What to Pack When Visiting London
These are the most important things to pack for your visit to London. I'm telling you what to pack for your trip to London, including clothing, non-clothing items, and what you DON'T want to bring in your suitcase on your trip to London. **Scroll down for my free London guide...
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How to Deal With the Weather While Visiting London:
How to Get Around London:
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Mentioned in this video:
US to UK travel adapters:
Is it dual voltage?
Behind-the-scenes London-y stuff on Instagram:
Free London 101 Guide for first-time London visitors:
Comprehensive and flexible 3-Day London Itinerary:
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Kontinuum - First Rain: youtube.com/watch?v=SKI1P2gEK54
Kontinuum:
lymington, hampshire
a short video showing some of the hampshire town
Bars of Bath in England
Bars of Bath in England
Bath, England
Our night out over Cider and Beers in Bath, enjoying our time with the locals.
Photos and Videos property and credits to CM by Carlos Melia / carlosmeliablog.com / carlosmelia.com. Full usage of this media is allowed only and exclusively when including full credits as mentioned above. Carlos Melia
Willow cricket bats made in Kashmir's Sangam Bijbehara
More of this is what will bring about a resurgence in Kashmir - good old Kashmiri / Himalayan hard work, perseverance, commerce and 'Make in India'!
Cricket is arguably, the most popular sport in India. Go to any part of India from Jammu & Kashmir in the north to Kerala and Tamil
Nadu in the south or from Maharashtra in the west to Arunachal
Pradesh in the east, you would most likely spot a bunch of boys busy playing cricket.
People work out their social events, leave from office and travel plans in accordance with the Indian cricket team's schedule.
Forty kilometers from Srinagar is Sangam, the hidden world of the
Kashmiri Willow and cricket bat makers. Sangam is situated on the
Srinagar-Jammu Highway in Bijbehara tehsil of Anantnag
district in Jammu and Kashmir.
Behind the beautiful willow trees, Kashmir’s cricket bat industry is a living, breathing, manufacturing industry, as the bats are handmade at a local factory. The willow clefts obtained from the willow trees here are fashioned to manufacture quality cricket bats. Cricket bat manufacturers largely utilized Kashmir Willow as a substitute for English Willow. Kashmir produces the largest number of cricket bats in India, which are sold worldwide.
The Kashmiri willow used to manufacture cricket bats comes from
different areas of the Kashmir valley. The trees are chopped into logs and are then split into wedges called clefts. The clefts are then cut into the basic shape of a cricket bat with the correct width and length.
These newly cut blocks of Kashmiri willow usually sit outside,
stacked up, waiting to dry under the summer sun. The bats are not only popular in India, but also in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.
In the manufacturing process, the handle and toe ends of the bat are established, with the blade selected from the best end of the willow to ensure a quality cricket bat and better performance. The shoulders of the bat are shaped and blended to give the correct shape and structure to the bat. The clefts are then placed in drying rooms.
Power saws are used to create the main shape of the bat and wood planes to make the bat surface smooth. Craftsmen then shape the blade to enhance the pick-up and weight of the cricket bat and to ensure a good overall balance.
When the handle has been fitted, the cricket bat is nearly complete.
The craftsmen subsequently give finishing touches by applying paint over the bats and pasting them with stickers and labels.
Kashmir Willow is renowned worldwide and is second only to the
famous English Willow for manufacturing the best cricket bats.
This small-scale industry provides various opportunities of
employment to the youth of the locality and its surrounding area.
Every family of these villages is directly or indirectly involved in this
industry and earns their livelihood from it.
This footage is part of the professionally-shot broadcast stock footage archive of Wilderness Films India Ltd., the largest collection of HD imagery from South Asia. The collection comprises of 100, 000+ hours of high quality broadcast imagery, mostly shot on HDCAM / SR 1080i High Definition, Alexa, SR, XDCAM and 4K. Write to us for licensing this footage on a broadcast format, for use in your production! We are happy to be commissioned to film for you or else provide you with broadcast crewing and production solutions across South Asia. We pride ourselves in bringing the best of India and South Asia to the world...
Please subscribe to our channel wildfilmsindia on Youtube for a steady stream of videos from across India. Also, visit and enjoy your journey across India at clipahoy.com , India's first video-based social networking experience!
Reach us at rupindang [at] gmail [dot] com and admin@wildfilmsindia.com
Train passes through Jorhat, Assam
The Northeast Frontier Railway abbreviated as N.F.Railway is one of the 17 railway zones in India. Headquartered in Maligaon, Guwahati in the state of Assam it is responsible for rail operations in the entire Northeast and parts of West Bengal and Bihar.
In 1881, Railway first entered in Assam when Assam Railway and Trading Company set up metre gauge track.
Jorhat has always been a vibrant town- a perfect mix of tradition and modernity. It was the hub of the anti-British struggle during the pre-independence era.Historically,it was the last capital of the Ahome Dynasty which had ruled Assam for six centuries.
Source:
This footage is part of the professionally-shot broadcast stock footage archive of Wilderness Films India Ltd., the largest collection of HD imagery from South Asia. The collection comprises of 100, 000+ hours of high quality broadcast imagery, mostly shot on HDCAM / SR 1080i High Definition, Alexa, SR, XDCAM and 4K. Write to us for licensing this footage on a broadcast format, for use in your production! We are happy to be commissioned to film for you or else provide you with broadcast crewing and production solutions across South Asia. We pride ourselves in bringing the best of India and South Asia to the world...
Please subscribe to our channel wildfilmsindia on Youtube for a steady stream of videos from across India. Also, visit and enjoy your journey across India at clipahoy.com , India's first video-based social networking experience!
Reach us at rupindang [at] gmail [dot] com and admin@wildfilmsindia.com
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Somerset 2013 - Bath -
BATH: im Jahre 44 n. Chr. von den römischen Besatzern als Aque Sulis gegründet, ist Bath heute teilweise Unesco Weltkulturerbe. Die heißen Quellen ließen Badehäuser entstehen, die von den kultivierten Römern gerne genutzt wurden. Die Abbey stammt aus dem 15. Jh., und kaum ein anderes mittelalterliches Gotteshaus besitzt mehr Fenster . . . Leider sind Touristenströme zu jeder Jahreszeit in Bath üblich - da wir vor 20 jahren das römische Badehaus und die Abbey ausgiebig besichtigt haben, sind wir diesen Orten aus vorgenannten Gründen ferngeblieben. Es ist jedoch eine Pflicht, bei einem Erstbesuch diese einmaligen Sehenswürdigkeiten nicht auszulassen . . .
ROYAL CRESCENT ist neben den römischen Bädern das bekannteste Wahrzeichen der Stadt. Der halbmondförmige Häuserriegel wurde für betuchte Bürger in der zweiten Hälfte des 18. Jh. erbaut. Ebenso der kreisrunde Platz THE CIRCUS . . . . 24.06.2013
Ganpati Bappa Morya!
Crowded streets, boisterous devotees, and lots of music and dance. We get you a glimpse of Maharashtra’s favourite festival.
Quad crosses ford by River House (1490) at Kersey Suffolk England UK
Filmed 20.9.18
Blue door cottages & Huntstile organic farm, Quantock hill's, Bridgwater, Somerset.
While staying at Blue door cottages, Sherwood, Goathurst, Bridgwater, Somerset, TA5 2DG, we went down the road to Huntstile organic farm for a supper in aid of Open hands India a very good charity that was set up by the owner of Blue door cottages Christine Dougherty. It was a great night out at a fantastic venue supplied free of charge by the owners of Hunstile John Ridout & Lizzie Myers with good music by The night owls jazz band and we raised over 1400 pounds. The next day we went for a short drive to Watchet where we had lunch at a pub close to the harbor, while enjoying an ice cream, a steam train went past. Then we went for a walk across the Quantock Hills, the Sun was shining in a clear blue sky and the views where spectacular. We could not have asked for a better weekend away and we can't wait to go back. A big thank you to Christine, John & Lizzie, see you again soon. Both Blue door cottages and Huntstile organic farm are fantastic places to stay, I highly recommend them both. Hunstile is also a great Wedding venue.
Shaftesbury: A Farmer's Town? Or A Town Of Farmers?
I primarily made this location-showing video for a friend of mine in Wales who was somewhat convinced that everyone where I come from, (the town of Shaftesbury), are all farmers but I couldn't send it to her directly (for some stupid reason) so I thought, sod it, I'll put it on YouTube.
I decided to make this video whilst out cycling one morning in an ill-fated attempt to try and dissuade her mono-farmer view of my hometown. However, I realised when I got home and started making it that we basically are a town full of farmers. To which numerous people have agreed. So...yes. YOU WIN HONEY!
You also get to see all the best bits of Shaftesbury in HD and in speed. You also get to see my bike a couple of times. Yay! Cycling for the win!
(I should point out now, before I'm thrown out of town by the council, that I may have been slightly harsh about some of the places mentioned in the video. This is for humour. I don't genuinely believe the harsh stuff I've written. I do enjoy living in Shaftesbury. To an extent...)
I also don't mean any copyright infringement by the use of the song 'Get A Little Dirty' by The Ironweed Project. I'm a fan and I liked the song. And it fitted with the pace of the video. Please don't sue or kill me. Please...?