The more I watch John’s videos, learning about the history of our road network, the more I feel like I’m fully qualified to be a road planner. Despite having no qualifications in road planning. “But that’s not what we got”, “but it was cancelled”, “and it’s bloody useless” 🤷🏻♂️
@Taladar20038 ай бұрын
If you add some urbanist channels to the mix you can get that same impression with a lot of other urban planning topics as well. And add some of those channels about building collapses perhaps for similar thoughts.
@samholdsworth4208 ай бұрын
I watch this shit and im American 😂
@ThePsiclone8 ай бұрын
You're hired. We need this bypass that's going to cost millions buuuuuut never actually going to be built? When can you start?
@ehsnils8 ай бұрын
After some iterations playing Cities Skylines I'm sure you can make a better job. But more than half of the road net design isn't technical, it's political (with the excuses that it's too expensive)
@Pianoguy328 ай бұрын
After seeing many of our nations roads, i can confidently say you are overqualified.
@David_D.8 ай бұрын
The highlight of my Sundays is here again! Cheers Jon!
@AutoShenanigans8 ай бұрын
Nice one, thanks for watching!
@joshcrofts8 ай бұрын
Black cat roundabout roadworks closed @@AutoShenanigans
@Bfdiseries8 ай бұрын
@AutoShenanigans nice too meet you again! I'm a good fan
@Truth-And-Freedom8 ай бұрын
@@AutoShenanigansCarbon is about control and nothing more. Never let a politician tell you they will make your life better if you give them all your money and rights .......... ♥️👍🇬🇧
@Saint_Dan1328 ай бұрын
Agreed😊
@ExclusiveMeerkat8 ай бұрын
Love me some Norfolk videos, have a high six!
@medler21108 ай бұрын
Oh! Less of the Norfolk jokes or I'll send my father, uncle and brother round, He'll give you a proper slap. 😁
@125bratАй бұрын
Normal for Norfolk🤣🤣
@SiRhodesDriverTraining8 ай бұрын
Sundays aren’t Sundays without Jon standing in a field. I’m liking this series mate. Good work.
@georgie6988 ай бұрын
Bravo on the very subtle duelling banjos at the first mention of Norfolk at 20 seconds. Very clever, almost imperceptible. Classy
@ozbolli7 ай бұрын
I love watching your videos when I'm high.
@fenrichlee28673 ай бұрын
This bloke knows more about Norfolk than I do, and i'm from here!
@TomK328 ай бұрын
A job half done is a job half finished. That flyover with extra roundabouts is a piece of art.
@davidcronan40728 ай бұрын
Hardwick roundabout was so big when it was first built that some motorists didn't realize it was a roundabout. They thought it was just an ordinary road and ended up driving the wrong way round the thing.
@kingofbengland8 ай бұрын
The roundabout was a pain to use around holiday times until they built the flyover. It still gets busy but the worst bit is between the industrial estate and hospital roundabouts if you're heading to the North Norfolk coast/ not towards Norwich.
@Pesmog8 ай бұрын
It has to be one of the largest roundabouts in the country, which is a bit incongruous given that most of Norfolk is pretty quiet.
@S.ASmith8 ай бұрын
@@Pesmog This road should be dual carriageway between Swaffham and Kings Lynn (cancelled) and the flyover to the A17 (which is what this section of A47 used to be) should have been dualled up to Sutton Bridge (which was the original plan). Instead this was all scrapped, the changed the road from the A17 to the A47, cancelled the West Lynn interchange flyover & left the A17 single carriageway all the way to Newark (bar the Sleaford Bypass which is only 2.3 ish miles long)
@Pesmog8 ай бұрын
@@S.ASmith The A17 is a shambles and a missed opportunity. One of my least favourite roads in the UK. They are going to have to spend serious money on it one day, particularly the bits at Sutton bridge and the Newark A1 junction. 👍
@david_harvey8 ай бұрын
That roundabout is a nightmare! The amount of times I have been on in and people get in the wrong lane and cut everyone up. Usually try to avoid it but depends on where I am staying in Norfolk to on how get to Lynn
@robinwells88798 ай бұрын
I believe that the advantage of the biomass power station is that it is burning wood chip for the most part which is not fossil carbon unlike the gas powered station. That said, the gas fired power station is pretty much state of the art in that it uses gas turbines to burn the gas and spin a generator and then they recover much of the heat from the exhaust to generate high pressure steam for a steam turbogenerator. By the time the steam is finished with it is below atmospheric pressure! Unlike the old coal thermal stations that struggled to convert more than 20% to electricity the gas stations are near 80% efficient. Better still, it’s an interruptible gas supply such that at times of peak national gas demand it can switch over to kerosene to relieve pressure on the gas grid. Green energy is all about subtle shades of green and we use the greenest first before resorting to less green options. We are also crap at putting our side of the story out there. 😢
@smorris128 ай бұрын
You need to be able to present your side of things in a 15 second TikTok done in mime to a Top 20 Hit from the last year.
@delboy70397 ай бұрын
Chicken shit is greener than the black coal that we used to burn..!!
@sh4dowchas3r8 ай бұрын
Nice of the Normans to put in a steel staircase to get to the top of Castle Hill.
@djsmithe8 ай бұрын
Thoughtful people those Normans.
@eiantaylor8 ай бұрын
I grew up in Thetford and used to climb up there as a kid. There were no steps, we had to crawl up on our hands and knees through 6 foot tall brambles trying to avoid the d0g$h1t. Either the steps are modern or I'm older than the Normans! (Feels like it sometimes!!!)
@SoulieGus3 ай бұрын
@@eiantaylor Stairs are very much a recent thing, must of gone up in the last 4-5 years, the whole of castle park now is also enclosed with fencing and gates and they have catle eat some of the shrubery around there as it was always overgrown and hard to maintain so that was their solution! Use to go there in my teens a lot but only occasionally drive by it now.
@justsammy82588 ай бұрын
And another railway reference!
@1_5RCBiker8 ай бұрын
It is the USAF that love Norfolk. Every half hour 24 hours a day a USAF plane will take off from Mildenhall and buzz Norfolk for a bit or whatever they do.
@PiousMoltar8 ай бұрын
Yeah, or Lakenheath, but it could also be the RAF from Marham.
@blueberry_dino46758 ай бұрын
That was an F-15 fighter, so I would've come from Lakenheath, not Mildenhall. Mildenhall is a heavy base and mostly has KC-135s
@nirgunapa568 ай бұрын
Thetford - the home of the Dads Army cast when they did the filming.
@125bratАй бұрын
My mum used to work in the Bell hotel in the 70's where they stayed whilst filming and she met most of them.
@rochellehewston93678 ай бұрын
Loved the Chicken Shit. Great informative video. I like where you use maps to show how the road layouts have changed, supposedly for the better
@gordon15458 ай бұрын
Afraid he missed the point of the biomass power station though. It's not to create power sustainably, it's to reduce the emissions from chicken crap - power is a side benefit. If you don't do anything with the manure it produces methane, with is 25-30 times worse than carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas. If we want to eliminate these emissions then we need to stop eating chicken (though overall it's pretty low carbon) but otherwise, burning the waste and getting energy from it is the best idea.
@david_harvey8 ай бұрын
There's two plants in East Anglia, the other is at Eye in Suffolk.
@paulsengupta9718 ай бұрын
@@david_harveyOn the old airfield?
@jonh65858 ай бұрын
Not just the RAF the USAF love it too often seeing their aircraft out of lakenheath e.g. F-35 , F-15s as well as osprey tilt wings.
@LorcanHamill8 ай бұрын
i really enjoy your videos - keep up the good work! But I think you've missed the point on the chicken crap power plant. All the carbon it emits was captured from the atmosphere during the life of the chickens (or at least while the crops were being grown that went into their feed). So in the long run, the level of CO2 in the atmosphere is not increased by the overall process - ie. it's carbon neutral. That's completely different to burning hydrocarbons where CO2 that was trapped over millions of years in fossil fuels ie being dumped into the atmosphere over a much shorter timespan.
@SportyMabamba8 ай бұрын
How is what any different except for timescale
@LorcanHamill8 ай бұрын
@@SportyMabamba It's fundamentally different. We can grow crops forever, feed chickens on the grain, burn their shit and make electricity without having *any* effect on atmospheric CO2. That's what's meant by a "sustainable" system - one that can run indefinitely without running out of materials or doing serious damage to the environment. In theory, we could do the same with fossil fuels - but we'd have to burn them at the same rate as they're created - which happens over geological timescales. I don't know if anyone has worked out the rate per year at which crude oil, natural gas and coal are formed - but I'm pretty sure that to use them at a sustainable rate we'd need to be consuming them at a tiny, tiny fraction of one percent of our current rate. Having petrol-powered cars could arguably be sustainable in theory - but the number of them would probably have to be reduced to a few dozen in the whole world.
@davidcronan40728 ай бұрын
For our American cousins, Thetford was the birthplace of Thomas (Rights Of Man) Paine. There is a statue of him in the centre of the town. He is holding a quill pen in such a way taht makes him look as though he is playing a game of darts!
@ChrisBrown-px1oy8 ай бұрын
The plinth is inscribed with quotations, one of which especially deserves repetition today: "I had rather record a thousand errors dictated by humanity than one inspired by a justice too severe".
@GrahamMacdonald-w9o8 ай бұрын
For our Canadian friends, George Vancouver was born in King's Lynn - after whom the city in British Comumbia was named.
@samuelgarrod83278 ай бұрын
The book he's holding is upside down as well.
@paulketchupwitheverything7678 ай бұрын
@@GrahamMacdonald-w9o There's a Vancouver in the US too (WA), next to Portland. I've wondered how often the two get confused.
@marieascot7 ай бұрын
I have that briefly in my Thetford video.
@stishy758 ай бұрын
If I told my younger self I would one day be entertained by watching a man drive round the UK giving me facts about the UK road network, I'd laugh in my face! Keep up the good work dude. 😂❤👍
@davebicker86188 ай бұрын
The Hardwick Roundabout is Rabbit Central. In Spring it's festooned with bunnies. It keeps the local press busy discussing what should be done about it. Oh yes! The best greasy spoon breakfast ever, nearby the speedway track.
@anusername83507 ай бұрын
They’re starting to colonise the McDonald’s now
@michaelward20827 ай бұрын
yes I have seen the rabbits,
@mrshannonite40168 ай бұрын
Just a quick addition to Thetford, they have a transport museum almost next door to the bus station. Worth going to if you want to see Corporal Jones' butcher van from Dad's Army.
@125bratАй бұрын
Not sure if it's still there but there used to be a Burrell Traction Engine museum just off the old (not the original road going past the Bell hotel in the town calentre) A11 near where it crosses the Little Ouse in the town. There's also the Dad's Army museum in the Guildhall in the old Market Place. There is also the Ancient House museum on Bridge Street iirc.
@davidquirk80978 ай бұрын
We used to get poultry house manure, delivered by the articulated lorry load, at the mixed farm I worked on. We had to leave it, weathering, for a year before spreading it and even then it used to make your eyes and nostrils sting. It also used to clean the rust off the loader bucket. Burning it seems the best thing for it. The Methane it emits while rotting down is four times worse as a greenhouse gas than the CO2.
@apuldram8 ай бұрын
Quite agree.
@bigdaddigaming8 ай бұрын
The RAF do love Norfolk and they love my home county of Lincolnshire as well, i think theres more RAF bases in those counties than anywhere else in the country
@Cal9007 ай бұрын
Lived in Brazil 10 years now, used to drive this route all the time. Thank you!
@FuddButter8 ай бұрын
Thanks John!
@arthome24418 ай бұрын
Interesting, thank you for continuing.
@garypoulton73118 ай бұрын
By the time this series is finished you won't be able to go anywhere in the UK without risk getting lynched! Love it.
@tobyjackman32128 ай бұрын
This is the best video I've ever seen about anything
@AutoShenanigans8 ай бұрын
Good to see you mate!
@MePeterNicholls8 ай бұрын
Thanks
@AutoShenanigans8 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot mate, most awesome
@paulkrenz95937 ай бұрын
wonderful
@davidcronan40728 ай бұрын
Thetford forest was started to provide pit-props for the mining industry.
@kimwhitbread27998 ай бұрын
previous to that it was a desert with sand dunes...
@davidcronan40728 ай бұрын
@@kimwhitbread2799 and millions of rabbits
@kimwhitbread27998 ай бұрын
Not forgetting the Thetford Stags...
@johncamp25678 ай бұрын
Another great addition to your body of work, sir!! 👍
@mikeydeakin12538 ай бұрын
Look forward to this video every week
@AutoShenanigans8 ай бұрын
Nice one, thanks for watching!
@PenryMMJ8 ай бұрын
The last maharaja of the Punjab owned the Elveden estate just outside Thetford. He was given 17,000 acres of Norfolk agricultural land by the India office as compensation for the British basically taking control of the Punjab. Quite a good deal for us at the time. The maharaja didn't make much better use of his new estate than he had of the Punjab. He ran up massive debt's and the estate was sold to clear those debts when he died. It's now owned by the Guinness family.
@swskating38658 ай бұрын
Auto Shenanigans, the covert motoring geek's equivalent of Songs of Praise Every Sunday
@Adhallphotography7 ай бұрын
Can't believe you didn't stop in the jewel that is Downham!
@anusername83507 ай бұрын
Lived there all my life, wouldn’t call it a jewel
@andljoy8 ай бұрын
The reason the biomass power station is better for the environment is that the CO2 is already in the cycle , the gas one is burning stuff that was not in the cycle. No reason to panic or anything but that is the idea behind it.
@KevinKitten8 ай бұрын
I also think that allowing the biomass to decay naturally would release methane which is many times more potent as a greenhouse gas than CO2, so burning it decreases the global warming that would otherwise result.
@andljoy8 ай бұрын
@@KevinKittenThat methane would break down in the end anyway so all you are doing in the biomass plant is speeding up the process. Until our government gets its finger out of its arse and builds 50 nuclear power plants its a decent option.
@oddsandwindsocks59058 ай бұрын
Loving this series
@paulketchupwitheverything7678 ай бұрын
Came here for the roads. Stayed for the labour camps, flint mines, biomass power stations and old ruins. The energy generation/CO2 info was very interesting. It feels inevitable that we are going to have to make changes but we also need to be careful about the alternatives. We might be creating the same problems, just from a different source or location.
@neiloflongbeck57058 ай бұрын
Next time you go to Thetford check out the Dad's Army museum. The museum is here because most of the location filming was done in and around the town.
@matthewsawford8 ай бұрын
Hey Jon. It's the River Great Ouse, sir. 😁 I live by the same river in Bedfordshire.
@elrekplaysgames47018 ай бұрын
most interesting
@TheJSB0078 ай бұрын
So many bright ideas our local council of kings lynn had but never got around to doing. Like the Wash wave power plant that never took off that was going to cost around £7million back in the 70s, now would cost 100 x that I'm sure. Then there's the bridge that was going to be built from Boston Lincs to Kings lynn through the Terrington St Clement Marsh, another back burner project that never took off, costing the industry billions in long delayed travel via Sleaford, Sutton Bridge A17 to Kings Lynn. Nice video John.😊❤️
@Churchill2502678 ай бұрын
Excellent series! Thanks!
@AutoShenanigans8 ай бұрын
Nice one, thanks for watching!
@scythal8 ай бұрын
I'm not even British myself, but Jon's presentation is something I look forward to every Sunday evening! Maybe someday I'll be able to drive down these roads...
@AutoShenanigans8 ай бұрын
Nice one, thanks for watching!
@dandann82378 ай бұрын
Another informative & entertaining video,
@B.Evil.C8 ай бұрын
Love the videos and this is a nice follow-up to the Motorways. Not sure (as it depends where the Biomass comes from I think) but assuming it is current farms and not dug up from old sites, that is the difference. I believe (but could be wrong) releasing CO2 that was captured by animals and released (which would likely happen if we left it) is different to digging up and releasing CO2 buried and previously captured in the ground.
@anusername83507 ай бұрын
Do this trip all the time so it’s nice to know more about it
@andymassey81058 ай бұрын
Thetford Priory built 11.07, closed 15.40 and by twenty past 6 it was ruin. That’s a busy days work
@albertperks34768 ай бұрын
Deepest darkest Norfolk - next time you're in the area have a look to see if you're near Rendlesham Forest the site of the noxious Alien ship that everybody denied happened but now say it did.
@scottishcarenthusiastsandtrainАй бұрын
Another excellent and informative video Jon.
@joncrawford34858 ай бұрын
Nice to see Norfolk's motorways featuring in your video's, Jon. 😛
@AutoShenanigans8 ай бұрын
They've been missed out for long enough!
@fenrichlee28673 ай бұрын
Norfolk is the only county that has no motorways - ain't that nice!!
@nicholashortonjustice4rebe3788 ай бұрын
I remember Thetford Castle from an Episode of TIME TEAM back in the Day.
@sheldon97sheldon7 ай бұрын
Yay Thetford, the place I grew up. I knew you'd finally make your way there. :)
@PineappleSkip8 ай бұрын
Always enjoy a bit of misspent public money, and I’d recommend a series subtitle ‘Jon’s quest for idiotic intersections and road improvement debacles’. Trawled up a goody on the A47. And the mega carbon spewing green power station that no doubt got a truckload of public subsidy. Keep ‘em coming!
@louisstanko868 ай бұрын
This definitely deserves its own show on the TV, top job 😊
@AutoShenanigans8 ай бұрын
Nice one, thanks for watching!
@baystated8 ай бұрын
That A47 flyover roundabout duopoly made my head hurt and then I remembered also that Brits drive on the left side... and I just gave up.
@minibus98 ай бұрын
excelent video. Fun fact Thetford and the area around it was the main filming location for Dad's Army
@djsmithe8 ай бұрын
Only Jon could make me want to visit Thetford. You've been spreading a whole lot of love.
@david_harvey8 ай бұрын
Don't bother it's cack! Forest is nice though. Now Lynn is interesting.....
@elmothesex8 ай бұрын
You can still go down a pit at Summerlee in Coatbridge near Glasgow.
@nebulaman768 ай бұрын
Where you were stood, next to the railway bridge is almost bang on top of the top secret GPSS (now Exolum) pipeline. It was used in WWII to supply airfields with aviation fuel. It’s still in use today but has been privatised. It’s still a state secret. The marker boards (white post with a yellow hat and black line) are the original WWII markers. I very surprised you didn’t mention the name of the power station as you would need one to produce all that s**t to burn.
@susaneb19548 ай бұрын
Loving the Great British Road Journeys, what a fab addition to the rest of the videos. Happy days, thanks Jon
@matthewskinner48148 ай бұрын
Hey Jon the old Campbell soup factory was a bit of a traffic landmark at KL. near to the Hardwick Roundabout. But hey, landmark loss is Tesco gain.
@AutoShenanigans8 ай бұрын
I did read about it and consider it for "inclusion" but there's nothing left to see :( not even an old piece of hardstanding.
@matthewskinner48148 ай бұрын
Yeah the tower was pretty cool and something to look out for when on the flat repetitive fenland roads. It might still be there on google street view from the 00’s?
@Bob-rn5ho8 ай бұрын
Nice one John. Cheers Bob
@neilbain87368 ай бұрын
Fascinating! Memories. You started almost exactly outside where I lived in Kings Lynn. A good place for a pint was The Crown and Mitre just of Tuesday Market Place. A very interesting pub run by a nicely eccentric character called Roger. I've had the privilege of cycling to Ipswich a couple of August Bank Holidays and getting a deserted Hardwick Roundabout all to myself (the flyover was actually being built when I moved there). An amazing experience. It was like the whole country got up at dead early o'clock and buggered off to the seaside leaving the inland bits deserted. I did it in 6hrs one year! I was a Lot younger and a lot fitter. Thetford is where the Dad's Army cast stayed during filming around Thetford Forest. Since I was there, there's a statue been put up of Captain Mainwearing. Dr Who was also filmed around there or possibly the sand quarry by Middleton near Kings Lynn which is all that's left of the Kings Lynn and Dereham railway to Norwich. Most of it is now under the A47. I've also gone to Norwich via Dereham and then straight South to Ipswich. I mention this because the road (I forget its number) is dual carriageway on the Norfolk side with a concrete road like a bit of the M90 in Fife. As soon as you cross the Suffolk border, it's singled carriageway with all sorts of speed limits, some being 50. Somewhere in Norfolk was just about the last remaining bit of three lane road where the middle lane was used for overtaking in either direction. These were quite common in the UK, but yes, bloody dangerous though they lasted longer than you'd imagine. They were changed to two lanes with each lane being a bit wider.
@hublanderuk8 ай бұрын
Fun fact last Friday I had a job near Thetford just off the A134 and then drove it almost to Kings Lynn to head to Downham market and across to Stamford.
@InfernalPasquale4 ай бұрын
Never expected to see you pass through our little corner of Norfolk ☺ I'm from Mundford, so much interesting history around here
@davidbromiley87488 ай бұрын
I travel to the area around Thetford several times a year for birdwatching, and there is often a steady stream of F15 and F35 fighters taking off from RAF Lakenheath, plus the occasional Boeing 777 painted all in white that got lost on its way to Stansted
@jasonali41228 ай бұрын
I believe there is a 'Dad's Army' museum in Thetford (apparently a lot of the outside filming was done in the area). It's a shame it wasn't given a mention.
@mrshannonite40168 ай бұрын
Ah, just posted something similar. Well done for beating me too it. :)
@paulsengupta9718 ай бұрын
Yes. Someone I know was in Dad's Army and he's in Thetford.
@Stevieweevietv8 ай бұрын
Ah nice to see a trip along a road i travel fairly regularly when going to stay at my dads flat in hunstanton from Bury St. Edmunds. Have to say i despise that hardwick roundabout! Always end up in the wrong lane going northwards 😂.
@andychase168 ай бұрын
Great to see you visit my home village of West Winch, I’ve always wondered what the old bit of road next to the A10 was, now I know! Another great episode where this Norfolk boy learnt something new about his County. By the way, as a former resident of Great Yarmouth don’t bother visiting, there’s nothing ‘Great’ about it, even the new Herring Bridge closed two days after opening! Safe travels.
@andrewdolinskiatcarpathian8 ай бұрын
Transport archeology at its best 👏👏👍😀
@radchenkoa8 ай бұрын
burned chicken manure emits CO2 that was absorbed by plants from the air the same year, so in a scale of the year it does not emit anything. While gas burning power station emits CO2 that was taken from the air a million years ago, making th air as it was million years ago when people did not exist.
@gordon15458 ай бұрын
Yeah he missed the point of the biomass power station, which not to create power sustainably, it's to reduce the emissions from chicken crap - power is a side benefit. If you don't do anything with the manure it produces methane, which is 25-30 times worse than carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas. If we want to eliminate these emissions then we need to stop eating chicken (though overall it's pretty low carbon) but otherwise, burning the waste and getting energy from it is the best idea.
@tomthomas22688 ай бұрын
Informative thanks
@hydorah7 ай бұрын
John, you make a great point. Burning things is not good for the environment, even if those things are renewable. Renewable ≠ green
@aedanjmcghie8 ай бұрын
Scottish forestry was planted in the '20s too. WW I used a lot of wood for the trenches so it had to be replaced.
@darrenraymond53348 ай бұрын
great work as always sir 😁
@Colin_Pole8 ай бұрын
Kings Lynn is also home to ex F1 driver and now commentator Martin Brundle.
@TomJE08 ай бұрын
I also believe George Russell is born there.
@garynorman8 ай бұрын
The Brundle family used to own a Toyota dealership at Tottenhill which is located on the A10 towards Downham Market. Martin lives in Gayton still I believe, which is just outside of King’s Lynn.
@ITFNBiteBayKon8 ай бұрын
My grand parents used to live in Theford, I have climbed Castle Hill many times in my life, and my heart broke the first time I arrived and the stairs where there, only been about 10 years or so, but really made it easy to get up the hill. It used to be a proper challenge.
@djtrainspotter8 ай бұрын
Oooo, spotted the Freightliner green/yellow canary liveried class 66/5 locomotive there, nice one hehe.
@paulharrison63858 ай бұрын
Could have mentioned Dads Army and the steam engine works.
@CookedLight8 ай бұрын
I was quite convinced you were going to mention that Thetford Forest is where Dad's Army was filmed. Chicken shout 😂😂😂
@Andrewjg_898 ай бұрын
King’s Lynn to Thetford is quite a good easy journey plus you go through part of the Cambridgeshire Fens. With the A10 as you go from Cambridge to King’s Lynn and avoiding Ely is quite impressive. Plus you got the A142 Southern Bypass that was built for heavy vehicles to avoid the low bridge and the level crossing.
@Mickhanic-garage8 ай бұрын
I drove this route yesterday while going from Lincoln to Sudbury..
@willtricks94328 ай бұрын
Moving from North London to Kings Lynn in 1969 the route has long memories for me. Get your good self along from Kings Lynn to Boston and have a look at the swing bridge, it is ace. Cheers
@hometheater84288 ай бұрын
cheers
@duckydashcam7518 ай бұрын
I drive the part of the A47 almost daily/weekly and the amount of traffic and the amount of accidents is dreadful...all because they didn't build that damn second flyover at pullover. Great video bud, have a safe travels to wherever next 🦆🤟🏻
@travellingjourneys78408 ай бұрын
I live in the area and it's always interesting to see other people's perspective. FYI the A10 will soon be diverted to a new junction and dualled part of the A47 to relieve the village of West Winch where a whole new housing development is planned.
@andychase168 ай бұрын
Another road plan that’s been buggered up by planners, the original plan was to divert from Setch, now just at Gravel Hill Lane, fingers crossed they deliver because the A10 is ridiculously busy through West Winch.
@travellingjourneys78408 ай бұрын
@@andychase16 I agree it would make much more sense to take it from the roundabout at the A134 junction and bypass everything above it.
@James472988 ай бұрын
As someone who has lived my entire life in West Norfolk you have nailed it, albeit you have been polite not to mention the webbed feet in Lynn and Chavs in Thetford. The power station was indeed built on an old Fisions fertiliser plant.
@dragontriketv8 ай бұрын
It just gets better. A brilliant presentation.
@pgriffithsulster8 ай бұрын
Used to live near Stoke Ferry 30 years ago in the village of West Dereham. Now if you had taken a detour into there you would have found the Wissington beet plant. Huge. It was lit up like a Christmas tree in winter and you could see it from the Littleport bypass
@AutoShenanigans8 ай бұрын
I've heard they grow special plants at Wissington.
@MervynPartin8 ай бұрын
Excellent, Jon. Your research is brilliant. I didn't realise the Chicken Shit Factory (A.K.A Thetford Power station) was such a large CO2 producer. One thing that you may have missed on the A10 section was the Setchey oilfield which operated from 1918 to the 1930s.
@gordon15458 ай бұрын
Afraid he missed the point of the biomass power station though. It's not to create power sustainably, it's to reduce the emissions from chicken crap - power is a side benefit. If you don't do anything with the manure it produces methane, with is 25-30 times worse than carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas. If we want to eliminate these emissions then we need to stop eating chicken (though overall it's pretty low carbon) but otherwise, burning the waste and getting energy from it is the best idea.
@AutoShenanigans8 ай бұрын
Nice, I didnt know about the oil fields!
@hammondpickle8 ай бұрын
No wonder that bloody roundabout (Hardwick) is such a nightmare! I hate driving that past that thing.
@marcom91038 ай бұрын
1:35 The flyover isn't really 'useless' as you suggest. It does separate a lot of traffic from each other making most movements less congested. It may not 'feel' like it's helping much because the A47 still has to stop for the small roundabout, but it isn't having to cross paths with the bust A10 / A149. Another genius of this design is the fact the second 'exit' if heading EB on the A47 is on your left allowing you to turn right onto the A10 SB while bypassing the busiest exits towards King Lynne and not having to cross at grade with the A47 WB. I'd say as far as British junctions go, they've done a good job here. There's plenty of examples where they'd have just made all the traffic mix at grade
@GrahamMacdonald-w9o8 ай бұрын
I was impressed that at 7:31 you called the road from Thetford to Diss the A-One-Oh-Six-Six rather than be tempted to call it the A-Ten-Sixty-Six, especially as you mentioned the fort the Normans built on Castle Hill just a few seconds later.
@gaffysmenk7 ай бұрын
I didn't know Thetford was a place. I just thought it was a box you shat in when driving around the cuntryside.
@jamesabbott52428 ай бұрын
Awesome Video
@AutoShenanigans8 ай бұрын
Nice one, thanks for watching!
@johnawalker92618 ай бұрын
Idea for a new Road journey, A38 from Bodmin to Mansfield. The longest double digit road in the U.K..
@jsnsk1018 ай бұрын
Went to Grimes Graves as a school trip it was great, and that was 45 years ago