It's hard to believe that a show for kids could be more informative and sensible than many contemporary shows made for adults! Great clip.
@malcolmjawohowelll28929 ай бұрын
Yes blue peter treated irs young audiences with intelligence.amd respected that some children are fascinated by grown up things
@hopebgood9 ай бұрын
@@malcolmjawohowelll2892 I totally agree mate. I used to love Blue Peter when I was a kid cos they didn't speak down to me.
@kennethpetersen88186 ай бұрын
I didn't even realize this was a children's show while watching the video.
@robalexander80656 ай бұрын
@@hopebgood The presenters were reprimanded by Biddy Baxter, if they dared to talk down to the young viewers.
@fburton89 ай бұрын
And this was Blue Peter, a programme for children. Splendid!
@tomkandy9 ай бұрын
Honestly made it half way through before realising it was from Blue Peter
@asa19731009 ай бұрын
Janet Ellis SACKED BY THE BBC FOR BEING PREGNANT AND NOT MARRIED!!!!! HOW THINGS CHANGE HEY
@davidbarnes2414 ай бұрын
I visited this estate about 5 years after this programme, the house wasn’t open to the public, but the grounds were for the day and I enjoyed it very much. I can’t recall the portico being so dilapidated, so presumably they had done some renovation by then.
@stevenbradley84929 ай бұрын
The presenter's voice is beautiful, and the show is presented efficiently and in a charming way.
@EnterShikari019 ай бұрын
Unlike present day Blue Peter!
@michaelevans2058 ай бұрын
Janet Ellis. Sophie Ellis Bextor's mum.
@Rich-bb5gp6 ай бұрын
Janet Ellis has one of the most distinctive voices in television... and she drove an Alfasud!
@kap20279 ай бұрын
Brilliant clip, presented beautifully to by Janet Ellis too!
@OhTheNormanity8 ай бұрын
Grew up watching Blue Peter. Fantastic show for us Gen Xers.
@tomtebby74089 ай бұрын
Caulke Abbey is a fantastic place to visit. It is still very much like it was in this video with lots of junk in dark rooms and forgotten toys - but beautiful too.
@bardo00079 ай бұрын
Some of the toys must be worth a fortune today. Like that horse.
@mrlotusmic9 ай бұрын
Can’t beat a bit of Ralph Vaughan Williams to start the day.
@juanman759 ай бұрын
Another gem from the archives! Looks like a very quirky and interesting place to visit. Very well made and presented programme.
@City__Walker9 ай бұрын
"Set in the midst of a landscape park, Calke Abbey is presented by the National Trust as an illustration of the English country house in decline. At its time of endowment, there had been little change to many rooms since the 1880s. A massive amount of remedial work but no restoration has been done and interiors are almost as they were found in 1985, so the decay of the building and its interiors has been halted but not reversed"
@rosieHolliday58879 ай бұрын
Gosh! The dream would be to transport myself back to 1984 & spend days rifling through all of those rooms of "junk" Just amazing
@Dubjaxfilms4 ай бұрын
I share that dream
@penelopesparrow9 ай бұрын
An absolute bucket list place for me, one day I'll make it over (from all the way here in Australia). Amazing to think this was 30 years ago and the abbey still operates today, mostly entirely the same! I expect you could walk into that bedroom and find everything in the same spot, just a little more dusty. It was kept like this by the trust on purpose, as a perfect illustration of the way stately homes declined in the 20th century as family's fortunes fell.
@nottmjas9 ай бұрын
I've been some 30 times as it's only an hour away from me and the rooms are still as shown here. As I've said elsewhere, the most emotive time to visit is late afternoon in October, November and December - check in the NT's website to see opening times and when the house closes for its annual winter deep clean - as the dimming light makes the inside and especially the abandoned rooms even more atmospheric. Plus if you'll be staying nearby, there are some other cracking National Trust and English Heritage places to visit in the surrounding area such as Ashby Castle, Packwood House, Baddesley Clinton House, Kenilworth Castle, Bolsover Castle, Hardwick Hall and Kedleston Hall, the home of a viceroy of India. And you have the Cotswolds and the Peak District, Lichfield, Warwick and Stratford upon Avon within driving reach. And all just two and a bit hours north of London.
@penelopesparrow9 ай бұрын
@@nottmjas thanks so much for all the info! So many places to explore; I've been to England twice and both times I didn't want to leave, I feel very at home there 🥰
@nottmjas9 ай бұрын
@@penelopesparrow Aussies, Kiwis and Canucks should always feel as if they're at home when visiting these islands, and vice versa 🇬🇧💞 🇦🇺💞🇨🇦💞🇳🇿
@lynnedanieli25379 ай бұрын
Janet's voice is wonderful 😊
@5nowChain57 ай бұрын
Proper English. 😎
@2511dhall9 ай бұрын
I have been there and it is great place to visit.
@MarJon-j9k9 ай бұрын
Amazing possessions in that house 😍
@jakecavendish34709 ай бұрын
Why does it feel so good?
@jeangenie689 ай бұрын
😂 I see what you did there.
@matthewbland87659 ай бұрын
JANET BLOODY ELLIS! 😍
@cbwavy9 ай бұрын
7:16 -wow that is so cool!
@leechilds37259 ай бұрын
Back when the BBC produced great TV.
@thecaveofthedead9 ай бұрын
Marvellously eerie. Like the inspiration for Gormenghast.
@deidraboswell84518 ай бұрын
I so hope all these things are saved, kept in a museum perhaps.
@fearney1237 ай бұрын
the house is open daily to the public, I room guide Fridays, its a wonderful place to visit
@davidkennedy89293 ай бұрын
The house is a museum!
@kimsherlock89699 ай бұрын
That birds expression, I loved it and knew I would smile at the contents. Is the bird a Gull 😂😅😊
@growlerthe2nd7129 ай бұрын
I’ve been to Caulke Abbey many times as I live near by , but I only been around the house once, I used to prefer the grounds instead some beautiful old trees there, and we used to take the kids in the summer for picnics and play football or mess around with a frisbee 🥏.
@BeesWaxMinder9 ай бұрын
Very like her daughter...& of course, Vice Versa!
@hughmackay52002 ай бұрын
The eccentricity dominated the family, and the house today has some weird contents. For me, the highlight is the great State Bed.
@mistofoles5 ай бұрын
Janet Ellis was also a presenter on "JIGSAW " ( Remember that ? ) I think she was in DR WHO too as one of his assistants.
@JCJTC9 ай бұрын
Arrested decay is a wonderful way to preserve our past. This was also used in parts of Alexandra Palace. It was reports like this in my childhood that fuelled my love of history. The rate at which we lost places like this, not just the massive stately homes but the smaller versions in towns all around the country (the village or town "big house") in the inter and post war years last century, we are lucky to have those that survived.
@EnterShikari019 ай бұрын
Arrested decay is just a made up fancy way of saying laziness and hoarding.
@EnterShikari019 ай бұрын
It was “used” in parts of Alexandra Palace, what nonsense.
@freakywizard29368 ай бұрын
As a child I would let my toys and trinkets exactly the same way and place, just as I had left them the day before, for hours in the following morning. I would stare at them untouched, harmoniously messy and when finally one where touched I lost a bit of a sense of wisdom greater than one can humanly explain... Only then I would start playing with them again. This video made me remind the feeling of it.
@freakywizard29368 ай бұрын
It was a peace undisturbed and Almost like history
@lukemccrohon5152Ай бұрын
Big up blue Peter
@refosco19939 ай бұрын
I’d like to see what the house is like now
@fearney1237 ай бұрын
its all but the same, slight changes for safety, i room guide and its wonderful place to visit
@jasonayres9 ай бұрын
As someone who likes nosing around antique and old ware shops (- generally looking at antiques, occasionally buying old wares-), this was fascinating. A story tinged with sadness, but fascinating. Some of the contents would fetch a bit of money these days. I don't know about the disused chamber pots, though. Although, there are collectors for everything these days.
@Dubjaxfilms4 ай бұрын
fascinating I wonder if the house is still like that
@mrb.56104 ай бұрын
In a word - no ! The National Trust has sanatised it !
@maxasaurus30089 ай бұрын
Hard to believe this was thirty nine years ago.
@nottmjas9 ай бұрын
I saw this clip when it was first broadcast and I was fascinated by that place, little knowing that it would one day become my favourite NT stately home. I must have visited it some thirty times over the years and in my opinion the best time to visit is in autumn in late afternoon just as the sun is setting and the light inside the rooms, especially the derelict ones facing east, is very atmospheric. You can sense the spirits of past inhabitants all around you. Like I said, l know that I saw this some 40 years ago but in my mind's eye, I thought that it was Simon Groome who presented this piece.
@anthonymitchell88939 ай бұрын
nottmjas i fairness she is the spitting image of Simon i could see why you would think that 😎
@nottmjas9 ай бұрын
@@anthonymitchell8893 more likely that Simon is a Derbyshire lad so whilst remembering the house, I forgot who the presenter was and then assumed it was him. Still, someone like Janet or Sarah would never be given a chance of presenting a children's TV show nowadays: too well spoken to connect with the viewers.
@syedalamgir58389 ай бұрын
Mystery of past
@Paul23779 ай бұрын
Did the National Trust really leave it untouched "to demonstrate the decline that many such country houses faced", or was it because they didn't want to spend the money to clear it out and do it up? :)
@nottmjas9 ай бұрын
A bit of both, but mainly the former. The NT first makes a property that they've taken on watertight and structural sound then tends to persevere properties in the state they were left in and not renovate them.
@Paul23779 ай бұрын
@@nottmjas I was being a little facetious. I love the NT and I'm a proud member, but I can imagine it would cost a lot more money to have cleared most of the rooms out and made them look half decent.
@pw70109 ай бұрын
@@Paul2377 What would be the point of "clearing" most of the rooms, tidiness fan?
@nottmjas9 ай бұрын
@@Paul2377 I spoke with a senior volunteer at Calke who mentioned that the NT doesn't disneyfy their properties; they leave that to developers who take on such properties.
@EnterShikari019 ай бұрын
They cba.
@mistofoles5 ай бұрын
So that bloke lives in that giant house alone ( Apart from his undoubtedly army of staff ) ?
@robinvanags9129 ай бұрын
Ellis arriving by Alfasud, examines aristocratic eccentricity.
@steveosshenanigans9 ай бұрын
I bet it was already rusty as it was 3 year’s old !
@jameswaters51339 ай бұрын
@@steveosshenanigans No chance of it restarting - she's still there in one of the dusty rooms!
@dzadza77759 ай бұрын
How did it escape requisition in WW2? Or did it?
@jameswaters51339 ай бұрын
Probably cause it was so antiquated. Felbrigg in Norfolk escaped requisition because it had no electricity.
@KathW-bf3ks9 ай бұрын
There were a small number of soldiers billeted there in part of the house, possibly engaged in making decoys to confuse night bombers. But only for the first couple of years of the war I believe.
@a34rwl4 ай бұрын
How utterly spkendid! Lets go back to this charming tine when everyone was frightfully posh and privileged - what, what😅
@hilaryepstein60139 ай бұрын
I just feel sorry for their families who were stuck in that mausoleum for generation after generation. No wonder they turned out the way they did.
@andsoistopped9 ай бұрын
They liked birds so much they killed them, stuffed them and put them in cabinets. Brilliant.
@themadplotter9 ай бұрын
Alright soft lad.
@andsoistopped9 ай бұрын
@@themadplotter alright ‘ard laddddd.
@alanduncan19809 ай бұрын
Gotta catch 'em all.
@davidtexmex16169 ай бұрын
Somewhat merrily morbid, the reclusive nature of it all points to suspicion 🤔
@andsoistopped9 ай бұрын
Just wondering if this clip would be better served with ‘Murder on the Dance floor’.
@k_DAN9 ай бұрын
Like as if the old coot couldn't have taken 20 minutes away from his accounting to show and tell her real stories about the place.
@jameswaters51339 ай бұрын
Socially awkward, probably
@jeangenie689 ай бұрын
The lovely Janet Ellis, who's other claim to fame... She is also the mother of Sophie Ellis-Bextor.
@Mooocheropordis9 ай бұрын
Odd that 'naturalist' has changed its meaning, whilst now it's means conserving habitats for living endangered animals and plants, to the Victorians it meant killing and stuffing to possess a rare bird in a box till there weren't any left!
@TheHarrip9 ай бұрын
Didn't her daughter become a pop star?
@M_Bamboozled9 ай бұрын
And when Janet became pregnant with her (unmarried), Blue Peter sacked her for it.
@mistofoles5 ай бұрын
Never thought of it before, but Janet was quite hot, wasn't she ?
@robbflynn43259 ай бұрын
Some of the 'junk ' will be worth a fortune.
@brocktoon84 ай бұрын
When the BBC was actually great, not just a propaganda machine for the woke cultural revolution.
@ed_leonardi9 ай бұрын
When people spoke English properly.
@hopebgood9 ай бұрын
People speak English properly now...just with different accents.
@ed_leonardi9 ай бұрын
@@hopebgood if you have proper education you shouldn't have an accent.