I had the opportunity to see it three times and had the chance to snowboard cannon mountain with my kids last year. I will live with that memory forever
@jennings99217 күн бұрын
I was born and raised in NH and I didnt know about that viewing area. what a cool idea. Im so happy they did that instead of trying to recreate it.
@stacyann8252 ай бұрын
If I ever get married again it will definitely be in Hammond Castle on Halloween
@JohnDeliciaHarris3 ай бұрын
“So ain’t I.” Always has confused me.
@johnortiz19643 ай бұрын
You have to check out the car commercial from Mitsubishi. It's a new feature called smart Park. Which is taylor made for a New England accent. It has three boston-born actors including Captain America himself Chris Evans.
@johnortiz19643 ай бұрын
Born and raised on the South Shore which are the communities south of Boston. I always figured the "Pilgrims" brought the accent over with them....
@stevehumphrey6674 ай бұрын
We do use Rs but just in the wrong places like Put a lot of Bananer peppas on that grinda
@skeemarty5 ай бұрын
I really want to go there. but some rich douchebag built a mansion ontop of the cliff
@ianklute49475 ай бұрын
The noises at the very beginning of this video are very off putting.
@tovarisch27885 ай бұрын
Did you actually say "exspecially"?
@BGEntertainmentGroup6 ай бұрын
Yes, it's behind the Walgreens. kzbin.info/www/bejne/rYW7Xn-kmpmenZIsi=okbM1fQ27EgKuBgV
@AlfredFJones17767 ай бұрын
Just drove through NH and saw the remnants of the Old F*ckface of the Foothills.
@Andy_Babb8 ай бұрын
I’m proud of my Boston accent but I can also admit it’s not a pretty accent haha
@fromloriann8 ай бұрын
I grew up in Peabody, but moved to Florida when I was 28. Im 67 years old now. I have not lost my accent in all these years. The first 2 words I had to drop, because nobody knew what I wanted, were Tonic and Bubblah. Unless I was speaking to my family. I call tonic soda now or the brand name or flavor. The next words I dont use anymore are Parlor ( pahlah) and cellar. Cellar, because Florida is swamp land so the build houses from the foundstions up, but never below ground level. I used to like that as a kid we called the living room a pahlor. I loved that wird and I knew it was a little old fashioned even back in the 60s and 70s, but its a word my parents and Grandparents used, so of course I used it and so did some of my friends. But here in Florida, I doubt they'd know what I meant. Thanks for the memories of how and why we pronounce words like we do.
@TheRealTomahawk9 ай бұрын
It’s interesting how Salem is short for JeruSalem
@Senacacrane9 ай бұрын
Wow just wow 😮
@Senacacrane9 ай бұрын
It's a shame, that this place went from humane treatment to inhumane treatment.
@DorothyHoward-c7p9 ай бұрын
The music accompanying this video is so loud and distracting the video is almost incomprehensible - tuning out the noise to focus on the content is too exhausting.
@hardlife81229 ай бұрын
. Oh My God !, there sending me too boner . gb* ~ hard life (MULDEW) .
@bellakaldera330510 ай бұрын
I've been down the tunnel at Dungeon Rock...There is a rhyme... Lynn, Lynn the city of sin, you never come out, The way you went in.
@danmanning412910 ай бұрын
My grandmother brought us up to Bethlehem every year to ski at Bretton woods during February vacation, and every time we went up, my cousins and I would fight to get a view of the old man. Punching and pushing each other out of the way to cement our snotty faces against the windows of her Buick to see him, even when it was dark (the old man on a full moon was a sight to see). I was deployed to Iraq when the old man fell, and it was as equally doleful as anything else I had experienced that year. After getting out of the military, I have made northern New Hampshire my home, and I wander the mountains of Franconia Notch and still look up at where the old man stood watch. Every year I visit the old woman of the notch (The watcher), and talk to her about the old man while looking up at his place. The old man is still there, the ambience of that area is one of a kind and something I have never experienced anywhere else in my travels around the world.
@andrew_owens768010 ай бұрын
I was lucky enough to have seen the original and climbed on Cannon Mountain in my rock climbing days.
@andrew_owens768010 ай бұрын
And THIS, ladies and gentlemen is why we need more than just STEM programs in school. Stalin had the best STEM programs in the world in his day, but nothing approaching great artists (who weren't put in gulags). SUPPORT THE ARTS!
@Gwaithmir11 ай бұрын
I visited Mystery Hill in 1975 and wasn't impressed. The walls looked like typical New England stonework by local farmers. Stones that were allegedly astronomically aligned weren't visible from the center of the site. The "sacrificial table" looks exactly like lye stones that I've seen on old farms in W. Massachusetts. Calling the place America's Stonehenge is dishonest.
@CookieMonster-dy5xq11 ай бұрын
Can I have a bo'le of wotah
@pinkchaos.11 ай бұрын
More like “Bahttle of wahtah”
@CookieMonster-dy5xq11 ай бұрын
@@pinkchaos. 😂
@Andy_Babb8 ай бұрын
@@pinkchaos.wahtah bottle
@garyhogan959711 ай бұрын
Pictures he toke inside seems to show that the floor of the cave has raised up and narrowed height as I remembered it back in the 1960's .The height seemed more to almost 6 ft 1/2 way down and then maybe 5 ft by the time one got to the end where water stopped and filled the cave as it seemed to go further.? Always wondered how far the original cave actually went ??
@harveypost1841 Жыл бұрын
Boy is that lake cold...
@jimhuffman9434 Жыл бұрын
Scary that HP Lovecraft got the idea for Arkham Sanitarium from a real-life place
@StarryTelling Жыл бұрын
60 years ago I played there and plucked starfish off the walls and carried them home in plastic buckets. I never knew this story. Thank you.
@debbie7474 Жыл бұрын
i take medicine to just two let you nurses know in this hospital that i take medicine to.
@debbie7474 Жыл бұрын
do you guys in this hospital take medicine.
@kishla2827 Жыл бұрын
Salme Massachusetts it be it close to harry potter con
@kishla2827 Жыл бұрын
Those people in the video is someone family or densends
@kishla2827 Жыл бұрын
It America guide to harry potter movie
@Dr.GermScary Жыл бұрын
How can you produce content on this subject without reading Barry Fell’s “America BC”. There is no evidence that it was a sacrificial table or ARE YOU IGNORANT OF THE EVIDENCE? It’s definitely the latter. There are scholarly journals published by faculty from MIT, Harvard, Edinburgh who all agree it’s a sacrificial table…based on the Celtic Ogam Inscriptions WITH PUNIC Phoenician Script dedicating the slab to Celt god Bel (same as Phoenician god Baal). The Phoenicians were notorious for sacrificing babies to their god Baal on the same exact type of slabs. The writing (ogam) found on the Iberian Celt monuments in America was an ancient version of ogam which excluded vowels and predates the ogam found on Celt monuments in Ireland and England. Thanks to an Irish Monk whose 12th century book contains a key to deciphering ogam script the monuments in America were deciphered. The ogam script deciphered at mystery hill is the oldest of all and the very 1st in the key left by the 12th century Irish Monk(600-800 BC). The Punic script found on the same stones could not have been made after the Romans conquered Carthage and took control of the Strait of Gibraltar (250 BC). Phoenicians definitely had trading posts in America and Iberian Celts most likely traveled with them This is just the tip of the iceberg and there is far more evidence which leaves very little doubt about the age of mystery hill
@debralittle1341 Жыл бұрын
Who cares about the workers. It's the people locked inside who suffer.
@jerrys9226 Жыл бұрын
I always thought it had its roots in the British. If you listen to Australians , another British colony, they pronounce words the same, car, beer, etc.
@Bleutisk Жыл бұрын
My dad ran the dairy barn.
@georgekenney8121 Жыл бұрын
i think that one of the best bewitched Season 5 episode 2 Samantha Goes South for a Spell (1968) it's about when she is sent back in time to Old New Orleans of 1868
@jennyjansen754 Жыл бұрын
I saw it about 50 years ago.
@billlohan5079 Жыл бұрын
Tonic. Was an old world that Charlestown people used. Growing up in west roxbury in 70s 80s we would ask someone “ you want a coke or something”. We never used the word soda though it was always on signs , everything was a coke or something!
@marinasanford6057 Жыл бұрын
Interesting
@DeerheartStudioArts Жыл бұрын
It wasn’t carved by man but by nature
@GrayWolf-745 Жыл бұрын
Accent? What accent? You were spot on and I'm guilty of all the local expressions. (Manchester NH) Great video. Thanks.
@rtbeerzi Жыл бұрын
I find it odd that no matter where you are, those wheely things at the supermarket all are named after something pulled by horses....? Carriage? Buggy? Wagon? When did shopping pushers become 19th century transportation?
@rtbeerzi Жыл бұрын
Bunghole Likkaassssssss
@jackchaput1863 Жыл бұрын
Does anyone remember "my gools, 1-2-3'? it's from Hide and Go Seek