Remnants Of Prehistoric Devon In Modern Times.

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History with Kayleigh

History with Kayleigh

2 жыл бұрын

I looked into the History of the County of Devon after having visited there, i went to Dartmoor National Park and saw standing stones, stone alignments and an Ancient Oakwood known as Wistman's Woods.
I look into how the landscape was formed, the possibility of an icesheet reaching this far south and the English Riviera.
Throughout the video i talk about my trip, my love for Devon and a little backstory into my life.
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Пікірлер: 323
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Watch The Collaboration with Salinda: kzfaq.info/get/bejne/jsyBppuZsbbDZmQ.html Go subscribe to Salinda; kzfaq.info/love/Bg-P1JIs4tDzmdjPPmDthw Research Paper Glaciers in Dartmoor; www.researchgate.net/publication/258707211_The_glaciation_of_Dartmoor_The_southernmost_independent_Pleistocene_ice_cap_in_the_British_Isles Get your Merch: historywithkayleighshop.com/ Become a Channel member: kzfaq.info/love/MwDeEoupy8QQpKKc8pzU_Qjoin Support me on Patreon: www.patreon.com/HistoryWithKayleigh
@Audion
@Audion 2 жыл бұрын
I like the hair clips on your plant on the table. 🤣
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Haha that's the only way to keep the stem of an orchid upright without it breaking 🤣
@Audion
@Audion 2 жыл бұрын
@@HistoryWithKayleigh 🤣
@BillySugger1965
@BillySugger1965 Жыл бұрын
Kayleigh, I’d love to show you the Dorset coast sometime. Devon is lovely, but seriously Dorset is absolutely gorgeous if you like water and coasts. From fossil hunting at Charmouth to the harbour at Weymouth, the dramatic cliffs of Portland, the whole Jurassic Coast, the beautiful Isle of Purbeck and the golden sands of Poole and Bournemouth. It has to be seen to be believed.
@calebwright7014
@calebwright7014 Жыл бұрын
It's good to see again miss
@brienfoerster
@brienfoerster 2 жыл бұрын
Nice job Kayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Brien!
@brienfoerster
@brienfoerster 2 жыл бұрын
@@HistoryWithKayleigh Pleasure
@mathewreed8669
@mathewreed8669 2 жыл бұрын
Hey Kayleigh I'm in Australia being that cold in the wood there would be no snakes about. In the bush here it is easy to visualise the local tribe going about their business. I find tools made by them regularly and feel a real connection with them. There is a stone circle nearby older than stone hedge called wurdi youang
@philwhatever3903
@philwhatever3903 2 жыл бұрын
Slow adders hibernate from October to March in the UK, so i guess it depends what time of autumn she was there,…….there is leaves on the trees so im guessing its probably early autumn. I found this strange also given that its cold. But Devon and Cornwall are generally warmer then the rest of the UK as they are in the gulf stream. (Palm trees even grow there) Edit and given that its a big open space it would make sense that they go to the wood to shelter from the cold. Although im no expert.
@davehooper4498
@davehooper4498 2 жыл бұрын
Britain has such a lot of beautiful places and there are not enough years to see it all, but you will be welcome to England with open arms. Once you move here you won't ever want to leave, its the best walks you can have in Englands Green and pleasant lands
@stephen150
@stephen150 2 жыл бұрын
Devon is beautiful, but there are many, many places as beautiful in the British Isles. The meloncholic romance of the Yorkshire moors, the epic scale and drama of well Scotland, all of it. Then there's Wales, Wales is so full of charm, hidden details and cosy hills and valleys, you'll want to plant roots. And everywhere in this tightly packed cluster of islands, you'll find interesting and interested people eager to share rare and amusing tales from years gone by, or just yesterday. One thing is always sure, you're never far from a hot cup of tea.
@thylacinenv
@thylacinenv 2 жыл бұрын
"The Plague Market at Merrivale" experienced at dawn shrouded in Autumn mist is magical, I'm sure you know how it acquired it's sinister name. One time visiting Devon and Dorset I dropped into a pub in Cerne Abbas for a pint only to share my space at the bar with a horse who pops into the pub everyday for his pint, then leaves by himself back to his paddock! Very entertaining as ever Kayleigh.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Nick!
@thylacinenv
@thylacinenv 2 жыл бұрын
@@HistoryWithKayleigh there's something about ancient stones and mist, had the same experience at Callanish!
@thylacinenv
@thylacinenv 2 жыл бұрын
Thankyou for response. The Plaque Market acquired it's name when the people of Tavistock in 1625 were decimated by the plague, farmers would leave produce by the stone rows to be collected by those well enough to collect. Payment was placed in buckets of water in the belief that the water would cleanse the money, at the very least these unfortunate people had something to eat.
@christopherhickner4673
@christopherhickner4673 2 жыл бұрын
You’re the best Kayleigh!!! History channel needs you!!!
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Haha i wish
@stephenjackson4968
@stephenjackson4968 2 жыл бұрын
You have such a soothing voice. I discovered your channel while nursing my rabbit back to health, after he was very poorly. I found each video to be informative, and calming, during that stressful time. You have a radiant charisma, and that combined with your discussions on fascinating topics helped me a great deal. He recovered, by the way. And, you have made a big fan.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Happy to hear!
@eecarolinee
@eecarolinee 2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting to hear of your reaction to a region full of glacial signs. I live in Maine which is part of the New England region in North America. We have examples of lots of glacial remains. From scoured rock and sunken valleys in Maine, to glacial moraine in southern New England. Cape Cod to Rhode Island to Long Island NY are all sandy outfalls... terminal moraines... the region has a full spectrum of glacial signs, geologically.
@norsehall309
@norsehall309 2 жыл бұрын
G'day Kayleigh, my wonderful wife comes from Devon, l met her in London when l was on a training rotation with the Australia Army, and that was the start of our romance, l myself love Exeter in Devon and the Roman wall, last time l was there people thought l was mad as l was seen hugging the wall in the middle of an arch in it, your lucky to have grown up with influence or you grandparents l did and think of them fondly, wising you and your family a wonderful Christmas and may the New year bring you much happiness, and remember when it cold and your shivering, it's nice and hot in OZ, cheers sweetheart, lol Neil.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Neil!
@elliottjames8020
@elliottjames8020 2 жыл бұрын
That took me back. I'm a from the English West Country but I've been living abroad for some years. One of my most memorable railway journeys was in Devon, just south of Brixham, the tracks run along the edge of the Channel and the waves were breaking against the sea wall and over the train. Thank you.
@andobreslin8735
@andobreslin8735 2 жыл бұрын
Hi kayleigh. I'm lucky enough to live in this area. Dawlish to be exact. Know and love these places so much. The intriguing thing about the magical Wistmans Wood, is how they've managed to survive. It's because of the boulders. The sheep struggle to get at the tree saplings and because of this, the small and last remnant of the Celtic Rainforest clings on.. UK uplands are heavily sheep farmed. This is on top of the Iron Age land management that took place thousands of years ago. I feel a real connection to the ancient Celtic/Druid past here. Devon and Cornwall have true history and mystery. I'd recommend visiting Cornwall too. Full of ancient Neolithical sites 👌🏻
@dananorth895
@dananorth895 2 жыл бұрын
I recall stories of giant oaks that were gargantuan. Large enough for a whole village to live in. Must have been thousands of years ago. Probably took as long to grow that large.
@trevorpomroy550
@trevorpomroy550 2 жыл бұрын
A storybook landscape!
@kevinwaite6725
@kevinwaite6725 2 жыл бұрын
Can you give me any links or info of the giant oaks? That is really amazing!
@dananorth895
@dananorth895 2 жыл бұрын
I don't remember the source. But history, legend particulary Great Britain some of the very old stuff. Remember Irish and English stories go way back.
@theironherder
@theironherder 2 жыл бұрын
Appreciating time scales is hard, and very interesting. I live in the Great Plains of the U.S., and my ancestors settled here in the late 19th century, so for me, that's when history began. Our weather records are less than 150 years old. Contrast this with the parish in Sweden that many of my ancestors came from (FWIW, all of my great grandparents were born in Sweden). This parish, Kristdala, has a church that is 1000 years old -- and as that church replaced its burned down predecessor, it was called, and is still called, "the new church". A 1000 years old, and it is still called the new church. I can't even begin to wrap my head around that.
@tonnywildweasel8138
@tonnywildweasel8138 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly that feeling! Like walking in the past, that connection, fantastic isn't it? Great that you experienced that, and maybe you have indeed found 'your place' there! Thanks for sharing it so openly, really appreciate it! Groet'n from the Dutch Northerner🌷, T. Edit: have fun in Sweden!
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!!
@beethimbles8801
@beethimbles8801 2 жыл бұрын
Wait to you come see our North Devon coasts. I grew up with Dartmoor and exmoor being a place we went for a Saturday ‘walk’. It was never a hike, a hike is going up snowdon. Also you must come and see Glastonbury. That place is the centre of the old world magic. Devon, it’s moors and cliffs has a magic and connection that weaves its way through the hearts of Devonshire folk. More times than I can count I fell sleep, or rocked my child to sleep, staring out at the moor. You must be an old soul, to still feel the pull of the heartland whispering it’s song in your heart.
@standingbadger
@standingbadger 2 жыл бұрын
Wonderful video. Thank you 🙏🏼. I live in Exeter but used to live on the southern edge of the moor too. It’s my favourite place to be. I was on Kes Tor last weekend. It was so windy at the top I could lean 45 degrees into the wind without falling over. If you’re in Devon again, the Bovey Valley walk from Manaton to Lustleigh is beautiful and one is well rewarded by an excellent pub and tea shop in Lustleigh. Also the east devon ‘jurassic coastline’ for fossil hunting. In the neighbouring county of Somerset is the Cheddar Gorge and caves (location of ‘Cheddar Man’). Glastonbury Tor in Somerset also worth a visit. I would be very happy to show you around these places, but I’m sure your friends in Totnes know of these places already. Thank you for a fantastic channel. 🙏🏼🦡
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!
@Pilgrimdave1960
@Pilgrimdave1960 2 жыл бұрын
You are so very likeable. It is always a joy to spend time with you. So very genuine. Feels a lot like sitting with a friend
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@donmcneal233
@donmcneal233 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Kayleigh..., again thanks for letting us have you entertain & inform about your adventures of & through history places & things. Yup, you're a hoot & I'm hooked.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks haha
@Sharadise
@Sharadise Жыл бұрын
Hey, I live in Torbay and I loved this video! As someone who's lived here for many years, and has walked many a trail in that time, it's fascinating to hear the impressions this ancient landscape has left on someone who has an appreciation for such things, seeing it for the first time. Also, a fun fact: the time period known as the "Devonian" is named after Devon because that's where a thing called the "Great Devonian Controversy" took place at. Also (and unrelated): in the 19th century we had a thing called the "Atmospheric Railway" here (well, it extended to Devon), which had trains running on it without locomotives. They were powered by a pressurised pipe between the rails. Keep doing what you're doing!
@Sharadise
@Sharadise Жыл бұрын
PS: That path in Totnes is the one going along Harper's Hill at the top of town, is it not? If so, I've walked it many times (although it is a bit tricky to tell from your angles).
@johnkey979
@johnkey979 2 жыл бұрын
Dear Ms. Kayleigh thank you for your extremely infectious enthusiasm you're the kind of person that makes it a pleasure to learn from thank you for the fine work
@L4g__
@L4g__ 2 жыл бұрын
Good to see someone talking about eating scones correctly 👌
@SalindaNichols
@SalindaNichols 2 жыл бұрын
Loved this deep dive and exploration of Devon's history! ❤️ So fun to relive your trip and learn more about Devon! See you in April! 😉
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
See you in April! Can't wait to be back again!! 😍🥰❤️
@jorgegonzalez-larramendi5491
@jorgegonzalez-larramendi5491 2 жыл бұрын
wow! you lucky guys - thanks for the photo -s : )
@johanseinen8245
@johanseinen8245 2 жыл бұрын
Hello Kayleigh, I'm from Hellevoetsluis which happens to be the Twin town of Torquay in Devon, because it so happened that in the 17th century Stadhouder William III of Orange Sailed with his fleet from Hellevoetsluis to England and landed near Torquay. I've been there twice and also been to the almost surreal landscape of the Moor, you really need to have been there to experience it I think because photos doesn't show that and you almost suspect that the Hotel/Restaurant Two Bridges is the only place in miles there because we also ended up there for lunch, but maybe our local Guide had some interest there, I couldn't tell.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Two bridges is definitely a place everyone visits when they go to the moor i heard haha
@scottclay4253
@scottclay4253 2 жыл бұрын
Don’t sit in the corner and cry, dear Kayleigh. I have enjoyed many many of your other videos and continue to work my way toward watching them all. I am happy you enjoyed Devon and avoided stepping on a viper. I hope your family visit with your sister & her family is a great trip as well. Thank you for sharing additional personal stories.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Scott!
@switchwizard9398
@switchwizard9398 Жыл бұрын
Wow, it's such a pleasure & a privilege to watch you to continue to grow. Yeah, I've been watching your videos recently. Every single one. From what I can find of your very first. I'm catching up as quickly as I can. I've only commented about 3 vids ago. I can't wait to get up to date eventually.
@marc3981
@marc3981 2 жыл бұрын
Ooh! I live in Devon, Plymouth to be exact. For English history, I love living in Plymouth, but for anything prior to the Norman invasion, the whole of Devon is simply amazing for Saxon and ancient British history. Even in Plymouth we have 'Cattedown Caves' with amazing findings. Hope you enjoyed your visit, come back soon. Plenty more to see
@doronron7323
@doronron7323 Жыл бұрын
Hi Kayleigh. This was my first visit to your channel and it was a rel pleasure to 'meet' you. You sure can tell a yarn in a most engaging manner. Glad you enjoyed your trip to Devon where I visited regularly for around 10 years, some time ago. Britain is a place of real contrasts, the place and the people. If you manage to live, or spend more time here you won't be disappointed. Like anywhere else, it pays to do some basic research to get the most from a visit. So happy to have found you.....I'll be back!
@Sparkeycarp
@Sparkeycarp 2 жыл бұрын
Nothing to worry about from the snakes during the cold weather. They are hibernating. Keep up the great work brave girl.
@davidcox2264
@davidcox2264 2 жыл бұрын
My dad was from Devon. Great video Kayleigh. Another winner.😍
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks David!
@JohnPaul-158
@JohnPaul-158 2 жыл бұрын
Enjoy your time in Sweden! I had to laugh about watching "doggerland". That was the first one of your videos I watched and that got me hooked on you!
@vincentbradley2056
@vincentbradley2056 2 жыл бұрын
I was born in Torcross during WW2. Thank you for this video brought me home
@danielgregory1705
@danielgregory1705 Жыл бұрын
Hi Kayleigh…👋. Loving your content. I’m Dan and I live in Exeter in Devon. Great info about my local area. I luv walking, cycling and wild camping around Dartmoor. I went to Red Lake recently which again is another very ancient landscape very near Wistman’s Wood and going to spend Boxing Day up at Haytor. This is a long standing tradition for some Dartmoor locals. Thanks again Kayleigh 👋😁
@floydriebe4755
@floydriebe4755 2 жыл бұрын
Kayleigh! enjoyed this immensely. i, also, am a great lover of books. everytime you tell of your past, i learn new things about my favorite history maven. i would love to go to England and Eyre and Scottland, but probably never be able to. so, any video you make of your wanderings thru those lands i'll watch with relish. or mustard or salsa or what have you. someday you need to see the mountains and gorges here, across the pond. Glacier Ntl Park, Grand Canyon, Bryce Canyon, Zion and others. and the ruins of the southwest are, while not as old, are right up your alley. glacial erratics, too, tho usually not in such abbundance. really love the ancient history of pretty much anywhere. and, you'll be back to Dartmoor, i'm sure. talk to you later, Klee! thanks!
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Happy to hear you enjoyed it!
@floydriebe4755
@floydriebe4755 2 жыл бұрын
@@HistoryWithKayleigh i did!
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Great!
@eyesofisabelofficial
@eyesofisabelofficial Жыл бұрын
The term "Break A Leg" comes from theater. After a really good show the crowd would shout for more and the act would take bow after bow causing the curtain to be raised and lowered so many times the winding handle - known as a "Leg" - would break. This all indicates the show was a resounding success.
@garymeredith488
@garymeredith488 Жыл бұрын
Thanks, you're a great person! Great video, captivating!
@jamesderwin
@jamesderwin 2 жыл бұрын
I started watching your channel a couple days ago. Then this video popped up, amazing, I’m from Devon. These places are very familiar to me and going to visit merrivale or whistman’s woods is my favourite kind of day trip, I always carry a warm pasty in my pocket, because yeah, pretty chilly. Anyway when you mention the names it sends shivers down my spine and my hair stands up on end, I like how you felt connected to the place because that’s how I feel too, it’s a special mystical place and lovely to hear you talk so passionately about it! From many visits to the stone rows at merrivale, I kinda have a gut theory, probably romantic nonsense though… the two sets of rows suggests a procession like ritual, because they’re clearly meant to walk between and have a few different sculptural elements, such as larger stones at the end, perhaps entrances and exits, and at the midway point of the row there’s a stone lined pit, some kind of stage or point. This configuration could be an obvious physical metaphor for the journey of life, or even the circle of life if the rows are to be viewed as a whole. The stream running through it, also stone lined, seems purposeful and even of such significance that its been lined and controlled to maintain this configuration. When standing at that place it’s hard to imagine you could be anywhere higher in elevation and the ferocity of the wind seems only to confirm you’re on top of the world, and perhaps closer to a higher realm. With that being said, I can’t think of a higher source of fresh sweet water in the area. So I like to think that maybe in this high place that the people paid tribute in some fashion to this life giving water, that this sacred place filled their world with this most valuable of life giving substances. It stands to reason that some kind of ritual placing the significance of that water at the centre of their human story would be very evocative and it still feels poignant even today. Anyway enough of my rant, it may have just been an elaborate corral for some Chief’s prized livestock.
@HistoryandHeadlines
@HistoryandHeadlines 2 жыл бұрын
I'm subscribing after reading the introduction in the History Slack Group.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!!
@HistoryandHeadlines
@HistoryandHeadlines 2 жыл бұрын
@@HistoryWithKayleigh You're welcome! The Slack Group has introduced me to a lot of channels that KZfaq hadn't otherwise recommended.
@TheSteveRobinson
@TheSteveRobinson 2 жыл бұрын
My mother was born in Devon, in Exeter to be exact, 97 years ago. She told me stories about Dartmoor and tales of the "little people".
@Jay-ho9io
@Jay-ho9io 2 жыл бұрын
This is one of my favorite videos of yours to date. I think it's incredible that you're willing to share some of the personal details that motivate you or make up your personal history (social media isn't always great about that.) My mind is kinda blown over the idea of a *three kilometer* line of stones being set by hand. Sounds like it was a pretty intense hike, but worth it. Thank you again. Glad you didn't freeze.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks! This was one of my most favorite videos to make 🙂
@logosthedestroyer
@logosthedestroyer 2 жыл бұрын
I love your channel. You have such a natural way of presentation, and manage to be very informative, interesting, funny and relaxing at the same time. Best of luck to you!
@Christian-Roots818
@Christian-Roots818 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent video ! When you started about your Grandmother and Your Book ! It just kinda exploded from there ! I couldn’t stop watching !
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@michaelwynn8763
@michaelwynn8763 2 жыл бұрын
I lived in Devon on Dartmoor for a few years, and as far as I know, the ice sheet never went further than oxford. The photos you show from grimspound have pathways put there by the local park keepers to protect the ground. grimspound has not been excavated and as it sits between 2 hills is not defensive but had a double wall, well worth a video on its own. There were more people living on Dartmoor at that time than there are now.
@francispitts9440
@francispitts9440 2 жыл бұрын
My grandparents lived in Devon Pennsylvania just outside West Philadelphia. I spent my summers out there “in the country” lol. After learning that it was named after the England Devon I read what I could find in our library. So I’m also curious about where you’re visiting. Thanks 😊
@kevinwaite6725
@kevinwaite6725 2 жыл бұрын
When you move to England, Kayleigh,you might have to work out more after eating all of their scones hehe.🥰 Thank you for sharing this I knew nothing of Devon, amazing. I wonder what the forest is like. I also loved that you shared your love of that novel with us. I can't tell my 1st novel love which got me into history everyone will laugh.
@mevenstien
@mevenstien 2 жыл бұрын
🙂☮️❤️ No it's not overkill ,you could even get one more and arrange them in Orion orientation just like in Egypt. Nice vid , looking forward to your next one .
@dorsetbigcat
@dorsetbigcat 2 жыл бұрын
I've always wanted to visit Whistmans wood and I live not far away in Dorset. I'm really glad to hear about the Adders there, I am a Reptile surveyor. Adders are our only venomous snake but they are not aggressive and they are terrified of humans.
@trevorpomroy550
@trevorpomroy550 2 жыл бұрын
I've wanted to go to Devon since I was a child! So very beautiful and old. It was only later that I knew about my own family history there. Not prehistoric though. Berry Pomeroy would be a highlight for me, as my surname suggests. Also the Barnstable and Bideford area. Great video Kayleigh! I'm jealous and glad that you got to visit! The Doggerland video was the first of yours that I had seen. It was amazing. I could comment on hiking in a hilly glacial landscape, but my comment is already too long...
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Haha thanks!
@LynnaeaEmber
@LynnaeaEmber 2 жыл бұрын
I love your videos, and this one is one of the best. My grandmother was from England, I would love to go there and visit some distant cousins.
@jodrel3
@jodrel3 2 жыл бұрын
Greetings from Marldon Devon near the English Rivera and just up the road from Kents Cavern 😊😊
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Whooo🤗🤗
@MrJento
@MrJento 2 жыл бұрын
There is a considerable difference between researching a place and seeing it first hand. May your feet never be still. There are many places where you feel connected with the past. Snakes don’t come out in the cold. Erratics deposits are reasonably easy to date. If they are in huge piles the originated in previous glaciations, and were shoved up into piles by the last one. When you find singularities as you did in Devon they were deposited in the last glaciation. The geology of the erratic can tell you about the direction of ice flow and the extent, if you can locate the strata that donated the stone. Erratics and alluvial mounds are one way that the limits of the ice sheet are mapped. Its an interesting subset of geology. Scones! Scottish butter, English marmalade, big cup of British Naval style tea. Goodnight. Fox out.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah i know snakes hibernate around this time but it's a good thing i didn't know. Cause you walk around very differently knowing they're there haha
@MrJento
@MrJento 2 жыл бұрын
@@HistoryWithKayleigh I grew up in snake country. Live in snake country. You adapt. You overcome. Just be aware, but not wary. Get out. See the world. But snakes are like guns. Always assume they are loaded. Treat them with respect. Happy trails!
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely treat them with respect, i love snakes!
@dazuk1969
@dazuk1969 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Vulpes, adders were the least of Kayleigh's worries in Wistman's wood. It is said to be one of the most haunted places in England. There are legends of human sacrifice, witches, and yes, even the devil looking for those that stray from the beaten track. Anyway, your post about the glacial erratics is interesting Vulpes....peace to ya.
@MrJento
@MrJento 2 жыл бұрын
@@dazuk1969 Hi amigo. Just about everything you see in North America today was cut out or dumped by a glacier. So it’s central stage in introductory geology. Not too excited about ghosts. Place like that you gotta watch out for those sabre tooth squirrels. Haha!
@tgmccoy1556
@tgmccoy1556 2 жыл бұрын
My dear wife was an Anglophile. One of her favorite authors was Elizabeth Gouge who was a author of note in Devon. Fairy tales and romance.
@Duececoupe
@Duececoupe Жыл бұрын
Can't beat that sound of waves, rain and thunder.... . . . . Sorry, drifted away there! 😉
@wadejustanamerican1201
@wadejustanamerican1201 2 жыл бұрын
This has been the most wonderful video, thank you. So many aspects that would be great to have an extended conversation on. On a complete side note, my Physical Anthropology Professors would hold a "Welcome back to the Pleistocene" party every year. They taught us back then that we are merely in an intra-glacial period. Have a great week.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@Montebann
@Montebann 2 жыл бұрын
Wow one of my favourite youtubers visited my part of the world. As a Plymouthian I'm so glad you got to enjoy Devon and Cornwall.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
I walked through Plymouth and we ate burgers in Plymouth haha
@Montebann
@Montebann 2 жыл бұрын
@@HistoryWithKayleigh Captain jasper's on the barbican?
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
No it was a small place next to a mall of some kind. With a large car park 🙂
@scottkinnersley6136
@scottkinnersley6136 2 жыл бұрын
Good work Kayleigh, enjoyed the story.
@billcotton1551
@billcotton1551 Жыл бұрын
I watched a sea kayaking video made in Cornwall. I have never seen more beautiful beaches in my life.
@krazikofiman
@krazikofiman 2 жыл бұрын
Wistman's Wood has an ancient mystical look to it. I would expect Leprechauns to be there, but I would never think of an Adler!
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Adder hahaha
@mayflowerlash11
@mayflowerlash11 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting vid on Devon history. A bit quirky but also definitely enchanting. As usual with Kayleigh.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks
@stevefisher2553
@stevefisher2553 Жыл бұрын
So good, thank you!
@paulbradbury7166
@paulbradbury7166 2 жыл бұрын
Just found your channel. Wonderful work. luv the soothing background music, reminds me of where I grew up in England. Really enjoying your narrative, the history and it's entertaining thank you from Australia.
@nefersguy
@nefersguy 2 жыл бұрын
Great stuff Kayleigh.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Nefers!
@paulanderson2657
@paulanderson2657 2 жыл бұрын
I lived a rural life in isolated parts of Northland nz...as well as being an artist that loves exploratory detailed fine brush work ... I also raised cattle...the beautiful animals were always showing me new standing stones arrangements...and stone ruins...in their territory... especially when I had to bring back young steers that broke fence ...to The Bush...or I prefer to say the jungle...also I became an eager ear to ancient knowledge that newcomer Maori...800ad wished to store with me...my adult daughters are Maori...which is a sanscrit word.. ..
@phatdayz
@phatdayz 2 жыл бұрын
Oh wow that is AWSOME! I live in Devon England im glad you enjoyed it x
@steved6092
@steved6092 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video Kayleigh, very enjoyable & could feel your excitement at seeing things you're passionate about ... you brought a huge smile to my face saying the lovely thing's about England, I hope you succeed in your "dream" of moving over here (I'm sure you will) ... oh, it doesn't matter how fit you are, the only way to get fit for walking hills & mountains is to walk hills & mountains ! .... great video, thanks for sharing your adventure ☺
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Steve!
@terryjosie
@terryjosie 2 жыл бұрын
My grandfather helped to clear Kents Cavern, in the early 1900's. He had a ''rescued'' ancient Bear and a scimitar-toothed cat tooth. The scimitar cat tooth is about 2 inches long, with a nice curve. My cousin has these teeth today.
@CwL-1984
@CwL-1984 2 жыл бұрын
Another awesome job 👍👍
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@johnirby8847
@johnirby8847 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome video!!! 🎉🎉🎉
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks John!
@Tipi_Dan
@Tipi_Dan 2 жыл бұрын
Tons of fun. I have an old friend in Devon. When I met her in San Francisco 25 years ago she never let on she lived in a manor house with horses and all that. An aristocrat apparently. Lost and gone forever, to me. Not overkill, the pyramids complement. Where is Bastet? It was she who clinched my subscription for you. My devotion. Bastet, not you. But who knows? I'm looking to adopt an adult orphan of good character.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Hahaha
@EASTSIDERIDER707
@EASTSIDERIDER707 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your trip to England and your personal history.
@MrMichaelAndrews
@MrMichaelAndrews 2 жыл бұрын
So cool you was able to fullfil your wishes. The Mistress of the Melon? Learning something new from you is very enjoyable. It's another lovely day.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Mistress of Mellyn
@mayamar529
@mayamar529 2 жыл бұрын
I visited Devon in 2015. And I had a book in mind too when I visited Dartmoor: "The hound of the Baskervilles" from Arthur Conan Doyle. And if you go to Princetown, you can follow his steps and walk through Dartmoor. There are lot of things to see in Devon.
@5nowChain5
@5nowChain5 Жыл бұрын
Hi Kayleigh, as someone Born on the TORRE of Torquay (next to the Central Church), its pronounced TOR-KEY. The Geology of Torbay is awesome with the variety of the rock types found there. Don't worry though, we always laugh when grockles (tourists) get all the village names wrong around Torquay. Ellacombe, Babbacombe, are the favourites for getting wrong. (the "-be" not being pronounced). If you are into LEY-LINES, the SouthWest is covered in them. An OrdinanceSurvey Map could be used to line up all the churches and standing stones across the region. Did you get to hear about the hairy hands of Dartmoor or all the Ghost stories. You have to be aware of the politics of Scones, in Devon and Cornwall. Children in Devon used to get abandoned on the moors (by their schools) with a map and compass and told to go to the pick up point in 4 hours. (without being told where they were dropped off). Come Back soon.
@cicad2007
@cicad2007 2 жыл бұрын
Another excellent video by Kayleigh. I never knew all that about Devon, or anything, really. As I said before, I love your relaxed, confident attitude when doing your videos. :-)
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@krishorswill
@krishorswill 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Kayleigh... glad you enjoyed Dartmoor and my lovely little hometown of Totnes. They're pretty special places. Totnes is supposed to be where Brutus landed when he first arrived to Albion, there were still giants here then apparently. Great channel with well researched content.
@christopherperry8693
@christopherperry8693 2 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed this. Salinda's channel is good too. Thanks for that tip Kayleigh.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
You're more than welcome!
@davidbruzzone9623
@davidbruzzone9623 2 жыл бұрын
Hey Kayleigh, Love your content! So happy you will join Anyextee and Jahannah James’ tour of EGYPT September 2022. See you there! David~
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I'm very excited and will be looking forward to the tour! Will see you there!
@captaindavejseddon8788
@captaindavejseddon8788 2 жыл бұрын
I love Devon and Lands End Cornwall, beautiful land. The reason why it is called a Scone is because it doesn't hang around very long and is fastest cake in land.. ;) x
@DarthMalaks_Missing_Lower_Jaw
@DarthMalaks_Missing_Lower_Jaw 2 жыл бұрын
Great video and what an amazing trip! @23:02 I love Devonshire scones and cream! There’s an English pub where I live in California that makes their own scones and cream.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@animavideography1379
@animavideography1379 2 жыл бұрын
Never knew there ancient woodlands from 10,000 years ago still surviving on these islands! You also looked sooo cute tbe those selfies you took there Kayleigh... 🥰🙏
@jsigur157
@jsigur157 2 жыл бұрын
Just discovered your channel and spent the afternoon enjoying your content
@andrewcannon205
@andrewcannon205 2 жыл бұрын
Cool, i went to Kents cavern when i was a teenager. For anyone who may be unaware we are still in an ice age, a warm interglacial period with smaller ice caps. In fact the last ice age is still in the process of melting, once all the ice has gone the ice age will be over. kayleigh, fyi the modern dutch language is the closest to OLD ENGLISH, spoken roughly 1000 years ago, epecially in the area known as Friesland. Great vids. Andy.
@steveking4966
@steveking4966 2 жыл бұрын
Glad you liked Devon, i haved walked all over dartmoor in the past, you need to look at the 3 moors of the area to take them in fully "Bodmin moor Dartmoor and Exmoor" The woods are special there is another one near Newton Abbot " Yarner wood interesting to compare as this one is the result of indusrial activity on the moor, you can have my place there as i left for brittany fr, don't expect warm weather in the spring on Dartmoor, in one weekend i had 0° snow and +30° mid may!
@DogWalkerBill
@DogWalkerBill 2 жыл бұрын
Surprises me that 7,000 BCE to 5,000 BCE ancient hunter-gatherers had sufficient tools & motivation to clear an ancient forest! A LOT of work with stone axes & wooden tools!
@Aengus42
@Aengus42 Жыл бұрын
My hometown is Brixham in Devon & you've just made me so very homesick! Did you visit Dartmoor in the Autumn? If so you may have come across Psilocybe semilanceata! I hope so! A day's shrooming up on the moors is one of my favourite ways to spend a day! 2nd edit: Churston Cove! The beach I raised my kids on! This is getting spooky! 3rd edit: We've got the kettle on Kayleigh! Welcome!
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh Жыл бұрын
I was there last year, it was amazing
@deanmurphy1240
@deanmurphy1240 2 жыл бұрын
Growing up in the Sierra Nevada foot hills of California (the 'mother lode' ) there are secluded groves of oak amongst the rolling hills among clusters of stoned,granite and limestone; many have evidence of grinding (of acorns) very intriguing and thought provoking. They look a LOT like the Grove you visited! Limestone boulder fields all around up in the gold country- as a young kid I climbed all I over them. They're not natural- they were 'hydraulically' mined !1850s- 1870s!
@dazuk1969
@dazuk1969 2 жыл бұрын
Hi K, that was very nostalgic listening to you talk about the book your Grandmother gave you, it obviously means a lot you. I have been to Dartmoor a few times and the wind can be brutal and relentless as there is nothing to break its flow. Did your friends tell you Wistman's wood is haunted ?. There are legends of druids, witches, pagan ritual sacrifice., and "the devil and his hellhounds with blood red eyes and yellow fangs looking for wayward travellers". You obviously made it out in one piece and I am pleased you enjoyed your time there. Nice vid K, peace to ya.
@SCHULTZEH
@SCHULTZEH Жыл бұрын
Love the back story...
@howinteresting2
@howinteresting2 2 жыл бұрын
Devon 😃 Plenty to see here! ('quay' pron. 'key') - Do come back to UK 👍
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Ha torkey ugh, i knew i made a mistake
@grabtharshammer
@grabtharshammer 2 жыл бұрын
Greetings from the English Riviera ;) I live just up the road from Kents Cavern, but guess what, I have never been. We tend to avoid the "Tourist" spots during the summer months, and Winter is too cold or they are closed. I shall really make the effort to visit the Cavern. Loving your videos. I find History fascinating, especially the really ancient stuff. Dartmoor always has a lot to offer as does Bodmin moor in Cornwall. Always gives you that sense of calm and connection
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
🤗
@wormthatturned8737
@wormthatturned8737 2 жыл бұрын
Yes the UK is so full of accessible history and most of it free! Never more than a half a days walk from a road to the remotest spots. I have travelled all around the world in my various jobs but will be retiring early soon. Then I will be travelling around the UK megalith and ancient site collecting ( only touching not taking)I plan to do 100 a year I may do them all before I get interred myself. Hence the need to retire early!
@erikistrup3477
@erikistrup3477 2 жыл бұрын
Six minutes into the video. A special and wonderful introduction. Thanks, Kayleigh! Being a reader, author and publisher, I know books are special 'doors'. (I also use the pen name, Eriqa Queen).
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@erikistrup3477
@erikistrup3477 2 жыл бұрын
@@HistoryWithKayleigh A different connection this time, maybe because I've been writing all day going 'out of my mind' to connect to the story. I find the 'energy' here very similar to what I use, when I let go and let ME loose.
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
@@erikistrup3477 yeah i think going with the flow instead of trying to steer into a direction is very needed when it comes to creativity
@larryreese6146
@larryreese6146 2 жыл бұрын
I too would like to go to Devon, I think. In this country we have the Grand Canyon, the Giant Sequoias, Yellow Stone, and even, in my home state, the Wichita mountains, which are something to see. But it's kind of hard to find many 2000 years old human jawbones.
@larryreese6146
@larryreese6146 2 жыл бұрын
Wouldn't mind seeing the flowers and dikes of Netherlands too or the canals and old buildings. From what I've heard the Dutch are a strong friendly hardworking people. I read Hans Brinker when I was a kid.
@PertinaxMaximus
@PertinaxMaximus 2 жыл бұрын
I love your videos!
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@PertinaxMaximus
@PertinaxMaximus 2 жыл бұрын
You're so pretty!
@hadrianjohnstone6578
@hadrianjohnstone6578 Жыл бұрын
You wouldn't have been cold if the humans had not destroyed the oak forest in the first place , and the ambience and look of Dartmoor would have been very different to what we see and feel today , we see a baron wasteland ,where the first people would have felt and seen a very different thing to us , imagination is a key survival tool to humans but it is also a double edges sword as our imagination and feelings can blind us to the damage we as a species do , thankfully we have our respective languages and written forms of language so we have the opportunity to not make such devastation again if we wish to. I enjoy your videos , your humour and your ability to make history interesting and funny I appreciate your efforts , thank you 👍😁
@OrganicAlkemyst
@OrganicAlkemyst 2 жыл бұрын
If it was cold, you probably wouldn't need to worry about the adders.
@chemitch8474
@chemitch8474 2 жыл бұрын
Jam then cream in Devon, a Cornish cream tea has the jam on top! Was born on Dartmoor, yeah there are snakes and sink holes filled with water, Rams, wierd bugs that eat into the flesh. jam on top is the way to go. :)
@sicko_the_ew
@sicko_the_ew 2 жыл бұрын
I've lived on "Snake Hill" (the name came later), and can reassure you that even the "aggressive" wild snakes almost all know that humans are dangerous, and get out of the way it's hard not to call "in terror". The only exception I've seen to this is a vine snake that was too busy eating another snake to flee. I think if it didn't have such a nice big meal it would've also fled "in terror" just like all the others. The snakes we're talking about are Mozambique Spitting Cobra (they spray venom in your face if cornered, but it doesn't make you blind if you wash it off - something I learnt from a Jack Russell Terrier, not by personal experience, because they always took off in a hurry at the moment we spotted each other), Egyptian Cobra (we're ascending the scale of aggro reputation and "medical dangerousness" here), and Black Mamba. The stories about Mambas are that they're fearless and will attack. I've seen several, and they all fled. Maybe somewhere there are Mambas that will chase after a rider on horseback - as the legend goes - until they get their lethal bite in, but on "Snake Hill"? Nyet. I've never seen so many snakes in any other place (in most places you just don't see snakes, for starters). And all of them would only have bitten someone as a desperate last resort. (Hmm ... after I left the pythons turned up, and they're a bit more aggro. I don't know if a python would hunt a human, in general, but they don't back down if challenged. My brother sent a video of him and two other guys rescuing one of the guys Jack Russell from a python, and it had all the attitude of "That's MY food! Gimme back!" ) So do pythons hunt Jack Russells, then? Probably if they can. But Jack Russells would definitely hunt pythons. They're the most dangerous dogs on Earth. They kill Rottweillers. (They get stuck in their throats when they attack them.)
@GuitarGuyATX
@GuitarGuyATX 2 жыл бұрын
I grew up in Totnes. I am an old man now and I live in Texas. Playing on Dartmoor as I grew up is deep in my soul. Thank you for your understanding it. A pleasure to see. Also, I think that Dartmoor being covered in trees during the times you are talking about is under thought about. The story when I was a kid was that the locals had deforested it. But I have heard other ideas over time including a near miss from a meteor darkening the sky’s for years about 3000 years ago ? Have you heard anything about this ?
@Mantus86
@Mantus86 2 жыл бұрын
Hey Kayleigh, I just found your channel today :-) Great content! You are gorgeous and informative. I used to live in Devon, so it was fun to watch places I knew, and hear your feelings. Dartmoor is possibly the most magical area, but for cool rocks and ancient stuff North Devon and Cornwall are also worth your time. By the way, I think it has to be jam first, cream second....
@HistoryWithKayleigh
@HistoryWithKayleigh 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I'm sorry my scone cream and jam order offended you hahaha! (Just kidding 😂) welcome to my corner of the internet🤗
@Mantus86
@Mantus86 2 жыл бұрын
@@HistoryWithKayleigh haha ;-) we can agree to differ, OR you could come over to the dark side thanks, and for when you move here, let me be the first to say "welcome to the island"
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