Coldstreamer19

Coldstreamer19

Hello, and welcome to my youtube channel! I record events for my regiment and other games sometimes.. Enjoy!!

Battlefield 1 funnies

Battlefield 1 funnies

WTF Sean

WTF Sean

Up, Up, and AWAAAYYEEEE

Up, Up, and AWAAAYYEEEE

Sea of Thieves Nonsense

Sea of Thieves Nonsense

Medic calls me a DING!

Medic calls me a DING!

13th Event

13th Event

Trooping the Colour 2002

Trooping the Colour 2002

Trooping the Colour 2000

Trooping the Colour 2000

Пікірлер

  • @king_goose
    @king_goose5 күн бұрын

    56:13 1:03:51 1:09:09

  • @tyleryacas2201
    @tyleryacas2201Ай бұрын

    was also in afghanistan during 2010 of trooping the colour

  • @williamnoble294
    @williamnoble294Ай бұрын

    Memories of Pirbright

  • @elliotsmith4051
    @elliotsmith4051Ай бұрын

    43:35 so proud of my dad

  • @thomaslutro5560
    @thomaslutro5560Ай бұрын

    So, sar'nt ought to have spent a little less time shining his boots, and a little more time on his teeth.

  • @scottmccarter861
    @scottmccarter861Ай бұрын

    This was the first year that His Late Royal Highness, The Prince Phillip, Duke of Edinburgh, rode in the carriage with Her Late Majesty, rather than on horseback.

  • @mstewie9718
    @mstewie9718Ай бұрын

    eft ha eft ha eft ha eft ha hea........... eft ha eft ha eft ha eft ha hea........ Only the British Army and only the guards at that.

  • @DOOM_A-O
    @DOOM_A-OАй бұрын

    real. If im not crashing, im not living.

  • @geo.m1639
    @geo.m1639Ай бұрын

    7 Days to go until TOTC 2024

  • @jeremytravers2161
    @jeremytravers2161Ай бұрын

    I think the piece at 1:18:52 is Preobrajensky.

  • @_.Matt._
    @_.Matt._2 ай бұрын

    The last Trooping the Colour of the British Empire before the handover of Hong Kong.

  • @gripper58
    @gripper582 ай бұрын

    Lol guards trying to March @ LI pace 😂😂😂

  • @Kameleonic
    @Kameleonic2 ай бұрын

    Holy fucked up teeth drill master sir.

  • @robnewman6101
    @robnewman61012 ай бұрын

    R.I.P EIIR.

  • @alfiescutt1522
    @alfiescutt15222 ай бұрын

    1:18:31

  • @johnnyrogers6912
    @johnnyrogers69123 ай бұрын

    staff sergeant Bains scots guards a right basterd

  • @edshike7581
    @edshike75813 ай бұрын

    Christ can you imagine the massive useless Fannie’s that walk the streets today doing this .

  • @davidfogarty2220
    @davidfogarty22203 ай бұрын

    Looking at that Welsh Guard lance sergeant's tombstone gnashers, I would say a visit to the Dental Corps was required pronto.

  • @reuterromain1054
    @reuterromain10543 ай бұрын

    A fantastic spectacle from a fantastic country.

  • @NyPer920
    @NyPer9203 ай бұрын

    Recruit Intake Term III/67, Junior Leaders Regiment RA, Bramcote, Nuneaton, Warwickshire. My Drill Instructor was Sgt Ken Wilkinson. Many memories!

  • @bernhardbrendel5238
    @bernhardbrendel52383 ай бұрын

    For old-school German soldiers it looks like line-dance, not drill. 😂 But I don't want to gossip, in Germany trans officers are now holding unicorn parades, raising rainbow flags in front of barracks, setting up gay groups in the army and recruiting all sorts of people, as long as they're not German and not white. And they don't have any weapons anymore; they are now standing around in Ukraine, waiting for the Russians to either destroy them or take them over. 😂

  • @kenUK762
    @kenUK7623 ай бұрын

    They are nowhere near as smart or well-drilled as they were at Pirbright. Just look at any Passing Out video ( including the Juniors) from Pirbright days. Today's lot are not a patch on yesteryear's Guards. I take my hat off to anybody who survived Pirbright back then. 👍

  • @ajwest3081
    @ajwest30813 ай бұрын

    I’m sure the SWOs are speaking in an alien dialect!!

  • @raybenstead2548
    @raybenstead25483 ай бұрын

    Joined the RAF as a boy entrant in 1960 at the age of 15 yrs and 9 months. It was a life of hell with the DI's on billet inspections. Beds overturned, the coke and coal for heating thrown across the floor and trampled in on the highly polished lino. Lockers up ended and the screamed verbal abuse. Then there were the cross country runs of about seven miles in full kit with the instructors breaking the ice on the frozen ditch in winter for us to wade through. On saying that i still remember the names of all the instructors. Ah those were the days but thank fcuk i am now almost 80 and think the government should bring back national service perhaps then there would not be so much crime amongst the younger generation.

  • @Adam-if3zd
    @Adam-if3zd3 ай бұрын

    All of you who think that this produce better soldiers those days and the British Army producers crap soldiers today, have no experience of the contemporary British Army. I joined the army in 1983 and I've recently finished working as an mod civilian with the British Army now. The complexity of today's battlefield equipment requires you have much more of thinking self-motivated soldier rather than the old tiktok wooden head fixed Bayonet and charge. Look at probably one of the finest fighting armies in the world, the Israeli army. They don't spend a lot of time on fancy drill but they do spend a lot of time on perfecting their role and on the combat scenarios. Proof of the pudding is eating how they have won countless wars and not been defeated

  • @issimondias
    @issimondias3 ай бұрын

    I don’t understand what’s meant to be hilarious about this.

  • @SociallyAcceptedGopnik
    @SociallyAcceptedGopnik3 ай бұрын

    I joined the Army two months after this parade, I remember watching this on TV. Reported to Barracks on the 18th of August 1986, four days before my 19th birthday. Left the Army 24 years later..

  • @kurtgodel5236
    @kurtgodel52363 ай бұрын

    1:01:08 -The March from Scipioni (Scipio)- "Scipio" - March from the dramma per musica _"Publio Cornelio Scipione"_ or _"Scipione"_ or _"Scipio"_ by Händel 1:04:14 -Molondorff's Parade March- "Parademarsch No 1" by Julius Möllendorf

  • @kurtgodel5236
    @kurtgodel52363 ай бұрын

    1:04:14 -Molondorff's Parade March- Parademarsch No 1 by Julius Möllendorf

  • @user-qc3yq7dh9f
    @user-qc3yq7dh9f3 ай бұрын

    I won't toby the queen guard

  • @user-qc3yq7dh9f
    @user-qc3yq7dh9f3 ай бұрын

    i like the queen guard

  • @TheLifeEvents
    @TheLifeEvents3 ай бұрын

    How would some of these SMs have survived in a Jap POW camp?

  • @bertiewooster3326
    @bertiewooster33263 ай бұрын

    When i fought in France we fell into a German trench with about 12 Soldiers as i fell in my 18inch baynot went straight into a soldiers chest i had a hell of job getting it out 1916.

  • @richaustin4991
    @richaustin49913 ай бұрын

    Those were the days…

  • @liverpoolscottish6430
    @liverpoolscottish64304 ай бұрын

    The NCO's are superb blokes- backbone of the British Army- first class!

  • @liverpoolscottish6430
    @liverpoolscottish64304 ай бұрын

    "UUuuuuuup!!!"

  • @RalphBrooker-gn9iv
    @RalphBrooker-gn9iv4 ай бұрын

    Seasons, saluting, for the use of. I do think there should be seasonal salutes. For instance the Autumn salute goes up as normal but the hand makes a slow, fluttering descent to the side of the body as a leaf from a plane tree. The Spring salute is a clenched fist that snaps up to the cap, and then the fingers slowly, tenderly open like flowering buds until the smart and soldier-like position of the hand is formed. 🫡

  • @GavTatu
    @GavTatu4 ай бұрын

    ohh slipping on those bashers boots !

  • @leftin74
    @leftin744 ай бұрын

    Now it’s all done by a geek on a key board.

  • @Adam-if3zd
    @Adam-if3zd3 ай бұрын

    Where do you get the idea from? Have you had any involvement with British Army contemporary phase 1 and phase 2 training

  • @leftin74
    @leftin743 ай бұрын

    @@Adam-if3zd I have no idea of anything connected to the British army, haven’t lived in that shit hole for 50 years now. See how they go against the Russians

  • @allancale9441
    @allancale94414 ай бұрын

    Wouldnt be allowed today they would all be off with stress !

  • @NeilFirbank-en1yd
    @NeilFirbank-en1yd4 ай бұрын

    🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @heli-crewhgs5285
    @heli-crewhgs52854 ай бұрын

    Aaargh! Aaargh!

  • @leftin74
    @leftin744 ай бұрын

    Modern youth won’t put up with this bullshit. No wonder no decent person wants to join the armed forces . It was never the same after the fusi wusses put aside their spears and shields and picked up a Kalashnikov.

  • @user-he5so4gz4r
    @user-he5so4gz4r4 ай бұрын

    No bullying? Bollocks! Junior soldiers were beaten, kicked, subjected to 'regimental baths', by the instructors. Two RWF corporals in our case. Same at the regiment in Germany, initiation it was called, why having certain parts of your anatomy whipped while held with sausage tongs is beyond me? Then there were greased broom handles, grease guns and being forced to down a pint of urine. One mate necked it, and because he did it with no complaints, they made him do it again with a "floater" in it. Give me a break.

  • @georgemulford2910
    @georgemulford29103 ай бұрын

    Why do they behave like that?

  • @user-he5so4gz4r
    @user-he5so4gz4r3 ай бұрын

    @@georgemulford2910 it was the culture, young men 16 years old were subjected to brutalisation that today would find the perpertrators in court. One lad was held down by two other junior soldiers whilst a third stabbed him in the stomach with a bayonet, no grudge or arguments, the 'stabber' wanted to know what it felt like to stab someone. Some juniors were tied onto their bare bed frames with buckets of cold water thrown over them, the kicker came when the shaver socket which most beds had as part of the overhead light for each bed space was wired up and turned on. Joining the regiment was also bad, new boys were subjected to abuse, initiations and assault, sometimes at the instigation of NCOs, occasionally by NCOs. Of course who could a youngster turn to? The chain of command for complaints had to go through the actual perpetrators, which usually resolved itself by threats, more assaults or extra duties until any complaint was withdrawn. Most youngsters did the minimum required and got out, the system doesn't work for junior ranks

  • @georgemulford2910
    @georgemulford29103 ай бұрын

    @@user-he5so4gz4r I believe you. Why would that be the case though? Doesn’t seem very professional or honourable let alone morale boosting.

  • @user-he5so4gz4r
    @user-he5so4gz4r3 ай бұрын

    @@georgemulford2910 life was made hell for "sprogs" because people got away with it, the same was happening in childrens homes, borstals and behind front doors across the country. Even PIE(Paedophile Information Exchange) had influence within certain political parties, then you had Saville, Glitter, Rolf Harris and others within the entertainment industry. As for the army? I know particular regiments gained a reputation for brutalising and bullying recruits, the Welsh Guards were notorious after the Falklands war, this was long before 'duty of care' or child protection laws were brought in. I was 17 when an NCO would enter our 3 man room after getting drunk in the mess, he would stagger in, straddle our shoulders and kidney punch us, or try to tear the hair out of your head. This was at the regiment. Young,black,brown they were all fair game back then. I was determined my kids would never experience that, I've dealt with a lot of veterans over the years, and some have horrific stories to tell, with one or two still traumatised, and they're in their 50s and 60s!

  • @davidfogarty2220
    @davidfogarty22203 ай бұрын

    @@georgemulford2910 Latent homosexuality. 🤣

  • @amayastrata4629
    @amayastrata46294 ай бұрын

    The purpose is to tell them they’re all useless idiots. Get them working, cleaning, ironing, running for the full 6 weeks and then they end up being the best lot they’ve ever trained. It makes you proud to be what you are. That’s how it’s done. A form of manipulation. Probably needed.

  • @gerryholland7274
    @gerryholland72744 ай бұрын

    Most NCO's had a great line for all of this.........Character building!🤣 I started my character building in 1962......

  • @TellySavalas-or5hf
    @TellySavalas-or5hf4 ай бұрын

    How i won the war 1967 from Richard lester. Watch it!

  • @user-tm5jo7oh5u
    @user-tm5jo7oh5u4 ай бұрын

    Does anyone know the year this was done, my late dad was in the coldstream guards in the late 50's to early 60's, i love to think he was in with those lads

  • @peterdickenson424
    @peterdickenson4243 ай бұрын

    i was at caterham late sixtys lad was beaton up to get him out of the squad

  • @kdx2002
    @kdx20024 ай бұрын

    1:01:20 Slightly out of step... but he recovered nicely!

  • @bobdonaldson1183
    @bobdonaldson11834 ай бұрын

    We can all relate to the DRILL WONDERING COULD WE MASTER IT The Drill PIgs did an amazing job

  • @tinysaxon3826
    @tinysaxon38264 ай бұрын

    Real Englishmen, Real British soldiers ! Not like todays mummies girls, wokey, rainbow, treehugging boys and girls, this is when we had a real army !!