Tales of Swiss Neutrality: WW1, Background and Mont Vully fortifications (1/2)

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 16 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 138

  • @biggles1024
    @biggles1024 4 роки тому +73

    I love these history videos. More please as time permits. Cheers, b.

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +15

      Thanks!

    • @Chilly_Billy
      @Chilly_Billy 4 роки тому +6

      Indeed so. The varied content on BOTR is one of its best features.

  • @mortengustavsen5431
    @mortengustavsen5431 4 роки тому +16

    Very interesting topic. Please do more of this type of videos as time and money allows. Thank you both Bloke and Chap, for an allround great channel.

  • @vickersmg
    @vickersmg 4 роки тому +9

    What a super emplacement. Very interesting to see so thanks for sharing (and thanks for the shout out as well). We're planning on doing something with the MMG pillboxes in the UK and possibly some firing from them - we've got a line on a suitable one not full of graffiti, litter or having been used as a toilet.

    • @vickersmg
      @vickersmg 4 роки тому +2

      @Cumberland Sausage We know the area relatively well as we're in Swindon. It's landowner permission for firing and filming that we need.

  • @jamietus1012
    @jamietus1012 4 роки тому +10

    I absolutely love these swiss political/ military history videos! Swiss history is so interesting

  • @guidor.4161
    @guidor.4161 4 роки тому +15

    Excellent and hugely interesting. Puts the gun stuff into context!

  • @cookingonthecheapcheap6921
    @cookingonthecheapcheap6921 4 роки тому +36

    Seriously. I love watching professional shooters, but this is excellent. Except for the flash backs I had from picking grapes as a kid lol.

  • @CheshireTomcat68
    @CheshireTomcat68 4 роки тому +3

    2:58 The very casual extra long razor sharp bayonet stance.

  • @johnusher1921
    @johnusher1921 4 роки тому +5

    The hand cut machine gun complex reminds me of the Grimes Graves Neolithic flint mines near Thetford in Norfolk - same type of pick marks in the chalk - Plus Ca Change... However they were cut with antler picks!

  • @FortuneZer0
    @FortuneZer0 4 роки тому +53

    Army fortifications do make for the best children playgrounds.

    • @Erpyrikk
      @Erpyrikk 4 роки тому +5

      as a kid i did enjoy clambering around atlantic wall bunkers.

    • @jamesbromstead4949
      @jamesbromstead4949 4 роки тому +3

      @@Erpyrikk I can say that in the 1970's, the custodians were not to thrilled with me and my cousins playing on the reconstructed ramparts at Andersonville. Still have pictures of us straddling a canon.

    • @richardelliott9511
      @richardelliott9511 4 роки тому +3

      Oh yeah, I was elementary age during the US CIVIL WAR centennial and living in the mid Atlantic states, I climbed many a cannon and breast work as the family explored the battle fields. Other era forts too, from Ft Ticonderoga down to York Town. Thanks Mike.

    • @Zorglub1966
      @Zorglub1966 4 роки тому

      @@Erpyrikk so i did!

    • @myparceltape1169
      @myparceltape1169 3 роки тому

      @@Erpyrikk We have got castles smartened up in Victorian times and holes in the ground made by bombers directed off course.
      The holes are easier to play in.

  • @zachariaszut
    @zachariaszut 4 роки тому +4

    Nice little map you got there. Much easier to visualise and understand a battlefield.
    During a conflict, desperate times, desperate measures may be tempting.
    The Swiss, quite naturally or neutrally took their precautions... and they were permitted to stay out. Good of them.

  • @HungrigerHugo89
    @HungrigerHugo89 4 роки тому +17

    I love your swiss military history content! You showed Lindybeige how to shoot high caliber rifles maybe Lindy can help you with the artform of rambling on in front of a camera for 1h without a cut. Tbh, you seem pretty good at that already though :D

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +7

      Thanks! I just manage to hide most of the cuts, lol!

  • @schmit6576
    @schmit6576 4 роки тому +2

    Finally getting around to watching this, Loving it all so far. Keep it up Bloke.

  • @creanero
    @creanero 4 роки тому +23

    Just realised at the start of this: the Swiss mobilised more men than the BEF contained....

    • @davidbrennan660
      @davidbrennan660 4 роки тому +14

      Typical Swiss aggression against peace loving neighbours.

    • @creanero
      @creanero 4 роки тому +9

      @@davidbrennan660 They do occasionally invade Leichtenstein by accident

    • @davidbrennan660
      @davidbrennan660 4 роки тому +6

      Another known troublemaker of Europe.... mind you the Red Army avoided the place in 1945..... that must mean something.

    • @arsenique6478
      @arsenique6478 4 роки тому +3

      @@davidbrennan660 Yeah, we're unconquerable. Mostly because Schaan is fuck-ugly and our accents sound even worse than most Swiss German ones.

    • @Charstring
      @Charstring 4 роки тому +1

      @@arsenique6478 E...d...e...l - wait a minute! EDELWEISS! BRILLIANT USER NAME!

  • @ShaDOWDoG667
    @ShaDOWDoG667 4 роки тому +3

    It's really cool that they left it open

  • @chadkhl1690
    @chadkhl1690 3 роки тому +1

    I absolutely love these videos. I grew up in Mulhouse and never suspected there was such historical wonders just a hike beyond the border. Can't get enough of this!

  • @Strato50
    @Strato50 3 роки тому +1

    Loving the WW1 content, especially images of the infoboards and old trenches & shooting positions. This is great, do more when you can!

  • @FrontierFootball
    @FrontierFootball 4 роки тому +2

    Definitely expand this series please!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Great video

  • @Alexia_Nothisone
    @Alexia_Nothisone 4 роки тому +5

    so freaking cool to see the military history of my canton :D

  • @robertl6196
    @robertl6196 4 роки тому +2

    Nice!
    Trivial point: the excavated machinegun positions appear to be carved out a loess deposit. Essentially deposits of wind-born dust loosely cemented by calcium. Very soft and carve-able.

  • @alexmartin9177
    @alexmartin9177 4 роки тому +4

    0:32 worried about olight there for a second.

  • @christopherberry9496
    @christopherberry9496 4 роки тому +1

    very cool, thanks for the tour!

  • @JohnCBobcat
    @JohnCBobcat 4 роки тому +3

    Upvoted for the content in general. Wish I could extra-upvote for the Homestarrunner/Trogdor bits.

  • @emoryzakin2576
    @emoryzakin2576 3 роки тому +2

    Trogdoooooooooooooorrrr!!!!!! Oh my it’s been......awhile bravo!!! Also very much enjoyed this escape from a crumbling America thank you for helping relieve the stress

  • @SafetyProMalta
    @SafetyProMalta 4 роки тому +1

    Glad you did another one of these!

  • @deanlowther4020
    @deanlowther4020 4 роки тому +2

    War walk was a really good series prof Holmes is sadly missed I've got a few of his excellent books
    You've done a excellent job with this vid 👍

  • @Manublablabla
    @Manublablabla 4 роки тому +2

    Stuff i never learned in school, but actually is kinda interesting. And i was born here..
    Keep doing it Great stuff!

  • @bhoward9378
    @bhoward9378 3 роки тому +1

    Absolutely fascinating. I particularly enjoy learning about the geography/topography of how military decisions have been taken in the past with respect to the technology of the time.

  • @davidbrennan660
    @davidbrennan660 4 роки тому +9

    I like a fixed fortifications..... lead on Bloke, entertain us.
    The footage of Bloke folding the map up so it fits in his pocket is a video in itself.

  • @RonOhio
    @RonOhio 4 роки тому +4

    Neutrality takes a lot of work and some luck.

  • @danpos1971
    @danpos1971 4 роки тому +11

    Thanks for this video. Very interesting how the Swiss protected their country. I wonder how effective it would have been?

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +7

      Probably quite effective against any attempts just to march through, but once the mass of the artillery came up the Swiss would have been thumped cos they weren't provided with large numbers of modern pieces. But ultimately they'd just have ended up fighting alongside whoever didn't invade them first once

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +17

      Major difference between WW1 and WW2, and I think I need to nail this point home in a later video:
      WW1: aim is to try to hold back either side trying to outflank the other through the Swiss central plain.
      WW2(early): aim is to stop the Germans outflanking the southern end of the Maginot Line through the Swiss central plain.
      WW2(post-Fall of France): Switzerland itself is the target, and the aim is to discourage the Germans from trying to conquer it.

    • @DavidCowie2022
      @DavidCowie2022 4 роки тому +1

      @@BlokeontheRange From one of your earlier videos, I was under the impression that Germany saw no need to conquer Switzerland when it could dominate it via the threat of blockade.

    • @kevinlove4356
      @kevinlove4356 4 роки тому

      @@DavidCowie2022 True, but bear in mind that WWII was a national/ideological war. If one of Germany's goals is to unify all German people under one government, and Switzerland is 70% German, then that is a good reason to invade and conquer Switzerland.

  • @b79holmes
    @b79holmes 4 роки тому +2

    Very cool video. Makes me wonder what would happen if such soft stone fortifications were on the receiving end of any kind of artillery ? There is a very old fort in St Augustine FL made of coral blocks which basically absorbed cannon balls from ships. Would rounds fired at this structure work their way in really deep or would it all collapse like a sand castle?

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +1

      Thanks - since they're not very deep, I suspect if they were hit with a large shell it'd have made a complete mess... There's a place in France with deep fortifications in similar soft rock, and that survived very well (the village that was on top was completely obliterated) cos the soft rock absorbed the blasts very well, but they were much, much deeper than these.

    • @jonathan_60503
      @jonathan_60503 4 роки тому

      I suspect that, like the much later US brick coastal fortifications of the early to mid 1800s, the soft coquina stone of that St Augustine FL fort would have fared very poorly against even early black powder explosive shells; despite being excellent against solid shot. (Absorbing a shell it exactly what you don't want to do if it's going to explode; because that magnifies the effect of it's explosives).
      And similarly this Swiss fort in WWI fort I tend to think wouldn't stand up for very long against any kind of delay fuzed high explosive shell. But it'd provide still wonderful protection from machine gun fire (whether direct or indirect), or from shell fragments, and probably give reasonable protection for a while against artillery using non-delay explosive shells (especially from smaller artillery like the iconic French 75).

  • @simongartmann5294
    @simongartmann5294 3 роки тому

    I wish i had you as my history teacher. Even your pronouncation of the different villages, regions and citys are perfekt

  • @thedamnyankee1
    @thedamnyankee1 4 роки тому +5

    /me pauses video and opens google maps in another window

  • @jackusmc2542
    @jackusmc2542 4 роки тому +4

    Thanks Bloke, really liked this. The mobilization must have mucked up the economy pretty well. Did they stand down the mobilization to a more sustainable number?

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +7

      Yup. Full mobilisation could only be sustained briefly at moments of highest risk, since it takes most able-bodied men out of the economy. So you've got it in 1914, 1939, 1940 and 1943 off the top of my head and without consulting a book (the "March Scare" of 1943 is a fascinating one, but it'll take us a long time to get there!!! In brief, it seems that the Germans knew that Swiss intelligence had a source highly placed in the German hirearchy, which was true, and that they wanted to confirm this)

  • @williamlloyd3769
    @williamlloyd3769 4 роки тому +4

    How analog! 3D plastic topographic map. Very high tech back in the day.

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +5

      I find it very visual and tactile :) Not the first time I've used it either, and it won't be the last!

    • @ZGryphon
      @ZGryphon 4 роки тому +1

      @@BlokeontheRange They make such a distinctive noise when touched, too. For some reason the sound of you running your pointer along it gave me distinct memory flashes of grade school in the late '70s.

  • @CAPNMAC82
    @CAPNMAC82 4 роки тому +1

    Excellent walk, Prof. B--if one that made me thirsty for wine.

  • @napalmholocaust9093
    @napalmholocaust9093 4 роки тому +1

    That brick arch in the sandstone tunnel is reverse built. Most are built from the top with a form below. You can't do that against a tunnel's back. It must have been fun to build it formless.

  • @alanmcconnaughey2698
    @alanmcconnaughey2698 4 роки тому +1

    Very nice video. Rock that soft may not have withstood artillery very well.

  • @Egma_1237
    @Egma_1237 4 роки тому +1

    Can't wait for part 2.

  • @keithwalker3460
    @keithwalker3460 3 роки тому +1

    the proff was my TA battaloion comander in the 80,

  • @Willindor
    @Willindor 4 роки тому +2

    Was Switzerland in the 19th century during the Italian and later German unifications worried about cantons seceding to any of the other countries around?

    • @felixtheswiss
      @felixtheswiss 4 роки тому

      Well prussia nearly invaded because they wanted the canton of Neuchatel back.

  • @CHmale81
    @CHmale81 4 роки тому +1

    Remembering visiting the place as a schooltrip in my 2nd or 3rd grade. Remembering that the teacher told us, that the caves where used to store wine by the romans...
    What a prick

  • @danieltaylor5231
    @danieltaylor5231 4 роки тому +2

    Ozarks? When was Bloke in the Ozarks and I missed it!?

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +2

      Before I was Bloke... Haven't been back for a while.

  • @peterconnan5631
    @peterconnan5631 4 роки тому +1

    Very interesting thank you!

  • @kevinagnew1519
    @kevinagnew1519 4 роки тому +1

    As you mentioned all arable land is used for farming in Switzerland. Why were the forests where emplacement 12 was located never cleared and farmed?

  • @phprofYT
    @phprofYT 4 роки тому +1

    That relief map is quite relaxed.
    I'll show myself to the door. ;)
    So, Switzerland is not Swiss cheese to attack, eh?
    Okay. Okay.. I'll go now.

  • @fleurdelispens
    @fleurdelispens 4 роки тому +2

    Anyone else hear Helvetic and think of the font?

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +2

      You'd think there was some link, wouldn't you? :)

    • @fleurdelispens
      @fleurdelispens 4 роки тому +1

      @@BlokeontheRange you mean they named a font after an iron age people? Wow, I never would have thought of that. You truly are one of the great geniuses of our time. 😜😂😂 (in case it wasn't clear, this was meant in good humor)

  • @trentgander5834
    @trentgander5834 4 роки тому +12

    I love this content, but the trogdor reference threw me off guard.

    • @contactacb
      @contactacb 4 роки тому +1

      I'm glad someone else saw it, for a moment I though I was hallucinating back in time for a decade or so! Homestarrunner.com!

  • @roykum6738
    @roykum6738 4 роки тому +10

    Trogdor!

  • @neilbennett694
    @neilbennett694 4 роки тому +1

    More please

  • @ulflyng
    @ulflyng 3 роки тому

    Thx. Very interesting

  • @nirfz
    @nirfz 4 роки тому +3

    3:39 "oehhhh" or as it is also called: Austria 🤪

  • @WhatIfBrigade
    @WhatIfBrigade 4 роки тому +1

    Love the vineyard. Is the wine good?

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +2

      Yes - and quite reasonably priced too.

    • @tanteju944
      @tanteju944 2 роки тому

      @@BlokeontheRange Where did you go? 😉😀

  • @blueband8114
    @blueband8114 4 роки тому +1

    Wish i had known about these places, when on my Vosges ww1 trips.

  • @Chilly_Billy
    @Chilly_Billy 4 роки тому

    Good job, Bloke. I was rather surprised by the fairly small guns used in the artillery position you visited. 120mm (4.8") wouldn't have a lot of explosive weight per shell nor would it have as long a range compared to say a 150mm piece. With those long fields of fire, range would almost certainly be the predominant tactical consideration. And since they were static, a heavier gun wouldn't be a liability in terms of mobility. Is it possible these 120's were the largest, longest-ranged guns in 1914 Swiss inventory?

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +1

      I suspect so... They were not lavishly provided for on the artillery front...

  • @Fido4President
    @Fido4President 4 роки тому +1

    3:50 Canton Ticino is not Italy!

    • @thefriese8805
      @thefriese8805 4 роки тому +2

      but Canton de Ticino/Kanton Tessin is surounded on 2 sides by Italy and is the only primarly italian speaking canton

  • @barbaraberni1319
    @barbaraberni1319 2 роки тому

    Yes my dear

  • @stephenfernandez
    @stephenfernandez 4 роки тому +3

    Wow, Switzerland must be a very civil country.
    Anything similar in most other western countries would be riddled with evidence of druggies etc.

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +1

      In the UK it would be full of rubbish and would have been used as a toilet...

    • @stephenfernandez
      @stephenfernandez 4 роки тому +1

      Same here in Australia. . .

    • @decnet100
      @decnet100 4 роки тому +4

      Well, back in the mid 90s Switzerland was basically just the same - growing opiate problems and drug related crimes in the urban places like Zürich in particular... then they started pioneering treatments to get people off opiates, including actual Heroine distribution.
      When I last visited Bern, there were quite literally junkies sitting in the well-visited park area about 100m from the national parliament, overlooking the river Aare and shooting up openly in the evening sun, "normal" families walking by within a couple meters - for me it was a clear "WTF" moment, someone would have immediately called the cops to "remove these unwanted elements" where I was from. My swiss friend explained to me that they are in fact provided with clean drugs, places to sleep and helped into jobs at a nearby center, so they are basically thought of as hospital patients - if they don't misbehave, they have just as much right to be there, even use their prescribed drug just like every other visitor to the park who might be a diabetic in need of an insulin shot.
      So why would they go and live in a damp historic fortification out in the woods instead?
      ua-cam.com/video/Cco4BT-KDK8/v-deo.html

  • @Zephcas
    @Zephcas 4 роки тому +1

    Great video but also--- TROGDOR!!!!!!

  • @michaelmulligan0
    @michaelmulligan0 2 роки тому

    The Swiss certainly have an eye for terrain

  • @DavidCowie2022
    @DavidCowie2022 4 роки тому +1

    Nice hat!

  • @KriLL325783
    @KriLL325783 3 роки тому

    Got to wonder if it's that easy to dig by hand and by water how resilient it would be to bombardment.

    • @smiley055
      @smiley055 3 роки тому

      Dont think would have withstand a bombardment,not just large rocks peeling off the ceiling,but the dust would be suffocating and blinding.Even with a mask.

    • @Slithermotion
      @Slithermotion 3 роки тому +1

      Well if you shoot into water,sand mud it will not be very effective.
      Armor isn't really about being as hard or strong as possible but to absorb alot of energy.
      I don't say that this would be very effective but it was probably the best option...I guess.

    • @myparceltape1169
      @myparceltape1169 3 роки тому

      @@Slithermotion You're right, that is the defence that castles used against cannon.
      Build a thick earth wall 100 metres back to prevent direct cannon fire but slope it lower on the attacker's side to deny them cover.
      The seige cannon does not have a direct sight to the door but the defender can shoot down.

  • @michaelmulligan0
    @michaelmulligan0 2 роки тому

    If that was the erosion naturally and by human activity, imagine what machine gun or artillery would have done

  • @nunyabidniz2868
    @nunyabidniz2868 4 роки тому +1

    WHAT!?! No guns? Not even an oblique reference? I feel cheated... ;-D

  • @malcolmhunt7108
    @malcolmhunt7108 4 роки тому

    In any other European country those Canon 12 cm Ord 1882 would have been in a museum by 1914.

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому

      You should see what the Dutch had and were even fielding as late as 1940 iirc... screw-breech, non-recuperating ancient

    • @malcolmhunt7108
      @malcolmhunt7108 4 роки тому

      @@BlokeontheRange yep just checked they still had 108 84 mm field gun [8-staal] from 1881 in May 1940. Love the Swiss military history videos so please keep up the good work and I'm looking forward to more in the future.

  • @carlcarlton764
    @carlcarlton764 4 роки тому +1

    30:40-ish. You say "leinsen", then an elderly woman does and a train runs by. What's that?

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +4

      "Lines and lines and lines and lines" Then she's hit by a train. It's the start of the 3rd series of the League of Gentlemen.

  • @Gordon_Shumwai
    @Gordon_Shumwai 4 роки тому +1

    28:11 Dumbo Einheit :)

  • @revmarcell6449
    @revmarcell6449 4 роки тому +1

    Did Swiss neutrality allow for using their air force to shoot down American and British aircraft, most of which were damaged during WW2? Then the internment of allied soldiers who often bailed out of crippled aircraft in not so friendly conditions is still remembered 75 years later.

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +5

      Yes. There were a number of shoot-downs of German aircraft early in the war (which pissed the germans off mightily), then again of some US aircraft late war when they refused orders to land and fired on the Swiss. RAF aircraft were usually in Swiss airspace at night and the Swiss had no night fighting capability. It's a topic that I collabed with Military History Aviation on a while back, and it's one where I'll look at some of it in more detail on BotR, particularly the day when the Germans actively picked a fight with the Swiss.

    • @revmarcell6449
      @revmarcell6449 4 роки тому +1

      Bloke on the Range I look forward to seeing your post on this subject. I was friends with an 8th Army pilot whose B24 , severely damaged aircraft was shot down by the Swiss. He was a POW in Switzerland for almost two years. He knew that he was near Swiss airspace but tried not to cross over. Before his passing he wrote about how he and another crewman survived but suffered ill treatment in captivity. To be fair, some pilots tried to land in Switzerland to get out of the war. I can see both sides of this issue but there are many questions yet to answered.

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +4

      Did your friend end up in Wauwilermoos for trying to escape? Interned Allied airmen were given pretty free reign to move about, provided they didn't try to leave the country (the Swiss were paranoid about the Germans thinking they were assisting Allied personnel to get back to their units and using that as an excuse to squeeze them on top of the other reasons they already had). There's no excuse at all for what went on at Wauwilermoos, and Béguin should have been prosecuted for war crimes, but bad treatment wasn't the rule at all.
      Also, a US investigation showed that the trope about pilots flying to Switzerland to get out of the war was basically untrue, by the way.

    • @revmarcell6449
      @revmarcell6449 4 роки тому

      Bloke on the Range, that investigation also discovered that the rumor of Allied pilots often tried to escape to Sweden or the Irish Free State was baseless. Oddly large numbers of allied aircraft were found in Sweden and Ireland. If the aircraft were damaged no charges were brought against the crews. The Irish shot up the allied planes to protect the crews. It was a sensitive in the US until,the 1960s. My friend Capt Abe Gorden thought it was because he Jewish. He said the problems began when he inquired about his crew. He wrote letters to his crews families and tried to post them first through the Red Cross then through the Swiss Post. He was jailed for the duration for these infractions.

    • @jcorbett9620
      @jcorbett9620 4 роки тому +2

      @@BlokeontheRange I can vouch for the "pretty free reign" part for Allied airman. My uncle and his crew were shot down and bailed out, landing in Switzerland. He had (until his passing) photos and cuttings from Swiss newspapers about the "Britsh aircrew" walking about the town. Unlike evaders who had crossed the border on foot to escape capture (another one of those "we don't want to piss the Germans off" moments), he and his crew were permitted to wear their uniforms when out and about, which attracted crowds and attention wherever they went.

  • @minutemanqvs
    @minutemanqvs 4 роки тому +2

    You look so british with your hat 😛

  • @rickoshea8138
    @rickoshea8138 4 роки тому +1

    Wolfenstein 3D?

  • @Boredoutofmywits
    @Boredoutofmywits 4 роки тому +1

    You need to work on your cadio mate. Great video though.

  • @kingerikthegreatest.ofall.7860
    @kingerikthegreatest.ofall.7860 4 роки тому

    Poor Liechtenstein, never gets any love.

    • @thefriese8805
      @thefriese8805 4 роки тому +1

      the military history of Liechtenstein is rather uninterresting with them not having any military, defense is instead carried out by the Swiss Army

    • @BlokeontheRange
      @BlokeontheRange  4 роки тому +2

      They're also the wrong side of the Rhine so would have been left completely in the lurch had anyone come from that direction.

    • @nirfz
      @nirfz 4 роки тому +1

      ...so poor that people even ditch an "e" from it's name 😉

    • @kingerikthegreatest.ofall.7860
      @kingerikthegreatest.ofall.7860 4 роки тому +1

      @@nirfz fixed

    • @nirfz
      @nirfz 4 роки тому +1

      @@kingerikthegreatest.ofall.7860 👍

  • @damiangrouse4564
    @damiangrouse4564 2 роки тому

    Switzerland’s been showing it’s not such a benign place lately…Davos news “interesting”…

  • @dksdg
    @dksdg 4 роки тому

    I’ll dump my rucksack and get my torch, are you British?

  • @mysterymete
    @mysterymete 4 роки тому +1

    Toowch

  • @barbaraberni1319
    @barbaraberni1319 2 роки тому

    Your are nice

  • @Iwannabwacanadian
    @Iwannabwacanadian 4 роки тому +1

    Is there anywhere in Switzerland that isn't gorgeous?

    • @dmg4415
      @dmg4415 4 роки тому +1

      Climing up the north face of an Swiss alp, just pain, until You are up.

  • @barbaraberni1319
    @barbaraberni1319 2 роки тому

    I can Good Witz popeln