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1870s floral window on the north side of the nave at Nether Whitacre.

 

The main panels contain eucharistic wheat and grapevine and roses with lilies respectively.

A few photos I forgot I had taken before Christmas 2015.....need to get on top of my editing!

Pix: Shaun Flannery/sf-pictures.com.

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COPYRIGHT PICTURE>>SHAUN FLANNERY>01302-570814>>07778315553>>

 

2th November 2007.........New Deal for Communities (NDC), The Voice.

 

Health Trainers Sarah Bone and Marlyn Stothard.

Nether series green laser pointer 532nm

The Church of St Mary the Virgin has a 15th-century tower, with the remainder of the church being rebuilt in 1851 by Richard Carver and Charles Edmund Giles. It has been designated by English Heritage as a Grade II* listed building.

Derbyshires only working windmill

The church of Saint Mary is the parish church of the village of Nether Stowey near Bridgwater in Somerset. The church can be found next to Stowey Court a little outside the village. Since the end of the 1960s the church has been 'cut off' from the village by the A39 bypass.

 

The church has a number of Victorian stained glass windows, two of which are in areas not open to the general public. This picture shows a detail from the East window of the church which depicts the Ascension of Christ. The window was made by Ward and Hughes of London and dates to 1886. In the picture can be seen the maker's mark and the date to be found in the window

Sheffield. 6th February 2001

Did some vintagey style processing to this for a change because all my cottage photos normally end up looking like postcards (and I cloned out a bright red skip that was ruining my view!)

 

Langlands cottage is a Grade II listed 16th/17th Century timber framed building. As I was looking for details, I saw a property page that informs me that the estimated market value of this house is £891,487. Blimey!

Derbyshire peak stone leaning against the tower.

Nether Westcote, Oxfordshire.

 

All images are the exclusive property of Paddy Ballard. The photographs are for web browser viewing only and may not be reproduced, copied, stored, downloaded or altered in any way without permission.

Gala Fairydean Football Stadium

Nether Road

1965

Architect: Peter Womersley

 

This is strange site in the borders town of Galashiels. The concrete structure is a style which is rare in Scotland. It wouldn't be out of place in Eastern Europe. For an architect who has created some striking structures, there seems to be very little published. Certainly not the most popular of styles but this is a striking stand and is locally known as the San Siro.

Nether Heyford, Northamptonshire War Memorial.

The village name 'Winchendon' originates from Anglo Saxon, meaning 'hill at a bend'. The Winchendon villages were recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Wincandone.

More; www.netherwinchendonhouse.com/Church%20of%20St%20Nicholas...

Queen Victoria Wall Box – Type WB2083/1

HP18 198

 

In unusual pillar.

 

Grade II listed.

Thatched house opposite the church.

c1230 church of Saint Everilda, Nether Poppleton

Small nether portal build

Nethers @ the 9:30 CLub.

Character designs/advertisement for a Canadian comic book company.

collage by NETHER ; pochoir by ?

This picture was taken inside the old abandoned photo framing shop.

NT423465, LR73.

 

HISTORY

Pillar completed 24th July 1958 costing £25.9s.11d. Computed as tertiary triangulation station NT33/T5 within the Peebles secondary block, and levelled to second class precision during 1959. This pillar station was last maintained by the Ordnance Survey in May 1970.

 

SITE VISIT

Three trig circuit from Fountainhall. Parked by northeast side of the road in the village at NT429493. Walked the road SE to a high point by the woods at NT436489, and headed SW up the field edge to the higher comms mast to meet the track. Continued SW to the junction of fences at NT424474 then took a near straight line to the trig column. Grazing top just outside woods. The pillar is in good condition. The spider retains its original OS centre cap with deep indented letters. The flush bracket faces NNW, compass measurement 341°. Vented through three sight holes, the left (NE) port remains plugged. The innards are partly blocked with debris. The open outlook spans 247° from SSE clockwise through west to NE. The remainder is blocked by the adjacent woods which break the line of sight with Carsinker Law. Descendend NW around Symington Hill to head for Mount Main.

 

Photographed: 5th October 2013, GRP.

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Interactive index: Google My Maps

 

Map: Trig Pillars on OS Landranger 73

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Neighbouring Triangulation Pillars

 

10126 - Carsinker Law : 2.03 miles to the northeast.

 

S9846 - Brockhouse : 2.45 miles to the north.

 

S9836 - Mount Main : 2.52 miles to the northwest.

 

S7479 - Sell Moor : 3.77 miles to the east.

 

S9834 - Windlestraw Law : 3.85 miles to the southwest.

 

S9448 - Collie Law : 4.63 miles to the northeast.

 

10132 - Carcant Hill : 4.99 miles to the northwest.

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This is a pretty good route, clean with some nice blocks and falls. Not much bog-trotting to reach the start from the Snake Path either. Worth the 2 stars in the Dark Peak Scrambles guide I thought but would probably stay in the main brook next time which looks good to the top.

A view inside a nether reactor after the pigmen have been killed and I collected all the loot. The entire reactor has turned into obsidian, though I'm not sure yet if I can still recover the core from inside.

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