THIS WILL NEVER HAPPEN AGAIN - FAMILY DAILY VLOG
ℹ️ In this vlog we capture a moment that will never happen again between cousins, Story & Leonie. We leave our lovely Forest Holidays Ccabin in the Forest of Dean & make our way back to London.
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Sacha & Jmayel present a unique representation of a real life adventure. Following the lives of a Man, Woman, Baby & Dog as expats LIVING IN PORTUGAL, creating a DAILY VLOG. A couple of English vegetarian film makers making a new life for themselves abroad with Eden the dog and a baby Story. New videos every weekday.
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A Stroll Around Hooksway in West Sussex
Julia and I are out for a stroll around the wooded area at Hooksway in West Sussex, a few miles north of Chichester and close to Chilgrove.
We start at The Royal Oak pub and take a short circular walk alongside beautiful autumn woodland through the East Dean Estate. En-route, we discover a delightful fairy ring of fungi.
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Top 10 Beautyful Place to Visite In England
top 10 beautyful place to visite In England
Yorkshire
Visitors flock to Yorkshire because there is no place on earth like God’s Own County. It considers its food and drink reputation as now the best in Britain. Yorkshire boasts more Michelin-starred restaurants than anywhere
Bath
With sweeping, honey-stone Georgian crescents and terraces spread over a green and hilly bowl, Bath is a strong contender for England’s most beautiful small city. It has a fascinating and easily accessible history, from
Cotswolds
The glorious, honey-coloured towns and villages of the Cotswolds look as if they have strayed into the 21st century from another era. The area is characterised by gentle dynamism, with lively galleries, vibrant festivals and
Devon
Craggy coves and cream teas, surf breaks and strolls, picnics and pints in pub gardens – holidays in Devon are wholesome, simple and scenic. Most people are drawn to the magnificent beaches on the south and north coasts,
Lake District
Visit the Lake District for Britain’s finest scenery, greenest countryside and grandest views. Its picturesque patchwork of lakes, valleys, woodlands and fells make it one of the best places in Britain to get out and experience the
Brighton
Visit Brighton because you need never get bored in this loveably eccentric city. There’s always something unexpected to enjoy – the secret is to roam freely and keep your eyes peeled. Head to the boho North Laine, and you
Cornwall
Cornwall is defined by its magnificent coastline with 300 miles of dunes and cliffs, medieval harbours and oak-forested creeks – and every mile accessible on foot. Such an unspoilt coastline inspires Enid Blyton-style
Norfolk
Norfolk's undulating countryside and sleepy, flint-built villages are perfect for gentle cycling, walking or touring by car. Stately homes, ruined castles, medieval churches and half-timbered wool-towns with fascinating museums
Suffolk
The beaches fringing the curved Norfolk and Suffolk coastline are the chief draw for visitors to the region. Even on the busiest summer’s day, there is always space for games, kite-flying or a quiet family picnic in the dunes. It’s
London
There can be few more cosmopolitan cities on earth. People pour in from across the world to visit, work or live. Londoners are used to hoardings marking the progress of colossal infrastructure projects such as Crossrail .More Info:
Places to see in ( Hassocks - UK )
Places to see in ( Hassocks - UK )
Hassocks is a large village and civil parish in the Mid Sussex district of West Sussex, England. Its name is believed to derive from the tufts of grass found in the surrounding fields. Located approximately 7 miles (11 km) north of Brighton, with a population of 7,667,[4] the area now occupied by Hassocks was just a collection of small houses and a coaching house until the 19th century, when work started on the London to Brighton railway. Hassocks until 2000 was just a postal district and prior to that the name of the railway station. The Parishes were Clayton and Keymer, it is believed that when the railway came in 1841 the Parish Councils were given the opportunity of naming the station. But they could not agree and eventually the directors of the London, Brighton & South Coast Railway gave up waiting and named the station Hassocks Gate themselves.
The area was colonised by the Romans and a Roman cemetery was found by Stonepound Crossroads. Modern Hassocks is thought to have stood at a Roman crossroads on the London to Brighton Way between Londinium Augusta (modern London) to Novus Portus (possibly modern Portslade) (running north-south) and the Greensand Way Roman road from modern Hardham to a north-south road at Barford Mills north of Lewes and possibly further to Pevensey. With the demise of the Roman Empire came an influx of Anglo-Saxons and the eventual reintroduction of stone buildings, such as the parish church of St. John the Baptist in the nearby village of Clayton, which is believed to have been built around the 11th Century.
The opening on 21 September 1841 of Hassocks Gate station (named after the nearby toll gate on the turnpike road to Brighton, but now known simply as Hassocks) on the London to Brighton railway saw the beginning of the village that we know today. South of the village the railway passes beneath the chalk escarpment of the South Downs through Clayton Tunnel, which at 6,777 feet (2,066 m) is the longest of the five tunnels on the railway.
Today Hassocks has a variety of independent shops including several cafes, specialist shops like the long established delicatessen, an optician, general hardware store & a couple of restaurants (Indian and Chinese) and a well-used community centre called Adastra Hall. In 2010 well known high street brands started to show an interest in the high street & modernisation of quaint old shops has seen the quirky give way to the corporate.
There is a Site of Special Scientific Interest within the parish. Clayton to Offham Escarpment, which stretches from Hassocks in the west, passing through many parishes including Ditchling, to Lewes in the East. This site is of biological importance due to its rare chalk grassland habitat along with its woodland and scrub. To the south of Hassocks is a small 7.12 hectares (17.6 acres) ancient woodland known as Butchers Wood. The wood is mainly oak and hazel with a large bluebell ground flora. It was acquired by the Woodland Trust in 1988. On the north-western edge of the village, on the London Road, is the Friars Oak, formerly a coaching inn, adjoining open meadows known as Friars Oak Fields.
Hassocks railway station serves the village. Thameslink and Southern provide regular train services to Brighton, London and Bedford. The station was rebuilt and redeveloped in 2013, the new main station building was opened on 5 July with the addition of lifts on both platforms completed by December 2013.
( Hassocks - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Hassocks . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Hassocks - UK
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Places to see in ( Addlestone - UK )
Places to see in ( Addlestone - UK )
Addlestone is the administrative town of the borough of Runnymede in the county of Surrey, England. The town lies just within the M25 motorway. Addlestone is home to an ancient oak named The Crouch Oak and is centred 18.6 miles southwest of London. Junction 11 of the M25 motorway serves the roads local to Addlestone and Chertsey, the adjoining town in which it was historically included. Addlestone has its own railway station on the Chertsey Branch Line, four principal bus services and is home to the post-junior parts of St George's College.
Addlestone is a large village which owing to its size is generally referred to as a town, 18.6 miles (29.9 km) southwest of London and 9.8 miles (15.8 km) north-by-northeast of the county town, Guildford; the town constitutes the administrative centre of the borough of Runnymede of which it is the largest settlement. Narrow green buffers separate the town of Weybridge and town of Chertsey and a larger green buffer including a farm, M25 and a golf course separates the village of Ottershaw. No fixed southern boundary with New Haw exists which has had signs at various points but not on all approaches
The name Addlestone probably means Attel's Denu: the valley belonging to a Saxon named Attel. Addlestone, historically called Atlesdon or Atlesford, was a part of Chertsey ecclesiastical parish[n 1], the basic unit of civil administration. In 1241 the place was listed as Attelsdene and by 1610 John Speed's map shows it as Adleston, halfway between St. Annhill and St. Georg Hill, just south of the Thames.
Heading north from the town, towards the Addlestonemoor five-way, two-lane roundabout is a Grade II listed building at the renaming Brighton Road to Chertsey Road, the George Inn, almost opposite which are another listed building split into two houses: nos 114–116 Chertsey Road, early 19th century, slate-roofed houses with sash windows. This Inn is a Tudor Period building with 18th century and later alterations and has three gables facing the road.
Woburn Hill is a large house built in 1815 spread over three storeys, that features a moulded cornice and fluted Greek Doric columns to its porch with an iron balustrade above it forming a balcony in front of a central window of the floor above. Row Hill forms a residential estate with shops of a butcher, baker and electrical appliance store that is contiguous with Addlestone to its west.
Addlestone Moor has a public house, now closed 08/2013, now a Day Nursery, flood meadows, a sports pitch and a mobile home park. Its roundabout marks on the closer side of town has five exits and is used for motorway access from primarily Addlestone, Weybridge, Shepperton, Laleham and Chertsey.
Addlestone railway station is on the Chertsey Branch Line from Weybridge from where rapid national services can be caught on the South West Main Line. A journey time of 47 minutes to London Waterloo station with one change is achievable or 81 minutes with no changes via Staines upon Thames, Feltham, Hounslow, Chiswick and Putney.
( Addlestone - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Addlestone . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Addlestone - UK
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End Of The Line: Episode 2 - High Barnet
This is End Of The Line, a series where Jake and Holly explore all the places at the end of every single line on the London Underground. This episode's location is High Barnet at the end of the High Barnet Branch of the Northern Line.
Our theme tune is by Eat Me. Buy their stuff here, it's very good-
Our background music is from Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com).
Other music on this episode comes from Emma Bunton and Ramin Djawadi. I do not own the songs and would like YouTube to place ads on this video on their behalf.
Previous scores:
Morden- 7/20
Best Hotels in Keswick The Royal Oak at Keswick
Main Street, Keswick, CA12 5HZ, United Kingdom
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Best Hotels in Keswick The Royal Oak at Keswick
The 18th-century Royal Oak at Keswick is in the market town of Keswick, just 2 miles from Derwentwater. A traditional pub, it features home-cooked seasonal food, cask ales and cozy accommodations with private bathrooms.
The Royal Oak at Keswick has elegant rooms with private bathrooms with either a shower or bath. Each room has an LCD TV, facilities for making tea and coffee, and free Wi-Fi.
In the restaurant, you can enjoy freshly prepared dishes made with local produce and seasonal ingredients from Cumbria. The bar stocks real ales from the Thwaites Brewery.
With stunning views of the surrounding hills, the former traveler's inn is close to the center of town. Keswick Lodge is a perfect base to explore the Lake District.
The wholesome, fresh Cumbrian breakfasts gained a Highly Commended accolade in Britain's Best Pub Cooked Breakfast 2009.
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South Downs Way, West to East, Part 3 of 6 - Petersfield to Amberley
This series of six videos is a detailed and authoritative photographic flipbook guide to all 113 miles of the South Downs Way travelling from west to east.
The South Downs Way is a long distance footpath and official National Trail that traces the length of the South Downs National Park. In doing so it predominantly follows the scarp slope of the range of chalk hills stretching from Winchester in Hampshire to Eastbourne in East Sussex.
Links to the rest of the SDW west to east series
Part 1 Winchester to Exton:
Part 2 Exton to Petersfield:
Part 4 Amberley to Ditchling:
Part 5 Ditchling to Alfriston:
Part 6 Alfriston to Eastbourne:
The National Trail Web Site
Ordinance Survey Maps covering the SDW
1:50000 Map Nos. 185, 197, 198, 199
1:25000 Map Nos. 132, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123
Public Houses and Inns
02:21 The Five Bells, Buriton:
02:23 The Master Robert Inn, Buriton:
04:00 The White Hart Inn, South Harting:
04:02 The Ship Inn, South Harting (closed):
06:25 The Royal Oak, Hooksway:
07:54 The Bluebell Inn, Cocking:
12:20 The George and Dragon, Houghton:
12:41 The Bridge Inn, Houghton Bridge:
Places of Interest
00:27 Butser Hill:
00:51 Queen Elizabeth Country Park:
02:21 Buriton:
02:59 Coulters Dean:
04:00 South Harting:
04:22 Harting Down:
04:33 Up Park House and Garden:
04:47 Beacon Hill:
05:10 Murray Downland Trust:
05:10 West Dean Estate:
06:20 Josef Oestermann Memorial:
06:35 The Devil’s Jumps:
07:34 Andy Goldsworthy Chalk Ball Trail:
07:58 Cowdray Estate:
09:06 Graffham Down Trust:
10:34 Slindon Estate:
10:47 Stane Street Roman Road:
11:02 / 11:07 Bignor Hill / Toby’s Stone:
12:34 River Arun:
Music
Revival Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
Disclaimer
Visitors who use this guide and rely on any information within it do so at their own risk.
Driving Up The A23
In the spirit of Warhol, the Driving series (Driving Through, Driving Towards and Driving Away From) is a collection of videos taken at random locations where absolutely nothing happens.
England & Wales Travel Skills
Rick Steves European Travel Talk | In this travel talk, Rick Steves explores the cultural hubs of London, Bath, and York; as well as the rural charms of the Cotswolds and Lake District; the historical thrills of places like Canterbury, Dover, and Warwick; and the rugged beauty of North Wales. Download the PDF handout for this class:
Subscribe at for more new travel talks!
(Disclaimer: Any special promotions mentioned are no longer valid.)
Buses on Dashcam between 31st December 2018 to 5th January 2019
Buses around Brighton and Worthing.
Sussex Walks: In search of Jacobs's Post
Today I am on Ditchling Common looking for the gibbet post of Jacob Harris. He was a Jewish pedlar who murdered the landlord of the Wayside Inn, later the Royal Oak. He also killed Mile's wife and maid.
I am Richard Vobes, the Bald Explorer, exploring Britain. Check out my website at:
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Selham Station (closed 1955).
Selham Station seen here in May 2011 was on the LBSCR Branch to Midhurst.Selham was opened in 1872 and closed to passengers in February 1955. Selham continued to handle goods until May 1963.The nearby bridge abutments can be seen by the Three Moles pub.Other stations on the branch at Petworth and Fittleworth still survive in private ownership.I had visited Midhurst Station before it was demolished in the 1970's to make way for housing.
Outwood Common & Horne ~ Autumn 2015
Scenic Autumn Tour taking in Outwood Common & it's Windmill. Outwood is a village in the Surrey weald. It is home to Outwood Post Mill which was once the oldest working windmill in England. It was damaged in gales in January 2012 and in October 2013. The mill and grounds have been closed to the public ever since, with an application for withdrawal of rights of access applied for.
The Mill has stood on the Common at Outwood for over 340 years. This incredible Mill was built just one year before the great fire of London. Built in 1665 by Thomas Budgen, the windmill was a working mill right up until 1996. She can still mill corn if required. The windmill is currently closed:
There are several miles of public, National Trust footpaths and bridleways as well as Outwood Common. The paths cross open common, woodland and fields, which change through the seasons: much of the countryside in and around Outwood is part of the Harewoods estate, which is owned and managed by the National Trust. There are two main National Trust parking areas. One is opposite the windmill and the other is on the track leading to the cricket pitch on Outwood Common.
1542 Earliest known reference to Outwood; the Court Roll refers to the restrictions concerning the felling of timber in Outwood mostly in the parish of Burstow. Then onwards down the hill to the rural village of Horne passing the lovely 7 bedroom Victorian House Horne Grange which was on the market for £1,650,000 although the estate agents website now says: This property has been removed by the agent. It may be sold or temporarily removed from the market. Horne Grange is situated on the edge of the rural hamlet of Horne in Surrey close to the county boundary with West Sussex. The Grange stands in a secluded position surrounded by lawns scattered with mature trees and shrubs with views across its own land. Close to the house there are outbuildings and stables, a kitchen garden and cottage with coach house. Then on a little further for a quick stop at the Grade 2* Listed, St Mary's Church, Horne. I wanted to revisit the medieval graffiti on the external jambs of the south door, the churches oldest feature.
Parish Deanery Godstone. A parish within the united benefice of Burstow with Horne. The heavily restored church in the heart of the village, dedicated to St Mary the Virgin, has 14th- and 15th-century windows. The south door dates from 1250, and there is a 14th-century oak screen and 15th-century chancel beams. Considerable restoration was undertaken in 1880., which robbed the building of almost all its archaeological interest and completely destroyed its early history. The oldest feature now remaining is the south doorway, which dates from the middle of the 13th century, but this may possibly have been inserted in the walls of a 12th-century nave. A slight inclination of the chancel to the north shows rebuilding of the east end of the church, but here again the absence of any original detail earlier than a 15th-century rood stair in the west end of the south wall makes the dating of this rebuilding, if indeed it ever took place, a matter of conjecture.
Church of England website details: Built: 13th century - restored 1880 Architect: restored by Gordon M Hills Listing: grade 2*
St Mary's church dates from the thirteenth century but was restored and extended by Gordon M Hills in 1880.
A set of drawings by Haswell from 1825 show a large timber belfry at the west end (similar to the one at Burstow) and in the interior view box pews, a pulpit and no arch to the chancel. In 1880 the west end was reconstructed and the belfry structure considerably reduced in size, and a north aisle, organ chamber, vestry and chancel arch were added to the original nave and chancel. The south porch was moved westwards and a fifteenth century window was re-fixed in the new north aisle. The roofs are tiled, the spire shingled and the walls constructed of a mixture of Reigate (or Merstham) stone, Wealden sandstone and Bath stone.
A Rood Stair in British Church Architecture, is a stair leading too the gallery or loft of a rood screen. The rood was a large crucifixion, usually carved and painted, generally with flanking figures of the Virgin Mary and St Peter. It stood on a loft, or gallery above a screen across the chancel arch. To access the gallery a curving stair was often set into the wall beside the chancel arch. The stair would lead through the thickness of the wall behind the arch and emerge at rood loft level. Many rood screens were destroyed during the Reformation, so you frequently see the upper exit of the stair as an orphaned doorway opening beside the chancel arch, seemingly leading nowhere.
Best Hotels in Ambleside The Britannia Inn
Elterwater, Elterwater, LA22 9HP, United Kingdom
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Best Hotels in Ambleside The Britannia Inn
In the village of Elterwater, this traditional Lakeland inn offers real ales and home-cooked food, in the heart of the Lake District. Lake Windermere is just 3 miles away.
Each homey room at The Britannia has a TV and tea/coffee making facilities. Dating back over 400 years, The Britannia Inn has oak beams and open fires.
A varied menu of both traditional and unique dishes is available, using local produce when possible. In the evening, advance booking is recommended.
Guests receive one free pass per person, enabling use of the recreational facilities at Langdale Estate Country Club, next to Britannia Inn. The club has a beauty salon, a 65-foot pool, a spa and racquetball courts.
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2004 Christmas Day at Portslade
Oxfordshire's Fifth Community Owned Pub
In October last year the Beckley & Area Community Benefit Society, set out to purchase their local pub. Located within the village the community were desparate to save the pub from closure. Now they have recently brought the it and are currently volunteering their time to brighten the place up. This makes it the fifth community owned pub in Oxfordshire.
Stones Hotel Bar and Restaurant, Minehead, United Kingdom HD review
Stones Hotel Bar and Restaurant - Book it now! Save up to 20% -
A 4-minute walk from the West Somerset Coastal Path, Stones Hotel Bar and Restaurant provides stylish rooms and a wide-ranging food menu. With free parking and WiFi, this hotel is just 7 minutes’ drive from Dunster Castle.
Each guest room features oak furnishings and has a flat-screen TV with satellite channels and tea and coffee facilities. There is also an en suite shower with a hairdryer and toiletries provided.
The Stones restaurant serves fresh pizzas, steaks and gourmet burgers alongside a range of traditional British mains and desserts. The relaxing bar offers beers, wines and cocktails and includes a secluded beer garden. Live music or DJs are featured on Saturday nights until midnight.
Stones Hotel Bar and Restaurant is located around 15 minutes’ walk from the Minehead & North Somerset Golf Club. The pretty village of Porlock is 6 miles away, and is home to the West Somerset Rural Life Museum.
'Female Freedom Has an Expiration Date': Being 35 and Single | Op-Docs | The New York Times
An Argentine woman, documenting her relationships, begins an intimate investigation searching for love and answers: must she settle down or continue to be a free spirit in order to be happy?
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When you reach your thirties many questions start being asked. Why aren't you married? Why don't you start a family? Being single in your thirties is never an ask easy task.
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'Female Freedom Has an Expiration Date': Being 35 and Single | Op-Docs | The New York Times
Danger mouse gets punched in a pub
Danger mouse gets punched in a pub near Portsmouth!
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