Thank you for your beautiful guiding through paradise 😅 Having a terrible day & you brought sunshine into my soul ❤
@user-ck5ho3di2o6 күн бұрын
What happened we even sold worms,
@TheSandwhichman108Ай бұрын
Thomas and friends is what awakened by love of trains and railway’s in the first place. I still remember watching cranky bugs for the first time and how charming the early episodes of the show were.
@TheSandwhichman108Ай бұрын
Anyone here ever heard of ever heard of Lionel? They’re an american toy company that made model trains and such as well. There founder I forgot his name had a love of engineering much like Frank.Hornby. Several Lionel trains have become sought after collector items like the Banker’s special or a personal favorite of mine the Black diamond.
@lalopereyra3031Ай бұрын
Soundtrack Dior and I.....
@jeanneamato8278Ай бұрын
I can’t get enough of these. They’re so alive! So real ! So special!
@pierrecaron8731Ай бұрын
Is always fun to revisit the past, but the present is always better.
@LuciThomasHardylover-qx6tsАй бұрын
It's interesting that the BBC caption says that in the 1960's Britain was 'starting' to take recycling seriously...as though WW2 had never happened! The saddest thing is that all the good habits people developed so quickly during the war were instantly dismantled when war ended. We all joked about being brought up to save wrapping paper, bits of string, elastic bands and the like, but absolutely everything was used and reused during the war. Children collected what the business man and housewife didn't. Now we know that we can't dump rubbish in the sea or a hole in the ground, some of that discipline would be good to bring back. The amount of single use plastic,at a time when we have peak oil and oceans full of the stuff,is still growing and we simply have to stop wasting these finite resources.
@AussiePomАй бұрын
I like Ian Rice's comment that building a model railway at home is a waste of time really for it's never going to pay the mortgage or put food on the table. But it may just save someones sanity and therein lies the benefit of building a model railway when depression so besets modern life for a model railway unlike a video or computer game is 3D and you can get your hands everything. You can learn so many skills from carpentry to electrical to kit assembly to building structures from scratch to soldering to DCC software. For people who retire model railways keeps their mind active for once you're no longer working a full time job then the challenge you apply your mind to is no longer there and you can start to slide quickly downhill until life is meaningless and you pass away. So whilst some may think that a model railway has no part to play in the modern world I say they're very wrong and model railways are more important than ever simply for keeping one sane.
@James-kj4cy2 ай бұрын
the Islamists will not allow women any freedom! Free the world from Islam!
@rustyturner4312 ай бұрын
Memories are made of this... Early '60s, I lived in England. I bought a NorVin in quasi-Black Lightning tune for 600 pounds...and everyone I knew said I should be committed. But it was the fastest thing on two wheels, or 4 for that matter as only a VERY few exotic cars were faster (and none of them had the NorVin's acceleration). I rode it for 3 years, bringing it back to the states with me. It was a long time ago, but I don't remember having much trouble with it once I'd gotten the electrics de-bugged (damn you, Joseph Lucas, Prince of Darkness...the English drink warm beer because they all have Lucas refrigerators!). Stateside, the NorVin was even more remarkablek, as it just gobbled up freeway miles, and this was the era of vast expansion of the Interstate highway system. Funny thing is, I can't for the life of me remember what happened to it... And, yes, I'm an old fart now (86 and still riding), but I still remember many lesser bikes I've owned and sold. I think the NorVin may have been part of the trade than netted me a beautiful '57 Corvette with newer brakes and a ton of rare go-fast parts...but I'm not sure. If I'd kept all the bikes and cars I've owned over the years, I'd have a collection worth many millions of dollars, but I've got my memories...and those are priceless (and I don't have to store them)!
@kelleydavis10102 ай бұрын
150 mph wearing a speedo?! i'd probably soil that speedo @ 150 mph.
@kerrypond67912 ай бұрын
Great song❤❤❤
@djscoah80372 ай бұрын
Enchanting
@ttm26092 ай бұрын
Nothing has changed really, rich getting richer because of the rest of population
@Phil-oj5nr2 ай бұрын
Got my first train set, Hornby 0 gauge clockwork, in 1953. Have been modelling railways ever since. A great hobby, you meet other modellers and help each other with any problems that arise. Visited the Bassett Locke shop in High Holborn many decades ago. On visits back to UK visited as many model shops as I could. Semi-retired in Picton, South Island, New Zealand.
@MartynBird-uy4zb3 ай бұрын
I m 64 . I would have been 4 years old in 1964 .yet this is also me .I have for many many years have leaned towards the sixties.soul or northern soul which it became known as at the end of the sixties iwas into .then came in 1979 the mod revival along with phil Daniels and quadrophenia .it hasn't t gone away .over the many years the music the mods and everything to do with the sixties and mod movement has still been going strong. My brother and me with mates who we knew in the mid to late 70 s we had the scooters then my brother had a g s vespasian loads of lights and mirrors mod ralleys still going now as then. Northern soul the mods and the unforgettable sixties even though I wasn't there in 64 I m still in around about way apart of it all sharing the experience.
@zzzsydneyhom13793 ай бұрын
As the saying goes, "I'd rather find my sister in a whore house than see my best mate on a Honda". British bikes rule!!!
@humbertofigueroa34553 ай бұрын
I can watch this documentary over and over again. Thank you
@ciaoinlin19673 ай бұрын
Full of love !
@mathersdavid51133 ай бұрын
Pears-a singer with no voice at all but great artistry.
@mariosxrusostomou55033 ай бұрын
Old good times ❤ templar
@steamgent45923 ай бұрын
Odd beliefs, I’ve always modeled about a half Century or more before my time. I’ve never liked the railways I grew up in nor live in. I’ve always modeled early 1900s and cheat and add motive power from the 1940s as the newest. All heavyweight coaches from the era. British trains are the same about 1910- 1940 that I model. BR never even exists yet on my railway.
@gee-wizz.50504 ай бұрын
6:33 llanrumney may have been a long way from cardiff centre, but it WAS still within cardiff boundary. Us llanrumnians were still Cardiffians lol!
@stevecurd91134 ай бұрын
My father's 79 & rides a 63 3ta & I'm 53 & ride a 67 T100T Daytona we ride out every Sunday & love every minute of that time with my Dad keeps him feeling young
@geoffreycarson23114 ай бұрын
BRITISH BALLS !!!Back Then 😁g
@pata2994 ай бұрын
What I would give to have Vidal Sassoon do my hair! Sadly, he's gone as are the times .
@pata2994 ай бұрын
"up ya get!"
@highway264able5 ай бұрын
Still have two Triumph 750’s…
@pasqualemontuoro9865 ай бұрын
Vorrei un contatto
@paularobinson72305 ай бұрын
Russell Senior ❤
@ttm26095 ай бұрын
Where are all the immigrants of dark colour 😂😂😂😂
@marzara51825 ай бұрын
Excellent series ,watched it on TV a few years ago,great to find it on KZread.
@DavidDougan-vs5gm5 ай бұрын
Make your dream reality buy a vincent vee twin one of the few classic bikes that will not go down in value and you will experince something that cannot be put into words but treat it with respect ,,,,,, or it will bite you.
@alan-sk7ky5 ай бұрын
6:07 Ahh, Cherokee tartan...
@garyfrancis61935 ай бұрын
I wanted to see when this started. I expect the 19th Century but when in the 19th Century? Who were the first to create model train sets? It must have coincided with electricity becoming more common in cities and homes. This says “ history of model trains” but doesn’t say anything about its origins.
@Thornus_______6 ай бұрын
A Railroad of a million tears
@EpulNorhan6 ай бұрын
when i learn about thai burma railway history, the first thing i didnt know about the highest dead of Malay & Tamil at the death railway. Of course, i know there is POW from Allied. I started know this when im visiting Railway Museum at Kanchanaburi, Thailand about 2 weeks ago.
@marie-ctunnicliff5136 ай бұрын
I remember this from when I worked for a computer company (SPL London) in the mid 60s! Things were so exciting then and optimistic - unlike now.
@jadysinclair75396 ай бұрын
Glorious from both. We shall never see (or hear) their like again.
@johnnyb88256 ай бұрын
I was born in 1966. In my late 20s I was talking about the 1960s to a guy who was two decades older than me. I said, "I feel like I missed something." He said, "You did."
One of the tower blocks in the Bristol development featured in this film was recently condemned on safety grounds and the residents forced to move with only a few hour’s notice.
@tonylarussa40468 ай бұрын
The Sicani and the Sicels were the first people of Sicily.
@tonylarussa40468 ай бұрын
Caffe Florian is 40 years older than Caffe Greco.
@deepindercheema49178 ай бұрын
The theme music was not used by Rank when the films were show, The BBC have chosen 'Another Happening' by Neil Richardson.
@malacca19518 ай бұрын
A year after Britten died, I knocked on the door of the Red House in Aldeburgh to ask if I could take some photos of the house and spent an afternoon chatting with PP. We talked about Shostakovich, Kathleen Ferrier, War Requiem, Huddersfield Choral Society and Peter Grimes. I wish iPhones had been around then as I only have a simple photo of us outside the famous garden gate! A wonderful day full of both happy and sad memories.
Пікірлер
Thank you for your beautiful guiding through paradise 😅 Having a terrible day & you brought sunshine into my soul ❤
What happened we even sold worms,
Thomas and friends is what awakened by love of trains and railway’s in the first place. I still remember watching cranky bugs for the first time and how charming the early episodes of the show were.
Anyone here ever heard of ever heard of Lionel? They’re an american toy company that made model trains and such as well. There founder I forgot his name had a love of engineering much like Frank.Hornby. Several Lionel trains have become sought after collector items like the Banker’s special or a personal favorite of mine the Black diamond.
Soundtrack Dior and I.....
I can’t get enough of these. They’re so alive! So real ! So special!
Is always fun to revisit the past, but the present is always better.
It's interesting that the BBC caption says that in the 1960's Britain was 'starting' to take recycling seriously...as though WW2 had never happened! The saddest thing is that all the good habits people developed so quickly during the war were instantly dismantled when war ended. We all joked about being brought up to save wrapping paper, bits of string, elastic bands and the like, but absolutely everything was used and reused during the war. Children collected what the business man and housewife didn't. Now we know that we can't dump rubbish in the sea or a hole in the ground, some of that discipline would be good to bring back. The amount of single use plastic,at a time when we have peak oil and oceans full of the stuff,is still growing and we simply have to stop wasting these finite resources.
I like Ian Rice's comment that building a model railway at home is a waste of time really for it's never going to pay the mortgage or put food on the table. But it may just save someones sanity and therein lies the benefit of building a model railway when depression so besets modern life for a model railway unlike a video or computer game is 3D and you can get your hands everything. You can learn so many skills from carpentry to electrical to kit assembly to building structures from scratch to soldering to DCC software. For people who retire model railways keeps their mind active for once you're no longer working a full time job then the challenge you apply your mind to is no longer there and you can start to slide quickly downhill until life is meaningless and you pass away. So whilst some may think that a model railway has no part to play in the modern world I say they're very wrong and model railways are more important than ever simply for keeping one sane.
the Islamists will not allow women any freedom! Free the world from Islam!
Memories are made of this... Early '60s, I lived in England. I bought a NorVin in quasi-Black Lightning tune for 600 pounds...and everyone I knew said I should be committed. But it was the fastest thing on two wheels, or 4 for that matter as only a VERY few exotic cars were faster (and none of them had the NorVin's acceleration). I rode it for 3 years, bringing it back to the states with me. It was a long time ago, but I don't remember having much trouble with it once I'd gotten the electrics de-bugged (damn you, Joseph Lucas, Prince of Darkness...the English drink warm beer because they all have Lucas refrigerators!). Stateside, the NorVin was even more remarkablek, as it just gobbled up freeway miles, and this was the era of vast expansion of the Interstate highway system. Funny thing is, I can't for the life of me remember what happened to it... And, yes, I'm an old fart now (86 and still riding), but I still remember many lesser bikes I've owned and sold. I think the NorVin may have been part of the trade than netted me a beautiful '57 Corvette with newer brakes and a ton of rare go-fast parts...but I'm not sure. If I'd kept all the bikes and cars I've owned over the years, I'd have a collection worth many millions of dollars, but I've got my memories...and those are priceless (and I don't have to store them)!
150 mph wearing a speedo?! i'd probably soil that speedo @ 150 mph.
Great song❤❤❤
Enchanting
Nothing has changed really, rich getting richer because of the rest of population
Got my first train set, Hornby 0 gauge clockwork, in 1953. Have been modelling railways ever since. A great hobby, you meet other modellers and help each other with any problems that arise. Visited the Bassett Locke shop in High Holborn many decades ago. On visits back to UK visited as many model shops as I could. Semi-retired in Picton, South Island, New Zealand.
I m 64 . I would have been 4 years old in 1964 .yet this is also me .I have for many many years have leaned towards the sixties.soul or northern soul which it became known as at the end of the sixties iwas into .then came in 1979 the mod revival along with phil Daniels and quadrophenia .it hasn't t gone away .over the many years the music the mods and everything to do with the sixties and mod movement has still been going strong. My brother and me with mates who we knew in the mid to late 70 s we had the scooters then my brother had a g s vespasian loads of lights and mirrors mod ralleys still going now as then. Northern soul the mods and the unforgettable sixties even though I wasn't there in 64 I m still in around about way apart of it all sharing the experience.
As the saying goes, "I'd rather find my sister in a whore house than see my best mate on a Honda". British bikes rule!!!
I can watch this documentary over and over again. Thank you
Full of love !
Pears-a singer with no voice at all but great artistry.
Old good times ❤ templar
Odd beliefs, I’ve always modeled about a half Century or more before my time. I’ve never liked the railways I grew up in nor live in. I’ve always modeled early 1900s and cheat and add motive power from the 1940s as the newest. All heavyweight coaches from the era. British trains are the same about 1910- 1940 that I model. BR never even exists yet on my railway.
6:33 llanrumney may have been a long way from cardiff centre, but it WAS still within cardiff boundary. Us llanrumnians were still Cardiffians lol!
My father's 79 & rides a 63 3ta & I'm 53 & ride a 67 T100T Daytona we ride out every Sunday & love every minute of that time with my Dad keeps him feeling young
BRITISH BALLS !!!Back Then 😁g
What I would give to have Vidal Sassoon do my hair! Sadly, he's gone as are the times .
"up ya get!"
Still have two Triumph 750’s…
Vorrei un contatto
Russell Senior ❤
Where are all the immigrants of dark colour 😂😂😂😂
Excellent series ,watched it on TV a few years ago,great to find it on KZread.
Make your dream reality buy a vincent vee twin one of the few classic bikes that will not go down in value and you will experince something that cannot be put into words but treat it with respect ,,,,,, or it will bite you.
6:07 Ahh, Cherokee tartan...
I wanted to see when this started. I expect the 19th Century but when in the 19th Century? Who were the first to create model train sets? It must have coincided with electricity becoming more common in cities and homes. This says “ history of model trains” but doesn’t say anything about its origins.
A Railroad of a million tears
when i learn about thai burma railway history, the first thing i didnt know about the highest dead of Malay & Tamil at the death railway. Of course, i know there is POW from Allied. I started know this when im visiting Railway Museum at Kanchanaburi, Thailand about 2 weeks ago.
I remember this from when I worked for a computer company (SPL London) in the mid 60s! Things were so exciting then and optimistic - unlike now.
Glorious from both. We shall never see (or hear) their like again.
I was born in 1966. In my late 20s I was talking about the 1960s to a guy who was two decades older than me. I said, "I feel like I missed something." He said, "You did."
Sublime. Music. !!!!!!!!!!!!! Grand. BravO. !!!!❤!!!!
... great, thanks :)
does anyone know the closing theme please.
1:36 YOU COULD BOIL A KETTLE ON THAT
One of the tower blocks in the Bristol development featured in this film was recently condemned on safety grounds and the residents forced to move with only a few hour’s notice.
The Sicani and the Sicels were the first people of Sicily.
Caffe Florian is 40 years older than Caffe Greco.
The theme music was not used by Rank when the films were show, The BBC have chosen 'Another Happening' by Neil Richardson.
A year after Britten died, I knocked on the door of the Red House in Aldeburgh to ask if I could take some photos of the house and spent an afternoon chatting with PP. We talked about Shostakovich, Kathleen Ferrier, War Requiem, Huddersfield Choral Society and Peter Grimes. I wish iPhones had been around then as I only have a simple photo of us outside the famous garden gate! A wonderful day full of both happy and sad memories.