Better than the Devil's Pulpit

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  • Опубліковано 28 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 49

  • @WILLWALK
    @WILLWALK 4 роки тому +3

    Thanks for showing the beauty of Crichope. I like watching beautiful places far away from home. Greetings from Indonesia!

  • @Fee212
    @Fee212 9 місяців тому +1

    The Devil's Pulpit was commercialised by Outlander, and this brought a load of louts in football tops and see you Jimmy bunnets. 🙄 Or visitors saying how beautiful Scatland is. 🙄
    This is breathtaking. ❤

  • @JaimieJo
    @JaimieJo 4 роки тому +2

    Beautiful! Very magical indeed. Thank you!

    • @SecretscotlandTours
      @SecretscotlandTours  4 роки тому +1

      Thanks... it's a special place and all the old signatures in the rocks make you feel connected to the centuries of people who shared the same pleasure when they visited. Must admit I did feel a wee bit spooked at times too when I imagined how I would have felt as a Covenanter holed up here.

    • @JaimieJo
      @JaimieJo 4 роки тому

      @@SecretscotlandTours Yes, imagine the many people that site has seen over the ages! If the rocks could talk!

  • @AA-xj1fr
    @AA-xj1fr 4 роки тому +2

    wow...a magical place indeed. Would love to visit once the lockdown is over.

  • @FenjaWonderland
    @FenjaWonderland 3 роки тому +1

    Lovely video! Thank you so much, which I had seen it before going to the devil's pulpit! But I still don't know where to make it out? Maybe you like to meet up one day?
    Kind regards the Highland Witch Fenja Wonderland

  • @lavona8204
    @lavona8204 3 роки тому +1

    Finding a local that knows the lesser known areas is key

  • @halsinden
    @halsinden 3 роки тому +1

    thank you so much for this! it's of such enormous use in terms of potential location scouting that might mean being relatively undisturbed during a shoot.

  • @Scotistani
    @Scotistani 4 роки тому +4

    Great video. I am in Glasgow and make some videos. Can catch up sometime for a wee collaboration

    • @SecretscotlandTours
      @SecretscotlandTours  4 роки тому

      Hello, sorry only just noticed your comment. Thanks for the feedback. Certainly open to the idea of discussing a collaboration. I'm just off to look at your channel now.

    • @Scotistani
      @Scotistani 4 роки тому

      Secret Scotland That’s great.Thanks 🙏🏻
      I had planned to travel to Isle of Skye in April and stop at places of interest to capture the beautiful landscape and historical sites, but unfortunately the pandemic happened.Once the restrictions are lifted it would be good to do a few collaborative videos exploring the sounds and sights of our beautiful country for the world to see.
      We can communicate via email if it’s convenient
      scotistani@gmail.com

  • @ArranOfAlba
    @ArranOfAlba 4 роки тому +3

    Nice vid

  • @derekgillan7314
    @derekgillan7314 4 роки тому +3

    very interesting thx

    • @SecretscotlandTours
      @SecretscotlandTours  4 роки тому +1

      Thanks Derek. It's certainly worth a visit if you are ever in the Thornhill area, but it's not signposted until you get near it. Interesting how places like this were once such big tourist attractions but are now hardly visited.

  • @gee4967
    @gee4967 4 роки тому +4

    That "ice" is actually a type of fungus

    • @SecretscotlandTours
      @SecretscotlandTours  4 роки тому +3

      I checked up on this when I got home and it is called "Hair Ice". It is actually ice but it is a type of fungus found in rotting wood that facilitates the forming of the ice in these fine strands. Apparently, it only forms when certain humidity, temperature and low wind conditions combine. You can read more about here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hair_ice

    • @gee4967
      @gee4967 4 роки тому +2

      @@SecretscotlandTours the more you know thank you for the link!

    • @Ineffablemystic
      @Ineffablemystic 2 роки тому

      We used to see stuff like that in the Black Forest Germany, but I had actually forgotten about it since it was long ago.

  • @louisasummer2298
    @louisasummer2298 2 роки тому

    it looks great is steps easy to get down or not

    • @SecretscotlandTours
      @SecretscotlandTours  2 роки тому

      Easy enough but the path acts like a stream so expect it to be wet.

  • @musicologox100pre
    @musicologox100pre 4 роки тому +1

    Where is this .?

    • @SecretscotlandTours
      @SecretscotlandTours  4 роки тому +1

      Near Thornhill, in Dumfriesshire

    • @seb-depp
      @seb-depp 2 роки тому

      @@SecretscotlandTours Can you be a little more specific about the place to enter the steps? I found the Crichope burn but it's rather long... Thanks and lovely video.

  • @JustOneKnight
    @JustOneKnight Рік тому

    😲❤😊👍

  • @WorldSurvivalist
    @WorldSurvivalist 4 роки тому

    Robert burns has been to every cave in Scotland

  • @bigbruno56
    @bigbruno56 Місяць тому

    Better than the devils pulpit ??? both together are nothing compared to the falls of Clyde, and Wallaces cave is there too, I've been in it.

    • @SecretscotlandTours
      @SecretscotlandTours  Місяць тому

      Very different places with very different appeals. You should post a video about the Falls of Clyde.

    • @bigbruno56
      @bigbruno56 Місяць тому

      @@SecretscotlandTours Hi, I dont know how to post videos, maybe I will learn one day, Im no good on the computer, but you should pay the falls a visit, there are videos on YT.

    • @SecretscotlandTours
      @SecretscotlandTours  Місяць тому

      ​@@bigbruno56 we've been a few times when visiting New Lanark. It's a bit too well known to fit with our theme of videos.

    • @bigbruno56
      @bigbruno56 Місяць тому

      @@SecretscotlandTours So I take it you have been in the real Wallaces cave there, ? he fled Lanark after he killed ther sherif

    • @SecretscotlandTours
      @SecretscotlandTours  Місяць тому

      ​@bigbruno56 there's also a Wallace Cave near us at Auchinleck.

  • @johngibson1256
    @johngibson1256 4 роки тому +2

    The white growth on the wood is a fungi. If you join a facebook UK mushroom group they have experts that will identify the actual species.

    • @SecretscotlandTours
      @SecretscotlandTours  4 роки тому +1

      It is actually made of ice and is simply called "Hair Ice". But there is a type of fungus found in rotting wood that facilitates the forming of the ice in these fine strands. Apparently, it only forms when certain humidity, temperature and low wind conditions combine. You can read more about here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hair_ice

    • @johngibson1256
      @johngibson1256 4 роки тому

      @@SecretscotlandTours so why does the headline say "Rotting fungus creates beautiful, glistening "hair ice" " asking for a friend. Lol. www.livescience.com/51633-fungus-driving-hair-ice.html

    • @SecretscotlandTours
      @SecretscotlandTours  4 роки тому +1

      @@johngibson1256 the fungus is on the rotting wood and it creates the conditions for the ice to start forming in these fine hair like strands. The stuff that looks like hair is actually made of frozen water not of a fungus.

    • @johngibson1256
      @johngibson1256 4 роки тому

      ​@@SecretscotlandTours To start with you asked the question what it was. I am a qualified Arborist (tree surgeon) and I gave you a sincere professional answer. You refused to accept that professional answer. I then provided an actual article on the fungus that causes the abnormal ice formation and asked a question. You side stepped the question and flipped factual reality on it's head because your ego will not allow for you to be wrong or to not have the final say. That toxic behavior in Buddhist studies and psychology is refereed to as a pathology. It's not about being correct or not for me and it is definitely not that I want to have the last say. Maybe you should take this chat transcript in it's entirety and go consult a psychologist and/or a psychiatrist. The facts stand on their own merit and do not need anyone's opinions to give them credence just like the symbiosis that the fungus has with water in the fungal/moisture/temperature anomaly that your original question was about. Nameste!

    • @SecretscotlandTours
      @SecretscotlandTours  4 роки тому +4

      @@johngibson1256 I'm a bit perplexed by the aggressive tone that you are taking. I've had others contact me to explain the science behind this. I've also read the article that you linked to and it continually refers to this natural phenomenon as "ice". The article that you linked to explains that a fungus on the wood creates the conditions for ice to form as thin strands of hair. To quote from the article: "The fungus helps the ice grow into thin hairs with diameters of just 0.01 millimeters (0.0004 inches), and helps to keep the strands in this shape over several hours at temperatures close to 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 degrees Celsius),".
      After studying the article, my understanding is that the fungus is necessary for the formation of the hair ice, but the hair ice is not a fungus, it is water that has frozen in thin hairlike strands due to the presence of a fungus.
      I've held the stuff in my hand and watch it melt.
      I'm not arguing with you, but you seem determined to find something to get angry about. Chill man... like the ice... chill.

  • @sandy-sx5zr
    @sandy-sx5zr 2 роки тому +1

    If you watch UA-cam HANGMAN1128, he's demonstrated for many years that these rock structures are giant trees petrified into rocks...great video 👍