View allAll Photos Tagged NorthYorkshire
Cowling, North Yorkshire
I spotted this tree isolated in a newly mown field from a high vantage point above Cowling.
Cowling, North Yorkshire
Wainman’s Piinnacle (often referred to as the Cowling Pinnacle by locals) was built in 1898 as a memorial to the Napoleonic Wars.
It was re-built in 1900 by locals following a lightening strike. It is a Grade ii listed building.
A very pleasant wander over a chilly Ingleborough. One of those occasions where I smugly trot down the iced up paths in my microspikes. I'm definitely going to fall on my face next time aren't I?
A disappointingly cloudless morning at Winskill! Well, there were clouds but they buggered off just before sunrise 😁 At least I had some light.
I have a couple of these shots and I could decide what to post first so I pointed at my laptop screen and picked this.
This shot confirms that not everywhere in the Teesside environs is smoggy and grimy.
Taken in the small village of Muston, North Yorkshire between Bridlington and Scarborough.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR VISITS, COMMENTS, AWARDS AND OFR ANY INVITES.
This lone Oak tree is near Limebar Hill between the villages of Arkendale and Minskip, North Yorkshire.
The fields are freshly sown with Autumn Corn to harvest next year
Down the walkway leading to the Art-Deco pavilion in Valley Gardens Harrogate.
Built in the 1930s and restored to its original splendour in 1998, this fairy-tale building occupies a tranquil corner of Harrogate’s historic Grade II listed Valley Gardens. With private terraces hidden away amongst ancient trees and lush greenery.
Turton cottages with the Blacksmiths in the centre. The stone door surround is in the shape of a horseshoe. If you listen you can still here the sound of the blacksmiths hammer and the whinnying of the horse's being shod.
Stainforth, North Yorkshire
Stainforth Bridge, (also known as Stainforth packhorse bridge and Knight Stainforth bridge) is a 17th century, arched packhorse bridge over the River Ribble in Stainforth, North Yorkshire, England.
The bridge was formerly on the main packhorse road between York and Lancaster, which has been superseded by later roads.
It was in private ownership until the 1930s, when it was taken on by the National Trust. It is now a grade II listed building.
Taken in North Yorkshire on the walk down to the Strid near Bolton Abbey. The sky was misty white and featureless so didn't want to include it.