View allAll Photos Tagged LODE
*LpD* for SAVIAD 2015 , *LODE*@ TCF
Details URL: tmblr.co/Z3IwFl1huMQ26
A watermill probably stood on the site of Lode Mill at the time of the Domesday survey in 1086. The Mill which stands today is likely to have been built in the eighteenth century.
In 1793 the mill was described in a sale notice as 'Anglesea Watermill with dwelling house, yard, garden, barn, stables and outhouse and 3 acres of pasture adjoining'. Old photographs show the house next to the mill. The house was taken down in the renovation of the 1930s.
In about 1900 the mill was converted from corn grinding to cement grinding. The cement was generally made by firing a mixture of clay and lime or natural chalk at about 400°C and grinding the resulting clinker into a powder.
GWR locomotive in the National railway Museum. I do like the sense of power in a steam loco, even when it is asleep.
U-bikes beside UVic coffee shop by McPherson Library
Cycled for an hour up thru UVic and Henderson Park
Stopped at the market on the way back home.
Home by 7:30a.m.
N.B. five u-bikes with four helmets -- a new record! And all locked in with the wheel locks
Waste Management Lodal, same creator. This appears to be a smaller capacity variant of he base Lodal.
L'accessoires July 2013
Event from July, 15th - August, 8th
This month LODE brings original mesh lace accessory for head with 6 different laces and hud for changing attachment
~enjoy~
Photography: Chirzaka Vlodovic
Models: Chirzaka Vlodovic
Marijana Aries
Beige summer dresses : Kunglers&Ison
<3
The Lode village sign mostly celebrates the old mill house on the Anglesey Abbey estate. I think lower down there's a fish and an insect, maybe a dragonfly? Hard to tell! At the top is the arms of Lord Fairhaven.
St James is a diminutive Victorian church in a diminutive village. Lode stretches along a single road north of the B1102, the main road from Cambridge to Burwell. It follows the little stream of Bottisham Lode to the point where the fens are reached, and presumably originated as a small waterside hamlet within the parish of Bottisham. Just to the west of the village is the National Trust property of Anglesey Abbey, which is well worth a look