You two are different. But in a very good way. You really get into each place you visit. You make everyday things here seem more..... You two are a breath of fresh air. Thankyou. Rik from UK... Manchester. 🇬🇧😃😜😘
@@Psychphuq I've never heard of a semi being called a Duplex. It sounds like a brand of condoms. After checking I find that as usual, it's an American term.
Thank you for posting. My dad lived in Gargrave during the war years when my grandparents ran the Swan Inn, featured in your video. He went back there a couple of times in his final years and it was obvious he had very happy memories of the place, attending Keighley Grammar School when he wasn't enjoying life in the pub or jumping into the river from the nearby bridge in summer. The Landlady of the Swan was good enough to let me and him have a room by room tour the last time we were there.
Very nice story! I'm sure it's easy to have fond memories growing up in such a cute little village. Stand up of the current owner to show you guys around the place. -E
6:36 I am not 100% but if i recall those are phone cables not electricity. at least in the 80's and 90's most phone lines were above ground (on telephone poles like the one in this video) and electricity was underground. Now this one could be different, but the term "telephone pole" is from this kind of thing.
Martin Nicholls not that rare, but only to individual farm houses etc. Gargrave is on the A65 so gets loads of passing trade to the Lake District. Cities have Bishops or royal charters.
The house is a semi detached, they are still built like that, they aren't necessarily a big house that has been split after building. You can get pre paid phone cards from newsagents for the phone box. The co op is owned by its members its a co-operative. I love that you are going off the usual routes for tourists.
An absolutely adorable couple as always. Cannot wait for more and glad you got to see a broader view of England. I really do enjoy watching your explorations. Its so funny and cute how you find regular English things so fascinating but i guess that goes to show how us English have taken our heritage and everyday quirks for granted. So awesome. Please keep it up. Plus please stay blessed, protected and happy :)
I think it's brilliant that you guys are actually travelling to little villages, rather than just doing tourist traps..you are showing more of England than most vlogers i know. You are showcasing the real side of our little island. Thank you so much.. we have so.much more to see. If more tourist will just step outside the cities..we done guys
You two are hilarious and I love watching your videos 1. because of your personalities and 2. because I am learning so much about areas I have never been to, in the country I was born and raised in. Thank you 😊
They call a semi, a 'mansion cut in half!' Love it! Wonderful enthusiasm and wonder - and yes, our TV is boring. Oddly, in the 80's... we only had three channels... and yet the TV was actually better!
Pubs near canals are often called the "Navigation" and were mostly built by Navvies which were Irish labourers, probably the cheapest labour going at the time. Probably 1d a day.
The Leeds and Liverpool Canal used to also support the Textile industry especially the Lancashire end of the Canal during the industrial revolution. The canal used to be lined with Textile Weaving Mills which are long gone although there are some old shells of the mills still around.
It was started at the Yorkshire end and actually connected to the Humber and Hull first via the Calder Navigation. It predates most of the Lancashire cotton mills, but did link in to existing canals canals on the Lancashire side and helped Liverpool become the bigger port. Coal will have been the most common cargo, but there'd have been much less demand for it without the wool and cotton mills.
Hillary Trump looks like the history books will have to be rewritten about where the canal started because canal books state it was started at the the Liverpool end! A commencement ceremony was held at Halsall, north of Liverpool on 5 November 1770, with the first sod being dug by the Hon. Charles Mordaunt of Halsall Hall.
@@optimist3580 You conveniently left out the second sentence of the wiki article you copied. 'The first section of the canal opened from Bingley to Skipton in 1773. So you are both correct in some manner but OP more so
Yea, hahahaha, we are probably going to hear about that a few times. It's funny, after we shot for the day we had a discussion about that and I forgot to leave the video out when I edited it. Still looks neat regardless. -E
The poles with wires strung between them are telephone wires that can also carry the internet signal the mains power cables are under the ground along with the water and sewage. i have been to Gargrave quiet a few times as i live in Leeds.
Great video again! A couple of observations as i watched: 1. Split houses are commong and are called “Semi Detached” very common all across UK 2. Money Puzzle Tree 3. That is called a kissing gate its to keep the sheep from crossing areas 4. Coal Bunker is where you stored the coal in the old days 5. Shout out to Sedgewick the Hedgehog 6. That little heater is called a radiator. Very common across the UK I hope you can check out 1. Gordale Scar and 2. Malham Tarn, Finally 3. Airton smaller village than Gargrave and where my godmother lives! Very well done. Good for your for promoting smaller parts of uk.
it's just sooo nice to see you guys in the countryside. so many tourists do the touristy thing and just go to London and Edinburgh. we do have tons of history in our fabulously quirky country. we/were are the masters of innovation and we take it so much for granted because we're used to it. you made me very happy due to the fact that you seem to be genuinely enjoying it all. thank you very much for this lovely posting.
When I think of a typical English village, it's one off the beaten track and not cut in two by a major road going through it as there's an awful lot of traffic there. It's still obviously a village because of the facilities are typical of a small settlement. Nice watch, thanks
That little house seemed so perfect and cozy to stay in during the winter. I could see it very easy to waste the morning drinking a cup of coffee and reading a good book. The ceiling was still tall enough for Eric too!
We are English and we find your little 'documentaries' so much more enjoyable and informative than the professional TV channel ones which are too arty-farty and polished. You get us right down in there with you. Love all your videos, keep it up.
This is where my Nana lives and where I spent all of my childhood!! The hill you looked at is where we hike and where my grandads ashes are, the church is where my mum got married and my nana and grandad used to own The Swan pub!! I love that you showed it all❤️Also in summer this place is beautiful and there are so many people come!! If you ever go again you need to hire a car there are so many places to walk!!
Wonder if they got to my uncles pub in Hardraw and saw the waterfall. I quite like these two they are keen to get stuck into the culture and eager to take in new experiences.
The old school was a Methodist one. The two doors would either have been one for boys room, one for girls room, or one for the junior school room and one for seniors.
Also the monkey puzzle tree you're looking at is a interesting case of convergent evolution. The Monkey puzzle is basically the new world's version of the pine tree.
That mini is indeed owned by a bloke who works at reliant (the big warehouse looking building across the way) hes called Chris and is a very lovely person. That car is his pride and joy and hes been restoring it for a number of years. The guys who work there are all lovely, I used to clean there and got on well with them all.
Love this so much! You’re so right (especially at 12:55) - so much of what you’re looking at and singling out as noteworthy seems so incredibly ordinary, everyday and, well yes, ‘boring’ to most of us who live here; but just seeing how genuinely enthused and happy you are to see these things really serves to remind us of just how lucky we are and how much of our history and culture we completely take for granted. So, for example, yes, medieval churches are “ten a penny” in the UK, and we really need to appreciate them more. Yes, I guess semi-detached houses are kind of weird when you stop to think about them - just never stopped to think about them until you pointed it out! And yes, C18th canals and locks, C19th schoolhouses converted into apartments, multiple pubs in tiny villages, no-nonsense street-naming, ‘supermarkets’ that are very far from being ‘super,’ old-style red phone boxes that still work!...they all seem so ‘normal’ and unremarkable until someone points them out and says “Wow, look at that! Isn’t that cool?” (Or “weird” or “funny”). So, thank you! Your enthusiasm gave me a little warm glow of pride in and affection for my country (and that’s a serious rarity!) I’m really glad you enjoyed and appreciated all these ‘little’ things. (Although, I would urge you to explore British tv a lot more - honestly, you’ve no idea what you’re missing!) Btw, I haven’t read any of the other comments that have been left, so I’m sure MANY people have probably already told you this, but the weird, prickly tree is a monkey puzzle tree. Don’t quote me on the history (I haven’t checked!), but they’re not native to the UK, and I suspect they were probably brought over here sometime during the period of the great landscape gardeners of the C18-19th who created many of the impressive grounds you’ll see at so many stately homes, and that they got disseminated throughout the country from then on. They’re still a little bit of a rarity to come across, though. They always fascinated me as a kid (so exotic and out of place in the UK), so I understand your curiosity about them! Thanks again - really great video! 😊
It so sweet seeing you in a village so close to the one I grew up in. We used to go paddling in the river and going to the great park just outside by the canal. I hope you made it to the cafe it's really nice we would cycle to them all the time, the cheese toasties are the best. Btw those aren't electricity lines, all that is underground now. They were phone cabels.
As I'm a Yorkshire lass, I'm glad you enjoyed visiting our little part of the world, it's a shame you couldn't visit later as we've had some really good weather through May and June. Really enjoy your videos guys, it's lucky our TV is so boring 😉🤗
Awesome video, I live in gargrave and have for 20 years now. The old school you speak of is actually an old Methodist chapel. The village does have it's own primary school
The electricity pole you pointed out is actually a telegraph pole distributing phone lines to the surrounding premises. The amount of electricity produced is so small as to be utterly harmless,
I live in a Town on the Leeds - Liverpool Canal in the North of England, Skipton on the border of Yorkshire and Lancashire but on the side of Red Rose County of Lancashire its a Beautiful part of England..
Found your excellent videos today. I went to Vietnam with you, and closer to home in Yorkshire. I am captivated with your commentary, and your personal dynamic. Brilliant adventures, thanks for sharing. Good luck for the future and take care.
If you come back to England you should explore the canal system! The canals do extend into other parts of the UK but England has the most extensive network. It's a huge network - all dug by hand and mostly from the 1700s or early 1800s. It was state of the art transport back then (no rail and no trucks) but is mostly leisure activities now. Renting a barge (sometimes new, sometimes converted from old freight carrying vessels) can be expensive but being forced to slow your life down for a while is priceless! Travelling with a 4mph speed limit is REALLY frustrating at first but becomes blissful without you even noticing the change. And you get to see the most fantastic countryside... not to mention some seriously great canal-side pubs!
I'm so glad you have got to experience the real UK. So many people think London = UK which couldn't be further from the truth. The real UK is truly beautiful, if you can avoid the rain.
The rain makes the land what it is. As a famous glaswegian comedian said "there's no such thing as bad weather.just the wrong clothes". The bonus of wet weather is a lack of folk wandering around in it .
semi-detached houses started popping up en masse in the UK and Ireland in the 1930s and ever since. They've been about much longer of course but were much rarer until then. They became popular in suburbia and built for the growing middle class who didn't want to live in the city or in a terrace. Detached houses took up too much room so this compromise was formed.
I love churches, When ever i visit a place i have to find a church i just love them :) what a great little house just perfect for 2, me and my husband lived in a place like that back in the days when we lived in Jersey ( Channel Isles) our kitchen was smaller awww its brought back memories :)
Did you notice the "GR" on the little post box? Even that's been there a while. Many small Post Offices have had to close or be absorbed because many of the services they offered, vehicle taxation, pension payments etc are done electronically now.
Hi Kyde and Eric, great video. 6:44 is a Telegraph pole used for telephone/internet and not electricity. Electricity to UK homes are normally supplied underground, except for rural farms which rely on small wooden electricity poles.
I love how Eric gets massively interested in the details and history of places, It's a really open way of approaching the world, for god's sake you're in Yorkshire, but it seems so interesting to me.
Ahhh the north. I lived in a little village in Cumbria called Newton Reigny, we had no shops but we did have a pub....... oooh! and a bus every Wednesday.
At 6:47 the old Swan inn unfortunately burnt down on 8th July this year, just as lockdown was being relaxed a little to allow pubs to reopen. The owners have said they are going to rebuild it.
The houses you thought were one house cut in half are actually built like that to start with, they are called semi detached and are very common across the UK.
All canals are man made, all rivers are natural formations though they may have been rerouted or had their banks altered. Those weren't power lines, they were telephone cables.
I think ive said this before (So sorry if i have) but you guys crack me up, seriously, your love for life and humour is fabulous (Even the weather doesnt $$$$ you off!!!!) :p
Love your videos guys. Those semi's were purpose-built and can be found in older East Coast US cities - e.g. in Philly where they'rev called twins. also known as semi-attached. That old Mini was cool. I recommend Lavenham in Suffolk and Malvern in Worcestershire if you ever feel the need to come back!
This is real Britain. Not London. I'm from a small coastal town in Scotland and there is loads that I can relate to in this video. Glad you got to experience it!
I have not read all the comments but from those I have read no one has mentioned that the 'five rise lock system you mentioned is in Bingley, West Yorkshire.
Neptune's staircase in Scotland (Caledonian Canal) is, I think, the biggest sequence of locks in Britain with 8. The Anderton Boat Lift and the Falkirk Wheel are alternative examples from past and present how engineers have dealt with boats getting from one level to another. They differ slightly though as both of them connect two different waterways rather than dealing with elevation
A lot of post offices were also something else from a long time ago especially in small villages. There was maybe one shop "The general store". I lived in Coventry and as a kid the two nearest post offices were other shops one an from mongers and the other a news agent. What always bothered me was on Thursdays the post office was closed while the real of the shop was open?????
Interesting looking at visitor's takes on very typical British places that we all take for granted. I grew up in Yorkshire and places like Skipton, Knaresborough etc was a common Sunday afternoon outing for the family when I was a kid. Never been to Gargrave though. Not sure if this has been pointed out elsewhere but that old school building at around 6:30 in, notice it has 2 big doors on the front. This would almost certainly have been separate entrances for boys and girls (even though they are so close together!) which was quite common when this style of building would have been built.
You guys are great as always! At Cael Hill, near Devises in Wiltshire there are 29 locks (built 1810) in a row, worth checking out. Nearby you can also go to the Crofton Beam engines - oldest steam engines in the world that can still do the job they were built for (but not very often) and visit Laycock which is just over flowing with cuteness and history and has been in dozens of films and TV shows. But I digress. Not electricity lines, phone lines. There are places where power comes in to the house on overhead cables but usually in much more remote areas, you can tell the difference because the power lines have ceramic insulators on the pole. My old school is now homes, but it had three doors, marked ‘Boys’, ‘Girls’ and ‘Infants’. While the school was fully mixed the coat hooks and lavatories were still located by the appropriate door. The ‘vehicle licencing’ function of the post office is probably redundant now. If you own a car you have to pay road tax annually, how much depends on how big and polluting your car is. You have to have valid insurance and an annual vehicle safety check called an MOT before you can pay your tax. We used to get paper discs as proof of payment, to display on the windshield, but now it’s all done by number plate recognition. The post office was one of the places you could go to get your tax disc but not all post offices could do this, hence the sign. Soreen is the best! Our TV is boring? I have never yet found anything on American TV worth watching, okay not entirely true but if it was worth watching (which has been rare) all the add breaks made it impossible to watch. Have you not watched Pointless yet? Or QI? I have said it before you guys need to come down to the South West, you would love it. Dartmoor, Exmoor, tiny villages, rivers, beaches, dramatic cliffs, historic sights, pirates, smugglers, The Hound of the Baskervilles, Jamaica Inn, Poldark!
Hi there, what a pity you missed out on going to Malham and Malham Tarn, (Google both for more info) I first encountered Gargrave on my Long Distance Walk, The Pennine Way (270 miles from Edale to Kirk Yethome) back in the 1970's and loved the area just as you did. Ofeten visited since then to see how much it changes over the years and that is very little from my first visit 50 years ago. Loved the video and I will track down other videos you have uploaded. All the best Tony
You guys are both awesome, keep the videos coming. It is the difference between a town and a city, a village isn't a town and not sure how a village becomes a town.
Caen Hill Locks (pronounced "Cane") are a flight of locks on the Kennet and Avon Canal, between Rowde and Devizes in Wiltshire, England. The 29 locks have a rise of 237 feet in 2 miles (72 m in 3.2 km) or a 1 in 44 gradient. The locks come in three groups. The lower seven locks, Foxhangers Wharf Lock to Foxhangers Bridge Lock, are spread over ¾ of a mile (1.2 km). The next sixteen locks form a steep flight in a straight line up the hillside and are designated as a scheduled monument. Because of the steepness of the terrain, the pounds between these locks are very short. As a result, 15 locks have unusually large sideways-extended pounds, to store the water needed to operate them. A final six locks take the canal into Devizes. This flight of locks was engineer John Rennie's solution to climbing the very steep hill, and was the last part of the 87-mile route of the canal to be completed. Whilst the locks were under construction a tramroad provided a link between the canal at Foxhangers to Devizes, the remains of which can be seen in the towpath arches in the road bridges over the canal. A brickyard was dug to the south of the workings to manufacture the bricks for the lock chambers and this remained in commercial use until the middle of the 20th century.
The comment on the Leeds Liverpool Canal implied that it’s only purpose was to get Gargrave limestone to Liverpool. Of course the Leeds to Liverpool Canal was a main means of transportation in the days when other means of getting heavy loads across country did not exist. Remarkably the canal crosses the Pennine Hills, hence the very large number of locks in the system. With the coming of railways, the canal system began to lose its importance. Now the canal is mainly used for recreational purposes.
hello you 2, as a kid I was told they were called monkey trees because monkeys could not climb them. also if you were the first person to see a monkey tree you could pinch the person beside you and say ( pinches on a monkey tree no pinches back ) Thanks for the memory.
Hope while you are there you get chance to visit Malham Cove and Bolton Abbey (including the Strid Wood) - both sensationally beautifully places to spend a day each. Malham cove is the source of the river Aire which flows through Gargrave in Airedale (Dale means valley). Bolton Abbey is on the river Wharfe in Wharfedale. I just cannot recommend them strongly enough.
Great Video as always Kyde and Eric , Next place hopefully somewhere hot and tropical for you to warm up , love England but as cold as a frog in a icebound pool.
You two are different. But in a very good way. You really get into each place you visit. You make everyday things here seem more..... You two are a breath of fresh air. Thankyou. Rik from UK... Manchester. 🇬🇧😃😜😘
Your description of semi-detached houses was just so adorable, not in a patronising way, it's just lovely to see my home through your eyes xx
The houses "cut in half" are called semi-detached and are built like that. Great video.
Also know as a duplex...
@@Psychphuq I've never heard of a semi being called a Duplex. It sounds like a brand of condoms. After checking I find that as usual, it's an American term.
So awesome as I am a Gargrave, and my family members came from Gargrave in the 1800’s to America. So cool to watch this video.
Thank you for this. My grandfather was from Gargrave. His father was the town doctor/surgeon in the early 1900s
Thank you for posting. My dad lived in Gargrave during the war years when my grandparents ran the Swan Inn, featured in your video. He went back there a couple of times in his final years and it was obvious he had very happy memories of the place, attending Keighley Grammar School when he wasn't enjoying life in the pub or jumping into the river from the nearby bridge in summer. The Landlady of the Swan was good enough to let me and him have a room by room tour the last time we were there.
Very nice story! I'm sure it's easy to have fond memories growing up in such a cute little village. Stand up of the current owner to show you guys around the place. -E
He probably knew my grandfathers family. The Wales. His father was the local doctor.
6:36 I am not 100% but if i recall those are phone cables not electricity. at least in the 80's and 90's most phone lines were above ground (on telephone poles like the one in this video) and electricity was underground. Now this one could be different, but the term "telephone pole" is from this kind of thing.
yep 100% phone lines
Phone for sure. There are power cables more the way you see them in the US dotted around but it's extremely rare.
Martin Nicholls not that rare, but only to individual farm houses etc. Gargrave is on the A65 so gets loads of passing trade to the Lake District.
Cities have Bishops or royal charters.
They’re phone lines- BT linesman*
Yep absolutely love these vids but their are quite a few things that pop up where they seem to have been given dodgy info by locals
The house is a semi detached, they are still built like that, they aren't necessarily a big house that has been split after building. You can get pre paid phone cards from newsagents for the phone box. The co op is owned by its members its a co-operative. I love that you are going off the usual routes for tourists.
I realize it's quite off topic but do anybody know of a good website to stream new tv shows online?
An absolutely adorable couple as always. Cannot wait for more and glad you got to see a broader view of England. I really do enjoy watching your explorations. Its so funny and cute how you find regular English things so fascinating but i guess that goes to show how us English have taken our heritage and everyday quirks for granted. So awesome. Please keep it up. Plus please stay blessed, protected and happy :)
"They haven't a clue about life outside of America." We have been in Asia for 8 years. -E
I think it's brilliant that you guys are actually travelling to little villages, rather than just doing tourist traps..you are showing more of England than most vlogers i know. You are showcasing the real side of our little island. Thank you so much.. we have so.much more to see. If more tourist will just step outside the cities..we done guys
The monkey puzzle is a prehistoric species a 'living fossil'! The leaves are tough and spiky to prevent dinosaurs from eating it (apparently)! :)
It's called a Chilean Pine
nicknamed the "Monkey Puzzle" because "it's the only tree a monkey can't climb"...well according to my Granddad lol
I think fossilized monkey puzzle becomes the semi-precious jewellery gem 'jet' favoured by Victorians 😏
I can't see any dinosaurs eating it, so, works
You two are hilarious and I love watching your videos 1. because of your personalities and 2. because I am learning so much about areas I have never been to, in the country I was born and raised in. Thank you 😊
Thanks!! -E
They call a semi, a 'mansion cut in half!' Love it! Wonderful enthusiasm and wonder - and yes, our TV is boring. Oddly, in the 80's... we only had three channels... and yet the TV was actually better!
Glad you enjoyed! To be fair, there are some wonderful British shows, they just didn't seem to be on when we turned on the TV! -E
When Kyde mentions this how the electrics work, that wasn't electric cables they were telephone lines. Great video though 👍
Your interest and enthusiasm are marvellous. Great to hear you have so much praise for our country. Thank you.
England has a huge network of canals covering the country (mostly all man-made), Caen Hill locks has 29 locks in a space of only 2 miles! :)
Pubs near canals are often called the "Navigation" and were mostly built by Navvies which were Irish labourers, probably the cheapest labour going at the time. Probably 1d a day.
The Leeds and Liverpool Canal used to also support the Textile industry especially the Lancashire end of the Canal during the industrial revolution. The canal used to be lined with Textile Weaving Mills which are long gone although there are some old shells of the mills still around.
It was started at the Yorkshire end and actually connected to the Humber and Hull first via the Calder Navigation. It predates most of the Lancashire cotton mills, but did link in to existing canals canals on the Lancashire side and helped Liverpool become the bigger port. Coal will have been the most common cargo, but there'd have been much less demand for it without the wool and cotton mills.
Hillary Trump looks like the history books will have to be rewritten about where the canal started because canal books state it was started at the the Liverpool end!
A commencement ceremony was held at Halsall, north of Liverpool on 5 November 1770, with the first sod being dug by the Hon. Charles Mordaunt of Halsall Hall.
@@optimist3580 You conveniently left out the second sentence of the wiki article you copied. 'The first section of the canal opened from Bingley to Skipton in 1773. So you are both correct in some manner but OP more so
@@matt36866 it seems there is a little confusion about what “started” and “completed” actually mean😉
6:42 that's the telephone pole lines , not electricity ... The power cables are under ground.
Yea, hahahaha, we are probably going to hear about that a few times. It's funny, after we shot for the day we had a discussion about that and I forgot to leave the video out when I edited it. Still looks neat regardless. -E
The poles with wires strung between them are telephone wires that can also carry the internet signal the mains power cables are under the ground along with the water and sewage. i have been to Gargrave quiet a few times as i live in Leeds.
The pole with the cables connecting to the houses are likely to be telephone lines, all power cables are usually buried underground
People in more rural locations in the UK tend to really fight to keep their post offices, it's an amenity some people really need.
Absolutely 💯 makes it look more authentic..
@@amenla9372 it isn’t for aesthetics, it’s so isolated communities have access to postal services :P
agree...but I found it cosy for some reasons during my stay there ..
I'm English and wanted to show England to my GF and your videos are really good for that! Thank you!
Awesome! Glad they are helping you paint a picture for her! -E
That tiny house is really awesome! My roommate and I have been on a tiny living kick so this was right up our alley! Also loving the cook and poop~ 👌🏻
Great video again! A couple of observations as i watched:
1. Split houses are commong and are called “Semi Detached” very common all across UK
2. Money Puzzle Tree
3. That is called a kissing gate its to keep the sheep from crossing areas
4. Coal Bunker is where you stored the coal in the old days
5. Shout out to Sedgewick the Hedgehog
6. That little heater is called a radiator. Very common across the UK
I hope you can check out 1. Gordale Scar and 2. Malham Tarn, Finally 3. Airton smaller village than Gargrave and where my godmother lives!
Very well done. Good for your for promoting smaller parts of uk.
I live just a few miles from here, it's nice to see somewhere local in the limelight! =D
It was nice to explore it! -E
I love your adventures together. It would be so fun to travel like that with your significant other. You all must be so close.
On the Kennet & Avon Canal there is a lock system with 29 locks rising 237 feet in a single ladder called the Caen Hill Locks.
If you like canal locks you should check out the Tardebygge lock flight in Worcestershire - 40+ locks in a row!
Wow, when he opened the door of the phone box I got a waft of the smell from inside! Memory is a powerful thing.
Haha, nice!
it's just sooo nice to see you guys in the countryside. so many tourists do the touristy thing and just go to London and Edinburgh. we do have tons of history in our fabulously quirky country. we/were are the masters of innovation and we take it so much for granted because we're used to it. you made me very happy due to the fact that you seem to be genuinely enjoying it all. thank you very much for this lovely posting.
Thanks, glad you enjoyed! -E
When I think of a typical English village, it's one off the beaten track and not cut in two by a major road going through it as there's an awful lot of traffic there. It's still obviously a village because of the facilities are typical of a small settlement. Nice watch, thanks
That little house seemed so perfect and cozy to stay in during the winter. I could see it very easy to waste the morning drinking a cup of coffee and reading a good book. The ceiling was still tall enough for Eric too!
We are English and we find your little 'documentaries' so much more enjoyable and informative than the professional TV channel ones which are too arty-farty and polished. You get us right down in there with you. Love all your videos, keep it up.
Thanks so much! Really happy when people from places we make videos about enjoy them! -E
This is where my Nana lives and where I spent all of my childhood!! The hill you looked at is where we hike and where my grandads ashes are, the church is where my mum got married and my nana and grandad used to own The Swan pub!! I love that you showed it all❤️Also in summer this place is beautiful and there are so many people come!! If you ever go again you need to hire a car there are so many places to walk!!
Nice, very cool to hear! I swear someone else told us family had once lived in or owned The Swan at some point, haha. Small town! -E
Kyde and Eric they left about 49 years ago so it's likely!!
Wonder if they got to my uncles pub in Hardraw and saw the waterfall. I quite like these two they are keen to get stuck into the culture and eager to take in new experiences.
The old school was a Methodist one. The two doors would either have been one for boys room, one for girls room, or one for the junior school room and one for seniors.
I used to live here this is so cool to see you guys exploring my home village!
I use to live in Gargrave. Was a lovely village to live in... mostly.
Having such fun watching you both ...thanks for making me smile..also i love a lass that loves her food...keep filming please...
Also the monkey puzzle tree you're looking at is a interesting case of convergent evolution. The Monkey puzzle is basically the new world's version of the pine tree.
Araucaria araucana (commonly called the monkey puzzle tree, monkey tail tree, or Chilean pine Endangered.
That mini is indeed owned by a bloke who works at reliant (the big warehouse looking building across the way) hes called Chris and is a very lovely person. That car is his pride and joy and hes been restoring it for a number of years. The guys who work there are all lovely, I used to clean there and got on well with them all.
Chris's mini made our day!
Love this so much! You’re so right (especially at 12:55) - so much of what you’re looking at and singling out as noteworthy seems so incredibly ordinary, everyday and, well yes, ‘boring’ to most of us who live here; but just seeing how genuinely enthused and happy you are to see these things really serves to remind us of just how lucky we are and how much of our history and culture we completely take for granted. So, for example, yes, medieval churches are “ten a penny” in the UK, and we really need to appreciate them more. Yes, I guess semi-detached houses are kind of weird when you stop to think about them - just never stopped to think about them until you pointed it out! And yes, C18th canals and locks, C19th schoolhouses converted into apartments, multiple pubs in tiny villages, no-nonsense street-naming, ‘supermarkets’ that are very far from being ‘super,’ old-style red phone boxes that still work!...they all seem so ‘normal’ and unremarkable until someone points them out and says “Wow, look at that! Isn’t that cool?” (Or “weird” or “funny”).
So, thank you! Your enthusiasm gave me a little warm glow of pride in and affection for my country (and that’s a serious rarity!) I’m really glad you enjoyed and appreciated all these ‘little’ things. (Although, I would urge you to explore British tv a lot more - honestly, you’ve no idea what you’re missing!)
Btw, I haven’t read any of the other comments that have been left, so I’m sure MANY people have probably already told you this, but the weird, prickly tree is a monkey puzzle tree. Don’t quote me on the history (I haven’t checked!), but they’re not native to the UK, and I suspect they were probably brought over here sometime during the period of the great landscape gardeners of the C18-19th who created many of the impressive grounds you’ll see at so many stately homes, and that they got disseminated throughout the country from then on. They’re still a little bit of a rarity to come across, though. They always fascinated me as a kid (so exotic and out of place in the UK), so I understand your curiosity about them!
Thanks again - really great video! 😊
Thanks so much, glad you've enjoyed a look at your country through our eyes! So fun that people from the UK are watching, haha!
I came to this channel when I was looking up stuff about tiny home architecture, and now things've come full circle!
Haha, perfect!
It so sweet seeing you in a village so close to the one I grew up in. We used to go paddling in the river and going to the great park just outside by the canal. I hope you made it to the cafe it's really nice we would cycle to them all the time, the cheese toasties are the best. Btw those aren't electricity lines, all that is underground now. They were phone cabels.
I was due to have an interview in Skipton so afterwards went to have a look at Gargave. Have a nice cream tea in a quaint little tea shop.
As I'm a Yorkshire lass, I'm glad you enjoyed visiting our little part of the world, it's a shame you couldn't visit later as we've had some really good weather through May and June. Really enjoy your videos guys, it's lucky our TV is so boring 😉🤗
Awesome video, I live in gargrave and have for 20 years now. The old school you speak of is actually an old Methodist chapel. The village does have it's own primary school
Nice little village, we loved spending time there! If you run into Dawn of Phil say hi for us! -E
The electricity pole you pointed out is actually a telegraph pole distributing phone lines to the surrounding premises. The amount of electricity produced is so small as to be utterly harmless,
Wow I actually really love this video, the positive vibe you guys give off is second to non
Thanks!
I live in a Town on the Leeds - Liverpool Canal in the North of England, Skipton on the border of Yorkshire and Lancashire but on the side of Red Rose County of Lancashire its a Beautiful part of England..
I enjoy the fishing on the canal in Gargrave, glad you enjoyed your visit :)
Found your excellent videos today. I went to Vietnam with you, and closer to home in Yorkshire. I am captivated with your commentary, and your personal dynamic. Brilliant adventures, thanks for sharing. Good luck for the future and take care.
Thanks so much! Glad you are enjoying! -E
Growing up in a hamlet with 1 bus stop that gets 3 buses a day, a village with a train station, pubs and a shops is mind blowing aha
Your fascination over a semi detached house had me cracking up in the first few minutes. ahaha.
If you come back to England you should explore the canal system! The canals do extend into other parts of the UK but England has the most extensive network. It's a huge network - all dug by hand and mostly from the 1700s or early 1800s. It was state of the art transport back then (no rail and no trucks) but is mostly leisure activities now. Renting a barge (sometimes new, sometimes converted from old freight carrying vessels) can be expensive but being forced to slow your life down for a while is priceless! Travelling with a 4mph speed limit is REALLY frustrating at first but becomes blissful without you even noticing the change. And you get to see the most fantastic countryside... not to mention some seriously great canal-side pubs!
We would *love* to, just gotta come with the right budget in the right season! -E
I'm so glad you have got to experience the real UK. So many people think London = UK which couldn't be further from the truth. The real UK is truly beautiful, if you can avoid the rain.
As a not original but definitely a long time Londoner I am soooooooooo in total agreement. Thank you for visiting outside the nation-state of London.
London is the real Uk...lol...
The rain makes the land what it is. As a famous glaswegian comedian said "there's no such thing as bad weather.just the wrong clothes". The bonus of wet weather is a lack of folk wandering around in it .
semi-detached houses started popping up en masse in the UK and Ireland in the 1930s and ever since. They've been about much longer of course but were much rarer until then. They became popular in suburbia and built for the growing middle class who didn't want to live in the city or in a terrace. Detached houses took up too much room so this compromise was formed.
I love churches, When ever i visit a place i have to find a church i just love them :) what a great little house just perfect for 2, me and my husband lived in a place like that back in the days when we lived in Jersey ( Channel Isles) our kitchen was smaller awww its brought back memories :)
you guys are the bomb. Love your videos and narratives. Very informative and not judgemental. Cheers.................
Thanks!! -E
6:44 aren't they telephone cables? Lovely part of the world though. I grew up in Leeds so visited the area regularly! Grassington is real nice👍
In the river they aren't stepping stones. They are a simple weir designed to retain water back during drought periods.
Well, haha, the people who live there tell us they are used as stepping Stones by kids in the summer.
Did you notice the "GR" on the little post box? Even that's been there a while. Many small Post Offices have had to close or be absorbed because many of the services they offered, vehicle taxation, pension payments etc are done electronically now.
Old Swan smashing pub. We had a canal holiday and spent far too long in there one afternoon.
Hi Kyde and Eric, great video. 6:44 is a Telegraph pole used for telephone/internet and not electricity. Electricity to UK homes are normally supplied underground, except for rural farms which rely on small wooden electricity poles.
I love how Eric gets massively interested in the details and history of places, It's a really open way of approaching the world, for god's sake you're in Yorkshire, but it seems so interesting to me.
I would totally love to stay in their B&B tiny home. No loft to climb up! It's charming as is the town. Loved your video, thank you!
Ahhh the north. I lived in a little village in Cumbria called Newton Reigny, we had no shops but we did have a pub....... oooh! and a bus every Wednesday.
I love that tiny house. I want one!
Thats a cute tiny home...Ive been fascinated with the whole concept
At 6:47 the old Swan inn unfortunately burnt down on 8th July this year, just as lockdown was being relaxed a little to allow pubs to reopen. The owners have said they are going to rebuild it.
Oh man, that's terrible!
The houses you thought were one house cut in half are actually built like that to start with, they are called semi detached and are very common across the UK.
All canals are man made, all rivers are natural formations though they may have been rerouted or had their banks altered.
Those weren't power lines, they were telephone cables.
I think ive said this before (So sorry if i have) but you guys crack me up, seriously, your love for life and humour is fabulous (Even the weather doesnt $$$$ you off!!!!) :p
Enjoying your videos of Yorkshire.
Love your videos guys. Those semi's were purpose-built and can be found in older East Coast US cities - e.g. in Philly where they'rev called twins. also known as semi-attached. That old Mini was cool. I recommend Lavenham in Suffolk and Malvern in Worcestershire if you ever feel the need to come back!
This is real Britain. Not London. I'm from a small coastal town in Scotland and there is loads that I can relate to in this video. Glad you got to experience it!
Thanks - really enjoyed this tour around a non touristy village.
I have not read all the comments but from those I have read no one has mentioned that the 'five rise lock system you mentioned is in Bingley, West Yorkshire.
Neptune's staircase in Scotland (Caledonian Canal) is, I think, the biggest sequence of locks in Britain with 8.
The Anderton Boat Lift and the Falkirk Wheel are alternative examples from past and present how engineers have dealt with boats getting from one level to another. They differ slightly though as both of them connect two different waterways rather than dealing with elevation
Two houses together are called semi-detached in Canada and were quite common in the 70's and 80's.
A lot of post offices were also something else from a long time ago especially in small villages. There was maybe one shop "The general store". I lived in Coventry and as a kid the two nearest post offices were other shops one an from mongers and the other a news agent. What always bothered me was on Thursdays the post office was closed while the real of the shop was open?????
Haha, weird Thursdays. -E
Spent many an hour working there. Nice to see an outside perspective of the area I live in :D
Interesting looking at visitor's takes on very typical British places that we all take for granted. I grew up in Yorkshire and places like Skipton, Knaresborough etc was a common Sunday afternoon outing for the family when I was a kid. Never been to Gargrave though. Not sure if this has been pointed out elsewhere but that old school building at around 6:30 in, notice it has 2 big doors on the front. This would almost certainly have been separate entrances for boys and girls (even though they are so close together!) which was quite common when this style of building would have been built.
Interesting! Didn't know about the gender split entrances! Things are a bit different now, haha. -E
You guys are great as always!
At Cael Hill, near Devises in Wiltshire there are 29 locks (built 1810) in a row, worth checking out. Nearby you can also go to the Crofton Beam engines - oldest steam engines in the world that can still do the job they were built for (but not very often) and visit Laycock which is just over flowing with cuteness and history and has been in dozens of films and TV shows. But I digress.
Not electricity lines, phone lines. There are places where power comes in to the house on overhead cables but usually in much more remote areas, you can tell the difference because the power lines have ceramic insulators on the pole.
My old school is now homes, but it had three doors, marked ‘Boys’, ‘Girls’ and ‘Infants’. While the school was fully mixed the coat hooks and lavatories were still located by the appropriate door.
The ‘vehicle licencing’ function of the post office is probably redundant now. If you own a car you have to pay road tax annually, how much depends on how big and polluting your car is. You have to have valid insurance and an annual vehicle safety check called an MOT before you can pay your tax. We used to get paper discs as proof of payment, to display on the windshield, but now it’s all done by number plate recognition. The post office was one of the places you could go to get your tax disc but not all post offices could do this, hence the sign. Soreen is the best!
Our TV is boring? I have never yet found anything on American TV worth watching, okay not entirely true but if it was worth watching (which has been rare) all the add breaks made it impossible to watch. Have you not watched Pointless yet? Or QI?
I have said it before you guys need to come down to the South West, you would love it. Dartmoor, Exmoor, tiny villages, rivers, beaches, dramatic cliffs, historic sights, pirates, smugglers, The Hound of the Baskervilles, Jamaica Inn, Poldark!
Thanks for the info. And about American TV, no one said it was good. Hhaha. -E
Hi there, what a pity you missed out on going to Malham and Malham Tarn, (Google both for more info) I first encountered Gargrave on my Long Distance Walk, The Pennine Way (270 miles from Edale to Kirk Yethome) back in the 1970's and loved the area just as you did. Ofeten visited since then to see how much it changes over the years and that is very little from my first visit 50 years ago. Loved the video and I will track down other videos you have uploaded. All the best Tony
You guys are both awesome, keep the videos coming. It is the difference between a town and a city, a village isn't a town and not sure how a village becomes a town.
You guys are great. Loved all your videos. I'm a Brit living In Bristol RI
Caen Hill Locks (pronounced "Cane") are a flight of locks on the Kennet and Avon Canal, between Rowde and Devizes in Wiltshire, England.
The 29 locks have a rise of 237 feet in 2 miles (72 m in 3.2 km) or a 1 in 44 gradient. The locks come in three groups. The lower seven locks, Foxhangers Wharf Lock to Foxhangers Bridge Lock, are spread over ¾ of a mile (1.2 km). The next sixteen locks form a steep flight in a straight line up the hillside and are designated as a scheduled monument. Because of the steepness of the terrain, the pounds between these locks are very short. As a result, 15 locks have unusually large sideways-extended pounds, to store the water needed to operate them. A final six locks take the canal into Devizes.
This flight of locks was engineer John Rennie's solution to climbing the very steep hill, and was the last part of the 87-mile route of the canal to be completed. Whilst the locks were under construction a tramroad provided a link between the canal at Foxhangers to Devizes, the remains of which can be seen in the towpath arches in the road bridges over the canal. A brickyard was dug to the south of the workings to manufacture the bricks for the lock chambers and this remained in commercial use until the middle of the 20th century.
the note in the phone box was saying if you have no cash you can still use the phone with your bank card/ not that it did not take cash.
Is that why it said: "This phone does not accept coins"?
The comment on the Leeds Liverpool Canal implied that it’s only purpose was to get Gargrave limestone to Liverpool. Of course the Leeds to Liverpool Canal was a main means of transportation in the days when other means of getting heavy loads across country did not exist. Remarkably the canal crosses the Pennine Hills, hence the very large number of locks in the system. With the coming of railways, the canal system began to lose its importance. Now the canal is mainly used for recreational purposes.
Felt the need to travel to Gargrave just to chat on the porch of the tiny house, drinking tea of course.
One of my ancestors helped designed and build the Leeds / Liverpool canal system.
Wow, incredible!
British TV isn't boring.
It's a pack of lies though.
Got to love the crazy British weather!
hello you 2, as a kid I was told they were called monkey trees because monkeys could not climb them. also if you were the first person to see a monkey tree you could pinch the person beside you and say ( pinches on a monkey tree no pinches back ) Thanks for the memory.
Cute!
Hope while you are there you get chance to visit Malham Cove and Bolton Abbey (including the Strid Wood) - both sensationally beautifully places to spend a day each. Malham cove is the source of the river Aire which flows through Gargrave in Airedale (Dale means valley). Bolton Abbey is on the river Wharfe in Wharfedale. I just cannot recommend them strongly enough.
Nice video I'm not far from there went to Gargrave on my bike a couple of week ago.
Great Video as always Kyde and Eric , Next place hopefully somewhere hot and tropical for you to warm up , love England but as cold as a frog in a icebound pool.
There seems to be more traffic in Gargrave than on the M25
It was a pretty busy road, yes. -E
mike saunders it's the main route to settle and hawes. The A65 is an incredibly busy road