Antiques Roadshow in Orkney 1992

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[Music] this week we've brought the Antiques Roadshow across the stormy waters of the Pentland first to Orkney a group of over 70 islands a few miles north of the scottish coast at john o'groats Orkney is a landscape of wild unspoiled beauty varying from gently undulating countryside to cliffs that rise perpendicular to the sea the old man of hoy was once part of those cliffs now eroded by the waves into dramatic isolation virtually everywhere you go on Orkney there are reminders of earlier civilizations the huge collective burial mound of maize how and the standing stones of Stenness reflect a history of habitation going back at least 5,000 years but in that long history there is one event that stands out from all others and it happened here at Scapa Flow on Midsummer's day in 1919 the entire German high seas fleet which had been interned here since the end of the war was scuttled on the orders of the German AB North so that his ships could not live again to fight in someone else's Navy in the Second World War the British battleship HMS Royal Oak was torpedoed here in Scapa Flow by a German u-boat which had slipped past the inadequate defences more than 800 men drowned on the orders of Winston Churchill and as a direct result of that tragic loss the very route taken by the German submarine was blocked off by an impressive causeway linking several of the islands together for the first time the Churchill barriers as they came to be called were built by Italian prisoners of war and on a low hill overlooking the water in two old army Nissen huts there's a tangible reminder of the years they spent incarcerated on opening the men who'd built those Churchill barriers the Italian prisoners of war missed one thing as much as they missed easily itself and was somewhere to worship they had nowhere to celebrate Mass so one day in 1943 a rather liberal and enlightened British commander said to them if I give you the tools will you build your own Chapel all the Italians readily agreed and this was the result among the prisoners was an artist Dominick OTO Chetty copying a holy picture in his wallet he painted a mural of the Madonna and Child the tabernacle was made from wood recovered from shipwrecks the lanterns that let the altar were fashioned from the prisoners bully beef tins geo Chetty was so proud of his Chapel that after the war he was invited to return to Orkney to lead its restoration well coming in to Strom ness this morning is the piano fairy from the Scottish coast bringing with it dozens of people from Caithness who we've invited to be our guest today to swell the ranks of the Acadians the people of Orkney who number some twenty thousand and many of whom we hope are coming to the Strom Ness Academy the local school to meet our familiar team of Antiques Roadshow experts do you know anything about them at all not a lot I think that the may have come out to a church at a chapel or something and how did you get them I just brought them here and or me was it a long time ago I would be 30 or maybe over 30 or 40 years did you pay a lot for them it was plenty I suppose maybe in the teens opposed I would think well they come all the way from Italy yes and they were made in a small place called Castelli de bruit so I see in the 18th century and I've Castelli they specialize in making these large tiles or clark's painted with all sorts of subjects and this one here I think it's so that's why it's a conversion of simple there who his name was Sol until he yes became simple and there's God speaking to him out of the cloud saying Saul Saul why do you persecute me yes in Latin now he is falling over backwards and his lovely horse oh and this one must be baby Jesus yes this is a Holy Family yes oh they what you call them in the adoration of the major I hear the three kings turning up and as you can see they parked their camels behind that's right now the factory was dominated by two great families of painters one of the families was called drew a GRU e and the other was called genteel and I think that these ones date from about 1740 and were probably painted by a man called Aurelio GRU I see and you could see this particularly by the amount of of manganese or purple he used and that's very typical of our radio gruha this one maybe a little later because he's got with rather more green in it what's interesting is as far as I can see that's the original frame that's an 18th century frame it's a very good feature missus somebody's stuck it together but that's not a problem and you this one presumably has a friend I had a frame is lost well but without a frame I would think that this one is worth between two and three thousand pounds and this one which is bigger a very active subject between four and five thousand pounds but they really are very exciting and amazing things to come all the way to auch there to to see thank you very much now this is a piece of furniture that you really can't ignore because the crane and figure on the top of this table is really spectacular isn't it it is lovely yeah no one do you have this table tilted upwards in a corner so that you see the grain or do you have it flat no like this Anoosh every day it's the news every day that's wonderful do you keep cloth over it no no because the colour has also remained and that's what part of the beauty so that you get this wonderful strong honey color with a black marks running right the way through it and it really is wild in this rose would have topped it when I first saw that the table there was the quality that sprang out not only does it got this tremendous grain on the top but if we can go down underneath look at the pedestal now this also I think is really something to enjoy and I'm not sure you don't always get down on your knees like this and look at its location in dusty occasionally for dusting well it looks in beautiful condition here and the generosity of all the forms all the shapes if you just run your hands around it the pedestal here or over the legs and down to this extraordinary fleshy leaf you Scrolls it's quite prehensile you feel they're going to come out at you but all that is really a sign of quality I think you've got a really good team yeah there are lots of these circular pedestal tables around they are ubiquitous in most rooms in nineteenth-century houses you would have a circular pedestal table but many of them are really a very little quality this one I think is very very fine indeed I had a cover on it but I have got a husband who have like folks to see the green it's very difficult isn't it to preserve it from one side and to enjoy it and see it on the other if you keep it away from direct sunlight yeah then there's no real problem here I mean are you interested in the value well rather not know we've had it it's been in the family my husband Arendt who originally had it but when we got it then it was valued at five pounds five pounds Shakira t-bird went pop no I was about 40 years ago or anything right well you know you'd be looking more in the region of two two and a half to three three and a half thousand pounds so thank you very much well it was a wedding present which we received from family friends who had traveled extensively in lists yes he'd been in the end their husband had been in the Indian Army it's amazing how much oriental pottery and porcelain does actually get to all the seafaring nations up in northwest Europe and I was hoping that we'd get quite a bit of Japanese here today so here's one splendid piece of Satsuma where the nice thing about it is really its shape if it were just a straightforward round ovoid shape it would not be I have to say a terribly exciting piece but the strength of the potting in producing this octagonal shape is what gives it its drum tremendous presence let's just start with the shoulder where you see typical designs for Japanese and in fact also Chinese pottery in porcelain the first is the Phoenix and if you then twist it round here you'll see a companion dragon yes the dragon is the male and the Phoenix is the female but then going to the main body of the piece what you have is in fact a rather charming outdoor scene with women and children basically just out of doors enjoying themselves and you always spot something new every time you look at it there's a tremendous amount of detail in it you're absolutely right when you think that even right down to the individual spots in the sky I mean those are done by hand everything is done by hand and bars like this typically would have taken maybe three weeks in total painting time they're going into the base there we see the Satsuma mom incidentally the Satsuma prince was in fact Christian at an early stage yeah now which is why his own personal bird island incorporates the Christmas cross yes and there you have the Potters mark which I'm afraid is a rather stylized I can't read the first character the second character says Suzanne it could be Rios and I'm not sure but anyway there's one more salient point about this which affects its value do you know what that might be I haven't a clue its condition you've got a fruit okay well in that case I have to ask you how did this happen looking inside there I don't know we only noticed that yesterday for him he started cleaning it to take it years would that be a blow from the inside or the outside almost certainly an impact of some sort just then has created a little star crack it's probably not visible in the outside but it is certainly visible on the inside and it has a bearing on the value of the piece but it's quite close to another crack which we can't see which is called the firing crack yes that doesn't have any effect on the value at all it's it liable to get what the star crack is it can get worse but the firing crack is unlikely to get worse that is the reason for it not really machinist well it's certainly living room all I would married life and we try to look after it but you know with a family growing up but this bount have had not yes well he is imperfect so it's only worth somewhere in the region of thousands 1,500 pounds amazing what started all this off this cup and saucer and where do you got this from did you actually bid for them yourself shoved your hand up and that's very brave many adults are scared to go a bit at a dog sleeping and some be knocked out and like a clock and they didn't bid only scratch their nose but you boldly went where many people fear to tread that's solid I said oh that's very nice that's made by Minton and it's a little toy cup and saucer for pudding in a small cabinet not really for use not for a child to play but it's hand-painted and I think that's very beautiful how much did you pay for the any other cup and saucer 13-month read 13 pounds well that is worth more than you gave for the lot that's very variable that's worth around about 30 40 pounds obviously useful for the blind but you know what you want to know what you put in on you children to use pepper you do you encourage children to use a lot of pepper and so did your grandfather great-grandfather buy it or because JJ Malay is famous in two different ways first of all he's the son of the most famous purified artists Sir John Everett Millais and he also wrote and he wrote his father's biography so people in the pure awfully well know him as a biographer and the the second thing that said you say famous for that he was a great Birdman and wildfire and illustrated other books and these are Ida ducks and this is a bird you see commonly up here as for price let's make a big deal but I would have thought somewhere around six to eight hundred pounds between sixty they look fairly late to me I'm going to thought their thirties furious to so far apart and keep some morning I'm sure has been in the family for a long time well handed do yes I would think that it the thing is if InDesign it's quite delicate it doesn't look as if it would stand up to being used a great deal it's got a really nice line to it here with the bat curling over and of course the first thing one might say is what do you think happened in the in the holes here it could be that there were straps going down that might be in brass or they could have been done in straw but it's quite intriguing I'm sure that there was some sort of panel filled in at the back which would have made it a bit more comfortable then you've got this Greek key design which is this motive along here and I think it's always had a cushion a squad cushion like this because if you take this off you'll see that this rat rat and seat wouldn't have been very strong to sit on and the fact that it's got quite a deep side here it shows that the seat cushion would have been there and then it would have made it level with the seat and then going down to the legs here it's got a really nice sweep down to this poor foot but what's particularly nice is if you look here at the back you've got this sort of furry bit that goes right down to the down to the foot and this was a leg that you found at the end of the eighteenth century and then it was still used into the beginning of the nineteenth century and the whole influence of the chair is a sort of Egyptian Roman Greek which was very popular at the beginning of the 19th century the chair is made in mahogany but there are some darker bits of mahogany as well and I think I think that that was done to give an impression of a bronzing which was also very fashionable at the time and the value about 500 pounds so it's a super chair thank you very much for bringing it it's the most distinguished order of st. Michael and George it's one of our higher orders that we have in this country you tell me a little bit about the background well I really know no background other than I saw the coin half crown for about 20 pounds and I was asked to take this in exchange really as I know is a wonderful fine for you it really is now let me tell you what you have here you have the collar of the order which like we're completely round there in there yes here you have the breast badge which would be worn which would be worn here and then you have the sash badge the sash goes around the shoulder and this is supported [Music] by the sash in that manner have you any idea have you any conception of how much is worth what happened a pool well you have here in toto something in excess three thousand peddling what three thousand dollars so I think you did very very well in your exchange do you have a collection of dolls in my mother hurt well since this one was bought she cheated me the collection adult that's just the first one presumably it was bought in Scotland yes in Edinburgh she had a very unfortunate name that she's known by this type of doll which is a slit head which is very unfortunate because I think they're one of the most charming of the waxed dogs the slits hell is because the wig was inserted in the top of the crowd it was quite an easy way of putting on a wig instead of inserting each individual hair which they did with later wax dolls this in fact is not a full wax it is called a wax over papier-mache so that they had a base on which to build the wax form her body is made of a rather rough it's probably a rough sort of kapok style but obviously not kpop in those days would have been rags or stuff together and very very firm really and this was would have been made in the 1840s as early as that in England and generally in excellent condition in the original clothes and a doll at auction today in this condition I can see making between five and seven hundred pounds how did you get it but it's always been out in the family as far as long as I know I've sort of had it on the mantle thought much about country you know a lot of the best and earliest pieces of porcelain have no mark on them therefore you would say got me mark now that would definitely would say how the goodness do I know where it comes from well here we have a porcelain box and when you look at it it's got sort of Rococo Scrolls in relief around the border here and they go on on each side so that's one hint about the date it was made in the 1740s this is made of a very hard white porcelain so it's a German Boston now fortunately there was only one factory really making boxes that time and that was the mice infection like all mice the boxes of the period it has to to things happen inside one the interior of the body is gilt entirely and do the inside of the lid is beautifully painted now these aren't actually stipple and you have to imagine the artist painting there with a feather a magnifying glass putting on each little spot of colour one at a time and the mount is the original mount there's only one unfortunate thing has happened with your mouth that is if you look very carefully inside you will see that there are traces of gilding and this silver mount was originally a silver gilt but that's not that's not a serious problem what of course is a problem is what's happened here where it has been broken you're not guilty no whatever did it happened before you I think that one could have this tidied up quite efficiently and not a great cost a box like this in perfect condition is worth five six or seven thousand pounds in this condition well it's lost a lot but it's still I think worth well over a thousand pounds and if we had it cleaned up nicely I think every well worth doing but it is very exciting and remarkable thing to see thank you your father would have got this from santa casa de yes he definitely did because in the family used to do a lot of framing of his pictures and he got that when in fact there was one of two more in the family but that was the one that came my way Constanta casa de was that was he's really open his most famous son as an artist and this must have been done as a teenager yes definitely which would make it about 1907 1905 1907 yes about that time it slightly crudely painted but it's a marvelously evocative view of Kirkwall well it's interesting because it's full of all the life and which the young person you and then he went down to Scotland and not only became a very famous painter but also the Queen's limner for Scotland's paint of Scotland and then he came back to walk me and spent really the rest of his life well this picture I think is a slightly one-off but of tremendous interest people here and and as such I'd value it and probably in the region of thousand fifteen hundred pounds well now we leave the people of Strom ness and our experts just for a moment for me to tell you about the Radio Times competition and of course to remind you that every week you stand a chance of winning a voucher which can then be exchanged for two and a half thousand pounds worth of antiques so it really is well worth having a go first however the answer to last week's question we asked you to name the decorative technique used on this Pembroke table and the answer is parquetry this is a technique in which pieces of wood are laid onto the carcass of the furniture in geometric designs well now to this week's competition object and here it is this very pretty little botkin case is a marvelous example of fine 18th century craftsmanship it was made to carry a lady's Bodkins or needles but is much more extravagant really than that simple task would suggest the lid and the cylindrical body fit very ugly together they're mounted in gold and it's smothered all over in this most marvellous colorful decoration of exotic birds sitting amid the branches of the trees this lustrous bronze background color is very reminiscent of oriental lacquer and that gives you some clue as to the decorative technique used the Europeans were great admirers of oriental skills in lacquering and they made many attempts at imitating it this was one of the most successful and say to the question what is this decorative technique called now to help you it's probably a good idea to look at a copy of the new Radio Times which gives you not only more details of the competition but even goes so far as to suggest a few possible answers and then your entry please needs to be postmarked before next Saturday and address to the Radio Times rather than to the Antiques Roadshow I'll be setting another question next week and also of course providing the answer to this week's competition in the meantime now back to the people of Orkney and our experts well obviously this is a piece of Weems pottery from from Scotland of course it's a superb piece this world you like it there I love these cockles I think they're absolutely bothers it strut around in the in the grass there are these gorgeous green colors I think which are very very romantic now of course got very popular but it was made popular around about 1902 to the 1920s when it was bought across some by very famous London people including I suppose the Greater clicked with a lot the Queen Mother who has her very fine collection and interestingly this has the mark of the Royal China dealers Thomas good here they they specialized in the sale of Wiens of from night you know even before 1900 and so that's almost a guarantee that it is a great piece of weebs I like it very much they are getting highly collectible especially a good piece of early Williams like this I suppose one's got to think in terms of perhaps 1500 pounds or this is the oval brass watch theme here yeah earliest watch that you have yeah one of the earliest watches one's likely to find its had a very hard life I'm afraid the movements been changed and some up bits are missing from the side of the case but you can see from the dial and the engraving of the dial surround and the shape the oval shape that it was the first period they were actually sometimes called as Nuremberg Eames this would be an exceptionally valuable watch if it was still in perfect condition many thousands of pounds but it's now something more rid of a museum piece and in view of the condition and the next one here this is made in Switzerland in about 1900 or so and they were made of something of a of a gimmick but they were quite popular and in fact you can see right through the dial it appears that there's no dye on at all it has the hands and it actually works if one opens the back up there's a small compartment for the movement and you can actually see the movements tucked away in the top yeah then they dark back yeah put some ring of teeth around the edge of the glass in the middle which turned the hands it's a clever idea unfortunately one of the glasses is cracked but great yes it could be replaced to that yeah these used to find these very easily now they're worth about 750 pounds they were in a portfolio inherited by my grandfather in Northumberland yes was he something to do with the China trade no he was a lawyer right an artist friend I presume yes well I must say they're two particularly charming watercolors and the first one as we can see here is entitled habitation of a Mandarin and there's a rather nice inscription underneath and this is particularly nice because I think shorts in the artist's handwriting so it would be contemporary the other one is I would have thought is probably a pleasure boat of some rich maybe Mandarin trader and is obviously not a working boat because it has lovely decoration we see the Dragons here and the lovely painted panels but coming back to this one here many of these sort of watercolours painted around 1840 that sort of thing our views on the Pearl River in China and I think that's most likely where this is have you ever thought of an artist for it at all or have you ever been told there might be by I was out in Hong Kong and I went to Macau yes generally lived painted yes [Music] yes well I think that's a very good name I mean generally was a very influential artist and he did guide there you're quite correct and these are very similar to George Chinnery and stylistically and the colouring and the drawing but I I feel they're not quite his hand and in fact we have a bit of a clue here because there appears to be a monogram which is slightly illegible but looks to be HC but I must be honest I'm not familiar with this name HC but the thing is there were so many artists who went out to China especially from 1839 to 1842 when the First Opium War took place and a lot of naval and military people went out there and in fact a lot of the naval people were officially trained at Dartmouth to draw it was one of the things part of their training and this the reason for this was in order to record fortifications because of course in those days they didn't have sophisticated cameras and that's why in idle moments but they have nothing better to do they do these delightful little drawings and sketches have you ever thought in terms of valuation at all do you do any idea what they might have obviously if you could find out who they're by they'd be worth a little bit more but let's be conservative and let's say that this one here is probably worth somewhere in the region eight to twelve hundred pounds so I'd probably insure it for about twelve hundred pounds and I think this one probably a little bit less is probably the reason of five to seven hundred pounds and I must say I think that particularly noise in the late 1840s in France there were three great glass houses that made papers I never called back to AH San Liu and quisha and two of them certainly macaron SN Louie made what this kind of wait we should call the mushroom wait because you've got a sort of mushroom me I think basket of what are called Cannes in the middle now most the ones that have blue bands like this are back around but I have a doubt in my mind here because when you look at this one there's a tremendous amount of sort of salmony orange is intact but you don't normally find it back around and I think that this may well be a silly one it has a little problem there that's a pool of brews yeah that's a pity [Music] commercially it might affect it for a few pounds but what would you think something like that could be worth well I think that we are actually talking something between 600 and a thousand pounds didn't think of it that much yeah you'd never believe that object as tall and as complex as this would actually be used to hold a watch which is in the middle now where on earth did it come from I didn't with it and under what circumstance I mean did you fall across it or no I saw it on the other dozen I went back to buy it why do you think you buy it at the time because I didn't really fit oh dear well she's wonderful isn't she um perhaps the best thing to do is to start with the watch itself because that's that's the the essence of the whole piece and this is a paired virgin watch and a normal verge watch like this would be worth perhaps a 150 pounds but this is fantastic with a picture of Wellington and that's what this wonderful edifice is is basically a watch stand but if we look at what it's made of first of all at the top the lady is made of ivory now that may be marine ivory RAL from elephant ivory coming down she's standing on this wonderful sort of altar if you like made of bone further down still you've got this looks as though it could even be the cedar wood I'm not sure about the the wood that's making me the mainframe and then at the bottom here again more bone carving and I'm looking at this and I'm wondering whether it's prisoner-of-war work is it scrimshaw work I'm going to really stick my neck out here and say it could be scrimshaw work because there you'd have the absolute mix between whale ivory in the teeth and whale bone which we've got a lot of here the wood could have been found on board ship yeah have you had any thoughts on it yourself no that's all the only thing I would say about prisoner-of-war work is that you don't tend to see that sort of use of of ivory and in such large chunks if you like you'd have ivory and in small pieces but that's quite a decent chunk of ivory that you have been carved from I'm sure somebody somewhere is gonna say well I think that it's President Warwick somebody else who think it's really sure I'm torn between the two I really am I can't say positively what I can say is that the watch itself is dating for about 1825 yeah that would then date date the piece to sometime around or perhaps just after that assuming that the watch had always been with it which I don't think is unlikely and under asking what you paid for it how long ago was it 20 years okay so much for it well how much 200 quid 200 quid 20 years ago well I can see why it wasn't a snap decision yeah I would have said that we're talking about something in excess of 3,000 now did you open you not to be well my father no but the house he had about the early fifties the previous family removed all their paintings and he needed something for the wall at the dining room and he had a friend who was an option here in Aberdeen and I'm not really sure of whether the friend gifted him this picture when he bought it so it doesn't go very far back I mean that it's not it's not a terribly old picture it's painted after the turn of the century in fact the most interesting thing about this picture is not the artist in fact but what it does it reflects the taste of the period just after the turn of the century say from 1910 to 20 where there was an enormous interest and love of old master paintings and this face if you like reflects that period of art the artist himself is never artists and is best known not for this sort of painting but for sort of rather beautiful mythological illustrations it's a nice quality painting and I think probably we should value it for insurance say at 8,000 pounds goodness that is what I'd like to know straight away is how a piece from India or China comes to being walked me well all I know about the piece of furniture really is it originally came from the castle for me so that suggests that there have been perhaps some colonial interests behind the the problems I believe so yes what I think is most spectacular about this piece of furniture apart from its weight which we can't demonstrate is extremely heavy piece made out of East Indian rosewood is this extraordinary rippling effect across the facade here this really shows some European influence the whole form of the piece is something like an English slant front bureau but this ripple effect across the front shows a distinctly Dutch influence and the Dutch and the British of course traded in the Far East and many of the pieces that were made in the Far East took up certain aspects of European design this is an interesting configuration of drawers you can see there's one long drawer above two short drawers and then two long drawers again which is not a very European future the handles I think are very nice here you have this quite heavy swan necks handle with the pierced back base plates and discussion here but these are quite thin but that is fairly characteristic of pieces that were imported from the Far East and if we can Oh wonderfully heavy if you perhaps pull out your that's right and inside you get the full beauty of the unfaded color this East Indian rosewood if we move through we can see that it has this European arrangement of pigeon holes it's got a document draw here it's had the hinges replaced at some point yes doesn't matter too much I think the weight of this forefront has necessitated the replacing of the hinges and then you can see that the ripple effect of the front is repeated in these lovely again rosewood drawers so this is really a piece I think of extraordinary quality do you have it separately insured no we don't think it might be worthwhile because something of this sort Mike well fetch between six eight thousand pounds I think because we're surrounded with water and was he expecting to see quite a lot of instruments up here but when you brought this in and it was a German chronometer I thought myself are slightly over the horizon the feet actually scuttled itself here in 1919 did this come from down through your family son I will lay a bet that this came off the ships because it's just the sort of instrument they'd have had there's a marine chronometer it's actually made by kettle on old toner and Al Turner was the center in Germany where they tested a lot of chronometer and we've got actually in the lid here we had a label for tips of keel he would have been the Chandler or the supplier and a regulator of the piece to the German Navy there's something particularly interesting about this instrument well that's a look inside because it's actually got a real puzzle to get out of the box if you look at the balance wheel here you can actually see that it's like to balance feels the first one is the standard rim and then you've got this little tiny miniature balance wheels on both sides of the mouse itself and they are for what is called middle temperature compensation they correct for small differences in temperature change in the middle of the temperature range extremes will be taken care of by them the large balanced expanding and contracting and the small ones will take care of minor differences and it is an extremely rare feature and the other interesting point about this instrument is it it has a pivoted dentists gameand now chronometer escapement or dent escapement is the type of escapement it was used for all marine instruments and this one has a pivoted escapement which is most unlike German workers as time as a unique instrument and with a history of coming quite surely off the fleet one of the fleet ships here before they scuttled I would think that we'd certainly be looking at something between five and ten thousand pounds yeah quite glad it didn't go down on the ship well at the end of last week's program you may remember I was speculating on exactly what we might find here in Orkney and indeed how many people would turn up because obviously there's a limited population well we've been more than satisfied on every conceivable count indeed one man from strongness was saying to me earlier he thought we'd seen roughly half the population of the islands here today it certainly felt like it and even our treasure trove has turned up during the day in various forms as well this for instance a stoneware pot that was recovered from the wreck of the German battle cruiser Hindenburg which was scuttled with the rest of the ships out in Scapa Flow in 1919 and we've seen so many of these to openes chairs and a lot of them are subtly different because they were made by individual crafters who all had their own ideas on how the design of the chair should be practically put together so are worn thanks to the people of Orkney and indeed those who joined us today from across the water on the north coast of Scotland they're now on their way back to casemis we're on our way now to Lancashire and I particularly hope you'll join us next week at the same time because that will be the last program in the current series of the Antiques Roadshow so until then from all of us here in Orkney good bye [Music] you [Music]
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Channel: whassigo
Views: 237,440
Rating: 4.6149492 out of 5
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Length: 44min 9sec (2649 seconds)
Published: Mon Jan 02 2017
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