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Summer 2018 in Cornwall was hot and dry with hardly any rain for 3 months, the grass went brown, I live here, recorded 29 deg C in july in Bodmin for many days at my weather station. If you visit in Autumn, expect variable weather, especially this far north, when the equinoxial storms from the Atlantic move in. It is now mid Winter and sunny and 11 or 12 deg C, try finding that anywhere in the World this far from the equator in Winter, where -20 deg C is the norm!
So nice of you to say, most people don't recognise the work that goes into it - always nice to hear from someone who appreciates on that level! Thank you.
Love this. I've only recently moved to Cornwall and even though I'd visited before, I saw my first Minack production last summer. It was mind blowing! We saw Sweeney Todd. We were then lucky enough to see the Christmas concert. Both times it rained and Christmas was FREEZING, but you take a cushion and a load of waterproofs, and I had my coffee in a thermos. Best theatre experience ever. X
In a way, I'm glad you saw Lands End on a more typical (for the UK) windy day as it all adds to the drama of the location. Basically there is no land mass to stop those south westerly winds as they come in off thousands of miles of Atlantic Ocean, so the south west takes the full brunt! I last visited there in the summer of 1967 and it was blowing a gale then too, so little changes :)
@@DanegerAndStacey I have been there many times, winter and summer. It can be amazing with blue sea and all blue sky. It can be hot and very windy at the same time. Winter with horizontal rain is a challenge.
Haha that's brilliant! For us it definitely is, we've been in sun only for the last 2 years of travel for the most part... quite fun though layering up.
You fixed the flag!..... and made it to Falmouth. My lil home away from home. Hope ya'll got a Philps pasty. How could anyone not love Cornwall?? Proper job!
Great work guys,try coming in the summer next time lol,really enjoyed it because on most vids similar to these theres too much talking & not enough scenery shown,you give just enough history then on with the views......Perfect
I went there with my girlfriend almost two months ago and went swimming at the beach you just showed! it is really clear but that wind makes it so cold that I could only stay in for like 5 min. So cool to see it from your point of view though, best that your back in Bali now!
Stoked that you've got to see it yourself - was it super busy that time of year? Looks like the ultimate beach spot from above anyway, few more rays of sun and we'd be happy
@@DanegerAndStacey It wasn't that busy surprisingly, maybe it was because its quite difficult to get to without having a car yourself maybe, its the best i've seen in the UK so far though!
Always love watching your journey Daneger & Stacey❤️❤️ cute couples.. thanks for sharing.. i will travel outside Southeast Asia one day..🙏 Safe travel always, have a cozy one, and live happily ever after😊😘
I like this video. What a good looking couple and you seem like genuine people. :) I'm searching places in Cornwall to visit this Spring. Hard to pick one place for just 3 nights.
Daneger and Stacey that’s pretty efficient considering you guys are youtubers (all the equipment). Looking forward to the packing video 🤗🤗🤗 hugs from Canada.
Great video and I love Cornwall. Used to live there and have been there four times this year so far as it's only a three hour drive for me. However...... Surprised Stacey didn't get told off for eating the cream tea wrong. Cornish Cream Teas have Jam first then Cream on top! She had it cream and then Jam. That's a Devonshire Cream Tea. Enjoy though and keep up the great work with the Vlogs.
Ahh Marc - you might have seen in the 3 or 4 videos before this we've had cream tea daily and always ate it the 'correct way' depending on where we are... but the Devon way is definitely our preference and this was the first time we went bugger it and just ate it for the taste.
@@DanegerAndStacey haha.. I did watch the other videos but after and out of order. Great videos as always. Thanks also for your hints and tips on Krakow. (especially the free walking tours) came in very handy when we went last month 👍🏼
I wonder how you two will survive Norway, ICeland,Greenland and Canada in winter? hmm my advise- a lot of warm scarfs will help to the face and neck, and gloves for the hands...although they are not helpful to hold the cam and phones...
When I was at Lands End, i was wearing shorts and a t-shirt. Looks like it's a wee bit cooler now. LOL I had some of the tastiest cornish pasties in Penzance! Can you please stop torturing me with creamed tea? I'm on keto now and can't keep watching you eat such tasty sweet and carby deliciousness!
Wow - either the weather was amazing or you're brave... or maybe both? Depends if you're doing fortnightly re-feeds though, you could eat a loooot of scones on a refeed day :P
@@DanegerAndStacey The weather was totally brilliant when I visited. The sun was out, wind was pleasant and temp was around 21C. I don't know if you've noticed my travel vlogs of late but I've piled on the weight since I started my foodie adventure four months back. In fact, one sub said that my face is starting to look like the moon (jokingly of course). LOL I'm trying hard to keep around 9 net carbs or below. Will do re-feed days once I've reached my target fat loss (not concerned about weight so much) goal.
Can I make a small request? In your series on a particular place, could you please number the separate videos. It doesn't always matter, but sometimes gets confusing when you refer back to something I haven't seen yet. Thanks.
Lands End is the most westerly, but not the most southerly point in England. It was spoiled many years ago now, when it was bought by a private developer
The whole of the West of Britain gets all the Westerly winds rain ( and storms ) from the Atlantic Ocean first. Hence all the greenery. Conversly, the Eastern side id dryer and warmer
As is the case everywhere (but especially Britain) the weather is important, a nice and Sunny warm day, is 50% of the enjoyment, in my opinion. OR, as they say in the Lake District, It's not the weather thats bad, you have the wrong clothes on that's all'.
Essentially English cream tea, its a scone with clotted cream and jam + a cup of tea. The Cornish part is putting the jam first, then the cream on top. That distinction makes it 'theirs'.
@@DanegerAndStacey a real Cornish cream tea is a Cornish Split, its a kind of sweetened soft bread roll, then jam then thick crusty clotted cream, all washed down with a cup of white tea, no sugar 💖
Pirates were real, The Admiral Benbow pub is in Penzance and dates back beyond the pirate days, but there is a tunnel that pirates used that runs from the beach to the pub. The pub is mentioned I think in the book Treasure Island.
Cornwall isn't known for it's pirates lol.. we were known for our smuggling entirely different thing! And we only did that because of the high taxes imposed on the salt to fund another royal war! We used to supply the majority of pilchards and to do that we needed salt. Without the fish we didn't feed ourselves... but the price of the salt was four times what the fish were worth. So just to correct your history lesson! :D Also another myth we didn't wreck ships either, because as hundreds of sailors have stated over and over again, you steer away from light.. not towards it so if someone was waving a lantern on the cliffs you'd steer away. It was something that Lyods bank started, because they got fed up with paying out due to all the shipwrecks off our Cornish coastline. It didn't matter that, Cornwall has had dangerous waters and coastline forever! Again this has been proven over and over again.. and of course not ONE PERSON, in Cornwall has ever been tried for wrecking... In fact if it wasn't for all the Cornish in villages and towns that turned out time and time again to try and rescue these men (many who died in the process) the deaths would have been double! Literally entire coastle villages turned out to help.... and if you go check the Gibson collection you'll even see the lines that the village people held to allow for the ship moving in the sea to get a breaches boy across. It was also a Cornishman Henry Trengrouse who invented the breeches boy and rocket to aide rescue! As well as the life jacket and a self righting life boat..
Lands end was named lands end because it was the end of the known world before America wad discovered/documented, also you went to porthcourno and didn't mention once anything about it's telecommunications history.
Should see Porth Curno at low tide it's even better. Sadly Lands End has been spoilt by a company turning into what I can best describe as a tacky tourist theme park with shops etc, aimed at the tourist trade.
@@DanegerAndStacey true but going up on to bodmin moors in sun an having drink at famous JAMACA INN.. bodmin moors are stunning . Iv spent alot time on those moors.
lol... I'm just going to say it, because it needs to be said haha.. "Jam first!" :D You're in cornwall not devon haha... You should have visited Cape Cornwall for views, lands end is just a torist trap now. It used to be beautiful when I was young before they built the amuzement trap and hotel... yuck, none of us locals visit it any more.. :( Back then it was just cliff walks, and gauze bush, and of course the fist and last house. Sadly when Cornwall started really booming in torist trade from sixties onwards everything slowly started to change down here. Until it resulted in places changing drastically and you end up with the monstrosity that's there at lands end. Thanks for that Peter de Savary!
We tried both ways, being sure to only experiment in the right locations, but kept coming back around to cream first IF it's think and clotted. Shame that things have changed so much!
@@DanegerAndStacey By the way (as a Cornish historian) can I just correct you on the whole smuggling thing.. firstly we didn't hit boats, we weren't pirates, and while we are at it, we also weren't wreckers either, (a rumour started by Lloyds of London, due to the large number of ships that floundered on our coastline, that they didn't want to pay up the insurance on) I know you didn't mention wreckers, but I thought I'd clear that one up for anyone else reading this lol.. and it had nothing to do with luxury items lol.. Not in the begining anyway. Don't know who told you that. The fact is smuggling was down to the crown levieing a REALLY high tax on salt (a lot higher than they levied on luxury items, so Cornwall was hit the hardest) to fund their war against first against America and then France.. and as cornwall's main industry apart from our mining, was Pilchard Fishing, it required a HUGE amount of high grade salt. After they increased the cost of the salt, it became so that the salt cost ten times more than what the fish were worth. So we lost all means of supporting ourselves, and meant we started to starve, which is why we started smuggling. Our fishermen would go across to France and bring back brandy, tobacco, tea and silks to sell. This kept entire villages from starving to death in the 18th century and early 19th. :D There isn't a town in Cornwall that didn't have a customs pipe at one time or another, Falmouth were I am from still has their customs pipe, known locally as The King's Pipe. You need a better guide, if that is what you were told by the guide lol...
Unfortunately you have come at the wrong time of year. At the end of October the temperature drops....and doesn't climb again until March. I have been waiting to see your faces when it does all week. . I think Rabbies do a superb job and really show off the country well. I might do a trip to Yorkshire next year.
Can't have it all we suppose, less people (which we love) because of the weather but the rain and wind is unpredictable. A bit of shock in this one, but we sort of like it as a change from the heat.
Shame you ended up at Land's End, a tacky tourist trap. The previous "Land's End" is a few miles along the coast and is called Cape Cornwall and is much more beautiful, wilder and not touristy.
No kidding around there, is literal is no land but cliffs and sea, such beautiful sights behoove ones imagination of actually going there and feeling that cold wind kicking your teeth in!! Glad they found a shelter from the wind that had a cool story as well.
Daneger and Stacey yeah, the whole area is cut off with a booth saying £10 per small picture and it can only be taken with their photographer. it was the only disappointing attraction in Cornwall. Everything else was beautiful