That must be annoying. I live in a wonderful place called 'up north', where you can walk for minutes, sometimes hours even without seeing anyone else, where tissues are not black after you've blown your nose, where there are moors and hills and where strangers call each other 'duck' and 'love'. However, we don't get many Caravaggio exhibitions or the like. Not much 'culture' to speak of. Bitter with the sweet, I suppose.
'Up north' where? My family are from York so I get the sweets and bitters of both on visits. Eh by gum I love them both dearly though! Haha. I've sat in a library for 12 hours today...so excuse the stir crazy ramblings.
Sheffield. We have a lot more hills than York, (or just about anywhere), but far fewer lovely Sam Smith pubs and no city walls. I live on the edge of the Peak district though, so it's pretty nice. Your family coming from Yorkshire could explain why you pronounced path with a short 'a' rather than a long one. I did find it a bit strange for a London lass.
lol
nightshot103 2 years ago
Nice little village in Western Canada.
About 30min from a city of 800000 or so.
Occasionally a train goes by.
Other than that, the loudest thing is the chirping of the birds.
Or sometimes a barking dog.
Very pleasant overall.
PFWoody488 2 years ago
Comment removed
fsxflyboy 2 years ago
I live in a flight path too, perhaps we're neighbors.
frumpyframpton 3 years ago
Wow that's harsh. I live in the U.S...next to a school. That's really the most interesting fact about where I live.
ntwiles 3 years ago
Ive always lived under a flight path, between a trainline and a primary trucking route. You stop hearing the planes after a while.
Lankythepyro 3 years ago
fabulous!
ludovico86 4 years ago
That must be annoying. I live in a wonderful place called 'up north', where you can walk for minutes, sometimes hours even without seeing anyone else, where tissues are not black after you've blown your nose, where there are moors and hills and where strangers call each other 'duck' and 'love'. However, we don't get many Caravaggio exhibitions or the like. Not much 'culture' to speak of. Bitter with the sweet, I suppose.
tiredandemotional81 4 years ago
'Up north' where? My family are from York so I get the sweets and bitters of both on visits. Eh by gum I love them both dearly though! Haha. I've sat in a library for 12 hours today...so excuse the stir crazy ramblings.
LegBeforeWicket 4 years ago
Sheffield. We have a lot more hills than York, (or just about anywhere), but far fewer lovely Sam Smith pubs and no city walls. I live on the edge of the Peak district though, so it's pretty nice. Your family coming from Yorkshire could explain why you pronounced path with a short 'a' rather than a long one. I did find it a bit strange for a London lass.
tiredandemotional81 4 years ago
Leeds. But I sure do get fuzzy when I hear of York. What a beutiful place
Flipflopab 2 years ago
Also I really love your accent (I'm not American)
Flipflopab 2 years ago
APHRODITE
mauriciorapdo 4 years ago
You're expressions in this are great too! haha
migps2 4 years ago 3
Really? Well I live very close to helicopters passing overhead almost constantly. Probably better than living next to a frequently traveled railroad.
migps2 4 years ago