CoralJackz

CoralJackz

We are Coral & Jacky - Welcome to our main channel, where we share our love of history and folklore while cycling and hiking with our dog, Zeb!

Discovering hidden gems, from Neolithic sites to rugged mountain trails and scenic coastal routes... ancient stone circles, ruins and magical landmarks. We'll take you on a journey through time, documenting the archealogical discoveries as well as the myths and legends that surround these architectural marvels.

We also share craft, woodwork and review videos...

So hit that subscribe button to join our community and embark on this journey with us!

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  • @markpack1111
    @markpack11115 сағат бұрын

    Why do e bike riders never raise their seats 😂

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz17 минут бұрын

    Not sure but we don't have ebikes.. 🤣

  • @juliamorganscott9384
    @juliamorganscott9384Күн бұрын

    Why is one of the stones covered in cut marks, I wonder?

  • @midast1590
    @midast1590Күн бұрын

    This is great. I'm trying to pick one of these up for my dog. I have an 80 lb lab and i'm wondering if I can fit him and some cargo in the back as well. If i attached that cargo divider coming from the top of the frame down to the back end of the board, do you think that would leave him enough room?

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackzКүн бұрын

    Hi there, our dog is around 25kg so a bit less than yours. We do put cargo in the back behind the divider and he has plenty of space. However, we did buy our trailer second hand for a reasonably cheap price. If you are thinking about spending the full amount on a new one, we would highly recommend getting the one they sell that is specifically for dogs.. your pooch may have a bit more space then and it will already have a hard bottom without you having to alter it :)

  • @midast1590
    @midast1590Күн бұрын

    @@coraljackz Ok thanks. Yeah, there's quite a few in my area selling second hand for cheap so I figured, if the conversion doesn't work out, it's not gonna be too costly.

  • @COJAZ
    @COJAZ2 күн бұрын

    ❤❤

  • @jenniferharrison4319
    @jenniferharrison43193 күн бұрын

    I love to look for interesting rocks and boulders in South West Lake District but abandon searching when the bracken grows. These are probably natural as johnbruce2868 mentioned. I have found the same shape on boulders that are near Neolithic and Bronze Age monuments. It may be that the capping stone was selected because it had these hollows.As you stated, they may have been used for a ritual purposes. Do you check if the hollows are aligned with any particular astronomical event, solstice’s etc 🤔

  • @JesseP.Watson
    @JesseP.Watson4 күн бұрын

    Scuse me, I was half asleep browsing when I commented last night. I am, at present, a fellow dolmenic enthusiast in Pembrokeshire. On Dinas Moor at present, if you pass by and see my old ramshackle white transit with boxes on the roof, do come and say hello, be a pleasure to talk ancient wonders with you. All the best, Jess.

  • @cattysplat
    @cattysplat4 күн бұрын

    Wild how big Blobby was in Britain at the time, even a Number 1 single. Watched the blob every Saturday on Noel Edmonds House Party.

  • @JesseP.Watson
    @JesseP.Watson4 күн бұрын

    Lot of folks talking bunkem here, anyone who's worked in dolmen construction knows this dolmen was a second (I run a small megalithic contractor firm, dolmen, circles, pyramids, usual crap for those seeking Godhood). Those two triangular holes are a very clumsy moulding flaw anyhow. Common issue these days with the state of the workforce, not like it used to be.

  • @Bell_the_Cat
    @Bell_the_Cat7 күн бұрын

    Massive capstone. Nice to see a chamber I've never heard of. Thanks for uploading. Samhain is pronounced 'sow-in,' I believe.

  • @N0C0MPLY
    @N0C0MPLY7 күн бұрын

    Great video but you pronounce Manorbier like an American tourist lol. It's pronounced Manor beer.

  • @18Ty
    @18Ty8 күн бұрын

    Lovely stuff 👌

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz2 күн бұрын

    @@18Ty diolch yn fawr 😁

  • @MyKharli
    @MyKharli8 күн бұрын

    They look like normal weathering /frost crack stone work to me . I am sure this feature is not rare .

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz8 күн бұрын

    Hi, thanks for commenting! It is rare to find these on a capstone of a monument, but yes they do look like natural features that would go unnoticed on a regular bolder or outcrop.

  • @user-df9wv1gs4w
    @user-df9wv1gs4w8 күн бұрын

    The most curious thing about these sites, is that they are all over the world in an era that man supposedly didnt have global knowledge. Or travel the globe. Like so many other anomalies, the pyramids, polygonal building, certain ways of dressing stone and more that i cant recall now that are global too. There seems to be many holes or gaps in our histories as the things i have seen propose a differing history to that which we are taught!

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz8 күн бұрын

    It's an interesting point, there is a growing consensus over the timeline of when the architecture moved across mainland Europe and over to the British isles... but certainly still lots of gaps.

  • @JesseP.Watson
    @JesseP.Watson4 күн бұрын

    Good to remember that certain things recur as common solutions and/or entertainments or interests. For example, the vast majority of cultures create some kind of bed, a house, a table, a chair, a bowl, a saw, a knife, clothing... the list is actually endless. These inventions may or may not share a point of origin, they are, pretty much, the only solution or the obvious solution to certain needs and or problems and so very similar solutions /designs reoccur independently, slightly different but essentially the same often in many ways. Notice that no two dolmens in Britain are identical and other dolmens around the world differ in ways to the forms seen here often - the Russian 'dolmen' is much more of a box, often with a hole in the front, unlike anything seem in Britain, the Japanese 'dolmen' form is likewise not exactly like anything seen in Britain, not that there is a set pattern here to compare to anyway. That being the case, what actually IS a dolmen when the term is used in that global sense? - it is simply a stone set on some others, there is no other criteria to qualify. Some look like giant tables with round legs, some are boxes made with thin plates, some are made from dressed stone, some are made from unworked stone, some are entirely enclosed, some entirely open, some big, some small, some have a stone atop over-hanging the 'legs' by a long way... some do not... some are round, some square, some triangular... some have multiple 'rooms' beneath them, some just one, some none. You get the idea. Point being... when we say 'dolmens are found right around the globe', well, what is a dolmen in these terms? - it is a monument featuring a stone balanced on others that might look a bit like a little house of a cow sometimes or any number of things. So, do we need a global civilisation to invent this and travel around the world suggesting the idea to everyone who built something like this, or might lots of people build something like this independently, perhaps for different reasons entirely, like lots of people have built a kind of table, independently, to put something on...? The other MAJOR problem is that megalithic building can be seem occurring in very different periods around the world - it's still going on in Indonesia in fact. So, it might be better to consider it a stage human cultures seem to pass through as they develop, rather than a one-off invention that was spread around the world. If you think about it, that's actually a far more interesting thought because it says : why do humans keep having this idea to build these massive stone house/table things....? Why, seemingly, if there are a load of people and some big boulders around, do they start building these structures? What is it that makes that form so appealing to us... or does it in fact have some obvious use or significance to people at that stage in cultural development that we cannot imagine once having passed through it?!? All the best, hope that gives a few thoughts.

  • @user-df9wv1gs4w
    @user-df9wv1gs4w3 күн бұрын

    @@JesseP.Watson I totally understand the point you made but yet, there are to many instances of this type of, same ideas in a differing format. There will always be ideas that pop up in different parts of the world and are essentially the same thing. There are instances of this in modern times with technology. This is just one example of those coincidences which are global. There are many others i have come across over the years. Just two classic examples for you, the pyramids and polygonal stonework. Both all over the world. Can your theory explain that? Any many many other instances of building and dressing stone etc etc. I just find it a stretch to believe these things occured independantly in every country and continent.

  • @user-df9wv1gs4w
    @user-df9wv1gs4w8 күн бұрын

    I visited Three Cliffs Bay on the Gower about a couple of months ago with my son. Looking to see if we could find any neolithic sites there. I remember as a child, holidaying there that we came across a site, which was cleared and looked after. Of what to me now seems a communal burial site. 2 rows of construction with about 6 chambers each side. It was in a forested area. We could not find it anywhere, we spent the day looking. Though we did find a site on a promontary that looked like it could be for someone of stature, considering its location and size to the other site that i recall. Going to have another day there to look as it has intrigued me not being able to find it. I havnt seen anything else like it in the yrs i have explored youtube. Which is why i want to find it and put it here for people to see. Great video buddy!

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz8 күн бұрын

    Hmmm, not sure exactly what you are describing... or at least nothing jumps to mind. Could you give a bit more detail? I know you say 'you haven't seen anything else like it', but would you say it looked more like Parc Le Breos chambered tomb, Sweynes Howes or Cerrig YGof... interesting either way. Oh, and thanks, glad you liked the video!

  • @user-df9wv1gs4w
    @user-df9wv1gs4w7 күн бұрын

    @@coraljackz It looks like the rectangular slab chambers of cerrig y gof. Yet instead of them being seperate like in cerrig, they are alongside one another in a row. 2 rows of about 6 chambers either side, with a walkway down the center. The overall structure was a rectangle. From memory the slabs were no more than around a meter in height. Now, i dont know if my memory serves me well or not, as i checked maps and dont see it anywhere, where i thought it was. I will take another trip though and scour google earth.

  • @zammap
    @zammap8 күн бұрын

    The Indian music is really out of place in a video about prehistoric Britain, and it's so loud that it's hard to hear the narrator.

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz8 күн бұрын

    Hi, yes we've pinned a comment apologising about the audio... we had only been making videos for a few months, and this was one of our first 'history videos'... please do have a look at our new stuff and let us know what you think 😁

  • @johnbruce2868
    @johnbruce28689 күн бұрын

    I'm a retired archaeologist with geological experience. This is a very interesting 'archaeology in the landscape' video (I subscribed) which I enjoyed very much, but don't let imagination replace reality as early 18 - 19th. century amateur commentators (like Fenton) did. The depressions are entirely natural features being formed by cleavage along very obvious bedding planes. They are quite distinct from cup marks. "Druids", btw, are associated only with Iron Age Celtic cultures through the writings of Roman historians but not with any of the earlier Neolithic / Bronze Age cultures responsible for megaliths, dolmens, standing stones, henge monuments, etc. That pure speculation is also founded in the imagination of early 18 -19th. century commentators. They were an enthusiastic, but uneducated, lot who frequently came to the wildest of dramatic conclusions. Years ago I excavated Horsenden Hill, Perivale, speculated, by similarly minded 19th. century commentators, to be a Saxon Hill Fort (they didn't build such structures!). Horsa (Saxon name) + dun (Goidelic Celtic morpheme), the two language construction didn't seem to bother them so they pounced on the obvious theatrical solution. The banks and ditches were natural and caused by landslips of London Clay when inclined at an angle of more than 17%. It can be difficult to distinguish geological from archaeological features. Learning about the monuments of Pembrokeshire is good, entertaining, stuff.

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz8 күн бұрын

    Hi, thanks for your positive and cautionary words! We're aware of the antiquarians many flaws, and take their accounts with a bucket of salt, but we do like to include their perspective. Sometimes demonstrating how much culture and opinions have changed over the past couple of centuries, sometimes simply as comic relief. But I do hope the phrasing made it clear enough that it was their opinion rather than ours; "over 200 years ago... it was still commonly believed that sites like this were druidic alters". We do agree that the depressions are likely natural features, but the striking red colour when we visited did get us wondering if this was present when Fenton visited, inspiring him to write that they 'received the blood'... A better question may be, were these marks likely to have been present before the structure was raised, and if so, did they utilise them in any way? Great example of anachronistic antiquarian assumptions, they are altogether too common... currently researching a Stonehenge deep dive and the early assumption about its age and who created it are quite varied and amusing!!

  • @johnbruce2868
    @johnbruce28685 күн бұрын

    @@coraljackz The red staining, likely caused by an alga of the phylum Rhodophyta, whose habitats included still fresh water pools, was most certainly present when Fenton visited. His first passion was poetry which goes far to explain his vivid imagination and enthusiasm for drama. Alas! The stone is pre-historic, so we'll never know whether the triangular depressions were used in any way and I wouldn't think about it too much... unless you find similar depressions elsewhere. Looking forward to the Stonehenge deep dive! ATB.

  • @donwright3427
    @donwright34279 күн бұрын

    Pembrokeshire is a magical place

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz8 күн бұрын

    It really is!

  • @fado792
    @fado7929 күн бұрын

    Markings are from frost. Dont spill my time.

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz8 күн бұрын

    It's entirely possible that freeze-thaw weathering has played its part in the formation of these depressions, thanks for your opinion. The rest of the video is about antiquarian perspectives, location and what it is like to walk to the site. Certainly would not want to spill your time, it might get on something and stain :)

  • @18Ty
    @18Ty8 күн бұрын

    Tough guy picking on a lady and her dog 😮

  • @anthonymichaelwilson8401
    @anthonymichaelwilson84019 күн бұрын

    A lost civilisation all over the Uk 🇬🇧 😊

  • @mikeclarke952
    @mikeclarke95210 күн бұрын

    Your dog looks a lot like my Chester. He's a Boston terrier and Staffy mix with tiger stripes like your dog.

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz2 күн бұрын

    @@mikeclarke952 aw lovely 😍 thanks for watching!

  • @karukurokami
    @karukurokami10 күн бұрын

    I was recommended your channel by chance and was pleasantly surprised. Im my opinion, the hollows on the stone are natural. That's at least what it immediately struck me as. On the smaller hollow, it is clear that its one surface follows a natural fault in the rock (which in fact has even started cracking open), and the most vertical surface looks very much like a crack itself due to the relatively sharp upper edge. I've seen many similar geometric hollows on large boulders where water has entered cracks, frozen, and broken off chunks over time. The larger hollow appears to follow smaller faults and has a similarly geometric shape inside Ultimately it also depends on context. Unless clearly man-made hollows are present on stones at other sites, it seems unlikely that this one would have been done intentionally

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz10 күн бұрын

    Hi @karukurokami, thanks for giving our videos a try and getting involved! My gut feeling is that they are likely natural features and, as you say, I've also seen similar geometric hollows on natural boulders. This is also an area that would have been under more than a kilometre of ice during the last glaciation period, so they could potentially have been formed when huge forces separated this section from the outcrop above. If we went with the assumption that they ARE natural, then the question could be: "Were these marks formed before or after it was raised by humans? Did the builders intentionally utilise an existing feature? Or did a process of natural erosion take place long after the monument was built, with the original builders never seeing these marks? George Nash's work on rock art in Wales gives me hope that we might get some more context for monuments from this period. He and his team have been identifying man made markings that have been previously overlooked... and the question of why and when some capstones were adorned with cup marks is being grappled with. We will have to do a video taking a closer look at rock on megaliths in Wales, I'll add it to the list! All the best, Jacky

  • @Zuczid
    @Zuczid11 күн бұрын

    Hello Coral Jackz! A few weeks ago my now Fiancée and I had the pleasure of visiting pembrokeshire and your videos were the highlight of our entire trip! Visiting Hoyles mouth felt like a once in a lifetime experience along with King’s Quoit and a few other spots using the neolithic Wales website! I have loved keeping up with your videos and I will never forget our unbelievable trip thanks to you all! I wish you both the best of luck in your future adventures! And thank you again!

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz10 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much.. You've made our day with this wonderful comment 😊

  • @jameswalksinhistory3848
    @jameswalksinhistory384811 күн бұрын

    Interesting 👍👍

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz11 күн бұрын

    Thanks James! :)

  • @georgepointer1127
    @georgepointer112711 күн бұрын

    Gost story obviously made up to make up for disturbing site.

  • @georgepointer1127
    @georgepointer112711 күн бұрын

    Should have left it alone

  • @georgepointer1127
    @georgepointer112711 күн бұрын

    Robbed of it's cover of stones and soil.

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz8 күн бұрын

    Yes, and some of the reconstruction attempts across the UK have been even worse... completing losing the last remnants of the site to someone's modern vision.

  • @SchwightDultz
    @SchwightDultz11 күн бұрын

    Your production quality has improved rather impressively in such a short space of time. Have you ever considered producing a proof of concept for the consideration of a larger media outlet?

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz10 күн бұрын

    Thanks! We're still filming most of it on our phones and having lots of fun getting familiar with the process, but getting a drone certainly felt like a level up. We are getting slightly more ambitious (kind encouraging comments like this help) and have a few 'bigger' videos that we've been working on in the background for a while now... but to be honest, no, it has not crossed our minds to make that sort of pitch. Sounds like a lovely idea though, perhaps one day!

  • @Plasingli4
    @Plasingli413 күн бұрын

    Nice video, full of useful info. So thanks for that! But just one thing -- re the reference to the bluestones being carried to Stonehenge by out ancestors. That's just a myth, and like most myths it is probably not true. The bluestones were almost certainly carried by ice.

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz13 күн бұрын

    Thanks for the kind words and clarification... I've pinned your comment to inform future viewers. To be honest, we were quite surprised to hear that we had made a reference to the Stonehenge bluestones in this video and had to have a re-watch. Brief Analysis When I said; 'A thousand years before the local bluestones were moved to Wiltshire during the earliest phases of Stonehenge', I intended to leave it vaguely open by not specifically saying how or where they were moved from. My thinking being that it could be interpreted as 'moved to Wiltshire from where the ice dropped them'. However, the way it is phrased lacks any reference to an ice age... and the word 'local', shortly before 'moved', gives a strong impression the stones were moved from Pembrokeshire to Wiltshire at that time. Apologies, I will be more careful in future!

  • @garethrossbuddell9436
    @garethrossbuddell943616 күн бұрын

    Three kings on Orion belt, I bet those hollows line up to that on the 21st of December.

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz14 күн бұрын

    Seems to be a popular theory! Thanks for commenting :)

  • @jc.wpbdry
    @jc.wpbdry18 күн бұрын

    beautiful!

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz14 күн бұрын

    😁

  • @spasespasevski5737
    @spasespasevski573719 күн бұрын

    WISH YOU COOL SEASON AHEAD.

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz14 күн бұрын

    And to you, too! Thanks for watching :)

  • @bobwershing3505
    @bobwershing350522 күн бұрын

    Next time do the testing with "loaded" trailers, there will be A lot more walking them off road than riding 👍

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz20 күн бұрын

    Hi 👋 we did do some 25kg tests in part 1 of this review, but could definitely have done more 😅 When we cycled Wales with our dog (also 25kg) and camping gear we were seriously doing a lot of 'bike & hike' 😆👍

  • @openmindedwonderer
    @openmindedwonderer22 күн бұрын

    That was so so interesting, great site to visit 🙂

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz14 күн бұрын

    Thanks :)

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz27 күн бұрын

    Hi everyone, thanks for watching. We apologize for the loud music. We made this video at the start of our KZread journey when we hadn't quite figured everything out. We have a new Tinkinswood video with extra info and aerial footage if you would like to check that one out.. you can find it on our channel :)

  • @Leavemykindalone1154
    @Leavemykindalone115428 күн бұрын

    Burley bee $300 cheap components easy damage rub on the fabric

  • @magalyrodriguez7087
    @magalyrodriguez7087Ай бұрын

    Mr blobby

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackzАй бұрын

    😁

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackzАй бұрын

    Thanks for watching. Let us know in the comments if there are any places you think we should visit. We love hearing your recommendations and thoughts about these places. You can also subscribe to our channel to see when we upload new videos!

  • @johnparr5879
    @johnparr5879Ай бұрын

    Interesting the... Concept.... That.... Markings in the stone, may be astrological........ signatures *

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackz14 күн бұрын

    This does seem to be a popular theory. Thanks for watching and commenting :)

  • @holidaynests9837
    @holidaynests9837Ай бұрын

    Another great video. I havent visited this one yet. Great detail. So good you are doing this.

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackzАй бұрын

    Thanks, it's an often overlooked site but definitely worth a visit!

  • @simoncoll3204
    @simoncoll3204Ай бұрын

    They were built for tithing,and were built by the mighty men of old , giants.

  • @qx4n9e1xp
    @qx4n9e1xpАй бұрын

    I have an electric scooter, and I've been looking at trailers. That 1-wheeled one has me curious. I wonder if I could flip the U-bracket upside down to fit the lower axle on my 10" scooter wheel. I might have to grind off the diagonal arch, and weld some reinforcement back into it, but it seems like a splendid idea over the 2-wheeled trailers, since scooters tend to lean more than bicycles.

  • @Gent82
    @Gent82Ай бұрын

    I unexpectedly stumbled upon St. Nons while hiking that section of the coastal path, about a month after you would have been there.

  • @udaraweerasekar2880
    @udaraweerasekar2880Ай бұрын

    Wow, 😍😍😍😍that place looks amazing! I'd love to visit soon. How can I find walking routes? Did you use a map or something else?

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackzАй бұрын

    Hi, thanks for watching! You can find this spot by following the coastal path from Port Eynon carpark. OS maps would be the best for finding the path but it's fairly easy 🙂

  • @pleaselikeshare
    @pleaselikeshareАй бұрын

    I need a tent for me and my staffy. Will be 2 weeks in it. I found your channel cuz I seen the Vango VM force tent for sale. But I have to do maybe 2-4 days hiking. So it's to heavy. I am thinking about bringing a, dog trailer (cycle) so my dog can use it and pull along stuff. Not sure if bringing bike yet... Bringing a guitar is essential so trailer is handy for that also. Going peak district. Hiking to a campsite with my kids. They can carry their own tents though. So the bigger tent I am needing would ideally be light and have maybe a wind break thing or chill out space for the dog. After hike will be at camp site. 2 weeks is a long time! So... Hoping canvas... I like the old shape triangle but teepee ok. Was also thinking about... No tent as such... Pop up gazebo 3m x 3m and a camping bed that has a tent built on-top of it? Or maybe a bivvy tent thing like the fishermen use? I'm clueless... Please if you have any advice. I did check your playlists out but not many reviews 😢 Thanks taking the time to do these videos they must help lots of people. People in shops only really know about what they sell or don't want to help if they don't sell what your looking for

  • @pleaselikeshare
    @pleaselikeshareАй бұрын

    You seem like the perfect person to ask!!!! I love your channel!!! I did similar to you a few years ago, wish i had documented it! Check out skanda vale in Pembrokeshire!!! Get some free food and find tranquility!! Also see an elephant.

  • @JackyCoralz
    @JackyCoralzАй бұрын

  • @Sally-ol1sy
    @Sally-ol1syАй бұрын

    Love Ffynone. What a beautiful country we live in, and your videos really capture the majesty of the Welsh countryside. Plus a side order of Welsh myths and legends, what's not to love?

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackzАй бұрын

    Thank you, we are lucky to have so many beautiful places to explore😁

  • @mikalrain
    @mikalrainАй бұрын

    Your bike trailer review made me almost want to get... ... a dog! So cute 😁

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackzАй бұрын

    Ah he is a cutie! Thank for watching 😁

  • @alfifbaggins8525
    @alfifbaggins8525Ай бұрын

    Excellent video. This campsite was where I spent most of my holidays as a child so this brought back lots of memories, and gave me some history on Culver hole which ive wondered about for 25 years!

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackzАй бұрын

    Thanks so much! That's lovely, and we're happy to hear it 😁

  • @mikldude9376
    @mikldude9376Ай бұрын

    Just stumbled on this video, great job testing , after watching the video I think I would be a bit more keen on the two wheeler, as you mentioned going up the hill slowly, at times the single wheeler might want to pull you over a bit , and I could see in my use if it was heavier on one side that it might be annoying. Cheers.

  • @mikalrain
    @mikalrainАй бұрын

    I think if you're doing road or gravel, the two-wheeler will be the better choice, but if you also do trail you'll be glad you got the one-wheeler.

  • @coraljackz
    @coraljackzАй бұрын

    We've had the double wheel trailer for a while now..It's a comfortable ride with kids as well as big dogs inside. :)