🚗American family road trip through New Forest & the Cotswolds 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 | ENGLAND TRAVEL VLOG

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  • čas přidán 26. 07. 2024
  • For a week my family came out to England, from the states, and we all embarked on a road trip! The first stops on our road trip were the New Forest and the Cotswolds. I was very excited to see free roaming ponies and visit some of the most beautiful English villages: Castle Combe, Bourton on the water, Burford, and Bibury! I get a lot of comments on my videos suggesting that we go to The Cotswolds so I’m glad that I can finally mark it off my bucket list!
    ℹ️ helpful links
    The Bishops Mill www.greeneking-pubs.co.uk/pub...
    New Forest www.thenewforest.co.uk/
    The Cotswolds www.cotswolds.com/
    Castle Combe www.visitwiltshire.co.uk/town...
    Bourton-on-the-Water bourtoninfo.com/
    Burford www.cotswolds.com/plan-your-t...
    Bibury www.bibury.com/
    🕰 timestamps:
    00:00 what's to come
    00:21 hi there
    01:45 picking up our rental car
    02:32 lunch
    03:12 looking for ponies
    04:35 my lunch came back to haunt me
    05:12 Castle Combe
    06:56 Bourton-on-the-Water
    07:59 Burford
    09:11 Bibury
    13:35 what's next...
    📚books i’m reading:
    Amazon Links are affiliate links. Thank you for supporting my channel!
    Starve Acre amzn.to/3upceXZ
    🎵music in this video:
    Music by 2% - I Won't Go - thmatc.co/?l=D4F8B803
    Music by The Natterjacks - What We're Told - thmatc.co/?l=96223182
    Music by Singto Conley - Hiraeth - thmatc.co/?l=A44848A2
    Music by Canopyframe - Calming Sophia - thmatc.co/?l=0E3C82A0
    Music by Canopyframe - Flu Season - thmatc.co/?l=E4FED9E8
    Music by Juan Sanchez - Solitary Island - thmatc.co/?l=C6569ED4
    📱socials linktr.ee/abbie_b
    ~about clowder library~
    Hi! I'm Abbie, a bookworm and cat lady. My husband (Jeff) and I got rid of everything we own (except my books lol) and left sunny California (with our quirky cat Tedward) for gray skies in England. On this channel you’ll find bookish (hauls, reviews) and travel (vlogs, tips, expat life) content!
    🔎: american living in the uk, living in the uk as a foreigner, travel to the uk from usa, european couple trip, travel to united kingdom, exploring england, things to do in england
    #newforest #cotswolds #UKtravel

Komentáře • 163

  • @clowderlibrary
    @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

    There seems to be a lot of discussion about whether or not I had food poisoning. Minor food poisoning exists--you don't have to be glued to a toilet or feeling like death to have it. As someone who has had both minor and severe food poisoning on multiple occasions and with a history of IBS I am VERY HYPER-aware of my what's going on with my bowels. I've had enough stomach/gut issues to know when I have had food poisoning so please stop assuming you know "what's really going on" ✌

  • @weedle30
    @weedle30 Před 2 lety +16

    Seeing all that green picturesque beauty, the peace and the tranquility of England - makes me so glad that I live here! Even if the shops do close at 5.00pm 😉😃❤️

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +11

      England doesn’t feel like a real place sometimes because it’s so beautiful!

  • @fravolousfilm
    @fravolousfilm Před 2 lety +16

    So much fun seeing an American family travelling in England :) the Cotswolds looks absolutely stunning. Can't wait to visit that part of England some day! Lovely video and really nice editing. Hello from Norway :)

  • @Cheeseatingjunglista
    @Cheeseatingjunglista Před 2 lety +14

    Those villages are ALL lived in, even in a national park the houses, farms etc are used by people, some of whose families have lived there for a couple of centuries - I lived in some myself, but obviously not for 200 odd years!!! As for Cider, you need to try some of the scrumpy produced in the village of Elmley Castle, its lovely, but STRONG, be careful. The Yew Tee pub in Conderton sells this nectar, the pubs wonderful and it just a few miles north of Gotherington - one of the villages I lived in , where the railways station has reopened and you can have a ride on am antique steam train, via tunnel under Cleeve Hill to Winchcombe and Sudely Castle, a fav place for Queen Lizzie the First to hang around in. On the top of Cleev Hill there is the Iron Age long barrow burial mound of Belas Knap - you can sit inside the entrace/burial chamber - sun floods in at the Winter solstice - magical place. It also is home to vaste fields of Magic Mushrooms in Sept/Oct time

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +3

      👀!!!!!

    • @radicalcartoons2766
      @radicalcartoons2766 Před 2 lety

      Yes, definitely second that! The "cider" you were drinking in that pub was just commercial watered-down slush!

  • @dazza9326
    @dazza9326 Před 2 lety +15

    Some of the villages in the UK are magical, you feel like you've gone back in time 500 years.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +4

      I constantly catch myself saying “how is this real life?!”

    • @dazza9326
      @dazza9326 Před 2 lety +3

      @@clowderlibrary It's a very pretty Country where everything is old.....

    • @richardpoynton4026
      @richardpoynton4026 Před 2 lety +3

      @@clowderlibrary 500 years? That’s cute…. lol.
      If you’d gone to Chester in the North of England - an old Roman walled city - you could’ve walked along the walls built by actual Roman legionnaires and feel like you’ve gone back 2000 years! (The City was started in 79AD)

    • @Someloke8895
      @Someloke8895 Před 2 lety +2

      To be fair, talking to some of the Locals can have the same effect.... although with a few of them, 50,000 years seems more apt.

    • @Stand663
      @Stand663 Před rokem +1

      It’s not old, it’s traditional.

  • @robertlangley1664
    @robertlangley1664 Před rokem +1

    It could only be in Britain green and mellow , we are so lucky it must be time for a cup tea

  • @amyw6808
    @amyw6808 Před 2 lety +6

    In answer to your question, people do live in those cottages.
    My friend got married in the church in Bibury a few years ago. Was a freezing cold day in the first week of March. We all stood in a long row outside to cheer the bride and groom out of the church, and throw confetti but had to wait while a group of Chinese tourists went along the row taking photos of us all. It was so funny 😆

  • @AndyKing1963
    @AndyKing1963 Před 2 lety +6

    Nice to see the belted Galloway cattle towards the end. Btw the weird duck was a Muscovy duck

  • @paulhorgan6152
    @paulhorgan6152 Před 2 lety +12

    I'm not really sure if this is a truth or myth, but the reason us Brits drive on the left hand side of the road is because in the olden days horsemen engaging the enemy needed to be on the left so they could use their weapons to there full potential. Back then as now most people were right handed. I would love that to be true. I hope you enjoyed your trip ❤❤🇬🇧😊😊to merry old England

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +2

      That makes sense to me!!
      We’ve had a lovely trip in England so far 💛 -and we’ve got much more we’re planning on seeing!

    • @Scrumpy00
      @Scrumpy00 Před 2 lety +6

      It is true. It is also the reason old spiral staircases ascend clockwise, so the defender has space to wield their sword and an attacker climbing the stairs would be at a serious disadvantage unless left handed.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +2

      @@Scrumpy00 thank you for this! I love learning all these little detailed facts

    • @paulhorgan6152
      @paulhorgan6152 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Scrumpy00 Thankyou so much scrumpy ❤🇬🇧😊

    • @paulhorgan6152
      @paulhorgan6152 Před 2 lety +1

      If visiting around Oxfordshire, as a bookworm, reader, you should visit the grave of Eric Blaire better known to us all as George Orwell, 1984,❤🇬🇧😊Animal farm at Sutton courtney, near Abingdon

  • @denisrobertmay875
    @denisrobertmay875 Před 2 lety +3

    Could be noted that the rivers and waters in the Cotswolds converge with the Thames. The Thames itself is navigable to Lechlade in the south of the Cotswolds.

  • @tonyrantnrave6854
    @tonyrantnrave6854 Před 2 lety +7

    Way back when the NHS first started, Guinness or stout was given to new mum's to help with iron deficiency after having a baby, it was on the NHS

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      That is ver interesting!

    • @Cheeseatingjunglista
      @Cheeseatingjunglista Před 2 lety +2

      Mackeson Stout, also known as Milk Stout was the preffered product, Guinness is a Porter, a dark "burnt beer" - the Latvian Mackeson was 9%, the brewery opened a branch there in the 1910s, so probably the 6% UK version for pregant Mums, but things were wilder then, so who knows. It was called Milk as it use Lactose sugar in the brewing, and thus was deemed "healthy"!! PS Burnt Beer was what my Grandfather, a native of Cork, claimed all Irish dark beers were know as when he was a kid

    • @markhirschmann9967
      @markhirschmann9967 Před 2 lety +1

      Worked in a chemical refinery, very hot . The old timers talked of getting a pint of Guinness for lunch to replace all the liquid lost through the heat

    • @gillianrimmer7733
      @gillianrimmer7733 Před 2 lety

      I was given a pint of Guiness every night in hospital after giving birth to my first 2 sons in 1975 and 1978 ( you had to stay in for 10 days at that time)
      They said it helped you produce milk.

  • @clowderlibrary
    @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +9

    Hi Friends,
    I wanted to mention something that was brought to my attention. I was not aware that food poisoning is taken super seriously here in the UK.
    I strive to be very honest about my travel experiences and sometimes shit (💩literally) happens. I frequently rate/review food in my videos-I’m not looking to get anyone in trouble or to be dramatic. I honestly thought the whole thing was actually kind of funny-i have a very self deprecating sense of humor. I didn’t contact the restaurant right after the incident because my poisoning was very minor and I just attributed what occurred to me as a one time thing and I was just unlucky. The pie was very delicious and I ate the entire thing and I have no regrets-i have had the kind of food poisoning that nails you to a toilet for a week and this wasn’t it, thankfully. I know the difference between a minor stomach bug and food poisoning-this was food poisoning.
    Since publishing this video I have sent the restaurant a message so they are aware. If I need to do something similar to this in the future please contact me via email or Instagram and I will handle it on my own. Please do not take it upon yourselves to contact them. Only I can speak for my experiences.

    • @xhogun8578
      @xhogun8578 Před 2 lety

      Food poisoning can happen at the best of places. Always good to report it back to the restaurant so that they can learn from it.
      I've had food poisoning in the past and as you say sometimes it can floor you and sometimes it's a minor upset. But I would always report it, either by phone or just an email.

  • @daiman56
    @daiman56 Před 2 lety +5

    Love the editing of your videos, they are on a professional level.

  • @paulhanson5164
    @paulhanson5164 Před 2 lety +4

    If you are living in Salisbury it is very easy for you to get around the New Forest without a car, there are 3 circular bus routes operating, the red, blue and green lines. They meet at certain points so that you can change routes. The buses are half the fun as they are open top, It's a great way to see the forest on a hot day.
    A day ticket allows you to get on and off the bus wherever you want and the routes cover the whole of the forest.
    If you catch a bus to Fordingbridge which takes about 30 minutes from Salisbury you can catch a red route bus

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      Ohh!! That’s good to know! I’ll have to remember this for next time.

  • @robertmcross1
    @robertmcross1 Před 2 lety +5

    It’s beautiful and so tranquil, hope you enjoyed your stay here in England:)

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +2

      It’s been so lovely and fun! Can’t wait to see more!

  • @tonywilkinson6895
    @tonywilkinson6895 Před 2 lety +1

    That was lovely!

  • @raymondscott6720
    @raymondscott6720 Před 2 lety +2

    Happy Independence Day. Great video.

  • @xhogun8578
    @xhogun8578 Před 2 lety

    Having lived in the New Forest and now not far from the Cotswolds, it is lovely to see these places I love through the eyes of a visitor.

  • @chipsthedog1
    @chipsthedog1 Před 2 lety +4

    I loved the New Forest I camped there for a week and every morning we would wake up to ponies & deer outside our tent like a Disney movie, my particular highlight was hiring horses for the day which was amazing and the guide told us "don't worry, around 3 o'clock the horses let you know it's time to head back & they will know the way" she wasn't lying either as soon as we stopped and turned around they were off! I was worried they were going to start running but they kept to a fast walk/slow trot must know its feeding time.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      I saw so many places I would have loved to have gone camping at!!

    • @chipsthedog1
      @chipsthedog1 Před 2 lety +2

      @@clowderlibrary it was great, you could also get a little map that took you on a hike through the forest which led to a beautiful pub in the middle of the Forrest where you could have lunch or just drinks it was beautiful and the map takes you to some lovely spots for scenery or deer/pony watching

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      @@chipsthedog1 ahhh!! That sounds so fun!! Are there places where you can go horseback riding?? I went on a horseback riding trip when I was 15 and have been wanting to go on another one…would love to do one here in England!

    • @chipsthedog1
      @chipsthedog1 Před 2 lety +2

      @@clowderlibrary Yes, my partner and I hired horses for the day and it was fantastic. It was about 8 years ago but I am sure it is still available.
      Also when you visit the south west I'd recommend Cheddar gorge it's beautiful and the caves are something else really impressive & you can pay a little extra for adventure caving where a guide takes you much deeper than tourists are allowed usually, trust me it's breathtaking like underground cathedrals. Interesting side note: they discovered a mummified body left deep in the cave in
      the mesolithic era roughly 7550BC & the remarkable thing is after dna testing it was found the current school teacher in the village is related to the Cheddar mummy!

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      @@chipsthedog1 WOW!!!!!

  • @Chris_GY1
    @Chris_GY1 Před 2 lety +1

    There’s a donkey roaming as well I saw it three weeks ago when I visited for a few hours from Basingstoke where I was staying for a few days before heading to The Queen’s racecourse at Royal Ascot on her Windsor Estate for horse racing.

  • @Greenwood4727
    @Greenwood4727 Před 2 lety +1

    luckily the weather held out. ;)

  • @kenralph5693
    @kenralph5693 Před 2 lety

    Hay on Wye has more bookshops than anywhere in UK. You'll love it there.

  • @stephendavies1585
    @stephendavies1585 Před 2 lety

    happy independence day to y`all.

  • @mrstoives2444
    @mrstoives2444 Před 2 lety +2

    Glad you enjoyed the Cotswolds, I have managed hotels in Burford and Bibury (The Swan) (thank you for the correct pronunciation 👍). I think Ted would have enjoyed the birds too!🦆!!

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      I spent a lot of time on google listening to the pronunciations and hoping I didn’t screw them up 😅-what a beautiful place for you to work!! Ted would have went bonkers for the birds 😂

    • @mrstoives2444
      @mrstoives2444 Před 2 lety +1

      @@clowderlibrary Would that all other visitors had your diligence. We used smile politely at those who said bib-ury and Burton on the water.👍

    • @bobdason376
      @bobdason376 Před rokem

      Aww i love the Bibury Trout farm i would always go there as a kid with my brothers and grandparents

  • @charlestaylor3027
    @charlestaylor3027 Před 2 lety +1

    Lots of villages have reading rooms and they are literally for reading in.

  • @tds1952
    @tds1952 Před 2 lety +1

    You have shamed me. I have raced and done many car track days at the Castle Combe Circuit. But I have never been to Castle Combe Village. I will put that right......someday.

  • @druidswillow1052
    @druidswillow1052 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi Abbie, Why are you always tormenting us with tasty looking food? Seriously that pie looked delicious even if it did give you a stomach upset! The Cotswolds looked lovely as ever and hope you're enjoying your travels/sightseeing Cheers Jim, Surrey X

  • @davidmartin3947
    @davidmartin3947 Před 2 lety +4

    Here in the West country the only acceptable flavouring additive to zidar is a hint of dead rat, but it appears you have already tried that, full strength, in your pie...;-)
    Glad you are having a great time.
    If you return to the Cotswolds area, Lacock near Castle Combe where some of the earliest photographs were taken is well worth a visit.
    Get yourselves out to the North Devon coast, Poldark country, too.
    The area around Lynton and Lynmouth is fabulous.
    Aidan Turner can frequently be seen there.
    Unfortunately acting pays to poorly for him to be able to afford a shirt......

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      I don’t know what was in that pie 🥲-no one else got sick from their food.
      Lacock is on my list of places to see! Just didn’t have time.
      Aidan Turner must be rather cold running around with no shirt on 🤣

    • @davidmartin3947
      @davidmartin3947 Před 2 lety +1

      I think the hot breath of his fans panting keeps him fairly warm..
      Here is a link for the north Devon area:
      visitlyntonandlynmouth.com/
      The cliff railway at Lynton, Watersmeet and the valley of the rocks are all exceptional, and within a few miles of each other.
      I stayed at a pub by the water at Lynton, which was great and fairly cheap.

    • @tabitha4135
      @tabitha4135 Před 2 lety

      @@davidmartin3947 He’s Gorgeous 🥵

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      @@tabitha4135 my husband also thinks he's gorgeous 😂--he bought a tricorn hat and I'm slowly waiting for him to turn into Ross Poldark lol

    • @tabitha4135
      @tabitha4135 Před 2 lety

      @@clowderlibrary 😀

  • @scollyb
    @scollyb Před 2 lety +1

    Sorry about the food poisoning
    I'd push back slightly on the car being essential for the new forest. It's definitely highly desirable, but you can see a lot hiking or cycling from the stations.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +3

      Would definitely have loved to ride bikes and do hikes/trails-just not enough time 😩

  • @AndyKing1963
    @AndyKing1963 Před 2 lety +1

    sorry to hear about the food poisoning, that's really bad luck.

  • @xhogun8578
    @xhogun8578 Před 2 lety

    Many villages had reading rooms, it was something that was common practice in Victorian times. Rich philanthropist who were normally strict moral church going people. They created the reading rooms for local people to read the newspaper and books and encourage them away from the pub.
    The rooms would have strict moral codes including no alcohol.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      Oh wow!!! Thank you for letting me know. I love learning little things like this

  • @bobbybigboyyes
    @bobbybigboyyes Před 2 lety

    The last row of cottages you saw in Bibury is called Arlington Row. Walt Disney loved them. The ARE lived in by local residents. Another American tried to buy the whole row but he was turned down. He did however manage to buy one cottage from there and he had it dismantled brick by brick, and shipped back to the US where he had it rebuilt. ( A bit like another American who purchased London Bridge who then shipped it out the the middle of the Nevada desert where it was rebuilt ) I live on the southern edge of the Cotswolds and not far ( 40 minutes ) from the New Forest. which was originally one of our Kings personal hunting grounds. I have family all around Brockenhurst and in the area. While you were there you should have gone to the village of Burley in the New Forest. It gets taken over by horses daily and some of them even manage to walk into the outside dining areas of restaurants and pubs. It is an ancient village with shops dealing in magic and witchcraft. You could say that Burley is spellbinding!

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      AHHHHH!!! Oh! Another trip to New Forest must happen then!! -I’m not surprised an American tried to buy the whole row 🤡-glad he was denied!

    • @bobbybigboyyes
      @bobbybigboyyes Před 2 lety

      @@clowderlibrary There is a lot more to see in and around the New Forest than you may realise. It is massive with many hidden mysterious places, full of legend. I am glad that American did not buy the whole row too, it would have ruined the village. If you want to know about anything and everything to do with the magical Cotswolds, then check out a channel on here called 'The Cotswold Explorer' --- The guy who does it is Robin, his voice is as smooth as silk and just perfect for storytelling, and all the stories are true, from the happy and beautiful history to the dark gruesome tales from within. He lives in the Cotswold Village where Downton Abbey was filmed, as well as many other famous movies. He even knows and chats to some of the cast. He has hundreds of videos on here, some short and some long. The Halloween ones are amazing, as is all of the architecture he visits, giving you all of it's history. There is an ancient doorway leading into a church with gnarled yew trees each side. It is said that it was they that inspired Tolkien to write Lord of the Rings. : )

  • @eturfrey
    @eturfrey Před 2 lety +1

    Some of the cottages in these villages will be holiday lets or 2nd homes for somebody, so not lived in all the time.

  • @jacketrussell
    @jacketrussell Před 2 lety +1

    08:30 It's a Muskovy Duck.

  • @radicalcartoons2766
    @radicalcartoons2766 Před 2 lety

    Interesting fact - the first big screen movie to feature Castle Combe was the 1967 Rex Harrison version of Dr Dolittle.

  • @Ian-lx1iz
    @Ian-lx1iz Před 2 lety

    If you don't care for sand dunes
    Or salty air
    But like cute little cottages
    Here and there...

  • @megapowerchannelsunc
    @megapowerchannelsunc Před 2 lety

    Tourists get bussed up from Salisbury along the main road to Stonehenge which really is not worth stopping for.
    But, just to the west is the Woodford Valley which leads up to Stonehenge. It is really beautiful, check out Heale House and it's gardens.
    Just west of Salisbury is the Chalke Valley, just father north explore the Tisbury / Fonthill area. By car just 30minutes away.
    Laycock is another village well worth visiting. All these places are missed by Brits who only get to see Wiltshire from the motorway on their way to Devon and Cornwall. Do investigate Chichester and Bosham Harbour and Arundel Castle. Further east you have the Sussex and Kent Weald where you will find Hever Castle, Ingham Mote, Grear Dixter and Rye on the way to Canterbury. South Dorset is well worth going to.
    Lyme Regis and Sidmouth aren't too far away. Keep the videos coming.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      Thank you for the suggestions!!!

    • @megapowerchannelsunc
      @megapowerchannelsunc Před 2 lety

      It would take weeks to just see some of these places but they are worth googling if you are planning to be in their area.
      Most tourist buses keep to the main A roads but often there are parallel country lanes following a river and going through unspoilt villages. You mentioned seeing Cornwall to see the Poldark locations. The cliff scenes may have been filmed there but most of the town and country house scenes were filmed in Corsham which is in good old Wiltshire

  • @tonyrantnrave6854
    @tonyrantnrave6854 Před 2 lety +1

    Muscovy duck all the way from south American and a few in southern states of the USA

  • @leematthews6812
    @leematthews6812 Před 2 lety +1

    Interesting. It must be at least 30 years since the last time I visited the New Forest.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      Why so long??! You certainly are due for a trip back!

    • @leematthews6812
      @leematthews6812 Před 2 lety

      @@clowderlibrary Yes, but there are entire continents I haven't seen yet! Places I haven't visited take priority 😊

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      @@leematthews6812 that is fair! I’m the same way! I have barely seen much of the US 😅

  • @johnburton3865
    @johnburton3865 Před 2 lety +3

    BTW it's not
    'New Forest'
    but
    'The New Forest'.
    Always add THE

  • @scatton61
    @scatton61 Před 2 lety

    Not just Ponies but also cows, donkeys, deer and pigs

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      Yes!

    • @galboy7899
      @galboy7899 Před 2 lety

      Pigs in the autumn (fall) out for pannage, acorns are not good for ponies!

  • @andrewdoubtfire4700
    @andrewdoubtfire4700 Před 2 lety +1

    I'd blame the Cider you drank before the pie!

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      If it was the cider I’d probably repeat the same mistake because I love cider 😅

    • @karenprice3523
      @karenprice3523 Před 2 lety

      I suggest that the cider caused the stomach upset dont drink cider on a empty stomach its too acidic.
      You tummy needs to acclaimatise to our richer foids.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      @@karenprice3523 as I’ve said on other comments I only ate toast that day and it was hours between that toast and the pie. The cider I drank the day before was not on an empty stomach. Process of elimination: it was the pie 🙃

  • @sterrissar
    @sterrissar Před 2 lety +1

    should have gone to Broadway and a trip on the steam railway

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      This is the second time someone’s mentioned a steam railway to me! I’m going to look into it!

    • @neilboulton9813
      @neilboulton9813 Před 2 lety

      @Clowder Library - I previously mentioned the steam railways. As I said it always worth just doing a quick google search if you are visiting an area just to check if there is one local to you and their running times etc. Glad you got over your food poisoning quickly.

  • @anthonyleighton4754
    @anthonyleighton4754 Před 2 lety

    Baby swans are called cygnets ....

  • @jeanniewarken5822
    @jeanniewarken5822 Před 2 lety +1

    Just to say... in most cases all those houses will be lived in by people.... the villages are not museums

  • @terry9325
    @terry9325 Před 2 lety +1

    I feel for you about you getting food poisoning I’ve had it really bad twice both times eating out ,one was a Sunday roast when I chose the roast pork the other while in Spain when I had a seafood paella ,I have never eaten pork or seafood again when eating out 🤮🤮🤮

    • @frglee
      @frglee Před 2 lety +1

      Unhappy memories of 'seafood platter' poisoning whilst visiting California in the 80s that laid me out for nearly a week! 🤢 🤮

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      The mix of meats did me in 🥲

  • @nickgrazier3373
    @nickgrazier3373 Před 2 lety

    Those cattle are heritage cattle very old breeds

  • @tonyrantnrave6854
    @tonyrantnrave6854 Před 2 lety

    Did you sort out your York pass?

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      Haven’t had a chance to plan a trip there yet but I’m going to look into it!

  • @free..to..air..
    @free..to..air.. Před 2 lety

    Get up North to the Derbyshire Dales...the Yorkshire Dales...the Lake District....and the coup de grace....Scotland...north of Glasgow...this is not chocolate box beauty....but rugged and natural

    • @valeriedavidson2785
      @valeriedavidson2785 Před 2 lety

      Northerners always like to decry anything down south. Everything about the Cotswold cottages is natural. The area had been forgotten for hundreds of years. The northern villages are much bleaker and stone much darker. No comparison.

    • @free..to..air..
      @free..to..air.. Před 2 lety

      @@valeriedavidson2785 don't let the villagers of all those lovely Lake District habitats here you say that...yours is chocolate box....end of

    • @valeriedavidson2785
      @valeriedavidson2785 Před 2 lety

      @@free..to..air.. But very natural and gentle beautiful countryside. The Lake District has beautiful scenery but the Peak District is harsh and rugged. Villages there nowhere near as nice as the Cotswolds.

  • @bluenose1875
    @bluenose1875 Před 2 lety

    Did you go to bourton on the water ?

  • @hetrodoxly1203
    @hetrodoxly1203 Před 2 lety +5

    You never had food poisoning, you'd be in bed for a week and loose a lot of weight, if it lasted for just a day you had a mild stomach upset that could have been caused by anything.

    • @Veni_Vidi_Vortice
      @Veni_Vidi_Vortice Před 2 lety +2

      How much is The Royal Oak paying you for this sort of work?

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      My toilet would disagree

    • @hetrodoxly1203
      @hetrodoxly1203 Před 2 lety +3

      @@clowderlibrary As i said mild stomach upset, if you had food poisoning it would be coming out of both ends, you have about 5 seconds when you think you're going to 5hit yourself and you will, you certainly wouldn't be going any distance from a toilet the next day.

    • @jacketrussell
      @jacketrussell Před 2 lety +1

      Last time I had food poisoning, I was incapable of doing anything for 3 solid days. Death started to seem like an attractive option.

    • @supersparks9466
      @supersparks9466 Před 2 lety +2

      I agree, food poisoning mostly lasts a week, 1 Day is a stomach bug which you can get in any country in the world especially if it’s something you have never eaten before.

  • @alanjay5974
    @alanjay5974 Před 2 lety

    Meant in the nicest possible way, ref food poisoning.But in you're case you're eyes are bigger than you're belly sometimes.Thats an expression that means you're biting off more than u can chew food wise.Hope you're feeling better.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      I ate the whole pie but I am definitely very guilty of having bigger eyes than appetite😅-it was delicious so you can imagine how bummed I was when it made me not feel well 🥲-thankfully it was really mild 🙌

    • @alanjay5974
      @alanjay5974 Před 2 lety

      @@clowderlibrary That's very honest of u, you're a fine lady.

  • @marycarver1542
    @marycarver1542 Před 2 lety +1

    Of course people live there !

  • @archiebald4717
    @archiebald4717 Před 2 lety

    Of course people live in the houses!

  • @danallen3947
    @danallen3947 Před 2 měsíci

    no food poisoning

  • @charlesunderwood6334
    @charlesunderwood6334 Před 2 lety

    The New Forest pretty sums up the difference between the US and UK with regard to hunting and guns. From Saxon times onwards (and maybe earlier) hunting was the reserve of the nobility, and The New Forest was one of the largest of these hunting reserves. Peasants who hunted could be executed as poachers. So outside the upper classes there has never been a culture of hunting, or the guns that later became part of it. The exceptions were farmers who would kill 'pests'- pigeons, rats and later rabbits. In contrast, in the US, hunting was largely a pursuit of the rural poor for food, and later entertainment, so the culture of shooting and having guns in engrained in society. So as a result, Britain has surprisingly large (for its population density) areas of (managed) wilderness full of wildlife in the form of former hunting areas, and no real gun culture.

    • @excession3076
      @excession3076 Před 2 lety

      The New Forest could better be described as a massive deer farm and forestry.
      Although nobility were the only ones who could hunt, because of "politics" the underlying function of these reserves has been brushed over. They were to provide venison and wood to the navy/army. Venison is very good for preservation, very lean so it doesn't spoil as easily. I think a figure I read was 15,000 deer killed in a large/annual drift to stock the navy fleet. Also the wood, you have to keep slow growing large tree "safe" for hundreds of years before they can be used.
      There's a reason Bucklers Hard is where it is.
      Cranborne Chase is the more interesting hunting reserve IMO. Some of the laws regarding the Chase were still in effect as late as the 1850's. Consequently, there's very little development/towns until Victorian times and the archeology of the area is remarkably intact.

  • @sticklebacksummer
    @sticklebacksummer Před 2 lety +2

    Shame your episodes aren't a bit longer

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      I’ll keep that in mind! I always worry if they’re too long people wouldn’t want to watch the whole thing

  • @monza1002000
    @monza1002000 Před 2 lety

    Sorry but l had to laugh when you said you would have hated missing the Cotswolds in one day. It must be very difficult knowing what to go and see when time is limited

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      Aside from the stomach bug I had I also had motion sickness but I was DETERMINED to see everything I could while we had a car 😅

    • @monza1002000
      @monza1002000 Před 2 lety

      @@clowderlibrary
      10 out of 10 for effort, respect 🙏 👏

    • @radicalcartoons2766
      @radicalcartoons2766 Před 2 lety

      Hope you managed to see the miniature village at Bourton on The Water. It was a great day out, when I was a kid!

  • @ianedwards80
    @ianedwards80 Před 2 lety

    Hello there I hope you phoned that put up And complained that should not happen

  • @hughfranklin4002
    @hughfranklin4002 Před 2 lety +1

    10:51 spot the American

  • @dave5017
    @dave5017 Před rokem

    UK citizens take it all for granted. Most will be walking down the road completely unaware that the little church has a history going back to Saxon times. That said, most won't even know what is meant by 'Saxon times'. Classical history (i.e. pre 20th century) isn't really taught in the schools here. At least not in the state schools in the cities anyway

    • @forsakingfear3652
      @forsakingfear3652 Před 3 měsíci

      State school educated here and guess what, I was definitely taught about our history as are my children now.

  • @phoenix-xu9xj
    @phoenix-xu9xj Před 2 lety

    People do live there. Really. 😂.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      Oh nice 😅- honestly it was so QUIET that it felt like a film set!

  • @gmdhargreaves
    @gmdhargreaves Před 2 lety

    Lovely footage but you should have reported the food poisoning and been compensated- it would also prevent others from being poisoned- Sorry for that you should not be getting positioned here in the UK

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      I'm not really a confrontational person. I don't like conflict, even when I'm the one who has been wronged. It's something i need to get better at. I did reach out to them but *crickets* 🙃

  • @terry9325
    @terry9325 Před 2 lety

    That pie you ate looked evil ,just waiting in some dark manky corner for you to come along to eat it 🤮😖

  • @mildandbitter
    @mildandbitter Před rokem

    Only in England would they call something a 1000 years old "New"

    • @HalStargazer
      @HalStargazer Před rokem +1

      it was new at the time 😁

    • @mildandbitter
      @mildandbitter Před rokem

      @@HalStargazerYes, those Norman bastards coming over here!

  • @2eleven48
    @2eleven48 Před 2 lety

    Isn't it kind of slanderous to talk about food poisoning and attributing it to what you ate in that pub? I'm sure the pub owner wouldn't be too happy hearing you say that.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety +1

      That was the only food I ate that day, other than toast that morning. The pub owner should be aware so no one else gets sick from it in the future 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @glynnwright1699
      @glynnwright1699 Před 2 lety

      @@clowderlibrary Much better to let him know, if you went directly to the public health officials he could potentially end up in a lot of trouble and would likely get a very thorough hygiene inspection whatever the outcome.

    • @2eleven48
      @2eleven48 Před 2 lety +2

      @@clowderlibrary ...How would the pub owner be aware if you didn't report it to them, or to an outside body? As you didn't do that, and as a matter of fairness, I sent an e-mail to The Royal Oak giving them details of what occurred (including my and your and another person's comment as shown here), and left it to them to progress with this or not. Do be aware that 'food poisoning', as you termed it, is a serious offence here, and not to be used glibly.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      @@2eleven48 I do hope you are aware that food poisoning can be both mild and severe. If I was glued to my toilet hacking and pooing myself for a week I would have contacted them. I’m not looking to get anyone in trouble, just stating my experience for transparency-like anyone who ever leaves a yelp review would.

    • @clowderlibrary
      @clowderlibrary  Před 2 lety

      @@2eleven48 i sent them a DM on Instagram stating what occurred

  • @denisrobertmay875
    @denisrobertmay875 Před 2 lety

    On a Literary note there is a now sadly neglected Children's Author, Cynthia Harnett en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynthia_Harnett who wrote a delightful series of historically set Children's Adventure Stories. One of which "The Wool Pack" is set in the Cotswolds. Although written over 60years ago and aimed at "Young Adults" (way before the term was thought of) the stories are a good read and well researched. They give an interesting insight into Early Modern Family and Social Life. I always thought that their format could stand reworking and outlet in other media.