Weird British Traditions That Confuse Everyone Else! - American Reacts

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  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
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Komentáře • 349

  • @Klingon2468
    @Klingon2468 Před 15 dny +84

    They missed the traditional pub crawl, that's 1 of my favourites.

    • @mcblaze1986
      @mcblaze1986 Před 15 dny +5

      That’s just a weekly thing tho more of a must do than a tradition, now getting ya mate over the top drunk on there 18th when they can legally go out now that’s tradition 😂😂

    • @sean49999
      @sean49999 Před 15 dny +2

      Pub golf ⛳️ 🍻🤙🏼

    • @Shrasha
      @Shrasha Před 15 dny +1

      That’s a casual weekday evening for me! The weekends are for the crawl around a special area, like the mad mile or wherever! 😂

    • @jamescurrie7678
      @jamescurrie7678 Před 15 dny +9

      The pub crawl is purely a myth, I supposedly have experienced this many times but have no recollection so it must surely be just wives tale

    • @clivenewman4810
      @clivenewman4810 Před 15 dny +1

      ​@@jamescurrie7678🤣🤣🍻

  • @hadesdogs4366
    @hadesdogs4366 Před 15 dny +20

    How is it that Americans are happy playing with dads shotgun and yet are too scared to chase a wheel of cheese down a hill 😂😂

    • @pobsdad
      @pobsdad Před 13 dny +4

      It always seem weird to me that Americans think it's odd that Brits can "open carry" a bottle of beer!

  • @mcblaze1986
    @mcblaze1986 Před 15 dny +82

    Drilling a hole in conkers? Hell no pass me the screwdriver and watch me stab my hand 😂😂

    • @greyparrot8
      @greyparrot8 Před 15 dny +2

      Right before you smash your knuckles to smithereens!

    • @Shoomer1988
      @Shoomer1988 Před 15 dny

      Why would you use a screwdriver?

    • @shithappens1975
      @shithappens1975 Před 15 dny

      ​@@Shoomer1988that's what most people use, you certainly don't need a drill, just a Philip's head screwdriver push and twist and then use it to thread an old shoelaces through.

    • @markcutting6504
      @markcutting6504 Před 15 dny +2

      & soak it in vinegar & leave it in the airing cupboard?you had to be hard up North when your still fighting with no shell.just a gnarly nut on a shoelace

    • @Rachel_M_
      @Rachel_M_ Před 15 dny

      ​@@Shoomer1988because I couldn't find the Brad awl

  • @rossjackie8805
    @rossjackie8805 Před 15 dny +8

    So many missed, wellie wanging, flaming tar barrels, black pudding tossing, tossing the caber, and Yorkshire pudding throwing. But for me it’s the annual flaming tar barrels at Ottery St Mary that deserves 1st place.

  • @marionhassell3023
    @marionhassell3023 Před 15 dny +15

    JT another weird one is Bog Snorkeling in Llanwrtyd Wells in Wales, Plastic Duck Racing down a River, Wellie Trowing, Worm Charming, snail racing 😂😂 😅 😅😅

  • @amy_TPN
    @amy_TPN Před 15 dny +4

    Honourable mention to the Atherstone Ball Game. It's run once a year, and the game is literally "whoever has the ball at 5pm wins". Here are the rules: 1) it stays on Long Street. 2) No killing anyone.
    "No killing anyone" is un-ironically something they have to specify. Last year there was a town-wide mass brawl and the cops have had to issue warnings due to consistent destruction of property every year 😅

    • @vikingwar-beargaming8843
      @vikingwar-beargaming8843 Před 13 dny

      Ahaha, was here to mention the Atherstone Ball Game, I'm just up the road in Sheepy, but yeah, the ball game is nuts to butts!! 🤘

  • @tonybmw5785
    @tonybmw5785 Před 15 dny +20

    They missed gurning. I guess Punch and Judy is one of the reasons why we have a sick sense of humour.

    • @keith6400
      @keith6400 Před 5 hodinami +1

      Started with pulling a grimace through a horse's collar. More recently a toilet seat.

  • @stephvoice1235
    @stephvoice1235 Před 15 dny +26

    I loved playing conkers as a kid

    • @peterwright6721
      @peterwright6721 Před 15 dny

      Yep played it all the time at school 40 odd years ago lol.

    • @sputukgmail
      @sputukgmail Před 14 dny

      Same. Also fun introducing a German family to it when I went over on a school visit. They loved it, had great fun :)

  • @mikeyitfc
    @mikeyitfc Před 15 dny +21

    Youths still play conkers in the UK except it's now called ''beat the shit out of each other with baseball bats and machete's''.

    • @markcutting6504
      @markcutting6504 Před 15 dny +5

      That's coz them homies bruvvers don't no wat de shoelace is innit.parents neva taught them to tie them coz busy on the pipe bro.shoelaces are to stop your feet falling out the shoes stolen from the rioting

    • @susanpearson-creativefibro
      @susanpearson-creativefibro Před 14 dny +1

      That’s because health and safety banned conkers at places like schools. How many relatively tame activities have been banned over the years, only to be gradually replaced by more dangerous and eventually illegal pastimes!

    • @littlemissgiggles165
      @littlemissgiggles165 Před 14 dny +1

      @@susanpearson-creativefibro Bulldog got banned at my school, I think someone broke their arm or something for it

  • @gemmascotland899
    @gemmascotland899 Před 15 dny +12

    For a few minutes..?!
    Naw, you wear that paper crown the rest of the day! 😂

    • @misslannie73
      @misslannie73 Před 15 dny +3

      I’ve woke up in mine many a Boxing Day!😂

  • @michaeledwards427
    @michaeledwards427 Před 15 dny +14

    Great video but the video you were watching missed a fair few weird British traditions out. 1. Duck race. A numbered plastic duck is put into a river or a stream and whichever reaches the finish line further down stream which has a net to catch them all is the winner. 2. Bog snorkeling. Basically snorkeling along 2 consecutive lengths of a 60 yard water filled ditch, the quickest wins. 3. Murder ball. 2 teams of any equal size play a game that has only 1 rule to get the ball behind the opposite teams goal line. Unofficially it's a game to give as much damage and hurt to the opposition as possible. 4. Shin kicking. You hold your opponent by the arms as he holds yours and basically you kick him in the shins trying to make him fall over. The brilliant thing about the different regions of the UK is the local traditions. A lot of them are literally are just regional, what's done in one part of the country isn't even heard of in another. So this list can be an incredibly long one if you talk to different people. Just to let you know that the men at the bottom of the hill who catch people in the cheese roll are from the local rugby club as it obviously takes a very burly and strong man (or woman!) to do it.

  • @collettemchugh9495
    @collettemchugh9495 Před 15 dny +27

    We do the magpie thing in ireland to 1 for sorrow 2 for joy 3 for a girl 4 for a boy 5 for silver 6 for gold 7 for a story never to be told, and we see 1 magpie we say good day Mr magpie how's your wife and family.

    • @darthwiizius
      @darthwiizius Před 15 dny +2

      The amount of magpies in my garden would require a multi-hour roll call to greet all of them, at least none have tried nicking my watch, yet...

    • @markcutting6504
      @markcutting6504 Před 15 dny +2

      In England we're supposed to salute 1 magpie!don't know why as it's associated with sorrow?also there was a kids programme called magpie in the early 70's that sang the magpie song.maaaaaagpie🙄😫

    • @markcutting6504
      @markcutting6504 Před 15 dny +1

      There's some great true magpie stories on youtube.people losing shiny things & having them returned & a woman that put a birdbath out & was swarmed with magpie to thank her bringing coins & other shiny objects

    • @darthwiizius
      @darthwiizius Před 15 dny

      @@markcutting6504
      Maggie Philbin. 😉

    • @cefngwyn
      @cefngwyn Před 15 dny +1

      You missed: "8 is a wish 9 is a kiss 10 is a bird you must not miss. Magpie!"

  • @85stace85
    @85stace85 Před 15 dny +11

    Punch and Judy used to freak me out as a kid.

  • @graemerigg4029
    @graemerigg4029 Před 15 dny +9

    Mr Punch does end up in front of the chap dressed in red surrounded by flames for summary judgment.

  • @antiqueinsider
    @antiqueinsider Před 15 dny +1

    No mention of Gurning (unmissable for JT!!) , The Athelstone Ball game, Swan-upping, Worm-charming, and many other great traditions. We could easily make a list of 30! Sheep dog trials? Tar barrels? Coxheath pie throwing? Haggis eating championship? Welly wanging? Black pudding throwing? There is no end (and no game too pointless)!

  • @nigelhyde279
    @nigelhyde279 Před 15 dny +13

    Talking about conkers and horse chestnuts and showing an image of a sweet chestnut.

    • @barriehull7076
      @barriehull7076 Před 15 dny +2

      and it looked like Austrians doing the 1st maypole dance.

    • @mikesaunders4775
      @mikesaunders4775 Před 14 dny +1

      To be honest its a pretty second rate offering all round.

  • @jasonwhite7890
    @jasonwhite7890 Před 15 dny +18

    J t please can you do some Fred dibnah reactions .

    • @AndrewwarrenAndrew
      @AndrewwarrenAndrew Před 15 dny

      but that would be dull. Always dreaded seeing him on tv nothing but chimneys and steam engines, *yawns*

    • @dave_h_8742
      @dave_h_8742 Před 9 dny

      Your a strange one who dosent like being scared shirtless by him climbing over loose boards 400ft up a loose chimney stack. Hoping it's sarcasm and your not a dull fecker !​@@AndrewwarrenAndrew

  • @rolybellamy956
    @rolybellamy956 Před 15 dny +3

    on the isle of man , as you go over the fairy bridge , you have to say hello to the fairys or bad luck will befall you ! ............. january 6th the haxey hood takes place in the fields of HAXEY a village near DONCASTER , basicly its a leather tube representing a ladys hat that was lost 100s of years ago up to 300 men wrestle to capture the " hood " between 2 pubs !

  • @pegaz6529
    @pegaz6529 Před 15 dny +4

    With the Morris dancers, they used to wear black paint on their faces, was a tradition for centuries, but all of a sudden it was "black face", which still makes me laugh because the tradition started before Europe even discovered Africa, so there weren't any black people around at all.

    • @denisemeredith2436
      @denisemeredith2436 Před 15 dny

      In days of old, the Morris men used to blacken their faces with soot so they wouldnt be identified as they danced because what they did was tantamount to begging which was outlawed at that time.

    • @kathrynmartyn2013
      @kathrynmartyn2013 Před 15 dny

      there are still 'black face' morris dancing groups

  • @helenwood8482
    @helenwood8482 Před 15 dny +3

    They tried doing Black Friday in the UK. Nobody was interested.

  • @TheCornishCockney
    @TheCornishCockney Před 15 dny +22

    Shin-kicking,wife carrying,welly boot throwing,bale push around a Cornish village.
    These and many more around these unique islands make us a blessed population.

    • @cmsxcb
      @cmsxcb Před 15 dny +5

      Don't forget bog-snorkelling.

    • @markcutting6504
      @markcutting6504 Před 15 dny

      Isn't that being pisse d as a youngster.waking up with armitage shanks embedded in your forehead😁

    • @DaveBartlett
      @DaveBartlett Před 15 dny +3

      ...or Gurning.

    • @cmsxcb
      @cmsxcb Před 15 dny

      @@DaveBartlett Gurning? That's just 2am kicking out time at any nightclub in Britain. It's a relief when they turn you down!!!

  • @realbiggestlegofanconnor7007

    10:18 cheese and rice, literally

  • @multiplemiggs5189
    @multiplemiggs5189 Před 15 dny +2

    Cheese rolling is where I live and that hill is almost vertical at the top...

  • @alanbayles1218
    @alanbayles1218 Před 15 dny +7

    Punch & Judy should be considered child abuse! Gave me nightmares whenever I came across this on holiday and my parents kept reassuring me "oh, don't worry he won't hurt you".... yeah sure! As for magpies, it won't be funny looks from people that would worry me if I started speaking to them, it would the evil eye from the birds themselves! Conkers if timed right, you could inflict serious injury to your "best friend" 😈
    There is one tradition that is missed off here involving soon to be married couples. Friends of the soon to be wedded couple would come and "collect" them, put them on the back of an open trailer and drive around the local village or town, whereby local people, shop owners etc would throw flour, spoiled food etc on top of the poor couple. By the time they would get back home they would be honking!

  • @JP_TaVeryMuch
    @JP_TaVeryMuch Před 14 dny

    6:30 Thank you for your pretty accurate summation of my rural english childhood.

  • @lauramchugh2454
    @lauramchugh2454 Před 15 dny +1

    I remember watching a punch and Judy show as a kid at Blackpool

  • @JamesLMason
    @JamesLMason Před 15 dny +5

    Imagine growing up back then?! I did grow up back then and I'm barely in my 40s.

  • @free..to..air..
    @free..to..air.. Před 12 dny

    The egg and spoon race...now theres a British tradition worth preserving

  • @carolynekershaw1652
    @carolynekershaw1652 Před 15 dny

    The recent addition to the pub crawl is the 'Greggs Crawl'

  • @anthonynoblett952
    @anthonynoblett952 Před 15 dny +1

    Wanna be confused, come for a drive with me in the morning where i salute single magpies and ask them how are the wife and kids 😂😂😂😂

  • @annecairns8414
    @annecairns8414 Před 15 dny +1

    Try the 'Running with Flaming Tar Barrels - Crazy English Folk Tradition. ' I'd love to see your reaction.

  • @anta3612
    @anta3612 Před 14 dny

    Some of them be cutting the cheese while chasing the cheese! 🤣😉

  • @robertclark2253
    @robertclark2253 Před 12 dny +1

    Most of these are English pursuits but there are others such as Welly Wangling which involves throwing a Wellington boot as far as possible and don't forget the Scots who also inhabit the British isles with sword dancing or caber tossing . Caber tossing inollves strongmen throwing huge logs known as cabers in the highland games .

  • @angelahawman4263
    @angelahawman4263 Před 15 dny +1

    What's this, "can you imagine back in the day?" Yes! I played conkers at my Junior School. You made me feel old, you young un you.

  • @direnova6284
    @direnova6284 Před 9 dny

    Punch and Judy was a thing of the past when I was a kid and I'm in my sixties.

  • @markdevlin8471
    @markdevlin8471 Před 15 dny +2

    Penny Up The Wall ?..lost so much dinner money.😂

  • @cmsxcb
    @cmsxcb Před 15 dny +2

    The origin of Punch and Judy is actually Italian.
    Cheese rolling is somehow connected with grazing rights for cattle (don't ask!)
    Maypoles are a... how shall we say... 'replacement' for a certain male appendage that 'pure, unmarried maidens' dance around. Maypoles are still quite common. The 'pure, unmarried maidens'... not so much 🙂

  • @ASMR.by.HIPPYCHICK
    @ASMR.by.HIPPYCHICK Před 15 dny +13

    We have the turkey/Chicken bone pull here too! As a child (70's) we played conkers, did the maypole dance, played jacks, two ball and British bulldog. Not for getting marbles, tick-a-nick (tag for those who dont know lol ) Hide and seek and skipping. Those were the days eh? ❤

    • @darthwiizius
      @darthwiizius Před 15 dny +3

      Conkers was the law when the season was right, now you can't play the game without wearing the kind of body armour used to survive as a bomb disposal specialist.

    • @Sun_Flower1
      @Sun_Flower1 Před 15 dny +1

      Bog snorkeling is a good one

    • @JP_TaVeryMuch
      @JP_TaVeryMuch Před 14 dny +1

      Thank you for mentioning British Bulldog too. Licensed rioting. The best!

  • @rickybell2.056
    @rickybell2.056 Před 15 dny +1

    Conkers was a serious sport in UK schools 😂

  • @Rachel_M_
    @Rachel_M_ Před 15 dny +2

    Who's going to tell JT that Halloween started in Ireland?

  • @CunningStunt92
    @CunningStunt92 Před 15 dny +1

    A village local to me has a tradition called the ‘Fig Pie Wakes’. Every year a road on a hill in the middle of the village is closed and people roll fig pies down it. Why? Originally we have no idea but in the last 30 years or so it’s been to raise money for the local church.

  • @richardjames3022
    @richardjames3022 Před 15 dny +2

    One film of horse racing was not the UK, as here in the UK we race on grass, not soil. The first sight of conkers in the shell were sweet chestnuts. Checkout Lewes bonfire, the biggest in the UK

  • @catbevis1644
    @catbevis1644 Před 14 dny

    The magpie thing is supposedly that the number you see together will tell your immediate future. There are many versions of the rhyme but the one I was taught was:
    "One for sorrow, two for joy,
    Three for a girl, four for a boy.
    Five for silver, six for gold,
    Seven for a secret never to be told".
    And if you see only one (foretelling sorrow), I was told to say "Good morning, Mrs Magpie!" to dissipate the bad luck.
    Birds in general have a lot of superstitions in the UK. Jackdaws are a portent of death- I had one sitting by my window on 7th September 2022 and joked how I'd never seen one in all the years I'd lived here so uh oh someone's going to pass any day now!... Yeah. 8th September didn't go well and I felt so bad that I'd made such a flippant joke! [the Queen. Not that I believe the superstition of course, I just feel like maybe it was something I shouldn't have joked about]. Robins are supposed to be passed loved ones returning to say hello. Goldfinches symbolise prosperity. And seagulls symbolise that you're about to get your chips/fries stolen by a flying rat.

  • @iceb-akap77ice93
    @iceb-akap77ice93 Před 15 dny +1

    Maypole day brings back some memories. Where I grew up we've got a 90ft Maypole. Back in the day the whole village turned up to help bring it down. And back up again. With huge ropes and a lot of pulling. And when it's up. Tradition is for someone to climb it. Then health and safety came into play. Now machinery brings it down and up again. And the person who climbs it has to have safety ropes now. This year one of my friends climbed it last year..It only happens every 3 year's though. It's to repair and repaint it too. Cool video.

  • @waynelowe3329
    @waynelowe3329 Před 14 dny

    I loved growing up playing marbles and conkers we had so much more fun as children than children do now with all the technology around, we had a better imagination and always found fun and exciting things to do. ( even if at times it was hedge hopping and knock a door run )

  • @whovianhistorybuff
    @whovianhistorybuff Před 13 dny

    10:38 you're absolutely right about that hill, I've never done the race but I've walked (or rather climbed) up that hill and it beggars belief how steep it is, it's actually steep enough to be classified as a cliff as much as a hill.

  • @CHEEKYMONKEY2647
    @CHEEKYMONKEY2647 Před 15 dny +2

    the best conker tree in my area was owned by a woman and she wouldnt let anyone take conkers until 1st of october, we played conkers alot and it was a big thing in school, but cheating was one of the things we frowned on, some pushed window putty inside, some soaked them in vinegar, many kept them in the fridge to make them last longer, everytime you won a match you would make a knot in the string to signify how many matches that perticular conker has won...

  • @keslitsmith1252
    @keslitsmith1252 Před 15 dny +4

    I have a video from a few years ago on my YT channel, at the museum I used to volunteer at in Wales, when I lived there! It's their version of Mari Lwyd! It was more to show the audience at the Christmas concert what Mari Lwyd was during the interval! Punch & Judy always scared me as a child, (& I have a severe fear of clowns too)!

  • @littlemy1773
    @littlemy1773 Před 15 dny +2

    I’m in the Isle of Man and we have some weird horse thing like the Welsh . Usually turns up in random pubs at Christmas time

    • @rolybellamy956
      @rolybellamy956 Před 15 dny +2

      ....hope you say hello to the fairys when you cross the bridge , we all did except for my daughter who fell down and grazed her knee as soon as we crossed the bridge !

    • @littlemy1773
      @littlemy1773 Před 15 dny +1

      @@rolybellamy956 I live not far from it lol . If you ever come back you need to find the original old fairy bridge it’s by a river down a farm track not far from Douglas!

  • @leanne87
    @leanne87 Před 15 dny +2

    Morris dancing is quite a big thing in my town, happens a lot around May day, carnival etc. We have another May Day tradition that happens every year, if you get a chance you should look up Hastings Jack in The Green. It comes from an old May Day tradition and a few other places still do it but ours in Hastings is the biggest in the country.

  • @user-bc7nx3mm8z
    @user-bc7nx3mm8z Před 15 dny

    Lets not forget the old 'lock in' back in the day the pub would close and lock the doors then continue serving those inside till about 3am...ah the 90's.

  • @oopsdidItypethatoutloud

    Punch and Judy... brilliant 😊
    ❤ from Northeast England ❤️

  • @dave_h_8742
    @dave_h_8742 Před 9 dny

    Pantomime at Christmas. The pantomime that went wrong is a funny one for you all to react to or watch on your own.

  • @croston81
    @croston81 Před 15 dny +1

    cant remember last time ive seen a punch n judy show

  • @marypettyfer4640
    @marypettyfer4640 Před 15 dny

    Oh 😂😂I say hello to the magpie 😂

  • @gfrths
    @gfrths Před 15 dny +2

    3:10 the strawbear festival is bigger than Christmas for us here in and around the town of Whittlesey, the Saturday of is honestly the best day of the year

  • @FuriKitten
    @FuriKitten Před 14 dny

    they missed a couple of classics;
    the befriending a road cone as your new best mate, that you will inevitably proudly try and wear on your head,
    The magical beer taxi, that conveys you from a point to your home (with your new best friend Ro de Cone or Mlle flashy light du road-beacon) that miraculously cost you the exact amount of money you had in your pocket to your door.
    The kettle...

  • @itzpolo_0121
    @itzpolo_0121 Před 15 dny +1

    Conkers were still a thing for a while - we still used to do this in early 2000s till our school banned it cause people were using them to hit each other

  • @janice506
    @janice506 Před 15 dny

    Scottish Highland Games have been going since the 11th century. It’s a wonderful Scottish tradition.

  • @dianeknight4839
    @dianeknight4839 Před 15 dny +2

    ,Shin kicking, Raft race, home made raft fancy dress race. Pram racing and barrel rolling. Also the Fireballs (New Year tradition in Scotland). Pub crawl. Lots of Pagan traditions like the Summer Solstice at Stonehenge, Yule logs (not the cake).

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 Před 15 dny

      Isn't there something about Ferrets and Trousers.

    • @samloveslfc
      @samloveslfc Před 15 dny

      What about bog snorkeling and worm charming.

  • @steveluetchford602
    @steveluetchford602 Před 15 dny +3

    You do make me laugh when discovering UK stuff 😂

  • @Craig.E
    @Craig.E Před 14 dny

    We have a tradition which is maybe more localised to Norfolk, but on Valentines day, a mysterious man called Jack Valentine knocks on your door, runs away but leaves behind a present. No one ever sees him. As you get older you realise it's just your parents or neighbour doing it, kind of like the Santa thing.

  • @nonnovyabizness3003
    @nonnovyabizness3003 Před 14 dny

    The magpie rhyme he said everybody knows (one for sorrow two for joy ) is the thyme for 70's children's t.v show and is not the historical rhyme which starts " one for sorrow two for mirth three for a wedding four for a birth " etcetera !

  • @claret6937
    @claret6937 Před 15 dny

    Hi JT, I think the origins of Punch and Judy are from Italy. If you like Morris Dancing, check out the Sidmouth Folk Festival. Also check out the burning barrels of Ottery St Mary. We always think of a black cat as bringing good luck. We do the saluting to the magpie but say "Hello Mr Magpie, I'm on my way to (wherever)"

  • @user-gf1jt2hp4m
    @user-gf1jt2hp4m Před 15 dny +1

    I have never seen a punch and Judy show and have no thoughts to see 1. My school did the maypole dance and sadly it's not done any more.

  • @Bridgercraft
    @Bridgercraft Před 15 dny +2

    We take bonfire night to a whole other level here in Sussex. Many of the towns have their own bonfire societies and they hold torchlit processions on different dates through the town/village with elaborate costumes, drumming and bangers (firecrackers to you) going off all around. The procession leads up to a fire site where there will be a massive bonfire (often in excess of 20 foot high) and fireworks display. All aided by a heavy consumption of beer of course.

    • @chrisperyagh
      @chrisperyagh Před 15 dny +1

      Lewes - "Health & Safety? What's Health & Safety?"
      I understood why all the shops in Lewes board up their windows after I first went there - I thought they were just being a bit too overcautious until it all kicked off.

    • @Bridgercraft
      @Bridgercraft Před 15 dny +1

      @chrisperyagh lol, yep! I'm a member of one of the drumming groups out of Hastings, we attend many of the bonfires and drum in the processions every year.
      Lewes is the best known and undoubtedly the biggest but Battle and Hastings are pretty good too!

  • @TanyaRando
    @TanyaRando Před 15 dny +2

    We do the wishbone too. It was always a big thing while growing up. They didn’t mention pantomime, I thought it was a worldwide thing lol but apparently not. Or bog snorkelling! I knew someone who won the bog snorkelling one year!

  • @YeCrustModifier
    @YeCrustModifier Před 19 hodinami

    I’m just 45 and we still played conkers at school, there’s no beating real visual fun ^_^

  • @gtaylor331
    @gtaylor331 Před 15 dny +3

    You said about how back in the day, you didn't have so much TV so conkers was the thing....No, that is not correct, back in the day kids played conkers because we didn't have health & safety....just common sense.

  • @daynegilbey3674
    @daynegilbey3674 Před 15 dny

    “Imagine growing up back then”
    I was born in 1987 and I played Conkers even through secondary school 😂

  • @robertwatford7425
    @robertwatford7425 Před 15 dny +1

    If Punch and Judy confuses you don't even try to understand Pantomime :-(

  • @sidneygriffiths5737
    @sidneygriffiths5737 Před 15 dny +1

    I used to love playing conkers at school back in the 80's, there were some notorious ones going around the school yard that you were wise to avoid if you didn't want yours split in two! It was the talk of the school when to high scoring conkers faced off, generating huge crowds!
    Ps is that a massive conker on that crane in the background?

    • @francespetrak4600
      @francespetrak4600 Před 11 dny

      My brother always soaked his conker in vinegar to make it stronger.

  • @stanpalmerzan4288
    @stanpalmerzan4288 Před 15 dny +1

    We do tip here in the UK but we don't have to as we do get a proper wage when it comes to going to work so we don't have to rely on other people generosity when it comes to something like working in places like restaurants

  • @sueKay
    @sueKay Před 15 dny +1

    I'm in my 30s and we still played conkers when I was a kid, though I doubt kids play with them now.

  • @MrDunkycraig
    @MrDunkycraig Před 15 dny +1

    Hey JT, im ashamed to say two of those items are within 15min drive of where i live. The straw man is in Whittlesey just to the east of Peterborough on whats is called the fens. That an ex swamp that is below sea level until it was drained a long while ago. The second is the Conker world champs in Ashton near Oundle which is just west of Peterborough. Now theres a very good pub in Ashton with decent ale if its still standing. If not theres a micro brewery just over the road😂 at Nene valley brewery. Sad to say ive not been to either event although the straw man must go back to Pagan times

  • @LittleBallOfPurr
    @LittleBallOfPurr Před 15 dny

    Christmas crackers contain two long things pieces of cardboard that are joined together inside with gunpowder in the join area. So when pulled apart, you get a loud 'crack' noise, similar to a gunshot, hence the name 'Crackers.'

  • @yurihuffles
    @yurihuffles Před 15 dny +2

    In terms of "Guy Fawkes Night", notice some of the key words there. "Protestant King"... "formally with anti-Catholic sentiment". The tldr being that the king at the time was massively brutal to the Catholics murdering many for simply not following the "Church of England" (which was the protestant faith with the King of England as the head). When the attempt failed, the kind had many people slaughter with their heads places on spikes in response, and proclaimed that it had been an attempt to attack parlement (ignoring he knew he was the core target) and so the day was "celebrated" as the day "democracy won". It's also why Guy Fawkes masks have very much come to the symbol of groups fighting for freedom against the ruling powers - although this does stem from "V for Vendetta" which in turn is a film/comic based around the Guy Fawkes tail and leaning more towards the "freedom fighter" side of it.

  • @wendywilson858
    @wendywilson858 Před 15 dny +1

    The kids do trick and treating in the UK. Xx

  • @RoxanneLavender
    @RoxanneLavender Před 15 dny +1

    I was a kid in the 1990s, we had tvs, phones, etc, but we still played conkers out on the streets. We also played with 'clackers' until one cut my face i think.

  • @illya7
    @illya7 Před 15 dny

    Where I live in Scotland: on New Years Eve people parade up and down the main street in Stonehaven whirling long ropes with balls of fire at the ends around their heads.

  • @Drescher1984
    @Drescher1984 Před 15 dny +1

    Funny to show 9ish magpies and 1 grey and black crow. Sure both are in the same family.

  • @mickdavis8521
    @mickdavis8521 Před 12 dny

    Then there’s shin kicking, worm charming and the Royal Shrovetide Football match. Plenty of others

  • @sylviagreybe672
    @sylviagreybe672 Před 15 dny

    One of the racetracks for the horse racing is in the town I live in in Scotland, and it always amuses us to see the ladies wearing fancy next to nothing skimpy outfits in the usually freezing weather just to watch horses run!

  • @robertclark2253
    @robertclark2253 Před 12 dny

    Hogmanay turn up at strangers house with at least a six pack of beer or cider and be invited in as a 'first footer' nowadays usually limited to friends , family or at least people you know but even back in the 90's it was wild .

  • @elly5740
    @elly5740 Před 15 dny +1

    still did conkers in the 90's haha

  • @greyparrot8
    @greyparrot8 Před 15 dny +1

    Cheese rolling takes place in 10 days time (27th) I believe. I live really close to the hill, not a chance I would ever attempt it!

  • @Shrasha
    @Shrasha Před 15 dny +1

    Still play Conner’s with my niece and nephew. Played the hell out of it as a kid. Was pretty average though. Probably lost more than I won.

  • @missmerrily4830
    @missmerrily4830 Před 15 dny +1

    I don't worry if I walk under a ladder or if I put an umbrella up indoors but no way would I not wish Mr Magpie a good day and ask after his wife and children if I see him on his own.

  • @helenbarnett695
    @helenbarnett695 Před 15 dny +2

    Kids used to sit outside the shops with a Teddy bear dressed up and ask penny for the guy, but these days it's considered begging, not many people go carol singing anymore either

    • @barriehull7076
      @barriehull7076 Před 15 dny

      Teddy bear, what part of the UK are you from? traditionally, children would make a "Guy", or life-size, scarecrow-like effigy of Guy Fawkes, which would be thrown onto the communal bonfire during the celebrations - but not before he was paraded around (sometimes in an old pram or go-cart) by the kids, who would ask for "a penny for the guy" to spend on sparklers.

  • @susananderson7504
    @susananderson7504 Před 14 dny

    Look up shin kicking. Worm charming. Gurning. Welly waning and there are many more

  • @deankelz29
    @deankelz29 Před 15 dny +2

    it wasnt so much find a nut from a tree we would go all out as kids and climb the tress jumping up and down on the branches and let it rain 100s of conkers lol or we would get big sticks or lumps of wood and throw them at the tress to knock the conkers down ....fun old times when kids used to be kids and half normal and not brain washed with tech and stuff 🤣

  • @nikkimckenna340
    @nikkimckenna340 Před 15 dny +1

    Cheese rolling is done near me, very dangerous sport and the hill is steep and Cheltenham racecourse is not far from me either and getting super dressed up tends to be ladies day, gold cup day. I’ve never been to races and got dressed up, when I go a lot tend to wear tweed and fedora hats xx

  • @chilled-out-on-lantau
    @chilled-out-on-lantau Před 15 dny +1

    Punch and Judy is nearly 400 years old! Still do the magpie thing - can also turn round and spit where I'm from, oh I loved playing conkers. OMG I left the UK 20 years ago and the only one I haven't done is no 9. +1 Everything else my whole childhood... I really miss bonfire night.

  • @sophieandwayne
    @sophieandwayne Před 15 dny +1

    I used to bake my Conner’s with vinegar! We have got to pc over here now and in schools they have to wear gloves and safety goggles wth!

  • @IDyce88
    @IDyce88 Před 15 dny

    punch and judy scared me too, but i'm not scared of ALL puppets...i think it depends on how they look...some don't bother me...some give me traumatic flashbacks. same with dolls and dummies.
    i have fond memories of bonfire night, i often went to several growing up...lots of merry people and good food with juice to drink.

  • @Sophice
    @Sophice Před 15 dny +1

    my grandad used to do punch and judy shows all his life, he carved all the puppets himself. even got invited over to germany once to do a show.

  • @davidrenton
    @davidrenton Před 15 dny

    as a kid in the early 80's coming back from school, i hit the motherload, 100 of conkers in the park, i went back to my house, got my dad , and a suitcase and filled it up, a suitcase full of conkers, going through them hoping 1 would be that immortal champion conker.
    People took it seriously at school, there was many theories on how to create the all conquering conker, many went down leave it in vineger route , at the end of it i had a suitcase full of moldy conkers with no champion conker

  • @bendystackpipe6668
    @bendystackpipe6668 Před 14 dny

    Groundhog day is my birthday so it became a tradition to find out what Phil says even though I'm British. Plus great movie.

  • @RickyT15
    @RickyT15 Před 15 dny

    Punch & Judy must of influenced good old Florida man.

  • @dcallan812
    @dcallan812 Před 15 dny

    And our cheese is not in an aerosol. 🤣🤣