Stonecat Wales
Stonecat Wales
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Willowherb Tea
Another amble out into the great outdoors with nothing direct in mind. I came across a stand of rosebay willowherb and decided to make an infusion from the leaves. While 'teas' can be made from most wild edibles, this plant is a tad more interesting because it has social and economic history in its background.
zhlédnutí: 48

Video

Bilberry Leaf Tea
zhlédnutí 30Před 9 hodinami
A couple of hours out following several more of heavy rain. My target, the bilberries plants growing where the woodland gives way to open moorland. August 2024, an excellent crop of berries and whilst I munched a goodly number, my aim was to brew up a mug of bilberry leaf tea.
Meadowsweet Tea, Flavouring Lemonade & Some Bats For Company
zhlédnutí 45Před dnem
I foraged some Meadowsweet flowers and leaves to knock up a crude 'tea' (an infusion) and I used the flower heads to flavour a bottle of cheap lemonade. Both were successful projects. Prep' was in the kitchen for the lemonade flavouring but the tea infusion was outdoors at dusk meaning I wasn't alone. There were many bats above hawking the gnats above the river.
Bus Journey From Llangollen To Wrexham
zhlédnutí 64Před 14 dny
A nice, dry, sunny day so for a change, I filmed the journey between Llangollen and Wrexham from the top deck of the regular Arriva Bus number 5 service. This route offers an even mix of rural and urban scenery.
Wrexham - Bidston Line Train Journey
zhlédnutí 66Před 14 dny
27/July/24. Some clips of the journey, arriving/departing stations on route.
Saighton-Waverton Walk
zhlédnutí 32Před 14 dny
Some selected clips of a shorter walk over the border in Cheshire of 9.25 miles, starting and ending in the village of Saighton, outside the city of Chester.
Super-Tasty Nettle Soup. Foraging Ingredients, Cooking, Eating.
zhlédnutí 233Před měsícem
Harvesting wild garlic bulbs and nettles, cooking them up into a soup, then consuming the end product out in the woods heated up on the camping stove. Finished off with a steaming hot mug of tea.
Exploring The Myth Of The Afon Conwy Afanc
zhlédnutí 156Před měsícem
I'm partial to the myths and legends of Britain and Ireland. Most are ancient and identify with Celtism in these islands though some clearly are much older than that. Perhaps 8000 BC or so? The Afanc is a mythical beast which inhabited deep rivers and deep pools in rivers, sometimes lakes, which would wreak havoc on neighbouring land, destroying crops, devouring livestock and people and so on. ...
Message In a Bottle Launch 21 June 24
zhlédnutí 173Před měsícem
After a bit of a break from an interest of mine, putting messages in bottles in the sea, I thought I'd re-start with a small batch of bottles cast into the sea at Hilbre Island, situated in the mouth of the River Dee estuary, which separates north Wales from England as it issues into the Irish Sea. Although I'm very confident where the bulk of the bottles will come ashore, odd ones occasionally...
Mouth Watering Wood Sorrel Soup
zhlédnutí 98Před měsícem
Remember folks, every new subscriber between my 500 sub' milestone and 1500 will see a tree planted. See this video for more details - czcams.com/video/Ig2115rCy44/video.html After making a big pan of potato and wild garlic soup using the leaves of the Allium, this time, I knocked up another batch but using the wild garlic bulbs. For a hint of green in the soup, I decided to use some wood sorre...
Pleasing, Picturesque Gronant to Maes Glas walk
zhlédnutí 63Před 2 měsíci
Remember folks, every new subscriber between my 500 sub' milestone and 1500 will see a tree planted. See this video for more details - czcams.com/video/Ig2115rCy44/video.html 10 June 2024. A nice picturesque and flat walk of 11 miles from Gronant to Maes Glas along the Wales coast path in Flintshire. A very interesting amble of excellent views, good wildlife and history.
A Stunning Scenery Wild Camp At Llyn Bochlwyd
zhlédnutí 121Před 2 měsíci
Remember folks, every new subscriber between my 500 sub' milestone and 1500 will see a tree planted. See this video for more details - czcams.com/video/Ig2115rCy44/video.html I decided at the last minute to do an overnighter wild camp at Llyn Bochlwyd, a glacial lake above Dyffryn Ogwen in Eryri (formerly known as Snowdonia). This lake sits higher up than the more well known Cwm Idwal, a favour...
Hedgehog Banquet
zhlédnutí 73Před 2 měsíci
Remember folks, every new subscriber between my 500 sub' milestone and 1500 will see a tree planted. See this video for more details - czcams.com/video/Ig2115rCy44/video.html Each night, a neighbour has up to 4 hedgehogs visiting her feeding station. I got the chance to leave a trail cam in position and picked up a couple of them.
The Mystery Of Ynys Gifftan's Name.
zhlédnutí 157Před 2 měsíci
If you like this video, please consider liking it, commenting on it and a subscription from yourself would be hugely appreciated. I like a mystery sometimes. And sometimes I like to try and solve them. This is the story of how I busted a myth about the name of a small tidal island in North-East Wales. For reasons not yet known, persons created then promoted an untrue account of how Ynys Gifftan...
Stunning Mandarin Ducks & Ducklings On Trail Cam
zhlédnutí 240Před 2 měsíci
Remember folks, every new subscriber between my 500 sub' milestone and 1500 will see a tree planted. See this video for more details - czcams.com/video/Ig2115rCy44/video.html If you look carefully, you might just be able to make out some hen's eggs under the water. I set up a camera overlooking some eggs I placed on a dry part of the river bed to attract any predators which are partial to them....
A Tasty Chicken Dinner For Mr Crow
zhlédnutí 405Před 3 měsíci
A Tasty Chicken Dinner For Mr Crow
Visually Stunning Eglwyseg Escarpment Walk. Llangollen To World's End
zhlédnutí 91Před 3 měsíci
Visually Stunning Eglwyseg Escarpment Walk. Llangollen To World's End
Magnificent. Dolgellau To Barmouth On The Mawddach Trail
zhlédnutí 210Před 3 měsíci
Magnificent. Dolgellau To Barmouth On The Mawddach Trail
A Hidden Snowdonia Gem, Ffynnon Llugwy
zhlédnutí 126Před 3 měsíci
A Hidden Snowdonia Gem, Ffynnon Llugwy
Rescuing A Trapped Lamb
zhlédnutí 97Před 3 měsíci
Rescuing A Trapped Lamb
500 subscriber milestone & thank you and new subscriber tree planting project.
zhlédnutí 99Před 3 měsíci
500 subscriber milestone & thank you and new subscriber tree planting project.
Berwyn Railway Tunnel Exploration
zhlédnutí 124Před 4 měsíci
Berwyn Railway Tunnel Exploration
Random Trail Cam Animals
zhlédnutí 156Před 4 měsíci
Random Trail Cam Animals
Pulford - Holt - Gresford Walk
zhlédnutí 143Před 4 měsíci
Pulford - Holt - Gresford Walk
Chirk Circular Walk
zhlédnutí 162Před 4 měsíci
Chirk Circular Walk
Wrexham And Rhosllanerchrugog Walk
zhlédnutí 181Před 4 měsíci
Wrexham And Rhosllanerchrugog Walk
Ellesmere Port To Chester Canal Walk
zhlédnutí 229Před 4 měsíci
Ellesmere Port To Chester Canal Walk
The Airbus Beluga Approaching Hawarden Airport.
zhlédnutí 270Před 4 měsíci
The Airbus Beluga Approaching Hawarden Airport.
A Spot Of Archery Practise
zhlédnutí 258Před 4 měsíci
A Spot Of Archery Practise
Checking My Nest Boxes
zhlédnutí 166Před 4 měsíci
Checking My Nest Boxes

Komentáře

  • @grahambennett8191
    @grahambennett8191 Před 16 hodinami

    Nice quality fish, bet they have never seen a hook before.Well done. Graham.

  • @user-yd9bj3bs8g
    @user-yd9bj3bs8g Před měsícem

    The bats in Greywell Tunnel on the Basingstoke Canal are legally protected and boats cannot go in or through , thereby cutting the restored Basingstoke Canal in two. Bats in enclosed spaces can create and spread diseases like covid. Using a mask is advisable in such places.

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 11 dny

      Hi. Thanks for your comment. Appreciated. I'm fully versed with the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 as amended. Bats are protected everywhere. It isn't an offence to look, only disturb. Quiet observation is perfectly fine........................ It may not be everyone's cup of tea, but I took little notice of Covid and just got on with my life. No masks, testing and no jabs. I would be more concerned about the likes of breathing in bat faeces' particulates or fibres from cage bird feathers and I regard those as statistically insignificant..................... If there were risks, every explorer of old buildings, cavers, pot-holers etc would need breathing apparatus lest they breathe in something nasty as bats abound in such places.......................What you say is valid however to me it is also subjective; a bit like saying don't eat apple pips because they contain cyanide........................... That said, thanks for your input. It is gratefully received. Cheers :)

    • @user-yd9bj3bs8g
      @user-yd9bj3bs8g Před 10 dny

      My wife and I love bats. We used to run a licensed bat rescue centre 30 years ago. It's amazing how scared some people are of a tiny pipistrelle. bat when it flies in their house and settles on a curtain. Quite illogical. One lunchtime my wife and I were having lunch in our back garden, when we were joined by a bat hanging on our wooden garden fence. Unusual for midday! Kind regards. John and Gill Bath.

  • @richardhenshaw5660
    @richardhenshaw5660 Před 2 měsíci

    You were in Connahs Quay.

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před měsícem

      Thanks for your observation. However, I beg to differ. It was Shotton. We were 200 yards from the railway bridge. Wepre Brook where it issues into the Dee is the Connah's Quay boundary and that was downstream somewhere beyond where the bore comes into view at the start of my clip........................ The mid way point of the river is the boundary between Shotton and Sealand......................... If this link works okay, you can zoom in and it quite clearly shows the boundaries. We were just downstream of the derelict landing stage on the far bank and that is marked on the map when you zoom in........... mapit.mysociety.org/area/12772.html Cheers.

  • @goshawkish
    @goshawkish Před 2 měsíci

    Great looking egg mate,i bet you couldn,t do that again 😀,great vid 👍

  • @PaulPhilbin-wu5ny
    @PaulPhilbin-wu5ny Před 2 měsíci

    What 🏚

  • @PaulPhilbin-wu5ny
    @PaulPhilbin-wu5ny Před 2 měsíci

    Quite 🛖

  • @macrolithic
    @macrolithic Před 2 měsíci

    Da iawn, it just means yn gymraeg, craggy island, ever heard of a comedy series like that?

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 2 měsíci

      Someone's tried to have a laugh. That much I know :) I've tracked down an adjective with what seems to be the same historic root and it describes a 'lle ber'. It'll be in my next upload on this subject of the ynys when I drill into the translation.

  • @decliche1286
    @decliche1286 Před 3 měsíci

    It truly is a bird eat bird world

  • @lakedistrictcampingwitAce
    @lakedistrictcampingwitAce Před 3 měsíci

    Cool

  • @zaragozakid310
    @zaragozakid310 Před 3 měsíci

    Well in, Scott. You're a good guy

  • @WyeExplorer
    @WyeExplorer Před 3 měsíci

    Ah, good going Scott. I've done a coupl, of lamb rescues when they get their heads stuck actually in the fence. It's great to see em run free. Mark

  • @davidhintz1
    @davidhintz1 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you so much!!

  • @gavinwestern4619
    @gavinwestern4619 Před 3 měsíci

    Congratulations on getting to 500 subs mate 🎉🎉

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 3 měsíci

      Thanks for that mate. Much appreciated. :)

  • @BadgerBotherer1
    @BadgerBotherer1 Před 3 měsíci

    Good work you're doing with those trees. I'll share on my Twitter, if that's okay.

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 3 měsíci

      By all means mate. Thanks for the support. Awesome :)

  • @macrolithic
    @macrolithic Před 4 měsíci

    Yes, there was a chap doing a project in east Carmarthenshire in the 1990's like yourself, Have you ever seen any seed on them? I think I have read that they are an ancient introduction like some of the elm clones, Bronze age possibly and spread along rivers and muddy flood plains by vegetative reproduction and then obviously got completely decimated in the last 150 years. They are more typical of Europe further south and east with warmer summers and there are several varieties (e.g. the north Italian one), and including one with snow white bark which you wouldnt think was a black poplar!

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 4 měsíci

      Female trees seed most years and much is fertile but according to the 'experts', there's only one known location in Britain where seedlings have been known to germinate. I actually visited the site in the south Wirral and saw a couple growing in the mud; they have exacting conditions to germinate which means population increase from seed is almost impossible in Britain in the wild. Naturally black poplars would spread via a combination of broken off branches and seed. The British black poplars are a sub-species of the continental ones and this 'betulifolia' is found only here and in parts of the Low Countries in Europe. The well known Lombardy poplars are black poplars bred as 'italica' since at least the 1700s. When I'm long gone and someone looks at black poplars as adult trees in the Dee Valley say 100 years from now, it will be pretty certain they will be one of mine :)

    • @macrolithic
      @macrolithic Před 4 měsíci

      Is it like a fluff with very small seeds in it? In Italy, the arrival of that fluff or down blowing on the wind is seen to signify the arrival of spring. Yoy need to get the seed under a decent lense to see if it looks like there a content in the seed coat. @@StonecatWales

  • @macrolithic
    @macrolithic Před 4 měsíci

    Da iawn, nice to see somebody helping wildlife. Made some woodcrete ones years ago cheaply with wire netting inside the crete which keeps the squirrels out a bit, they seemed quite attractive to the feathered folk. Got a bluetit nesting above me now in part of the roof space and there sometimes a noctule batting its wings above the ceiling.

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 4 měsíci

      Diolch. Sut mae pethau'n mynd? Indeed, those greys squirrels like rats will bore through concrete given time. Reinforced woodcrete! Awesome.

  • @missyoubeth
    @missyoubeth Před 5 měsíci

    Enjoyed the vid.

  • @daniellindsay4053
    @daniellindsay4053 Před 5 měsíci

    You need to castle cut top of can to let it draw properly

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 5 měsíci

      Thanks for your comment. Appreciated. :) I'm familiar with castellated rims. Of course I could have done that however my point was deliberately using just two tools of whatever came to hand with eyes shut delving into a tool box. Had I done that at home, I could have used a drill, tin snippers etc. That was too easy. My whole aim was one of crudeness enough to get it to work.

  • @stealthop
    @stealthop Před 5 měsíci

    great idea. cheap as chips works for me

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 4 měsíci

      Thanks for the positive response. Appreciated :)

  • @dane2487
    @dane2487 Před 5 měsíci

    Hi there. This video was a good find and saved a few of your other ones to watch. I heard they grow best on flood plains but have a heard of a few on sandy soils inland on the Wirral. I hope to visit them this summer. Have you seen big ones in drier soils? I tried to find some others a few years ago but failed. Fingers crossed this time

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 5 měsíci

      Hi.............. Thanks for yourr comment and question................ Traditionally and normally, they do indeed grow on flood plains and along streams and rivers elsewhere than on flood plains. They will also grow away from obvious water and even quite high in altitude........................ They do need to be near some water supply so long as it is enough to feed the tree daily. They consume a huge amount of water each day and it is seemingly true that they should never be planted on clay soils near dwellings as they can draw so much water, the clay dries out and shinks causing subsidence............................... In the wetter west of Britain, they will grow at those higher altitudes. I see no reason why they wron't grow on sandy soils. It will depend on how deep is the water table. If the moisture is there year round, they should grow well tbh............................... At Formby, there is a consideable number of genuine black poplars growing in the sand dunes thiugh most ae not huge at all. At first glance the terrain would appear arid, but some feet down below the dunes, the soil is damp as it is below the high water mark of the shore, so water penetrates quite a way inland which by then is free of salt............................ www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/liverpool-news/mystery-hidden-grove-rare-trees-26189069 ............................ Hope this proves of some use to you? ............................. I'd write to Wirral council as a FOI request and ask them for any info' on the location of black poplars in the borough. Most local authorities in Britain have BP data bases........................ Cheers :)

    • @dane2487
      @dane2487 Před 5 měsíci

      Thanks that is very interesting and sounds logical@@StonecatWales

    • @jordanadam4693
      @jordanadam4693 Před 4 měsíci

      I've planted 40 of these on and around my allotment site. Males and female plants. Barnsley area. Hopefully they will grow ! 🙏

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 4 měsíci

      Good work. The more the merrier. I find they are quite easy to grow and even if only half survived, it's still a huge plus.

  • @WyeExplorer
    @WyeExplorer Před 5 měsíci

    I was going to say that - I liked how the water heated up a distance from the flames. A good test - great result. Mark

  • @davidmills5918
    @davidmills5918 Před 5 měsíci

    panad gymreig yn nyffryn ddyfrdwy. Ardderchog

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 5 měsíci

      Diolch am y geiriau caredig cyfaill. Byddaf yn mynd i'r ynys yn fuan. 'Dwi'n edrych ymlaen at y peint a sgwrs wedyn. Sut mae pethau'n mynd? :)

  • @WyeExplorer
    @WyeExplorer Před 5 měsíci

    Ah, nice one. The fuel burned alright - and you got to burn the label too. An easy fun stove - good going. Mark

  • @WyeExplorer
    @WyeExplorer Před 5 měsíci

    That was for sure mesmerizing. It's a great natural wonder - really good you could be there for it. I wonder how much energy that exerts - a fair bit no doubt. Down here on the Severn they surf the bore. Great show. Mark

    • @mikeoglen6848
      @mikeoglen6848 Před 4 měsíci

      People have been known to Canoe it - where the channel narrows and makes the wave bigger.

    • @WyeExplorer
      @WyeExplorer Před 4 měsíci

      @@mikeoglen6848 Just as good as a surf that sounds.

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 4 měsíci

      Someone on YT has a vid doing just that :)

    • @WyeExplorer
      @WyeExplorer Před 4 měsíci

      @@StonecatWales Would like to see that.

  • @WyeExplorer
    @WyeExplorer Před 5 měsíci

    Ah, lovely time out on the hill. I do like a bit of pine needle tea - I also like how we can busy ourselves on the hill making small fires, boiling water then enjoying our concoction. You looked at peace there at the end. Very mellow and satisfying. Some good info there. Mark

  • @robbridges5975
    @robbridges5975 Před 6 měsíci

    Brill video. I’ve often wondered what the bore would look like from that location… now I know. Pity there was so much fresh water in the river, else it would have been more spectacular on such a good spring tide. Thanks for posting.

  • @TheF0nz1
    @TheF0nz1 Před 6 měsíci

    Nice one Scott hope you are well mate!

  • @AAHomeGardening
    @AAHomeGardening Před 7 měsíci

    i was looking for some last year and did not find any - i need to go out and look again soon

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 7 měsíci

      It's naturally found in the western parts of mainland Britain but will grow almost anywhere it is introduced. If you are in such western parts, I'd suggest mooching about in deciduous woodland which isn't too dense as the shoots and leaves are just appearing now and are very obvious. In a few weeks, woodland floors will be covered with it where it occurs.......................... Thanks for commenting :) Always welcome.

    • @AAHomeGardening
      @AAHomeGardening Před 7 měsíci

      @StonecatWales OK, probably I was too easy Ii was in one of UK national forest looking last Friday

  • @WyeExplorer
    @WyeExplorer Před 7 měsíci

    Really good you being able to get out finally. It has been wet down here too. I love these usually on trail - just good for a munch. But as you say good for cooking too. A nice forage there. Here's wishing you a happy new year a great 2024 up there in North Wales. All the best from the shire. Mark

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 6 měsíci

      Hi Mark. Thanks for your comments. Much appreciated. The countryside is one big smorgasbord to me. Have a great 2024 too. Looking forward to your uploads this year. Best wishes from North Wales :) Scott

    • @WyeExplorer
      @WyeExplorer Před 6 měsíci

      @@StonecatWales A pleasure there. Yeah, I get that about the outdoors - never wanting for anything. See how 2024 unfolds.

  • @thebonsaiprojectkernow
    @thebonsaiprojectkernow Před 7 měsíci

    Hi mate, just to let you know those black poplar I bought from you have done really well 💪

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 7 měsíci

      Hi. I'm glad to hear that mate. They aren't too difficult to get going. I watched your vid of the unpacking. I'd be really interested to see how they come on as bonsai over time. I always offer some to enthusiasts in February and that'll be the case again in 2024. I've been responsible for the planting of hundreds of black poplars now across Britain via my own efforts and the cooperation of a whole network of enthusiasts. Your project is a welcome added dimension....................... Good luck with your endeavours mate. Cheers. :)

  • @johndodd4375
    @johndodd4375 Před 8 měsíci

    Tell me why did you have wafers on fishing the canal

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 7 měsíci

      I wasn't wearing waders. I had waterproof trousers on tucked into wellington boots. I did check when you posted and it looks like waders. but just 'wellies'. :)

  • @archangel20031
    @archangel20031 Před 8 měsíci

    Cotton wool? It's either made of cotton from a plant, or wool from a sheep!

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 8 měsíci

      Thanks for your post. All my life, cotton wool has been so called no matter what it's actually made of. I'm 61 years old and as a youngster, cotton wool. In other countries it might have different names. It is actually pure cotton and has no connection with sheep. It's just another peculiarity of British English, the wool being a colloquial word for the fibres....................... That said, cotton fibres are sometimes now mixed with synthetic fibres to create yarn and some clothing materials.

  • @richardwebb5317
    @richardwebb5317 Před 8 měsíci

    My father skipped school and dodged guards* to watch the aqueduct getting blown up. (He lived on the next farm but one upstream). There is a very fine bridge in Little Hereford, now hidden away in a back garden but it used to be visible from the road and really puzzled me as a child - why would there be a big bridge in a garden away from the railway or river? The canal was somewhat forgotten *Only the Home Guard.

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 8 měsíci

      Next time I'm that way, I'll look out for that bridge in the garden you mention. Thanks for that :)

  • @ianmaddams9577
    @ianmaddams9577 Před 9 měsíci

    Has anyone been back to sign the visitor book since this was made ?

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 9 měsíci

      Hi............ I'm assuming not. The visitor book had contact details and no one has contacted me. I wasn't the first person to enter that tunnel. i was beaten to it by a few months by a couple of canoeists who only took photos. I made this brief video. It is possible no one has been in since or, they have but have simply not bothered to advise me..................... It was a gesture on my part out of curiosity so, the result is what it is. Should I ever get a response, I will update viewers and if the opportunity arises, I'll go back and explore the tunnel again :) Cheers for the question. Appreciated.

  • @simonmcowan6874
    @simonmcowan6874 Před 9 měsíci

    Just found this, i know its ages ago but a great post, i know the area a little but not heard of this canal.

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 9 měsíci

      Hi.............. It's easily located on Google Earth for starters and the portal I entered has a public footpath just 50 yards away which takes you over the railway line. It is all accessible from the appropriately named Tunnel Lane which runs out of Orleton village. The footpath I mention is just before the lane crosses the railway line......................... The canal as I mention has been gone a long time but still quite visible in places. If you get the chance, it's well worth a visit. :)

  • @johncunnane1582
    @johncunnane1582 Před 9 měsíci

    thanks, greetings from Ireland.

  • @extrememiami
    @extrememiami Před rokem

    Im in south Florida and keep finding coal scuba diving 3.5 miles off-shore. I figured it was a shipwreck. So far ive found around 100 lbs of it. Pieces from a coin size all the way up to a 30lb rock 1/2m long. Theres no coal naturally I believe or is coal rock just found all over the place nationally. Does anyone know more? Shipwreck or natural occurrence. My areas has calcium carbonate rock and oolite. Ive never heard of coal natural to Florida especially off-shore.

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 9 měsíci

      Hi................ Thanks for your message. Apologies for the delay in replying. If you are sure there is no coal being brought up from the sea bed in storms which gradually comes ashore, then it could be there is a ship wreck of sorts off shore...................................... I'd be tempted to examine the coal itself and note if there is seaweed attached or barnacles. If much of the coal has either but especially the latter, then it's probably been in the sea for a long time before being cast up. If the opposite and free of marine life, it must be coming from a source close to shore. This might suggest a wreck eroding and finally spilling its cargo or in some cases possibly coal for a steam engine!....................... Hope this suggestion helps? ...................... Thanks for the post. Appreciated :)

  • @gavinwestern4619
    @gavinwestern4619 Před rokem

    Wow that's unusual it's something I've seen many times on holiday in Greece but I'll keep my eyes peeled during the evening from now on. BTW thanks for saving the Llan tree, it's great to see it still there and hopefully the council have seen sense now 👍

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před 9 měsíci

      Hi........................ I know of several colonies of glow worms in North Wales but I came across a random natural history note referring to one being spotted on a country lane outside Llangollen. I went for a mooch and discovered two. So, result. Apparently they were more common in the Dee Valley in the past but no one seems to see them now........................................ Yes, those who proposed removing the tree backed down almost as soon as the petition appeared especially when it was publicised in the local press and shaed on social media. So, another success story. :)

  • @nicholasjones7312
    @nicholasjones7312 Před rokem

    Fantastic! I always wondered where this canal was! Diolch!

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před rokem

      Ti'n croeso :) For its short length, still quite visible and accessible in places. It would have been quite the engineering feat had it all come to fruition and carried cargo.......................... Thanks for commenting. Much appreciated. Diolch eto.

  • @ruthfield4083
    @ruthfield4083 Před rokem

    good video scott, love t he country side and the history with it, 👍

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před rokem

      Hi. Thanks for your positive comments. Much appreciated. I like to add in these snippets. Look out for a vid on a wild camp at Llyn Irddyn in the next couple of months :) Definately going back. Cheers.

  • @NotAnotherBonsaiChannel

    Very nice video Scott. Sounds like this was quite a challenging walk, you sound out of breath. Beautiful scenery though.

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před rokem

      Thanks for the comment. Much appreciated. I was out of breath, but it sounds far worse than it is as I tend to hold my camcorder right in front of my face as I look into the small screen, so it picks up everything and amplifies it. A good stretching of the lungs is always good :)

  • @robbridges5975
    @robbridges5975 Před rokem

    Very relaxing to watch. Bet you enjoyed that egg butty and a cuppa. 😊

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před rokem

      Oh yes. I eat a lot of foraged foods too but only the best tea (or coffee) is made from pure stream water :)

  • @haggispixie
    @haggispixie Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing. Had not seen that type of trap before.

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před rokem

      Thanks for your kind comment. Appreciated. Cheap Chinese versions of a traditional lobster/crab pot. They work well, but don't last long. :)

  • @ftr841
    @ftr841 Před rokem

    We actually tried to do this walk recently but there were restricted access signs on the forestry tracks.

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před rokem

      The whole forest belongs to Natural Resources Wales as such, the entire forest is public access. The signs you will have seen are old and were placed when former thinning/felling operations occurred. They are only advisory anyway. Several public foorpaths cross the woods too but are generally unuseable as they planted on top of them. I have tackled NRW about this and about 25% of the forest is to be felled between this autumn and 2027. The footpaths are to be reinstated. 12 months ago, they cleared the access roads and built a new bridge over the Dee within the forest to take the weight of the lorries. :) :)

  • @Plakebake
    @Plakebake Před rokem

    Whistlin' time

  • @jurgluthi9568
    @jurgluthi9568 Před rokem

    A bit shaking but otherwise good!

  • @robertogarrido3192
    @robertogarrido3192 Před rokem

    Thanks for upload your videos God videos bro

  • @nicholaskelly6375
    @nicholaskelly6375 Před rokem

    In September I had a look around the Ffrwd branch. It was in a largely similar state when I first saw its remains in 1968. The branch was originally planned to reach Coed Talon. It was one of a number of branches of the Ellesmere Canal that were either not built or not completed. The branches being as follows. 1) The Coed Talon (Ffrwd) Branch. Which would have served the collieries around Coed Talon etc. It would also have been a navigable feeder linking reservoirs which would have supplied water to the summit level of the Ellesmere Canal Western Main Line for the locks descending to Chester, Holt and Trevor respectively. 2) Holt/Farndon Branch. Like the Coed Talon (Ffrwd) Branch. The Holt/Farndon Branch was to come off the Western Main Line of the Ellesmere Canal. This was planned to serve the main section of the North Welsh Coalfield. Running from Trevor to Chester via Ruabon and Wrexham. Like the Main Line it was never built. 3) The Prees Branch. This ran from the Ellesmere Canal towards Prees between Wem and Whitchurch. However It was decided to terminate the branch at Quina Brook on the Turnpike road between Wem and Whitchurch and the locked section down to Prees was abandoned. Today apart from a short section of canal the bulk of the Prees Branch is abandoned. At the wharf in Quina Brook lime kilns were built to supply local farmers etc etc. Today the kilns still exist albeit in a derelict condition. 4) The Shrewsbury Branch. This branch was planned to run from English Frankton to Shrewsbury. However once the Shrewsbury Canal had reached the town from the Coalbrookdale Coalfield it was decided to abruptly abandon the branch. So it literally terminates in a field north of Baschurch! A terminals basin with wharehouses and lime kilns was built a short distance from the terminus at Weston Wharf near Weston Lullingfields. Returning to the the Coed Talon Branch. By 1796 or so about three miles of level canal between Gwersyllt and The Ffrwd had been built. It was at that point that all further construction was abandoned. But it appears that the canal was used for some years until c.1808 delivering coal from the collieries around The Ffrwd to a Landsale Yard at or near Gwersyllt. By all accounts the canal was abandoned for two reasons. 1) The Ellesmere Canal Co was unwilling /unable to spend any more money on a short isolated stretch of canal. 2) Improvements to the local Turnpike road system meant that it was pretty pointless loading up a wagon taken it to the canal put it on a boat (It is believed that there were three boats on the branch. In all likelihood they were originally the boats used in the construction of branch) take it three miles or so by a rather indirect route and then unload the boat and put it in another wagon for onward road delivery. The most substantial structure on the branch would have been the aqueduct at The Ffrwd which was later demolished/rebuilt when the Wrexham, Mold & Connahs Quay Railway used a parallel route. It's site can be clearly seen today. There is an illustration of the Ffrwd Branch at work. Which shows a boat loading coal from Ffrwd Colliery with a (highly stylised) Caergwrle Castle in the background! On the subject of canals on the North Welsh Coalfield I was told many years ago about "Y Cwt Bowser" (Bowser's Canal) which apparently was a navigable drainage leat. Presumably with an underground section into the mine (Like the Duke of Bridgewater's underground levels at Worsley near Manchester or indeed the navigable adits serving the Flintshire lead mining industry). I have never been able to find out very much about "Y Cwt Bowser" My informant was pretty vague about its location and wasn't sure if it was located in the Moss Valley or the Westminster Valley! The only other local canals that I canal think of are the Flint Coal Canal which was never actually built. However the short lived concern did build an iron bridge to provide access to the canal that was never built! Also on the south bank of the river Dee to the west of Chester a short Tub boat canal was built around 1768 and lasted until around 1780. This was Sir John Glynne's Canal. Today it's route is taken by various drainage ditches. Most of the local collieries etc etc prior to the Railway Age relied on Turnpike roads and Tramroads (Particularly on the Flintshire section of the Coalfield). The only other local canal mystery is the experimental Boat Lift that was erected at/near Ruabon! Edward Rowland and Exuperius Pickering patented a design for a canal lift. This caught the attention of the Ellesmere Canal Committee who thought that it would be a good idea to try the idea out somewhere between Ruabon and Trevor. That it was built is clear as it is mentioned in the Ellesmere Canal Co minutes. As well as by various canal engineers including John Rennie. It would appear that it was built in 1794 and was demonstrated until June 1795. What is certain is that the patentees were paid by the Ellesmere Canal Co for their efforts in 1800 ( By then the Ellesmere Canal Co had lost all interest in the Western Main Line). However It appears to have completely vanished. As that great canal historian Charles Hadfield commented in his 1966 book 'The Canals of The West Midlands' "Perhaps somewhere along the ghostly line It's inexplicable remains still stand, waiting to be found" Well in 2007 Richard Dean published an excellent article in The Canal & Railway Historical Society Journal on a possible location for this enigmatic boat lift. It is possible that the Lift (or "Machine") was erected at Home Farm on the Wynnstay Estate. Thank you very much for an interesting video.

  • @WirralWill
    @WirralWill Před rokem

    Hello Scott. It's been a while, always love your camping videos! 🏕 Children of the Corn style there, were there any vibes after dark? Trail cameras always a cool addition. Good to see you're keeping well, Will

    • @StonecatWales
      @StonecatWales Před rokem

      Hi Will. Thanks for commenting :) Appreciated. Hope all is good with you? Had a bit of domestic stuff going on for the last 6 months or so which has stifled my wanderings. Hopefully things now getting back on track. No vibes afer dark. Incredibly silent. No breeze but heard the odd owl hooting, ducks passing overhead and some canada geese calling in the distance as well as the odd car on a road about a half mile away. Otherwise, totally quiet. Glad it was dry though. Not recommended if wet. The trail cameras picked up a fox and a duck on the pond but the footage wasn't too good and for me bog standard animals. I prefer the rare or unusual, something different so, nothing of note. AYB Scott :)

  • @bobp3390
    @bobp3390 Před rokem

    great to see you getting all the way through ;emerging safe on the other side .good for you .