13 British Places You CAN'T Find On The Map 🗺❌ (Yorkshire, Spaghetti Junction...)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 2 авг 2024
  • Today we're introducing you to 13 British place names that you CAN'T find on the map! From "Spaghetti Junction" to "Auld Reekie," these UK place names are famous, but can't be located using a map. Instead, you'll have to rely on good ol' local knowledge to get to these British places.
    Do YOU know of more British places that are missing from maps? Drop a comment down below sharing your local wisdom with us (and make sure you let us know how to pronounce these British place names)! 😆
    👍 SUBSCRIBE - for fresh British culture videos 3x per week ruclips.net/user/wanderingra...
    🔴 WATCH NEXT
    👉 British Food BANNED In America • British Foods BANNED I...
    👉 Our Top 10 Favourite Things About The UK • Top 5 Things Americans...
    ❤️️ PATREON
    Support the channel and get 3 exclusive videos every week! Additional perks include live streams, behind-the-scenes videos, our private Facebook group, and more! / wanderingravens
    🌍 JOIN THE ADVENTURE
    Follow our social media pages for updates and additional content!
    Facebook Page: / wanderingrav…
    Instagram: / wandering.r…
    Travel Blog: www.wanderingravens.org/
    Pinterest: / thewanderin .
    💑 WHO ARE THE WANDERING RAVENS?
    Hi! We're Eric & Grace, a couple of travelers who have been wandering around the world for over 3 years. We make videos about travel and British culture and release new episodes 3x per week.
    Don't forget to subscribe and hit the notification bell so that you get an alert every time we release a new travel & culture video!
    Our favorite aspect of doing RUclips is interacting with you in the comments, so make sure you stop by and say hi! 😊 Do YOU know of more British places that are missing from maps? Drop a comment down below sharing your local wisdom with us (and make sure you let us know how to pronounce these British place names)! 😄
    #british #britishculture #britishslang

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @WanderingRavens
    @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +6

    🔴Watch next: Americans Try Pronouncing British CITIES! ruclips.net/video/Rum4irM5rQQ/видео.html
    💌Want 3 additional videos per week? Join our Patreon community! ➡️ www.patreon.com/wanderingravens

    • @joeswanson7634
      @joeswanson7634 4 года назад +1

      Have you guys visited Newark on Trent ?

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +1

      @@joeswanson7634 Not yet!

    • @pjmoseley243
      @pjmoseley243 4 года назад

      theres two more! 1) Moscow 2) EXON

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +1

      @@pjmoseley243 Thank you!!

    • @pjmoseley243
      @pjmoseley243 4 года назад

      @@WanderingRavens EXON is in Devon on the River EX and Moscow is in Cumbria neat the Northumberland county border and near the Scottish English border. I have been to both places, but cant find them on the map or any map. not even GOOGLE maps

  • @bryanhindle8307
    @bryanhindle8307 4 года назад +72

    You won't find the "Black Country" on a map even though it has a Museum dedicated to it.

    • @RosLanta
      @RosLanta 4 года назад +7

      I was just thinking of Black Country! Should definitely be on the list.

    • @PixelsAtDawn
      @PixelsAtDawn 4 года назад +1

      I came here just to say that. It's generally the most surprising people who aren't native!

    • @jaiji
      @jaiji 3 года назад +2

      I’m a bit late to the party but I was thinking they’d missed the Black Country too

    • @Villaboy78
      @Villaboy78 3 года назад +1

      So often have to stop to explain when talking about the black country online... Remember kids , pollution bad

    • @marcusgreen4609
      @marcusgreen4609 3 года назад +2

      I’m from the Black Country and think we should’ve had a mention, we even have our own alphabet.

  • @martinbatley9512
    @martinbatley9512 4 года назад +13

    Growing rhubarb in the dark makes it put all it's energy into creating a tall stem, or stick, as it searches for light. This results in a "stick" of rhubarb that is thinner and less fibrous than normal with an under developed leaf. It is also paler in colour and sweeter making it more suitable for culinary use.

    • @gavinparks5386
      @gavinparks5386 3 года назад

      The plants need to be grown in the open for a few years to build up their root reserves , then they can be "forced " inside once more.

  • @keithorbell8946
    @keithorbell8946 4 года назад +5

    Yorkshire dialect has strong roots in Old Norse. I remember my Dad having a conversation with a Norwegian, he using his Yorkshire Dialect and she speaking Norwegian.

  • @beverlytaff4914
    @beverlytaff4914 4 года назад +5

    The funny thing is that although Bristol is deemed to be in 'The West Country', yet, Edinburgh is actually further West than Bristol but it's on the East Coast.

  • @applejuice5272
    @applejuice5272 4 года назад +70

    Eric: *puts water-filled mug in to microwave*
    Yorkshire: "BLASPHEMY!"

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +1

      WHAT'S THAT?? A voice from beyond the grave?? I thought Yorkshire died in 1972!

    • @garyscholes9567
      @garyscholes9567 4 года назад +8

      @@WanderingRavens Hello guys. Love your channel! Just thought I'd point out that Yorkshire was never an administrative county in the proper sense - as you say in the video, it was split into the 3 Ridings. So it didn't really cease to exist in the early '70s with local government reorganisation. Traditional Yorkshire is still, however, a Ceremonial County, with its own Lord Lieutenant (whatever the hell that means :-) ). Back in Viking times, there was of course the Kingdom of York (upon which Yorkshire is loosely based) which actually pre-exists the Kingdom of England.

    • @unknownregions5014
      @unknownregions5014 4 года назад +7

      @@WanderingRavens Tell that to Yorkshire Tea, one of the most popular tea brands in the UK

    • @tonys1636
      @tonys1636 4 года назад +1

      @@garyscholes9567 The Lord Lieutenant is the Monarchs official representative in the County and will greet the Monarch whenever they visit and carry out ceremonial duties on behalf of, they all have one, some have to represent more than one County as in Yorkshire or Sussex ( East and West ).

    • @dasy2k1
      @dasy2k1 4 года назад +3

      Let's face it microwaving water is the least of the American blasphemies regarding tea....
      The Americans think correct tea party behaviour involves a boatload of tea and a harbour!

  • @nevillemason6791
    @nevillemason6791 4 года назад +10

    My favourite is on the M62 motorway in West Yorkshire. Were it passes at high level over the Pennine Hills the carriageways are several hundred yards apart due to the topography. Between the carriageways is a single isolated farm that's known as: 'The little house on the prairie'.

  • @GenialHarryGrout
    @GenialHarryGrout 4 года назад +65

    I'm an old(ish) Yorkshireman and I only recognise Yorkshire as one large county.

    • @tonycasey3183
      @tonycasey3183 4 года назад +7

      I am an oldish Yorkshireman and Yorkshire will always exist in the hearts and minds of stout Yorkshire folk. The maps says otherwise, though.

    • @ianpark1805
      @ianpark1805 4 года назад +8

      I’m a very old and stout Yorkshireman and I can confirm that in our hearts and minds it’s still a whole entity. Now then, think on.

    • @andyrjs
      @andyrjs 4 года назад +7

      Absolutely, Yorkshire is one place to most Yorkshire folk.

    • @METALFREAK03
      @METALFREAK03 4 года назад +1

      And I only recognise it as "London's countryside".

    • @martinbatley9512
      @martinbatley9512 4 года назад +5

      One county with three Ridings.

  • @davehopkin9502
    @davehopkin9502 4 года назад +3

    The Caledonian Canal runs from Inverness to Fort William it used 4 natural lochs (including Loch Ness) to get through the Great Glen - you can hire boats to do the trip

  • @julianb1474
    @julianb1474 4 года назад +10

    I always thought "Home Counties" directly abutted London. So not Sussex.

  • @myles1718
    @myles1718 4 года назад +63

    CAMBRIDGESHIRE HAS NEVER BEEN OR EVER WILL BE PART OF THE "HOME COUNTIES" IT IS A PART OF EAST ANGLIA

    • @johnp8131
      @johnp8131 4 года назад +1

      I agree. I moved from Herts to Cambs thirty odd yeas ago...........Thankfully!

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +1

      Good to know! :D

    • @kevinjones4559
      @kevinjones4559 4 года назад +5

      Sussex and Bedfordshire usually not and Oxfordshire definitely not part of Home Counties.

    • @ianprince1698
      @ianprince1698 4 года назад +1

      @@kevinjones4559 they are the counties that border the City of London with its Lord Mayor but then London kept growing and growing

    • @lorddaver5729
      @lorddaver5729 4 года назад

      @@WanderingRavens What about Essex...sometimes called "Londonshire".

  • @davidmarsden9800
    @davidmarsden9800 4 года назад +4

    The English Riviera was coined by the Great Western Railway in the 1920's and displayed on railway posters in stations etc

  • @andyt8216
    @andyt8216 4 года назад +4

    There will always be a Yorkshire!
    Unfortunately the situation was a little more complex than you mentioned. The East Riding of Yorkshire was actually scrapped (dare I say murdered) in 1974 and replaced with an unpopular artificial county called Humberside (yuk) which included northern parts of Lincolnshire. This was so absolutely hated in East Yorkshire that the county was scrapped in 1996 after 24 years and East Yorkshire / East Riding of Yorkshire was reborn. Yay!
    Alas, the hated H word lives on for the time being in the name of the police, fire service and local BBC radio station (for old folk). There is also a very small airport in Northern Lincolnshire called Humberside Airport. It also explains why the "region" is known as "Yorkshire and the Humber" as the sliced off part of Lincolnshire is still often included with 4 counties of Yorkshire for some purposes. Its a relic of the 3 Yorkshire 1974 counties and Humberside making up an area together.
    Perhaps, it was because the East Riding was reborn that it wanted to reinstate the word Riding even though the borders are slightly different to the pre-1974 East Riding.

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +2

      That's so interesting! Thank you for sharing these facts with us :) May Yorkshire live on!! 💪🏻

    • @andyt8216
      @andyt8216 4 года назад +1

      @@WanderingRavens Ha, you're welcome and yes, vive le Yorkshire. Lancashire may have had a Merseyside sliced off it at the same time, but we Yorkshire folk, didn't put up with that "Humberside" nonsense for long! :)

    • @Woollylinnet
      @Woollylinnet 4 года назад +1

      @@andyt8216 As I see it, out of all the 1974 counties only Merseyside really caught on. Probably because Scousers tend to think they're something apart from the rest of us.

  • @HighHoeKermit
    @HighHoeKermit 4 года назад +14

    Wow, League of Gentlemen reference! Welcome to Royston Vasey, you'll never leave!

    • @HighHoeKermit
      @HighHoeKermit 3 года назад

      @jason longsden I did yes, that's why they got him to be the Mayor. I also used to drive through Hadfield (which was used as Royston Vasey) every day as I worked in the next town. The local cafe I went to every lunch time still had the words "you'll never leave... much" on the menu, despite being at least a decade later.

  • @martinmaynard141
    @martinmaynard141 4 года назад +9

    And Middlesex is part of the "Home Counties" but was abolished at the same time as Yorkshire.

  • @josephturner4047
    @josephturner4047 3 года назад +3

    Rhubarb was well known for growing on privy sites. When privies were at the bottom of the garden and periodically moved, the ones with pits that is, not buckets, the old site would provide an abundance of rhubarb.
    Rhubarb originated in China. One Emperor during the opium wars suggested that they stop selling the stuff to us so that we would die of constipation.

  • @Captain_Yorkie1
    @Captain_Yorkie1 4 года назад +4

    Yorkshire doesn't exist
    Me: Loads double barrel shotgun and puts on flat cap. What did you say

  • @joespence954
    @joespence954 4 года назад +5

    Great video! I’m from the East Riding of Yorkshire and we used to be part of an area called ‘Humberside’ (the area around the River Humber) which contained the East Riding, including the city of Kingston-upon-Hull, and North Lincolnshire. However, as of the 1990s, this was abolished but the riding was kept as before, whereas South, North and West Yorkshire removed the riding parts. Yorkshire is also rightly known as ‘God’s Own County’ and for some reason to come from Yorkshire is something to be incredibly proud of. I have Yorkshire Pride! Hope that’s helpful :-)

    • @joespence954
      @joespence954 4 года назад

      You should also look into the history of the street in Hull called ‘The Land of Green Ginger’. Lots of fairytales about it. Definitely a video opportunity here

  • @Someloke8895
    @Someloke8895 4 года назад +8

    It's nicknamed Tusky, because of an incident quite a while back.
    A traveller was passing a Yorkshire Farmer, harvesting his Rhubarb crop using his newly acquired Malamute farm dog, which he was handing Rhubard stalks to and the dog was dropping them into a basket by the edge of the field.
    The Traveller pointed at what was going on and asked : "Hello, what's this?"
    Farmer replied: "That's T'usky in't it."
    And the name stuck.

    • @tonycasey3183
      @tonycasey3183 4 года назад +3

      Hahaha
      Nobody outside Yorkshire got the joke.
      Well played, that man.

    • @EvsEntps
      @EvsEntps 3 года назад +1

      I'm from East Anglia and I have no idea what that means.

    • @schofe7692
      @schofe7692 3 года назад +3

      I'm from Huddersfield, unfortunately I got it 😂

    • @Lazmanarus
      @Lazmanarus Год назад +1

      I'm Welsh & I got it, it comes from the Yorkshire habit of dropping the "he" part of the, so the house would t'ouse, the mill would be t'mill.

  • @beantravelling
    @beantravelling 4 года назад +14

    There is a very small village near where I used to live near Howden in Yorkshire. The road sign is there, there are a hand full of houses but it's not on a map. It's called - The Land Of Nod

    • @tonycasey3183
      @tonycasey3183 4 года назад +3

      I drive past there so often on the way to the East Coast and see the sign all the time. I never realised it wasn't on a map. I just checked. You're right!

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +2

      I love that name! I'll bet they sleep well there 😂

    • @tonycasey3183
      @tonycasey3183 4 года назад +1

      Isn't the Land of Nod from the old Testament?

    • @yorkshirecoastadventures1657
      @yorkshirecoastadventures1657 4 года назад +1

      I think thats near Swine?

    • @lyndapet1
      @lyndapet1 4 года назад

      My dad always talked about the Land of Nod airport.

  • @andrewsheppard1940
    @andrewsheppard1940 4 года назад +8

    The last thing I expected in one of your videos was The League of Gentlemen! Loved it :-)
    PS Your pronunciation of English place names is getting much better, keep it up.
    PPS Was going to mention The Black Country and The Magic Roundabout, but I see they have already been brought up in the comments

  • @davidcopplestone6266
    @davidcopplestone6266 4 года назад +22

    I live on the other side of Portsmouth Harbour, and can see one of the new carriers from my living room window.
    Eric has it right

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +1

      Brilliant! Thank you! :D

    • @russcattell955i
      @russcattell955i 4 года назад +3

      Portsmouth is Pompey and Plymouth is Guz in naval folklore. Guz because Devonport naval base is the first port of call from the Atlantic for a good "run ashore" and guzzle as much ale as a matelot wants.

    • @ccg8658
      @ccg8658 4 года назад +1

      @@russcattell955i I was always told the name "GUZ" came from the naval radio designation for Plymouth during WWII.
      Pompey nicknamed because Portsmouth held all the dens of iniquities like brothels etc found (and seen by the RN sailors visiting in the 1800s) in the Roman city of Pompey

  • @Villaboy78
    @Villaboy78 4 года назад +5

    Spaghetti Junction contains a canal , a viaduct , a railway , a motorway , and a couple of major A routes plus local traffic underneath. It’s nuts but the best thing is the lovely view of Villa Park ! Up the villa 💕

    • @arthurterrington8477
      @arthurterrington8477 3 года назад +2

      It's quite a sight walking along the canal tow path underneath it all. Aston Villa brought us Martin Laursen, so I can't fault Villa

    • @chasfaulkner2548
      @chasfaulkner2548 2 года назад

      Otherwise known as Witton Wanderers

    • @chasfaulkner2548
      @chasfaulkner2548 2 года назад

      KRO, SOTV

  • @JoshHCK
    @JoshHCK 4 года назад +48

    I shall swim to France and confiscate that microwave

  • @wscottwatson
    @wscottwatson 4 года назад +9

    The "reek" in Auld Reekie has got little to do with smell. It is specifically to do with chimney smoke.
    Another use of the word is in the Scottish well wishing phrase "lang may your lum reek". You can read this as "long may your chimney have smoke coming out". This is expressing a hope that you long have the wherewithal to heat your house and cook your food!

    • @iapetusmccool
      @iapetusmccool 4 года назад +2

      Reykjavik in Iceland has the same root.

  • @KD-wm5po
    @KD-wm5po 4 года назад +6

    The ‘Home Counties’ - to me this means ... counties directly bordering London, Tory voters, Daily Mail or Telegraph readers, listen to Radio 4 or 3, but NOT necessarily suburban (which just means the less urban area of a large town or city). Very much like ‘Middle England’, which extends to a broader area to also include central England and East Anglia.
    They both refer to attitudes and social class.

  • @PedroConejo1939
    @PedroConejo1939 4 года назад +3

    The Landsker Line - a linguistic line in West Wales separating English- and Welsh-speaking areas. This gives rise to the area unofficially called Little England Past Wales, which is nothing to do with the number of English people who live there but is due to the language. It goes back to the 11th century.

    • @carahughes1412
      @carahughes1412 4 года назад +1

      Always heard of parts of Pembrokshire being little England in Wales. Tenby springs to mind especially, but didn't know about the Landsker Line, it makes sense now thanks :)

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +1

      This is a great one to know about! Thank you for sharing that with us!

  • @Callrissian
    @Callrissian 4 года назад +2

    One you might of missed is "The Jurassic Coast" this refers to the coastline of Dorset where about 90% of all British Fossils have been found. They are so common here that if you know what you're looking for they can still be found even today just walking along the shore.

  • @franl155
    @franl155 4 года назад +5

    I've heard London referred to as "The Smoke" - lol note the definite article there!
    It's pronounced Portsmuth - same as Dartmuth, Exmuth, and so on.
    Or, as I'm a cockney, it'd be Porstmuff, Dartmuff, etc

  • @sharonm3474
    @sharonm3474 4 года назад +12

    Yay!!! You mentioned stoke! My beloved potteries!
    Home of the humble cheesey oatcakes (not to be confused with the scottish oatcake) and ppl who look at the bottom of plates to see if it's one of ours.
    I'm a born and bred stokie and I'm very proud of my potteries roots.
    I think most ppl my age (36) and above have worked in a pottery factory or shops at some point in their lives. It's like a right of passage!!
    You said Portsmouth right! Well done you are figuring out our confusing language!!
    As always you are lovely and thank you for making me smile.

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад

      Hi Sharon! Thank you for the lovely comment! Did you learn to make pottery as a Stokie? That's so cool!

    • @sharonm3474
      @sharonm3474 4 года назад

      @@WanderingRavens I worked in the shop ☹️. BUT in order to work in the shop we had to have induction days where they would show us around the factory and teach us about the processes in the factory so we could tell people about the pottery.
      My mum worked in the factory checking the prints on plates.
      We made simple pottery in art lessons and glazed it and the teacher put it in a kiln.

    • @watersideanimals215
      @watersideanimals215 4 года назад +1

      I always look under cups and plates to see where they are made. I used to work at Wedgwood and Royal Doulton.

    • @martinmaynard141
      @martinmaynard141 4 года назад +1

      I'm from Middlesex (one of the former Home Counties) and was taken to Stoke by my poetry teacher to see how it was done!

    • @NemeZisUK
      @NemeZisUK 4 года назад +2

      I work in a Tile factory in Stoke

  • @rosiecass5837
    @rosiecass5837 4 года назад +27

    You pronounced Portsmouth perfectly, mate!

  • @michaelparkinson7567
    @michaelparkinson7567 4 года назад +1

    When the old county of Yorkshire was reorganized in the 70s, the East Riding part became part of Humberside together with a part of North Lincolnshire. It was officially no longer Yorkshire, although everybody still thought of themselves as from Yorkshire. The new county was so unpopular it was eventually abolished and the constituent bits returned to Yorkshire and Lincolnshire.

  • @treborbobby
    @treborbobby 4 года назад +27

    Eric, you are correct in your pronunciation of Portsmouth

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +2

      Wonderful! Thank you!

    • @marcusjohns5166
      @marcusjohns5166 4 года назад +1

      But your pronunciation of Torquay is VERY amusing!

    • @TRIXrWING
      @TRIXrWING 3 года назад +1

      @@marcusjohns5166 tour key

    • @TRIXrWING
      @TRIXrWING 3 года назад

      @@marcusjohns5166 my favorite is Derbyshire makes me laugh everytime they say it

    • @lanahands781
      @lanahands781 3 года назад

      @@marcusjohns5166 when did they say Torquay? I heard Torbay?

  • @peterpan6821
    @peterpan6821 4 года назад +22

    Yes, the Great Glen is fully navigable by boat and ship. The lochs have been joined by a series of canals and locks so as to shorten the journey by sea. It was a massive engineering achievement.

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +5

      Incredible! Would love to take a boat through that one day!

    • @dasy2k1
      @dasy2k1 4 года назад +1

      The Devil's Staircase (Banavie locks) is well worth a visit

    • @jillhobson6128
      @jillhobson6128 4 года назад +3

      @@dasy2k1 Neptune's Staircase

    • @Ramtamtama
      @Ramtamtama 4 года назад +3

      anything to do with Telford?

    • @raymartin7172
      @raymartin7172 4 года назад +3

      The stone on the east side of the Great Glen is European. On the west side it is north American. They are two different places. Continental drift

  • @welshdragon99
    @welshdragon99 4 года назад +5

    The majority of the Welsh population lives either in one of the large towns on the south coast between Newport and Llanelli or in the Valleys. Also, the Balti triangle in Birmingham, the Jurassic coast, the Welsh Marches, the Borders (the area on the Scottish side of the border between England and Scotland), the north, and the channel islands (in the Bristol channel including flatholm, steeholm, and lundy), aren't normally on maps...

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +1

      Thank you for these!! Will add them to the list for a potential part 2 :D

    • @philipellis7039
      @philipellis7039 4 года назад +2

      Ooh, Balti Triangle. Excellent.

  • @jamieo2147
    @jamieo2147 4 года назад +2

    Originally when Yorkshire was divided it was split into North Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, South Yorkshire and Humberside. But nobody in Humberside liked that because they identified as Yorkshire folk so they eventually got it changed again in 1996 most of Humberside became the East riding of Yorkshire and the rest mainly became North Lincolnshire

  • @duncansargent
    @duncansargent 4 года назад +2

    I am from Dorsetshire in the south of England. I would say that we are definitely in the West Country and would define the area as the old Saxon Kingdom of Wessex. Also Cornwall normally gets lumped in as it is otherwise on its own and isolated and afterall it is to the west of Wessex so why not?

  • @hadz8671
    @hadz8671 4 года назад +22

    In Gaelic "Mor" means big, so Gleann Mor is Gaelic for "Great Glen".

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +3

      Good to know! Thank you!

    • @ftumschk
      @ftumschk 4 года назад +1

      Beat me to it, Hadz.

    • @alexandergunn5143
      @alexandergunn5143 4 года назад

      Great Glen is a small village outside of Leicester too actually

    • @cymraegpunk1420
      @cymraegpunk1420 4 года назад

      In welsh Mor means sea, but can also be used to mean a lot of something :)

    • @kevinomalley9487
      @kevinomalley9487 4 года назад

      @Rhosyn Mintys In irish muir is sea and mor is big we also have fhairaige for sea

  • @gavinparks5386
    @gavinparks5386 4 года назад +4

    The land north of the Great Glen was once geologically part of America.It's a closed sea I think , and the rocks match with the Canadian north western seaboard.

  • @braces2
    @braces2 3 года назад +1

    What most people don't know is that beneath Spaghetti Junction is a canal junction. I have narrow - boated along these canals once on holiday. It is amazing to sail under this crazy junction.
    You should try a narrow boating holiday as it's so relaxing.
    Great video btw.

  • @elainebagpuss6407
    @elainebagpuss6407 4 года назад +2

    Just a quickie: The city of Bristol (which also has county status, though not referred to as such) is often included in The West Country groupings, regardless of what some folks further south like to say.😉

  • @DPYROAXIS
    @DPYROAXIS 4 года назад +22

    I know some Yorkshire people and they will tell you there is no north, south etc and there is only Yorkshire. Their place so I don't argue.

    • @simonh
      @simonh 4 года назад +4

      They're right. There is only Yorkshire! Roll with it, don't question! ;-)

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +2

      We'll roll with it :D

    • @simonh
      @simonh 4 года назад +3

      @@WanderingRavens I'm sure you'll have seen the Yorkshire Airlines advert, right? ruclips.net/video/6VLYpKGVBUg/видео.html

    • @Simon-ho9db
      @Simon-ho9db 3 года назад

      There are three types of people: those from Yorkshire, those who wish to be from Yorkshire and those with no ambition at all!

  • @mickb2009
    @mickb2009 4 года назад +19

    Yorkshire as a county exists where it belongs in the hearts of us Yorkshire folk . Tory jerrymandering can't split Gods Own County ask most Yorkshire Folk where they come from and they will answer Yorkshire not South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire and so on I was born in the West Riding of Yorkshire for example

    • @martynbush
      @martynbush 4 года назад +4

      What's the difference between a Yorkshire man and a coconut? You can get a drink out of a coconut.

    • @Kaylz29
      @Kaylz29 3 года назад +1

      So true! I don’t think I’ve ever said I’m from West Yorkshire

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 3 года назад

      @Jon Boylan What about the bits that are now in Lancashire!

    • @robertgrason393
      @robertgrason393 3 года назад

      @Jon Boylan a winner in the lottery of life

    • @arthurterrington8477
      @arthurterrington8477 3 года назад

      You were 'lucky' enough to get Tory jerrymandering. The 1970s changes were a much watered-down version of what the previous Wilson government had in mind (confer the Maude Radcliffe report)

  • @billyoneill7381
    @billyoneill7381 4 года назад +1

    Middlesex is an ancient county that was completely engulfed in Greater London in 1965. The only references to it are the towns, postcodes and the cricket team.

  • @bobbell4461
    @bobbell4461 3 года назад +1

    Canoeing the Great Glen is often used as an expedition task for those doing their Duke of Edinburgh's Gold award.

  • @Brookesworld777
    @Brookesworld777 4 года назад +24

    STOP WITH THE MICROWAVED TEA. 😂😂😂

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад

      😂😂

    • @Lily_The_Pink972
      @Lily_The_Pink972 3 года назад

      You said in another video that you don't use microwaves because you think they're unsafe. What changed?

  • @andyhepburn6855
    @andyhepburn6855 4 года назад +34

    London is the Big Smoke not the Old Smoke...

    • @RoyCousins
      @RoyCousins 4 года назад +9

      When I was a kid, London was called The Smoke.

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад

      Good to know! Thank you!

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад

      London seems to have many names! 😂

    • @tollyt7465
      @tollyt7465 4 года назад +10

      @@WanderingRavens A northerner went to London once and was reported to the police by worried Londoners.. He was charged with smiling and saying hello to people indescriminately.

    • @replevideo6096
      @replevideo6096 4 года назад +1

      @@RoyCousins I agree. If we were visiting London, we would say we're going down the smoke. Before the Clean Air Act took effect, we always arrived home with the inside of our collars black where the soot in the air had stuck to our sweat.

  • @werdnarotcorp8991
    @werdnarotcorp8991 4 года назад +1

    Love that you got the rhubarb triangle correct with Morley, Rothwell and Wakefield. The center of this triangle is East Ardsley where the forced rhubarb was put on the trains for London. However the name for rhubarb locally was not tusky but tushy. I am from east Ardsley/Thorpe the two villages close to the center of the triangle, though the most apt description nowadays is where the M1 meets the M62 motorway since Ardsley station closed in 1963..

  • @SteamboatWilley
    @SteamboatWilley 4 года назад +1

    The Caledonian Canal through the great glen (which connects and makes use of a number of lochs including Loch Ness) was built to allow ships to pass from the east coast to the west coast without going the long/hazardous way round via Cape wrath. Completed in 1822, it became redundant as a trade route as ocean going ships became too large to pass through it, but it is still used for leisure and the occasional coastal vessel carrying logs.

  • @brokenglass2069
    @brokenglass2069 4 года назад +9

    Yes i did has a small child my parents took me to a neightbours house. My father showed me a small shed went inside. Was so dark i could only see a candle. The noise i heard was so weird it freaked me out. Later did more research read about force growing amazing stuff.

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +1

      So weird! That would freak me out too!

    • @MrJonno85
      @MrJonno85 4 года назад +5

      Wondered where that story was going...

  • @paulbutler1473
    @paulbutler1473 4 года назад +14

    So how come you havent mentioned the .
    'Black Country'?

  • @michaelscott7166
    @michaelscott7166 4 года назад +1

    I can concur that you actually can hear forced rhubarb growing. I went to see one of the sheds on a school trip as a young kid. Put it this way I wouldn't want spend the night in one, it's kind of subtle but eerie creaking noises.

  • @aphishoutofwater7019
    @aphishoutofwater7019 4 года назад

    Hey guys
    Great video again, you both always tickle me pink :D
    There's a place on the Isle of Wight called, Smokey Hole, it always gets a little chuckle from me when I hear it said on the buses.
    This has nothing to do with your video but you should watch a few episodes of 'On the Buses'
    Have a great day!!
    xx

  • @mariuscheek
    @mariuscheek 4 года назад +10

    On the subject of road junctions, what about The Magic Roundabout?

    • @stephenphillip5656
      @stephenphillip5656 4 года назад

      Swindon. There's another one in Hemel Hempstead I'm told.

    • @channelwanderer7010
      @channelwanderer7010 3 года назад

      Haudagain roundabout

    • @andyp5899
      @andyp5899 3 года назад

      @@stephenphillip5656 The Hemel Hempstead is just by the Kodak building

  • @PeterDay81
    @PeterDay81 4 года назад +4

    I am from Erdington just up the road from Spaghetti junction a great place to learn to drive but can you say Spaghetti Junction with a Brummi accent?I now live in Droitwich Spa all the best and keep safe.

  • @claire4234
    @claire4234 4 года назад

    Home county girl here!! Love your videos . I’m learning so much about my own country watching these.

  • @RosLanta
    @RosLanta 4 года назад +2

    Similarly to Spaghetti Junction, if you say Roundabout City pretty much everyone will know you mean Milton Keynes.

  • @harrietrabbitts9
    @harrietrabbitts9 4 года назад +12

    Home Counties generally refers to the counties surrounding London. We definitely aren’t all white, middle class, church going people....

    • @mattybuividas9929
      @mattybuividas9929 4 года назад

      Live in Bedfordshire.
      Very multi cultural.
      Only 40 miles away something like that to London

    • @ethelmini
      @ethelmini 4 года назад +1

      It does fit in context though. It's where the well off professionals moved to out of London when the railways made commuting possible.

  • @eddiepilsman7130
    @eddiepilsman7130 4 года назад +36

    What about "THE BLACK COUNTRY" incorporates Dudley, Sandwell, Wolverhamptoon and Walsall

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +9

      Oh no! We missed one! Don't worry, if we can find enough names, we'll make a part 2 ;)

    • @Canalcoholic
      @Canalcoholic 4 года назад +5

      Careful there, Wolveramtun is a bit iffy and Saddle Town is a no-no. Best thing for Walsall is nuclear testing.

    • @Andy_U
      @Andy_U 4 года назад +1

      @ Dave Busby - We haven't been stopped from calling it that, yet, then?

    • @pauloconnor9522
      @pauloconnor9522 4 года назад +2

      Another one to add: Shakespeare Country!

    • @JamesKemmingsZ1K
      @JamesKemmingsZ1K 4 года назад +1

      @@Canalcoholic Wolverhampton born and bred, definitely black country.

  • @jamesmcclements4354
    @jamesmcclements4354 4 года назад

    Good to see another one lol thanks guys for the reply x

  • @HyperDaveUK
    @HyperDaveUK 4 года назад +3

    I lived at Spaghetti Junction for 20 years :-) Thanks for picking this topic! It won't fade from usage whilst the roads are there :-)

  • @tollyt7465
    @tollyt7465 4 года назад +30

    Can't find Yorkshire? Just shout "Oh Go help me" and the clouds part, rays of sun spatter down, Micheal Parkinson arrives, flat cap on head, whippet scurrying dutifly around his feet, Pint of Tetley tea in a mug gripped in his hand...
    Ps: Even thinking Yorkshire doesn't exist is Blasphemy, but actually saying it out loud will get you barred from Yorkshire for eternity, thereby preventing entry to heaven..

    • @markanne54
      @markanne54 4 года назад +2

      I remember a dyed-in-the-wool Yorkshireman telling me in all mock seriousness that the first Yorkshireman came into being when a Geordie screwed a pig. Though he didn't use the word screwed.

    • @martinbatley9512
      @martinbatley9512 4 года назад +5

      @@markanne54 Wrong, because God is a Yorkshireman and he came first. 😀

    • @martinbatley9512
      @martinbatley9512 4 года назад +5

      Think you'll find it's Yorkshire Tea that he's got in the mug and instead of a whippet it'd be a copy of the Yorkshire Post 📰to see how his beloved Yorkshire County Cricket Club🏏 are doing. Lol

    • @elephantsmemory3142
      @elephantsmemory3142 4 года назад

      Tetley's bitter more like alo a Yorkshireman would know that the triangle is where TUSKY grows

    • @sahhull
      @sahhull 4 года назад

      Yorkshire is on every map I've seen.

  • @LucifersTear
    @LucifersTear 4 года назад +3

    "Chuff your crumpet"....
    *dies* 🤣🤣🤣

  • @safctilidie
    @safctilidie 4 года назад

    A video on how to make a proper cup of tea definitely needed! Yorkshire tea ftw of course.

  • @stephenbarnard8672
    @stephenbarnard8672 4 года назад +2

    Hi Guys, many thanks for educating this Brit with some very interesting facts, I was in Pompey this Morning and well done Eric it is pronounced Portsmuth even though it is spelt mouth, you have cracked the English way of pronouncing really well.

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +2

      Glad you enjoyed it! And thanks for letting me know that I got the pronunciation right!

  • @isaacmartinez6904
    @isaacmartinez6904 4 года назад +11

    Trying to find unmarked places is like finding a needle in a haystack. Anyway, awesome video.

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад

      Thank you, Isaac!! :D

    • @edwardpurkis1084
      @edwardpurkis1084 4 года назад

      Set fire to the haystack then magnet the ashes 🤣

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +1

      @@edwardpurkis1084 I like this answer! XD

    • @edwardpurkis1084
      @edwardpurkis1084 4 года назад

      Wandering Ravens you has your needle back and also a angry farmer to boot🤣

  • @jamesread5295
    @jamesread5295 4 года назад +5

    Home Counties so named during the 2nd W War by pilots flying back over the channel as they were the first sight of 'home', so really these are Kent, Sussex (East & West) and Surrey with Hampshire, Essex as outsiders... ;)

    • @tonycasey3183
      @tonycasey3183 4 года назад +2

      1695 is the earliest mention of The Home Counties, so that is unlikely.

    • @brianwilson3952
      @brianwilson3952 4 года назад

      @@tonycasey3183 Could still be an armed forces term. I suppose the first thing the navy saw was the white cliffs.

    • @tonycasey3183
      @tonycasey3183 4 года назад

      @@brianwilson3952
      Could be. Could be anything. Nobody knows.

    • @tonycasey3183
      @tonycasey3183 4 года назад

      @@brianwilson3952
      Wouldn't account for any of the non-coastal Home Counties, though.

    • @ianprince1698
      @ianprince1698 3 года назад

      landed gentry would refer to the main farm buildings as home farm or the part of the farm near their home

  • @tommywulfric9768
    @tommywulfric9768 4 года назад +1

    Whilst travelling along the Spaghetti Junction towards "Brum" or "Brummagem" (Birmingham) and you feel a bit peckish, try the Balti Triangle for an amazing curry! Thanks for an interesting and absorbing post, you both have a wonderful way of articulating what you say very clearly, imaginatively and endearingly....received the kisses, but missed my "bizou!" tonight lol 😁

  • @theturtlemoves3014
    @theturtlemoves3014 4 года назад +1

    Once you have finished touring The Valleys, which also had a long history of iron and steel working, make your way along the M4 and keep going until you reach "Little England beyond Wales"

  • @jasonyoung7705
    @jasonyoung7705 4 года назад +6

    What about the hole in the ozone layer?
    Its right above my house.
    I eat a lot of peas...

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +2

      So the increase in hurricanes is YOUR fault!!

    • @davidwall2919
      @davidwall2919 4 года назад

      So where in Antarctica do you live?

  • @mentaldavethefirst
    @mentaldavethefirst 4 года назад +14

    Bedfordshire should never be included in anything. It's for the best if we pretend Bedfordshire doesn't exist at all

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад

      😆😆

    • @tommywulfric9768
      @tommywulfric9768 4 года назад +4

      Except when "Up the Wooden Hill to Bedfordshire" (Sung by the late great Dame Vera Lynn)

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 4 года назад

      Bit Like Northamptonshire. they dont really fit anywhere . Beds, Bucks and Oxon, Or Beds Herts and Berks ?

    • @1daveyp
      @1daveyp 3 года назад

      I've always assumed Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire exist in order to stop the Midlands rubbing against London.

    • @richard6440
      @richard6440 3 года назад

      @@1daveyp in order to stop the Midlands rubbing against London........the last thing i would want , is for my county to rub against London , so thank you beds and herts, you are doing a fine job............God Bless the Queen :)

  • @steveclarke6257
    @steveclarke6257 4 года назад +2

    The Highlands of Scotland would be an artificial island as the waterway you noted is called the Caledonian Canal (stretching from Inverness in the East to Fort William in the West), which is actually a series of canals joining the large lakes in the Great Glen together

  • @johnwelford1580
    @johnwelford1580 3 года назад +2

    Yes - the route through the Great Glen is the Caledonian Canal

  • @wencireone
    @wencireone 4 года назад +12

    I came here for entertainment ✓ never fails 😂
    Got educated as well ✓ never knew about 'forced rhubarb' 👍👨‍🎓

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +1

      So glad you enjoyed this one! Also, what's your name? You comment so often, we'd love to put a name to the username :D

    • @wencireone
      @wencireone 4 года назад

      @@WanderingRavens🤔 I'm like you, just backwards 😉👍

  • @wss2191
    @wss2191 4 года назад +6

    I started twitching when that mug went in the microwave😂

  • @timdiggle5090
    @timdiggle5090 4 года назад +2

    Although I am originally from the outer reaches of the Home Counties (Cambridge) I now live in Harrogate (a little bit of Surrrey parked in North Yorkshire!) just outside the Rhubarb Triangle. Harrogate is home to the Royal Horticultural Society's Harlow Carr Gardens which are very nice to visit but many people concentrate on the flowers and fail to realise that it is also home for The National Rhubarb Collection! Yes, a field in which an example of every variety of UK domestic rhubarb is maintained and grown. You just have to visit ...

    • @BigJohn5662
      @BigJohn5662 4 года назад

      If you can call 28 miles just outside? I have lived half a mile from the Rothwell point of the triangle all of my life and drove the 40 minutes to Harrogate and back again for three years. If only it was just outside, it certainly didn't feel like it to myself.

  • @jeremywilson2022
    @jeremywilson2022 4 года назад +1

    Your pronunciation of Portsmouth is spot on

  • @davewilliams3800
    @davewilliams3800 4 года назад +7

    Yorkshire is more a state of mind.
    Fortunately you can find the superior county of Lancashire 😃

  • @cockertoo8920
    @cockertoo8920 4 года назад +6

    It is pronounced Ports muth!! I've been sitting here waiting for The Black Country which is West of Birmingham :(

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +2

      Oh no! We missed one! Don't worry, if we missed enough, we'll put them into a part 2 :D

    • @JonTheDrummer100
      @JonTheDrummer100 4 года назад +3

      @@WanderingRavens there are so many interesting things to learn about when it comes to the Black Country including the accent, dialect, food, and LOADS more. If you get chance I'd definitely recommend a visit to the Black Country Living Museum in Dudley, I imagine it would be right up your street!
      Happy (slightly belated by 20 mins) Black Country day! 🥳

    • @clairepaynter1866
      @clairepaynter1866 4 года назад +3

      Ar, the black country, a bostin place to goo. 😁

    • @mattpotter8725
      @mattpotter8725 4 года назад

      I wouldn't ever say that The Black Country is West of Birmingham, especially if you are in that neck of the woods, and by that I hope you don't mean the West of Birmingham (you could get lynched for that in that part of the world)!!! Whilst technically correct the places do have names, and have been just as important in Britain's industrial past as Birmingham is today - namely West Bromwich, Dudley, Tipton, Walsall, Wednesbury, and many more, but not Wolverhampton, Stourbridge, or Smethwick apparently (good luck pronouncing that lot). Great part of the world, not so black, industrial, or polluted anymore. In fact if going up there then Coalbrookdale and Ironbridge where the industrial revolution began. It seems very rural today.

    • @cockertoo8920
      @cockertoo8920 4 года назад +1

      @@JonTheDrummer100 Yes, they'd love it, it's bostin'

  • @sargieboi9315
    @sargieboi9315 4 года назад +1

    Fun fact. Torbay has it's own mild micro-climate so receives more sun than other coastal UK areas.

  • @catman492000
    @catman492000 3 года назад +1

    The Caledonian Canal runs the length of the Great Glen and is navigable from Fort William to Inverness

  • @sage6336
    @sage6336 4 года назад +13

    Ask a stranger ????? Don't try that in London

  • @royw-g3120
    @royw-g3120 3 года назад +1

    East Anglia seems the most ill defined. Some purists insist it is just Norfolk and Suffolk, most people will add Essex, and quite a few others add Cambridgeshire too. Some others add other parts. The definite southern border is the Thames, no one adds Kent, it is Eastern enough but too south.

  • @martynbush
    @martynbush 4 года назад

    I live in Hertfordshire, the nicest of the home counties. Loving your pronunciation of Hertfordshire, Berkshire and Portsmouth. Spot on.

  • @tonycasey3183
    @tonycasey3183 4 года назад +3

    You're welcome, guys.

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад

      Thank you, Tony!! You always teach us so much :D I'm so glad we were able to do a video together like this :)

  • @Submarine_2010
    @Submarine_2010 4 года назад +18

    If you’re reading this: may the force be with you

  • @RainbowSauceGames
    @RainbowSauceGames 4 года назад

    I hadn’t heard of a lot of these so I learnt some new stuff today!

  • @johanelkerton5460
    @johanelkerton5460 4 года назад +1

    Locally to us in Warwickshire we also have the Black Country!
    It is an area of the West Midlands, west of Birmingham and commonly refers to a region covering most of the four Boroughs of Dudley, Sandwell, Walsall and Wolverhampton. The Black Country gained its name in the mid nineteenth century due to the smoke from the many thousands of ironworking foundries and forges plus also the working of the shallow and 30ft thick coal seams. ^_^
    Sammy xXx

  • @sage6336
    @sage6336 4 года назад +5

    Home counties have to touch the M25

    • @tonycasey3183
      @tonycasey3183 4 года назад +3

      Home Counties existed before the M25

    • @peterbrown1012
      @peterbrown1012 4 года назад

      Before London county, the home counties went into London.

    • @sage6336
      @sage6336 4 года назад +1

      @@tonycasey3183so did i. Good point well made .

    • @tonycasey3183
      @tonycasey3183 4 года назад +2

      The earliest mention of "the Home Counties" that I could find was from Charles Davenant in 1695. He was talking about taxation and does not mention WHY they are called The Home Counties, but he does say that there are ELEVEN of them! In his book, Kent from 1975, Marcus Crouch suggests that The Home Counties were so called because it was where the main circuit County courts surrounding London sat. Others have suggested that they were the counties in which Members of Parliament could reasonably be expected to travel to Westminster without claiming expenses for overnight accommodation, second homes or billets.
      The fact is that nobody knows exactly which counties are the Home Counties or why they got that name. All we know is that the term was in common use from at least the late 17th century and possibly before.

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад

      Incredible! You really did your research on this one, Tony! Thank you!

  • @andrewmildinhall8210
    @andrewmildinhall8210 4 года назад +1

    You could also add the Marches which is the border area between England & Wales. The term goes back to the Norman conquest when powerful marcher lords ran the area and defended against Welsh raids.

    • @kumasenlac5504
      @kumasenlac5504 3 года назад

      The term was also used for the administrative areas on the Scottish/English Border when it existed.

  • @eviltwin2322
    @eviltwin2322 4 года назад +1

    Although the Rhubarb Triangle is kind of a thing, the stuff used to be grown all over the north. I remember going into friends' houses as a kid where they had a room JUST for growing it. They would force it by blacking out the windows and it would grow really quickly because in the wild it would be trying to get above the undergrowth to find the sun. It grew so fast you could actually hear it! A loooooong, slow creaking. It was pretty spooky!
    And once again you pretty much said all of the above! I must learn to finish the videos before commenting!!!
    That long line of water in The Great Glen is pretty famous - it's Loch Ness!

  • @Danny-vk4zj
    @Danny-vk4zj 4 года назад +1

    I was born and bred in Hampshire.. hmmmmm, plenty of rough and tumble...and yup.. Eric, u nailed the pronunciation of Portsmouth.. 😀😀😀

  • @alklein4660
    @alklein4660 3 года назад +1

    Spaghetti Junction sounds something like Malfunction Junction in Dallas (the intersection of I35E and I30, which can become impossible at times). But the old intersection of the Cross Bronx Expressway and the Hutchinson River Parkway (in NYC) was a multilevel horror before it was totally redone.
    (Google Maps knows The Potteries and a few other "place nicknames" you talked about.)

  • @Shadowstrom
    @Shadowstrom 3 года назад +1

    Yes it is possible to make the journey from Fort William to Inverness by boat and that is the Caledonian Canal. There 29 locks, 4 aqueducts, and 10 bridges. Boat hires are available

  • @callumgreenshields7691
    @callumgreenshields7691 4 года назад +1

    The Central belt , the area of Scotland than goes from Glasgow in the west to Edinburgh in the east.

  • @glitch_animations7289
    @glitch_animations7289 4 года назад

    Ohhhhhhhh league of Gentlemen men referenceeeeee.
    Just made this channel ten times better

  • @donnyskinglongliveme
    @donnyskinglongliveme 4 года назад

    loved this video folks! I'm a yORKSHIREMAN AND NEVER HEARD OF Yorkshire rhubarb or the triangle.sounds very cool though. I wonder if my Yorkshire heritage is why I crave rhubarb so much.Also yes you can go by boat from the coast at Inverness, right through a series of lochs (including loch ness) and canals to Ft William on the opposite coast. 1 of the canals has a series of locks called 'Neptune's staircase' that takes you up a hill. Britain's highest mountain 'Ben nevis' is also on the journey.

  • @criswadsworth
    @criswadsworth 3 года назад

    I live in Rothwell, I went for a walk in May and ended up in a field surrounded by rhubarb. It was the first I'd heard of the rhubarb triangle. I also found a field with an alpaca in, and a blind horse.

  • @andrewpinks4925
    @andrewpinks4925 4 года назад

    In Scotland at a traditional new year greeting is “Lang May yer lum reek.” Which quite literally means ‘long may your chimney (lum) smoke (reek).’ This was a wish that you would always have fuel (peat) to keep your fire burning (for cooking and heat). So reekie definitely relates to smoke not smell.

  • @Captally
    @Captally 4 года назад +1

    People of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, another Naval town, pronounce it just the same as we do.