Best you bugger off back home then.
We arrived in Cornwall yesterday having had the easiest journey down here for many a year. Off we go this morning for a steady walk around the lanes. Numerous couples walk towards us some chatting in the usual loud southern fashion. A cheery hello is received with total silence or even a look of terror. We are accustomed “up north” to everyone we encounter greeting us with a welcoming comment but these fokkers down here are a miserable lot.
Best you bugger off back home then.
That'll be tourists you encountered then, not Cornish.
R
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
When cycling through Cornwall a few years back, I’ve found literally all the people super friendly. Quite surprised to read this - probably tourists as mentioned above.
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Whilst there is a degree of anxiety here I find it hard to believe that rude locals are the norm.
Cornwall is one of the friendliest places I've lived.
As stated above - more likely to be a rude visitor. I expect they will complain bitterly about paying there two quid to cross back over the boarder when they leave
As an aside - whilst there is a small but noticeable nationalist movement here it appears to be orientated more towards civic nationalism as opposed to the ethnic type. In short all are welcome provided they embrace local norms and cultural references. Seems fair enough to me. Ive never understood how people seem oblivious to how rude they are being by living in a place and then moaning about it. I seemed to find that a lot among people from the North who were living in the South East. I lived in the South East for nearly 40 years, moving there from Northumberland and regarded it as home - often being quite defensive of it. I certainly wouldn't make a point of criticizing it or being rude. I follow the same ethos here. If somewhere is so awful, irritating or whatever why live or go on holiday there? Best be off back to your original area I would have thought! Sorry - off on a bit of tangent there.
Last edited by Velorum; 5th July 2020 at 21:23.
Haven’t been to Cornwall for 20+ years, but I remember the folks being friendly.
I’m not sure there are any Cornish folk left in Cornwall.
You weren’t eating scones with the cream and jam the wrong way around were you?
Cheers..
Jase
According to official figures there are 568,210
Though some may have gone on holiday yesterday and not be at home
You can`t just be in an area for a flash in time with strangers and make comments about how the people are there.
Where i live in Wales there are massive amount of people here who have come from away and they brought their bad manners with them from wherever they were from originally.
No, my luver that is Somerset,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_gZ3eCFnaE
Last edited by genesos; 5th July 2020 at 22:00.
Well it feels closer to a 'Northern' welcome than anywhere else Ive spent time and I include Bury, Sheffield and Doncaster in that. In fact I would say that it is more friendly and non judgemental than the area I was born and raised in - West of Newcastle on the Northumberland border.
Anyway, we all have our own perception of these things I guess.
Sorry that you have such a negative one of these parts.
If they're unfriendly then they're probably from Winchester.
"A man of little significance"
I pedalled down there to Lands End from Durham in 1977, took me 6 days IIRC, via Devon and along a bit.. The cream teas were a very enjoyable way to refuel. The folks were very friendly, although I wasn't wearing any woad to be fair. ;-) Here's the bike at Lands End, still have the Carlton Clubman frame hanging up . . .
F.T.F.A.
I'm a scouser and if I met someone from Doncaster on a country lane in Cornwall I wouldn't say hello either. Now, f*** off …
On a similar theme, we stayed in a family friend's house in Salcombe, Devon, about 10 years ago. I hated the place instantly because it was packed to the gills with Howard's Way yachting twats. The entire week we were there I didn't hear a single Devon accent and I started to feel guilty that we were partly contributing to the horror. One evening, we were sitting outside a pub with our 3-year-old and a lady approached with a tin and asked if we'd like to 'sponsor' her daughter to sail the Indian Ocean. I asked what charity the journey was raising funds for but was met with a vacant stare. She muttered something about, "She just wants to do it for the experience". I bit my tongue and politely declined.
Then on the last day a bloke came round to check the flat and take the keys. Guess what? He was from Devon. I got talking to him about the place and he told us he went to the school opposite the flat, which was now more flats, and he lived 30 miles away because he couldn't afford to live in the place he was born.
From what I understand, Cornwall is pretty similar.
Last edited by Onelasttime; 5th July 2020 at 22:26.
I'd advise the OP to steer well clear of London then if he uses the Cornish as a benchmark for 'unfriendly'!
Hold on, how did Bristol get dragged into this?
Nothing unfriendly here in the capital of the West Country (that'll annoy someone, I'm sure), unless you fall into one of the many categories of people that offend locals. Just like anywhere else.
Dave
ps - I am sure that Somerset wants to gain independence form the attitude that they are all charming, thick, cider-drinking yokels like the Wurzels.
I was born and bred in Devon and it's a bit unfair to label West Country folk as unfriendly.
Every year we welcome you into our homeland when you block every road and pinch our parking spaces. You keep buying our houses either to rent them out to someone more loud and drunken than yourselves or choose to live in it for just a couple of weeks a year and hence my parents had to move over 100 miles away because we were priced out of the market.
You leave tons of litter all over the place, scare horses for fun, leave gates unlocked and drive camper vans everywhere and tip your s**t out of the door and drive off as far and fast as possible to avoid detection.
Despite all that, we still welcome you with a smile.
^^^^^
Ah, scorn and misery alert!.
When you look long into an abyss, the abyss looks long into you.........
Salcombe is two very different places depending on when you visit: in the holiday season or out of it. Over 80% of the properties there are second homes and mostly owned by home counties people. Accordingly, the average property price is Ł730,000 so there's not many locals living there. I like the place, but flatly refuse to go anywhere near it in the summer holidays.
R
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
FTFY.Despite all that, we still welcome you your money with a smile.
R
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
Last year when we were looking to move we saw a house up this end we liked but couldn’t look round them because they weren’t finished. We were away to Cornwall in the August and the wife found the same builder doing a development about 20 miles where we were staying. Luckily they had the houses down there we were interested in and the missus wangled a look round. Obviously the same style but 95K price difference between home and there and to me they were more attractive as they were made of the Cornish stone. Having been down there many times over the years I always thought Devon and Cornwall property was still good value compared to other places in the country.
Last edited by Franky Four Fingers; 6th July 2020 at 07:44.
Of course the OP could have just met some of those people who believe you can catch Covid-19 by making eye contact.
I live in sunny Hampshire and during the lockdown most people will respond to a smile or a greeting, but about 20% just pretend not to see or hear you, it's definitely a Covid-19 thing.
That said, if they were Londoners they're probably used to the only strangers who talk to them being muggers.
M
Breitling Cosmonaute 809 - What's not to like?
They are generally too busy telling you that Yorkshire is God’s Own Country and that Yorkshire is the best place In the world anywhere and that Yorkshire people are the salt of the Earth etc etc etc.
I was born and brung up in Zomerzet and weaned on proper flat zider out of old plastic bottles. We are are charming,thick yokels .....mainly because of the zider
You have the biggest gift for irony that I have ever seen.....you even beat Andyg on that front.
For knocking you on your arse, pop to the blue anchor in Helston and sup a few spingo.
The west country is my part of the world and it is beautiful, since the 90's it's been known that local people are being outed from their local communities mainly by M25 owners wanting a holiday home.
This drove the prices up and killed some communities as come winter lots of homes were empty resulting in no income for small local business, come the summer its time to cash in but its all feast and famine with no local people at the heart of these small villages during winter.
People are friendly in this part of the world but please remember that recently they had to deal with was an exodus of M25'ers loaded with Covid heading to holiday homes in the south west, welcoming hello's were not on most peoples minds..
ISWYM.
IPA 4.5% A clean tasting hoppy beer, originally brewed for Queen Elizabeth II's Golden Julilee in 2002. Middle 5.0% The most popular beer. Originally brewed to welcome home those men who fought in the First World War. It is a traditional sweet Cornish bitter, with an unforgettable flavour. Bragget 6.0% Originally brewed in 2001 to celebrate the anniversary of Helston's first charter, which was granted in 1201. The beer gets its deceptively smooth, sweet taste from apple and honey, but beware it isn't a beer for lightweights. Special 6.5% Brewed for the first time to celebrate the marriage of Prince Charles and Diana, this magnificent beer is one of the strongest brewed in Britain today. Dark in colour and sweet in taste, this is the crem-de-la-crem of real ales. At Christmas and Easter, an extra special brew is available at 7.6 ABV.
Proper job!
R
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.