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10:23 a.m. -- Hodder Breeze hauling on the Malaspina Strait with the north end of Texada Island in view, seen from Grief Point Park, Powell River, B.C., Canada.
Vessel description and photos by Paul: prtugboats.blogspot.com/2013/03/storm-breeze.html
50% crop.
Nikon D200
AF-S DX VR Nikkor 55-300mm f/4.5-5.6 G ED
Good day out with Korpz and Revert, real good company.
Shame that the composition of the overall prodo came out a bit weird...
Nonetheless, always good to paint big
Blogged - The Rack - HoD
Haus of Darcy: Kyo mesh piercing set…love it!
Special price - Saturday 14th Dec 12am, 24 hours only!
A 16th Century packhorse bridge over the River Hodder in Lancashire.
The bridge beyond is the 200 years old Lower Hodder Bridge which now carries modern traffic.
This aqueduct takes water from Bowland down to Blackburn. Walkers can cross it to take a permitted footpath to Dunsop Bridge. This proved useful as one of the stream crossings on the right of way is a bit dodgy in wet weather.
A Summer view looking down onto Higher Hodder Bridge Cottages which sit nicely on the banks of the River Hodder and above them you can see the edge of Longridge Fell which is called Kemple End. The lush green landscape of this area is a treat for the eyes at this time of the year in the ever changing seasons of the English countryside packed with forests, woods, and trees of all different varieties.
The River Hodder is a river in Lancashire, England. The river is a County Biological Heritage Site.
It rises on White Hill and flows for approximately 23 miles to the River Ribble, of which it is the largest tributary. The confluence of the rivers is an impressive[peacock term] sight, particularly when both are in spate.
The Hodder drains much of the Forest of Bowland Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and all but the last mile of its course is through this scenic area.
The upper reaches of the river feed the large Stocks Reservoir, which provides much of[quantify] Lancashire's water supply. After exiting the reservoir, the Hodder continues in a general southward direction. It collects many tributaries from the valleys of Bowland and, lower down, parts of the Ribble Valley. Most notable among the feeders of the Hodder are Croasdale Brook, Easington Brook, the River Dunsop, Langden Brook and the River Loud.
Description Courtesy of Wiki, May not be accurate.
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Enjoying the season’s change - in the woodland at Hodders Combe-Quantock.
With the Sanderson whole-plate camera (c1910) and some vintage glass plates (Kodak Process plates) treated as ISO6. Rodenstock Eurynar Lens f4.5 21 cm.(1915) - Shooting data : ISO6 F4.5 2seconds