WHO IS MY MOM?!?! | Ancestry DNA Results (SHOCKING FAMILY SECRET!) | European

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024
  • Check out my mom's DNA results from AncestryDNA and learn about a SHOCKING family secret!
    Other DNA-Related Videos:
    My AncestryDNA Results - • WHO AM I?!?! | 23andMe...
    My 23&Me Results - • WHO AM I?!?! | Ancestr...
    Where's Ash?
    / ash_serrano
    Raw DNA Info:
    www.dna.land
    www.familytree...
    www.gedmatch.com
    www.myheritage...
    UPDATED RESULTS AS OF 2020:
    England, Wales & Northwestern Europe 48%
    Ireland & Scotland 19%
    Germanic Europe 14%
    France 10%
    Norway 7%
    Sweden 2%

Komentáře • 161

  • @krysdekel
    @krysdekel Před 5 lety +69

    I found a half sister I never knew existed yesterday through my Ancestry DNA results. Still in shock.

    • @omfug7148
      @omfug7148 Před 5 lety +8

      I found a half brother (from my mom) who I also never knew existed, in my case I was not that shocked, LOL, my mom got around.

    • @klee8179
      @klee8179 Před 5 lety +3

      Same here! We're both adopted...10 months apart and share the same birth father 😊

    • @randomvintagefilm273
      @randomvintagefilm273 Před 5 lety +1

      Wow that is a shock, does she look like you?

    • @krysdekel
      @krysdekel Před 5 lety +2

      @@randomvintagefilm273 a bit from the pictures I've seen, but we haven't met in person yet (she lives in another state). Her sons look like our dad and like our brothers.

    • @krysdekel
      @krysdekel Před 5 lety +1

      @@omfug7148 wow, I know how shocking it can be.

  • @luella2897
    @luella2897 Před 5 lety +14

    Yes, we too "discovered" that an old family rumor was true . My husband,s Dad is not his father. Not totally shocking if you knew his biological mother but still it was sad for my husband to find out that his "Dad" that had raised him after they had divorced at his age of 2 was not his father! Also, a "long lost" second cousin of mine contacted me trying to locate his father's family who happened to be my 1st cousin. My cousin, his father, has passed but he has now went from being a only child to having 5 half sisters!! He also has a living uncle and more cousins!! They are so happy to have found one another and hope to meet in person one day !

  • @ramoss415
    @ramoss415 Před 5 lety +16

    That actually happens a lot more than people realize. It's just that now we have the DNA testing to show it, so family secrets are coming out. There is even a support group on Facebook now for people in similar situations as your mother. It doesn't change what her relationship with her father was.

  • @hannahbyers8046
    @hannahbyers8046 Před 6 lety +12

    That is wild! I can't imagine.
    You guys are looking at it the right way. Reaching out and hopefully expanding the family. :)
    Sending love and support.

  • @SkepticalHeretic
    @SkepticalHeretic Před 2 lety +2

    Great set of videos on you and your family's DNA journey! and congrats on the almost 2 months old little one! (just saw him on your insta page)...

  • @speedymcweeniemom8556
    @speedymcweeniemom8556 Před 3 lety +3

    This is definitely shocking and fascinating, I hope everything worked out for everyone as well as could be expected, if you have time please post an update if you are able to ❤️

  • @ltariku
    @ltariku Před 5 lety +5

    I was terrified when you suddenly opened your mouth at 6:13 with that background sound lol. I'm still waiting for that 23andMe updated video tho

  • @truthseeker444
    @truthseeker444 Před 5 lety +23

    The Basque people live in the Iberian Peninsula, and they are the genetic cousins of the Irish, they share the same DNA. Also, the Basques have the highest incidence of Rhesus negative blood in the world (Irish also a high percent), if your Mum is RH negative that would also connect her to the Basques and the Irish. The Basques live in Northern Spain, but they are not genetically linked to the Spanish, no one knows where they came from before they settled in the Iberian peninsula, the Irish descend from them. Hope this helps. BTW "Who is my Mum", title misleading, clearly you know who your Mum is.

    • @trishaengle7712
      @trishaengle7712 Před 5 lety +2

      truthseeker444 : I’m A negative blood type. I have never done DNA testing, but this is very interesting!

    • @amberlynnyates1295
      @amberlynnyates1295 Před 5 lety +2

      I heard the Irish and the Basque were related through an article. Basques came before Celts in Europe, but don't know what the people were called that were first in Europe though.

    • @flone23gmail3
      @flone23gmail3 Před 5 lety +3

      all true but the Basque do indeed have 'some' genetic ties to the Spanish...Irish are related to us in Galicia (Celts).

    • @flone23gmail3
      @flone23gmail3 Před 5 lety +2

      ...and Portugal

    • @karlvonboldt
      @karlvonboldt Před 5 lety +2

      Yes, the Celts (Irish, Scottish And Welsh) had a significant influence over Western and Southern Europe at one point. Basques are Iberian (Spain and Portugal Peninsula)

  • @jeep146
    @jeep146 Před 5 lety +10

    Better to know then not to. So far my results were pretty straight. Now my wife's that was a whole different story. Finding half brothers that were adopted no one knew about. Really crazy.

  • @thomasspicer4130
    @thomasspicer4130 Před 5 lety +7

    Very interesting but actually some Iberian ancestryDNA isn’t that unusual in the low confidence categories for a British or Irish person its highly likely that it isn’t really Spanish as we think of it today but rather it’s a reference to the ancient link between the celts of Britain and the basque people of northern Spain/south western France. This is especially common in Irish people and welsh as well as in Cornwall where there they can test as having up to 10% Iberian DNA on ancestryDNA but it will be catagorised as British on other testing sites like 23andme. Also I’d check to see if you have any updates on ancestryDNA as your minor low confidence regions can often disappear altogether as have happened to mine recently. :) very cool video though .

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 5 lety +4

      I’m definitely 25% Panamanian ... my Abuelo is Spanish, African and Native Anerican

    • @sandradeearna3342
      @sandradeearna3342 Před 5 lety

      Hey that's quite interesting. My daughter has had her dna done. When she first got her results back she had 6% Iberian Peninsula, then when it was updated, it changed to 2% French and 2% Swedish. Now I understand why. Thank you.

    • @maflor-dill9667
      @maflor-dill9667 Před 5 lety +1

      Yes. When I found out that my maternal GM had a Basque GM from Spain I wanted to find out more about these people. Recently I read up on British studies between Basque DNA and people of the British Isles that share the same Celtic ancestors.

  • @StaceyMayer
    @StaceyMayer Před 5 lety +3

    Ah, the possibilities! What an amazing journey! Thanks for sharing!

  • @annakatarzyna9207
    @annakatarzyna9207 Před rokem +1

    Irish, Scottish and Cornish are Celtic. English are Saxons and small % dna can be traced to Romans.
    My mother found out at age 85 that her dad was not her biological, thanks to Ancestry.

  • @gazoontight
    @gazoontight Před 4 lety +2

    I think you are correct. Celtic people lived in the British Isles and Northern France and Northern Spain. England was named for the Angles, one of three Germanic tribes that invaded the British Isles and were the ancestors of the English people.

  • @paulinesmith6553
    @paulinesmith6553 Před 2 lety +2

    Happened to me. At age 60 I learned who I thought was my biological father was not. It was ok by me because he always said I was not his when he was alive.

  • @milowadlin
    @milowadlin Před 5 lety +7

    I checked my results again recently, and they had changed pretty substantially, and the low confidence regions disappeared. Bet yours did too.

  • @Pianoscript
    @Pianoscript Před 5 lety +4

    Hi Ash, I could trace my own ancestry to the Antonin family of Ancient Rome. That being said, the Antonin built a wall in Great Britain and many
    Brits have this same Y-chromosome as yours truly: R-M167. Its labelled Celt-Iberian and was present throughout the Mediterranean and its loyalties were
    divided between Hannibal of Carthage and Rome. You're Armorican (english channel) like me. Your truthfulness will be beneficial to you.

  • @chrisgordon5719
    @chrisgordon5719 Před 5 lety +9

    Ancestry DNA. The worst thing that ever happened to family secrets in the whole wide world.

  • @randomvintagefilm273
    @randomvintagefilm273 Před 5 lety +5

    The farther back you go in time, of course your DNA is going to start spreading out. I think ancestry's percentages are roughly based on the last 500 years (I think)

  • @mfstarr1
    @mfstarr1 Před 6 lety +5

    We took those and found out my moms dad was her dad all along. Lol she just looks more like her mother.

  • @nancymayberry27
    @nancymayberry27 Před 3 lety +4

    Did you ever find out about the half sibling of your mom's? I want to do a DNA on my twin grkids because it's been said they possibly have 5 half siblings. They know of one for sure. All this popping out kids and giving them away is going to lead to many shocking "I love you, but my DNA says you're my brother/sister!" So many don't know that their biological parents should have to leave contact info for the kids. They can give the names of parents then say don't contact us, at least they can look up info without contacting the biological perso.

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před rokem

      I did find more about my half-aunt but she didn't have any interest in getting to know us.

  • @stephaniebake417
    @stephaniebake417 Před 4 lety +1

    I saw a documentary on the Celts, there had been a drought in the Mongolian area and they could no longer survive there. They ended up in Europe, as in Scotland,England and so forth. Which would explain Portugal , as they went through there to get to England,Scotland,France and Germany

    • @ermioniburgess8720
      @ermioniburgess8720 Před 4 lety +1

      Celts came from near Caucasus.The ancient Sumerians .They are not from Mongolian.All Europeans families including Caucasus people come from Jabthet son of Noah.Asiatics come from Shem.

  • @sunflowerbynight
    @sunflowerbynight Před 4 lety +1

    interesting what you have found. What a shock. I found also my kids with different cousins, different amounts of % also a shocker.. cause we can not explain it, and they look like twins..
    Also, I found people with your last name, and related to that name, in my myheritage list, as my 3rd cousins...
    (i am 39% English, 36% german/ french/ dutch (western Europe) and 20% Scandinavian and 1% middle eastern, 3% eastern Europe... i know Italian, Spanish, french etc, south European went to England. and people from germany are a lot mixed with english, and therefore we are now this much English, and they mixed in england with scandinavian. As they strived a lot for a long time in England. But these people also went to USA and other places, Canada, Australia in the big move... So the most family I have are Americans.
    I found on gedmatch (gedmatch is free) a lot more DNA .(.southern, and Asian, and African on some chromosomes i am 20% subsaharan)...
    and looking at the big move around the world, is i guess, how you find all of us.. our entire family...
    i never knew before i was this much English... i expected so much southern...but now i understand how it makes sense...and find more family because i understand where to look, they moved from south to north...and then around the world...
    Because gedmatch and also familytreedna give a lot more information you might find more clues there... and the way our families moved, and thus places to search for answers, and because they show lists of people that are related to you.
    good luck

    • @sunflowerbynight
      @sunflowerbynight Před 4 lety

      by the way my last name is from a grandma in 1700, she was not married, we kept her name, but it had to be Hörnich, and i have other names in my grandparents that might lead to your last name instead of my lastname, because of that.

    • @sunflowerbynight
      @sunflowerbynight Před 4 lety

      btw these family members with the same last name, are from Mexico and Spain. I know you search for your mom, but this can be interesting too, if they shared family. Lots in my family are cousins some how, far cousins. So you might find more that way.

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 4 lety

      I love hearing your history!

  • @dotothenn
    @dotothenn Před 6 lety +6

    Have you looked at the new update that happened a few day's ago?

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 6 lety +11

      Yes! She went to like 90% English! My personal results changed a lot and got more precise on my Native American and African ancestry! Soooo cool!!!!

  • @jpdj2715
    @jpdj2715 Před 5 lety +1

    The problem with "origin" genetic markers like "Iberian" is that we do not have hard data but statistics. A man who could not swim drowned/died crossing a river with an average depth of 2 feet - statistics. The original Iberian inhabitants in Roman times were likely ancestors of today's Basques. Today's Iberians have genes from Goths, North-Africans and Romans and 80% of Spaniards have 2 'Jewish' markers. IIRC

  • @lolablake9196
    @lolablake9196 Před 5 lety +1

    I when that specific Scottish bits were points out in the test because I know that a big chunk of my ancestory should be Scottish but I also have English.

  • @EagleScout1976
    @EagleScout1976 Před 5 lety +1

    What were the error bars on the estimates? My test shows I am 23% Irish and I know that estimate is way off. But looking at the large error bar it covers what I know from my family tree. At 6% I suspect the error bar includes a range from 0 to 9% so it may just be the inaccuracies in the algorithm that they used for their analysis.

  • @ahem....bullsheet3720

    The most interesting thing I found out was unknowingly I dated a third cousin! We were from different states there was nothing to lead us to believe we were related.

  • @shadesofmakeup78
    @shadesofmakeup78 Před 5 lety +2

    My sister in law took a DNA test to see if she matched with the man she was told was her father. My husband and his mother had already taken the DNA test and these particular cousins matched them as 3rd and 4th cousins. But my sister in law was matching them as close family and 1st cousins. I was handling her account and new right away that my mother in law had deep dark secret that was coming out through DNA. My mother in law confesses to sleeping with her very own 3rd cousin and had my sister law from him. This was 50 yr old secret. My husband was shocked his sister is his sister/cousin.

    • @staceycoates1418
      @staceycoates1418 Před 5 lety +1

      Third cousins really are not that close as far as the ick factor. Many 3rd cousins don't really know they are related unless someone is into genealogy. They share great-great grandparents. I am not saying they would not know but it isn't all that bad.

    • @shadesofmakeup78
      @shadesofmakeup78 Před 5 lety +1

      @@staceycoates1418 They knew they are cousins they have lived next door to them their whole lives.

    • @shadesofmakeup78
      @shadesofmakeup78 Před 5 lety +1

      My sis in law was upset she never knew the her grandfather was next door her whole life😢. The maternal grandfather was never around.

    • @staceycoates1418
      @staceycoates1418 Před 5 lety

      Yeah, that would be upsetting.

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 5 lety +2

      Wow that’s an intense situation

  • @dianefiske-foy4717
    @dianefiske-foy4717 Před 5 lety +4

    Don't forget about territorial differences through time. Great Britain, for example, would have had changing borders due to wars, etc.

  • @nathantisdale2013
    @nathantisdale2013 Před 5 lety +6

    Yes English people are descendants from Anglo Saxons/Scandinavians and the Irish, Scottish and Welsh are Celtic :)

    • @omfug7148
      @omfug7148 Před 5 lety +1

      I have always known that I was mostly British, both paternal grandparents were born there, but I am 13% Scandinavian, and most it that comes from Norway where my very English last name (or so I thought) is relatively common.

    • @omfug7148
      @omfug7148 Před 5 lety

      @alison webster I am 2% French...yes, the Norman conquest, LOL.My paternal great grandfather was born in Scotland, Grandma in Lancashire and grand-dad in County Durham, I know nothing of my mother's heritage but her last name is also British in origin.

    • @atempuser
      @atempuser Před 5 lety +5

      There's also a lot of Celtic in the English.

    • @Cosmicfraud3209
      @Cosmicfraud3209 Před 18 dny

      ​@@atempuserlots of Germanic scandos too

  • @BAHARBINSON000
    @BAHARBINSON000 Před 5 lety +3

    Are you Spanish or Italian on your father’s side, due to the surname Serrano?

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 5 lety +4

      My Latino roots come from Panama ... in my dna I’ve found some Spanish, Baltic, Italian, some Native American and a small percentage of African.

    • @thyrien1088
      @thyrien1088 Před 4 lety

      Serrano is Spanish

  • @RonBurgundyTime
    @RonBurgundyTime Před 6 lety +5

    Doesn't she look like an American actress or celebrity?
    I'm pretty sure that I have seen this face before on a celebrity. Can any American here help me with this?

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 6 lety +6

      I have been told I look like Claire Danes. Could that be it?

    • @RonBurgundyTime
      @RonBurgundyTime Před 6 lety +2

      Yes yes yes that's her. You even look prettier than her in her prime time.

  • @dbprice100
    @dbprice100 Před 6 lety +7

    That is shocking. Hopefully your mother is doing ok with this and that the Ancestry relationship match contacts you. The unknown can me so hard. Here's to you and your mom getting some answers.

  • @jbaron8120
    @jbaron8120 Před 5 lety +4

    Upload your raw dna data results to my heritage family tree dna and 23& me for FREE.
    You will get haplogroups in 23& me which might show if you your ancient lineage.

    • @xMotivatedLifex
      @xMotivatedLifex Před 5 lety

      How do You do that? (I haven't ttied yet.) Is that pretty straight-forward of a process?

  • @davehoward22
    @davehoward22 Před 5 lety +1

    That is really high british dna,my families lived in yorkshire since forever,and im only 58%

  • @sialig9297
    @sialig9297 Před 2 lety +1

    Well this past year all three of us girls (myself and 2 sisters) took ancestry DNA .. We are in our 60s and we found out our youngest sister had a different dad... It was a shocker, I am not even sure my dad knew even though my mother and dad never divorced or seperated. Come to find out, my youngest sisters apparent father happens to be our God father that owned a private school to which we all went to when we were very young. Since both of my parents passed before this DNA was done, we can not ask any questions... even our God parents are passed before my parents died so.... never know what skeletons are in those closets.... huh?

  • @BarbaraBoronda
    @BarbaraBoronda Před 3 lety +1

    I am related to a lot of serrano's on my dads side

  • @MarMar-wn9et
    @MarMar-wn9et Před 5 lety +2

    I knew you were Spanish/ Mediterranean as soon as I saw you. It’s all in your face.

  • @beingsneaky
    @beingsneaky Před 4 lety +3

    ah yeah oct 2019 they just did another update on ethnicity results looks one again.

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 4 lety +3

      I just got my new results. They are pretty different!

    • @rominamilenova5854
      @rominamilenova5854 Před 3 lety

      @@AshSerrano And what they showed you ? 😊 Can you show or read your new results ? 😊

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 3 lety +1

      @@rominamilenova5854 I have a new video!!!

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 3 lety +1

      @@rominamilenova5854 czcams.com/video/LtfRjUGAQ4o/video.html

  • @ZZ-yx4bz
    @ZZ-yx4bz Před 4 lety +2

    How much did that cost with having a specialist?? How long do they help?

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 4 lety +3

      She actually reached out to me because she was helping one of me 3rd cousins. So, she was kind enough to help me for free. Ancestry has options though. The price varies. You can go here for a free estimate with Ancestry. www.progenealogists.com/?_ga=2.18164921.1628975602.1596385285-1615088239.1596385285

    • @ZZ-yx4bz
      @ZZ-yx4bz Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you so much my birthday is coming up and this is my present. I don't know my real age name or where I was born all my documents are what parents say. One more question what did you ask?

  • @Reborn2h2o
    @Reborn2h2o Před 6 lety +7

    Yeah this happened to me last year. I was matching someone who was from my dad's Hometown and just assumed that they were from one of the female lines that I may not know of. they got their dad tested and my dad matched him like a half Uncle. that's when I had to call my oldest cousin and and talk to her and found out that my grandmother worked for this other gentleman and there was talk that they had a thing going on. Well it was more than just talk.It is still very shocking to me I have been doing my genealogy for over 20 years)my dad died 4 years ago and will be five the 30th of this month and he never knew. I can't get my two first cousins on my paternal side which it's only 3 of us, to test, even though I bought the DNA test for them very discouraging.

  • @julielovelace7189
    @julielovelace7189 Před 5 lety +1

    Through the YEARS. People are abandoned, adopted or lied about who the daddy is etc.

  • @copisetic1104
    @copisetic1104 Před 5 lety +1

    If you got back into the 1200s on some of your ancestors, you are a real good genealogist. Records back that far are virtually non existent.

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 5 lety +2

      In general, yes -- except for church records

  • @Mrwaigoren1
    @Mrwaigoren1 Před 5 lety +2

    What sources were you consulting to get to 12th century. Thanks

    • @titusb6792
      @titusb6792 Před 5 lety

      I thought that too

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 5 lety

      Ancestry.com

    • @titusb6792
      @titusb6792 Před 5 lety

      @@AshSerrano Isn't that impossible to get sources from 12th century?

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 5 lety +3

      @@titusb6792 You'd think so! But I mentioned the 1200s, which is the 13th century. The church does/did a great job of keeping track of baptismal records etc!

    • @titusb6792
      @titusb6792 Před 5 lety +1

      @@AshSerrano Ok, here where I live they just go to 1650s, because of the Thirty Years' War. Sorry, isnt the oldest known Church book from 1435 and just fragments are remaining?

  • @mrtech2259
    @mrtech2259 Před 5 lety +1

    This is really shocking. Any updates?

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před rokem

      NO! They weren't interested in us

    • @mrtech2259
      @mrtech2259 Před rokem

      @@AshSerrano ha I had to rewatch the entire video since it was so long ago and I already forgot the story. Hope you're doing well. 😀

  • @BAHARBINSON000
    @BAHARBINSON000 Před 5 lety +3

    I thought British means English, Scottish and Welsh

    • @elyjane5103
      @elyjane5103 Před 4 lety

      It does, also Ireland because of the movement of people through history.

    • @knsubramanian9837
      @knsubramanian9837 Před 4 lety

      Man!.It also includes all of them potato Irish!.

  • @FCntertainr
    @FCntertainr Před 5 lety

    Angles, Saxons, Jutes and Frisians ate originally from northern Europe Denmark Germany etc area. Breton Brittania Romans called Celtic Gaelic tribes. Vikings from Scandinavia raided Britain before Germanic infusion giving the blonde hair and blue eyes.

  • @ejones4765
    @ejones4765 Před 5 lety +1

    What part of Wales are part of your family's Ancestors from? I come from Northwest Wales.

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 5 lety +2

      Mostly from Denbighshire (NE) but also Glamorgan (S); Rhayader (Central); Anglesey (NW)

    • @ejones4765
      @ejones4765 Před 5 lety

      @@AshSerrano Hi Ash, I also have family from Denbighshire. Also Bethesda, Tregarth (nr Bangor), Caernarfonshire. Maybe we can exchange email addresses? I also have family in The Bronx, New Jersey and Staten Island.

    • @willrichardson519
      @willrichardson519 Před 5 lety

      Aberystwyth and it's hinterland.

  • @eastcoastemt9392
    @eastcoastemt9392 Před 5 lety +3

    Has no one heard of the "Black Irish" here?

  • @jpdj2715
    @jpdj2715 Před 5 lety +2

    Ages ago, a gentleman would send his son on a grand tour to discover the world, build a network, experience potentially scandalous things far away from home. I forgot the author/references, but one of these grand tourists wrote home: the women in the Netherlands are chaste after marriage; the women in France are chaste before marriage; the women in England are never chaste.

  • @AppalachiaJennifer
    @AppalachiaJennifer Před 5 lety +2

    Any updates?

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před rokem

      I wish! They were not interested in getting to know us!

  • @irish327rose5
    @irish327rose5 Před 5 lety +1

    What do you mean you found them??? Did they give you names and informatjon about them???

  • @Bazerkly
    @Bazerkly Před 2 lety

    Iberian Peninsula is like 30% Irish

  • @equestriannewbies889
    @equestriannewbies889 Před 6 lety +1

    I can’t believe it either!!!

  • @beingsneaky
    @beingsneaky Před 4 lety +1

    i dont know why ppl are SO SHOCKED or devesasted . your parents grand parents are Human. and such things happen. And he Dad IS her Dad no matter what(who was in her life?? not dad or bio dad?). and to be harsh, suck it up get over it and just accept it there is not a thing you can do about it.

  • @stephallan2543
    @stephallan2543 Před 4 lety +1

    Please watch the Irish, British and the Scottish Native Peoples...this will definitely clear up “why” they are extremely adamant about the separate identities! Ha ha 😉🙇🏻‍♀️🙏🏽🔑🧬💗

  • @wuilmermenjivar7467
    @wuilmermenjivar7467 Před 4 lety +1

    Girl You last name is mediterraneo.

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 4 lety +2

      The history of my last name is interesting. As I assume you know, in the Latin American community a set of parents has four last names and their parents have eight names. And they each only give one name to the child. So, some of my family names include Aguirre, Lescano, Serrano, Cordoba, Almengor, and Rios.
      Serrano was originally Cerrano and I traced it back to my 6th great grandfather, Geronimo Ventura Cerrano.
      Birth :29 Apr 1810 • San Pedro, Tarata, Cochabamba, Bolivia
      Death: 13 Mar 1832 • Santiago, Veraguas, Panama
      Geronimo was married to a Bolivian/Andean native named Manuela.
      Which is reflected in my update Ancestry and 23&me results!

  • @johnjackson678
    @johnjackson678 Před 5 lety

    Grandma had been running around.

  • @sr2291
    @sr2291 Před 3 lety

    Go on DNA Painter.

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před 3 lety +2

      Will try it!

    • @sr2291
      @sr2291 Před 3 lety

      @@AshSerrano You just type in the number of centimorgans and it automatically estimates your possible relationships.

  • @tonydigital6017
    @tonydigital6017 Před 5 lety +1

    What's up with all these pretty chicks doing DNA? Where are the average looking people? They dont get online and tell people their results? Only pretty ones? Whatever....

  • @bobbyhood101
    @bobbyhood101 Před 5 lety

    They separate the British from the Irish because of their history in fact they share the same genetics because of the mixing of thousands of years of close existence! Realistically it is hard to separate them but it's culturally expedient to do so! My family has all of the above English, Welsh, Scottish ,Irish with a random Dutch or German in the tree!women cheat as many as 10 percent of the people walking around the planet don't know their real father! Genealogy can't explain what happened in a random house in the 1500s but genetics can!

  • @spitfire2885
    @spitfire2885 Před rokem +2

    So your white got it 👍

    • @AshSerrano
      @AshSerrano  Před rokem

      Yes! I am white!

    • @spitfire2885
      @spitfire2885 Před rokem

      @@AshSerrano so why make a video about it ? Since we all know you white Duh !

  • @msdaisy6949
    @msdaisy6949 Před 5 lety +7

    Why cant you just get to the point? All you ppl on here think we want to listen to you just talk.

    • @1964crf
      @1964crf Před 5 lety +1

      Snarkey much?! Good grief, go crawl back under the rock.

    • @irish327rose5
      @irish327rose5 Před 5 lety +1

      @@1964crf some of us are trying to figure out how to get names, asshole. Some of us dont know who our parents are and some dna tests just generalize background countries... why don't YOU tell us who gives names pictures and information? Insensitive jerk

  • @zb7293
    @zb7293 Před 5 lety

    To say that she is not super diversed is ridiculous...
    And for people out there, don't do those test, they keep your DNA info, and they can sell it to any interested buyer.

  • @stephensonakpotu8356
    @stephensonakpotu8356 Před 3 lety

    Loving the fit physique

  • @ebrimakamara9558
    @ebrimakamara9558 Před 5 lety

    You are not from good back ground