Scotland is the best for outdoors stuff. Most (like 90%) of Scots live in a band that goes roughly Glasgow -> Edinburgh -> Aberdeen, once you’re outside of that area everything is comfy. Gaelic speaking areas in the west are a pain to get to but are generally beautiful
Northern Ireland is just lacking in anything to do. There’s some stuff related to the troubles that’s kind of interesting; most natural site is the Giant’s Causeway which is brutally mogged by basalt structures anywhere else. They’re going to cut down that tree bit from Game of Thrones too. I once got refused entry to a pub outside Belfast by a bouncer who was actually UDA (I had no idea, the guy I was with grabbed me by the arm and was all “No problem! Some other time!” and marched me away. I must have looked Catholic)
Wales has nice nature and some parts like Pembrokeshire are worth visiting. Like anywhere else in the U.K. the urban areas are crap but they’re concentrated around the south coast with a smattering up the north.
England. Towns and cities range from crap to utterly bleak and dismal. London has some nice things for a few days and the looted stuff in the museums are worth seeing. Countryside comfier and some of the chocolate box rural villages are charming. Everywhere is busy all the time
>Gaelic speaking areas
what are you talking about? there are no gaelic speaking areas, there are just areas where people can also speak gaelic. it's a big difference.
they are difficult to get to because they are islands and i assume you are not a fish.
I'm scoping out places in the UK that would be best to move to once I'm done with uni. Thinking of doing a one month trip making a rectangular loop Liverpool -> Newcastle -> Glasgow because the relatively empty area between Manchester and Scotland looks quite cozy. Roughly along this shitty line I drew in paint. It is nice or a big shithole?
That's a lot of driving for a trip but there's plenty to do in all those cities, guess you could do Lake district and Blackpool (fuck you I love tacky British seaside places) on the way down.
Between Manchester and Blackpool is some of the cheapest places to live in the UK but they're deprived as fuck and will probably remain so for decades. Lake District is almost as cheap but far more comfy. You're just isolated from fucking everything. Might be worth checking out Derbyshire for a balance of comfy, affordability and ease of getting to cities.
Northern Ireland
There is literally nothing interesting here lad, what are you on about , we are a 50/50 mix of the worst Irish culchies and British brexit arseholes
wales
What are the Welsh chicks like
they're a little sheepish
As in shy, I like sheepish chicks
Isle of Man and Northern Ireland. All the others are cuckistan
i want to visit because I want to see what northern ireland is like but almost all uk posters tell me that northern ireland is a miserable shithole
Norn Irn has beautiful coastlines and countryside. The towns and cities are fairly grim apart from Belfast, which is all right.
Scotland is the best for outdoors stuff. Most (like 90%) of Scots live in a band that goes roughly Glasgow -> Edinburgh -> Aberdeen, once you’re outside of that area everything is comfy. Gaelic speaking areas in the west are a pain to get to but are generally beautiful
Northern Ireland is just lacking in anything to do. There’s some stuff related to the troubles that’s kind of interesting; most natural site is the Giant’s Causeway which is brutally mogged by basalt structures anywhere else. They’re going to cut down that tree bit from Game of Thrones too. I once got refused entry to a pub outside Belfast by a bouncer who was actually UDA (I had no idea, the guy I was with grabbed me by the arm and was all “No problem! Some other time!” and marched me away. I must have looked Catholic)
Wales has nice nature and some parts like Pembrokeshire are worth visiting. Like anywhere else in the U.K. the urban areas are crap but they’re concentrated around the south coast with a smattering up the north.
England. Towns and cities range from crap to utterly bleak and dismal. London has some nice things for a few days and the looted stuff in the museums are worth seeing. Countryside comfier and some of the chocolate box rural villages are charming. Everywhere is busy all the time
>Gaelic speaking areas
what are you talking about? there are no gaelic speaking areas, there are just areas where people can also speak gaelic. it's a big difference.
they are difficult to get to because they are islands and i assume you are not a fish.
I'm scoping out places in the UK that would be best to move to once I'm done with uni. Thinking of doing a one month trip making a rectangular loop Liverpool -> Newcastle -> Glasgow because the relatively empty area between Manchester and Scotland looks quite cozy. Roughly along this shitty line I drew in paint. It is nice or a big shithole?
That's a lot of driving for a trip but there's plenty to do in all those cities, guess you could do Lake district and Blackpool (fuck you I love tacky British seaside places) on the way down.
Between Manchester and Blackpool is some of the cheapest places to live in the UK but they're deprived as fuck and will probably remain so for decades. Lake District is almost as cheap but far more comfy. You're just isolated from fucking everything. Might be worth checking out Derbyshire for a balance of comfy, affordability and ease of getting to cities.
I'm too scared to visit the UK. What if I break some dumb law I never knew about? What if I become the victim of differential enforcement?
>What if I become the victim of differential enforcement?
Then you just need to integrate