Highland Journey (1957)

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  • @duncancallum
    @duncancallum Год назад +16

    My Mate Ritchie Hislop and i cycled through the Highlands for 2 weeks in 1956,and we had a wonderful time staying at Scottish Youth Hostels .Our Country is certainly very beautiful , had very little cash in these days , so on our last day staying at Crainlarich in the morning all we had cash for was 2 wee packets of individual corn flakes to get us home to Bingham, Portobello, Edinburgh, aye we were a wee bit hungry that day cycling hame . Duncan Pitkeathly .

  • @LadyAnna.888
    @LadyAnna.888 3 года назад +40

    Oh I wish I could time travel back to those times! ❤

    • @susanhill8332
      @susanhill8332 3 года назад +9

      So do I. So sad those times have gone.

    • @matshanssen2070
      @matshanssen2070 9 месяцев назад +2

      So do I. Would you also travel to the future if you could?

    • @gordon1545
      @gordon1545 8 месяцев назад

      So you could toil 14 hours a day in the fields and in smoky, ill-lit kitchens? Coping with widespread poor health and infant mortality? Banned from playing games on a Sunday?
      It never ceases to amaze me that people watch tourist promotion films and believe they're seeing social history.

    • @philtate1029
      @philtate1029 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@gordon1545your view is amazing. We are in the end of days and you wouldn't go back?! Enjoy what's coming mate it's worse than the world has ever known

  • @briancaldwell283
    @briancaldwell283 3 года назад +52

    I was 13 when this was made. I almost cried watching it. Expat in Canada.

    • @briancaldwell283
      @briancaldwell283 3 года назад +4

      @George Job aye. Too bad we can't turn back the clock. All the best my friend .

    • @james03pearce
      @james03pearce 3 года назад +1

      I would live to move to Canada one day

    • @doyoumind9356
      @doyoumind9356 3 года назад +1

      I was minus 2 ! Born 59

    • @geoffpriestley7001
      @geoffpriestley7001 3 года назад +1

      2 years but we went up every year ti 2010 doing the 500mile west coast wild camping trip

    • @briancaldwell283
      @briancaldwell283 3 года назад

      @@geoffpriestley7001 great stuff!

  • @pattismithurs9023
    @pattismithurs9023 3 года назад +49

    I love seeing holiday makers dressed in woolen suits and neckties, Mum in her best hat and dress, maybe knitting while looking at the sights. Quaint times.

    • @stuartwilliams7912
      @stuartwilliams7912 3 года назад +4

      Gran and Grandad sitting in deck chairs in their Sunday best.

  • @ramjet8778
    @ramjet8778 3 года назад +162

    In 1957 people were polite, courteous and civil..and they looked clean and smart. Go forward 63 years in time to today and you will see how far backwards society has gone....no respect, no pride and no social graces... The future is bleak.

    • @Martin-lp4yg
      @Martin-lp4yg 3 года назад

      yes no one swore or was a C**t in the 50's! it was all tickety boo....what a load of mince...the future was bleak in 1939...get real...folk are folk...take off the rose tinted glesses..most folk are still ok these days...its the folk at the top that ultimately suck!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @ottocooper4256
      @ottocooper4256 2 года назад

      Get a grip snowflake

    • @rabadooda
      @rabadooda Год назад +32

      People are easier to control when they have no sense of community or belonging. Its by design, not an "accident".

    • @boomtish4520
      @boomtish4520 Год назад

      Absolute nonsense. We died younger, there was more poverty,more crime, more addiction problems. This is not reality. It’s television.

    • @ramjet8778
      @ramjet8778 Год назад +15

      @@boomtish4520 Sorry, but the statistical evidence does not support your comments….drug addiction in the highlands is far worse that the 1950’s by about a factor of 20 or greater and the same applies to crime….don’t forget that back then the Kirk played a major role in people’s lives and helped to promote the virtues of a decent, moral and ordered life albeit through the theology of hell and damnation if anyone transgressed. Poverty was always there and to a large extent it still is, although the influx of people leaving the wealthy cities in search of a dream or second homes has brought some affluence but also considerable other drawbacks…..in short, overall not a lot has improved in the 66 years that has passed since 1957…there may have been huge leaps in technology and health but society has not got a lot happier or content…and somewhere along the road an age of wonder and innocence has been lost.

  • @geddesjimmy
    @geddesjimmy 9 месяцев назад +3

    Highlander born and bred, I was 1 year old when this was made, this brought back memories of my childhood, holidaying in North Uist and Loch hourne, Glengarry. Roaming the hills of my home in Tomatin just South of Inverness. Lovely film which I have saved to show my grandchildren, thank you.

  • @carolynellis387
    @carolynellis387 3 года назад +10

    Such beautiful scenery, we caravanned all over in the mid 60s and had a simply wonderful time, midges included

  • @stewartmcfarlane2008
    @stewartmcfarlane2008 3 года назад +27

    Lovely old film which awakened some memories. Many of my ancestors were Highlanders, with a few Irish for variety. From the age of 15 (1969), I would hitch rides up to the Highands with my Sheltie and my tent, to wander and explore. I once walked from Inverness to to Shiel Bridge via Gken Affric, and the hitched up to Skye. An epic trip and Glen Affric was always a favourite. In later years I would be up there scuba diving off Skye and the Western Isles. Accessed by liveaboard dive boats which were always converted fishing boats. Great days. I too noticed the unhistorical euphemism for the Clearances, "neglect", suggesting it happened by accident.

    • @sm3296
      @sm3296 3 года назад +6

      What a beautiful youth you had. I had my heart captured by Scotland and look forward to when I can return. A timeless beautiful place.

    • @dougieranger
      @dougieranger Год назад +1

      A more elegant time indeed.

    • @gordon1545
      @gordon1545 8 месяцев назад

      @@dougieranger It was not more elegant. Films like this don't show the realities of toiling in the fields, cutting the peats, endless carrying and washing. It was only elegant for the wealthy.

    • @dougieranger
      @dougieranger 8 месяцев назад

      @@gordon1545 I think there was less mugging, rape, fraud etc. Maybe that’s why I thought that. It was also a bit of a paraphrase of Obi Wan.

  • @cushyglen4264
    @cushyglen4264 9 месяцев назад +5

    Alastair Dunnett who wrote the script for this was an interesting character. He became editor of the Scotsman & was knighted just before he died in 1998. As a young man in the 1930s he kayaked round the west coast of Scotland & wrote a book about it - Canoe Boys. His wife Dorothy Dunnett was a successful novelist.

  • @keithroberts5611
    @keithroberts5611 9 месяцев назад +10

    I was born in England but my heart is in Scotland, As a young man I travelled to the Highlands by train to Fort William camped beneath Ben Nevis, The next day I took the foot path to the top of the mountain, Never saw another soul up or down!!! Unlike today I've been told!! Also I took the train the west Highland railway to Malaig,From this experience I fell in love with Scotland and cried when the time came to leave😢 Fast forward 25years, I got married found myself on the property ladder!!At the time there came a property boom, My house doubled in price!! This was the opportunity I've been waiting for for so long, I found a 3bedroom cottage in 7 acres of ground and various out buildings, Not far from Fort William with far reaching views over the sea and mountains beyond,Just one stumbling block the wife didn't and wouldn't go!!! That was my only chance I'll ever get gone, The strange thing is our daughter moved to Glasgow to get her degree to which got with honours, Meanwhile meets a great partner a scot, She loves Scotland and wouldn't won't to live anywhere else, And she's expecting her first baby anytime now!!!Thanks for sharing this magnificent film brings my memories back to life!!🤔🥰🇬🇧🙏

    • @kevinfitz8516
      @kevinfitz8516 9 месяцев назад

      typical englishman, always trying to stake a claim somewhere else

    • @BoskiM
      @BoskiM 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@kevinfitz8516lol 🤣

  • @connieholcomb4069
    @connieholcomb4069 3 года назад +16

    Such a pleasant film.I will watch it again when I need a calming moment in my day. 🙂🦋joy

  • @caroldave4037
    @caroldave4037 5 лет назад +41

    I first toured Scotland all around coast in 1974...went up in 2001 on motorbike bridges at Ballachulish and skye now there.. nearly parted this world at sligacan bike accident....have been many times I'm from cumbria this film may seem quaint but it is why Scotland is my first favourite place to go....brillant from dave

  • @MrTantrums007
    @MrTantrums007 2 года назад +39

    Superb film recorded in a time when Britain was still truly British. In the 1950s those who could afford the time and money to travel the whole of Britain by rail, bus and car had a unique quality of life that could never be repeated today.

    • @justintime1307
      @justintime1307 Год назад +6

      Then Thatcher happened. Not one has been any better since then unless of course you are a multimillion company, only then can you be in their club

    • @judeross3875
      @judeross3875 9 месяцев назад

      Yes the exiles indeed were lucky to travel back to their motherland just couldn't live there.

    • @Paratus7
      @Paratus7 9 месяцев назад +6

      @@justintime1307yawn. Do you blame Thatcher for your bad acne too.

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@Paratus7 Thatcher was a total bitch. She and her counterparts in Canada and the US wrecked the economies and systems of their countries so badly that until today they are still unfixable!

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv 9 месяцев назад +7

      @@justintime1307 Absolutely right! She did so much damage that the country STILL hurts from it today!

  • @bertgeorge3357
    @bertgeorge3357 8 месяцев назад +2

    This is a charming film that creates deep nostalgia for the time it was made, evidently even in those who weren't alive then. I was, and an it's irresistable feeling. But when I take off the rose-tinted specs I wonder what it is we're all so affected by. Can it actually be a desire to be transported back to those times? Well, for me I'd be going back to almost certain death if I only had 1950s medical treatment to rely on. Similarly, I wouldn't be materially as well-off as I am in 2023. Despite those and other negatives, I can't shake off the feeling that there's something preferable and I guess it's the feeling of a simpler existence, one where it was easier to keep track of human priorities.

  • @normanrussell5526
    @normanrussell5526 8 месяцев назад +3

    I love these films. They make a bit sad but also very very nostalgic for those far off days, when men were men and ladies were ladies, who wore fine cloths and people were much more relaxed and very happy with their life, even though they were only poor in money but not in pride and content with their lives.

    • @gordon1545
      @gordon1545 8 месяцев назад

      Those things were never true though and these films were marketing material, not documentaries. Women were absolutely not more relaxed or happier with their lives in the Highlands, nor were they wearing fine cloths.
      What you're seeing is the small number of people wealthy enough to go on holidays, carefully shot for this promotional film. The women of the Highlands toiled in the fields in all weathers and in heavy clothes, just like the men. They are far more relaxed and happy now.
      The realities of social history are important to understand, otherwise we live in myths.

  • @Bhenderson0001
    @Bhenderson0001 4 года назад +77

    Love these bits of old film..... I like to archive and after many years I now have a massive archive and a special section for bits of film like this. In this current age I hope people will watch these films and see that there is something we have lost back there somewhere and its something we need to get back..... respect for the land and the people, the mystery of the land and our connection with it.... the list goes on and these are things that we lose at our own peril.

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@SteveHoyland1963 Too much nostalgia for one's youth can wreck your present.

  • @dougmccoy100
    @dougmccoy100 8 месяцев назад +1

    I’m old enough to remember the early sixties which means that I can indulge myself in some nostalgia when watching this film. The question whether the 50s and 60s were better or worse than today will depend on where you lived and your own family’s circumstances. My family were incredibly poor and we lived in a run down part of town with a large immigrant community. That immigrant community consisted of Italians, Poles, Afro Caribbeans and towards the end Indians. Each ethnic group endured bigotry and racism and they in turn visited bigotry back on others. I was fortunate in that I made friends with an Indian boy and family who treated me exceptionally well, which considering my family’s circumstances was a blessing. It was a blessing because seeing the racism they endured made my situation a little less hard.
    So, when I indulge myself in looking back nostalgically on the past it’s because I lament the loss of the railways. I lament the demise of the High St and so many, many, other things that I enjoyed back then. Do I lament the changes to society which others have expressed? No!

  • @phil36310
    @phil36310 3 года назад +53

    Wonderful ! Makes one think about our world today... and what we call 'progress'..... Thanks for sharing!

  • @chriswardlow9441
    @chriswardlow9441 3 года назад +4

    What a cracking film,from 1957 I was 9 years old then, the views are stunning great to see passengers chatting together and I particularly liked the lady knitting.The coach they are in I think is a Bedford WTB model and the coachbuilder's were probably Duple,these are day's of no power steering of cause and I guess it would have with no synchromesh,but i'm no expert,quite a task driving along those windey B road,s and,the coach driver looking very smart in his uniform it would be standard dress for staff and complemented with a clean white shirt and most important a tie.Really enjoyed this,thanks for sharing

  • @TerryMcGearyScotland
    @TerryMcGearyScotland 8 месяцев назад +2

    Just, Wow! How things have changed from those days in the 50s! This is pure nostalgia and I love it . I was born in 52 in Edinburgh so it was great to see what it was like around then. Around 1965/66 my dad took us to Banavie near Fort William for a night or so in a rented coal-fired caravan. Driving an old black Ford Prefect (reg ASH 280!) on those old roads it must have been a real expedition! As an active 71 year old hiker I'm looking at those mountains and recognising some of the areas. Nowadays a weekly trip up to the Trossachs and beyond is the norm rather than a undertaking. Boots, walking poles, rucksack and (of course!) waterproofs are all to hand ready to explore our still glorious country! Thanks so much for sharing this memory stirring video. Much appreciated. [I've over 500 RUclipss covering most of my hikes!]

    • @ashleyhoward8926
      @ashleyhoward8926 7 месяцев назад +1

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but the registration ASH comes from Peebles, so maybe you can still get one. I considered it myself years ago when I spotted my name on a car in Newcastle. I'm from Northumberland, bu tI love the wesy coast in particular, so now I'll take a look at your videos.

    • @TerryMcGearyScotland
      @TerryMcGearyScotland 7 месяцев назад

      @@ashleyhoward8926 Good morning! Its origins could well have been Peebles, probably traded in to an Edinburgh dealership. Thanks and I hope you find my (mainly hiking) videos enjoyable. The west coast is my favourite area too. 👍🤝

  • @davekeith7504
    @davekeith7504 3 года назад +8

    Thanking you for showing this film it pulls the heart back again .

  • @martyngallogly5212
    @martyngallogly5212 5 лет назад +15

    My two years in the Highlands were the best ever. Everything right on your doorstep.
    A wonderful wee film

  • @duncanreynolds7744
    @duncanreynolds7744 3 года назад +24

    This film was actually released in 1953, it is a charming reflection of a simpler time long gone now. I grew up in the North of Scotland in the fifties and had a wonderful childhood there. I thought the narrator was Duncan McRae but it is Duncan McIntrye another actor entirely, although he does sound very much like Duncan McRae who I remember fondly as Para Handy on TV in the late fifties.

    • @nledaig
      @nledaig 11 месяцев назад +2

      It is odd that Macintyre couldn't pronounce Buachaille correctly

    • @jimwright1148
      @jimwright1148 10 месяцев назад +2

      No,he was Dougie the ‘mate’.

    • @beachcomber1able
      @beachcomber1able 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@nledaigProbably didn't have the gaelic.

  • @robinwells8879
    @robinwells8879 3 года назад +36

    I have been visiting the west coast annually for 55 years and it never fails to make me feel alive in a way that the south can never achieve. It was two days by my parents car in the early days and I'm able to do it in 8 hours now! Had hoped to see the Oban of the fifties too. Joy.

    • @nw8000
      @nw8000 3 года назад +4

      Yes would love to See Oban there is a glimpse of it in the film en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bridal_Path_(film)

    • @HarvestHome2000
      @HarvestHome2000 Год назад +5

      Robin, the phrase 'the west coast' has only two meanings for me - the railway line to Carlisle, and THE west coast, of Scotland. You're so lucky going every year! Every time I hear the chorus of 'Dignity' by Deacon Blue I well up - it's so evocative of by far the most beautiful part of Britain. Best wishes.

    • @robinwells8879
      @robinwells8879 Год назад +3

      @@HarvestHome2000 absolutely right. I had a colleague who was doing up a yacht for his retirement and died just before he made it to the big day. Dignity makes me shed a wee tear for him every time I hear it but it also places my mind in Lochgilphead, so a mixed blessing.

  • @thehoodooqueen777
    @thehoodooqueen777 Год назад +23

    This is absolutely magnificent!! ❤

  • @markhornsey288
    @markhornsey288 5 лет назад +54

    Love films like this,I would have been 4,we didn’t have all the stuff that we have now but life was much better and simpler

    • @briancaldwell283
      @briancaldwell283 3 года назад +5

      Mark, all the best, young fellow!

    • @martm216
      @martm216 3 года назад +2

      I would have been four as well.

    • @MegAndJas
      @MegAndJas 3 года назад +1

      @@martm216 Me too :)

    • @martm216
      @martm216 3 года назад +3

      @@MegAndJas we should form a nostalgic fellowship exclusively restricted to those born in 1953!

    • @MegAndJas
      @MegAndJas 3 года назад +2

      @@martm216 There's an idea :)

  • @SteelHorseRider74
    @SteelHorseRider74 3 года назад +4

    Technicolor painted the great scenery even nicer.

  • @smitajky
    @smitajky 3 года назад +7

    What a magnificent film. I have enjoyed every moment of it. Thank you.

  • @gary8491
    @gary8491 2 года назад +29

    Beautiful. Living within the Highlands is spectacular. The scenery is out of this world. I'm a true scotsman. Born and bred in this beautiful country. Scotland. Your movie is fantastic. Wasn't born in that era. But nothing really hasn't changed. Except the buses. The scenery is still spectacular. Wild moors. And plenty of wild places to wild camp around our beautiful land for all to share. Plus you have that feeling of Freedom.

    • @dougieranger
      @dougieranger Год назад +2

      Spot on.

    • @duncanstirling5206
      @duncanstirling5206 10 месяцев назад

      Pity you are still under English rule in 2023 by the will of those who call themselves "true Scots".

    • @albertdong
      @albertdong 8 месяцев назад +2

      What? I'm 55 years old and have lived in the North Highlands my whole life (Sutherland). Scenically it may be the same but culturally it's entirely different. The Highlands were an isolated destination and there were few visitors until about the 2010s. Villages were vibrant and full, family homes were passed down through generations and families lived in close proximity. The local pub or hall was full of local life at the weekend (for good and bad) and as a community it felt like we were one - we pulled together and we were a large family of Highlanders. But ease of travel, advertising, NC500, AirBnB, second homes, greed, the Instagram generation and the "colonial" attitudes of some people who have settled or own land in the Highlands have changed things forever. So yeah - the mountains might still be there and the space might still be there. But the old spirit and culture of the Highlands is slowly changing and disappearing as it becomes gentrified for the masses and the money makers.

  • @johnfulstow3454
    @johnfulstow3454 3 года назад +14

    Wonderful, colourful description of the Highlands and Islands. I was 11 when this was released. Seven years later I was on a camping/ touring holiday to many of these places.
    Writing this in Aug 2020 I'm sitting in my camper on a site in Gairloch overlooking Skye. The scenery is unchanging and remains magical. I love place.

    • @carolynellis387
      @carolynellis387 3 года назад +3

      We visited a caravan site in the 69s at Gairloch, loads of huge jelly fish on the beach after a wild storm. My dad served up in Scapa Flow on the Artic convoys

  • @johnpirie3800
    @johnpirie3800 Год назад +15

    Fantastic short video. It really doesn't need any further comment.
    For those and us who love the Highlands, this film captures every detail.
    Thank you Johnny Cassettes and RUclips.

  • @WeeShoeyDugless
    @WeeShoeyDugless 9 месяцев назад +5

    Loved the video, takes me back to my early childhood days back in the early 60s when the roads, towns and villages were just as in the video.
    I still visit the Highlands & islands every year as our main holiday, usually 2 or 3 weeks when we try to visit a new island each visit.
    Interestingly, whilst on Skye only a few years ago, I am certain the old 'dumper tractor' in the video (approx 19.55 in) was sitting at the side of the road on the coast road above Portree!!
    Has anyone else noticed it?
    Back in the '60s, a company called Hunter of Glasgow were the main contractors who 'dualled' the roads and bridges on the island.
    The company went bust and lots of their green liveried machines and vehicles were abandoned at the side of the road, i recall an Atkinson lowloader outfit with a road roller aboard in great, usable condition just parked up in a layby!!

  • @steves5172
    @steves5172 9 месяцев назад +3

    I have been visiting Skye every year for business and holidays since 1987, some 36 years. Over that time the island has seen an influx of visitors growing year on year. Not only holidaymakers but incomers buying property and land, building new, renovating old and pushing prices of property beyond the reach of the local people. So much has changed that the real character of the island is fast disappearing.
    This film stands, thanks to Edgar Anstey, as a testament to the old ways of crofting, and the hardy people that inhabited the isles when they were truly independent and proud!

  • @SigEpBlue
    @SigEpBlue 3 года назад +11

    "The loneliest moor in all of Scotland" -- sounds like it's inviting me to live there.

  • @delzworld2007
    @delzworld2007 3 года назад +6

    What a beautiful documentary with such poetic a commentary.

    • @philiprufus4427
      @philiprufus4427 Месяц назад

      The late Duncan Macrae,then a Scottish Institution. We fifties born kids remember him. The Sergeant Piper
      In Tunes of Glory 1960, with John Mills and Alec Guiness.

  • @andypdq
    @andypdq 4 года назад +24

    The Highlands and Islands are very different these days than they were in the 1950s as shown by this film, when this film was made it was permanently sunny, every time I visit it pisses down.

    • @briancaldwell283
      @briancaldwell283 3 года назад +13

      Andy, they saw you coming. They just want to sell raincoats. Have a wee dram and you'll feel better!

    • @ramjet8778
      @ramjet8778 3 года назад +3

      Love your reply....made me laugh alot ....so very true.... It's always raining when I go....must be that damned global warming !

  • @MrPaddymarley
    @MrPaddymarley 3 года назад +5

    The narration is poetic and colourful!

  • @davidbradshaw659
    @davidbradshaw659 5 лет назад +31

    17:40 neglect!? That was the Clearances!

  • @jazzman1626
    @jazzman1626 3 года назад +24

    Somewhere out there, the much loved and missed Tom Weir is probably walking over the hills.

  • @hoofie2002
    @hoofie2002 5 лет назад +15

    I remember as a boy being really excited to go on the Ballachulish ferry, the same type as the one shown here. Long gone now replaced by a bridge.

  • @Richie90090
    @Richie90090 3 года назад +7

    I absolutely love this vid .. Had me enthralled

  • @grazzer1673
    @grazzer1673 9 месяцев назад +2

    My word, this looks so majestic!
    That's it - we are booking a trip to visit the land of my ancestors.

  • @keithnaylor1981
    @keithnaylor1981 2 года назад +5

    WONDERFUL!!! Went on a three day trip to the highlands about 5 years ago. It was beautiful, like going back in time, in fact, I think it was the same coach.

    • @matshanssen2070
      @matshanssen2070 9 месяцев назад

      The same coach...?
      Really?

    • @mynameisGail
      @mynameisGail 9 месяцев назад

      @Kiethnaylor : The same coach? Absolutely no way ! It's Citylink modern transport nowadays .I guess the best way to describe them are similar to American grey hound coaches. Those old types of buses seen in this film footage haven't been in existence in my whole lifetime and I'm 54 years young , born , bred and still live in Scotland. God bless you though and whatever mode of transport you used , thank you for visiting bonny Scotland 😊 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @jazzman1626
    @jazzman1626 6 лет назад +27

    Very enjoyable indeed! I love the sound of the narrators of these old films. Seeing the cars and busses in the year after I was born sigh.

  • @LarryBees
    @LarryBees 4 года назад +14

    fine old film. hills have not chaged much, but the roads have !! thanks for posting . Great Channel 😀😀

  • @LifeistooshortCK
    @LifeistooshortCK 3 года назад +6

    Thats how to advertise your product. Beautiful film and a story well told. 👍

  • @StreakyP
    @StreakyP 3 года назад +24

    Mallaig... when there was still fish in the sea and things hadn't been trawled out

  • @rogerredding5269
    @rogerredding5269 3 года назад +14

    Beautiful film, and the narrator and music 🎶 is excellent.oh for a time machine 😂 would go to those times in a heartbeat.

  • @hanskristiansen7512
    @hanskristiansen7512 3 года назад +3

    H. Kristiansen
    A very interesting and charming presentation of a beautiful part of Scotland. They don’t do it any better these days.

  • @wadesaleeby2172
    @wadesaleeby2172 Год назад +1

    Oh Bonnie Scotland how I love thee! 🤗😍☺️❤️🌊🌅🌺🎶🐬🏔️

  • @weerobot
    @weerobot 4 года назад +19

    Awesome....1957 less than a second ago geologically speaking...

  • @domhaughton6809
    @domhaughton6809 3 года назад +13

    That was an absolute joy to watch. Thank you so much for sharing it.

  • @orkneyancestor2059
    @orkneyancestor2059 Год назад +3

    An atmospheric commentary complimenting the superb scenery.

  • @flosscake8705
    @flosscake8705 3 года назад +6

    Beautiful part of the world.

  • @Mod-rw9cw
    @Mod-rw9cw 3 года назад +4

    Used to go to Scotland on holiday every year from 1970 to 1982 with my parents and sister. We used to tow a caravan and I have been to all f these places. Glen Coe was always my favourite then Fort William also liked Tralee Bay near Oban.

  • @scabbycatcat4202
    @scabbycatcat4202 6 лет назад +22

    Edgar Anesty produced some wonderful travel log documentaries. Full of nostalgia . Steam trains, steam ships, and what appears to be an abundance of friendly happy people . He was the main producer of the British transport film unit and what I would have given to have had his career !!

    • @philaypeephilippotter6532
      @philaypeephilippotter6532 4 года назад +5

      *Edgar Anstey,* whom I knew, was a kind man although he didn't suffer fools gladly. His career in documentary films started in the late 1920s with *John Grierson* and pretty well finished when he retired from *BTF* _but_ it was a long career. He enjoyed his life with *Daphne,* his *Canadian* wife, and was respected within *BTF* though a couple of people didn't like his political views (he was centre/left and they were definitely left). He supported *Watford F.C.* before *_Elton John_* made it fashionable and his *_Who's Who_* entry reflected his propensity for giving loud advice to the referee from the touchline.
      Apart from most of the purely instructional films there was only one made under his ægis that he didn't influence at all - but he didn't want to. That was *_Terminus_* which was directed by *John Schlesinger* who was responsible for it from the _ground up._

  • @MrMjp58
    @MrMjp58 3 года назад +5

    Superb footage. Beautiful music score.

  • @karaloca
    @karaloca 3 года назад +121

    People on that bus would be talking to each other, these days each stupid head would be buried in a mobile phone, posting on anti-social media and not even looking at the landscape.

    • @crawfordg
      @crawfordg 3 года назад +3

      Hi You are quite correct we went to near Arrocahar from the south west of england 2 years ago 2 very middle aged woen totally spolit the journey and throughout the tour of 5 days by playing very loud music on their mobile phones and shouting when a call was made. To make matters worse on nthe last I counted in excess of 50 text messages. This was the third cpoach trip we made with the same company and all were spolit by unruly inconsiderate middle aged women shouting. Needless to say we will never travel on a long distance coach again. Being an exiled Scot we thought that this would ave us in car travel an be relaxing never never again!!

    • @karaloca
      @karaloca 3 года назад +7

      CGH doesn’t matter what age they are, not about that for me, I see idiots of all ages addicted to their mobiles.

    • @flipper2392
      @flipper2392 3 года назад +6

      @@crawfordg Women are genitically programmed to talk incessantly whenever there is more than one present. When we go out for a meal we always find ourselves next to the table with the screechy woman.
      I note I'm not the only person to call it anti social media.

    • @martm216
      @martm216 3 года назад +2

      Sad but true.

    • @delzworld2007
      @delzworld2007 3 года назад +2

      How right you are. I live in a tourist resort and I see this every day.

  • @lesliedymond9484
    @lesliedymond9484 3 месяца назад +1

    A lovely film thank you sir

  • @anthonytravers6947
    @anthonytravers6947 3 года назад +5

    So natural so beautiful so like Ireland was back then.

  • @photodom2000
    @photodom2000 Год назад +5

    Amazing to see how formally dressed everyone was back then, even traveling by bus. I was in the pass of Glencoe a few weeks ago, and it hasn't changed any. And those mountaineers are nuts. This film was made in the year I was born, so it's sobering to think that all of these people are no longer with us. Oh, and funny how it never rained.

    • @unconventionalideas5683
      @unconventionalideas5683 Год назад +2

      That's why you go during the short sunny season. I imagine it is like many places: there is a short time of year, say two months of the year at most, where sun is fairly common. All the rest of the year it is quite uncommon.

    • @cattymajiv
      @cattymajiv 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@unconventionalideas5683 We don't even get that in Edmonton Alberta, Canada. I've been trapped here for 40 years, and summers are a miserable affair! Cloudy and cold. But then there is no place to swim nearby anyway, except a river filled with fertilizer, pesticide, and algae.
      The right wingers here have destroyed the few good things that did exist. And they have gerrymandered the electoral boundaries so that 1 million right wing MAGAt farmers and seperatists can out vote over 3 million city dwellers.
      If only we could have a little bit of sun and warmth to give us a few nice days to lessen our misery! But not here. This summer, 2023, has been the worst I've seen in my whole life.

    • @mmurphy1533
      @mmurphy1533 6 месяцев назад

      In the islands it actually rains a lot less than in the hills. The clouds just go overhead and drop their load when they hit the mountains on the mainland. We still get our share of wet weather, but it's funny the way the islands are often deserted and have beautiful weather, then we come to the mainland, up into the hills and into the fog and all of a sudden there are runners and hikers and joggers everywhere enjoying "scotch mist".

  • @tonypaddler
    @tonypaddler 3 месяца назад +1

    Beautiful footage, thanks for sharing it 😀👍

  • @laurallama73
    @laurallama73 5 лет назад +10

    So beautiful. Visited on family vacay almost 10 yrs ago. I hope I can visit again.🇨🇱❤️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @jamestaylor2376
    @jamestaylor2376 3 года назад +6

    In those days in scotland there was always understated classical music playing

    • @SierraNovemberKilo
      @SierraNovemberKilo 9 месяцев назад

      A mix of popular tunes, Scottish reels and filler played by an orchestra. Not actual "classical" music.

  • @russellbaldwin708
    @russellbaldwin708 3 года назад +12

    Bloody marvellous to see this,,has anyone got a time machine,i want to travel there now,it makes me laugh at myself because of all the kit i've bought for hiking and watching the two fellas climb a mountain in their everyday clothing and use just a bit of rope!! Thankyou so much for putting this on here,it puts it all in perspective!!

    • @zachariahwade8532
      @zachariahwade8532 2 года назад

      i know Im asking randomly but does anyone know of a trick to log back into an Instagram account?
      I stupidly forgot my login password. I appreciate any tricks you can give me.

    • @achillesgabriel6847
      @achillesgabriel6847 2 года назад

      @Zachariah Wade instablaster =)

    • @zachariahwade8532
      @zachariahwade8532 2 года назад

      @Achilles Gabriel i really appreciate your reply. I found the site thru google and im in the hacking process atm.
      Takes quite some time so I will reply here later with my results.

    • @zachariahwade8532
      @zachariahwade8532 2 года назад +1

      @Achilles Gabriel It worked and I finally got access to my account again. I am so happy!
      Thanks so much, you really help me out :D

    • @achillesgabriel6847
      @achillesgabriel6847 2 года назад +1

      @Zachariah Wade glad I could help :D

  • @briancaldwell283
    @briancaldwell283 3 года назад +5

    I love these old busses.

    • @briancaldwell283
      @briancaldwell283 3 года назад

      @Pat Crossley thanks Pat, I couldn't remember the "Bedord" name.

  • @Doubleoseven502
    @Doubleoseven502 3 года назад +4

    Ive been looking for this for ages! Love these old films.

  • @VickersDoorter
    @VickersDoorter 3 года назад +9

    Amazingly rich colourful shots and so few people. Now we're overrun.

  • @mathewgreen4099
    @mathewgreen4099 5 лет назад +17

    Lovely old film, many thanks for posting.

  • @sentfrom4477
    @sentfrom4477 9 месяцев назад +1

    Beautiful accent. A touching and magnificent interlude.

  • @dickpotter6108
    @dickpotter6108 3 года назад +4

    This is my country, thank you.

  • @marclayne9261
    @marclayne9261 3 года назад +1

    Great film.......a Time Capsule......Clan MacDuff here! I retired to Montana....

  • @MrPaddymarley
    @MrPaddymarley 3 года назад +3

    What a relaxing way to travel through wonderful Scotland..I want to do this trip...!

  • @HazelDaCosta
    @HazelDaCosta 4 года назад +8

    hello all new here, my husband crazy for this thankyou

  • @RichardMMarshall
    @RichardMMarshall 9 месяцев назад +14

    Absolutely wonderful. The sequence of trad climbing is particularly interesting. Having recently been over through Glen Coe and some of the backroads, it's amazing how the remoter parts are unchanged while much is overfilled with tourists.

    • @adriankelly_edinburgh
      @adriankelly_edinburgh 9 месяцев назад +3

      I'm fairly certain that the route they were climbing is Agag's Groove (a classic V. Diff) which I've climbed myself many times. They did well to get a camera up there, even taking the easier line up Curved Ridge which runs alongside can be tricky!

    • @unconventionalideas5683
      @unconventionalideas5683 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@adriankelly_edinburghI think they used a helicopter for the camera, though.

    • @edenbreckhouse
      @edenbreckhouse 6 месяцев назад

      @@adriankelly_edinburgh really basic equipment. No sit harnesses and the lead climber must have been 30ft above any protection. If he's have fallen there the second would have had no chance in arresting the fall.....

  • @nw8000
    @nw8000 3 года назад +4

    Such a beautiful film

  • @Richie90090
    @Richie90090 3 года назад +3

    What a fantastic way of life!

  • @arilebon
    @arilebon 3 года назад +8

    The narrator is wonderful.

    • @johntait491
      @johntait491 3 года назад +1

      A genuine "Highland's" accent. ;-)

  • @m__r1100
    @m__r1100 3 года назад +10

    4:04 is my old house, Gray Street, Killin

    • @MrSqwertery
      @MrSqwertery 3 года назад +3

      A beautiful wee town, always love visiting it..
      Was that loch Lubnaig a few seconds before Killin..

  • @g2macs
    @g2macs 3 года назад +7

    Ah....the Highlands...how lovely, unless you live there then it's putting up with rain from September to June, potholes that can swallow
    a bus and midges that can strip your epidermis in under a minute.

  • @oculii1
    @oculii1 3 года назад +2

    Truly the good 'ol days. How did we lose our way...?

  • @carolynellis387
    @carolynellis387 3 года назад +4

    Did anyone ever read the novels by Lillian Beckwith starting with her first one, The Hills is Lonely a fabulous set of stories and wonderfully humorous

    • @sm3296
      @sm3296 3 года назад +2

      I did yes, beautiful stories.

    • @pegjones7682
      @pegjones7682 2 года назад +1

      Own them all, and reread from time to time!

    • @carolynellis387
      @carolynellis387 2 года назад +1

      @@pegjones7682 They are wonderfully funny and well written too. I'm so glad you enjoyed the books

  • @jmurray01
    @jmurray01 8 месяцев назад +6

    What a bitter-sweet movie to watch. Back when Scotland was full of Scottish people, men were men and women were women. Climate change hadn't been invented, diversity wasn't engineered and everyone spoke the same language and believed in the same God. These days I feel like a foreigner in my own country.

    • @andymack5093
      @andymack5093 6 месяцев назад +2

      Fully concur......... my dearest (sadly now late) Uncle born in 1926 in Kirkintilloch, was our last link to those wonderful and gentler times, and just so grateful to have had (through his eyes) a brief glimpse back to those times when visiting from NZ in 2008, - a true Scot, and a gentleman.

    • @tonypaddler
      @tonypaddler 3 месяца назад +1

      Bitter - sweet indeed, your post is just about word for word as I'd have written it!
      Although I love watching these types of videos, and always will, they also rub it in as to how far downhill our country has gone (been forced to go!)
      Luckily I've made it into the autumnal years of my life while the country was relatively unharmed.
      See what winter brings, eh ... ? 🤔🙄😐

  • @MrTam63
    @MrTam63 5 лет назад +9

    Braw wee film , reminds me ae bein' a young boy in the late 60s early 70s .

  • @HarvestHome2000
    @HarvestHome2000 Год назад +10

    1:26 and 21:12 - Duntulm Castle, Skye. The section with the arch has disappeared, sadly along with most of the rest of it.
    It's wonderful to see what these fabulous places used to be like, before mass tourism began to ruin them. Loved the Kyle of Lochalsh ferry!

  • @Teenibash1969
    @Teenibash1969 9 месяцев назад

    Oh beautiful. I am a lover of Argyll but all the west coast is lovely. How smart it was then.

  • @piyabiswas9475
    @piyabiswas9475 8 месяцев назад

    Beautiful movie. Love it

  • @susanhill8332
    @susanhill8332 3 года назад +6

    How sad those times have gone. Swap my Persimmon home tomorrow for a croft.

  • @sinistershenanigans965
    @sinistershenanigans965 3 года назад +2

    What a life so uncomplicated. Tack me back please

  • @dirkdoenvanv.8156
    @dirkdoenvanv.8156 9 месяцев назад

    It is There To Find!!! Thanks for posting!! Chilling!!

  • @jorgesantoine24
    @jorgesantoine24 9 месяцев назад +1

    Fabulous film

  • @nevillemason6791
    @nevillemason6791 3 года назад +3

    The film claims to be 1957 but the view of Edinburgh at 3:06 is earlier. The trams shown stopped running in November 1956 (only to be re-introduced on the same street some 58 years later!)

  • @macbrahan
    @macbrahan 3 года назад +6

    Lovely film; although dated 1957, it must have been shot a year or two earlier. The Edinburgh shots show the old trams fully operational in Princes Street, and these were phased out in 1955/56.

    • @pegjones7682
      @pegjones7682 2 года назад +2

      And brought back at huge cost around 2007

    • @grazzer1673
      @grazzer1673 9 месяцев назад

      @@pegjones7682 Thank goodness that elegance, charm and character can on occasion win out over the bean-counters working in the finance department.
      Some things you can't put a price on!

  • @ChineseGordon1956
    @ChineseGordon1956 3 года назад +2

    Ahh....Duncan Macrae is the narrator of this lovely piece of history...I remember him every time when i was a boy during Hogmanay.

    • @trevorcox3020
      @trevorcox3020 3 года назад +6

      Says it was Duncan Mcintyre in the introduction credits

    • @Jeffybonbon
      @Jeffybonbon 3 года назад +1

      I thought that too but its someone else

    • @williamkurzenberger6414
      @williamkurzenberger6414 2 года назад +1

      He really does sound like Duncan MacRae. I was slightly disappointed when I read the credits.

  • @briancaldwell283
    @briancaldwell283 3 года назад +8

    Anybody remember as a wee yin being scared when the steam engines roared into the station?

  • @stevenbrownlie2095
    @stevenbrownlie2095 4 года назад +2

    Excellent video made a year before I was born. Thank you for the upload. Loved it. Subscribed.

  • @mickigoe
    @mickigoe 5 лет назад +4

    Thank you, JC, hugely enjoyable.

  • @markharrisllb
    @markharrisllb 3 года назад +2

    We stayed at Killin on the Scottish part our honeymoon. This is the first year we’ve not been back to Scotland as we had to cancel because of the pandemic.

    • @sm3296
      @sm3296 3 года назад

      Mark if you do go back plan a visit to Fife, it’s beautiful, has more sunshine and no midges!

  • @mozdickson
    @mozdickson 3 года назад +3

    I'm a Dickson, or Deidreksen if you like, of Clan McLeod. My forebears never "neglected" their Skye cattle nor Croft nor kin a day in their lives! They were cleared, their livelihood stolen, their language and culture suppressed.
    But forgive the past sins, Hold Fast, God our Father is greater than all. And New Zealand did us all fine. Thank ye.

  • @user-fe5do8cq6x
    @user-fe5do8cq6x 9 месяцев назад

    Most enjoyable. I do indeed recall the old road to Mallaig creeping through Glenfinnan and down to Loch Eilt. It is still a great run but you need to slow down to appreciate the unchanging scenery. Gathering sheep too in Glen Suileag looking down to Loch Eil and over to The Ben. Our maths teacher, "Ferret", used to come out on Sundays in his old Ford Prefect for afternoon tea by the loch. All an eon ago and a long way from Sydney!