Just found your channel yesterday and I must have watched at least a dozen videos so far. Very interesting and made even more enjoyable by the presence of the lovely Rebecca ..
I once said to my (step) dad, who's family are Northamptonians (and Leicester), "Our family are full of cobblers", and he replied with a smile, "No, they are full of shoemakers", and he wasn't wrong; my late (step) grandfather could make a pair of "half pairs" from animal skin to finish product! Great video as usual.
For those non - Northamptonians, "Cobblers" is the nickname for our local league one football team, which derived from our pre-eminence as a shoe and boot making town. Very interesting vid.
I remember back in the the 80s Northampton shoe company going back and get in second-hand top of the range shoes after price that's why I call memories thanks James
That's something I've never quite understood. Northampton is/was a centre for shoe/boot MAKING, not shoe/boot repairing. Cobblers are shoe repairers. Shoe MAKERS are Cordwainers. Surely, the team should be the Cordwainers, not the Cobblers???
Well presented video. You two are fun to watch and what you document is so interesting. I lived in Northamptonshire from 1992 to 2018 and love Blisworth Tunnel area. I have seen and learned so much more than I thought i knew. Thanks. And Rebecca I am inspired to watch your channel seeing you in the background trying to get the camera operators/audience attention.
Great vid guys....I've only just discovered your channel, via Wessex Ways. I'm Blisworth born and bred, spent my childhood playing around by the tunnel. Thought I knew most of the canal and tunnel history, but I've learnt lots there. Tony Marsh has written a wealth of historical stuff on Blisworth's History website....I shall tell his daughter about your video, I'm certain she'd take great interest. Ps although unpowered boats aren't allowed through the tunnel, my late partner Laura was part of the Blisworth Subterranean Canoe Club that used to paddle through after dark.....or rather paddle through after 'last orders'!
I passed through the tunnel for the very first time last year. We visited Stoke Bruerne museum while on the trip and discovered the story of the multiple attempts to build the tunnel. It sounds like one of the failed attempts actually got substantially built before they gave up. This was all news to me! Didn’t have time to explore as we had a tight schedule to keep and so this video is really interesting. I always love to see the physical evidence. It’s possible of course that the abandoned portals were never properly finished in brick or stone and were just shored-up workings. Even if it was finished it would be very likely they would have recovered the bricks for reuse. If so then there would be very little to see now. Who knows, there are so few records. Another brill video, thank you.
Love this kind of detective work... I remember, years ago, using a very old 10" OS map to trace the line of an original tramway alignment that was later used in part by the GWR in the Forest of Dean - little bits of the original alignment remained but they would have been almost impossible to find without that old map - and they're probably all gone now. Great video guys!
Brilliant! What a fabulous video. I doubt if many people who travel the GU canal know the history of the 3 tunnels. Now your film has brought the history to life. Many thanks.
Another great video! I learn a lot about your tunnels and canals from you two. And Paul you need to get a cue card so you don't forget Rebecca. I live only a few miles from a canal here in the USA called the Delaware and Raritan, which is a park as well as a water supply source for many towns. It is a very interesting walk too.
I think what I like about these vids is it's some naturally curious people out for a ramble, taking a keen interest and suspicion in what they see; you actually get out there and do the legwork to find the archaeology. Three attempts plus a railway. That's determination. It would have been great to be a fly on the wall at all the boardroom meetings especially when the geologists got involved. Not only could the Egyptians build straight shafts, they never lost their portals either. Wonky shafts and a bloke back every year looking for a portal...
You both make such a fabulous partnership with your videos the chemistry couldn’t be better just like peas and carrots. Another Bobby dazzler info packed story of lost heritage.
If you have just filmed that recently, it is a shame I did not know you were going to do it, as I am currently in that general area, and I would have happily given you a ride on my narrowboat through the current tunnel. Nice video.
These tunnel and waterway explorations of yours are so enjoyable. We were on a motor home holiday with one of our kids and he plus me on our bike found the one at Chirk.
Another fascinating video! I'm not surprised that there were failures before the current tunnel was completed... Got an unwelcome shock when navigating the tunnel (both ways) in 1972. No-one warned me I would get drenched passing under each ventilation shaft by a shower of ground water!
@@pwhitewick LOL!!! Fishing for "Brownie points" Paul?? Can't fault you though as I would do he same. Great vid too!! keep them coming, love the quality of research and information.
Hi both, you are right in saying there were two more tunnels at Blisworth, I believe the first two were abandoned because of quicksand, then finally a third tunnel was built. Great video as usual, well put over.
Just a quick note from the states to say how much I love your videos. It’s been 8 months since my last visit to England and I am missing it. If you are in Facebook, please feel free to post your videos on my railroad and industry preservation group Ahead of the Torch. They crew there will love what you do. We need a version of you two in the USA.
Marvellous video, as always. Northamptonshire has some great tunnels, both canal and live railway: Braunston, Kilsby, Stowe Hill, Hunsbury Hill etc. I think Husbands Bosworth is just into Leicestershire. Then, of course there are Kelmarsh and Oxendon!
I think this highlights the difficulties that these early navigation engineers faced and the sad cost in lives that the lack of surveying technology caused. Great video Rebecca oh and Paul. :-D
I love Blisworth Tunnel, had many fun days on the canal there having lived in Milton Keynes . really enjoy watching your videos . Learn a lot.. nice you both have a hobby to share in
Enjoyed this most interesting video as usual. We travelled through the Blisworth tunnel on a widebeam canal boat in October 2018. Very early start as widebeams are only allowed through early in the morning with CRT staff in attendance to stop any other boats going through in the opposite direction. Can't remember the shafts but do recall the concrete ring type segments lining part of the tunnel which I understand are similar to those used on the channel tunnel.
Haha I was born in Northamptonshire, many many years ago. Really enjoyed that, shame you didn’t find your portals but it was great anyways. Thanks so much for taking me along, please stay safe
Widebeams can pass through the tunnel but only before 8am and must be pre-booked. CRT staff have to attend both ends of the tunnel to stop any boats coming in the opposite direction.
As always very interesting. I though the steeple of Stoke Bruerne church was used as one node for the alignment. My little boat (nearly) in one of your shots !
From what I can see on a map, the church tower lines up pretty well (almost perfectly, actually) with the current (in use) tunnel - not sure how they planned to link the previous efforts given that they used a different alignment without a similar reference point...
very, very interesting indeed. i've walke the footpath over the canal tunnell where they used to walk the horses. Very close to the railway in places yet I never heard a train. keep searching folks.. sooo interesting. thank you
if you look at it from google earth you can view older satellite images and you can see some really interesting stuff in that field near the "north portal". in fact there is a sunken spot you can see now on google maps south west of the bend in the canal. the images from 2006 are incredible the angle of the light makes every bump stand out.
Have been under Blisworth quite a few times ( and the gushing roof vent 200 metres in from the south, all over my crew) but never knew about the other potential tunnel alignments.
My family had a coffin and chicken house making company there by the tunnel in the 1890s, it caught on fire one night and when the fireman turned up the hoses had holes drilled in them, true story, Burbidge Blisworth Coffin and chicken house makers.
Lovely Video, and very interesting indeed, Can't believe you forgot Rebecca at the end lol Also during the BR Days the Cobbler was also known as the London Euston to Northampton service when they were loco hauled trains.
Too bad a local University couldn't get involved with some ground radar equipment considering how interesting this really is. Oh and PS thank goodness for The Tim Traveler giving you guys a shout out, I've been quite engaged with your content since I found it that way.
litterally went here the other day to film the museum up to blisworth portal, we met the blacksmith and he took my camera and showed it around, if you dont mind id like to place a link in my video to your knowledge on these abandoned tunnel. This is my local area and more knowledge the better..
Another excellent video guys. On these rare occasions when you get an 𝐚𝐜𝐭𝐢𝐯𝐞 canal tunnel, how about trying to get a lift through the tunnel on a boat? Do both of you drive? One could film the journey, while the other moves the car to the other portal. With all your YT contacts, you could probably organise something before you went. Just a thought.😁
@@pwhitewick Maybe something for a future episode. Like I said, just a thought. I've been through quite a few of the remaining active tunnels on narrowboats but, I would imagine, the majority of folks will never have seen the inside of one. Have you ever seen any of the "Nicolson Guides"? They publish one for each of the canal systems, detailing bridges, tunnels, locks and canalside "businesses"🍻 - all set on excellent maps. The thing I like is that the canals run top-bottom on the page, rather than following the actual, directional course of the cut. They might be a handy aid to your research.
way back in the early 60's me and other lads from St Johns School (near Tiffield) Towcester used to go down there on a Saturday and Sunday afternoon to smoke cigarettes - ah, the Good Old Days!
Don’t know if there’s anything worthy of a video but (fairly) local to here is a place called Helmdon where there’s a viaduct crossing another railway, both disused, a few bridges and some massive landscaping for all the railways. I drove through the other day and it looks cool but like I say, I’m not sure there’s any story there.
hey paul and rebecca , oh and matt , another really interesting one , ever thought about entering the backwords race paul ? , awwwww poor rebecca at the end there , how could you paul lol :)
I lived up there for a few years I can tell you a little history of Northampton Tower the towels built by a lift company which tested the lifts and now it's stands as tall as nelson column can you investigate that thanks James
Rebecca in a skirt! Now I can die a contented man. 😂 Do you think it's possible for a shaft to be so cluttered up by greenery it becomes totally invisible?
Having traveled through the Blisworth Tunnel several times, my memory of it is the several shaft along its way. Not only vertically above the actual tunnel by at least one slightly to the side of it with an almost a landing stage against the side of the tunnel. How on earth did they know how to make the actual tunnel so straight?
Just looking at the shape of the canal I thought there must have been an earlier planned tunnel. Those kinks are hideously inconvenient for a major highway and offer more digging with shovels. No one wants to dig more with a shovel.
If you want to go through in a wide beam boat you need to book with CRT, and they stop traffic coming in the opposite direction. I think you can only go at 0800 or 0830 or something
Just found your channel yesterday and I must have watched at least a dozen videos so far.
Very interesting and made even more enjoyable by the presence of the lovely Rebecca ..
I once said to my (step) dad, who's family are Northamptonians (and Leicester), "Our family are full of cobblers", and he replied with a smile, "No, they are full of shoemakers", and he wasn't wrong; my late (step) grandfather could make a pair of "half pairs" from animal skin to finish product!
Great video as usual.
For those non - Northamptonians, "Cobblers" is the nickname for our local league one football team, which derived from our pre-eminence as a shoe and boot making town. Very interesting vid.
I remember back in the the 80s Northampton shoe company going back and get in second-hand top of the range shoes after price that's why I call memories thanks James
Padders shoes are still in Kettering, Northamptonshire.
That's something I've never quite understood. Northampton is/was a centre for shoe/boot MAKING, not shoe/boot repairing. Cobblers are shoe repairers. Shoe MAKERS are Cordwainers. Surely, the team should be the Cordwainers, not the Cobblers???
Well presented video. You two are fun to watch and what you document is so interesting. I lived in Northamptonshire from 1992 to 2018 and love Blisworth Tunnel area. I have seen and learned so much more than I thought i knew. Thanks. And Rebecca I am inspired to watch your channel seeing you in the background trying to get the camera operators/audience attention.
Great vid guys....I've only just discovered your channel, via Wessex Ways. I'm Blisworth born and bred, spent my childhood playing around by the tunnel. Thought I knew most of the canal and tunnel history, but I've learnt lots there. Tony Marsh has written a wealth of historical stuff on Blisworth's History website....I shall tell his daughter about your video, I'm certain she'd take great interest.
Ps although unpowered boats aren't allowed through the tunnel, my late partner Laura was part of the Blisworth Subterranean Canoe Club that used to paddle through after dark.....or rather paddle through after 'last orders'!
I passed through the tunnel for the very first time last year. We visited Stoke Bruerne museum while on the trip and discovered the story of the multiple attempts to build the tunnel. It sounds like one of the failed attempts actually got substantially built before they gave up. This was all news to me! Didn’t have time to explore as we had a tight schedule to keep and so this video is really interesting. I always love to see the physical evidence. It’s possible of course that the abandoned portals were never properly finished in brick or stone and were just shored-up workings. Even if it was finished it would be very likely they would have recovered the bricks for reuse. If so then there would be very little to see now. Who knows, there are so few records.
Another brill video, thank you.
Thanks malcolm. By the amount of abandoned shafts we definately assume they made quite a few headways.
Love this kind of detective work... I remember, years ago, using a very old 10" OS map to trace the line of an original tramway alignment that was later used in part by the GWR in the Forest of Dean - little bits of the original alignment remained but they would have been almost impossible to find without that old map - and they're probably all gone now. Great video guys!
Thanks Bill, we love making this type of video!
Brilliant! What a fabulous video. I doubt if many people who travel the GU canal know the history of the 3 tunnels. Now your film has brought the history to life. Many thanks.
Many thanks!
Another great video! I learn a lot about your tunnels and canals from you two. And Paul you need to get a cue card so you don't forget Rebecca. I live only a few miles from a canal here in the USA called the Delaware and Raritan, which is a park as well as a water supply source for many towns. It is a very interesting walk too.
I think what I like about these vids is it's some naturally curious people out for a ramble, taking a keen interest and suspicion in what they see; you actually get out there and do the legwork to find the archaeology.
Three attempts plus a railway. That's determination. It would have been great to be a fly on the wall at all the boardroom meetings especially when the geologists got involved. Not only could the Egyptians build straight shafts, they never lost their portals either.
Wonky shafts and a bloke back every year looking for a portal...
Whats more to love! Thanks Neil, thats exactly how we try and come across.
You both make such a fabulous partnership with your videos the chemistry couldn’t be better just like peas and carrots. Another Bobby dazzler info packed story of lost heritage.
If you have just filmed that recently, it is a shame I did not know you were going to do it, as I am currently in that general area, and I would have happily given you a ride on my narrowboat through the current tunnel. Nice video.
Now that would have been ace!!
These tunnel and waterway explorations of yours are so enjoyable. We were on a motor home holiday with one of our kids and he plus me on our bike found the one at Chirk.
Another fascinating video!
I'm not surprised that there were failures before the current tunnel was completed... Got an unwelcome shock when navigating the tunnel (both ways) in 1972.
No-one warned me I would get drenched passing under each ventilation shaft by a shower of ground water!
Oooh. I wasnt aware it was that bad!
Very interesting - thanks! Rebecca is too stylish to be forgotten anyway!
I agree
@@pwhitewick LOL!!! Fishing for "Brownie points" Paul?? Can't fault you though as I would do he same. Great vid too!! keep them coming, love the quality of research and information.
I can see another channel name change to Rebecca & Paul to make up for forgetting to mention Rebecca at the end of this one!!
I am of the opinion that Rebecca is the brains of this outfit.
Hi both, you are right in saying there were two more tunnels at Blisworth, I believe the first two were abandoned because of quicksand, then finally a third tunnel was built. Great video as usual, well put over.
Thanks Graham
Poor Rebecca.........being forgotten by Paul, shame on you!!!!. Excellent video again. Keep Safe!
😬😬😬😬
Forget once... and you'll *always* be reminded!
Living not too far from Blisworth and regularly driving through, it is great to hear this insight into the tunnel. Excellent video both. Cheers Keith
Thanks keith.
Just a quick note from the states to say how much I love your videos. It’s been 8 months since my last visit to England and I am missing it. If you are in Facebook, please feel free to post your videos on my railroad and industry preservation group Ahead of the Torch. They crew there will love what you do. We need a version of you two in the USA.
Robert thank you. Thats very kind. Feel free to post out videos in your group. Or at least the links to them.
This is very intresting. I have been there lots, traced out the route of Outrams tramway but knew nothing of the other tunnel allignments.
If we had a more time we would have tried more on the route. Saw a few bits but probably a lot more.
Very interesting as always. Best of luck to Tony on finding the tunnel portal oneday!
Let's hear more from Rebecca, she seems to have a lot of information and presents it well
She should have an Only Fans page.
Rebecca and Paul great video. Made my monday night.
Thanks Shaun, a pleasure.
Marvellous video, as always. Northamptonshire has some great tunnels, both canal and live railway: Braunston, Kilsby, Stowe Hill, Hunsbury Hill etc. I think Husbands Bosworth is just into Leicestershire. Then, of course there are Kelmarsh and Oxendon!
Yup we need to come back and do a few more!
Top work guys - very educational as always - thanks
I think this highlights the difficulties that these early navigation engineers faced and the sad cost in lives that the lack of surveying technology caused.
Great video Rebecca oh and Paul. :-D
Yup, thankfully we have come a long way since!
Poor Rebecca, how could you miss her out.
I bet Paul is reminded about forgetting Rebecca at every argument
@@nicklowe536 totally .She should launch her own channel .I'd watch it.
Shame on you Paul!
I love Blisworth Tunnel, had many fun days on the canal there having lived in Milton Keynes . really enjoy watching your videos . Learn a lot.. nice you both have a hobby to share in
Just found your channel via Tim the traveller. And I love it! Can’t wait to binge watch all episodes
Wonderful Tomas, welcome to the channel.
Enjoyed this most interesting video as usual. We travelled through the Blisworth tunnel on a widebeam canal boat in October 2018. Very early start as widebeams are only allowed through early in the morning with CRT staff in attendance to stop any other boats going through in the opposite direction. Can't remember the shafts but do recall the concrete ring type segments lining part of the tunnel which I understand are similar to those used on the channel tunnel.
Yup, I am sure they were used here as a trial first!
Haha I was born in Northamptonshire, many many years ago. Really enjoyed that, shame you didn’t find your portals but it was great anyways. Thanks so much for taking me along, please stay safe
Thanks Linda, lets hope Tony keeps going back!
Fascinating stuff!! Sounds like those tunnels and shafts should be stabilised somehow and blocked off for safety.
I couldn't agree more!
Very intrigueing excellent vid Tunnel Detectives
Thanks Stephen.
Great video guys thanks Rebecca xx😂
Another great vid. Took me away from stage 4 lockdown for a quarter of an hour. Wonderful!
Widebeams can pass through the tunnel but only before 8am and must be pre-booked. CRT staff have to attend both ends of the tunnel to stop any boats coming in the opposite direction.
Thanks Richard.
As always very interesting. I though the steeple of Stoke Bruerne church was used as one node for the alignment. My little boat (nearly) in one of your shots !
Ah yes, we heard this too. But the question is.... which alignment.
From what I can see on a map, the church tower lines up pretty well (almost perfectly, actually) with the current (in use) tunnel - not sure how they planned to link the previous efforts given that they used a different alignment without a similar reference point...
very, very interesting indeed. i've walke the footpath over the canal tunnell where they used to walk the horses. Very close to the railway in places yet I never heard a train. keep searching folks.. sooo interesting. thank you
Thanks Keith.
Paul,Rebecca........and Matt, very interesting video, i love stuff like this
Another great video Paul & Rebecca.
Thank you.
Come on Paul don't forget your glamorous assistant 😁😁 , another great vid cheers guys
if you look at it from google earth you can view older satellite images and you can see some really interesting stuff in that field near the "north portal". in fact there is a sunken spot you can see now on google maps south west of the bend in the canal.
the images from 2006 are incredible the angle of the light makes every bump stand out.
Have been under Blisworth quite a few times ( and the gushing roof vent 200 metres in from the south, all over my crew) but never knew about the other potential tunnel alignments.
Fascinating little story when we started digging into it!... right up my street!
absolute legends ! what a fantastic team
Thanks Jimmey
Another very informative video guys Rebecca rocking a sixties vibe today.👍🙂
Fascinating - enjoyed that...
Glad you enjoyed it
Another great video guys.
Keep'em coming.
Rich😘
Cheers Rich
Brilliant video. Interesting that they had three goes at building a tunnel. The channel tunnel piece is very interesting too
My family had a coffin and chicken house making company there by the tunnel in the 1890s, it caught on fire one night and when the fireman turned up the hoses had holes drilled in them, true story, Burbidge Blisworth Coffin and chicken house makers.
We need to talk about this one day Steve.
New channel name, same great content and hosts. Been around since Every Disused Station.
Ahhh thanks.
Lovely Video, and very interesting indeed, Can't believe you forgot Rebecca at the end lol Also during the BR Days the Cobbler was also known as the London Euston to Northampton service when they were loco hauled trains.
Ah brilliant, didn't know that Simon!
The Grand Union is an amalgamation of several separate canals, the Grand Junction being one of them.
Too bad a local University couldn't get involved with some ground radar equipment considering how interesting this really is. Oh and PS thank goodness for The Tim Traveler giving you guys a shout out, I've been quite engaged with your content since I found it that way.
We loooove Tim. Glad you are enjoying the channel.
This is where LIDAR could be very useful in mapping al the anomalies in the landscape over the tunnels!
Wonderful video, thank you very much.
Thanks Andrew
Good morning guys , Cheers from California !
Thanks Olin
Great Video I expected the mystery to be a bloke in a suit in the middle of the tunnel !
Hahaha....
Great vid you guys, Damn shame you didn't manage to find that portal!!!!
Keep up the fantastic work 👍 👍👍👍
Let's hope Tony keeps visiting.
litterally went here the other day to film the museum up to blisworth portal, we met the blacksmith and he took my camera and showed it around, if you dont mind id like to place a link in my video to your knowledge on these abandoned tunnel. This is my local area and more knowledge the better..
Very welcome, thank you.
another super vid thanks and stay safe
DON'T FORGET YOUR SIDEKICK PAUL WHEN DOING YOUR OUTRO! ;)
To make up for forgetting Rebecca at the end, she should be given the microphone for most of the next video.
She is very much against this notion.... sorry. She does have a chanel of her own though.
@@pwhitewick Fair enough, although there's an idea for the next April 1st - just swap channels.
@@LoveBristol oooooh like it
Another excellent video guys. On these rare occasions when you get an 𝐚𝐜𝐭𝐢𝐯𝐞 canal tunnel, how about trying to get a lift through the tunnel on a boat? Do both of you drive? One could film the journey, while the other moves the car to the other portal. With all your YT contacts, you could probably organise something before you went. Just a thought.😁
Not a bad idea at all. Unfortunately we had too much filming on top on this occasion so had to drive bck and forth to various bits to cram it all in.
@@pwhitewick Maybe something for a future episode. Like I said, just a thought. I've been through quite a few of the remaining active tunnels on narrowboats but, I would imagine, the majority of folks will never have seen the inside of one.
Have you ever seen any of the "Nicolson Guides"? They publish one for each of the canal systems, detailing bridges, tunnels, locks and canalside "businesses"🍻 - all set on excellent maps. The thing I like is that the canals run top-bottom on the page, rather than following the actual, directional course of the cut. They might be a handy aid to your research.
Interesting and intriguing. 👍
way back in the early 60's me and other lads from St Johns School (near Tiffield) Towcester used to go down there on a Saturday and Sunday afternoon to smoke cigarettes - ah, the Good Old Days!
Very interesting history! Maybe you could meet up with Tony and try to find the portal together!
I would love that!
Great stuff you guys! What adventures!
Thornton???? Thornton chocolates?😊
I lived in Northamptonshire for several years and not only did I never have a cobbler, I never even knew they existed!
Cobblers....
@@pwhitewick seriously I didn't!!!
Very interesting as always.
Glad you think so!
Wow, brilliant video.
Another fine video. The mystery endures.... untill someone shows up with some equipment to cut away those hedges and do a bit of digging.
Might be one for the winter
You totally need to rent some Ground Penetrating Radar machinery for these quests. :D
That would be cool
I don't understand what the mystery element was all about - at 4:45 I can quite clearly see a tunnel entrance and Paul even points to it !! Ha ha !!
Interesting finding the hidden parts
Very very good and interesting
I love this video thanks for sharing
Thanks Stephen. Much appreciated
Don’t know if there’s anything worthy of a video but (fairly) local to here is a place called Helmdon where there’s a viaduct crossing another railway, both disused, a few bridges and some massive landscaping for all the railways. I drove through the other day and it looks cool but like I say, I’m not sure there’s any story there.
Absolutely Robin. Interestingly we have filmed here in the last month and a video will follow shortly.
Wife: "Oh look, Rebecca's in a skirt"
Me: "Hadn't noticed"...
Another awesome video, informative and great to watch.
hey paul and rebecca , oh and matt , another really interesting one , ever thought about entering the backwords race paul ? , awwwww poor rebecca at the end there , how could you paul lol :)
Another Quality video folks👌
Cheers DM
No lidar scans of the area of the portal? Might get a slight depression.
Yup and they show the southern end fairly well, sadly nothing fornthe north.
I lived up there for a few years I can tell you a little history of Northampton Tower the towels built by a lift company which tested the lifts and now it's stands as tall as nelson column can you investigate that thanks James
Great stuff! Thanks!
You were near me! Those unguarded shafts are scary and people are stupid enough to walk on them.
You might get a broadbeam boat through the tunnel but if there's a standard 7ft wide lock down the canal you would be stuffed!
Just more evidence for Charles Darwin's "survival of the fittest" downside. "chlorinating the gene-pool"
@@hanskniezand2049 All the locks in that area are wide...
Rebecca in a skirt! Now I can die a contented man. 😂
Do you think it's possible for a shaft to be so cluttered up by greenery it becomes totally invisible?
100% yes
2:45 Top-rate mappery, sir!
It wasn't bad was it!
Guys, you really need to speak with Santa and get a GPSr! Great explore - tempted to go for a butchers mesen!
I think the "You are here" maps are amazing! How do they know!?!?
I know right
Having traveled through the Blisworth Tunnel several times, my memory of it is the several shaft along its way. Not only vertically above the actual tunnel by at least one slightly to the side of it with an almost a landing stage against the side of the tunnel. How on earth did they know how to make the actual tunnel so straight?
Beautiful.
Interesting walk about plus some excellent detective work! Question: Why do you walk so fast Rebecka can't keep up?
She deliberately stays back to get us lots of overlay. Her choice.
Not far from me, just a couple of miles: not been to the tunnel since i was a kid though
A lovely walk over the top
Just looking at the shape of the canal I thought there must have been an earlier planned tunnel. Those kinks are hideously inconvenient for a major highway and offer more digging with shovels. No one wants to dig more with a shovel.
If you want to go through in a wide beam boat you need to book with CRT, and they stop traffic coming in the opposite direction. I think you can only go at 0800 or 0830 or something
Thanks Richard, I think a few have said the same.
Fascinating
Aweeee poor Becca, you should disown him for missing you out, hahaha
Good video
That was interesting.
Thanks Joseph
Woooow