I have just returned to Australia after visiting Glen Etive, a place my father took me to as a boy for a brief holiday some 45 years ago before we migrated to Australia to live. Despite the long absence, I clearly remembered the places where we camped and fished and they are still so hauntingly beautiful and mystical. Thank you for this great video, I will always have great memories of beautiful Scotland. Greetings from Adelaide, South Australia!
David Murdoch - Your description of Glen Etive is so accurate. But the local pronunciation of Etive is something like a-teev rather than eh-teev with the 'a' as in 'bake'.
@@iainmorrison7302 Based on the Gaidhlig "Gleann Eite", the vowel should be more like the 'a' from 'bake', as Eoghann suggested, but what people say in practice could be different.
I have just returned to Australia after visiting Glen Etive, a place my father took me to as a boy for a brief holiday some 45 years ago before we migrated to Australia to live. Despite the long absence, I clearly remembered the places where we camped and fished and they are still so hauntingly beautiful and mystical. Thank you for this great video, I will always have great memories of beautiful Scotland. Greetings from Adelaide, South Australia!
lovely video, bringing back great memories of our trip to glen...what a place! Cheers!
David Murdoch ... lovely voice. Any other video narrations?
great stuff thanks very much
Very beautiful
David Murdoch - Your description of Glen Etive is so accurate. But the local pronunciation of Etive is something like a-teev rather than eh-teev with the 'a' as in 'bake'.
I have only ever heard it pronounce Eh-Tive rhyming with live. Just saying
@@iainmorrison7302 Based on the Gaidhlig "Gleann Eite", the vowel should be more like the 'a' from 'bake', as Eoghann suggested, but what people say in practice could be different.
Aye, I will.