Lancashire Footnotes Episode One Hundred and Six - Silverdale

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024

Комментарии • 37

  • @malcolmdouglas5476
    @malcolmdouglas5476 4 месяца назад +1

    Poor Jeanie. Excellent.

  • @deborahcontessa6023
    @deborahcontessa6023 4 месяца назад +2

    Those ancient corpse roads beckon for another saunter, though I fear my arse may find itself wedged in the fairy steps these days. As for the inebriated denizens of the area, they sound like kindred spirits indeed!

    • @wyrearchaeology1
      @wyrearchaeology1  4 месяца назад +1

      You can't get up the Fairy Steps now...not since Jeanie McIntosh's Zimmer got stuck in 'em halfway up.

  • @lynnjenks7145
    @lynnjenks7145 4 месяца назад

    Loved the CGI and all the special effects. Your Professor Brainstawm efforts are amazing. Keep up the good work x

    • @wyrearchaeology1
      @wyrearchaeology1  4 месяца назад

      They're not special effects. We were lucky enough to encounter a few genuine 'wirms' (hairy and/or otherwise) during our expedition - and Jeanie McIntosh really does look like that. John Carpenter's special effects team couldn't recreate the true horror of it all.)

  • @wombal177jim
    @wombal177jim 4 месяца назад +1

    🤣 Enjoyed that thanks 😂. ATB

  • @grahamstephenson9393
    @grahamstephenson9393 4 месяца назад +2

    This is a long episode, i got the popcorn and ice cream out at about 4.15, It was very enjoyable as always. Up in the lancashire border regions is great, as part of Cumbria was once Lancashire a few years back. It's only the pennines where you must heed caution as you're near white Rose territory. Look forward to the next feature length installment.

    • @wyrearchaeology1
      @wyrearchaeology1  4 месяца назад +1

      At some point we're hoping to do Coniston and Bowness - old Lancashire - when the weather's warmer and the ice cream vans are out...just because, really... 😀

    • @grahamstephenson9393
      @grahamstephenson9393 4 месяца назад +1

      @@wyrearchaeology1 Ahh Bowness high street, We go there a couple of times a year to watch the Townies wander about with Alpine snow cramps and walking poles as they scale the expensive shop windows. In july, It can't be climbed in winter apparently.

    • @wyrearchaeology1
      @wyrearchaeology1  4 месяца назад +2

      When I was a kid, many decades ago now, we used to stay a couple of times a year in a cottage on the southern banks of Coniston Water that was owned by a friend of my parents. Me and my brother would row across to the island in the middle of the lake, little realising that we were following in the footsteps of the Swallows and Amazons. It's still Lancashire as far as I'm concerned, which is a good enough excuse to go back anyhow. 🙂

  • @martynking542
    @martynking542 4 месяца назад

    One of my favourite places is the Silverdale area. I go to Leighton moss about four times a year. And I have stayed at Challan hall, it's a bloody good B&B.

    • @wyrearchaeology1
      @wyrearchaeology1  4 месяца назад

      It looks like a nice place, I must admit. Apart from the dead dragon over the fireplace. 🤪

  • @nikitamckeever5403
    @nikitamckeever5403 4 месяца назад

    Silverdale to me is a mine in Staffordshire . One of many I worked in . Your Silverdale I have also visited to sea fish which is very good although you have to watch the tide

    • @wyrearchaeology1
      @wyrearchaeology1  4 месяца назад +1

      I misread that - I thought it said 'to see fish'. I definitely needs some new specs. 🤪

  • @samstvshow
    @samstvshow 4 месяца назад

    Beautiful commentary.

  • @davidhooson7696
    @davidhooson7696 4 месяца назад +1

    Silverdale, it sounds like a kingdom in Game of Thrones, no wonder Sir Roger De Courcey and his bear had to slay hairy worms, which I expect were just friendly lil dogs, the murdering sh*t, and the last wolf, probably just a bigger dog, no wonder everyone drinks there and passes the time getting wedged in narrow crevices, thank you Brian and co.

    • @wyrearchaeology1
      @wyrearchaeology1  4 месяца назад +1

      You could expect nothing more from a man who called his bear 'Nooky' and spent most of his life with his hand up it's bottom, really...

    • @davidhooson7696
      @davidhooson7696 4 месяца назад

      @@wyrearchaeology1 thankfully it wasn't Nooky's arm up Rogers arse, though he did have that look about him..

    • @wyrearchaeology1
      @wyrearchaeology1  4 месяца назад

      I think they took it turns, and occasionally invited Emu, Rod Hull and the Krankies to join in. Er...so some bloke in the Fisherman's Arms told me.

  • @girnogiovana6577
    @girnogiovana6577 2 месяца назад

    big up

  • @NarrowboatLiberty
    @NarrowboatLiberty 4 месяца назад

    I jumped in fright at the image of Michael Portillo. You need to pre-warn of such grisly imagery. I recovered by the time you got to the steps bit, thankfully, or I might have suffered serious injury.

    • @wyrearchaeology1
      @wyrearchaeology1  4 месяца назад

      I can only apologise. I'm only grateful that I didn't use the photographs of Jacob Rees Mogg and Eric Pickles.

  • @pierremchughes9917
    @pierremchughes9917 4 месяца назад

    Always makes me smile, but I'm running out of patience waiting for you to find a pub called the George and iccythosaurus or indeed any made up Dino saw!

    • @wyrearchaeology1
      @wyrearchaeology1  4 месяца назад

      If I ever get enough money I'll open a pub called the George and the Hairy Worm, just for you. 😜

  • @cycler666
    @cycler666 4 месяца назад

    I walked down and up the fairy steps, only a small child might be able to do it without touching the sides.

    • @wyrearchaeology1
      @wyrearchaeology1  4 месяца назад +1

      And only then if they're on stilts - some of those steps are at least four and a half feet in height.

  • @KokowaSarunoKuniDesu
    @KokowaSarunoKuniDesu 4 месяца назад

    Why didn't they carve steps into the Buck stone, like they did with the one up Tatham Fell? prehistoric Yorkshire enterprise, that was. Though much depends on whether there's owt worth seeing off the top of it.

    • @wyrearchaeology1
      @wyrearchaeology1  4 месяца назад

      Apparently the Fairy Steps aren't carved - they formed naturally. Apparently.

  • @tattoobillyband7725
    @tattoobillyband7725 4 месяца назад

    I see Sir William Baguley/ Baggelegh Effigy in the opener