There's Nowhere Like Norfolk - Visit Norfolk, England
In Norfolk you can choose from miles of unspoilt coastline, beautiful countryside, forests and heathland, internationally-important nature reserves, amazing birdwatching, easy-going walking and cycling and fabulous seaside resorts. There’s the unique Broads, Britain’s Magical Waterland and a National Park; Norwich, a fantastic city of heritage, culture and shopping; and the stunning north Norfolk coast, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Add a Royal residence, countless outdoor activities, a fantastic variety of family theme parks and attractions, historical sights, and some of the country's best fresh, seasonal food and you have all the ingredients for a perfect escape in a unique and diverse environment – and at any time of the year.
Great Yarmouth - British Seaside VIDEO TOUR (Norfolk, UK)
So it was our first time visiting Great Yarmouth, finally! We had never made it past Cromer on the Norfolk hump! It reminds me of Blackpool, but with less fights and less drunken people, just! Hundreds of arcades!!! We almost didn't make them all! lol! We started in the town as that is where we found the free parking! It was a nice walk to the seafront from there.
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Great Yarmouth, often known as Yarmouth, is a seaside town in Norfolk, England, straddling the mouth of the River Yare, some 20 miles (30 km) east of Norwich. A population of 38,693 in the 2011 Census made it the third most populous place in Norfolk. It has been a seaside resort since 1760 and provides a gateway from the Norfolk Broads to the North Sea. Its longstanding fishing industry, mainly for herring, declined steeply after the mid-20th century and has all but vanished. North Sea oil from the 1960s led to a brisk oil-rig supply industry that now services offshore natural gas rigs. More recent offshore wind power and other renewable energy create further support services. As a tourist centre, Yarmouth became prominent when a railway built in 1844 gave visitors easier, cheaper access and triggered an influx of settlers. Wellington Pier opened in 1854 and Britannia Pier in 1858. Through the 20th century Yarmouth was a booming resort, with a promenade, fortune-tellers, pubs, trams, donkey rides, fish-and-chip shops and theatres. Other attractions include the Pleasure Beach, the Sea Life Centre, the Hippodrome Circus and the Time and Tide Museum, and the one surviving Victorian seaside Winter Garden in cast iron and glass.
Video Title: Great Yarmouth - British Seaside VIDEO TOUR (Norfolk, UK)
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Antiques Roadshow UK Swindon
Antiques Roadshow UK Swindon. Antiques Roadshow UK Swindon. Antiques Roadshow UK Swindon.
Antiques Roadshow UK Cawdor Castle, Castle Coole. Antiques Roadshow UK Cawdor Castle, Castle Coole. Antiques Roadshow UK Cawdor Castle, Castle Coole.
Antiques Roadshow UK Scarborough Grand Spa Hall 1. Antiques Roadshow UK Scarborough Grand Spa Hall 1. Antiques Roadshow UK Scarborough Grand Spa Hall 1.
Antiques Roadshow UK Scarborough Grand Spa Hall. Antiques Roadshow UK Scarborough Grand Spa Hall. Antiques Roadshow UK Scarborough Grand Spa Hall.
Antiques Roadshow UK Minehead Railway Station 1(02, October). Antiques Roadshow UK Minehead Railway Station 1. Antiques Roadshow UK Minehead Railway Station 1.
Blickling Hall, Norfolk, UK. Christmas Lights
Blickling Hall is a stately home which is part of the Blickling estate. It is located in the village of Blickling north of Aylsham in Norfolk, England and has been in the care of the National Trust since 1940.
Carol Of The Bells by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution licence (
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Please watch: Museum of Norwich - At the Bridewell - Visiting Norwich
Get a feel for the City where I was born.
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Holkham Hall, Wells next the Sea, Norfolk
Video of Holkham Hall, Norfolk.
Hair Thatching (1958)
Long Wittenham in Berkshire (now Oxfordshire).
Man measures proportions of a dilapidated cottage - its windows are broken. Mr Roye England makes scale models of traditional English cottages that are ready for demolition or just falling to pieces. He is creating a model village.
Mr England is seen working on a model. He uses tweezers to move parts of his model. He uses fine sand from egg timers to represent soil, rubber sponge is used for ivy, card for the buildings, blackbird feathers are used for flowers etc.
Mr England's wife and Wynne Morris turn up and Mr England asks his wife to cut a chunk out of Morris's hair. This will be used in the model to represent thatched roofing.
Mr England has another project which is (surprise, surprise) a model railway. Another man - Guy Williams - is working on this project with him. Mr Williams gives the thumbs up signal to Mr England and he flicks a switch. Various shots of the model railway in operation.
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FLAT EARTH BRITISH ,Doggerland Britain's Atlantis .Did It Exist ?
Today with Martin Liedtke we will be looking at Doggerland in the North Sea .Doggerland was a land once thought to link Denmark to Britain but was flooded by a Tsunami in the past in the age referred to as the ice age ..Yesterday in a Daily Mail article they say they found evidence by divers working for oil companies.In this post we looking into whats been called Britain's Atlantis and ask the question did Doggerland Exist? The narrative is a Tsunami flooded the area 5.500 years ago,or there about. Also some thoughts on the ISS, and the Human psyche. Here is the article linked Linked FEI Conference on FEB Filtered Live feed with Globebusters seen on this video by Candi ispynasalies . Details to the upcoming UK Convention 2018 More to come soon on FEB Please feel free to sub or share this video.....Onelove Peeps :)
Ghosts And Witches Of Olde England
'Ghosts And Witches Of Olde England' is a remarkable journey, touring around the country to explore some of the best examples of fright inducing folklore ever related. Narrated by Rowan Atkinson.
TALES FROM A DEAD WORLD - A PARANORMAL INVESTIGATION OF A RURAL 17th CENTURY COUNTRY COTTAGE
Following on from Santon Church, I was invited by Patricia Burke to investigate her beautiful country home which has some interesting past owners from a Baron to a Bishop.
The investigation brought light anomalies, EVP and history brought to life in an almost hour-long investigation. Shared here is but a short trailer.
The full show will be on Amazon in the New Year.
Hope you enjoy!
For updates check my website at
Norwich. England UK. Cathedral, Dragon Hall, Castle,City Center. HQ
Norwich is a city on the River Wensum in East Anglia and lies approximately 100 miles (161 km) north-east of London. It is the county town of Norfolk.
Mermaids Caught On Camera & Spotted In Real Life
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Mermaids are mythical creatures that have had a major presence in our society for quite some time. Little girls dream of becoming mermaids. Well, actually, there are adults who dream about becoming mermaids too! From story books to movies, mermaids are half human from the waist up and half-fish from the waist down. Throughout history, there have been sightings of mermaids in personal journals of sailors and voyagers like Christopher Columbus. But today, it is believed that Columbus may have actually been looking at manatees, not mermaids. Either way, it doesn’t diminish the fact that we, as a society, care deeply about mermaids and want them to be real so badly! While we still wait for that first emergence, people have created life-size replicas and even faux documentaries of mermaids that have convinced us that they are real. There are also cases of real people sitting on rocks in mermaid costumes, like the Active Pass mermaid in British Columbia, Victoria, Canada. When enough people are involved in the hoax, almost anything is possible.
In this video, we will introduce to you some stories of mermaids that have been caught on camera and spotted in real life. Thanks to Animal Planet’s Mermaids: The Body Found, people thought mermaids actually existed. But in reality, the network used creative CGI and amazing special effects to make it look all the more convincing. There are more hoaxes where that came from, so get ready! If anything, these stories prove just how gullible we still are as a society.
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Places to see in ( Stowmarket - UK )
Places to see in ( Stowmarket - UK )
Stowmarket is a small market town situated in Suffolk, England, on the busy A14 trunk road between Bury St Edmunds to the west and Ipswich to the southeast. The town of Stowmarket is on the main railway line between London and Norwich, and lies on the River Gipping, which is joined by its tributary, the River Rat, to the south of the town.
The town of Stowmarket takes its name from the Old English word stōw meaning principal place, and was granted a market charter in 1347 by Edward III. A bi-weekly market is still held there today on Thursday and Saturday. The church of St Peter and St Mary is in the Decorated style and dates to the 14th century. The 16th-century former vicarage, now the town council offices and register office, has associations with John Milton; Milton’s Tree in its grounds is believed to be an offshoot of one of the many trees he planted there.
Haughley Park is an historical house of significance listed in the English Heritage Register. It is a large red brick country house built in about 1620 for the Sulyard family who were very prominent landowners in this area. Opened in 1967, the Museum of East Anglian Life occupies a 70-acre (28 ha) site close to the town centre. The Karnser is a raised pavement in Station Road West, next to the church. The name is the East Anglian dialect word caunsey, meaning a causey (causeway).
In the 18th century the Gipping was made navigable between Stowmarket and Ipswich by a series of locks. The newly created canal was known as the Ipswich and Stowmarket Navigation. Stowmarket railway station is on the Great Eastern Main Line from London Liverpool Street to Norwich. It is also the junction of the line to Bury St Edmunds. It is served by Abellio Greater Anglia. Suffolk County Council has built a road from the Central Roundabout, a short distance to the east of Stowmarket, to Gipping Way in central Stowmarket at a cost of £21 million.
Stowmarket has held an annual carnival for well over 50 years in the recreation park featuring a fun fair, fireworks, a procession through the town and local entertainment. Stowmarket also plays host to the music festival Stow-Fest, a live music open-air event that takes place annually at Chilton Fields in the North of Stowmarket. Stowmarket has a maritime climate type as is typical for the bulk of the British Isles. Wattisham is the nearest official weather station, about 4 miles south south west of Stowmarket Town centre.
( Stowmarket - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Stowmarket . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Stowmarket - UK
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Places to see in ( Calne - UK )
Places to see in ( Calne - UK )
Calne is a town and civil parish in Wiltshire, southwestern England, at the northwestern extremity of the North Wessex Downs hill range, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Calne is on a small river, the Marden, that rises 2 miles (3 kilometres) away in the Wessex Downs, and is the only town on that river. It is on the A4 road national route 19 mi (31 km) east of Bath, 6 mi (10 km) east of Chippenham, 13 mi (21 km) west of Marlborough and 16 mi (26 km) southwest of Swindon. Wiltshire's county town of Trowbridge is 15 mi (24 km) to the southwest, with London 82 mi (132 km) due east as the crow flies.
In AD 978, Anglo-Saxon Calne was the site of a large two-storey building with a hall on the first floor. It was here that St Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury met the Witenagemot to justify his controversial organisation of the national church, which involved the secular priests being replaced by Benedictine monks and the influence of landowners over churches on their lands being taken away. According to an account written about 1000, at one point in this meeting Dunstan called upon God to support his cause, at which point the floor collapsed killing most of his opponents, whilst Dunstan and his supporters were in the part that remained standing. This was claimed as a miracle by Dunstan's supporters.
In 1086 Calne may already have been, as it was later, a market town on the main London-Bristol road. The church in it was well endowed. 74 or more households were held almost outright by burghal tenure (as citizens of a borough), and the lordship of its large outlying land was divided between the king (of whom 45 burgesses were tenants) and the church. In the Middle Ages the king's successor as the lord of Calne manor and, as owner of the church's revenues, the treasurer of Salisbury Cathedral, each had the right to hold a market and a fair in the town, with two triangular market places or fair grounds.
Tourism is described in nearby places of interest below, with details of the surrounding historic and landscape attractions. Within the town the annual Calne Music & Arts Festival was established in 1975. Notable buildings in the town include St Mary's Church, an array of houses on The Green and the town hall. Of particular note is Calne Library which has won awards for its innovative design and was opened by the Queen in 2001. Since the demolition of the Harris pork factory and the completion of the first phase of redevelopment/regeneration in 2001, Calne has seen Cotswold stone, similar to local limestone, being used together with smart red brickwork, formerly reserved for fine historical buildings.
The town centre suffers traffic congestion, with the A4 through the town close to gridlock during rush hour, due to single-file traffic between Curzon Street and Wood Street, with eastbound traffic having priority. A northern bypass road (part of the A3102 road) was completed in 2001. Calne is equidistant (12 mi or 19 km) from the M4 motorway at Junction 16 (Wootton Bassett/Swindon West) to the northeast of Calne, and the westbound M4 junction 17 just north of Chippenham to the northwest. The nearest main passenger airport is Bristol, 38 mi (61 km) to the south west. Calne has no railway or bus station, though in March 2007 it was designated as a National Express coach stop on route 403 from Bath to London via Heathrow Airport. The service runs once a day and has wheelchair-accessible coaches. Stagecoach West, Faresaver and Thamesdown Transport provide bus services to other nearby towns and cities such as Chippenham, Devizes, Marlborough, Swindon and Bath.
( Calne - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Calne . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Calne - UK
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Places to see in ( Aberdeen - UK ) Duthie Park Winter Gardens
Places to see in ( Aberdeen - UK ) Duthie Park Winter Gardens
Duthie Park Winter Gardens or The David Welch Winter Gardens at Duthie Park is Winter Garden one of Europe’s largest indoor gardens and Scotland’s third most visited gardens.
Duthie Park Winter Gardens boasts a beautiful floral paradise all year round with many rare and exotic plants on show from all around the world.
Come and visit the Temperate House of Duthie Park Winter Gardens , Corridor of Perfumes, Fern House, Victorian Corridor, Japanese Garden, Tropical House and Arid House, which has one of the largest collections of Cacti and Succulents in Britain.
( Aberdeen - UK) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Aberdeen . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Aberdeen - UK
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Northumberland August 2018 | Lightwater Valley | Beamish Museum | Cherry Adventures
Hi! We spent 5 days in Northumberland UK. Starting off at Lightwater Valley for Abbi's birthday then up to Northumberland to a caravan park, Kirkley Hall Zoo, Beamish Museum and the National Park.
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The Locations Of 'A Warning To The Curious' (1972 BBC Ghost Story For Christmas)
This is a video tour of the locations used in the British 1972 BBC TV drama 'A Warning To The Curious', based on the M. R. James book of the same name. It's probably my favourite of the BBC Ghost Story For Christmas TV series. Around January of 2017, I happened upon the K-Punk Blog site detailing the author’s visit to identify & photograph the locations used in the filming ( all around the North Norfolk coast. I also filled in a couple of further locations from Adam Scovell's BFI Blog ( Here are the locations I visited, listed in the order they are shown.
Waxham Beach, east of the village of Waxham
Sections of this beach appeared in 'Whistle And I'll Come To You'
Sherringham Station on the North Norfolk Railway
Doubled as Seaburgh Railway Station
Shipwright's Pub on East Quay Street in Wells-Next-The-Sea
Used as the inn in Seaburgh as shown on screen, now a private residence
Happisburgh Lighthouse in Happisburgh
Used as the lighthouse in Seaburgh as shown on screen
St Mary The Virgin Church in Happisburgh
Used as the church in Seaburgh as shown on screen
Weybourne Station on the North Norfolk Railway
Doubled as Thruxton Railway Station
Holkham Beach north-west of Wells-Next-The-Sea
Used as the beach and forest area where the crown is buried
The locations were pretty much as I had expected them to be based on my research beforehand. On visiting Holkham Beach, I parked in the Holkham Beach car park, which is a ways west of the nearest village of Wells-Next-The-Sea. There were two peninsulas of forest either side of the car park stretching out onto the beach. I assumed that the one on the right, nearest Wells-Next-The-Sea was used in the film, but I decided to go towards the left-hand forest first as the author of the K-Punk Blog site did not see any likely screen-matching hills (from which Paxton dug up the crown) in the right-hand forest. About half a mile round the beach/tree-line, the make-up of the forest changes to fairly flat ground, younger trees and looks nothing like that seen on screen. I backtracked and went to the right-hand forest. I lugged my camera equipment around two miles round that treeline instead, and couldn't spot any likely looking hills either. I could have gone further, right the way round to Wells-Next-The-Sea causeway, but time was getting short and I was totally knackered. That said, the film was shot nearly 50 years ago, so all it would take is for the tree-line to have moved a short distance forward or back, or erosion to change the layout a little, and suddenly that hill could never be identified.
Most of the locations were pretty quiet when I did my shooting, with the exception of Weybourne railway station which was semi-busy. I shot most of the footage of Sherringham railway station at around 6am, hopping fence and approaching the first person I saw to ask permission. Sherringham station gets pretty packed during the day. Filming trains either arriving or leaving Sherringham station via the road bridge overlooking the station can be tricky. There is only one pavement; on the side which looks down onto the station. To film footage from the other side of the bridge looking out into the distance, you have to stand tight in to the bridge wall, and it's a fairly busy narrow road.
Over those two days, I got 107 shots totalling around 80mins of 1080p footage using my Sony NEX-VG10 camcorder with 35mm-lense-adaptor and a 28mm Canon old-style manual SLR lens. I did try to properly compose a number of the shots but for the most part I opted for coverage over quality. There are a few shots in there with moiré patterns, which I'd normally catch on my 7 LCD monitor, but I simply lacked the time to properly compose and double-check each shot. Once I got back home, I immediately started editing with Adobe Première, matting the 1080p 16:9 source footage into 2.35:1 widescreen, using Magic Bullet Looks to change the colour grading, and a Gorilla Grain 16mm film overlay to add the grain. I made the opening and closing titles to roughly resemble those used in the original, in keeping with the 70s BBC production look of the film. I happened upon a complete 'A Warning To The Curious' OST listing here; and used this to assemble & mix my own complete score, which I added to my footage.
I'm not intending to do anything further with this project beyond this YouTube upload, and a few Blu-ray copies for friends. If anyone is interested in getting a Blu-Ray copy, or if any media production companies interested in licensing my footage, then please get in contact via email through my website. The email address is at the bottom-left of every page.
Fantastic walks with your dog along the East Anglian coast | ITV News
Another in the ITV News Anglia mini-series Tails and Trails highlighting fantastic walks with your dog in the scenic and inspiring countryside of East Anglia.
In this episode, Natalie Gray is in her beloved North Norfolk with her tiny terrier Wilf but she's on the trail of a much bigger beast - the demon dog Black Shuck who inspired one of the most famous books of all time.
Along the way Natalie met up with the curator at Cromer Museum, Alistair Murphy and historian Peter Stibbons.
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Oxford Rail GER K85 (aka LNER N7) 0-6-2 in Wartime Austerity Grey - Unboxing and Review
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Cromer Pier Hosts BBC Antiques Roadshow
The BBC Antiques Roadshow team visit Cromer Pier (North Norfolk, England) to film a couple of episodes.
Raising Tomorrow's Ancient Woodland
Rosalind Forbes Adam embarks on a project to create an ancient woodland from scratch, with the help of botanist Lin Hawthorne.
haggewoodstrust.org.uk
A CAN film
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Woodlands TV