View allAll Photos Tagged Forester
class 5 4-6-0 45231 sherwood forester leaves a trail of smoke approaching winsford heading to carnforth on a test run
in the past large parts of cheshire were designated royal hunting forest and in early medieval times maintained their own harsh forest laws which forbade locals to hunt anything there , sometimes on pain of death
from the 17th century , the important title of master forester was held by members of the Done family from nearby utkinton hall--so the forester name is quite appropriate for the location
Real Name: जंगल संरक्षक
Alias: Forester
Weapons: Homemade guns that he refers to as पिस्तूल
Bio: Born in a Marathi village, in the forests of New Blok City, जंगल संरक्षक was raised to be a warrior. Little did they know, he would become the greatest warriors the tribe had ever seen. He did not earn his name until he decided to become a solo warrior. The name जंगल संरक्षक means "Protector of the Forest" in Marathi. To this day, he is out in the forest, protecting his villagers. The people of New Blok City refer to him as "Forester", because they don't know his real name.
45231 Sherwood Forester crossing the Montgomery Canal on a training run from Crewe to Shrewsbury via Chester and Wrexham. Possibly my shortest walk to watch a steam train as the walker's car park is about two hundred yards away!
Didn't take long to break in my new Forester. About fifteen miles on some Arizona back roads and it looked "normal", with less than 1000 miles driven.
Photographed in the Coronado National Forest, near Parker Canyon Lake.
CELTIC FORESTER
Sharpness
SHARPNESS >>> SHOREHAM
IMO: 9256171 - Built 2003
General Cargo - 89.98m X 15.3m
A cistus forester moth seen at the Linear Park in Cinderford in the Forest of Dean last Friday morning.
78/100
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I have tried many times to get good photos of this interesting small day-flying moth, but it is a very shy species. However, it was a muggy and overcast morning, and those are pretty much perfect conditions for photographing insects. You don't have a shadow to scare them, and they can't readily fly. Unless you bump the leaf they're sitting on or get so close they panic, you can photograph most species at will, and this specimen sat perfectly still while I got several shots. (It never did leave.)
'Peak' no. 100 'Sherwood Forester' stands at Derby in February 1973. The loco entered traffic as D100 on 8 May 1961, later renumbered as 45060 and was withdrawn on 8 December 1985 and is now preserved.
Forester (Adscita statices), on willowherb. Holme Fen National Nature Reserve, Cambridgeshire. Thursday 14th July 2016.
There were quite a few of these pretty little irridescent green moths flying about amongst the willowherbs at Holme Fen on Thursday. ID is probable rather than definite; they seemed to be too large to be the otherwise very similar Cistus Forester (Adscita geryon), and as there aren't any nearby populations of Scarce Forester (Jordanita globulariae) I'm fairly confident it won't be that. This one is almost certainly a female - the males have really attractive feathery antennae, but it was a struggle to get any decent photos in the breeze.
The Forester is a UK Biodiversity Action Plan Priority Species, so it was nice to find a population at Holme Fen.
There were three Forester's Terns fishing in the shallows. They were beautiful against the clouds and pink sky.
45231 Sherwood Forester heading along the embankment below Beeston Castle on a lovely Cheshire morning. 37521 was chugging away at the rear. The service is scheduled for three days this week on a circuit from Locomotive Services base in Crewe to Chester and Shrewsbury and back via the West Coast Main Line.