When I say 'Caer Caradoc' at one stage I of course mean 'Cader Idris' Hope you enjoyed the video. If you did please consider supporting my work by buying me a coffee at www.buymeacoffee.com/francisjonesa Very many thanks, F-J
I invested 40 minutes of my time in this video and came away feeling like I’d shared 3 lovely days in Wales with you! Wonderful video, and such a delightful pace too! Much better than the rubbish on the TV! Well done sir and thank you!
Thank you very much - that's very kind - so pleased you enjoyed it. It was such a fun trip. I really must do another one as everybody has been so supportive and encouraging.
Think I’ve watched this video half a dozen times now. It’s just so relaxing & nice to watch. I do similar trips with my landrover around Northumberland. One of my all time you tube favourites. Thank you😊
Thank you. So glad you like it. It was fun and relaxing to make until bits started to fall apart technically - but we limped home! Really want to do another trip - so much gets in the way! Northumbria, what a great area to explore with a Land Rover too! Enjoy every minute!
What an absolutely charming video, loved every second of it. Pure escapism from the modern day world we live in today. Simple charm of the Series 1, and enjoying the beautiful country side a great partnership. I’ve owned my 1972 Series 3 for 26 yrs never part with it. Thanks for sharing
Pleasure and thanks for your kind words. It was amazing how I found routes that were just so quiet but when I did meet people they all commented on the Landy and told me about theirs! If you were to watch the film in black and white I feel it would look if it was filmed in the late 1950s too. I was very lucky that it was a great trip - apart from the electrical problems!
Thanks, yes, still going strong and I have sorted the engine out so it is running really well! We had it out for the children to play in on my son's fourth birthday party and they loved it! Hope I never have to part with it. Luckily I do have dry storage which makes all the difference! Thanks for watching!
I did a1000 miles round trip to connahs Quay from Sussex in my 61 109 a couple of years ago. Weather was scorchio every day( four day trip), this takes me back, driving tiny roads ,miles in second and third, and just before I turned off at llanwchllyn on the amazing road to Dinas Mawddy I drove past a corner of Bala lake , there were people in the water so I stopped and had a swim. Absolutely fantastic. It’s a great way to bond with your vehicle, driving all day.
That sounds fantastic! You were enjoying your vehicle in just the way you should and it does create amazing memories doesn't it! Bala and Lake Vyrnwy are not that far from me too. I should do that - normally I fly over them! Thanks for watching and taking the time to share your story - makes me what to get out there and do that now!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones it’s a very nicely produced film, you certainly took a lot of time setting up drive by shots. Very dedicated considering you had a misfire. They’re not easy easy to drive but when you settle into the groove it’s the next best thing to an old motorcycle for feedback and rewarding decisions. Watching your film made me want to explore the single track roads of wales again. Thanks.
@@highdownmartin Thanks - it did take time but there was no rush and it meant I got out to look at things and it really did write itself. The only planning really was what I took and the general route. The film just created itself as I went! Yes it is great to drive and so light and untiring due to the 2WD so the steering is really fingertip light when moving. I have never actually driven a 4x4 Series one! Hope you get a chance to get out there again sometime.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones great inspiration for a relaxed trek in my early S3. I think the Welsh road gate was nr. the Hafren Forest. Fantastic part of the world. P.S castrol valvemaster is a good lead replacement solution - the latest version includes protection against ethanol damage.
Thanks - so pleased you enjoyed it. The S1 is now ready to go again but will have to wait for better times! Yes, do get your Land Rover going - you won't regret the freedom and fun it gives you!
What a lovely video....I have a 1968 2a and have owned every Land Rover model except a S1 and that is on my “must have before I die” list! We are planning a road trip in “Dave” later this year and we had planned to head over to Wales and this film has just made our minds up...thank you very much for posting. Cheers Nick
Nick - great to hear from you and you really have experienced the world of Land Rovers. I think you will find your 2a very similar to the S1. Do plan a trip and do it - you will never regret it and the memories it leaves you with (even of breakdowns) are completely worth it!
Thanks - glad you enjoyed it and recognised the area. The vehicle is working well now so I must get my act together and get out again and make another film perhaps going south this time.
Thanks Paul. Very kind of you. I forget how lucky I am - just need more time. Perhaps you can plan to get back into Series Land Rovers at some stage. It is hard to live without one!
Thanks Neil! Yes, those gates! Lots of getting in and out. Not very common on public roads anymore but at least the handbrake held! Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment too!
Simply Wonderful, I made a big mistake by selling my Ford escort cabriolet 1989 ,it just made me smile 😊 and I can see the passion that you have for land Rover just brilliant that you took the time to fim this wonderful video thanks 😇
Thank you - that's very kind of you. I know exactly what you mean but we cannot keep everything and you may have been fine with your Escort but if I kept some of my great old cars rust would be the winner!
I love this video I keep coming back to it on hot sunny days here in NZ . We used to have a caravan near Lake Bala in the 70s we traveled from Hinckley in Leicestershire
Thanks Roger. Yes, Bala is lovely - and we are not far from there or Vyrnwy to. I love NZ and the Coromandel is to die for. The good news is the engine has been rebuild and it is ready to go again. I now just need to find the time and the weather (and the lockdown needs to be lifted too!) Thanks very much for taking the time to comment. Good to hear from you.
I first watched this a year or so ago, then found it again today. I’ve since bought a 1966 Series 2A. It’s the most difficult thing I’ve ever driven and I love it! It is something you drive, just for sake of driving it. Steering is only a suggestion. Braking for a stop sign requires a week of planning. But people smile and wave. It usually lives behind my wife’s garden, and makes me smile whenever I see it. People can keep their shiny pretentious trophy cars. Give me a tatty Landy any day.👍
Great to hear that you have a Landy now and do please get out there and enjoy it. I find mine one of the easiest and lightest vehicles to drive but it is only 2WD. Get the brakes sorted and some slack taken out of the steering and it will be a joy to drive but drive slowly! Our type 2 VW camper used to take huge concentration as it wandered all over the place. Got the steering sorted and it became so much easier! Hope you have fun with your 2A. Let us know how you get on! If only I had the time to get out again...!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Another UA-camr is driving around the world in his Defender. He stopped here in California last fall and filmed my Land Rover. If your interested , it is “LandyAndy4X4” Castle Air Museum part 2, towards the end of the video. Let me know what you think! Cheers👍
@@calsurflance5598 Just seen it and what a lovely Series 2 you have. In your weather I think it will probably last forever and cost you nothing in repairs... but then again it is a Land Rover! Do use it and you will turn heads everywhere you go. It looks fantastic and, as you say, keep it looking like a working vehicle and not something that people are too frightened to even touch!
Wunderbar gemachtes Video sehr entspannend und es zeigt wunderschöne Landschaften ,es geht auch langsam mit diesen schönen alten Landrover danke und alles Gute.Grüsse aus Österreich
Wonderful video! One of my favorite pastimes is putting around in a '58 Series 2. I may have to take up tea drinking...I love the thought of pulling off the road, making a cup of tea, and reading for a while.
What a lovely outing. Thanks for posting this. I have a 1957 Series I, a 1966 109 Safari Wagon, and an ex-MOD 1971 IIa 109 1-ton. Love them! Cheers from The San Juan Islands, Washington State, USA.
Pleasure Stewart. You do have a fabulous collection! I have always been disappointed that UA-cam does not allow photos in the comments as this would be a great opportunity! You live in a magical part of the world! Thanks for taking the time to comment.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Well, except for the ex-MOD 109, the other two were rescues, although both were usable and road legal after some extensive tinkering. The Safari Wagon had spent twelve years enveloped in briars and had a large family of wood rats living in it! But the tinkering, as you already know, is a significant part of the enjoyment of ownership. I am slowly getting them in more presentable shape. But I must say I don't fancy these total, like new, restorations which Americans seem so fond of. Land Rovers were built to be used, not pampered as garage ornaments. Interesting about your Series I being two-wheel drive only. I had no idea they ever built any like that. Anyway, wanted to say once again how much I enjoyed your video. It has been almost 25 years since I was back in the UK and I got quite homesick watching it! My family is from Lincolnshire.
@@stewartmarshall4112 Interesting Stewart. Yes, I love the fact that my Series 1 looks old - in fact it is in the state it should be if it just was looked after over the years - Land Rover patina! Glad you enjoyed the scenes from the UK - most of it was Wales as I live close to the boarder and I was looking for mainly slow and scenic quiet roads. Driving around San Juan must be a real treat!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Yes, it is a lovely part of the country and the climate is actually very English-like. The terrain is similar too, aside from the gigantic fir trees they have here. The San Juan Islands remind me of Scotland's Western Isles. One thing that is lacking is the history. This part of the US is only recently settled so one might drive all day without seeing a single ruined castle or abbey! I will try to get some photos for you onto my Facebook page, of my LR fleet, or a video up on youTube. Cheers, Stew
Loved watching this on a Sunday evening in Kenya. Made both the wife and I miss summers in the UK. I've two series ones here but nothing beats a summers day back home though.
Thanks Edward - so please you liked it. The whole reason I went out like that is we have had Kenyan weather all summer so I could go out with no risk of cold nights or rain at all. It was so much fun. Yes, we are so lucky with our scenery here but you are too I am sure. Enjoy your Series 1s!
Must be something about us engineering/physics types that gravitate to tinkering with old Land Rovers. I've been a slave to a couple of old Range Rovers, one (2door) for over 30 years. Great you've managed to keep that so original.
Great to hear from you Marcus and good to hear that you love your Land Rovers too. Hope you are getting a bit more freedom at the moment in Canada. Great Land Rover country!
Thanks Nathan. It is a lovely area. Mid Wales and the north are excellent - have a good look at the maps before you go and look out the quietest roads - don't worry if the journey then looks really long - you can get quite a bit done in a day! Glad you enjoyed the film!
Thanks Ari. So pleased you liked it. We were only talking today about what I have not done this summer and another Land Rover trip was top of the list!
..thoroughly enjoyed accompanying you on your outing...the scenery...your campsite...and the sheep...and of course the grand old Series 1 is what brought me to your channel to begin with...always enjoyed seeing them in the old African Safari movies...
So glad you enjoyed it. It was great fun. I know exactly what you mean about the old African movies! Many thanks for watching and taking the time to comment.
Absolutely marvelous, buddy, to watch. Came across by accident...wanna do the exact same thing. Had a 88 IIa lightweight, a 109 III and a 88 III from 1990 to 2005. Sold it because I rebuilt 95 % of the chassis, gearbox,axles, clutch....and those things I had changed broke down again after some 7 to 10 years later except the engine. But I repent havin' sold them watching those pics. Can you roughly recall the route? Your movie makes me buy one again and keep it for good 🤣
Thanks Florian - sounds like you have had some great Land Rovers over time. Somethings in life you cannot keep (things get sold on and make memories for others) but you would not have the memories and experience if you had not done it if that makes sense! My route...I kind of went where the wind took me but it was through Pont Robert on the first day and then north to the foothills of Cader Idris. No off roading - all on roads with it being 2WD. I walked the Glyndwr Way a few years ago so followed a few road bits of that and then I think to Tywn if I remember rightly and then a limp home back via the main roads to Welshpool. The first part of the film is roads near Meifod - no distance covered as it was slow and what you have to do to get those filming shots! I just took the OS map and looked for fairly minor routes. She is going again now so I must do another one. Thanks for taking the time to comment and let us know how you get on too! You will enjoy it even if you break down!
Thanx for answer! Definitely gonna buy one again even though might take some time to find a neat one... viewing video brought back sweet memories I thought I had forgotten....added profile foto of 1994....makes me cry
Gordon, thanks for that and I hope it spurs you on to completion! I really must make an effort to do another film once the maintenance and time allows.
Totally agree! Though I would say UK as most of this was filmed in beautiful Wales! Thanks for watching and hope it felt like you were with me on the journey too!
Cory - great to hear from you and thanks for the comment - yes it was great to slow down a bit. Judging by your profile picture you like VW campers - have you seen the videos I have posted of my trips in our yellow T2? That is a lot of fun too.
Delightful video of super quiet country lanes, a bit of peace, and a piece of fine 1950's engineering. Many thanks. Your Landy is in superb condition, with a lovely fragile patina, where really, we can see its working life in front of our very eyes. "Original, unrestored, compete, still working!" Kudos. We've heard of these few Series 1's with 2WD, but equally interesting is the lack of a low-and high ratio transfer box. Cheers.
Thank you - yes it is a very unusual Land Rover indeed. I have used the vehicle for lots of jobs such as taking garden waste to the tip etc. and this is what I love about it. As you say it is a working vehicle so not made to look new or showroom at all. What you said about seeing its working life in front of our eyes crystallises it well. I want to keep it going but never 'restore' it. Does help having a dry garage though! I have a Willys Jeep that is a bit of a hotchpotch of parts and I love it for the same reasons. ua-cam.com/video/leZK_jGnGuE/v-deo.html
Excellent - many thanks - yes, well done with your Land Rover. That condition is just great. Restore a Series 1 and you can end up with the irony (or inexplicable oxymoron) of an off-roader to precious to off-road! And you have also lost its 'history'. Lovely CJA2 too. Keep up the good work.
@@vanishingpoint5673 - Many thanks. When the weather comes and I get the vehicles working well I would like to go out again and explore in a similar way. It was fun making the film and that style of working and traveling certainly means you slow down and take a look at the world.
Awsome video . I had a 110 defender . Always wanted a ser 1 just for the fun of going on a relaxing sat morning drives in the countryside . Or a afternoon picnic . From Steve stott in sutherlin Oregon u.s.a.
Steve great to hear from you - glad you enjoyed the film. Remember you can do this with any Landy - just get out there and enjoy the freedom and one bonus of the 110 is that you are less likely to break down!
Late comer to your really great video Anthony. Beautiful views and fantastic Landy!. I love Land rovers, I've had them on & off for the last 20 years, i agree with ypu that drivin one at their...ahem..sedate pace gives you the opportunity to appreciate your surroundings, albeit rather noisily hahaha. I like to use the air conditioning gag aswell 😄
Thanks Martin and so great that you liked the video. It is a special experience in these old things isn't it? Sounds like you have experienced exactly the same things and one never forgets them (or the maintenance bills!!). Must get round to doing another one sometime but in the meantime thanks so much for taking the time to comment and sharing your experiences.
I also have an ex RAF 2 wheel drive but dating from 56. Has been converted to 4 wheel drive but have all parts to take back to 2x4 format. Been re-engined with a Rover 14 engine, very similar but having an aluminium head and SU carb. Great to see you enjoying it, mine now lives with me in SW France where it is great fun on the lanes and tracks.
Jonathan - great to hear from you and that you have a 2x4 as well - older than mine! Glad you are having lots of fun with it. Am I the only person left with an unchanged 2x4?
@@AnthonyFrancisJones no, but whatever you do don't ever convert to 4 wd, it's rarity makes it worth a hell of a lot more than a standard they were made as an airfield tug so you could use low box on a hard surface without transmission windup they also had a limited slip diff very rare, please treasure it ( or sell it to me lol )
Sure Tom, but an adventure is what you make of it and I think it could be rather fun in your vehicle - different but it's what you do that counts and where you go. Why not give it a go as a 'practice' ready for the day you have a Landy? I am sure you will enjoy it.
Really nice vid thanks for sharing it. You’re both great lovely countryside. Glad you also have Willys Jeep. As of me I’d enjoy such kind of journey along with my dog.
El auténtico espíritu Land Rover, campo y vida lenta. Gracias por el vídeo y por tu espíritu. Cuida ese vehículo. (Que curioso que no tenga 4x4). La próxima vez que salgas deléitanos con otro vídeo. Saludos desde Tenerife, muchos land rovers por aquí también. Gracias, muchas gracias.
Muy contento de que te haya gustado. Un gusto saber de ti. Hope the Spanish makes some kind of sense! Lovely to hear from people abroad who enjoyed the film.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones I have been toying with the idea of buying a series 2 and after seeing you video will now go ahead. Am based in Kenya and we have real classics here such as early series 1
@@AnthonyFrancisJones not rust but abuse and non original parts even from other cars being fitted to keep her running. We have an annual concourse show (hopefully this year) which will be my inspiration to make her nice.
Thanks - glad you liked it - it was a really fun trip even though it was cut a little bit short but it felt like I was going back 50 years in time on those quiet roads. Yes the solar charger was the only real technology I had with me other than the film camera but I wanted to avoid buildings and power points and be self-sufficient - petrol aside.
I was Reared on series 1 land rovers ,great to see a non restored little Jem. The quality of materials used on these vehicles was vastly superior to today's models ,the galvanised parts never wear out .
Thanks - yes it is really as original as it can be. The wiring loom looks very old too! It is so much fun. One thing is noticeable in these 4X2s just how light the steering is on them. It would never need power steering!
I’ve undone 1954 7/16” nuts and bolts round the seat box and floor pan which were persuaded apart and when oiled and wire brushed were as good as new, no pitting all threads sharp, clearly defined right way round for the nut. Other , way newer , plated nuts and bolts were just shearing off. Very high quality steel on those old fasteners and components!
Thanks - great that you enjoyed it - I must say I definitely did! I wish I had drawn a map and put it in the video but it was really planned and then became a bit ad hoc! Basically past Llansan(t)ffraid, Meifod/Pont Robert via the back most roads I could find. Then out to Aberdovey, Cader on the smallest roads I could find and then back via Welshpool. I am not sure I completely remember myself but it was a case of a few days before looking at maps and just taking the smallest public roads I could find. None of it was 'off road' or on green lanes. All good fun and stopping wherever I wanted too. If you have a Landy hope you can enjoy something like this yourself too. Make it your own adventure!
Great video and great editing! I really enjoyed the trip. Thank you for taking the time to film and upload the video. Beautiful country. My Series I is a 1957, LHD, 88” and I love it. I have a Disco too. It’s a 1999 Series 2 with the 4.0 V8 petrol engine, but it has a facelift from a 2003 model. For those of us not familiar with your country, I noticed the opening and closing of gates on some roads. Are those public roads with limited access or private roads? Most roads in Puerto Rico: 4:03
Thanks so much for your comments. We have a lot in common - I have a V8 S2 Disco too - not the one you see in the film at the start - that had to go. 220,000 miles and still going strong. Now, the roads, there are a few very minor public roads in the UK that get very little use and predate the fitting of cattle grids so they still have gates. I actually know one where the public road has the gate and the farmer has fitted a cattle grid to the side of it and does not want anyone using the grid so you have to open and close the gates instead! (Council refused to fund a cattle grid so it is rightly his own private one). Roads like this are getting rarer so I seek them out to enjoy - the TWD does not get stuck and you don't do any damage to the surface and have right of access. It must be great out where you are.
Anthony Francis-Jones Thanks for the reply and additional info. I grew up down here but moved to the USofA for several years and then returned to take care of my sick mother. The S1 was in California, Washington, South Carolina, Florida and now in PR. My friends in the US wanted to see where I live now, so a while back I made a video showing some of the roads where I travel. If you want to see it, I think that clicking on my name should take you to it. Nothing fancy or too edited / complicated. I don’t have those skills. It’s me just driving from my place to my mother’s town.
Lovely video! I own a belgian made Land Rover Minerva Series 1 myself. good to see them oldies out and about! the belgian army also used Series 3 Land Rovers that were 2 wheel drive, they were meant for road use only when ordered but ended up in all branches so when used as proper Land Rovers a lot of them got stuck off road... good to see you fitted your mirror along the way! ;)
Good the hear from you and glad you enjoyed the film. Sounds like you have a really interesting vehicle too. Yes, you are right they are no good at all off road but feel really light to steer on a hard surface. I think so many of them have been converted to 4WD so original ones are hard to find.
A thoroughly enjoyable watch, thank you! Great to see someone enjoying their Land Rover - there is such a pleasure in having nowhere particular to be isn't there! I've had a bad few days working on mine, but your video has provided the motivation to carry on. I completely get your comments about the people you meet - they turn heads where ever they go, certainly never bought mine for that but it's all part of the charm. Looking forward to some camping trips in my Series this summer when it's on the road again. Did you trace the cause of the misfire in the end - the usual rotor arm troubles..? Phill.
Phill, thanks for taking the time to comment and I am so pleased you enjoyed it and it motivated you to keep working on yours. I know the feeling but in the end with the right amount of time they will go again and can be enjoyed until the next issue rears up! Hope to have a bit of time (finally) tomorrow to look more closely at mine - I am pretty sure that the misfire is a burnt exhaust valve - had one go before but not an unsurmountable problem. Hope you are driving around in yours during the summer.
What a nice little Landy.. The fact that they always bring you back home after all these years, are just proof of their quality. I've picked up your link somewhere else on UA-cam. There you mentioned your weird /funny/ strange ( can't remember your exact words ) 4 x 2 Series 1 Landy ? Tell us more please. I know that they did make a few 4 x 2 's, but never seen one... Was staring at your front suspension looking for a diff, but need to look again 😂😂😂 Thanks for a lovely drive with you. 🇿🇦
Yes, my Landy only has driven rear wheels and just an axel at the front so it is only ever 2WD. They made a few of these and not many remain but mine is as original as it can be. I think someone in the comments kindly gave more info about these strange 4x2s and their history. Makes the steering really light to use too. Thanks for watching and 'joining' me on what was a great journey!
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What a great video! Compliments from Switzerland. We can only dream of such empty roads and landscape, as since Schengen contracts opened our borders, entire Switzerland became so crowded, that your film is a dream of our past, far gone...😢
Glad you enjoyed it! Many of our roads are clogged to breaking point but there are plenty of quiet areas to seek out too. Just been in the Black Mountains (Wales) and I was amazed at how many there are there just waiting to be explored! Thanks for taking the time to comment. A Series 1 drive in Switzerland would be quite something!
Very enjoyable video thank you. I liked the beautiful scenery and also the part where your wing mirror magically repaired itself :-) 2WD - so Rover could leave off the expensive transfer box - bet they liked that! Re the oil filler - the breather on the rocker cover is retained by a bolt, but the one on the oil filler tube (yours is red) is just a push fit (at least it is on my 1954 1.6L) give that a try.
Thanks so much for the comment. Interesting about the transfer box. Someone else mentioned the oil filler so I will look at that - I think I did not pull hard enough. Rather like using a Whitworth spanner! If the truth be told our drive was rather over grown and I broke the wing mirror on the way out right at the start. Turned around and went out through the fields instead as the gates were wider. That mirror had lasted for years and I broke it off in the first few minutes of driving! I really must make another one - plan to do mid to south Wales. Thanks again for your kind remarks - as ever makes it all worthwhile.
Thank you for posting, that was enjoyable. I second that about the Discovery needing that toolbox. I have a 1998 Disco and a 1969 Jeep CJ5, about the equivalent of a Series I or 2 in terms of speed and comfort. I was amazed you were able to drive with the back flap open without gassing yourself, as my Jeep is horrible for that and our tailpipe arrangement is identical. I usually just keep it closed and the doors and side flaps off.
Thanks Michael - so pleased you enjoyed the film. I was just chatting about how much fun I had making it. You sound like you have some great fun vehicles too. Perhaps the current situation will mean you have more time to fettle them.
Lovely Landrover just getting mine back up and running again after a few years not doing much. Your right about people being more intrested in land rovers then a Ferrari. I once had my 80" parked between two early Rolls Royce Silver Ghosts and I had a crowd of people around the Land Rover with very little interest being given to the Rolls Royces. Obviusly this was a great feeling as the two Rolls Royces are some of the most impressive cars I have ever seen.
Thanks, great to hear that you are working on your Land Rover to get it up and running. You won't regret it! Stunning weather at the moment so I am reminded that I really must do another trip!. You are right about them turning heads wherever they go and all for the right reasons, not showing off but just pure nostalgia! Good luck getting yours going again.
Well I enjoyed you film Tony.....makes me want to get out and try a tour in my S3 soft top SWB.....saying that I have slept in it several times when younger....68 now.....talking 30/40 years ago.....bought in new in 1975. Love your S1....love to drive one...I see you have a WW2 Willys Jeep.....again lover one. Just looked a several of your electronics vids....I get the feeling you may have an amateur radio license like me.
Thanks Nick. I am lucky to have some lovely vehicles! Great you still have your S3. They are great fun too. I do have a ham licence but sadly have rarely used it. Did the exams when I was still at school! Have an aviation one too, so you might enjoy me flying our old PA 28 - Piper Cherokee. Thanks for taking the time to comment and glad you enjoyed the video. We do have some great countryside in our tiny island! ua-cam.com/video/ZvlxJ1oLCb4/v-deo.html
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Hi Anthony.....I thought you may have dabbled with radio. I have since I was a kid...now 68....I to have an aero VHF licence as well as a Marine VHF licence..... Did own my own a/c till recently....microlight.....I do miss it. I will take a look for your flying vid...I used to fly with a pal in a PA-28.....nice old a/c arnt they....we seem to like the same things. Keep up the good work.
Really enjoyed your video- just my sort of thing. I would love a S1 but with prices so high, I will have to make do with a 1980s 90. I do love the pace it instills in my driving though and there is nothing quite like being out there with nature, as you have shown. Keep up the great work!
Thanks Ian. You will have fun with your Land Rover regardless of it's age. You have the advantage of reliability with the 90! When time allows I do hope to do another one - as they say - this one just wrote itself.
@@szymong7990 - I know the feeling but when you make time it always feels great. I was taught "always have your vehicles ready to go" so you can just have an hour's trip or just down to the shops - that seems to work but mine are always in pieces!
A wonderful video, sir! Thank you taking the time to assemble it and post for our viewing pleasure. A question: you've passes through a number of gates, opening them and closing them. Here in Wyoming (Western U.S.) gates often designate private property meaning "no go". What are the passage and passage rights in Wales? Is the land private or leased? Are the gates for livestock? I'm curious as I do not know. Regardless, I greatly appreciate you doing what we practice here: "Finding gates and leaving them [as they are found]" A common courtesy and respect seemingly not so commonly found these days. Cheers!
Nathan, thanks for taking the time to comment and pleased you enjoyed it! We do have the Countryside Code which talks about leaving gates as you find them though it is rather preaching to the converted! Rights of Way law is complex and unusual in the UK but there are rights across and through lots of private land - all land is owned by someone or the Queen/Crown - but there are routes, many of which are ancient that have been used by the public to get from one place to another - many have become roads. Lots are just footpaths or bridleways but some roads, usually on high ground have some stock fencing, but to keep stock apart still have gates or cattle grids. Most of these are on very quiet routes (I picked these especially) and the gates exist as they have always been there - a farmer cannot just put one in across a highway! There aren't many of these left! Hope that answers your question a bit - but in summary if you own a large or even small chunk of land it is more than possible that there are public rights over them - rarely for vehicular use though! I was on public roads all of the time. Great to hear from you and thanks for your great question.
26:26 oh my god haha... that scene with you opening the gate reminds me of the same particular scene from the movie "The Gods Must be Crazy" (1980) - what's amazing is that in that movie it is also a Defender just like yours. I would advise you watch that movie if you haven't already. The movie is a masterpiece. Bar-none. :) P.S. - Didn't these cars have a manual starting crank handle (you stick it through the front bumper)? Just if so the switch breaks, it is a means of an alternative staring method.
Andrey, great to hear from you and thanks for the suggestion. I will definitely look it up. Mine has a crank handle and a crank shaped hole in the front bumper but I think the crank pulley does not have the lugs on it if I remember - I really must go and look! I used to crank start our TE20 Ferguson (petrol) tractor all of the time!
Mono.... It's not a Defender, bro... 😂 Yes, that Series 1 in Gods must be crazy was good fun... The main actress in it is a good friend of mine, and we chat regularly .. She is still as pretty today as in 1980. Wonder what has happened to the old Landy... Take care 🇿🇦
Really enjoyed your well presented short film that really shows how lovely life can be with the right attitude, fantastic weather, beautiful countryside and an old Landy. It really is amazing that they made a Landy with only two wheel drive, I have had Landy's for many years and to be totally honest, I never knew they made one that did and I am very puzzled myself as to why they would make it with just 2wd? Thank you for educating me on this. I must make it a mission as to why..
Many thanks for the comment. Yes it is a very odd vehicle and you do ask yourself 'Why?' With weather like we are having at the moment I should be out there now! If you find out more about 2WD ones let us know here.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones I'm wondering if they went for weight considerations for either carrying in planes or parachuting them out of planes. I was not aware of 2WD models - with 4 speed box. It's a rare optional 'upgrade' that' is in fact a downgrade !
@@AnthonyFrancisJones So you need driving lessons too :) My first 'car' was a Sherpa minibus. I used it to tow a caravan off a soft field which had an up-slope to get back onto the road - and I didn't get stuck - and that had normal road van tyres on it. With the front knobblies put on the back, things may improve !
I had one in the mid-eighties . Novel at the time and a talking point with many folk I encountered , but I don't miss it really . Now have a D3 V8 ( from new ) and it's quite OK , but expensive in maintenance .
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it and felt you were with me on the trip. I do hope to make another one - need to do a bit more on the S1 and wait for the restrictions to end too!
Thanks Carolyn. Yes, that would be fantastic - what an amazing place NZ is to explore with a Land Rover. Better get it working properly first before I plan that trip!
Yes, you are totally right! I have been very busy with work but when the holidays come I really need to get out there again. It is fully repaired and working well!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Swapping them over won't change any of that but will at least give you better grip off road on the rare occasions you go there ! (even if it's just getting from where you park to tarmac !)
When I say 'Caer Caradoc' at one stage I of course mean 'Cader Idris'
Hope you enjoyed the video. If you did please consider supporting my work by buying me a coffee at www.buymeacoffee.com/francisjonesa Very many thanks, F-J
I invested 40 minutes of my time in this video and came away feeling like I’d shared 3 lovely days in Wales with you! Wonderful video, and such a delightful pace too! Much better than the rubbish on the TV! Well done sir and thank you!
Thank you very much - that's very kind - so pleased you enjoyed it. It was such a fun trip. I really must do another one as everybody has been so supportive and encouraging.
Think I’ve watched this video half a dozen times now. It’s just so relaxing & nice to watch. I do similar trips with my landrover around Northumberland. One of my all time you tube favourites. Thank you😊
Thank you. So glad you like it. It was fun and relaxing to make until bits started to fall apart technically - but we limped home! Really want to do another trip - so much gets in the way! Northumbria, what a great area to explore with a Land Rover too! Enjoy every minute!
Crikey! Another cultured fellow with a taste for the finer things in life. A series 1 and a Disco and an appreciation for tea. Great job!
All the great things in life - the great outdoors and fresh air too!
What an absolutely charming video, loved every second of it.
Pure escapism from the modern day world we live in today.
Simple charm of the Series 1, and enjoying the beautiful country side
a great partnership.
I’ve owned my 1972 Series 3 for 26 yrs never part with it.
Thanks for sharing
Pleasure and thanks for your kind words. It was amazing how I found routes that were just so quiet but when I did meet people they all commented on the Landy and told me about theirs! If you were to watch the film in black and white I feel it would look if it was filmed in the late 1950s too. I was very lucky that it was a great trip - apart from the electrical problems!
Anthony Francis-Jones
You were working hard. Time for new trips with the Landy!
@@mrcvry yes, especially with weather like this!
Thanks for taking us along. Beautiful country. I love old Landies.🇬🇧🇺🇲
Pleasure! So glad you liked it and enjoyed the trip. You are right, it was great fun in an old Landy!
As I'm watching in 2022 I really hope this LR is still with you and bringing you pleasure.
Thanks, yes, still going strong and I have sorted the engine out so it is running really well! We had it out for the children to play in on my son's fourth birthday party and they loved it! Hope I never have to part with it. Luckily I do have dry storage which makes all the difference! Thanks for watching!
I did a1000 miles round trip to connahs Quay from Sussex in my 61 109 a couple of years ago. Weather was scorchio every day( four day trip), this takes me back, driving tiny roads ,miles in second and third, and just before I turned off at llanwchllyn on the amazing road to Dinas Mawddy I drove past a corner of Bala lake , there were people in the water so I stopped and had a swim. Absolutely fantastic. It’s a great way to bond with your vehicle, driving all day.
That sounds fantastic! You were enjoying your vehicle in just the way you should and it does create amazing memories doesn't it! Bala and Lake Vyrnwy are not that far from me too. I should do that - normally I fly over them! Thanks for watching and taking the time to share your story - makes me what to get out there and do that now!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones it’s a very nicely produced film, you certainly took a lot of time setting up drive by shots. Very dedicated considering you had a misfire.
They’re not easy easy to drive but when you settle into the groove it’s the next best thing to an old motorcycle for feedback and rewarding decisions.
Watching your film made me want to explore the single track roads of wales again. Thanks.
@@highdownmartin Thanks - it did take time but there was no rush and it meant I got out to look at things and it really did write itself. The only planning really was what I took and the general route. The film just created itself as I went! Yes it is great to drive and so light and untiring due to the 2WD so the steering is really fingertip light when moving. I have never actually driven a 4x4 Series one! Hope you get a chance to get out there again sometime.
These old Landies are truly iconic.
Thanks Tony. Hope you feel I did it justice and you enjoyed the video.
I enjoyed that like a watercolour. Well done, sir.
Pleasure! Glad you enjoyed it!
Great video great car this is live.
Thanks Arthur. It's a great old Land Rover and the film was really fun to make. Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment.
Brilliant! Thank you for making the video.
Pleasure - it was great fun making it and glad you enjoyed watching.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones great inspiration for a relaxed trek in my early S3. I think the Welsh road gate was nr. the Hafren Forest. Fantastic part of the world.
P.S castrol valvemaster is a good lead replacement solution - the latest version includes protection against ethanol damage.
Thanks for that and I think you are right about the Hafren Forest area too!
What a lovely little holiday! Now I really wanna get our series 1 ready for travel. Great history of the Landy aswell.
Thanks - so pleased you enjoyed it. The S1 is now ready to go again but will have to wait for better times! Yes, do get your Land Rover going - you won't regret the freedom and fun it gives you!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones our dream is to take it on a road trip to the UK. See Scotland, Wales and England from the Landy. 😃
@@slowshop excellent - you will enjoy that - take it slowly and be prepared for some repairs on the way!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones The Land Rover build is on my channel. Check it out. It's not strictly original but I will make it look as original as possible.
What a lovely video....I have a 1968 2a and have owned every Land Rover model except a S1 and that is on my “must have before I die” list! We are planning a road trip in “Dave” later this year and we had planned to head over to Wales and this film has just made our minds up...thank you very much for posting. Cheers Nick
Nick - great to hear from you and you really have experienced the world of Land Rovers. I think you will find your 2a very similar to the S1. Do plan a trip and do it - you will never regret it and the memories it leaves you with (even of breakdowns) are completely worth it!
What a great find! Really enjoyed this video. Also the fact that many years ago I used to go walking in these parts when I lived in the UK.
Thanks - glad you enjoyed it and recognised the area. The vehicle is working well now so I must get my act together and get out again and make another film perhaps going south this time.
Thank you for a lovely, lovely video. It makes me wish I could have my old Series 3 back.....
Thanks Paul. Very kind of you. I forget how lucky I am - just need more time. Perhaps you can plan to get back into Series Land Rovers at some stage. It is hard to live without one!
Thanks mate, it inspired me to get my 1964 SIIA 88 Diesel out on the road....
Excellent Jacques! Yes, do get it going, you won't regret it and let us know how you get on.
Fantastic thankyou @ 8:20 the gate I was waiting for you to find a rock 😂
Thanks Neil! Yes, those gates! Lots of getting in and out. Not very common on public roads anymore but at least the handbrake held! Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment too!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones have you watched the gods must be crazy the start of the show is a series 1 it’s hilarious
Take care and safe travels
N
No. But I know I must!
i really enjoyed this wee trip what a cool wee landrover
Glad you enjoyed it Derek - it was great fun and seems like a long time ago. I really must do another one! Thanks for the comment.
Simply Wonderful, I made a big mistake by selling my Ford escort cabriolet 1989 ,it just made me smile 😊 and I can see the passion that you have for land Rover just brilliant that you took the time to fim this wonderful video thanks 😇
Thank you - that's very kind of you. I know exactly what you mean but we cannot keep everything and you may have been fine with your Escort but if I kept some of my great old cars rust would be the winner!
Great little video.
Thanks Neil - glad you liked it and thanks for taking the time to comment. It is a great little Landy!
I bought a series one earlier this month and this is exactly what I am planning to do. No cellphone, just a beer, book and nature
Perfect. You must film it or at least do a slide show on UA-cam and share the link here. Would be good to see how you got on - don't break down!
Ah lovely
What a beautiful old Landy. The old petrol engine chugging to life and revving when taken out. Nice!
Thanks - glad you liked it - it is a special and old machine and it does have a very unique sound. Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment.
I love this video I keep coming back to it on hot sunny days here in NZ . We used to have a caravan near Lake Bala in the 70s we traveled from Hinckley in Leicestershire
Thanks Roger. Yes, Bala is lovely - and we are not far from there or Vyrnwy to. I love NZ and the Coromandel is to die for. The good news is the engine has been rebuild and it is ready to go again. I now just need to find the time and the weather (and the lockdown needs to be lifted too!) Thanks very much for taking the time to comment. Good to hear from you.
Lovely Video, thanks for sharing your Series 1 with us all.....
Pleasure Rob. It really was a case of 'it just wrote itself'! I had a great time making it too so thanks for watching.
I first watched this a year or so ago, then found it again today. I’ve since bought a 1966 Series 2A. It’s the most difficult thing I’ve ever driven and I love it! It is something you drive, just for sake of driving it. Steering is only a suggestion. Braking for a stop sign requires a week of planning. But people smile and wave. It usually lives behind my wife’s garden, and makes me smile whenever I see it.
People can keep their shiny pretentious trophy cars. Give me a tatty Landy any day.👍
Great to hear that you have a Landy now and do please get out there and enjoy it. I find mine one of the easiest and lightest vehicles to drive but it is only 2WD. Get the brakes sorted and some slack taken out of the steering and it will be a joy to drive but drive slowly! Our type 2 VW camper used to take huge concentration as it wandered all over the place. Got the steering sorted and it became so much easier! Hope you have fun with your 2A. Let us know how you get on! If only I had the time to get out again...!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones
Another UA-camr is driving around the world in his Defender. He stopped here in California last fall and filmed my Land Rover. If your interested , it is
“LandyAndy4X4” Castle Air Museum
part 2, towards the end of the video.
Let me know what you think!
Cheers👍
Great, I will have to have a look and be jealous!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones
Haha! I’m the one who is jealous.👍
@@calsurflance5598 Just seen it and what a lovely Series 2 you have. In your weather I think it will probably last forever and cost you nothing in repairs... but then again it is a Land Rover! Do use it and you will turn heads everywhere you go. It looks fantastic and, as you say, keep it looking like a working vehicle and not something that people are too frightened to even touch!
Wunderbar gemachtes Video sehr entspannend und es zeigt wunderschöne Landschaften ,es geht auch langsam mit diesen schönen alten Landrover danke und alles Gute.Grüsse aus Österreich
Und viele Grüsse aus England! Freut mich sehr, dass dir der Film gefallen hat!
Wonderful video! One of my favorite pastimes is putting around in a '58 Series 2. I may have to take up tea drinking...I love the thought of pulling off the road, making a cup of tea, and reading for a while.
Thanks Rich - you have everything you need to do the same. So let us know how you get on. You will have a great time.
What a lovely outing. Thanks for posting this. I have a 1957 Series I, a 1966 109 Safari Wagon, and an ex-MOD 1971 IIa 109 1-ton. Love them! Cheers from The San Juan Islands, Washington State, USA.
Pleasure Stewart. You do have a fabulous collection! I have always been disappointed that UA-cam does not allow photos in the comments as this would be a great opportunity! You live in a magical part of the world! Thanks for taking the time to comment.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Well, except for the ex-MOD 109, the other two were rescues, although both were usable and road legal after some extensive tinkering. The Safari Wagon had spent twelve years enveloped in briars and had a large family of wood rats living in it! But the tinkering, as you already know, is a significant part of the enjoyment of ownership. I am slowly getting them in more presentable shape. But I must say I don't fancy these total, like new, restorations which Americans seem so fond of. Land Rovers were built to be used, not pampered as garage ornaments. Interesting about your Series I being two-wheel drive only. I had no idea they ever built any like that. Anyway, wanted to say once again how much I enjoyed your video. It has been almost 25 years since I was back in the UK and I got quite homesick watching it! My family is from Lincolnshire.
@@stewartmarshall4112 Interesting Stewart. Yes, I love the fact that my Series 1 looks old - in fact it is in the state it should be if it just was looked after over the years - Land Rover patina! Glad you enjoyed the scenes from the UK - most of it was Wales as I live close to the boarder and I was looking for mainly slow and scenic quiet roads. Driving around San Juan must be a real treat!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Yes, it is a lovely part of the country and the climate is actually very English-like. The terrain is similar too, aside from the gigantic fir trees they have here. The San Juan Islands remind me of Scotland's Western Isles. One thing that is lacking is the history. This part of the US is only recently settled so one might drive all day without seeing a single ruined castle or abbey! I will try to get some photos for you onto my Facebook page, of my LR fleet, or a video up on youTube. Cheers, Stew
@@stewartmarshall4112 Great, thanks!
wonderful trip, i really enjoyed coming along with you. thank you.
Thanks David. So pleased you liked it. I have such happy memories of the trip. It was like going back in time!
Loved watching this on a Sunday evening in Kenya. Made both the wife and I miss summers in the UK. I've two series ones here but nothing beats a summers day back home though.
Thanks Edward - so please you liked it. The whole reason I went out like that is we have had Kenyan weather all summer so I could go out with no risk of cold nights or rain at all. It was so much fun. Yes, we are so lucky with our scenery here but you are too I am sure. Enjoy your Series 1s!
Great video
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it!
Great video. I have a 1969 Jeep and a 1960 Jeep. I sit on the fuel tank too, lol. Nice vehicle you have.
Many thanks. Hope your Jeeps are going well and that you get time to enjoy them.
What a very nice, relaxed and enjoyable video. Well done! 👍
Thanks - it was a wonderful - though short adventure! I am glad you liked it. Really want to do it again sometime.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones I would love to do a similar trip in my IIA 109"
@@onetonlandrover Yes, you should and let us know here how it all went.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Its being rebuilt just now, but hopefully in the summer...
Lovely . just lovely.......................Thankyou
Pleasure - so pleased you liked it. The beautiful weather today really reminds me I should get my act together and get out there again.
it doesnt get more english than this haha loved it!! gidday from western australia mate luv the old landy
DJ - thanks for the comment - yes it was wonderful. Most was filmed in Wales but I know what you mean - it is real UK country. Good to hear from you.
Must be something about us engineering/physics types that gravitate to tinkering with old Land Rovers. I've been a slave to a couple of old Range Rovers, one (2door) for over 30 years. Great you've managed to keep that so original.
Yes, you are right!
Great video took me back 45 years . I am looking for a series one now to relive my late teens when I used to camp at Aberdovey
Thanks - so pleased you liked the film and it encourages you to get out there again in a S1. Do hope you get a chance before too long.
Mavelous little car ! I’m currently working on a 1982 series 3 stage one v8 station wagon.
Great. Hope you get it running soon.
Lovely Video! great looking SI currently working on a 52' 80" wheel base, wonderful views up in wales wow!
cheers from Canada!
Great to hear from you Marcus and good to hear that you love your Land Rovers too. Hope you are getting a bit more freedom at the moment in Canada. Great Land Rover country!
This chaps a natural hope to see lots mor videos
Thanks, that's very kind. I need to get the repairs sorted, some nice weather and do another one.
Absolutely stunning
Going to start planning a trip like this around mid and north Wales in my series 2
Keep it up amazing
Nathan
Thanks Nathan. It is a lovely area. Mid Wales and the north are excellent - have a good look at the maps before you go and look out the quietest roads - don't worry if the journey then looks really long - you can get quite a bit done in a day! Glad you enjoyed the film!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones will deffinatly spend time looking
May add a few gentle grenn lanes in while im doing it 😁
Nathan
Best of British to you two. You both have what it takes - so go and do it. Am green wth envy. Godspeed.
Thank you Henry. I do feel so lucky to be able to do these things and so pleased you liked the film. It was so much fun making it.
Wonderful video mate. Really enjoyed it. Hope to see more in the future ☕️
Thanks Ari. So pleased you liked it. We were only talking today about what I have not done this summer and another Land Rover trip was top of the list!
slow down, see more, own less, be free... and ride one of these charming old landies of course...
Yes, you are right which was one of the reasons for the trip!
..thoroughly enjoyed accompanying you on your outing...the scenery...your campsite...and the sheep...and of course the grand old Series 1 is what brought me to your channel to begin with...always enjoyed seeing them in the old African Safari movies...
So glad you enjoyed it. It was great fun. I know exactly what you mean about the old African movies! Many thanks for watching and taking the time to comment.
Great video. Love what you did. Really relaxing to watch. Bravo
Many thanks - very kind of you. I had so much fun making it and just taking life a bit more slowly. Glad you felt the same way too.
Absolutely marvelous, buddy, to watch. Came across by accident...wanna do the exact same thing. Had a 88 IIa lightweight, a 109 III and a 88 III from 1990 to 2005. Sold it because I rebuilt 95 % of the chassis, gearbox,axles, clutch....and those things I had changed broke down again after some 7 to 10 years later except the engine. But I repent havin' sold them watching those pics. Can you roughly recall the route? Your movie makes me buy one again and keep it for good 🤣
Thanks Florian - sounds like you have had some great Land Rovers over time. Somethings in life you cannot keep (things get sold on and make memories for others) but you would not have the memories and experience if you had not done it if that makes sense! My route...I kind of went where the wind took me but it was through Pont Robert on the first day and then north to the foothills of Cader Idris. No off roading - all on roads with it being 2WD. I walked the Glyndwr Way a few years ago so followed a few road bits of that and then I think to Tywn if I remember rightly and then a limp home back via the main roads to Welshpool. The first part of the film is roads near Meifod - no distance covered as it was slow and what you have to do to get those filming shots! I just took the OS map and looked for fairly minor routes. She is going again now so I must do another one. Thanks for taking the time to comment and let us know how you get on too! You will enjoy it even if you break down!
Thanx for answer! Definitely gonna buy one again even though might take some time to find a neat one... viewing video brought back sweet memories I thought I had forgotten....added profile foto of 1994....makes me cry
@@florianaugustinhintermeir9626 - sounds like a great project. Now crack on and do it!
I’ve been wanting a series 1,2, or 3 for my first car for a while now, and watching this video has me excited to get one so I can do this!
Excellent - they are so much fun. Glad you enjoyed the film - freedom is great... until you break down!
I enjoyed that! I'm currently restoring a 2a 109, so i can do just this sort of thing!!!
Gordon, thanks for that and I hope it spurs you on to completion! I really must make an effort to do another film once the maintenance and time allows.
There really isn't many places that can beat the english countryside on a summers day like this, Great video loved this!
Totally agree! Though I would say UK as most of this was filmed in beautiful Wales! Thanks for watching and hope it felt like you were with me on the journey too!
Antony deberías hacer más vídeos como este . Es muy bueno
Gracias Tomás, muy amable de tu parte. ¡Realmente me gustaría cuando tenga el tiempo y el clima!
Slow down and enjoy the ride! Excellent job!!
Cory - great to hear from you and thanks for the comment - yes it was great to slow down a bit. Judging by your profile picture you like VW campers - have you seen the videos I have posted of my trips in our yellow T2? That is a lot of fun too.
Delightful video of super quiet country lanes, a bit of peace, and a piece of fine 1950's engineering. Many thanks. Your Landy is in superb condition, with a lovely fragile patina, where really, we can see its working life in front of our very eyes. "Original, unrestored, compete, still working!" Kudos. We've heard of these few Series 1's with 2WD, but equally interesting is the lack of a low-and high ratio transfer box. Cheers.
Thank you - yes it is a very unusual Land Rover indeed. I have used the vehicle for lots of jobs such as taking garden waste to the tip etc. and this is what I love about it. As you say it is a working vehicle so not made to look new or showroom at all. What you said about seeing its working life in front of our eyes crystallises it well. I want to keep it going but never 'restore' it. Does help having a dry garage though! I have a Willys Jeep that is a bit of a hotchpotch of parts and I love it for the same reasons. ua-cam.com/video/leZK_jGnGuE/v-deo.html
Excellent - many thanks - yes, well done with your Land Rover. That condition is just great. Restore a Series 1 and you can end up with the irony (or inexplicable oxymoron) of an off-roader to precious to off-road! And you have also lost its 'history'. Lovely CJA2 too. Keep up the good work.
@@vanishingpoint5673 - Many thanks. When the weather comes and I get the vehicles working well I would like to go out again and explore in a similar way. It was fun making the film and that style of working and traveling certainly means you slow down and take a look at the world.
Awsome video . I had a 110 defender . Always wanted a ser 1 just for the fun of going on a relaxing sat morning drives in the countryside . Or a afternoon picnic . From Steve stott in sutherlin Oregon u.s.a.
Steve great to hear from you - glad you enjoyed the film. Remember you can do this with any Landy - just get out there and enjoy the freedom and one bonus of the 110 is that you are less likely to break down!
Lovely Landy 😍
And matching lovely shed ❤️
@@overnighter Thanks - you are right on both counts!
What an interesting story! The Indiana Jones of the Land Rovers? Great video too! cheers!
Thanks Federico. Kind of you to comment and glad you enjoyed 'joining me' on the film.
Late comer to your really great video Anthony. Beautiful views and fantastic Landy!. I love Land rovers, I've had them on & off for the last 20 years, i agree with ypu that drivin one at their...ahem..sedate pace gives you the opportunity to appreciate your surroundings, albeit rather noisily hahaha.
I like to use the air conditioning gag aswell 😄
Thanks Martin and so great that you liked the video. It is a special experience in these old things isn't it? Sounds like you have experienced exactly the same things and one never forgets them (or the maintenance bills!!). Must get round to doing another one sometime but in the meantime thanks so much for taking the time to comment and sharing your experiences.
Thoroughly enjoyed, thanks for sharing.
Thanks for the comment and really pleased you enjoyed it Liam. Was great fun.
I also have an ex RAF 2 wheel drive but dating from 56. Has been converted to 4 wheel drive but have all parts to take back to 2x4 format. Been re-engined with a Rover 14 engine, very similar but having an aluminium head and SU carb. Great to see you enjoying it, mine now lives with me in SW France where it is great fun on the lanes and tracks.
Jonathan - great to hear from you and that you have a 2x4 as well - older than mine! Glad you are having lots of fun with it. Am I the only person left with an unchanged 2x4?
@@AnthonyFrancisJones no, but whatever you do don't ever convert to 4 wd, it's rarity makes it worth a hell of a lot more than a standard they were made as an airfield tug so you could use low box on a hard surface without transmission windup they also had a limited slip diff very rare, please treasure it ( or sell it to me lol )
@@royblackburn1163 Thanks for that - yes you are totally right it is to be treasured and enjoyed (and have money thrown at it!)
Great video with a really special landy. Good stuff.
Fantastic, glad you liked it and your comments make it all worth while.
Great video thanks for sharing 👍
Pleasure Tom - Glad you enjoyed it. It was great fun to do and I really enjoyed the trip.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones it's something iv dreamt of doing for a long time, just wouldn't be the same in an old fiesta, thanks very much for the reply.
Sure Tom, but an adventure is what you make of it and I think it could be rather fun in your vehicle - different but it's what you do that counts and where you go. Why not give it a go as a 'practice' ready for the day you have a Landy? I am sure you will enjoy it.
Really nice vid thanks for sharing it. You’re both great lovely countryside. Glad you also have Willys Jeep. As of me I’d enjoy such kind of journey along with my dog.
Thanks - so glad you enjoyed it. Love my Willys too but I need to get it working reliably before a Jeep trip. Hope to get out again this summer.
El auténtico espíritu Land Rover, campo y vida lenta. Gracias por el vídeo y por tu espíritu. Cuida ese vehículo. (Que curioso que no tenga 4x4). La próxima vez que salgas deléitanos con otro vídeo. Saludos desde Tenerife, muchos land rovers por aquí también. Gracias, muchas gracias.
Muy contento de que te haya gustado. Un gusto saber de ti. Hope the Spanish makes some kind of sense! Lovely to hear from people abroad who enjoyed the film.
Anthony Francis-Jones Perfect de Spanish. Greetings
@@Echicere Thanks! My partner helped me too!
😂😂😂😂👍🏻
Thanks for sharing this! Great and inspiring.
Many thanks - glad you enjoyed it. All the comments are encouraging me to make another one.
Great video, and I love the Landy
Thanks Colin. Your comment makes it all worth while! It is a bit of a strange thing a 2WD S1. I wonder if there are many more out there?
Great video, one of the best on youtube i felt as though i was there with you and i love your Land Rover!!!
Thank you that's very kind of you. I did have great fun making it and the Landy steals the show as ever!
Lovely film
Thanks - glad you liked it and at least we can think of the times we enjoyed when we were out.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones I have been toying with the idea of buying a series 2 and after seeing you video will now go ahead. Am based in Kenya and we have real classics here such as early series 1
@@JJ-mg1yx Great go for it - I guess rust is not your constant enemy?
@@AnthonyFrancisJones not rust but abuse and non original parts even from other cars being fitted to keep her running. We have an annual concourse show (hopefully this year) which will be my inspiration to make her nice.
@@JJ-mg1yx Great - be 'functional' and then you won't mind using it like I do!
Great video! Love the contrast of the solar charger and the tissue in the gearbox! Yes, very rare to see 2 WD only. Keep the vids coming!!
Thanks - glad you liked it - it was a really fun trip even though it was cut a little bit short but it felt like I was going back 50 years in time on those quiet roads. Yes the solar charger was the only real technology I had with me other than the film camera but I wanted to avoid buildings and power points and be self-sufficient - petrol aside.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Was the 12V supplied not good enough for you ?
Why did I not think of that!
Enjoyable video, thank you! I have owned a 1945 Ford GPW for 33 years.
Excellent. Glad you enjoyed it. The GPW sounds great! Have you seen my Willys? Videos of it in my playlist. Thanks for taking the time to comment too.
Thank you for your reply Anthony. I haven’t seen your Jeep, I shall have a look at your playlist. Thank you!
I was Reared on series 1 land rovers ,great to see a non restored little Jem. The quality of materials used on these vehicles was vastly superior to today's models ,the galvanised parts never wear out .
Thanks - yes it is really as original as it can be. The wiring loom looks very old too! It is so much fun. One thing is noticeable in these 4X2s just how light the steering is on them. It would never need power steering!
I’ve undone 1954 7/16” nuts and bolts round the seat box and floor pan which were persuaded apart and when oiled and wire brushed were as good as new, no pitting all threads sharp, clearly defined right way round for the nut. Other , way newer , plated nuts and bolts were just shearing off. Very high quality steel on those old fasteners and components!
Yes indeed! They have lasted so well!
Just found the video absolutely superb would have a map of the route you drove please
Thanks - great that you enjoyed it - I must say I definitely did! I wish I had drawn a map and put it in the video but it was really planned and then became a bit ad hoc! Basically past Llansan(t)ffraid, Meifod/Pont Robert via the back most roads I could find. Then out to Aberdovey, Cader on the smallest roads I could find and then back via Welshpool. I am not sure I completely remember myself but it was a case of a few days before looking at maps and just taking the smallest public roads I could find. None of it was 'off road' or on green lanes. All good fun and stopping wherever I wanted too. If you have a Landy hope you can enjoy something like this yourself too. Make it your own adventure!
Great video and great editing! I really enjoyed the trip. Thank you for taking the time to film and upload the video. Beautiful country.
My Series I is a 1957, LHD, 88” and I love it. I have a Disco too. It’s a 1999 Series 2 with the 4.0 V8 petrol engine, but it has a facelift from a 2003 model.
For those of us not familiar with your country, I noticed the opening and closing of gates on some roads. Are those public roads with limited access or private roads?
Most roads in Puerto Rico: 4:03
Thanks so much for your comments. We have a lot in common - I have a V8 S2 Disco too - not the one you see in the film at the start - that had to go. 220,000 miles and still going strong. Now, the roads, there are a few very minor public roads in the UK that get very little use and predate the fitting of cattle grids so they still have gates. I actually know one where the public road has the gate and the farmer has fitted a cattle grid to the side of it and does not want anyone using the grid so you have to open and close the gates instead! (Council refused to fund a cattle grid so it is rightly his own private one). Roads like this are getting rarer so I seek them out to enjoy - the TWD does not get stuck and you don't do any damage to the surface and have right of access. It must be great out where you are.
Anthony Francis-Jones Thanks for the reply and additional info. I grew up down here but moved to the USofA for several years and then returned to take care of my sick mother. The S1 was in California, Washington, South Carolina, Florida and now in PR. My friends in the US wanted to see where I live now, so a while back I made a video showing some of the roads where I travel. If you want to see it, I think that clicking on my name should take you to it. Nothing fancy or too edited / complicated. I don’t have those skills. It’s me just driving from my place to my mother’s town.
@@explorer8888 Great - I will look that up.
Lovely video! I own a belgian made Land Rover Minerva Series 1 myself. good to see them oldies out and about!
the belgian army also used Series 3 Land Rovers that were 2 wheel drive, they were meant for road use only when ordered but ended up in all branches so when used as proper Land Rovers a lot of them got stuck off road...
good to see you fitted your mirror along the way! ;)
Good the hear from you and glad you enjoyed the film. Sounds like you have a really interesting vehicle too. Yes, you are right they are no good at all off road but feel really light to steer on a hard surface. I think so many of them have been converted to 4WD so original ones are hard to find.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Try it with the correct tyres on it. I noticed you have slicks on the back ;)
@@millomweb Never thought of looking at the tyres - they have been on it for years!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Put the knobblies on the back for improved off-road traction.
@@millomweb agreed!
Absolutly epic vid 📽️👍
Excellent - so glad you liked it - I do hope to make more at some stage.
Love this content! More of this while I'm in Isolation please! Jake Crossland if you remember me btw! Keep up the hard work!
Great to hear from you Jake and hope you are well. Yes - cannot wait until I can do more of this!
i very like this video
Thanks! Indonesia must be amazing too in Land Rovers!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones yes you are right, greetings friendship
A thoroughly enjoyable watch, thank you! Great to see someone enjoying their Land Rover - there is such a pleasure in having nowhere particular to be isn't there! I've had a bad few days working on mine, but your video has provided the motivation to carry on.
I completely get your comments about the people you meet - they turn heads where ever they go, certainly never bought mine for that but it's all part of the charm. Looking forward to some camping trips in my Series this summer when it's on the road again.
Did you trace the cause of the misfire in the end - the usual rotor arm troubles..?
Phill.
Phill, thanks for taking the time to comment and I am so pleased you enjoyed it and it motivated you to keep working on yours. I know the feeling but in the end with the right amount of time they will go again and can be enjoyed until the next issue rears up! Hope to have a bit of time (finally) tomorrow to look more closely at mine - I am pretty sure that the misfire is a burnt exhaust valve - had one go before but not an unsurmountable problem. Hope you are driving around in yours during the summer.
What a nice little Landy..
The fact that they always bring you back home after all these years, are just proof of their quality.
I've picked up your link somewhere else on UA-cam.
There you mentioned your weird /funny/ strange ( can't remember your exact words ) 4 x 2 Series 1 Landy ?
Tell us more please.
I know that they did make a few 4 x 2 's, but never seen one...
Was staring at your front suspension looking for a diff, but need to look again 😂😂😂
Thanks for a lovely drive with you. 🇿🇦
Yes, my Landy only has driven rear wheels and just an axel at the front so it is only ever 2WD. They made a few of these and not many remain but mine is as original as it can be. I think someone in the comments kindly gave more info about these strange 4x2s and their history. Makes the steering really light to use too. Thanks for watching and 'joining' me on what was a great journey!
What a great video! Compliments from Switzerland. We can only dream of such empty roads and landscape, as since Schengen contracts opened our borders, entire Switzerland became so crowded, that your film is a dream of our past, far gone...😢
Glad you enjoyed it! Many of our roads are clogged to breaking point but there are plenty of quiet areas to seek out too. Just been in the Black Mountains (Wales) and I was amazed at how many there are there just waiting to be explored! Thanks for taking the time to comment. A Series 1 drive in Switzerland would be quite something!
Very enjoyable video thank you. I liked the beautiful scenery and also the part where your wing mirror magically repaired itself :-)
2WD - so Rover could leave off the expensive transfer box - bet they liked that! Re the oil filler - the breather on the rocker cover is retained by a bolt, but the one on the oil filler tube (yours is red) is just a push fit (at least it is on my 1954 1.6L) give that a try.
Thanks so much for the comment. Interesting about the transfer box. Someone else mentioned the oil filler so I will look at that - I think I did not pull hard enough. Rather like using a Whitworth spanner! If the truth be told our drive was rather over grown and I broke the wing mirror on the way out right at the start. Turned around and went out through the fields instead as the gates were wider. That mirror had lasted for years and I broke it off in the first few minutes of driving! I really must make another one - plan to do mid to south Wales. Thanks again for your kind remarks - as ever makes it all worthwhile.
Not only 2WD but 4 speed too !
Thank you for posting, that was enjoyable. I second that about the Discovery needing that toolbox. I have a 1998 Disco and a 1969 Jeep CJ5, about the equivalent of a Series I or 2 in terms of speed and comfort. I was amazed you were able to drive with the back flap open without gassing yourself, as my Jeep is horrible for that and our tailpipe arrangement is identical. I usually just keep it closed and the doors and side flaps off.
Thanks Michael - so pleased you enjoyed the film. I was just chatting about how much fun I had making it. You sound like you have some great fun vehicles too. Perhaps the current situation will mean you have more time to fettle them.
With some front ventilation, it'd reduce exhaust gasses coming in the back door !
Lovely Landrover just getting mine back up and running again after a few years not doing much.
Your right about people being more intrested in land rovers then a Ferrari.
I once had my 80" parked between two early Rolls Royce Silver Ghosts and I had a crowd of people around the Land Rover with very little interest being given to the Rolls Royces. Obviusly this was a great feeling as the two Rolls Royces are some of the most impressive cars I have ever seen.
Thanks, great to hear that you are working on your Land Rover to get it up and running. You won't regret it! Stunning weather at the moment so I am reminded that I really must do another trip!. You are right about them turning heads wherever they go and all for the right reasons, not showing off but just pure nostalgia! Good luck getting yours going again.
Well I enjoyed you film Tony.....makes me want to get out and try a tour in my S3 soft top SWB.....saying that I have slept in it several times when younger....68 now.....talking 30/40 years ago.....bought in new in 1975.
Love your S1....love to drive one...I see you have a WW2 Willys Jeep.....again lover one.
Just looked a several of your electronics vids....I get the feeling you may have an amateur radio license like me.
Thanks Nick. I am lucky to have some lovely vehicles! Great you still have your S3. They are great fun too. I do have a ham licence but sadly have rarely used it. Did the exams when I was still at school! Have an aviation one too, so you might enjoy me flying our old PA 28 - Piper Cherokee. Thanks for taking the time to comment and glad you enjoyed the video. We do have some great countryside in our tiny island! ua-cam.com/video/ZvlxJ1oLCb4/v-deo.html
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Hi Anthony.....I thought you may have dabbled with radio.
I have since I was a kid...now 68....I to have an aero VHF licence as well as a Marine VHF licence.....
Did own my own a/c till recently....microlight.....I do miss it.
I will take a look for your flying vid...I used to fly with a pal in a PA-28.....nice old a/c arnt they....we seem to like the same things.
Keep up the good work.
@@nickaxe771 Great - Interesting to hear what you have done - all makes for happy memories!
Really enjoyed your video- just my sort of thing. I would love a S1 but with prices so high, I will have to make do with a 1980s 90. I do love the pace it instills in my driving though and there is nothing quite like being out there with nature, as you have shown. Keep up the great work!
Thanks Ian. You will have fun with your Land Rover regardless of it's age. You have the advantage of reliability with the 90! When time allows I do hope to do another one - as they say - this one just wrote itself.
Think you for my last 41,20 min great trip
Pleasure - glad you and others felt they could 'join me' on the trip. I am making plans for the next one but need to finish fixing the vehicle first!
I have 3 land and Triumph spitfire but i can t find free time to use them 😢
@@szymong7990 - I know the feeling but when you make time it always feels great. I was taught "always have your vehicles ready to go" so you can just have an hour's trip or just down to the shops - that seems to work but mine are always in pieces!
A wonderful video, sir! Thank you taking the time to assemble it and post for our viewing pleasure. A question: you've passes through a number of gates, opening them and closing them. Here in Wyoming (Western U.S.) gates often designate private property meaning "no go". What are the passage and passage rights in Wales? Is the land private or leased? Are the gates for livestock? I'm curious as I do not know. Regardless, I greatly appreciate you doing what we practice here: "Finding gates and leaving them [as they are found]" A common courtesy and respect seemingly not so commonly found these days. Cheers!
Nathan, thanks for taking the time to comment and pleased you enjoyed it! We do have the Countryside Code which talks about leaving gates as you find them though it is rather preaching to the converted! Rights of Way law is complex and unusual in the UK but there are rights across and through lots of private land - all land is owned by someone or the Queen/Crown - but there are routes, many of which are ancient that have been used by the public to get from one place to another - many have become roads. Lots are just footpaths or bridleways but some roads, usually on high ground have some stock fencing, but to keep stock apart still have gates or cattle grids. Most of these are on very quiet routes (I picked these especially) and the gates exist as they have always been there - a farmer cannot just put one in across a highway! There aren't many of these left! Hope that answers your question a bit - but in summary if you own a large or even small chunk of land it is more than possible that there are public rights over them - rarely for vehicular use though! I was on public roads all of the time. Great to hear from you and thanks for your great question.
Yes thoroughly enjoyed it!!
I have a similar Landover, but I am lacking some engine parts, eg water pump, piston rings etc. Engine block has cracked. Need them for replacement
Hope you manage to get them. It will be well worth it and you can enjoy the vehicle running again!
26:26 oh my god haha... that scene with you opening the gate reminds me of the same particular scene from the movie "The Gods Must be Crazy" (1980) - what's amazing is that in that movie it is also a Defender just like yours. I would advise you watch that movie if you haven't already. The movie is a masterpiece. Bar-none. :)
P.S. - Didn't these cars have a manual starting crank handle (you stick it through the front bumper)? Just if so the switch breaks, it is a means of an alternative staring method.
Andrey, great to hear from you and thanks for the suggestion. I will definitely look it up. Mine has a crank handle and a crank shaped hole in the front bumper but I think the crank pulley does not have the lugs on it if I remember - I really must go and look! I used to crank start our TE20 Ferguson (petrol) tractor all of the time!
Mono.... It's not a Defender, bro... 😂
Yes, that Series 1 in Gods must be crazy was good fun...
The main actress in it is a good friend of mine, and we chat regularly .. She is still as pretty today as in 1980.
Wonder what has happened to the old Landy... Take care 🇿🇦
Every time I watch this video I hear the fanbelt squeel when you get time could you fix it, might cool the engine down
Thanks Roger - that's a great idea. I should look into that. Simple enough job.
Really enjoyed your well presented short film that really shows how lovely life can be with the right attitude, fantastic weather, beautiful countryside and an old Landy. It really is amazing that they made a Landy with only two wheel drive, I have had Landy's for many years and to be totally honest, I never knew they made one that did and I am very puzzled myself as to why they would make it with just 2wd? Thank you for educating me on this. I must make it a mission as to why..
Many thanks for the comment. Yes it is a very odd vehicle and you do ask yourself 'Why?' With weather like we are having at the moment I should be out there now! If you find out more about 2WD ones let us know here.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones I'm wondering if they went for weight considerations for either carrying in planes or parachuting them out of planes. I was not aware of 2WD models - with 4 speed box. It's a rare optional 'upgrade' that' is in fact a downgrade !
@@millomweb Agreed - a real downgrade if you take it off road at all. Even wet grass and it's stuck but on the road it is so light to drive.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones So you need driving lessons too :)
My first 'car' was a Sherpa minibus. I used it to tow a caravan off a soft field which had an up-slope to get back onto the road - and I didn't get stuck - and that had normal road van tyres on it. With the front knobblies put on the back, things may improve !
@@millomweb Yes indeed!
hi am sure you can add oil through the red breather that goes to the tappet cover it pulles straight off without tools chears from aus
Geoffrey - that's a good idea. I must give it a go. I am rather amused by the idea that one needs a spanner just to change oil - how old fashioned!
I had one in the mid-eighties . Novel at the time and a talking point with many folk I encountered , but I don't miss it really . Now have a D3 V8 ( from new ) and it's quite OK , but expensive in maintenance .
Yes, I know what you mean. My Disco V8 eats fuel but runs on LPG and is just expensive in every way!
i'm a fan ;)
Many thanks - glad you enjoyed the film. I do hope to make some more before too long.
Well that chilled me out... anymore.
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it and felt you were with me on the trip. I do hope to make another one - need to do a bit more on the S1 and wait for the restrictions to end too!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones . Such a heart warming reply. Thank you .
@@terrygribb9185 pleasure - I so want to get out there and film more!
A 4-speed LR must be pretty rare ! I'm wondering if it's a light weight model for dropping by parachute or at least air transit.
Could be but I think it is just because it was used on concrete airfields. Less needed - less to go wrong!
good trip afj you should bring the old 2wd to new zealand for a trip you would love it
Thanks Carolyn. Yes, that would be fantastic - what an amazing place NZ is to explore with a Land Rover. Better get it working properly first before I plan that trip!
23:00 Had to get some oil......
Seem to have gained a mirror too !
Always need oil! Mirror? Not sure, think it was there all the while - think it fell off and I put it back on for that shot.
@@AnthonyFrancisJones It was missing from the beginning of the video !
@@millomweb Yes, I remember now - it was loose in the cab and on the journey I tie wrapped it on!
AFJ We need a Landie update!
Yes, you are totally right! I have been very busy with work but when the holidays come I really need to get out there again. It is fully repaired and working well!
Why have you got the rear tyres on the front ?
Good point! Been like that for years - as I use it on the road only I guess it improves fuel economy and reduces noise!
@@AnthonyFrancisJones Swapping them over won't change any of that but will at least give you better grip off road on the rare occasions you go there ! (even if it's just getting from where you park to tarmac !)
@@millomweb Worth a try. The knobbly tyres I had on the military Land Rovers were so noisy I remember!
It's a well known fact that rear tyres last longer than front tyres and many a young lad has been sent to the garage to request 'rear tyres'..
@@AnthonyFrancisJones I guess they'd be proper LR tyres - with their fairly distinctive sound. Driving along with 4 tame sirens !