Hen Heaven

Hen Heaven

Hen Heaven not only specialise in providing the perfect hen party for the bride-to-be, but also here, creating videos about subjects that interest us... and of course will interest you! From the latest film to our newest hen party activity, you can see it all here on Hen Heaven TV!

New Videos Every Tuesday & Friday

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Tenerife Hen Weekend

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Barcelona Hen Weekends

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York Hen Parties

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Benefit Hen Party Package

Dublin Hen Parties

Dublin Hen Parties

Пікірлер

  • @aarongeorge5012
    @aarongeorge501215 күн бұрын

    Honestly nothing better in life? Very shameful behaviours from all of them. If u have employers, I hope they sack u for this kind of behaviour

  • @OfficialRedDirtNurse
    @OfficialRedDirtNurseАй бұрын

    When you do an update, share the tradition of drinking from a quaich. 😊

  • @OfficialRedDirtNurse
    @OfficialRedDirtNurseАй бұрын

    When I was a kid in Glasgow we loved a scramble.

  • @paulbacchus1015
    @paulbacchus10152 ай бұрын

    My favourite word - Crabbit.

  • @carolechapple6111
    @carolechapple61112 ай бұрын

    Loch Lomond should be the track by Runrig, the best ever.

  • @charmainelamont2020
    @charmainelamont20203 ай бұрын

    It is not slang.

  • @JimmyJamesJimbo
    @JimmyJamesJimbo3 ай бұрын

    Haha I’m a Scottish American and was engaged to a Scot and her mother always teased her for speaking “posh” 😂 anyway love your shit. If she spoke like you maybe I’d have gone through with the engagement and married that wee sassy lass lol

  • @irenedavo3768
    @irenedavo37683 ай бұрын

    Remember to Subscribe

  • @Kiljakki_i_norn
    @Kiljakki_i_norn3 ай бұрын

    The sixpence is because if you wanted to object to a wedding you had to throw a sixpence in front of the bride. If the bride couldn't match the sixpence then the wedding had to stop. Wedding dresses don't have pockets so carrying a sixpence in your shoe ment that if someone tried to stop your wedding out of spite you had the funds to keep the wedding going.

  • @purposedrivenvoice
    @purposedrivenvoice3 ай бұрын

    that scots flag is almost like a confederate flag . those are now illegal - unfortunately ....though not for private citizens

  • @marktgillan
    @marktgillan4 ай бұрын

    Not slang. Scots is a language.

  • @jimmybirtles3800
    @jimmybirtles38007 ай бұрын

    Makes me miss hame.

  • @Viky.A.V.
    @Viky.A.V.7 ай бұрын

    Peely wally - that's me!) Your fairy-tale-ish accent and looks make me wanna ask, "Merida, is that you?" =) Actually, if I speak with my native (Ukrainian) accent, it'd sound similar. We loove the rolling Rrrr, I call it the Real R, haha Thanks for sharing!

  • @frankbrou7971
    @frankbrou79717 ай бұрын

    Yer a fun one...

  • @williamstclair7906
    @williamstclair79068 ай бұрын

    Mighty

  • @dixoncreates1131
    @dixoncreates11318 ай бұрын

    I filmed a wedding with a ceilidh and it was the best one I've ever been to, let alone filmed kzread.info/dash/bejne/qoaIuayhprHLm8Y.html&ab_channel=DixonCreates

  • @jamesrudd2275
    @jamesrudd22758 ай бұрын

    i love her Scottish accent i am in love

  • @reecedignan8365
    @reecedignan83659 ай бұрын

    Bit late to the party but why no. I believe the reason Loch Lomond is so popular at weddings - besides just being a banging song - is that it’s a very beautiful love song between a man and his sweetheart. Essentially their is history to the song. Originally it was a poem about 2 Scottish soldiers that had been captured during the Jacobite rebellion. 1 was to be released, the other to face execution. So the one to be executed says to the other to take the high road home, while he’ll take the low road (in Celtic tradition the dead will always find their way back to their homelands under the ground after they die). So his words are to the man to live to return home to cherish his love, because he will no longer be able to cherish his sweetheart on the banks on Loch Lomond.

  • @DOMiNOUKAE
    @DOMiNOUKAE10 ай бұрын

    N U T

  • @bekkibuenviaje9680
    @bekkibuenviaje968010 ай бұрын

    The sixpence one is still around bc I was given a lucky sixpence by my grandmother to wear in my shoe for my wedding. The marriage didn’t work out tho so so much for that 😂

  • @marasmelkinson4427
    @marasmelkinson4427 Жыл бұрын

    Loveeeee your voice

  • @bernardmansire8642
    @bernardmansire8642 Жыл бұрын

    😁😁😁

  • @SergioVasov
    @SergioVasov Жыл бұрын

    Why you speak without accent?

  • @coliealexis8155
    @coliealexis8155 Жыл бұрын

    your accent is fake

  • @ianclough2198
    @ianclough2198 Жыл бұрын

    A dirk.

  • @Deluge4000
    @Deluge4000 Жыл бұрын

    SCRAN is a very common word in the Australian navy. It also means "food", but it's become an unflattering acronym that now stands for "S*-er, I mean.. ~stuff~ Cooked by the Royal Australian Navy"

  • @smokedham88
    @smokedham88 Жыл бұрын

    I'm getting married today and did 3 of these things, late night, wrote vowels before and my partner is hung over haha

  • @user-ju4of5pl9y
    @user-ju4of5pl9y Жыл бұрын

    Before forgetting the Scottish culture: Scottish children complained to their parents' that, they are bad speaking scottish language, and they asked them Either teachers study it well in schools or you have to teach it us secretly at homes F.Northmans

  • @SeekingChaim
    @SeekingChaim Жыл бұрын

    I like “Having a chinwag”, to chat.

  • @DioneC141
    @DioneC141 Жыл бұрын

    In Ireland we also use the Word eeijit

  • @arthurjohnson9982
    @arthurjohnson9982 Жыл бұрын

    As Scottish as David Cameron delivering a patronising speech at the London Velodrome. You’re not Scottish at all. I bet you don’t even like Irn Bru.

  • @iainmcclain
    @iainmcclain Жыл бұрын

    Crazy. I have wondered if we could get around in Scotland but now I know. Definitely. My family uses many of these words.

  • @iainmcclain
    @iainmcclain Жыл бұрын

    Being Scottish, I have thought about how to incorporate my family history into my wedding if I ever have one. As for the Kilts! Way to go!. As for the thistle, the first story is more reasonable.

  • @elizabethdible323
    @elizabethdible323 Жыл бұрын

    Every time I pass here I think of my Mum This was originally Lady Glenorkys church where my Mum and Dad were married That was 1948 I was christened there 1 year later 1949 I was happy to see that the original frontage had been retained Happy and sad memories for me

  • @katelynnramirez8610
    @katelynnramirez8610 Жыл бұрын

    Im Scottish,french,polish,and a bit of Mexican and i love to understand other cultures especially what i came from

  • @haileymaurer122
    @haileymaurer122 Жыл бұрын

    This is such a lovely video, and you have a lot of knowledge of your wonderful culture. My fiance and I are American but both happen to have Irish roots and are hoping to respectfully incorporate Irish traditions throughout the ceremony. We couldn't find a Reedy tartan but we did choose a lovely tartan that incorporates our wedding colors of red, gold and green. We're planning to incorporate the same colors in the handfasting cords. We're also having my dad put the lucky penny in my shoe before I walk the aisle. We understand we're not native to the culture, but hold a lot of love and respect for ancestors :). Thank you for the insightful video!

  • @dark_one1337
    @dark_one1337 Жыл бұрын

    As Scottish as Billy Connolly dancing the Highland Fling in front of a bagpiper. You’re witty, occasionally belligerent, addicted to fried food and unfailingly friendly: you’re the most Scottish person ever. now tha tae sorted out, how do I fling? It's so hillarious I must've been adopted.

  • @Scotlandshop
    @Scotlandshop Жыл бұрын

    More Scottish wedding traditions, handfasting, scrambles and tartan kzread.info/dash/bejne/i3iNz8mihrLWh8Y.html

  • @daintydinah7648
    @daintydinah7648 Жыл бұрын

    Us Geordies do this too we call it "the hoy oot"

  • @laurenmontera9516
    @laurenmontera9516 Жыл бұрын

    Don't scream/karaoke your voice away the night before you get married. You need to be able to say "I do", or whatever vows you have planned. So, save your voice the trauma of screaming at your staff and party for whatever happened and talk it out with someone else to keep you calm. I'm getting married tomorrow.

  • @davejardine9759
    @davejardine9759 Жыл бұрын

    "Fizzy Juice"! "Fizzy Juice" Yer jokin'" In Scotland it's ca'd "Ginger" or just Juice or even Skoosh. Ye can even get Lemonade... "Any danger o' a boatle a' lemonade mister?" "Sure son, whit flavour?" An whit's wi' Dreich which you're pronouncin' "Dreikit" It's pronounced Dree - CH (wi' the "CH" like clearin' yer throat like in LoCH!) If yer oot oan a dreich day wi' a smirr fae the haar aff the sea ye'll end up drooket (soaking wet) Are ye mibi mixin' the wurds up? Otherwise... Gaun yersel Lassie!

  • @jeannemarkham1149
    @jeannemarkham1149 Жыл бұрын

    Hilarious

  • @walkingthroughdusk
    @walkingthroughdusk Жыл бұрын

    You are absolutely gorgeous! 💯

  • @sczpizjuan
    @sczpizjuan Жыл бұрын

    As a Korean who loves Swedish music, it’s likely that I am well aware of the meaning of “braw”.

  • @christophereasterday6559
    @christophereasterday65592 жыл бұрын

    Stairheid rammy.

  • @lizdoll6039
    @lizdoll60392 жыл бұрын

    Getting married in a week in Hawaii 🥳✈️💒🏖 Helpful video!

  • @cameronjacobs2719
    @cameronjacobs27192 жыл бұрын

    What about "blackening the bride and groom"

  • @saltr2413
    @saltr24132 жыл бұрын

    Im from Aberdeen and when we talk about dirty, we say 'mUcket' instead of 'mOcket'

  • @slhughes1267
    @slhughes12672 жыл бұрын

    Americans still use "nut" in reference to "head" i.e. "That person is off their nut"/ they're crazy. "That [item] is driving me off my nut"/ the item is driving a person crazy. " That person is a nut case/nutter"/ they're crazy.

  • @inconnu4961
    @inconnu496110 ай бұрын

    We do? Where do we do this at? Havent heard those phrases in decades! Generally, now nut refers to the male anatomy. So if english is not ones native tongue, and you are in the States, i wouldnt use that word in ANY other context other than its proper meaning unless the people around you use it to mean 'head' or 'noggin'. it can go wrong more times than it can go right! But nut case & nutter will be used as you say.

  • @LilianTejada
    @LilianTejada9 ай бұрын

    ​@@inconnu4961in the 70s it was very common to hear "he's nuts" to mean crazy. To talk about nuts in the other meaning started with my children's generation (90s?). Same thing with pussy which before that time it was an affectionate way to refer to a cat. Language changes with each generation, and older meanings become obsolete.

  • @slhughes1267
    @slhughes12672 жыл бұрын

    That ancient Brace tartan closely resembles the ancient McMillan