I was born close to the edge of the Peak District. They were concentrating on the natural wonders; but there is a ruined castle at Castleton, and a huge and beautiful stately home at Chatsworth. There are massive caves you can visit. The whole area is superb for mountaineering and caving. The pink flower is heather, which, when it flowers in September, can make whole hillsides purple. And, of course, our legal system of Rights of Way and Rights to Roam means that so much is accessible by paths you have legal right to use.
@pi18727 ай бұрын
Thank you, I bet the caves would be neat to check out.
@johnmcaleer70995 ай бұрын
Its funny but everyone thinks of rain when they think of the uk.new york,rome and sydney all have more,but it is fairly overcast alot of the time. We have a similar climate to seattle.
@susangarbutt71895 ай бұрын
That large "wind power eyesore"are more commonly known as a blot on a beautiful landscape.
@helenab73904 ай бұрын
They may ruin the view but they are there to help the environment so these beautiful places will live on for future generations..😊
@sc3pt1c4L7 ай бұрын
Stannage edge, Derwent reservoir, Dovestones and the Trinnacle, Alport Castles...sooo many missed.
@erikadavis22647 ай бұрын
If we all add a few, we may just do it! 😃
@erikadavis22647 ай бұрын
These are lovely locations, but, as ever, they miss many other beautiful spots such as Castleton's caves, the Monsal Trail, Buxton, Edale (which is the start of the Penine Way), Stanage Edge, Cromford and the Mills, where the industrial revolution began. Thank you for appreciating the UK and NI. ❤
@pi18727 ай бұрын
thank you
@NickHobbs7 ай бұрын
Thanks for reacting to my suggestion! I just wanted to point out that this whole video was a top 10 of just one places in your last video - there's so much to see here! Congratulations on your channel taking off - I hope the algorithm helps boost it more.! I watch a lot of reaction videos - if you want to get in touch, let me know :) - I derive so much pleasure in sharing the UK with people! Take care :)
@pi18727 ай бұрын
Thank you so much
@sjbict7 ай бұрын
great reactions to our beautiful country. look up dry stone walls and what can be done with this very old skill. Dry stone walls are all over the UK and mark land boundaries and fields
@navigator100group27 ай бұрын
You are right about the Wind Turbines, Scotland is littered with them
@NickHobbs7 ай бұрын
I actually disagree! To me it's man working with nature - as long as they're done properly and tastefully!
@tomnicholson21155 ай бұрын
Realy enjoyed watching your reactions, new subscriber today, watched three already, don't get to see to many Canadians on KZbin, so it makes for a nice change, England is a green and pleasant land, but theres a cost of rain and gloom for that, but some great veiws when the sun does show up, theres a long history on these islands and mans footprint, plus his animals have just about managed every square inch of the UK, (and Ireland) so do check out Scotland, Wales and Ireland too.
@canonndaleguy36587 ай бұрын
It only rains on days with a "Y" in them.
@pi18727 ай бұрын
Lol 😆
@ked26877 ай бұрын
There is a ruined castle at Castleton, plus several caves which can be visited. There is a popular “rock” called Blue John and I believe that this is the only known location of it. Also missing were the most popular dales in the Peak District. Dovedale, Lathkill Dale, Monsal Dale and many more.
@erikadavis22647 ай бұрын
That'd be Peveril Castle. The 'rock' is fluorite: Blue John is a semi-precious mineral, a rare form of fluorite with bands of a purple-blue or yellowish colour. The Romans mined it, and there are examples in museums.
@masterofparsnips53277 ай бұрын
The "purple stuff" is Heather in flower.
@pi18727 ай бұрын
thank you👍
@kaylucas517 ай бұрын
Purple stuff is heathers
@pi18727 ай бұрын
Thank you 👍
@shannongarcia9707 ай бұрын
Congrats on passing that 1 k sub mark 🎉
@pi18727 ай бұрын
thank you very much😁
@shannongarcia9707 ай бұрын
@@pi1872 welcome you deserve to blow up , great content .
@monofrida17 ай бұрын
There are more rainy days in Miami (at 135) and Orlando, Florida (117) than there are in London. New York City clocks in at 122 days and 1,268mm of rain. Washington DC, Rio de Janeiro, Sydney, and Mexico City all have more rainy days on average in any given year than London.. In the rest of the country, according to the UK Met Office, the average rainfall in Britain is 1,154mm per year. On average it rains for 156.2 days per year (data from 1981 to 2010). However, some parts of England are much wetter than others, and the farther west you go the likelier it is you’ll need to pack an umbrella. The Scottish western Highlands get doused annually with over three meters of rain. There is a classified rainforest in Scotland! The Lake District and the Pennines in the northwest of England top the rainy charts too, as well as the mountainous Snowdonia area in Wales and the higher ground of the Cornish and Devonshire moors. I'm pretty sure it has become warmer and drier recently though
@pi18727 ай бұрын
Thank you lots of info there 👍
@monofrida17 ай бұрын
@@pi1872 You're welcome. The rain is generally light and passes by quickly too rather than having long lasting heavy downpours. Especially in the south east
@stevekenilworth7 ай бұрын
UK, we get period pretty wet times and also dry times too like 1540 Europe seen drought lasting 11 months, in 1808 uk seen 38c that was 50 million less people back then, 1906 heat began in August and lasted into September, 1911 heat began in early July and didn't let up until mid-September where even in September temperatures were still up to 33 °C, the 1955 was a period of hot weather that was accompanied by drought. In some places it was the worst drought on record, more severe than 1976 and 1995, 1976 one of the worst droughts in British history it just went on and on, 2022 we did hit 40c but i call it year airport records miles concrete and tar, like the first one to be broken wind from south east before airport was 36c just after airport 39.1c urban heat island effect and if we were built up as we are now in 1808 that would been 40c too. every now and again we get long hot spell over number years but weather rely a lot on the jet and all it takes is a locking pattern and we could get weeks wet even months or the other heat. and talking about rain According to the Met Office the rainiest parts of the UK are concentrated in mountainous regions with Snowdonia, the Lake District and the Scottish Highlands all receiving more than 4 metres of rainfall in a year that is a lot rain, but tend to get a lot rain more west as that where lot wet weather comes from. all it takes is a locking pattern and the weather locked in for a while, like 2022 heat was pushed more south and concentrated and heat built and built so when it push north uk we hit by a lot very warm air. we back in the same grand solar cycle what leading up to last one 1540 period and leaving it we seen crazy weather events we now back in this cycle we see every 350-400 years, from 1500-1800 forest fires in usa were 10x worse than modern times, the last decade could not add up to yearly burn from 1500-1800, expect things to continue to get worse till at least 2053 before starting to settle but that still take time, grand solar cycle we not seen for 100's of years
@pi18727 ай бұрын
Wow, are PM Justin Trudeau just taxes us all more and more because of the weather he thinks if we pay more tax, it won't be hot 😂
@angelataylor20497 ай бұрын
You need to do the Lake District in Cumbria…in my opinion the most beautiful scenery in England!
It’s not that bad we have lovely weather and at times very hot therefore not raining everyday
@MaxwellMoore-d1u7 ай бұрын
The Peak District is Local to me ive walked and Mountain Biked all over it and been underneath in the many caves
@johnmcaleer70995 ай бұрын
Love castleton and its blue john caves,gorgeous part of the country
@NickHobbs5 ай бұрын
Hello! Can you explain your username please? I'm seeing a lot of similar usernames. The just look like random spam-generated usernames, but it's clear you're a real person. How did you get that username?
@johnt89987 ай бұрын
People seem to think that it rains all of the time, here in the UK. That's not true. Yes we probably get more rain than you are used to, but we have had our fair share of heatwaves and long dry spells too.
@pi18727 ай бұрын
Oh wow thank you
@shaunbyrne90377 ай бұрын
Did you know there are 5000 miles of canals and rivers in the Britain . 2700 miles of UK canals and rivers are connected up to form a waterways network . Hence one popular holiday / vacation is to hire a narrow boat to explore the canal network . The canal history goes back over 200 years when it was built to be the main transport for manufacturing materials and ware before trains or roads . The canals are now maintained for leisure purposes or many people even live full time on their boats . A cool video to check out is a Canadian couple who venture off for their first canal experience . Their adventure is over 4 videos well worth checking out for a unique view of beautiful countryside . The video is ... 4 Surprising Days On A Canal Boat In Wales - Ep. 1 .
@pi18727 ай бұрын
Thank you👍
@whitecompany187 ай бұрын
I'm ok with the wind turbines, don't even notice them anymore, most of ours in the North West are out in the Irish sea but I've recently read that Irish and uk fishermen are losing valuable fishing territory from the massive turbine fields proposed so a few in land don't hurt👍
@donepearce7 ай бұрын
Wind turbines are cool. I always like to see them.
@stevekenilworth7 ай бұрын
they an eyesore, they fly tipping , littering pretty landscapes. i like taking pictures i keep driving till i get away from them
@donepearce7 ай бұрын
@@stevekenilworth then you are missing out on some great pictures
@stevekenilworth7 ай бұрын
@@donepearce i do not agree littering the countryside these litter the countryside so i drive on and find better less known off the main track where these horrid thing's hidden out sight, one power station or many 100's these i take the power station. even so called green energy biomass ships 27 million trees from USA and Canada that 8-9 million tons wood pellets and quick search average ship hold 30,000 tons so that is a lot ships and lot trips 1000's of miles. these turbines just going to end in landfill they litter the landscape and kill wildlife and lot times land owners are paid to turn them off, 2023 UK consumers are paying hundreds of millions of pounds to turn wind turbines off no wonder our bills so high , shipping wood 1000's miles and these plus when we sitting on 100's of years cheap energy and all these must also have a back up so power station on standby so even more cost
@jeanneale92577 ай бұрын
Peace love from England The peaks are beautiful Take a look at Cornwall and the scilly isles
@pi18727 ай бұрын
I will thank you👍
@jeanneale92577 ай бұрын
@@pi1872The Eden project in Cornwall is the largest biodome in the world well worth a look
@Thegrinch21697 ай бұрын
it rains 192 times a year,great vid theres so much in the uk to see😄
@pi18727 ай бұрын
wow that's a lot of rain 💦
@ElunedLaine7 ай бұрын
Here's a couple of YT vids you might enjoy - 'They Built a Rainforest Ecosystem inside a Geodesic Dome' by FLORB and 'I Explored the UK's Rarest Habitat & found something amazing...' by Leave Curious