, but yeah there's some lovely places in Yorkshire.
@martinwebb1681
@martinwebb1681 3 месяца назад
Doesn't matter where you go in England, North, East, South or West there are beautiful places everywhere, picturesque little villages in lush green surroundings, old castles and ancient churches, houses that are hundreds of years old, tranquil streams and rivers, and around the coast loads of sandy beaches in pretty little seaside resorts.
@penname5766
@penname5766 3 месяца назад
No. The Westcountry is absolutely stunning: Devon, Somerset and Cornwall but particularly Exmoor, which spans Devon and Somerset. Its steep valleys and sweeping hills go right up to the cliff edge and there are wild ponies and tiny, tiny churches. The views across the Bristol Channel to Wales are incredible. Often, videos don’t do it justice or show the best bits because some of the towns and villages are pretty remote by modern standards with very steep roads into them (the same goes for Cornwall). But they’re worth it.
@penname5766
@penname5766 3 месяца назад
Please react to the video about England’s South West Coast Path! It runs for more than 600 miles along Dorset’s Jurassic coast and all the way round Cornwall then up past Devon and Somerset. It was built so that the Coastguard could look out for smugglers coming in from the Caribbean trying to avoid the import taxes at Bristol.
@custa73burner
@custa73burner 3 месяца назад
You're right about our small rural communities being peaceful and serene. Traditionally they lived their lives by the weather and the seasons and not the clock.
@StephMcAlea
@StephMcAlea 3 месяца назад
"It makes me homesick for a place I've never been." In Welsh we call that "Hiraeth", a longing for a place where your heart lies whether you've been there or not. There's no direct English translation. The correct pronunciation is: (Emphasis on capitals) HI-rye-th ('Hi' as in "hit" A rolling 'r' 'eye' (as in what you look out of) 'th' as in "bath".)
@BunyipToldMe
@BunyipToldMe 3 месяца назад
Mawkish
@mehitabel6564
@mehitabel6564 2 месяца назад
@@BunyipToldMe unimaginative.
@hobi1kenobi112
@hobi1kenobi112 2 месяца назад
Yes, a very lovely word. It's almost a guarantee that there was an Old English equivalent though, now lost to time and technology, as I distinctly remember seeing an Old Germanic word for a similar concept. The people of the past, whatever their cultures or differences, had many beautiful words to describe emotions and concepts, and seemed far more bound to, and in tune with their homelands and Nature. Some words have survived but many are sadly lost. And no doubt worth reviving. I suppose in modern English the nearest there is (from the Old) is 'pining' - which is not as specific but can be utilised for the same concept as in 'pining for shores you've never been to'. If I can find the Old German word I will as it was very interesting and had a nice sound.
@JaneAustenAteMyCat
@JaneAustenAteMyCat 2 месяца назад
Is that 'hi' as in 'high' or 'hi' as in 'hit'?
@GarryCollins-ec8yo
@GarryCollins-ec8yo 3 месяца назад
I lived in England for 4 years. The UK is a beautiful and diverse country.
@donnaashbrook8169
@donnaashbrook8169 3 месяца назад
I did teacher training in Ambleside in the Lake District and I was living in paradise! I was born in the North of UK so it wasn’t very far from my home, but once you enter the Lake District National Park you are in another world completely. The colours on the fells change dramatically from hour to hour, season to season. It is like the rest of the country/world has ceased to exist. You get caught up in the beauty and the magic of the unique scenery and the ways of life which don’t seem to have changed much. Even the dialect contains many Danish words, passed down through the families. My heart will always be there , even though I have defected to the South coast with its own language , culture and history, plus it’s a bit warmer!
@Paul_Allaker8450
@Paul_Allaker8450 3 месяца назад
It's funny you guys mention walking not being a thing in the USA, I visited Miami about 15 years ago, I decided to just go for a walk, didn't care where I was going, just wanted to get some miles under me, I was stopped by the police and they just couldn't understand that I was walking recreationally, it just didn't compute with them that someone would just walk, what made it worse was they asked me where I was going, and I just said "I don't know, I'm just killing some time", it was so weird being challenged for walking. 😂
@RonSeymour1
@RonSeymour1 2 месяца назад
When you said killing some time you were fortunate not to have been thrown to the floor and cuffed. An exaggeration but not if the officer misunderstands you.
@reindeer7752
@reindeer7752 2 месяца назад
Where I live there are sidewalks and bike paths everywhere. There are also 682 miles of hiking trails in the forest. Why do you think you can judge 50 states by one experience in one city in one state? Who would want to walk in the city of Miami, anyway? Go to the beach and walk in the water for miles and miles, all the way to Maine if you choose.
@meditationandstudyvibes4416
@meditationandstudyvibes4416 2 месяца назад
@@reindeer7752 the point is being able to walk wherever you want , when you want, and it doesn’t raise i eyebrow.
@reindeer7752
@reindeer7752 2 месяца назад
@@meditationandstudyvibes4416 I've always been able to do that in the USA and I've lived in six states and traveled in all 50. One person's odd experience means nothing.
@meditationandstudyvibes4416
@meditationandstudyvibes4416 2 месяца назад
@@reindeer7752 I’m struggling to see the judgement , I see an observation and a reaction to that observation. And then there is you lol Upset for some reason
@diannegooding8733
@diannegooding8733 3 месяца назад
Each Country of the UK and the Republic of Ireland are beautiful but other countries are beautiful as well. Travel anywhere wherever you can as much as you can!
@pennyaccleton6227
@pennyaccleton6227 3 месяца назад
You're right. I've been to a few places around the world, and, unless humans have made a dump of it, they are just so beautiful. It's remarkable that places can *be* so beautiful and yet so *different*! Even a surprising amount of the human stuff has its own beauty. The Creator does wonderful work.
@geoffreynolds8835
@geoffreynolds8835 3 месяца назад
The Boat's on the canal are called Narrow Boats. Long boats are Viking ships.
@jeanthornton2107
@jeanthornton2107 2 месяца назад
Barge!
@peterchapman3740
@peterchapman3740 2 месяца назад
@@jeanthornton2107 nope thats something else
@jeanthornton2107
@jeanthornton2107 2 месяца назад
@@peterchapman3740 I live just off the Leeds and Liverpool canal in Lancashire. I live by a marina , it is full of these vessels and all on them call them Barges. Maybe it depends what part of the country you come from. Even the Barge Inn, in Wiltsgire calls them Barges.
@susanwalker1953
@susanwalker1953 2 месяца назад
@@jeanthornton2107 i think your both right... it goes on the length,,,one not exceeding 7 feet (approx. 2.1 metres) in width or 72 feet (approx. 21.9 metres) in length is a Narrow Boats over that is a barge
@FoxyFoxlyn
@FoxyFoxlyn 2 месяца назад
My mum calls the canal the cut.
@craigjames499
@craigjames499 Месяц назад
For a relatively small country we have diverse culture, accents, language, cuisine and scenery. In my opinion the West Highlands of Scotland and the Cairngorms offer the best natural beauty and wilderness. Cornwall is also worth a visit
@lindariley4455
@lindariley4455 2 месяца назад
It's lovely to hear you being so positive about our country, thank you!
@jameswatkinson1571
@jameswatkinson1571 3 месяца назад
I live and was born in West Yorkshire, where everything is conveniently close by, just a short drive away. These videos serve as a reminder of how often we overlook the abundance of natural resources available to us.
@paulmaude2650
@paulmaude2650 3 месяца назад
Piece hall in Halifax is a must
@loopyloo788
@loopyloo788 3 месяца назад
Walked my dog on Bamburgh beach this afternoon. And yes it is indeed beautiful. ❤️
@joancline4844
@joancline4844 3 месяца назад
Wonderful part of our country
@judithwilson3561
@judithwilson3561 Месяц назад
@@loopyloo788 my brother passed suddenly and instantly on that beach, no warning. I can't help but think he picked a beautiful place to leave us.
@AnneFoggensteiner
@AnneFoggensteiner 29 дней назад
Just had a holiday in Northumberland from Birmingham. Love it. Walked the dog along the beach from Seahouses to Bambrugh. The sun shone and it was fabulous. Had fish and chips in Bambrugh. Noticed the locals prefer Northumberland to Northumbria?
@AnneFoggensteiner
@AnneFoggensteiner 29 дней назад
Come and visit. We would love to see you. You can hire a canal boat and sail up the canals. America is very beautiful too it’s just that the UK is tiny and full of beauty and history.
@michellemac6150
@michellemac6150 3 месяца назад
Aww I’m from and live in North England. It’s so nice to see you guys so enthusiastic and visiting the lesser known parts of the UK and not just London. Great video 😊
@nigelhamilton815
@nigelhamilton815 2 месяца назад
We are certainly blessed. I have travelled my country for many years and not seen 30% of its splendour. I'm glad people appreciate it as much as I do.
@philfernley
@philfernley 23 дня назад
Bloke from Hebden Bridge here, checking in. It was lovely to see my home on the list - -that's exactly what it's like there. I live closer to Manchester these days, but regularly pop back to visit the fam.
@lynseyh8876
@lynseyh8876 3 месяца назад
I love american reaction to my country i think alot of british people take it for gramted , america in our veiw is a new country i have a stool thats older than america but still im glad u appreciate it more than even sometimes we do . .❤❤
@reindeer7752
@reindeer7752 2 месяца назад
Your view is wrong. The European invasion of what is now the USA began in the mid 1400s. St. Augustine, Florida dates to that time and so do towns in New Mexico. Jamestown in current Virginia was established in 1607 after the Lost Colony of Roanoke (1585). The oldest tavern in the USA, still in use, was established in 1673 (The White Horse, Rhode Island). The independent nation of the USA dates to 1776 however, Great Britain as a unified nation (but that's debatable) dates to 1707. Compare to France, 1792 and Germany, almost a hundred years later in 1871. Don't start with but, but, but. I know a lot about history. People in what you call the British Isles and Europe have been invaded and been invaders. Borders have changed many times. If you want to claim history from thousands of years ago, compare it to the indigenous peoples of what is now called the USA. Your stool means nothing.
@littletree1343
@littletree1343 3 месяца назад
Chatsworth House in Derbyshire is a very cool day out !!
@debbieredfern2267
@debbieredfern2267 2 месяца назад
@@littletree1343 the cascade in not on this year though because of repairs. That is a very popular part of a day out there. Just bear that in mind
@FoxyFoxlyn
@FoxyFoxlyn 2 месяца назад
Castleton and Bakewell nearby too.
@Scaleyback317
@Scaleyback317 3 месяца назад
I've been married to an NY born Sicilan beauty for 37 years. She was raised in FL. We lived in FL for a couple of years and CA for a couple of years before she decided living in UK offered a better standard of life than we could ever have in the US. She watched her home town Jupiter turn from a lovely little town into a concrete mess. It breaks her heart to see what it's become compared to her childhood idyll. We've been back in the UK for 32 years now and would never wish to live elsewhere. Besides we have the whole of Europe as our playground now and have taken advantage of that. I've lived all over the UK and abroad as a child (Dad was military and in turn I also joined the Army) He comes from Whitehaven (the coastal side of the Lake District) We did a wonderful holiday in Northumberland and caught a whole week of good weather (unheard of up there) More to the area than just Bamburgh Castle and the beach but it has to be said it is one of the most imposing castles I've seen (that includes the 7 years I lived in Germany) Durham is glorious, York is interesting and fun - the Viking museum is great and just off the Shambles (twenty feet or so) is a little square with some of the best street food outlets I've stumbled across anywhere in the world. Had relatives in Whitby and visited regularly - you're right it is fish and chips country and fresh from the boats too. The fish that is, the chips, I guess, are fresh from the tractor! Richmond in Yorkshire was a place I was based close to as a young soldier and it's just a beautiful, friendly little market town which I would have been happy to retire to. We do like to explore Wales - it is very underrated as a holiday destination and as castles are your thing you won't be disappointed. Pembroke castle and the whole story of a forgotten superhero of the British Isles called William Marshal (French born) who was the real deal of what the world pays to watch films of the knights of yore about. A giant of a man and a giant of a personality who left his sword marks and fingerprints on the service of 5 kings - some of whom he fought against before he served them. Cardiff is an underrated city break - surprised me on our first visit. My wife's destination of choice is anywhere along the south coast - gets crowded in the summer but there's something for everybody here from the impressive military museums in Portsmouth, to the Dorset coastal regions (where I was born) to the grand houses in Sussex. Our next holiday will be in Kent again - Rochester/Canterbury/Dover Castle (arguably the most interesting and extensive in Britain) It's a simple enough drive for us and we go back every couple of years to see again what we've already seen and to find something new. Last trip we stayed longer than intended in a beautiful little town called Sandwich. You could live ten lifetimes as a resident of the UK and still not hope to see/enjoy it all. We feel we have won the lottery of life - now if we could only manage the monetary one........... Florida - We enjoy it to visit as we have some local knowledge (and family there) and tend to avoid the usual tourist spots (though all of them deserve at least one visit in the lifetime of all of us - the US really does know how to do the theme park thing) We prefer the older, fast disappearing old Cracker towns. Jonathan Dickenson Park was a great escape spot. Northwards of Tampa along the coast and inland used to be laid back, easy going and a joy to visit (there are still some spots left) but in the last 30 years the bulldozers have wreaked havoc all the way along there. We still have a building plot near Crystal River but would feel hypocritical developing it for anything other than personal use now - and all thoughts of FL as a potential retirement spot have long been dispelled. We lived about half an hour from Yosemite in CA. We visited and drove the foothills extensively - Yosemite just takes the breath away and I would hope to see it again before I start decomposing. No great desire to see much else of the US however - four years filled my curiosity itch - would far rather spend the money and time visiting Canada (BIG trip planned for next year to do colonial (French and British) Canada) . Enjoyed your offering here. Re your urge to see and visit the UK - My wife (aka - She who must be obeyed) read a book when she was a little girl all about a lass living in a castle on a little island off the south coast of England. She, some years later, wrote in her diary, "I just have to go to England" I believe she even showed me that entry a lifetime ago now but cannot state that with absolute certainty. Little could she have known as she rewarded herself on Graduating university (Gainesville) with a whistle stop tour of Europe she would meet me in London and end up spending more of her life here than she did in the states and not just that but living and working on that little island and able to walk around that castle in the storybook on a daily basis should she wish to (It's an easy walk from our house) Almost spookey eh!? Me - I dreamed of never marrying and stomping all over the world having fun - sort of did that for a while but ended up with under the watchful eye and terrible temper of an NY jailor who read a book as a kid and servng a life sentence too scared to deny her anything she wishes. Beginning to think she planned it all and found the fool ......... gotta go now, her not so royal highness has a list of, "Stuff to do"...... one day I'm going to say no and risk castration or something really medievally abhorrent.
@smitz7847
@smitz7847 3 месяца назад
You have just broken the longest comment record 👏
@Scaleyback317
@Scaleyback317 3 месяца назад
@@smitz7847 It's clearly too late to apologize!
@deathbane8695
@deathbane8695 3 месяца назад
I'm from Whitehaven and its a lovely coastal town with probably some of deep history like its the only town in the UK that America invaded John Paul Jones the haig pit disaster also it was home to where England military used to buy there cannon balls from as they where the best
@beverlybradley5485
@beverlybradley5485 3 месяца назад
Whitehaven is in North West Cumbria, the Lake District is in Cumbria, we don’t say that Whitehaven, Workington and Maryport are part of the Lake District.
@Scaleyback317
@Scaleyback317 3 месяца назад
@@beverlybradley5485 Which is why I said it's on the coastal side of the Lake District as opposed to on the coast of the Lake District. I'm describing it to people who may not have much of an idea of the geography of Cumbria. If it were aimed at Cumbrians no further explanation would be necessary would it!?
@SarahWilson-fv5vo
@SarahWilson-fv5vo 3 месяца назад
I'm from York and the Minster never fails to take your breath away when you see it. Im 56 now and it never fails to amaze me.❤
@GeoffHome-u6r
@GeoffHome-u6r Месяц назад
I was born in the North Riding of Yorkshire and live near Ripon and York (Yorvik). We have lived, worked and travelled in Oz and the US which l loved, but always asked myself why countryside was so different to Northern England. Clearly you both appreciate this country and should plan to return many times. We were in York yesterday, walking the Roman walls, close to where my mother’s family can trace their history back to the 1600s ❤
@debsday5445
@debsday5445 3 дня назад
Wow amazing 😊
@broBobH23
@broBobH23 3 месяца назад
I visit Northumberland every summer. Great people, gorgeous beaches and castles and fantastic pubs.
@Dave534
@Dave534 3 месяца назад
My favourite place in the Country is the Peak District I visit a village named Edale it is a tiny village surrounded by mountains and has 2 old style traditional pubs
@judithmaca1570
@judithmaca1570 2 месяца назад
And it is the beginning of the Pennine Way. Wonderful walking in that area!
@Dave534
@Dave534 2 месяца назад
@@judithmaca1570 I have walked every hill there I do need to make time to walk the Pennine Way I don’t know how long it will take though
@judithmaca1570
@judithmaca1570 2 месяца назад
@@Dave534 I wasn't suggesting that you would walk the Pennine Way, though others reading this, may themselves be interested in doing so. They may also be attracted to that area which has so many spectacular walks!
@Dave534
@Dave534 2 месяца назад
@@judithmaca1570 it is something I want to do I just need to find the time. My advice to first time visitors would be visit the visitor centre pick up some maps and look at the different walks available
@judithmaca1570
@judithmaca1570 2 месяца назад
@@Dave534 I so wish that I had walked that full route when I was still young and fit enough! It used to be possible to walk from one youth hostel to the next across that beautiful area, and the same with the Lake District, but very sadly many of the hostels were sold off, and also block-booked for large groups of people, so no availability when arriving on spec. I always liked to be flexible in my plans and to stay and explore for a few days. Now I need a comfortable bed etc, but still have little money.
@westleyjohnstone4719
@westleyjohnstone4719 3 месяца назад
It's beautiful , but the weather gets us down. But without the wet conditions it wouldn't look so green and lush
@Caterina22
@Caterina22 Месяц назад
Doesn't get me down! I love the cooler weather and rain is so cleansing
@westleyjohnstone4719
@westleyjohnstone4719 Месяц назад
@@Caterina22 nearly every day?
@DrasticSkuba
@DrasticSkuba 22 дня назад
Northern England is beautiful. I'm from Scotland and Northern England is my go-to if I wanna leave in Scotland but stay in the UK. Great people, great environments, and much more cost-effective than London
@kayleighhirst6544
@kayleighhirst6544 2 месяца назад
All of these places are beautiful as im from yorkshire. Thanks for covering the uk
@mikeymikeFType
@mikeymikeFType 3 месяца назад
My first holiday as a kid was in Bamburgh. Loved playing in the sand dunes. Beautiful place
@HanChap2
@HanChap2 2 месяца назад
The first time I ever visited Bamburgh beach and castle, I couldn't believe I was in England still. It was a beautiful, hot and sunny day and it felt like I was on holiday abroad. The sea was so clear and the beach wasn't crowded. Instantly fell in love with the place and go back there as often as I can.
@davidthompson882
@davidthompson882 3 месяца назад
Ive worked for many Americans in the forces who are based in the north of England who have opted to stay as they just fell in love with the place, my friend from Indiana is coming over next year I’m looking forward to showing her all the places you guys don’t normally see
@HanChap2
@HanChap2 2 месяца назад
I went to school in Harrogate and had a LOT of friends from the local RAF base that is used by the USAF. I'm wondering if you are talking about the same base 🤔 As a kid I was always fascinated by the giant Golf balls in the countryside 😂
@petermolloy6684
@petermolloy6684 3 месяца назад
I am a Yorkshire man and York is the capital of the county of Yorkshire. Gods own county
@ukeman1387
@ukeman1387 3 месяца назад
“Hear all, see all, say nowt. Eat all, drink all, pay nowt”.
@johnshuman2307
@johnshuman2307 3 месяца назад
I thought Richmond was ?
@weejackrussell
@weejackrussell 3 месяца назад
Yorkshire is the biggest county in England.
@Imgettingaword
@Imgettingaword 3 месяца назад
I'm a Lancastrian and don't forget Lancashire won the war.
@partridge9698
@partridge9698 3 месяца назад
Devon runs it close. Devon rhymes with heaven; sort of..
@janetwaring2195
@janetwaring2195 7 дней назад
Yes! These places are as beautiful as they look. I don't live too far from Malham, North Yorks and is a great place for walkers. So peaceful.
@neilharrison7422
@neilharrison7422 3 месяца назад
As a native Cumbrian (Lake District), born and raised. I can tell you it is a privilege to live in the area we do, it is one of the most beautiful places on the planet.
@PresidentHotdog
@PresidentHotdog 2 месяца назад
Except on a bank holiday weekend. Nightmare.
@adrianboardman162
@adrianboardman162 3 месяца назад
I'm from Saddleworth, and although we do get a lot of rain, that's the reason the grass is so green. The North of England has a lot more to offer than just Oasis and Greggs (try their sausage rolls!). The industrial revolution started in Oldham, the Rights of Man was penned in Manchester, The Beatles came from Liverpool, Alan Turing worked at the University of Manchester. The north has far more history than you'd think, and the more you delve in, the deeper into the rabbit hole you go. Oh, and Manchester has a T-Rex called Stan. Typical Mancunian humour, we named a man eating predator Stan. Oh and the humour too. Didn't we vote on calling a boat Boaty McBoatface?
@billythedog-309
@billythedog-309 3 месяца назад
Saddleworth is part of Yorkshire, currently under occupation.
@DuruttiVisca
@DuruttiVisca 3 месяца назад
Saddleworth is the capital of child killers
@DuruttiVisca
@DuruttiVisca 3 месяца назад
@@billythedog-309dream on it’s lancs forever
@billythedog-309
@billythedog-309 3 месяца назад
@@DuruttiVisca 'forever' meaning as long as your feeble mind can comprehend.
@barbarastepien-foad4519
@barbarastepien-foad4519 3 месяца назад
What domyou mean please ? ​@@billythedog-309
@barnaby5548
@barnaby5548 3 месяца назад
"In England's green and pleasant land", The last 6 words from William Blake's poem "Jerusalem".
@Maggy47
@Maggy47 3 месяца назад
Love that song
@susanhowarth6670
@susanhowarth6670 2 месяца назад
Jerusalem should be our national anthem ❤
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 3 месяца назад
p.s. Keswick is pronounced as Kessick. As in a lot of place-names here in the UK, the 'w' in the middle of the word is actually (mostly - but not always, confusingly!) _silent_! Sandwich though, that middle 'w' _is_ pronounced!! By the way, if you see a video about the beautiful Isles of Scilly... That 'c' is also silent, and thus, the Isles are called (correctly) the Silly Isles - or, the Isles of Silly.🙂🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿❤️🇬🇧...Good Luck.🙂🤞🤔🖖
@barrysteven5964
@barrysteven5964 3 месяца назад
Keswick is pronounced Kezzik. 🙂👍
@myrarowlands9216
@myrarowlands9216 Месяц назад
Howarth in Yorkshire, half an hour from where I live is where The Brontes lived, one of whom wrote Wuthering Heights. I do love your Wild West history I have to admit. We all have something to be known for and proud of. 👍
@OriginalNiceButOdd
@OriginalNiceButOdd 3 месяца назад
Check out the SW UK, places like Cornwall, Devon, Somerset, Wiltshire for example. Beautiful.
@johnbowman7389
@johnbowman7389 3 месяца назад
May I recommend checking out the Channel Islands of Jersey Guernsey Alderney Sark and Herm. A beautiful group of islands, crown dependencies of the UK occupied by the Germans in WW2. Fine food, fine wine and some spectacular views, beaches and cliff walks.
@stevenwilkins1625
@stevenwilkins1625 3 месяца назад
I lived and worked on Sark 97to98 it was like stepping back in time no cars or street lights on the island just bicycles and tractors. if you went out at night you have to take a torch and a whistle with you so you didn't bump into people or get lost if you did people could hear your whistle I also spend time working on Jersey and Guernsey but I always preferred Sark.
@simhedgesrex7097
@simhedgesrex7097 3 месяца назад
They're not actually part of the UK. This is why, even when the UK was part of the EU, the Channel Isles were not.
@werewolf195
@werewolf195 2 месяца назад
You can go around the whole of Guernsey on a public bus for next to nothing if they still do the hour ticket. Great place and be amazed by how much the tide rises and falls by.
@johnbowman7389
@johnbowman7389 2 месяца назад
@@simhedgesrex7097 yes you are correct they are crown dependencies of the uk👍
@johnbowman7389
@johnbowman7389 2 месяца назад
@@werewolf195 I think they still do that bus ticket. We take the car over now on the fast cat from Poole. Stayed in some lovely hotels. Cobo Bay, Wayside Cheer and my favourite was the Idlerocks which unfortunately burned down. Was right on the cliff top at Jerbourg point.?????? Overlooking Sark and Herm.
@Elaine-y4i
@Elaine-y4i 3 месяца назад
I live in West Yorkshire and yes I think our country is beautiful. North Yorkshire is stunning Northumberland is amazing. Scotland is too . Then we have Wales too blows you away 😊
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 3 месяца назад
Wales is our sleeper, we are steadily picking up curiosity about it lol
@feltrider1981
@feltrider1981 3 месяца назад
I live in North Wales, you should definitely check it out if you get the chance. It's beautiful. The village we live in is called Rhuddlan, it's only small, a few thousand people, but we have a 750 year old castle by the river 😂
@carolrobson9097
@carolrobson9097 3 месяца назад
Yorkshire is the biggest county in England, with York being the city of Yorkshire and yes they are beautiful I live North Yorkshire near Saltburn
@HanChap2
@HanChap2 2 месяца назад
Saltburn is a gem of a place.
@jeremyevans9137
@jeremyevans9137 Месяц назад
I’ve just discovered your channel, so I’m catching up a bit. Thank you for appreciating my country and my home county of Dorset (Old Harry Rocks and Durdle Door). You’re so witty and Tiffany is so pretty. Love your reaction videos.
@louiserowsell
@louiserowsell 3 месяца назад
I live in Northumberland it has Alnwick castle as well which some of the Harry Potter movies & more castle as it near the Scottish border that’s why we have some many other castles to visit in Northumberland. Cragside house & gardens are beautiful Hexham abbey is stunning & you can follow & walk along the Roman wall which is a world heritage site. ❤
@HanChap2
@HanChap2 2 месяца назад
My kids were Harry Potter mad, so I took them to Alnwick Castle. They LOVED it. Got to see where the forbidden forest was meant to be and Hagrids Hut. As well as have broomstick flying lessons. Fantastic day out, even if you're NOT crazy for the Harry Potter films.
@Mouse2222
@Mouse2222 3 месяца назад
Hi, the mountains you see in the lake district and other areas of the UK were sculpted in the Ice Age, with the UK being near the edge many valleys were formed by the flow of glacial ice this is maybe why they look a little different to what you are used to seeing
@Stuski666
@Stuski666 3 месяца назад
Also, you have to realise how old, geologically, much of northern Britain is. The mountains of this part of the world are so much older than the Rockies, Alps, Himalayas and Andes are. There are no mountain building forces acting on the UK, only erosion. Also historical deforestation and farming practices mean the mountains are much less tree covered than in other parts.
@DrZiplock
@DrZiplock 3 месяца назад
Yorkshire is a historic county, and was by far the largest in England. It is sub-divided into North, South, East and West Yorkshire counties now, in the past it was divided into three Ridings. All are Yorkshire (though there are some friendly internal rivalries between them), so Yorkshire itself has a particularly strong regional identity that defies modern administrative areas. York itself is the city from which the county and the House of York took its name. It's a wonderful place, with charming country villages, big vibrant cities, amazing coastline, ancient woodland, green rolling hills and windswept moors. I can't recommend visiting it highly enough.
@garysmith4425
@garysmith4425 3 месяца назад
Northumberland used to be much bigger from Edinburgh to the north banks of the humber including which much later became Yorkshire.
@eveeggleston7611
@eveeggleston7611 2 месяца назад
Im from Durham and i think you forget to appreciate the beauty of your own country so thanks for this...
@markstott6689
@markstott6689 2 месяца назад
Yorkshire is the County. York is the historical capital city of Yorkshire. Historically, York was the capital city of the north of England back in medieval times. In religious terms, Canterbury is the religious centre for the south and York for the north. Both have an archbishop. Yorkshire is beautiful, especially when the sun is shining. 😊❤😊
@royboy6890
@royboy6890 2 месяца назад
As a Lancastrian we must disagree on that. Theoretically the house of Lancaster won the war of the roses even though the final battle was won by the house of York.
@GaryWiseman-kx2nu
@GaryWiseman-kx2nu 3 месяца назад
Born and raised in East Yorkshire and yeah these places really are that beautiful
@ams1897
@ams1897 3 месяца назад
Bransholme?
@paulwild3676
@paulwild3676 3 месяца назад
Beverley is an little known treasure. Beautiful town.
@trevorfuller1078
@trevorfuller1078 3 месяца назад
@@paulwild3676Bishop Burton, Dalton & Middleton-on -the-Wolds too for picturesque village scenes in the Yorkshire Wolds countryside!
@paulwild3676
@paulwild3676 3 месяца назад
@@trevorfuller1078 It looks quite Southern around there. Beverley looks more like a town in Hampshire, than the North. Malton is the same. Quite twee. Not the grandiose architecture we associate with the North. None of the big stone edifices, you get on the Pennines.
@trevorfuller1078
@trevorfuller1078 3 месяца назад
@@paulwild3676 : Hi 👋 Paul, There perhaps is a geological reason & explanation for such phenomena! The Cretaceous chalk/limestone belt that runs down more or less the Eastern-Central half of England 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 is maybe the common denominator & quarrying source of similar historical building materials! The northernmost end of this belt starts roughly at or around Flamborough Head, a significantly large & long limestone promontory, jutting out some six miles or so into the North Sea on the Yorkshire coast, lying some 25 miles north-north east of Beverley & conversely, this underlying Cretaceous geological strata runs on to finish southwards, approximately at the chalk cliffs of the Isle of Purbeck in Dorset (That is coincidentally also located at the beginning/end of the Jurassic Coast that encompasses the whole length of SW Coasts of Britain), & which includes the Isle of Wight & extends along the South Coast, running eastwards from there & south-east Hampshire to the North Foreland in Kent. Actually on reflection, Beverley’s Georgian, Regency & Victorian architecture bears a remarkable resemblance to those similar historical constructions in the town of Witney in Oxfordshire, not too far from Hampshire! Originally, I am from East Yorkshire, but some 15 years + ago, I had some business to transact in the Witney area that necessitated me spending about two months in this area in the Thames Valley on the edge of the Cotswolds! It struck me then on how distinctly similar both locations were to each other in terms of architecture & their ambience! But I suppose that relationship must exist & be replicated with numerous, similar, historic towns & cities up & down the country both in England & elsewhere!
@scottrobinson7739
@scottrobinson7739 3 месяца назад
Yip the north is by far the most beautiful part of the country I’m in Newcastle the most northern city in England, all us northern folk are lucky to be where we are, a truly stunning place,,, lots of real history old as sand , castles, cathedrals, keeps old and beautiful
@MrsLynB
@MrsLynB 3 месяца назад
With a gorgeous accent! Love your accents x I’m a scouser & love how we have so many different accents. Geordie my favourite. Irish a close 2nd for me. And a lovely Welsh lilt is just so lovely to listen to. I also have a love of any Scottish accent. Although Glaswegian is probably a favourite of mine x
@fishboy3626
@fishboy3626 3 месяца назад
Would Carlisle not be further north ?
@PolarBear4
@PolarBear4 2 месяца назад
@@fishboy3626 There's not much in it but Carlisle is a bit further south. Just a bit though!
@judithmaca1570
@judithmaca1570 2 месяца назад
@@scottrobinson7739 Very friendly people too! My daughter lived there for a year or so.
@leighbishop6213
@leighbishop6213 2 месяца назад
Not to forget us Northners are the most nicest people in the whole entire world!
@nekite1
@nekite1 3 месяца назад
I live in Sunderland which is in the north east of England. Just a 5 minute walk from my house will take you to a church whose foundations date back to 674 AD. As to Harry Potter locations, they used Durham Cathedral's cloisters, and exterior and interior shots of both Alnwick castle and Bamburgh castle. My fairly local favourite has always been Hadrian's Wall, which was built by the Romans some 1900 years ago.There are so many great places to visit all over the British Isles.
@kerrydodsworth4290
@kerrydodsworth4290 3 месяца назад
St Peter's Church? I'm originally from South Shields so I think I know which one you're talking about
@nekite1
@nekite1 3 месяца назад
@@kerrydodsworth4290 Yup, correct. I live in Roker - 5 minutes walk to St Peter's, the same to Roker Park and slightly longer to Roker beach.
@Jeffwalker66
@Jeffwalker66 2 месяца назад
I used to live in Durham and York. We are so used to it . I really enjoyed seeing your reaction to our beautiful area of England 😊.
@fr8545
@fr8545 Месяц назад
You guys just seem like really open minded beautiful people. We need more of that in our world
@MrCoxy38
@MrCoxy38 3 месяца назад
The reality is that growing up surrounded by these elements, and seeing them constantly, becomes as commonplace as growing up in America and being accustomed to your own environment.I had a friend visiting from Kingsport, TN, and it became quite bothersome as they constantly stopped to take pictures every two minutes. Growing up with a nearly 1000-year-old building in your backyard can become as commonplace to you as your neighbor's house, as I have already mentioned. To put this in context, it would be akin to me visiting your city and taking photographs of ordinary buildings and the surrounding areas, leaving you to sit down and wonder why.Please don't misunderstand me; I'm not ridiculing tourists. I completely grasp their enchantment with castles and ancient structures. However, when you've grown up around these and lived with them your whole life, they become as familiar as the very ground you tread upon.
@striplow3011
@striplow3011 3 месяца назад
I was born n live in morecambe, morecambe bay over looking the lake district 45 min drive round the bay to get there but morecambe bay sunsets are the best 👌 quiet seaside town in summer very busy when warm n sunny people on beaches ⛱️ really gorgeous place here ,I've been to florida, Vegas n new York nice but I love the green of England and slower pace ,Liverpool my football team is best city in world love it there especially on game days 1 hour on train away awesome 👌
@Kernewik101
@Kernewik101 3 месяца назад
Don't forget the Duchy of Cornwall, like Wales it's an ancient Celtic nation full of ancient sites, myths & legends. It's a Duchy with it's own Head of State, seperated from England by the river Tamar...stunningly beautiful as is the Cornish language❤❤
@thomasmumw8435
@thomasmumw8435 3 месяца назад
I'd recommend a trip or few days on the Scilly Isles...... Beautiful!
@aodhanmonaghan1268
@aodhanmonaghan1268 3 месяца назад
"Duchy of Cornwall" ≠ Cornwall. The Duchy of Cornwall was created in the 1300s to replace the Earldom of Cornwall. Both the Duchy and the Earldom were not the County. Even in the 1300s, most of the Duchy was outside Cornwall. Half of Dartmoor in Devon today, parts of Herefordshire, Dorset and London are in the Duchy. It's effectively a property portfolio used to generate an income for the heir. It's something people often get confused by. William is Duke of Cambridge, but Cambridge isn't a Duchy. So, what does it mean? Well it's a fancy title. Why Duke? Why not? Why Cambridge? Why not? William doesn't rule Cambridge or appoint it's mayor or sign laws for Cambridgeshire County Council. The same is true with Wales William, as heir, is Prince of Wales. But Wales is not a Principality. Why not? A Principality is somewhere RULED by a Prince. Wales was briefly a unified Principality for a few decades, after various Welsh kingdoms United under the Llewelyns. They didn't control all of Wales as we think of it today though. The whole "King of England calls his heir the Prince of Wales" thing started out semi true. As in, to start with after Wales was conquered, it was ruled by the King's son, who used the title Prince of Wales. It was technically autonomous within the Kingdom of England but since it was ruled by the son of the king of England, it didn't really stray from the Kings plans. After the merger in the 1400s of England and Wales, Wales has been directly ruled by the King of England, only regaining self rule in 1999. So since the 1400s, the usage of the title has been more of a mixture of legitimising and normalising English rule, and the suppression of the Welsh (or the British. Until the 1600s, the term British referred to the Welsh (North Welsh)and Cornish (West Welsh). British referred to the Celts, not to the Germanic English). So while the lands of the Duchy of Cornwall are amazing, they're predominantly outside the County of Cornwall, which I'd argue are far far better. Herefordshire is great sure and Central London, but not much beats the Cornish coastlines. There never has been a "Duchy of Cornwall" in the sense like the Holy Roman Empire's multiple duchies, marquisates, bishoprics etc. There was an independent Cornwall for sure, but not with the name Duchy, a very Romance Term. The Saxons had set up the Earldom of Cornwall, but even that was a disjointed land estate that was half outside the county of Cornwall. You'd need to go back to before the counties were set up, at which point the names and borders are less clear-cut. In the 8th century the Kingdom of Dumnonia was gradually annexed and ultimately ceased tu exist with the expansion of the Kingdom of Wessex, one of the main 2 of the 7 largest Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms that would conquer each other until they formed the kingdom of England in the late 800s. Around this time, many Cornish fled to what's now France, where they're known as the Breton, who speak Brezhoneg/Breton, a descendent of Old Welsh/Old Brittonic just like Cornish is Finally, of note, the term is always Duke for the primary title holder. The Queen for instance was Duke of Normandy (Jersey etc) not Duchess of Normandy.
@paulwild3676
@paulwild3676 3 месяца назад
Cornwall is nice along the coast. The inland towns are drab and impoverished. The Yorkshire Dales has much nicer towns. They are wealthier and better maintained. Cornwall has nowhere to touch Knaresborough, Grassington or Pateley Bridge. Devon is prettier inland.
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp 3 месяца назад
Most counties were ancient kingdoms. Essex for example.
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp 3 месяца назад
​@@aodhanmonaghan1268 Not quite. Normandy and Lancaster are royal peculiers, so they use the male term for their duke even though she be a woman. Not so for York, Edinburgh, Kent, Cornwall, etc.
@mrfrye18
@mrfrye18 2 месяца назад
we have sooo many castles and cathedrals, we like to preserve our history in the uk. 1 of few things that makes me pround to be English 😊 as for the lake district, its more amazing than the video shown. 1 of my fave places in the uk to get away to when i need to take a couple of days away 😊
@werewolf195
@werewolf195 2 месяца назад
Hebden Bridge is only 4 miles down the road, 2 hours your in the Lake District and Few hours more and you are in southern Scotland. Fly in to Manchester and see the beautiful North .Edinburgh , York, Newcastle are all easily accessible by train,bus or car. The only thing that will eat you is the fly’s in I think August in the Highlands. London is very expensive compared to the North. We are very friendly and welcoming.
@hobi1kenobi112
@hobi1kenobi112 2 месяца назад
The whole Widdop/Gorple Reservoir area outside Hebden is as wild and fantastic as it gets.
@JuneSteel
@JuneSteel 3 месяца назад
Just wish you would listen more to the commentary then you would know that the ruined building is an old abbey (cathedral)
@susanroberts2289
@susanroberts2289 3 месяца назад
I agree. 1) Whitby, Yorkshire is a place people go back to time and time again. It is totally authentic and there is a great association with Dracula. And, yes, ‘killer fish and chips’ are also sold there. 2) Nothing, absolutely Nothing, can be like or compared with York in Yorkshire. 3) The Lake District is stunning but the speaker hasn’t pronounced the town of Keswick properly… it’s pronounced as “Kezzick”. 4) Northumbria is simply, is the hidden gem of England. 5) Manchester is steeped in history and its association with Abraham Lincoln. It was also the first industrial city in the world and the first ever railway journey that ran from there to Liverpool thirty miles away. Liverpool is world famous for many things as well as the four musical lads who came from there. 6) Here’s a kindly tip for your next blog. A palace isn’t a castle and a castle isn’t an abbey. But I really enjoyed your podcast. Cheers😊
@TheDrewit76
@TheDrewit76 3 месяца назад
All great stuff there Susan, but I’d just like to politely correct you on one thing. The first railways were in the North East, where the first locomotives were invented. Freight lines were first used to take the coal from the mines to the ports and the first passenger line was Stockton to Darlington.
@susanroberts2289
@susanroberts2289 3 месяца назад
@@TheDrewit76 👍Yes, I did know that the first travelling train was in the NE, Yaaaay! but what I had in mind was the first commercial railway journey with passengers between two cities. Whichever one or way we view it… they’re firsts and they’re a long way north of The Wash.🚂🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿😘
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 3 месяца назад
Just please don't choose videos by Ryan Shirley (I don't know if that's the right way to say his last name - but that's how it sounds!) Anyway, his frequent mispronunciations of our beautiful countryside sites and towns / cities are, _really_ extremely frustrating...and not just by me!! Admittedly, his filming via drone etc, are great...but knowing / learning how to say place-names properly would surely help you find how to get to the places.🤞🤔😏🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿❤️🇬🇧🙂🖖
@sjm6963
@sjm6963 3 месяца назад
I couldn't believe he pronounced the letter W when he said Keswick. From an American I can understand but an Englishman? Bloody Southerners! 😂
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 3 месяца назад
@@sjm6963 It might just be another AI thingy?!
@SofaandChill
@SofaandChill День назад
Durham lad here, very lucky to live walking distance from the Cathedral! I would love to spend time in Florida and see the difference which I am sure I will one day! Great video
@kevwarner2978
@kevwarner2978 3 месяца назад
I live in north yorkshire. And convert some of those old stone buildings into homes. Obviously building control is strict on these buildings in keeping with the age and culture of its surroundings. And where i live in a converted barn, my neighbours are sheep, cows and horses. Brilliant video 👌
@TimeyWimeyLimey
@TimeyWimeyLimey 3 месяца назад
The Lake District is definitely worth it. You'll find a lot of outdoor pursuits places there that offer canoe trips, abseiling, even caving if you're adventurous. I'm sure I've seen somewhere that there are castle Air B+Bs and there are old castles and manors that are now hotels.
@speleokeir
@speleokeir 3 месяца назад
There's not much caving in the Lake District thought there are mines, but it's right next to the Yorkshire Dales which has loads of caves as it's limestone. The Mendip Hills in Somerset, Brecon Beacons in S.Wales and Peak District in Derbyshire are the other main caving areas.
@wycliffeb
@wycliffeb 3 месяца назад
We do realise how beautiful our country is. I live in Cardiff, Wales the fastest growing city in Europe and a truly fantastic place to live.
@MrsLynB
@MrsLynB 3 месяца назад
Absolutely love Wales. My Nanna was Welsh so in the blood x
@MaxwellMoore-d1u
@MaxwellMoore-d1u 3 месяца назад
Eeh by Eck Lad come North and bring the Mrs as well ,I'll show thee me Whippets .
@TimeyWimeyLimey
@TimeyWimeyLimey 3 месяца назад
Just for the record, whippets are racing dogs similar to greyhounds, he's not being rude.
@davepeachey1140
@davepeachey1140 3 месяца назад
Hi I worked as a chef in the pub in Malham back in the 1980s and would often take a walk up to Malham cove to get some of those beautiful views and it was one of my favourite places to visit on my days off .I have really fond memories of my time there. If you do come back to uk in the future I would highly recommend you visit Malham.We are blessed in the UK to live in such a beautiful part of the world
@simonbarnwell7787
@simonbarnwell7787 6 часов назад
You are so appreciative and respectfull and would be very welcome , i'd love to bump into some visitors like you .
@jezlanejl
@jezlanejl 3 месяца назад
During the ice age Britain was covered in ice, as it warmed and the ice melted it carved the hills, that's why they look so rounded, in the lake district and Scotland the lakes are basically puddles from the ice age... PS, don't forget the South of England, you get the New forest, South downs, Devon and Cornwall, Stonehenge, also it's the sunniest part of the Uk....apparently.
@AnneDowson-vp8lg
@AnneDowson-vp8lg 3 месяца назад
The reason there are so many castles, cathedrals and abbeys is that after 1066 when William the Conqueror invaded England and became William I, he brought the latest fortifications technology from the Continent, gave land to his relatives, friends and those who had been loyal to him and told them to build large castles to intimidate the English. Some of them were were reserved for the King and his relatives. Some castles are still lived in but many have been ruined by war over the years. After the English Civil War, 1644 to 1651, many of them were 'slighted', deliberately ruined so they c
@AnneDowson-vp8lg
@AnneDowson-vp8lg 3 месяца назад
ouldn't be used in war again. In the 1280s, Edward I finally conquered the whole of Wales and put up so many castles that there are more castles there than any other country in Europe, and it's a small country. Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries after falling out with the Pope over his divorce from Catherine of Aragon and marriage to Anne Boleyn, he gave some land and buildings to his cronies who put up country houses, some became Church of England parish churches and some just became ruins as local people just took away the stones for their own use. I'm a proud Yorkshire woman. Yorkshire is the biggest county in England. When the Vikings took over in 865 they divided it into thirds, or ridings, West Riding, North Riding and East Riding. It stayed like that until 1974. York is the county town of Yorkshire. Now it is divided into North, East, South and West Yorkshire. I live in West Yorkshire. Please would you mind not talking over the commentary of the video as you're missing on valuable information and so are the rest of us. Otherwise a very good video.
@HanChap2
@HanChap2 2 месяца назад
I take my children on walks up the hills and we hunt for sea shells. They're absolutely fascinated with the fact that they can find seashells so high up from the beaches (we live near a lot of beaches) and fossils too. We go fossil hunting on the beaches as well, but it's more surreal finding them where you wouldn't expect to find them. I can see their little minds totally blown by the fact that those hills, so far above the sea level, were once under water.
@grahamfrear9270
@grahamfrear9270 3 месяца назад
We do still build stone houses in the UK
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 3 месяца назад
p.p.s. Those boats you liked at Hebden Bridge are called Narrow boats upon the narrow canals throughout the countryside and some towns and cities. _The Thames is pronounced the River Temz_ ( _Not_ how you said it: Tames!) _Yorkshire_ _is_ the _County_ within which the town of _York_ (& others too, of course) is situated.
@TheGreenMan-u1b
@TheGreenMan-u1b 2 месяца назад
Really enjoyed your video, Yes there is so many places to visit, you would need to spend several months in the uk to appreciate just a few of them. The yorkshire dales on their own are amazing.
@Trippingthroughadventures
@Trippingthroughadventures 2 месяца назад
Thank you so much lol with enough support hopefully we can do that lol.
@paultricklebank
@paultricklebank 2 месяца назад
Yes I for one really do appreciate beautiful Britain. I live in a town called Bewdley but sometimes I take for granted that my street has houses from 1400s and all the others are 1700s but sometimes when I look outside at night it feels like being transported to the 18th century.
@debsday5445
@debsday5445 3 дня назад
Wow so fortunate ❤
@iainsan
@iainsan 3 месяца назад
The problem with the US is that you tear down buildings and replace them with new ones after about 50 years. Chicago, New York and Boston all existed by the 19th century, but there is precious left from that period. Most of the old buildings were torn down to build 20th century skyscrapers, etc... You would have more left of your past if you actually preserved more.
@trytellingthetruth.2068
@trytellingthetruth.2068 3 месяца назад
They make television programmes about how they tear down buildings from the 18th/19th century. One in particular is called "barnwood builders". That's how they treat architecture from the past.
@jameson5735
@jameson5735 3 месяца назад
Have a look in to Japanese architecture. They knock down and rebuild. The difference, they retain the design and idea. It's just a different way of thinking.
@DaveDunford
@DaveDunford Месяц назад
@@trytellingthetruth.2068 On the other hand, they protect 19th- and early 20th-century buildings as "historic" that we Brits wouldn't look twice at. I suspect things are a bit more enlightened now.
@trytellingthetruth.2068
@trytellingthetruth.2068 Месяц назад
@@DaveDunford I've already said they tear down buildings from the 19th century. They don't protect them, they turn them into something else.
Далее
AMERICANS REACT AND LEARN ABOUT THE BLITZ
26:29
Просмотров 217 тыс.
American Reacts to England's Greatest Castles
25:25
Просмотров 164 тыс.
I traveled around Britain. these things shocked me
13:24