I lived in Spain as an exchange student from the Southern United States when I was 14. I’m 60 now with my very own garden paradise of 7 acres. Most of those acres are forest, a little over 1 acre is lawn and the rest is planted with flower and vegetable. When I watched this episode I was surprised by this huge waterfall of emotion that came over me. I found myself crying hard….why? I realized how much I was influenced by Spain as a child before O was ever interested in gardening. My only knowledge of gardening at the age of 14 was from helping my Grandfather garden in Mississippi. He had grown up during the depression and so in fear of food insecurity he grew the most lush vegetable gardens…full of greens, figs, peaches, muscadine, tomatoes, peppers, onion, melons galore. I thought it was magical but I hated the work. Weeding and watering in the heat of the Delta. Always watching out for fire ant mounds and copperheads…swarmed by mosquitoes in the evening and of course having to listen to Pa-Pa call all of us kids lazy and spoiled because we would complain endlessly when forced to work for “movie money” (tickets for Star Wars were $1.75, a box of popcorn was .50 cents and a drink was a quarter.) All that said, I did love the garden, the watermelons etc. it was all so special but my Grandfather never grew flowers or ornamental plants. I have here at my house an Eastern wall that it covered with my collection of geraniums and I am always happy to see the reaction of folks seeing it for the first time. Many who do not garden don’t know the geranium and ask “What flower is that”? It’s just a simple geranium but when displayed all together they tickle my fancy. They are very easy to propagate. Thank You for hitting my heart this morning. My family took me for a weekend visit to Cordova and although my eyes were young and my idea of ever having my own garden not developed…seeing all the pots and water features in this video was a Eureka moment. Spain was where it all began. I also have bitter orange trees, jasmine, gardenia and a collection of old fashioned roses that I grow for the smell. Am I wealthy? Hardly. When my husband and I purchased first the 5 acres and later the property next door it was almost empty…some fig and muscadine and a worn down veggie patch but it was also land located in one of the poorest parts of town in the middle of poorest preforming public schools in my state. That’s how we could afford it. Now my husband will retire next year and both of us have no desire to travel or eat out in fancy restaurants. Our kitchen was last updated in the mid-1980’s, both of our cars are over 25 years old as well as our Winter jackets and blankets….We have created our own little paradise that we can finish our days in. My Grandfather I spoke of above died in 1983 in the middle of his garden with a hoe in his hand. God has been so good to us…we have more than we could ever deserve.
Villa d’Este and Villa Lante are just stunning. Truly a thing of beauty is a joy forever. I can imagine the parties held there, laughter tinkling above the gurgling fountains, a cool breeze wafting over the flowing water, warm rays of sun sparkling on the rippling surface. I could spend ages just sitting there enjoying the beauty of it - God’s creation and man’s creation in perfect harmony. Perhaps someday I can see it in person.
Wow...what a great explanation of the Muslim garden idea. THe philosophy of it. I live near the Colonial Spanish UNESCO World Heritage former capital of Central America: Antigua, Guatemala. Being an American expat retiree I loved the walled courtyards in the town...copied from Spain...My very first visit walking the cobblestone streets as a humble large door called a porton would open I would catch a glimpse of a fountain and rose filled courtyard as in southern Spain. It would surprise me every time how so simple a colonial exterior would hide such lushness. Several hotels are in large properties so the gardens are even more impressive. I was lucky to spend 6 mos here living with an upper class family in their home next to a famous church, La Merced. They had another family member who owned such a hotel so I went there for coffee often in the private quarters where they lived. I was lucky to have an introduction into local society that tourists do not get. I was charmed by the easeful life, the understated elegance of the homes and the tranquility of the gardens. I felt I had stepped back in time a century, or two or more. I simply HAD to live here! It is a small town limited by surrounding hil.s and volcanoes to 12 blocks by 12 blocks, ruined churches brought down by earthquakes to paint....heavenly. This was 20 years ago. In two years my husband and I had sold our sailboat we had retired on, bought a property not far outside the town with views of the surrounding volcanoes, expanded the house and made it more like the ones we saw in Sevillia and Granada, lovely tiled decor, added fountains and gardens of roses and tropical plants. THis place the town and our home has given us 20 years of exquisite joy in a perfect climate with great friends, locals and expats alike .We all entertain mostly in our gardens filled with hummingbirds and migrating species including our beloved painted buntings we had on St Simons Isllamd in Georgia, USA....And just as he says....one keeps the walls outside simple..ours are covered with bougainvillia, you come into the porton walk down a path and then there before you is a small paradise on earth with the sound of two courtyard fountains and the birds seranading you...atop two walls peek the tops of two volcanoes....one inactive and the other far enough away to be safe, is active, erupting lava down its slopes and into the air periodically. WE built a second level large terrace area ala espana and a small third level, one as a viewing terrace for that erupting volcano and to see the heavens.
My 17 year old loves this stuff. he is already working during the summers at a botanical garden nearby. The woman that runs the place is a Harvard biology professor. She is teaching him all kinds of things. Boy the gardens he could have a future with all over the world.
Thank you for sharing this program. How wonderful it is, in this time of quarantines, to travel the world of gardens. It makes me appreciate anew what a sanctuary, a gift, a blessing any garden is, large or small. Wow. This program is better than buckets of jewels! And it makes me wonder what it would be like if we all saw each other as gardens ... if we wondered what sunlight, what water, each person needs to truly bloom. It would be a different world, but not, i think, impossible. Thank you. May the joy and peace this video gives others be returned to you many times over!
LAURA A LOVELAND imitation gardens and pretty indeed, but to imagine the garden of Eden. These wouldn’t compare. Paradise was lost and now all we have are remnants of this lost paradise. I’ve seen pictures of the garden of Ninfa in Italy. It’s also very pretty.
@Ted Carruthers He is not doing any self-publicity nonsense. He is a very well-known presenter and has a weekly show called the Gardener's World with the BBC for years, filmed at his garden. This is part of the series he did about gardens around the world.
FOr anyone who loves the Alhambra as I do AND Spain and Spanish history SEE the 3 season progam produced in Spain "Isabelle" about Isabel and Ferdinand , to see the Alhambra dressed in silk cushions funrnishings... transformed to a true paradise as it WAS! The series is the best on these subjects ever made...English subtitles!
How I would love to do Majorelle the train north then to Granada! I took a cruise ship from the USA through the strait to Barcelona then back to Granada which was the dream of a lifetime for a gardener....simply one of a kind!
Wonderful way to start the day. Missed the Roman gardens when there but saw the fascinating and lovely Alhambra. Wish I liked its contemporary people as much... Thank you Monty, this is a charming film.
Your video is very informative just I would like to correct one small information the Almoravids are one of the native Daynasties that rulled most of north Africa and the Iberian peninsula they are definitly not from the midlle east they were from the South of the kingdom of Morocco. Best regards
it is not 4k but i still manage to enjoy it from the first minute to the last. simply briliant naratives as english language could be capable of. the feel of it. it transcends. it inspires and it satisfies.
I am thrilled you went to Crauncho’s home! He is just the best, as you said he makes something new out of the Mediterranean and Arabic traditions, it has been the perfect ending!
Just a correction about thz moroccan part it's not arabic it's native amazigh north african amazigh and mediteranean culture. Nothing to do with meadel east. This beauty doesn't exist in meadel east
You are right, it doesn’t exist in the Middle East, I am referring to the Arabic tradition in Spain, when the Muslims invade Spain in the seven hundreds they arrive to a gothic Spain that had been roman for seven hundred years and they adapt their style to what is already there, they “arabise” the Roman villa, I am referring to that new mix
for a series about gardens, it shows a lot of views of trains and city skylines. It barely showed the back yard gardens and hardly mentions the plants found in them.
I think these series are meant to inspire people to travel. Yes, not everyone has the opportunity to, but I think this series is for garden-obsessed people that will be inspired by the selection here and then plan trips around it... But I do agree, there can NEVER be enough shots of the gardens and explanations of the plants.
A shame the Palacio de la Granja in Segovia did not appear here. The fountains there are great, they have nothing to do with the Islamic world so many tourists are not interested. For them Spain is just the Tales of the Alhambra by Washington Irving, something that did no good to Spain. If you go to Madrid, take a short trip to Segovia and go tho see the gardens and fountains ns, better in autumn... ☺️☺️☺️
The more I listen to Mr. Don the more i realise history needs to rewritten. The most powerful man, the richest man.......in the western world Mr. Don, in the western world. NOT THE WORLD
The gardens of spain are of pure moroccan architecture, and the influence is amazigh =native north african. Absolutly not arab. This kind of architechture don't came from meadel east at all and it's compkeatly different from meadel east. it's native to morocco and south spain because this part was controlled by the moroccan empire for centuries. While visiting alhambra i have the feeling i'm in fes La jiralda has his similar mosque in marrakech...
Btw, the "h" is silent in Spanish. So, Alhambra is pronounced, "Alambrah." Again, the "h" is silent in Spanish. Examples: Hola, hombre, hambre, alcohol, etc... It's basic Spanish.
The English word alcohol comes from Arabic (al-kohl). Means possesses by spirits. It’s root is also in the English word ghoul. It’s not Spanish and the h is not silent.
Almoravids and almohads didn’t come from the Middle East. Almoravids are Moroccan Imazighen/“berbers” of native North African descent who converted to Islam. Please make some research before saying such things. It’s also not an “Arab” garden, we call Moroccan architecture “moorish” for a reason, mainly because it is actually NOT Arabian. Same thing applies to Riads which are only found in Morocco and nowhere else in the Middle East. Again, much and much misinformation in this documentary, I personally don’t recommend it.
LIKE THE PROGRAM. AND REALLY LIKE YOU MONTY! .... BUT FOUND IT OFFENSIVE THAT WHEN THEY TRANSLATE ANYONE FROM ITALIAN/ TO ENGLISH. .... THEY USE A "STEREOTYPE ITALIAN/ ENGLISH ACCENT!" "O A MAMA A MIA! ME ENLISH NUT SO GOOD!".... THAT'S JUST INSULTING! AND EMBARRASSING!!!!! YOUR PRODUCTION TEAM SHOULD KNOW BETTER THAN THAT! ..... I COULDN'T BELIEVE MY EARS WHEN IT FIRST HAPPENED. ..... I ACTUALLY HIT REWIND TO MAKE SURE IT ACTUALLY WAS TAKING PLACE! ..... IT'S ABSOLUTELY INSULTING! I AM EMBARRASSED FOR YOU!
Why not stop dubbing at all, UA-cam has a subtitle feature for those who do not understand the native languages. I think the local/simulated accent was cute. @JustMeGeorgie Just a little tip about netiquette, if I may: ranting in ALLCAPS, with spurious exclamation marks, is like a shouted tirade, and has the opposite of the intended effect. I am embarassed for you. I could have done with less 'explanations'. That strait crossing must have been pretty horrible, Monty, I appreciate that you told us of your experience. I loved the bosco, the views, the soukh streets, and the cactus plants!
Havent you heard? it was a truly 'multicultural' society -- you cant say anything bad about muslims and blacks in the west else they will fire you because you are being 'close minded'
I lived in Spain as an exchange student from the Southern United States when I was 14. I’m 60 now with my very own garden paradise of 7 acres. Most of those acres are forest, a little over 1 acre is lawn and the rest is planted with flower and vegetable. When I watched this episode I was surprised by this huge waterfall of emotion that came over me. I found myself crying hard….why? I realized how much I was influenced by Spain as a child before O was ever interested in gardening. My only knowledge of gardening at the age of 14 was from helping my Grandfather garden in Mississippi. He had grown up during the depression and so in fear of food insecurity he grew the most lush vegetable gardens…full of greens, figs, peaches, muscadine, tomatoes, peppers, onion, melons galore. I thought it was magical but I hated the work. Weeding and watering in the heat of the Delta. Always watching out for fire ant mounds and copperheads…swarmed by mosquitoes in the evening and of course having to listen to Pa-Pa call all of us kids lazy and spoiled because we would complain endlessly when forced to work for “movie money” (tickets for Star Wars were $1.75, a box of popcorn was .50 cents and a drink was a quarter.)
All that said, I did love the garden, the watermelons etc. it was all so special but my Grandfather never grew flowers or ornamental plants. I have here at my house an Eastern wall that it covered with my collection of geraniums and I am always happy to see the reaction of folks seeing it for the first time. Many who do not garden don’t know the geranium and ask “What flower is that”? It’s just a simple geranium but when displayed all together they tickle my fancy. They are very easy to propagate. Thank You for hitting my heart this morning. My family took me for a weekend visit to Cordova and although my eyes were young and my idea of ever having my own garden not developed…seeing all the pots and water features in this video was a Eureka moment. Spain was where it all began. I also have bitter orange trees, jasmine, gardenia and a collection of old fashioned roses that I grow for the smell. Am I wealthy? Hardly. When my husband and I purchased first the 5 acres and later the property next door it was almost empty…some fig and muscadine and a worn down veggie patch but it was also land located in one of the poorest parts of town in the middle of poorest preforming public schools in my state. That’s how we could afford it. Now my husband will retire next year and both of us have no desire to travel or eat out in fancy restaurants. Our kitchen was last updated in the mid-1980’s, both of our cars are over 25 years old as well as our Winter jackets and blankets….We have created our own little paradise that we can finish our days in. My Grandfather I spoke of above died in 1983 in the middle of his garden with a hoe in his hand. God has been so good to us…we have more than we could ever deserve.
Monty’s enthusiasm for all things horticultural is infectious, civilized and ultimately humane. I so enjoy his informative programs.
Amazing Experiencing ART and ARCHITECTURE in Marroco ,beautifully narrated ..,Thank you from INDONESIA
You have softened my deep depression. I thank you so much
Awww Tarifa!!! I adore Morocco and Tarifa is little Maroc. Adorable.
I would love to go there.
Villa d’Este and Villa Lante are just stunning. Truly a thing of beauty is a joy forever. I can imagine the parties held there, laughter tinkling above the gurgling fountains, a cool breeze wafting over the flowing water, warm rays of sun sparkling on the rippling surface. I could spend ages just sitting there enjoying the beauty of it - God’s creation and man’s creation in perfect harmony. Perhaps someday I can see it in person.
As always..so understated in his enthusiasm..showing us the natural world of gardening that has survived the centuries...thankyou Monty..🌳
OMG 😯 j’adore ça au Maroc les constructions et ses jardins à l’intérieur de leurs maisons,pouvoir profiter de la nature sans sortir de la maison
Wow...what a great explanation of the Muslim garden idea. THe philosophy of it. I live near the Colonial Spanish UNESCO World Heritage former capital of Central America: Antigua, Guatemala. Being an American expat retiree I loved the walled courtyards in the town...copied from Spain...My very first visit walking the cobblestone streets as a humble large door called a porton would open I would catch a glimpse of a fountain and rose filled courtyard as in southern Spain. It would surprise me every time how so simple a colonial exterior would hide such lushness. Several hotels are in large properties so the gardens are even more impressive. I was lucky to spend 6 mos here living with an upper class family in their home next to a famous church, La Merced. They had another family member who owned such a hotel so I went there for coffee often in the private quarters where they lived. I was lucky to have an introduction into local society that tourists do not get.
I was charmed by the easeful life, the understated elegance of the homes and the tranquility of the gardens. I felt I had stepped back in time a century, or two or more. I simply HAD to live here! It is a small town limited by surrounding hil.s and volcanoes to 12 blocks by 12 blocks, ruined churches brought down by earthquakes to paint....heavenly. This was 20 years ago.
In two years my husband and I had sold our sailboat we had retired on, bought a property not far outside the town with views of the surrounding volcanoes, expanded the house and made it more like the ones we saw in Sevillia and Granada, lovely tiled decor, added fountains and gardens of roses and tropical plants. THis place the town and our home has given us 20 years of exquisite joy in a perfect climate with great friends, locals and expats alike .We all entertain mostly in our gardens filled with hummingbirds and migrating species including our beloved painted buntings we had on St Simons Isllamd in Georgia, USA....And just as he says....one keeps the walls outside simple..ours are covered with bougainvillia, you come into the porton walk down a path and then there before you is a small paradise on earth with the sound of two courtyard fountains and the birds seranading you...atop two walls peek the tops of two volcanoes....one inactive and the other far enough away to be safe, is active, erupting lava down its slopes and into the air periodically. WE built a second level large terrace area ala espana and a small third level, one as a viewing terrace for that erupting volcano and to see the heavens.
Soy española viviendo en México y puedo visualizar tu jardín. Gracias por la hermosa descripción
My 17 year old loves this stuff. he is already working during the summers at a botanical garden nearby. The woman that runs the place is a Harvard biology professor. She is teaching him all kinds of things. Boy the gardens he could have a future with all over the world.
QueenFanPiper62 .
Wonderful! I can vouch for the loveliness of the profession! It sounds like your son is off to truly auspicious start.
QueenFanPiper62 : And one day, his own off-spring will declare, 'I didn't lick it off a stone !'
What is he doing now??
“She is teaching him all kinds of things..” unfortunate phrasing
19:27 The white doves are flying through the waterfall to cool off. I love watching this.
The Patio gardens are precious beauties 😍😍
Thank you for sharing this program. How wonderful it is, in this time of quarantines, to travel the world of gardens. It makes me appreciate anew what a sanctuary, a gift, a blessing any garden is, large or small. Wow. This program is better than buckets of jewels! And it makes me wonder what it would be like if we all saw each other as gardens ... if we wondered what sunlight, what water, each person needs to truly bloom. It would be a different world, but not, i think, impossible. Thank you. May the joy and peace this video gives others be returned to you many times over!
Monty Don is my new favorite "documentary blogger" and a day without his movies is not a good day. Keep up the great work, Monty! Laura
LAURA A LOVELAND imitation gardens and pretty indeed, but to imagine the garden of Eden. These wouldn’t compare. Paradise was lost and now all we have are remnants of this lost paradise. I’ve seen pictures of the garden of Ninfa in Italy. It’s also very pretty.
@Ted Carruthers He is not doing any self-publicity nonsense. He is a very well-known presenter and has a weekly show called the Gardener's World with the BBC for years, filmed at his garden. This is part of the series he did about gardens around the world.
Most beautiful garden in the world. I agree!
Beautiful🌺 Thank you for sharing.
LOVE the program! Thanks so much for sharing and inspiring me with new ideas for my own property.
Thank you . The similarity of these gardens to the ancient Indian and Persian gardens are fascinating ... lovely!!
FOr anyone who loves the Alhambra as I do AND Spain and Spanish history SEE the 3 season progam produced in Spain "Isabelle" about Isabel and Ferdinand , to see the Alhambra dressed in silk cushions funrnishings... transformed to a true paradise as it WAS! The series is the best on these subjects ever made...English subtitles!
How I would love to do Majorelle the train north then to Granada! I took a cruise ship from the USA through the strait to Barcelona then back to Granada which was the dream of a lifetime for a gardener....simply one of a kind!
Wonderful way to start the day. Missed the Roman gardens when there but saw the fascinating and lovely Alhambra. Wish I liked its contemporary
people as much... Thank you Monty, this is a charming film.
Wow. He is the Michael Wood of gardening. I can taste those fogs now.
J’ai déjà vu sur Netflix les documentaires sur lui et les jardins qu’il a fait et j’adore 🥰
Beautiful 😻
Your video is very informative just I would like to correct one small information the Almoravids are one of the native Daynasties that rulled most of north Africa and the Iberian peninsula they are definitly not from the midlle east they were from the South of the kingdom of Morocco.
Best regards
I thoroughly enjoyed this video it is inspiring.
A nice tour for the world gardens
it is not 4k but i still manage to enjoy it from the first minute to the last. simply briliant naratives as english language could be capable of. the feel of it. it transcends. it inspires and it satisfies.
Really enjoyed this show! Very well orchestrated!
Lovely gardens
God bless us beautiful earth well furnished .
Wow quel belle endroit pour faire vélo
Wow congratulations! I wish to see it personally Maybe Someday
This I s amazing
He is amazing!!
C’est merveilleux 😊
👍👏👏Kuwait
Amazing!!!!
Well done Monty.
thanks for the fantastic shap
Thanks beautiful
Love it Monty Dons
this may be useful for you when clearing the garden
I am thrilled you went to Crauncho’s home!
He is just the best, as you said he makes something new out of the Mediterranean and Arabic traditions, it has been the perfect ending!
Just a correction about thz moroccan part it's not arabic it's native amazigh north african amazigh and mediteranean culture. Nothing to do with meadel east. This beauty doesn't exist in meadel east
You are right, it doesn’t exist in the Middle East, I am referring to the Arabic tradition in Spain, when the Muslims invade Spain in the seven hundreds they arrive to a gothic Spain that had been roman for seven hundred years and they adapt their style to what is already there, they “arabise” the Roman villa, I am referring to that new mix
love it!
Alhambra ❤️
Wow
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
I need this type of job to apply I am in Morocco I am in tin masour
0623899503
Elio!
The last garden should be changed for an historical portuguese 's garden and so complete italian, moroccan and iberian view.
can you colonise a new planet to start a new life
Fernando=spanish version of Monty ;-)
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
sublime paralyis
for a series about gardens, it shows a lot of views of trains and city skylines. It barely showed the back yard gardens and hardly mentions the plants found in them.
I think these series are meant to inspire people to travel. Yes, not everyone has the opportunity to, but I think this series is for garden-obsessed people that will be inspired by the selection here and then plan trips around it... But I do agree, there can NEVER be enough shots of the gardens and explanations of the plants.
24:52 what is the name of the song please
Thank you
Not entirely positive,but i believe it's by Popol Vuh. If you like it you will surely like them
A shame the Palacio de la Granja in Segovia did not appear here. The fountains there are great, they have nothing to do with the Islamic world so many tourists are not interested. For them Spain is just the Tales of the Alhambra by Washington Irving, something that did no good to Spain. If you go to Madrid, take a short trip to Segovia and go tho see the gardens and fountains ns, better in autumn... ☺️☺️☺️
The more I listen to Mr. Don the more i realise history needs to rewritten. The most powerful man, the richest man.......in the western world Mr. Don, in the western world. NOT THE WORLD
One note, as others have mentioned, it should be called “Arabic” or “Moroccan”, not Islamic.
For sure ❤️
The gardens of spain are of pure moroccan architecture, and the influence is amazigh =native north african. Absolutly not arab. This kind of architechture don't came from meadel east at all and it's compkeatly different from meadel east. it's native to morocco and south spain because this part was controlled by the moroccan empire for centuries. While visiting alhambra i have the feeling i'm in fes
La jiralda has his similar mosque in marrakech...
Btw, the "h" is silent in Spanish. So, Alhambra is pronounced, "Alambrah." Again, the "h" is silent in Spanish. Examples: Hola, hombre, hambre, alcohol, etc... It's basic Spanish.
It's the same in Italian, Portuguese and French ...
Well, the correct pronunciation of it is Alhamra (al \haa \m\ ra). Which means The Red in Arabic.
😚😍
The English word alcohol comes from Arabic (al-kohl). Means possesses by spirits. It’s root is also in the English word ghoul. It’s not Spanish and the h is not silent.
@@annaday6436 Thank you, so interesting.
Tiwwwoli ?
Tivoli
You just don't see enough of the gardens: they are overshadowed by this prat!!!!
I couldn't watch this video because the damn music was way too LOUD!! Left at 1:58. Yuck.
80 gardens.. prescription..Spain ..morroco...Italy.
The brothers Grimm..🧙...🧵📌🧵..
Ahahahah
Almoravids and almohads didn’t come from the Middle East. Almoravids are Moroccan Imazighen/“berbers” of native North African descent who converted to Islam. Please make some research before saying such things. It’s also not an “Arab” garden, we call Moroccan architecture “moorish” for a reason, mainly because it is actually NOT Arabian. Same thing applies to Riads which are only found in Morocco and nowhere else in the Middle East. Again, much and much misinformation in this documentary, I personally don’t recommend it.
Japanese Gardens best
Yes👍
2 cultures that co-existed in spain? funny man.
???
@@venicemitchell1407 there was nothing but war and one religion was always suppressing the other
LIKE THE PROGRAM.
AND REALLY LIKE YOU MONTY!
.... BUT FOUND IT OFFENSIVE THAT WHEN THEY TRANSLATE ANYONE FROM ITALIAN/ TO ENGLISH.
.... THEY USE A "STEREOTYPE ITALIAN/ ENGLISH ACCENT!"
"O A MAMA A MIA!
ME ENLISH NUT SO GOOD!"....
THAT'S JUST INSULTING!
AND EMBARRASSING!!!!!
YOUR PRODUCTION TEAM SHOULD KNOW BETTER THAN THAT!
..... I COULDN'T BELIEVE MY EARS WHEN IT FIRST HAPPENED.
..... I ACTUALLY HIT REWIND TO MAKE SURE IT ACTUALLY WAS TAKING PLACE!
..... IT'S ABSOLUTELY INSULTING!
I AM EMBARRASSED FOR YOU!
Why not stop dubbing at all, UA-cam has a subtitle feature for those who do not understand the native languages. I think the local/simulated accent was cute.
@JustMeGeorgie Just a little tip about netiquette, if I may: ranting in ALLCAPS, with spurious exclamation marks, is like a shouted tirade, and has the opposite of the intended effect. I am embarassed for you.
I could have done with less 'explanations'. That strait crossing must have been pretty horrible, Monty, I appreciate that you told us of your experience.
I loved the bosco, the views, the soukh streets, and the cactus plants!
How can this british guy be so naive and ignore the islamic invasion of Spain for what it was: a terrible, shameful invasion?
Havent you heard? it was a truly 'multicultural' society -- you cant say anything bad about muslims and blacks in the west else they will fire you because you are being 'close minded'
He may not wish to be controversial but it would be better not to describe it at all.