I lived there for 2 years upon leaving the army and Richmond will always be a place I hold dear in my very being. I was so blessed to of met really awesome people. If you get a chance you should definitely visit it's amazing. And the butifull Easby Abbey. ❤️👍👍
Gorgeous video as always (topic, views, stunning video quality and... comments!). Nice ricochets on the river! (over ten?) Congrats to the Director, the Editor and the Producer! Merci Noel!
Lived there for many years and took it for granted. Now I live an hour away in Skipton, North Yorkshire if you ever get the chance come visit North Yorkshire you won’t regret it
How to be you po Getaways with Noel, ang ganda talaga ng vlogs mo marami akong natutunan.pang international Nat Geo ka tlga. ang galing nong sa pag tapon ng bato.
I have just been to item and today, as part of a hike. On the hike I passed by Aske Hall, which h is a must see historic bnuildinp g too. I enjoyed your tour very much! Thank you Noel!
My guess is you passed through Gilling West on that hike. I grew up in Gilling and still have family there whom I visit. Richmond is a beautiful town and I plan to move back there soon.
@@wondrinminstrel oh, I can't say. I followed the hike leader. We passed the majestic Aske Hall and Stable Block, if that's any help? Yes Richmond is beautiful, and I enjoyed my visit here. I have been before. It's a beautiful market town to move to.
The building he walks past at 5.30 secs used to be Richmond lower school. 9.53 is what I call the back road into Richmond Centre, it's a dodgy road it's where I crashed my car lol. Richmondshire is an amazing place to live, I'm very lucky 😊
Noel, nice video however please, please learn the correct pronunciation for local names and places check your facts the road to Catterick was built in 1915 by 5000 German POW's not as you state Italian
Thank you for your comment. As English language is not my mother tongue it is a challenge for me to pronounce words like native speakers. In linguistics, non-native speakers usually experience a phonological representation in the mental lexicon and articulatory constraints, which somehow explains what non-native speakers encounter as they learn to pronounce English sounds. With regards to the road to Catterick, I stand to be corrected and an erratum in the description section was created to acknowledge your valuable comments.
@@sarahwood1693 sure no, I'm bloody certain and if you pop along to the green Howard's Museum You will find conclusive evidence or alternatively You can go online to the same sauce and find out the facts for yourself. Also to leave you better informed the Italians were our allies during world war I so it's highly unlikely that they had been prisoners of war now isn't it?
@@elizaf3082 well mispronunciation is something that probably dogs all of us and though irritating can be overlooked but straightforward factual mistakes.... not so much