Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Is Britain your ideal place to live?

Is Britain your ideal place to live?

You are lucky, the camera will bring you back from a beautiful, green and not crowded country, as big as Britain, but Birmingham has the same population, about 2 million. My last check (oh, no, it's about 5 million now-thanks to Suash Agrawal for correcting me). Hundreds of years ago, there were about 5 million people in Britain, and now there are about 65 million people. Well, guess what-it's very different! Let 65 million people flood into New Zealand, and it may start to look less primitive.

Until recently, most non-Maori people in New Zealand were descendants of British immigrants, who brought British cultural and technical ideas. Your country is actually descended from Britain. But for this relatively old country, all you can say is a series of insults, mainly because you are old. I hope you don't use similar insulting words to address your biological parents and grandparents.

Yes, Britain has soil. From at least one other answer, I noticed that even your beach is not guaranteed to be perfect! However, I can show you some photos, even in dirty old Southampton, a port city with docks and oil refineries, on the low tide coastline, there is only a plastic garbage (and a lonely green glass) among the clean pebbles;

We can all show our works selectively. You have decided to hate Britain, so what you show and see is the result of crowding and carelessness. Yes, I can show you some pictures, an overflowing garbage can surrounded by disposable coffee cups, but although it is in Britain, it is not. You choose to see only what you hate very much, which makes you turn a blind eye to all the good things. As far as you are concerned, they are British. Well, I think it will help you stay away from my hometown! Still, they are beautiful. I can reach some places in less than half an hour after leaving my shabby hometown in Southampton. Even in your lovely and young country, I won't exchange them.

For example, there are beautiful chalk streams, such as the Cote River, the Ikey River and the Avon River in Hampshire. The clear water of these rivers comes from the underground aquifer deep in the chalk formation, which is an ideal habitat for trout and other fish. I just found out yesterday that there are only 200 chalk rivers in the world, of which 85% are in England. This is the Ikey River in the winter afternoon:

New forests in early autumn:

In the season when trees turn, while pigs are happily looking for acorns to eat, another part of the forest:

Forest streams in late summer:

The history of churches, castles and cathedrals can be traced back to 1000 years ago (well, Exeter is only half an hour away from here, but I don't have any pictures of Winchester Cathedral in my mobile phone):

And prehistoric buildings that have existed for four or five thousand years:

Surfing nephew's Cornwall beach:

New and old Southampton, moving forward while respecting the past;

A little boy can play in a forest stream;

I can go on, but I may bore you-after all, you don't really want to know why I love my country, do you? You just want to insult us again!