Re: Curious - what are the distinctions between England, Great Britain
As a Londoner by birth and a Home Counties boy by raising, I too have noticed the remarkably insular nature of the West Country. A significant national trip involves going to Birmingham. When I mention I'm intending to drive to London and back in one day I get incredulous looks. Not saying that's necessarily a bad thing, in my experience it hasn't led to any particular negative personality traits, it's just remarkable, especially sitting at one end of the M4 corridor. But if there's anywhere in Britain where people still grow up, marry, get a job and have babies, who grow up, marry, get a job and have babies, all without leaving a single town, it's the West Country.
One part of the South I lived in was the West Country, bordering Dorset, Somerset and Wiltshire. And most people from around there had never been beyond Bath.
Take the piss out of Northerners and their accents all you want, but with your stereotypical West Country folk? Gimme a break
And talk about casual racism there. But then I honestly don't think most of the people I knew there had actually ever met a non-white person in their life.
As a Londoner by birth and a Home Counties boy by raising, I too have noticed the remarkably insular nature of the West Country. A significant national trip involves going to Birmingham. When I mention I'm intending to drive to London and back in one day I get incredulous looks. Not saying that's necessarily a bad thing, in my experience it hasn't led to any particular negative personality traits, it's just remarkable, especially sitting at one end of the M4 corridor. But if there's anywhere in Britain where people still grow up, marry, get a job and have babies, who grow up, marry, get a job and have babies, all without leaving a single town, it's the West Country.