Thank you Carole g, St Ives still retains a charm, but not so many of the real Cornish. I remember quite a few old timers I meet when I was younger as well my own relatives, but they are getting rarer.
thank you enjoyed this,i have been visiting cornwall for nearly fifty years and if truth be told the only thing that ever changes are the shop signs, look above the shop signs and see the past,
yes i agree the last few times ive been down it appears there is a german invasion since brexit , the ones i spoke to were lovely ,but these days local accents are becoming almost impossible to come across ,which is lamentable.
Annie Dodkins my great,great,great nan born and bread,family of shoe makers/repairs,moved and resettled in the midlands 19century i do believe,absorbing video,thankyou
Chris Trick I moved to St Ives in 1974 and worked the Jasmine, Celtic Lass and Frisky for 5 years I had to leave the sea because no one would give a fisherman a mortgage and so joined the Ambulance Service where I worked as a front line ambulance and was stationed in St Ives for 32 years. I had the privilege to have fished with Dan Roach ,John f Toman ,William John Ninnis ( legger) and too many others to list but between them taught me everything from rigging and using a mizzen to fishing from Newlyn in the winter for Mackerel. Infact I still tie feathers the old way with chicken neck feathers and whipping
Fantastic film with flawless editing and PERFECT 👌 evocative emotionally steering music , thank you
Yes lovely music too a real feel good video for such a beautiful place thank you 👍 my fave place to be.
Thank you for your comment, it is certainly my favourite place but then again I am biased. That said Cornwall has many gems to explore.
Alan Butler Yes indeed and I look forward to exploring them :)))
I live in st Ives and wow it’s still looks amazing but no tourists
Thank you Carole g, St Ives still retains a charm, but not so many of the real Cornish.
I remember quite a few old timers I meet when I was younger as well my own relatives, but they are getting rarer.
So sad 😞
this video shows the real Cornwall l would love to go to St Ives and go back to this time the people led such simple lives
thank you enjoyed this,i have been visiting cornwall for nearly fifty years and if truth be told the only thing that ever changes are the shop signs, look above the shop signs and see the past,
Thank you for your kind comment, I agree totally. Sadly the thing I miss are the old local voices you used to hear in the street.
yes i agree the last few times ive been down it appears there is a german invasion since brexit , the ones i spoke to were lovely ,but these days local accents are becoming almost impossible to come across ,which is lamentable.
@@davidjanson9900 it feels sad to me , I love all accents but the fact that there are almost no Cornish accents in Cornwall does not feel right to me
Annie Dodkins my great,great,great nan born and bread,family of shoe makers/repairs,moved and resettled in the midlands 19century i do believe,absorbing video,thankyou
Lovely , to have a time machine eh and to see the real Cornish in the cottages
It doesn't matter from where you come,but its where you're heart is
A wonder full reminder of the past Sam beckerleg
Chris Trick I moved to St Ives in 1974 and worked the Jasmine, Celtic Lass and Frisky for 5 years I had to leave the sea because no one would give a fisherman a mortgage and so joined the Ambulance Service where I worked as a front line ambulance and was stationed in St Ives for 32 years. I had the privilege to have fished with Dan Roach ,John f Toman ,William John Ninnis ( legger) and too many others to list but between them taught me everything from rigging and using a mizzen to fishing from Newlyn in the winter for Mackerel. Infact I still tie feathers the old way with chicken neck feathers and whipping
My favorite place in the world 😀
beautiful video .
Thank you Patty, there will be more on this theme soon.
St Ives knocks st Tropez into touch !
I'd assumed the church tower always had a clock.
Thank you Ian, I agree with your comment.
Too much zooming.....the postcards speak for themselves.