 Hwyl Llywodraeth Cymru! Yn ymwyfyrdd ymwysgwyllt yn eu cydyddio. Rydych chi'n gwybod yn ymwysgwyllt yma. Rydych chi'n gwybod yn ymwysgwyllt a'i cywyddoedd ein parwysborth. Yn ymwysgwyllt, gyda'n gwneud efallai'r parysborth. Mae'r ysgol fwyaf sydd wedi'u sgwr, yw'n gyntaf, ac mae'r rydyn nhw'n ei wneud. Mae'r hyn yn ymwyfyrdd yma i fynd i ffyrdd, a'i gwneud yn grannu, grannu. Ie ddigon i'n dwi'n meddwl i gael i'r sgol yma. Ie ddigon i'n meddwl i'r ffordd. Daeth yn 2012, y dyfodol yma o'r hunain. Dyma yn y Llywodraeth. Mae'r gwerthiaeth Erddangodd, mae'r ddweud eich gael eich gael eich gael eich gael ar y gael. Mae'n meddwl i'r gael ar y gael. Mae'r gael eich gael ar gyfer Llywodraeth. Mae'r gael ar gael i'n meddwl i'r ddweud. Mae yna'r gael ar hoffa ar y gael. Felly mae'n cyfrifiede sylwedd. Yna yna nhw rhai o wneud holl yn invent, am bobl, nad ydym yn hollodd himol. A byddwn ni wedi bod yn cyflנים ar meddwl, yn dweud gan y Chlymennu Gynysigrwyr. Rhaid yn fwy'r llefydd cegorol yn yr hollod bod. A ydych chi'n gyrnu'r lefennid Cymru, a rhaid mwyn i byddai'n cael ei gweld i'r llefennid Cymru. Yn y rhai o'r llefennid Cymru, byddai'n gyrnu'r llefennid Cymru. ac efallai y gallwch yn ymgyrch gyda'r Brwyll Rhaidlaryg, yr ymgyrch yn ymgyrch yn ymddangos ar y gwrdd yma, ond nid yw yw'n amlwch y rhaidlaryg, ac mae'n cwer o'r rhaidlaryg gyda'r Brwyll Rhaidlaryg, ac mae'n ddim yn ymgyrch yn ymgyrch ar y rhaidlaryg. Ac mae'n gwrdd yn ymgyrch yn ymgyrch yn ymgyrch, mae'r bydd ar gyfer ymgyrch, a'n ymgyrch yn ymgyrch, mae'n trwy'n'r gyrddion, a gwaith i ddweud i'w ddweud i Dacallingsen. Mae'n bwysigau, mae wedi cael Brunel. Felly y gallai'n gweithio'r ddweud iawn. Mae'n bwysigau eistedd o'r bêl Dacallingsen, fe fydd yn ei gydydd i'ch ei gweithio, mae'r bêl o ddweud i'w ddweud i'u ddweud i'u gweithio. Ond ddifodol, mae'r bêl i'w ddweud i'u bêl i'u Dacallingsen, a mae'r bêl i'r bêl i'u ddweud. oedden nhw, ydy lludwch yn llawer llawer o ynnog o'i ddod. Ac mor hyn yn ddesgrifio i'ch strydlest. Mae'n dweud mai yn cwyl wahanol, ac mae'n ddysgu oedd Oedon yn Llywodraeth Llywodraeth, a'r trwyng oedd nesaf yn Ysgolwch yn taenfod, wrth gwrs, yn Llywodraeth. Ond mae'n dechrau i Llywodraeth, ac mae nhw'n gyddi'n gwybod, mae'n gwybod pwn o'r awg iddo. Ielod, rwy'n gyddiwyd o'r awg. Mae'r ceffordi, gwelio'r cofnag dwylo. Felly mae'r gwasanaeth genno'r ffarrddau. Mae'r ffarrddau feall iawn yna i gion. Mae'r meddwl. Mae'na maith eu flaw. Mae'n meddwl do gyfalu a chymdr yn hynny. Mae esi'n dda i ddo roi. Mae'n dda i weld o'r ffordd. Mae'n ddweud amddir. O'r ddweud i ddoch i'r roi. Mae'n ddw i'r ddweud i ddoch i'r ddweud i ddweud. a'r rheiniio rhan oherwydd ei wneud. I wnaethe cwmallu o'n ddech functions i'w wneud, ond os rydych yn digwydd gyda'i wath gael, drwy'n gweithio arell, mae'r mhelydd a ddylai wedi bod gan ymddangas, mae'n bwysig gyda'r rhan oes ar y walch, ond ein mynd yn cael ei cyfri grwyb, am gofyn, faint felly na rydyn ni'n ysgrifennu, ond hynny i chi'n gwybod eich dylai, ond rydyn ni'n gwybod younfydig arall. gyd am yma ? Onw o'i argynni i dyma i t swimsiliadiaeth! Yn rhaid, eithaf, eithaf, yw s swimsiliadiaeth wrth gael eu bod i'n rhaglionion iaith ymlaeth aethau, os siw i fynd, ymlwch, i'r syniad yw cyffwng syniadau dau amdano chi o'r eu cyffwng strategy ie'r rhaglenion i ddesgliadau i ddechrau'r yrhad. Yn rhaid, yw ddysgu'r swimsiliadiaeth. Yn rhaid, mae'r rhaglenion i'r swimsiliadiaeth. Cwlaffin y brifwynd yng Nghymru sefydlu i'r hynny o'r pobl o bethyd. O fydd hwnnw'r pobl, rwy'n fawr hynny, newid o cas mai dwy, rwy'n hoffi'n dda i'r pobl. Fel y gyd yw, rwy'n fawr hynny o bethau ddych chi gyho miseriau fe fydd yn dod. Mae erbyn wedi cael teulu be gael gweld ei gwybwyr. Roedd mae'r ddysgwm fydd actoriau, ddysgwm y gallu ddysgwm fydd. Roedd ymlaen ar bethau? Roedd ychydig o ddysgwm owned. colt混, now this is on the way back from that holiday down in clifff was colton Herren rides. That is quite a small property. So the castle didn't really only ground stays I went there and explored the grounds, and then the next one is Bradley Manor. Now there is one thing I want to be odd about Bradley Manor an it is an international trust they just call it Bradley. But to me it is Bradley Manor. Why do they drop the manor? They Rydym wedi bod oedd yn dechrau'r jLERUSLINE park ywa, mae yn sefyd i'r하��f Mae'r kollーム Mae Poe Gyllenw youthu byddaeth a'r iawn o gweld o fynd yr iechydungu yn cromyaeth Felly mae chi i 100 o gw warnings gallais fod popeth neud ein accident Rydym y cwrin yw'r dda i'r niwed i chi wedi'i gweithio i Niwtyn Abertyn. Felly, rydyn ni'n ddod yn gweld yn Lardau i Niwtyn Abertyn, boi'n gwneud i chi'r wneud i gweithio i gweithio i'r newid, a ddweud i chi'n gwneud i'r Lardau i rwyf, ac rydyn ni i gweithio i chi eich hyfforddi'r gweithio. Rydyn ni'n gweithio i'r Compton Castelb Bradwyr i Maenau i ddechrau. Dyna gweithio i ddweud i niwtyn newid. Mae hwnna yn ymweld yn yr ysgol yn y Lard, mae e'n ffordd hefyd yng Nghymru, mae'n Aeffbryr Stone Surfer. A gallwn ni'n gweithio sylwyd y dda, mae e'n gweithio i Weston Ddau, mae'r cyflwynt yn gyntaf Hynnyddiol, yn cyflwynt cymryd, mae wedi bod yn gweithio'r ddau, gyda ni'n meddwl i'r cyflwynt, ac mae'n gofio i Weston Ddau, mae'n gweithio i Aeffbryr Stone Surfer, ac mae'n gweithio i Aeffbryr, ac mae'n gweithio i Aeffbryr Stone Surfer. felly mae'r fforddo hynny yn fenol am ydw i, ac yw Manuhau Abry. Mae ff Beth Avery Manohaus yn y b Person Dyma. Mae gwaith ym Mhwng Nŵr. Mae'n mynd i'n ffawr mae'r cyfrifiadau. Mae'r ffeyddau sy'n eu dutyd oedd yma. Gweithio, amniogodd i chi, i'r gwrs o'r ffrindys, am y na ymwng i chi fel rhywf yn rhoi, mae'n llyfiadau. Mae'r arfer ffordd gyda ni'n ffrindys, mae'r arfer hyn yn ychydig yn ymwyllgor, You're going to have to pick most things up and have a look. So it's quite funny. It says please do touch. In fact, I think the stewards in the room will tell you off if you don't pick stuff up and touch it. So yeah, do if you want to get really hands on at National Trust Portiair every manner is your place for you. Now this next one, I'm not going to try and pronounce it my suppose it could go but my Welsh will probably correct me. Tyw i isaf bethger. Beth Jellot efallai yn y Reoli Oeddaeth, sydd wedi'i fwyaf am gael, byddwn i ddod, byddwn i'n gael. Mae'n oeddaeth maen nhw'n ei wneud. Rwy'n i'n golygu ond i'r ysgrifennu yma, mae efallai'r ysgrifennu yma, i'r ysgrifennu yma'r ysgrifennu yma yn Snoedonia. Mae'n gynhyrchu'r Beth Jellot efallai yn y rhaid, i wneud i'n gwybod i'r iawn. Efallai i'n gwybod i'r ystod o Beth Jellot. Iwn i'r peth ar ôl. Rwyf yn i'n ei wneud yn yr awdurdod a'r cyffredinol i'r pririo i'r gwrth. Rwy'n i'n bwrdd i'r stasiwn yng Ngharrait Barslu. Rwy'n i'n bwrdd i'n bwrdd i'r stasiwn. Fe yna'r gwerthau sylwyr yma yn dweud yng Nghaerffredd yn y South. Mae Ysgolwyr ein ddorfod, yng Nghaerffredd yn Hampshire. Mae ysgolwyr yma. Rwy'n i'n ei wneud. Mae'n ymwneud. I have done a video more recently at Neverorgley mill, you can have a look at the link on the screen now to see that video. So yeah, Winchester City Mill was the next one. Another one I've also done a video at more recently is Shugborough Hall in Staffordshire. At the time of getting this stamp it was when the house was National Trust but it was run by the local council. It's not done like that anymore, it's all National Trust. I remember you had to pay to park there, I think you had to pay even if you remember. It didn't bother me, I just parked on Canock Chase and walked there, a long long walk that I like, a long long walk. And then I kind of walked around the camels and made my way back out. So yeah Shugborough Hall, interesting property, it's got the West Coast mainline running through it which I quite liked. Whenever I travel on the West Coast mainline I always enjoy passing through Shugborough Hall and see the estate. There's a decorated bridge to hide the railway and stuff. I'll have to go and do more videos at some point. Next one, this is the only National Trust property I'm aware of that you can get to by tram, like easily by tram. It's Moredenhall Park in South London and you can literally step off a tram. Forgot my name at the stop but it's coming on screen now. And you can walk straight into Moredenhall Park and Moredenhall Park is free for everyone to visit. It was part of the agreement that it was free for everyone to visit. The house isn't open to the public but you can go there, you can visit it. So as I say, it's the only National Trust property you can see tram from. There might be others near a tram stop although I'm not sure. But anyway, the River Wondell flows through the site. The River Wondell is a fast flowing river in South London. It joins the teams up at Wandsworth and there was a lot of mills on it because it was such a fast flowing river. Now, at Moredenhall Park, they've got a generating hydroelectricity from the corkscrew. So that is free for everyone. So do go and visit it. If you have a London travel card, you can get there very easily. Get the district line down to Inwood and jump on the tram. I'll get a train down to Croydon and jump on the tram. And the tram's in London, a good find as well. Now going from London to somewhere really completely different, it's Caracaree in Northern Ireland. It's this wobbly rope bridge from across to an island off the Northern Irish coast. I mean, the Northern Irish coast is amazing. It's something you've got to do at some point. I think everyone in their life should see the Northern Irish coast. So we went there. Now, there's no prizes for getting where I went next. Giant schoolsway. Fascinating place. There's various legends as to how it was built. I won't talk too much about that now. I think I'd have to go there again. I've been there twice in my life. I'd love to go there again. And do Northern Ireland, visit miniature railways and railways in Northern Ireland. So yeah, we'll do Northern Ireland in the future. Now we have a Scottish one. I thought there'd be another Scottish one. I said in my last one about that. It's the Tenement House in Glasgow. Tenements were houses built... Well, obviously in Glasgow, Edinburgh and other Scottish big towns and cities. They were, you know, they were blocks of flats basically. But this one was never modernised. So they realised it was worth saving. A lot of them had been demolished, replaced by a tower block, which had then been demolished, replaced by a more modern one. You will see a lot of tenements in Glasgow, especially Glasgow, still standing, that have been modified and made into luxury housing. But this Tenement House, you can see it, as it would have been when they were new. So that's worth visiting. I went there by Metro. Apart from the London ones, you can get to by Metro. I can't remember the name of the stop off the top of my head, but I went to that one on the Clockwork Orange to Glasgow subway. OK, the next one. It's an interesting one. The Town Walls Tower. That's in Shrewsbury. It's not open very often. It's only open a few days a year. It's run by a staff from the nearby Attingham Park. I think it's like three weekends a year. It's open. So I went there. It's probably the smallest National Trust garden I've been in. But like I said, they're all fascinating. They're all worth visiting. I don't think it matters, you know, whether it's a huge country estate or just a small town wall tower there. I just really enjoy going to them. The next one is Doug Maston Hall. So I'm not too far from there. Doug Maston Hall is, so it's one of the National Trust places in Shropshire. It's on the banks of the River Severn. You can do certain walks on the estate. You can see it's then very railway. So, you know, well worth visiting a bridge north. Oh, now next one, the Holy Austin Rock House, one like no other. It's at Kinver, which is actually in Staffordshire. Staffordshire is a very strangely shaped county. It's a very long county and there's a doggling that goes around sort of down the back of Birmingham. So Kinver in Staffordshire, there's Kinver Edge. But in the edge is these rock houses. Houses in the rock. There's also a miniature row in Kinver. So at some point I should go and do a hundred of inch video on both. But yeah, the rock houses, they are really quite fascinating. And where have we got next? Oh, Lime Park. It's interesting on the stamp. It does say Lime Park, as I was saying in the book. They just call it Lime, which I don't know. Maybe there's a very good reason, but I don't know. Anyone knows the comment. Lime Park is probably more known, not so much for what it was, but for what it ended up for its basically playing the exterior role of Pemberley in Pride and Prejudice. There's the very famous scene of Mr Darcy, coming out of the lake. In fact, when I went to Lime Park, there was a giant moral of Mr Darcy in the lake just to sort of remind everyone what happened there. I have a feeling with that series of Pride and Prejudice, the interior was filmed at Subbury Hall, but the exterior was filmed at Lime Park. So Lime Park, I've been there a few times. I've been done the wider estate walk. I've got the train to Disney from Manchester. I've gone to Lime Park, had a coffee in their tea room, because it's outside the Bay barrier, and I carried on walking up over the top of the hill and back down to Disney. That was like a 7 mile walk, but I do go to Lime Park. Brilliant place, especially if you like driving a bit of this. Next, what is Sunnycroft? Now this is in Telford. It's a Victorian gentleman's house in Telford. So that's one of the urban properties. To me it's an ideal home. The money, I'd love to live somewhere like. I wouldn't want to live somewhere huge, like on the massive stadiums, but somewhere the size of Sunnycroft, you know, I could have a miniature railway and stuff around to go out and rent. It's kind of like, say it's my dream home, maybe. See, I like Sunnycroft, it's a nice property. And then another one, this is also one of my favourite ones, it's Wittig Manor, which isn't too far from there. It's on the edge of Wolverhampton. It's an opportunity to house William Morris. There's two William Morris's involved with National Trust. One's cars, one, probably the more famous one, is basically he did artwork, which was then produced as wallpapers, as curtains, et cetera. William Morris never went to Wittig Manor, but they ordered a lot of his products for Wittig Manor. So it's an urban one, in quite a nice part of Wolverhampton. Lovely gardens. The next one is Ireland Hall. Ireland Hall's one I've since been to and done Henry's Adventures video. If you have a look at the link on screen now, you'll be able to see the next floor in the gardens. Ireland Hall is also a youth hostel, so I stayed the night there. Now I went to Pryche, the next day, Pryche Tramway Village. Most of the original Ireland Hall's been demolished, but the gardens are quite fascinating and you can also walk from there to there. The next one is Ireland Hall. The next one is Ireland Hall. The next one is Ireland Hall. The next one is Scotland Hall. So I think it's the only back-to-back to Birmingham that survived. I think you can't just turn up. You have to book this one. They do tours, they take you around the back-to-backs and you see how people would have lived. So it's sort of seeing how the other end of society lived. You know, a lot of them are the bigger stately homes, but it's also quite nice. They do cover some of the lots of rich people. a'r ffordd o'r rhai bwysig. Ac oeddwn ni'n ffordd o'r swyddog. Rwy'n meddwl ar y cyflwyno, rwy'n meddwl i'r hawdd ystod, rwy'n meddwl i'r Gleauston Gareth yn Cardros, sy'n gweithio. Felly mae'r gweithio, rwy'n meddwl i'n meddwl i'r gael. Fel hynny, mae'r bwysig yn Carlisle i'r berthglau. Mae'r ffordd yn ymddangos i'r llyfr Gael Fheccan. The West Coast mainline actually passes very close to it and Thomas Carlyle wasn't very happy about it, he didn't like new things such as railways. So I went to his birthplace in Echo Fecan and then that week I was in London. And I've been told the story of Thomas Carlyle and how he grew up and it just made sense. Seen as the National Trust have got his house in London, basically going here chapter 2 I went to Carlyle's house in London and got them both on one page, I've got all of Thomas Carlyle's two houses on one page, so quite happy with that. I'm not saying it's so easy to do it in that way, it was just the way circumstances worked. I hadn't been to Carlyle's house and I thought well now really is the best time to go to see because I've literally just been to his birthplace. Now another one, probably one of my favourite ones, Biddorff Grange. I've done a few videos there and it's amazing Biddorff Grange, you can go around the world in the garden. It's not a huge garden but there's so much packed into it, it's like the follies they've got there. It's just amazing. If there's one property everyone should go to at one point in their life, you've got to go to Biddorff Grange. It's an amazing property. The house isn't National Trust, you can go in one room but do visit Biddorff Grange. Next one, Castle Ward, that's in Northern Ireland. I spent a week there, did another one of these National Trust work in holidays. Again it was great fun because in the evenings you could just go for walks around the estate, I loved it there. I wouldn't say I explored every inch of the estate but I explored a lot of the estate during my free time. National Trust work in holidays I think were all cancelled in 2020 for fairly obvious reasons. I haven't been on one for a while, I just haven't had the time but perhaps one day I'll go on one again. If you're on a holiday it's a bit different and you're prepared to do a bit of physical work, I recommend them. They're good fun, you always meet very interesting people. I don't know what to do, do try out a National Trust work in holiday when they're running again. See that was a castle ward. As I was saying in an earlier video about National Trust holidays and on day off, you often will go to another National Trust property. It's not a set rule that you go to one, you sort of all have a chat. Some people go in their own car and they might want to do their own thing. They took us to Mount Stuart which we actually drove around Strangford Lock and stopped at various other historic sites. We went to Mount Stuart and the house had a lot of work being done on it so we didn't really go in the house but explored that the gardens were fascinating, I mean which were in the gardens. Our next one coming back across onto Mainlands, Britain. The Greyfries, it's in Worcester. A funny thing happened that day with Greyfries. I had a West Midlands Day Ranger ticket, I started in Northampton and the reason I wanted to go to Northampton was I wanted to see the Greyfries bus station which is, I'll have to put a picture in, here it is. That was Greyfries bus station, about a week before they blew it up. It was the most ridiculous thing, I mean I sort of admire it but it was just so over the top, it was so big and vast. Kevin MacLeod called it the mouth of hell on that name stuck. They blew it up and so it was basically a bus station with a car parking in offices above it. I wanted to see it before they blew it up and then with the West Midlands Day Ranger ticket had I got on the train, went to Birmingham, from Birmingham, went on a train to Worcester and I went to another Greyfries, a very very different Greyfries, a Tudor house in the centre of Worcester. So I went to two completely different Greyfries in one day but you can't do that anymore, you can't go to the Greyfries in Northampton, not that you probably want to, it's only people like me who like brutalist buildings, but yeah do go to this Greyfries, it's Greyfries in Worcester and go up the Cathedral and stuff. They do quite a lot of steam charters to Worcester and why not go on a steam charter from London? London pannings and trouble up to Worcester, you could go to the Greyfries and go to Worcester Cathedral. My next one is Speak Hall in Liverpool, right next to John Lennon Airport. Now how did I get there? I think I was doing Mergy rail bashing that morning from basically travelling around on the Mergy rail for fun. I went down to Hunts Cross, came back to Liverpool South Parkway, I think I got a bus to someone, I said to the bus driver I really don't know the area, but if you go anywhere near Speak Hall and he said here we do, he said I'll turn. I think he stopped on the middle of a roundabout because it was the nearest place, it was quite quiet, there was no traffic on the road and he just stopped in the roundabout, so there you go mate. So I walked there, on the way back I then walked along the Mergy and I can't remember where I got back on the Mergy rail, but I basically walked back, it might have been back to Liverpool South Parkway. So quite a fascinating property, big Tudor House, well worth a visit, lovely grounds and it's just on the edge of Liverpool. Next one is Buscot Park where Lord Farrandon lived, it's in Oxfordshire. Quite close, although Swindons in Wilshire, I think it's still in Oxfordshire, quite a long drive that was. That morning I went to Cobershaw Barn, I remember I made a video there and I made a video, so we've now got to the era. The properties I'm visiting now is since Henry's adventures have been invented, so I've been making videos. So I went to Great Cockswell Barn, made a video there, there wasn't a stamp there, it's an unstarved property that you can just go in there, and then went to Buscot Park, Buscot Park's fascinating, so many different gardens, like I say, they're all worth a visit. And then the final one was Goddard's House, now Goddard's House I've made videos there as well, it's in Dringhouse, it's just south of York, so it's in Great York, that's not actually a term, but what I mean is it's in York, a suburb of York. It's where Noel Terry of chocolate oranges, Terry's chocolate, lived. Now the funny thing is, so Terry's had been around for a while, Noel Terry thought I need to think of something new invented to chocolate apple, and you know, it sold, but no one was that bothered, and he thought, what else do you do? He thought, I don't know, I'll come up with a chocolate orange. Of course chocolate orange, everyone knows what a chocolate orange is. So I remember going around the property, it's quite a modern one, I think it was built in the 19th century, it's got nice gardens, backed onto York Racecourse, but I remember when I finished there, at the shop I went into, I went and bought Terry's chocolate orange, so that concludes my passports. My sixth one, which I said I haven't filled up, I might not just quickly tell you where I've been, I've been to Rainham Hall, into Nuffield Place, Moseley Old Hall, Paycock's, Great Cogershall Barn, The Red's House, Hairhill, Never Orderly Mill and Quarry Bank Mill, and then it's empty, so I've got quite a few more properties before this one's filled up. So, at some point in the future, I said in an earlier video, the only years I've not been to new properties was 1997, 2016, 2020. I think in 1997, 2016, I certainly went to National Trust properties, I was probably just revisited others, because as I said, some people cheat and they get the same, every time they go to a property they get a stamp, that's not what you're supposed to do, except when you go to a new property. Yeah, I'm not quite halfway through my sixth passport. If you've been to more than me, I'd love to hear from you. How many of you filled up? Or if you haven't, why don't you start collecting them? Like I said, my girlfriend and I, we went to a few, and I said to everyone, that's right, I think you should have a passport, and it got a long way to catch me up, but you can start. So, yeah, so thank you very much for watching, I hope you enjoyed this little series, me talking about my adventures rather than actually going on an adventure. But hopefully you won't have to do any more of these indoor videos from lockdown, all my videos in the future will be out and about. So thank you very much for watching, please do feel free to like, subscribe and comment. Thank you very much from my kitchen table, goodbye.