I am a Lifelong fan of all things Jack Hargreaves. Shortly after getting married we moved to Cann near Shaftesbury, and on my first jaunt into town who should drive past in a Blue Suzuki but the man himself. I truly felt that we were in the Country and have always treasured the sighting of a Hargreaves in its natural element.
He used to be very friendly with Mrs Mitchell from high steppers livery yard in Sturminster Newton. I’m not sure 100%, but I think he used to keep some of his horses there in the 90s….
No advert breaks every five minutes with recaps to tell you what you watched five minutes ago. No zoomy camera cuts, no stock music, just 25 minutes of beauty, history and vital information about our way of life. Thank you for this.
I never get tired of these programs, l used to love watching out of town on a Sunday morning hoping there will be a bit on fishing from the age of 10 as I remember.
When you see what England was a few decades ago and what we have now it’s not sad it’s outrageous that such a kind way of life is gone. In Ireland we seen this problem, and knew it would wash up on are land someday. The Irish people are a different animal than other European people. Are leaders sell our culture for euros but the folk own the villages the towns the cities and are Celts blood is real important to us. Come live with us but don’t come if you wish to take the piss for the people have learned from the cousins in England what awaits if we don’t keep our country Irish. We ask for nothing just the right to control our own kind our own land.
My grandfather loved the programmes Jack Hargreaves presented. After each programme he'd then explain more about what had been shown on the programme. A wonderful time to have lived in. Even though I'm only 64 I miss those old times. The horses, slow pace of life, wonderful times. When I was 10/11 I used to help the local milkman deliver milk at weekends and during school holidays. This was done with a horse & cart (the horse's name was James. I'll always remember than!). Great memories.
Fantastic ! What a GEM we lost when Jack passed away. They say 'When an old man dies, it's like a Library burning down', well that sums Jack up completely ! R.I.P. Jack. Thanks for sharing his videos. Take care 🙂
Jack taught me everything I needed to know about angling/horses/lurchers/ferreting and rabbiting, etc. He was a real country, Gent. There's never been anyone like him since. RIP mate. You're missed even decades after your passing.
It is often the case that those who love the country aren't from the country. David Attenborough, for example, lives in London and Jack was born there too.
glad i was born in1967 had to go hop picking when i was 12 used to cry getting up at 5am in a wet field ..would not have changed it for the world looking back whats happened to this country now utter disgrace ,,,SHAME ON ALL YOU POLITICIANS 💔
I wonder if those villages have now all been populated with Chelsea tractor owners and all the locals homes have become second or holiday homes. Unfortunately money talks and our traditions are lost forever. Great series of programmes Jack made, totally unique, social history now, many thanks 😊
Hello from the East Riding of Yorkshire. Jack was a wonderful human being, a man of the land. If there where more people like him our country would be a far better and safer place to be. I never got the chance to meet Jack, which is a shame but I shall never forget him and his wonderful programmes. I am 68 now and i love our green and pleasant land, I sometimes wish I had been born in Jack's time. I would have seen a better Britain despite world wars and hardships. I truly believe that people had more respect towards each other. Thank you for a wonderful program. 👍
I live in a small Somerset village close to the Bristol Channel. Watching this and all of the other incredibly precious films made by this great man shows me just how times have brutally changed. Our village and many others are rat-runs for cars with the narrow streets crammed with parked cars from the new shoe box homes being thrown up everywhere. I cycle my Somerset lanes as much as I can and there are still a few places left where dear old Jack would still feel at home but they are dwindling fast. Men like him with his vast knowledge are the backbone of country life. I truly miss him, his soft voice and the explanation of a life gone by. Thank you Jack.
2:46 View from Knoll Farm towards Sturminster Common and Broad Oak 3:14 Okeford Common 3:29 View towards Win Green 3:51 Roome Farm 4:06 Okeford Fitzpaine 4:07 Lower street, Netherway Farmhouse 4:28 The Royal Oak - Lower Street, Okeford Fitzpaine 5:05 Higher Street 5:26 Turning for Okeford Hill 5:35 St Aldhelm’s Church, Belchalwell 6:59 Garlands Lane looking towards Belchalwell Street 7:28 Ibberton Village Hall 7:40 The Crown (currently The Ibberton) - Church Lane, Ibberton 9:05 Woolland 11:21 The Manor House, Droop 11:29 Manor Farm, Droop 11:50 St Mary’s and St James’s Church, Droop 11:58 Droop Cottage, Thickthorn Lane 12:21 Bungalow on Marsh lane 12:25 Marsh lane looking towards the back of Bulbarrow 13:05 Hatherly Farmhouse 14:00 looking towards Dorset Gap 15:02 View from Ansty Cross towards Aller and Melcombe Bingham 15:17 Probably Hilton Bottom 15:38 Hilton 16:04 Thomas’s Hill Plantation 17:14 Milton Abbey 18:04 Pidgeon House Plantation 18:28 Milton Abbas 19:01 The Hambro Arms - The Street, Milton Abbas 20:42 View from Woolland Hill (Bulbarrow) 21:44 Baker’s Folly 22:45 View towards Ibberton The route is about 18 miles starting from the pub in Okeford, going via Ibberton and Droop to Ansty Cross around Bulbarrow Hill. Milton Abbas is out on a phallanx, so the route is there and back through Hilton. On returning to Ansty, Cuckoo Lane goes to the top of Bulbarrow, and then it's back down Ibberton Hill to Baker’s Folly.
@@Peace11.11 Baker's Folly is on the Ibberton Hill road, but they don't do cream teas anymore; you'd have to park in the Forestry Commission car park behind it to get a similar view
What a wonderful film thank you David for giving everyone the chance to see what a wonderful country England once was. Its definitely declined since this was made.
i'm British and I'm 60 years old. This was on telly when I was 13. That aside, the photography was great. The horses heads shadows in the lane... The camera man had an eye for beauty. A dreamlike quality. I don't believe I've ever seen this, Thank you very much.. p.s. We didn't see much of the pubs!
I have watched many of Jack's videos and have been amazed at how he used to explain things on his programmes clearly just by speaking and with a few home-made props, without fancy graphics, hysteria or fake drama. What a pleasant change from present day programmes!
Ah yes, nostalgia isn't what it used to be. (Do you not remember rampant inflation and power cuts due to strike action? Holidays abroad where the holiday and spending money hadn't to exceed £50 because the economy was so bad.)
This is one of the loveliest videos of the English countryside I've come across. I would also add that at about 14 minutes the merging of the trotting and the music was quite an effect.
As a teenager I used to do the stickin up in the skittle alley at the Oak. Was paid about 50p and a plate of chips iirc. Nice to see the street I grew up in on here, we were living there at the time this was filmed. Some journey that btw! It was a school friend's family that ran the tea house at bakers folly, not there as a tea house now.
I was born in Shaftesbury in the late 50's and had a great aunt who lived in Child Okeford. My grandfathers family lived just a few miles north of here around Fontmell Magna and Shaftesbury. Jack lived at Belchawell and the pubs can be found at Okeford Fitzpaine, Ibberton and Milton Abbas. The whole area is so peaceful and absolutely beautiful. This film brought back a lot of memories. 🙂
This is a world I would gladly go back to in an instant! The world we live in today knows very little of the countryside and the skills involved in maintaining farm land and woodland. I am grateful that when I was young the countryside was on my doorstep. My grandmother, when we visited could open her French doors straight out onto open farm land. I bet if you stopped 100 people in the towns now and asked them to identify trees for instance, most could only name 5. The fields I played still showed the old ridge and furrow in places from medieval farming methods.
My cousin Bunty worked with Jack on the How panel and I met him on a few occasions. Watched all his TV and it is quite painful to view this video. He always supported our local show and his knowledge especially of fishing was immense. A lovely man. God Bless the legacy he left for the future.
My Gran kept a country pub from 1947 to 1980. She always had great chunks of bread and cheese on the tables. My mother said that it stopped the men going home for their dinner as many had come in straight from work. A couple of pints and some bread and cheese and they'd stay till closing. Good business woman my Gran lol.
I live in Dorset and work as a bin man and regularly visit this area on my rounds- still extremely beautiful, especially very early mornings when no-one else is around. The tea shop isn't there anymore but still a good spot to have lunch.
Jack saved the very best til last, I have had a beer or two in all of those pubs I have chatted to the man himself in one of them,on few occasions. I haven’t been round much of the route on a horse and cart, all though I did travel part of it in the same way. I have ridden it many times on a motorbike, which arguably is as good. Thank you so much Dave for sharing these videos, they are now a valuable historical document of a time not so long ago. In the time since this was filmed the area has changed again, as Jack predicted!
@@spotsterjon74cu I suspect that would have been his local. I believe Jack's ashes were spread on Bulbarrow, as requested by him. Lovely film and memories.
I can remember watching his programs in my younger days. I never watched much TV as a child, but I still remember him with a fondness. Life was so much simpler in those days, we were no angels and still got a clout from the local Bobby when caught. Thanks Jack.
Beautiful Countryside. Great Show this was, and 85 seems like yesterday. Men like Jack & Fred Dibnah brought this past to us on their Television shows, and I am grateful to see these again, but said because that past is long gone now. I hope our Anglo-Saxon heritage stays alive.
Oliver Kite was an inspiration to young anglers. I began by harvesting, then copying trout flies, tying them that evening then testing them the next day on the water.
At my mother’s cremation back in May. I had the music played, as a tribute to Out of Town which was her favourite tv programme, encapsulating all the things she loved, being a Moonraker born and bred.
Well done, it’s so nostalgic isn’t it 👍😢. We had the music for the same reason for my Dad’s funeral service two years ago. He would have been 96 today, 16th August, so I’ve especially enjoyed being taken back to Out of Town this morning. All the best, Gerry
I’m old and lucky enough to remember these from the first time around,Jack had a profound effect on me at the time and even more so now, I think he would be very disappointed in the loss of many of these skill and the change,not for the better of the English countryside 😢
Thanks to you Dave for showing these old films based on Jack Hargreaves. I must have seen most of them when they were originally broadcast, but that hasn't spoiled my enjoyment of every one. R.I.P Jack. Sadly missed.
I live in Dorset and remember watching as a child of around 7 or 8. I'm 51 now and the change I've seen over the years is huge. All the horse fields that were, and so much of the farmland is all filled with housing. I feel sad for my memories of the past. I know you can't live in the past but life was so much simpler then
I was born in 1963 and grew up in Southern TV land! Jack's wonderful programmes were hugely influential on me. I'm so very pleased that his work, thanks to Dave Knowles, has been brought to established fans and a new audience. Bless you Jack, and thank you Dave.
I now find myself at 65 living from London in Dorset One day I vow to visit Jack's old house I still avidly watch all the episodes especially the fishing oned because Jack is like an encyclopaedia of countryside knowledge God bless you Jack your legacy lives on !
This reminds me of staying with my grandmother, when I was a child in the 1960s, and she lived in Somerset. The sound and sights of the summer and the friendliness of the people. I know it is now a cliche, but no-one locked doors - the houses in the village were all open and everyone knew everyone. Fresh eggs and milk and my grandmother making the butter and bread for breakfast - with the butter formed by wooden mould, complete with a thistle pattern on top of the block of butter. It really is a lost world, a lost England - now present only in my memory - or seeing the occasional video like this. It was such a happy childhood and such a great place to spend the summer. I'm not sure many realise what has been lost.
I used to watch this lovely man with my dad when I was young. I still love to see any of the programs. They bring wonderful memories and I Lear so much still
I knew many great Elms as a young boy in 1950s ! Owls & Jackdaws found a home within their hollow branches & trunks! I recall seeing great nails protruding from some trees so as to form hand/ footholds to gain access to these birds nests ! Later years I motored along lanes flanked by much younger Elm trees whose canopies were so dense that even on brightest Summer day was quite cool & darkish ! I never thought such trees could vanish!
Mature elms were struck by a virus that took out about a dreadful 95% since the 1960's . Spread via a woodboring beetle brought over in ships from North America as Timber - the ' Dutch Elm Disease ' virus was as bad as 'Bubonic Plague' was to people in the Middle Ages.
I'm from Dorset and watching this reminds me of everything we have lost . Many fields and hedgerows now covered in concrete. If Jack was around now he would weep. He certainly wouldn't attempt to ride on that cart today through villages without putting himself in harms way.
What a wonderful video as well as a wonderful man too. I remember watching these with my Dad who's long gone. I'm now 78 and as others have said, it brings back so many memories of days long gone. Life was so much slower and people were happier too. Thank you for this video. I shall work my way through these and one of them is going to go on my Christmas wish list.
I used to go to those pubs back in the 60s. Royal Oak in Okeford Fitzpaine, The Crown in Winterborne Stickland, Hambro Arms in Milton Abbas. The country lanes are still the same.
Small correction. The 2nd pub is the Crown at Ibberton. Sadly, it changed its name about 10 years ago and is now called The Ibberton. More of a dining pub these days.
I remember watching Jack in a children's programme called, 'HOW' explaining how things worked in that calm melodic voice of his. It was nice watching this, it brought back memories.
What an enjoyable episode. Such beauty mixed with a feeling of loss for the old ways of England. Thanks for publishing Dave. These videos mean a lot to me.
Wish it was still like this, Jack was brilliant, got me into fishing and country life, my dad always did say one day we will be back to the horse and cart.
Used to love out of town on a Sunday afternoon growing up in Belfast during the 70's and 80's as a young boy,it took me away to a simpler time and place away from the mayhem of the place I actually lived in. I get a great sense of peace whenever I hear the title music. Thank you jack Hargreaves.
Greetings from South of France, where I've been walking some Camino routes. Just prior to that I walked the Cotswold Way then almost all the Peddars Way. Camping out. Just to record that the English countryside is beautiful, flourishing, more biodiversity than here in Occitane where birds are few and crops many. Jack, we owe you a debt of gratitude. THANK you
Good old days When hotels were for holidays. When you got ill doctors would even home visit When you got toothache dentist would see you same day. When a crime occurred the police would attend. It wasn't perfect but it was a damn site better than nowadays.❤
I remember I used to watch this as a kid back in the day.. takes me back and even watching this on UA-cam makes me feel calm and relaxed. what a great program but such a shame to see how things used to be and how ruined they are now. great times
I live in Okeford Fitzpaine, the location of the 1st pub - The Royal Oak. All the pubs are still there and operating. The Ibberton (previously The Crown) in Ibberton and The Hambro Arms in Milton Abbas. Sadly the Tea room on Bulbarrow hill is no more. It’s now a private residence. I have to agree the views from Bulbarrow are magnificent
I live in Huddersfield. Jack was from near Holmfirth I believe so quite near. I reported a 60ft tree I thought had Ash die back however turns out its an elm and very few left round these parts. I wondered what villages they were. Thanks
The very great Jack Hargreaves, there was never anyone like him, he was a Godsend, he helped to educate and show many people who lived in cities, towns and places that people had no or very little contact with the farming, fishing country life. I only got to watch Jack a few times on a battered rented small black and white TV in my rented room back in time. Jacked helped to brighten up people's lives. Jack is now enjoying eternal peace in Heaven. As the people say in my town, Thanks A Million Jack
I absolutely love these Jack Hargreaves videos. I live nearby. Doing this pub crawl is on my list. I don’t have a horse and cart so I might need to borrow a bike.
The programmes were more of a history lesson, not a cry for the past. Jack never moaned about the present day although I doubt he would agree on many things. Great series!
Brings back childhood memories for me sitting on my grandfather’s knee watching this on the telly I grew up on a farm which is very sadly become a giant housing estate in the last two years now for my memories I watch jack and remember our farm house the tin bath in the kitchen in front of the fire I do not envy the generations of today I grew up in the best of times when everyone was friendly and all the people that worked at harvest would stop at lunch time and my grandmother would bring a giant picnic to the field my child hood was so much happier than the kids of today and jack is very sorely missed rip jack and thank you for all my memories ❤
A fantastic record of country life from a time long past, beautifully presented by a first rate communicator, and now preserved for future generations to learn from. Thank you Jack, and thank you Dave Knowles for allowing us to enjoy these programmes once more. They are timeless and just as relevant today as they were when first broadcast.
I am a Lifelong fan of all things Jack Hargreaves. Shortly after getting married we moved to Cann near Shaftesbury, and on my first jaunt into town who should drive past in a Blue Suzuki but the man himself. I truly felt that we were in the Country and have always treasured the sighting of a Hargreaves in its natural element.
He used to be very friendly with Mrs Mitchell from high steppers livery yard in Sturminster Newton. I’m not sure 100%, but I think he used to keep some of his horses there in the 90s….
No advert breaks every five minutes with recaps to tell you what you watched five minutes ago. No zoomy camera cuts, no stock music, just 25 minutes of beauty, history and vital information about our way of life. Thank you for this.
So true
A wonderful sign-off with Jack traveling down the lanes he loved so much; and us along as guests. R.I.P. Jack, you are sorely missed.
Just beautiful. R.I.P. Jack, you are sadly missed
He passed in 1994
As are those bygone days
I never get tired of these programs, l used to love watching out of town on a Sunday morning hoping there will be a bit on fishing from the age of 10 as I remember.
When you see what England was a few decades ago and what we have now it’s not sad it’s outrageous that such a kind way of life is gone. In Ireland we seen this problem, and knew it would wash up on are land someday. The Irish people are a different animal than other European people. Are leaders sell our culture for euros but the folk own the villages the towns the cities and are Celts blood is real important to us. Come live with us but don’t come if you wish to take the piss for the people have learned from the cousins in England what awaits if we don’t keep our country Irish. We ask for nothing just the right to control our own kind our own land.
Never a truer word said.
😅
What a wonderful film.
What a beautiful county Dorset must be...still?
Jack Hargreaves is so sadly missed.
His like will never be seen again.
No mobile phones no internet a wonderful time miss it like mad.
How have you just watched this? Doh!
@@stepheng8779Don’t hate the player, hate the game
@@stepheng8779Dumb comment!
A more simpler & civilised age..
And No Millennials Peter
The black dog following the cart was my beautiful Bramble . We lived on the farm in Ibberton. . Thank you I could see him again x
My grandfather loved the programmes Jack Hargreaves presented. After each programme he'd then explain more about what had been shown on the programme. A wonderful time to have lived in. Even though I'm only 64 I miss those old times. The horses, slow pace of life, wonderful times. When I was 10/11 I used to help the local milkman deliver milk at weekends and during school holidays. This was done with a horse & cart (the horse's name was James. I'll always remember than!). Great memories.
Don't despair about your age mate. I'm sure you could be handy mending a fuse, when you're lights have gone!😉
Fantastic ! What a GEM we lost when Jack passed away. They say 'When an old man dies, it's like a Library burning down', well that sums Jack up completely ! R.I.P. Jack. Thanks for sharing his videos. Take care 🙂
Jack taught me everything I needed to know about angling/horses/lurchers/ferreting and rabbiting, etc. He was a real country, Gent. There's never been anyone like him since. RIP mate. You're missed even decades after your passing.
It is often the case that those who love the country aren't from the country. David Attenborough, for example, lives in London and Jack was born there too.
So sad that I remember this and 50 years forward , change has send us backwards to a world that Jack would not recognise 😢
glad i was born in1967 had to go hop picking when i was 12 used to cry getting up at 5am in a wet field ..would not have changed it for the world looking back whats happened to this country now utter disgrace ,,,SHAME ON ALL YOU POLITICIANS 💔
That's why Sunak has no problem in destroying this country, because he has no love for it or memory of what it once was, like we do
I wonder if those villages have now all been populated with Chelsea tractor owners and all the locals homes have become second or holiday homes. Unfortunately money talks and our traditions are lost forever. Great series of programmes Jack made, totally unique, social history now, many thanks 😊
Indeed they have...live very close by.
Hello from the East Riding of Yorkshire. Jack was a wonderful human being, a man of the land. If there where more people like him our country would be a far better and safer place to be. I never got the chance to meet Jack, which is a shame but I shall never forget him and his wonderful programmes. I am 68 now and i love our green and pleasant land, I sometimes wish I had been born in Jack's time. I would have seen a better Britain despite world wars and hardships. I truly believe that people had more respect towards each other. Thank you for a wonderful program. 👍
That’s tonight’s bedtime watching sorted 👍
Pleasant dreams….
Just did this exact pub crawl with my dad to honour jack, even stopped by at belchawell church and passed by his home. Long live jack!
I live in a small Somerset village close to the Bristol Channel. Watching this and all of the other incredibly precious films made by this great man shows me just how times have brutally changed.
Our village and many others are rat-runs for cars with the narrow streets crammed with parked cars from the new shoe box homes being thrown up everywhere.
I cycle my Somerset lanes as much as I can and there are still a few places left where dear old Jack would still feel at home but they are dwindling fast.
Men like him with his vast knowledge are the backbone of country life. I truly miss him, his soft voice and the explanation of a life gone by.
Thank you Jack.
2:46 View from Knoll Farm towards Sturminster Common and Broad Oak
3:14 Okeford Common
3:29 View towards Win Green
3:51 Roome Farm
4:06 Okeford Fitzpaine
4:07 Lower street, Netherway Farmhouse
4:28 The Royal Oak - Lower Street, Okeford Fitzpaine
5:05 Higher Street
5:26 Turning for Okeford Hill
5:35 St Aldhelm’s Church, Belchalwell
6:59 Garlands Lane looking towards Belchalwell Street
7:28 Ibberton Village Hall
7:40 The Crown (currently The Ibberton) - Church Lane, Ibberton
9:05 Woolland
11:21 The Manor House, Droop
11:29 Manor Farm, Droop
11:50 St Mary’s and St James’s Church, Droop
11:58 Droop Cottage, Thickthorn Lane
12:21 Bungalow on Marsh lane
12:25 Marsh lane looking towards the back of Bulbarrow
13:05 Hatherly Farmhouse
14:00 looking towards Dorset Gap
15:02 View from Ansty Cross towards Aller and Melcombe Bingham
15:17 Probably Hilton Bottom
15:38 Hilton
16:04 Thomas’s Hill Plantation
17:14 Milton Abbey
18:04 Pidgeon House Plantation
18:28 Milton Abbas
19:01 The Hambro Arms - The Street, Milton Abbas
20:42 View from Woolland Hill (Bulbarrow)
21:44 Baker’s Folly
22:45 View towards Ibberton
The route is about 18 miles starting from the pub in Okeford, going via Ibberton and Droop to Ansty Cross around Bulbarrow Hill. Milton Abbas is out on a phallanx, so the route is there and back through Hilton. On returning to Ansty, Cuckoo Lane goes to the top of Bulbarrow, and then it's back down Ibberton Hill to Baker’s Folly.
Thank you so much for listing the itinerary - i was wondering where all of the places were
@@Peace11.11 Baker's Folly is on the Ibberton Hill road, but they don't do cream teas anymore; you'd have to park in the Forestry Commission car park behind it to get a similar view
Thank you
England is very beautiful - I’m proud to have been lucky enough to have been born here.
You have a wonderful English name too. Long live the English.
Well said 👍
What a wonderful film thank you David for giving everyone the chance to see what a wonderful country England once was. Its definitely declined since this was made.
i'm British and I'm 60 years old. This was on telly when I was 13. That aside, the photography was great. The horses heads shadows in the lane... The camera man had an eye for beauty. A dreamlike quality.
I don't believe I've ever seen this, Thank you very much.. p.s. We didn't see much of the pubs!
These programmes are fantastic - but quite sad in that they show a time that will never again be enjoyed.
I have watched many of Jack's videos and have been amazed at how he used to explain things on his programmes clearly just by speaking and with a few home-made props, without fancy graphics, hysteria or fake drama. What a pleasant change from present day programmes!
Jack lived it all ... and you don't need notes or a teleprompter for that.
Greatest presenter ever
Thank you Andy.
Back when TV was good and life was much much better ,
Ah yes, nostalgia isn't what it used to be. (Do you not remember rampant inflation and power cuts due to strike action? Holidays abroad where the holiday and spending money hadn't to exceed £50 because the economy was so bad.)
This is one of the loveliest videos of the English countryside I've come across. I would also add that at about 14 minutes the merging of the trotting and the music was quite an effect.
As a teenager I used to do the stickin up in the skittle alley at the Oak. Was paid about 50p and a plate of chips iirc.
Nice to see the street I grew up in on here, we were living there at the time this was filmed. Some journey that btw! It was a school friend's family that ran the tea house at bakers folly, not there as a tea house now.
Thank you so much for the update as people often ask what has become of some of the places Jack visited on his programmes.
What wonderful times, never to be seen again.
growing up in the Southern TV region as a kid in the 1970s, this theme music instantly reminds me of Sunday roasts dinners
Likewise, the music gets me every time! Thanks Dave for resurrecting these.
Used to watch Jack way back when I was a child what a great knowledgeable man he was
I was born in Shaftesbury in the late 50's and had a great aunt who lived in Child Okeford. My grandfathers family lived just a few miles north of here around Fontmell Magna and Shaftesbury.
Jack lived at Belchawell and the pubs can be found at Okeford Fitzpaine, Ibberton and Milton Abbas. The whole area is so peaceful and absolutely beautiful. This film brought back a lot of memories. 🙂
This is a world I would gladly go back to in an instant! The world we live in today knows very little of the countryside and the skills involved in maintaining farm land and woodland. I am grateful that when I was young the countryside was on my doorstep. My grandmother, when we visited could open her French doors straight out onto open farm land. I bet if you stopped 100 people in the towns now and asked them to identify trees for instance, most could only name 5. The fields I played still showed the old ridge and furrow in places from medieval farming methods.
My cousin Bunty worked with Jack on the How panel and I met him on a few occasions. Watched all his TV and it is quite painful to view this video. He always supported our local show and his knowledge especially of fishing was immense. A lovely man. God Bless the legacy he left for the future.
Oh ... Bunty James. How is she?
Innocent times. Sadly never to be repeated.
My Gran kept a country pub from 1947 to 1980. She always had great chunks of bread and cheese on the tables. My mother said that it stopped the men going home for their dinner as many had come in straight from work. A couple of pints and some bread and cheese and they'd stay till closing. Good business woman my Gran lol.
A Fantastic program, i only wish i had a time machine
Just what the doctor ordered for a rainy Monday morning in 'modern' England (lifted me up).
I live in Dorset and work as a bin man and regularly visit this area on my rounds- still extremely beautiful, especially very early mornings when no-one else is around. The tea shop isn't there anymore but still a good spot to have lunch.
Jack saved the very best til last, I have had a beer or two in all of those pubs I have chatted to the man himself in one of them,on few occasions. I haven’t been round much of the route on a horse and cart, all though I did travel part of it in the same way. I have ridden it many times on a motorbike, which arguably is as good. Thank you so much Dave for sharing these videos, they are now a valuable historical document of a time not so long ago. In the time since this was filmed the area has changed again, as Jack predicted!
Where was/is the Crown, can find the other two. Just realised have been on holiday there or at least nearby.
@@adecirkett5351 The Crown was at Iberton, which is under Bullbarrow hill, that was the pub I was most likely to see him in.
@@spotsterjon74cu I suspect that would have been his local. I believe Jack's ashes were spread on Bulbarrow, as requested by him. Lovely film and memories.
Absolutely beautiful. Peaceful and easy pace of life.
Even a bit of global warming there for the fruit cakes 😂😂😂😂😂
I can remember watching his programs in my younger days. I never watched much TV as a child, but I still remember him with a fondness. Life was so much simpler in those days, we were no angels and still got a clout from the local Bobby when caught. Thanks Jack.
Jack understood our countryside well, unlike Countryfile today.
Beautiful Countryside. Great Show this was, and 85 seems like yesterday. Men like Jack & Fred Dibnah brought this past to us on their Television shows, and I am grateful to see these again, but said because that past is long gone now. I hope our Anglo-Saxon heritage stays alive.
Oliver Kite was an inspiration to young anglers. I began by harvesting, then copying trout flies, tying them that evening then testing them the next day on the water.
At my mother’s cremation back in May. I had the music played, as a tribute to Out of Town which was her favourite tv programme, encapsulating all the things she loved, being a Moonraker born and bred.
Well done, it’s so nostalgic isn’t it 👍😢. We had the music for the same reason for my Dad’s funeral service two years ago. He would have been 96 today, 16th August, so I’ve especially enjoyed being taken back to Out of Town this morning. All the best, Gerry
I’m old and lucky enough to remember these from the first time around,Jack had a profound effect on me at the time and even more so now, I think he would be very disappointed in the loss of many of these skill and the change,not for the better of the English countryside 😢
Thanks to you Dave for showing these old films based on Jack Hargreaves. I must have seen most of them when they were originally broadcast, but that hasn't spoiled my enjoyment of every one. R.I.P Jack. Sadly missed.
I live in Dorset and remember watching as a child of around 7 or 8. I'm 51 now and the change I've seen over the years is huge. All the horse fields that were, and so much of the farmland is all filled with housing. I feel sad for my memories of the past. I know you can't live in the past but life was so much simpler then
God bless.. No one like him and there never will be again.. What a legend.
I was born in 1963 and grew up in Southern TV land! Jack's wonderful programmes were hugely influential on me. I'm so very pleased that his work, thanks to Dave Knowles, has been brought to established fans and a new audience. Bless you Jack, and thank you Dave.
I now find myself at 65 living from London in Dorset
One day I vow to visit Jack's old house I still avidly watch all the episodes especially the fishing oned because Jack is like an encyclopaedia of countryside knowledge
God bless you Jack your legacy lives on !
I do hope that's not the last Old Country we're going to see!
What a beautiful way to spend a day. Simple pleasure at a human pace.
Old Country was a marvellous programme.
If he saw the state of the UK today he would be mortified.
Perhaps you shouldn't put words in his mouth.
This green and pleasant land. Thanks Dave. First class.
This reminds me of staying with my grandmother, when I was a child in the 1960s, and she lived in Somerset. The sound and sights of the summer and the friendliness of the people. I know it is now a cliche, but no-one locked doors - the houses in the village were all open and everyone knew everyone. Fresh eggs and milk and my grandmother making the butter and bread for breakfast - with the butter formed by wooden mould, complete with a thistle pattern on top of the block of butter. It really is a lost world, a lost England - now present only in my memory - or seeing the occasional video like this. It was such a happy childhood and such a great place to spend the summer. I'm not sure many realise what has been lost.
These films are very valuable.
This should be prescribed on the NHS .
I agree, they are a sheer pleasure.
Along with The Detectorsists
DETECTORiSTS
@@mattwillis9173I be one of them lol
What an amazing font of knowledge Jack Hargreaves was these programes should be required viewing in classroom s showing social history
I remember watching Jack the very first time round - loved his programs. R.I.P Jack - like the rest of our beautiful country.
I used to watch this lovely man with my dad when I was young. I still love to see any of the programs. They bring wonderful memories and I Lear so much still
I knew many great Elms as a young boy in 1950s ! Owls & Jackdaws found a home within their hollow branches & trunks! I recall seeing great nails protruding from some trees so as to form hand/ footholds to gain access to these birds nests ! Later years I motored along lanes flanked by much younger Elm trees whose canopies were so dense that even on brightest Summer day was quite cool & darkish ! I never thought such trees could vanish!
It’s heartbreaking.
Mature elms were struck by a virus that took out about a dreadful 95% since the 1960's . Spread via a woodboring beetle brought over in ships from North America as Timber - the ' Dutch Elm Disease ' virus was as bad as 'Bubonic Plague' was to people in the Middle Ages.
Loved watching Jack Hargreaves programmes when I were a young boy growing up in London.
A minefield of information,He knows the history of his neighbourhood x the flora and fauna X the pubs .A brilliant series.
I don't think you mean minefield 😀
Just dreaming now but true so sad in the 50s and 60s when I was growing up it was a good time but now it's so sad
I'm from Dorset and watching this reminds me of everything we have lost . Many fields and hedgerows now covered in concrete. If Jack was around now he would weep. He certainly wouldn't attempt to ride on that cart today through villages without putting himself in harms way.
Isn't it pathetic, the country has been flushed down the toilet 😮 breaks my English heart 🇬🇧 🫀
The UK is a dead county. A total cesspit thanks to the boomers generation.
What a wonderful video as well as a wonderful man too. I remember watching these with my Dad who's long gone. I'm now 78 and as others have said, it brings back so many memories of days long gone. Life was so much slower and people were happier too. Thank you for this video. I shall work my way through these and one of them is going to go on my Christmas wish list.
nice comment i am 64 and agree
Brilliant, the good old days the one and only Jack Hargreaves
Thank you Dave for this wonderfully perfect Sunday evening video. What I wouldn't give to be on that wagon and enjoy that day with Jack.
Yes spending time with Jack was full of stories. Far too many for me to remember.
I used to go to those pubs back in the 60s. Royal Oak in Okeford Fitzpaine,
The Crown in Winterborne Stickland, Hambro Arms in Milton Abbas. The country lanes are still the same.
Thank you for providing the info missing from the programme!! But can you identify the tea house??
Small correction. The 2nd pub is the Crown at Ibberton. Sadly, it changed its name about 10 years ago and is now called The Ibberton. More of a dining pub these days.
@@n.j.r.fisher4257Bakers Folly on Bulbarrow Hill. Now closed.
His wisdom ,country code ,and love of life ,i will never forget...!
I remember watching Jack in a children's programme called, 'HOW' explaining how things worked in that calm melodic voice of his. It was nice watching this, it brought back memories.
Love these episodes it takes me back being born in 1960,a much simpler hands on time ❤
What an enjoyable episode. Such beauty mixed with a feeling of loss for the old ways of England. Thanks for publishing Dave. These videos mean a lot to me.
Sublime perfection.
Looks as close to paradise as you can get anywhere times gone forever sadly a different world and not for the better.
Wish it was still like this, Jack was brilliant, got me into fishing and country life, my dad always did say one day we will be back to the horse and cart.
Used to love out of town on a Sunday afternoon growing up in Belfast during the 70's and 80's as a young boy,it took me away to a simpler time and place away from the mayhem of the place I actually lived in.
I get a great sense of peace whenever I hear the title music.
Thank you jack Hargreaves.
Greetings from South of France, where I've been walking some Camino routes. Just prior to that I walked the Cotswold Way then almost all the Peddars Way. Camping out. Just to record that the English countryside is beautiful, flourishing, more biodiversity than here in Occitane where birds are few and crops many. Jack, we owe you a debt of gratitude. THANK you
This man is the first to ever teach me anything when I was young he's a true hero ❤🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
He certainly is
Delightful program , i watched as a boy Sunday lunch time, mainly for his fishing trips and tips.
Good old days
When hotels were for holidays.
When you got ill doctors would even home visit
When you got toothache dentist would see you same day.
When a crime occurred the police would attend.
It wasn't perfect but it was a damn site better than nowadays.❤
I remember I used to watch this as a kid back in the day.. takes me back and even watching this on UA-cam makes me feel calm and relaxed. what a great program but such a shame to see how things used to be and how ruined they are now. great times
Every man needs a uncle or father or grandfather like jack. He would be a better man than 95 per cent of the so called men these days.
Or maybe 98%?
@@Lamya65 Sadly, looking at the Tik Tok and Twitter generation I think you must be one of the lucky ones.
Think you maybe right.
That 5% is heading in the wrong direction as the new generations are coming through.
Ah, you mean a londonder who makes up complete crap about the countryside they never grew up in?
Peak boomer
I live in Okeford Fitzpaine, the location of the 1st pub - The Royal Oak. All the pubs are still there and operating. The Ibberton (previously The Crown) in Ibberton and The Hambro Arms in Milton Abbas. Sadly the Tea room on Bulbarrow hill is no more. It’s now a private residence. I have to agree the views from Bulbarrow are magnificent
Jack's ashes were scattered on Bulbarrow Hill.
I live in Huddersfield. Jack was from near Holmfirth I believe so quite near. I reported a 60ft tree I thought had Ash die back however turns out its an elm and very few left round these parts. I wondered what villages they were. Thanks
Thank you Charles it is good to know that the pubs are still there.
Wish he'd taken us into the pub.
The very great Jack Hargreaves, there was never anyone like him, he was a Godsend, he helped to educate and show many people who lived in cities, towns and places that people had no or very little contact with the farming, fishing country life. I only got to watch Jack a few times on a battered rented small black and white TV in my rented room back in time. Jacked helped to brighten up people's lives. Jack is now enjoying eternal peace in Heaven. As the people say in my town, Thanks A Million Jack
I absolutely love these Jack Hargreaves videos. I live nearby. Doing this pub crawl is on my list. I don’t have a horse and cart so I might need to borrow a bike.
What a lovely ending to the series, Dave. Beautifully done as always, and what a pity there's nothing like it any more. Thank you!
The Quintessential English Country Gentleman, RIP Jack 🙏🏻 Thanks for sharing David 🙌🏻
My pleasure I am so pleased you enjoyed the programme.
wonderful memories i loved watching Jack
The programmes were more of a history lesson, not a cry for the past. Jack never moaned about the present day although I doubt he would agree on many things. Great series!
I was a great fan of Jack Hargreaves. What an engaging and interesting man.
Absolutely wonderful, Jack is still missed but I bet he wouldn't like things today....
Great memories of watching Jack and trying to work out what the mystery object was before the end of the show.
I miss nice, honest, informative programmes like these. Nostalgia at its best. Thank you.
I could listen to Jack all day what an informative story teller, very sadly missed.
Brings back childhood memories for me sitting on my grandfather’s knee watching this on the telly I grew up on a farm which is very sadly become a giant housing estate in the last two years now for my memories I watch jack and remember our farm house the tin bath in the kitchen in front of the fire
I do not envy the generations of today I grew up in the best of times when everyone was friendly and all the people that worked at harvest would stop at lunch time and my grandmother would bring a giant picnic to the field my child hood was so much happier than the kids of today and jack is very sorely missed rip jack and thank you for all my memories ❤
A fantastic record of country life from a time long past, beautifully presented by a first rate communicator, and now preserved for future generations to learn from. Thank you Jack, and thank you Dave Knowles for allowing us to enjoy these programmes once more. They are timeless and just as relevant today as they were when first broadcast.
Such a relaxing programme used to watch this when I was young boy 👍
Brilliant beautiful and simplistic these are the good old times 👌