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The little used Dolgarrog station actually saw a passenger alight on this turn, the 13:08 Llandudno - Blaenau Ffestiniog, with 150264 drawing into the platform.
19th February 2013.
Ashgill flows from the remote hills around Alston, in East Cumbria down to the South Tyne River near Garrigill, some 4 miles from Alston. The waterfall is around 50 feet high as it falls from its rocky plateau to the valley below. This area used to be a rich source of quality lead which was mined intensively. A path leads behind the waterfall as you can see here!
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So you're sitting in your hotel, freezing to death. The room has a heater. But the heater has *this* remote. What do you do?
Detail of a window on the north side of the chapel by Abraham van Linge 1641.
University College is one of the oldest foundations in Oxford, but structurally what we see today dates mainly from the 17th and 18th centuries onwards. The chapel occupies the eastern half of the south wing of the main quadrangle (opposite the College's main entrance from High Street). It was heavily restored and Gothicised in 1862, but still retains its original 17th century woodwork, and more importantly a very fine glazing scheme of the same date.
The windows (aside from the two Victorian ones in the chancel) are the work of German artist Abraham van Linge and form a complete set dating from 1641, with six Old Testament subjects on both sides (plus two from the New Testament in the antechapel). All are executed mostly in enamel (as were most stained glass windows at this time) which is painted on rectangular panes of clear glass like a canvas, although a limited use of actual coloured glass ('pot metal') still features here for certain elements (for example more vividly coloured parts of drapery). Some of the most attractive features are the rich backgrounds with lush landscape and city-scapes often filling as much of the space as the figures illustrating the narrative. Glass of this unusually tolerant era in the Post Reformation is very rare outside of Oxford, and the windows here represent this phase of the medium at its finest.
University College isn't open as often as some Oxford colleges (it took me several visits before I finally managed to gain entry) and an entry fee and tour are required, but I had my own personal guide (one of the students) who was very knowledgeable and kindly left me to enjoy the chapel for as long as I wanted at the end.
Eye indicator light: the eye light can be used to check the state of the helicopter. Turn on the power of the remote control: if the eyes flash slowly, its charging; if quickly, it missed the signal from the remote control; if the eyes stop flashing and off at the same time, charging completed. When the power on the remote control was turned off, the eyes will flash when you turn the power of smart remote-controlled dragonfly.
Two-channel for controlling: can fly up and down, left and right , the remote control can be used to control the speed of the wings or the rear, or charge the helicopter at the same time.
Commentary.
The heart of the North-West Highlands in autumn.
Remote mountains glow in orange iridescence where Loch Monar is dammed for hydro-electric power.
Here is the end of the road.
From this point, only paths wend their way through the wilderness.
Remote.
Quiet.
Distant.
Far from the madding crowd.
Such wild beauty either inspires or inhibits, beneath the slopes of the Munro, Sgurr na Lapaich (out of image, to the left).
Once these slopes were less austere, and were softer, gentler, clothed by a mass of Scots Pine foliage.
Seventeenth Century landowners imported
sheep to replace crofters.
Saplings eaten before maturity led to these bare sunlit slopes.
Damming of many North-West Highland valleys, as here,
changed winding, gorge-like river valleys into a series of man-made, dammed lochs as part of immense Hydro-Electric Power Schemes.
And so, even scenery evolves under the influence of humans, animals and technology.
Fortunately, the scale, grandeur and ancient mountainous framework dismisses such changes with disdain.
The whole is greater than the sum of the parts and this
landscape still glows with glorious splendour.
Mark spent Thanksgiving rehabbing his old RC helicopter. While waiting for the Turkey to come out of the oven, the boys gave it a test flight out in the circle.
STD98LE-8: easy to install, practical, and lightweight
Size 1000 x 180 x 450 (dimensions)
Material: spray steel pipe, anti-theft lock core, yellow black pasted reflective tape or black yellow pasted reflective tape
Rugged, smart and strong, simple, safe, and stylish
STD98LE-8 "column" design, simple and alert, lightweight and convenient to carry
High-quality steel pipe spray high-performance anti-theft lock core
No direct damage to your car, plays an important role in the protection of your car
Size: 1000 x 180 x 450 (dimensions)
Abandoned, giant, Soviet-era structure with adjacent very tall antenna, reputedly part of USSR space programme, precise purpose remains unknown. Located in a isolated, rural location a few hours from Tashkent.
Real close. 1/6 sec at f 18 / ISO200 - 50mm. EF50mm f/1.8 II - Reversed.
Pick an everyday subject and get as close as you can to it. Make a photograph and post it!
Close to Malham Tarn Lake in the Yorkshire Dales (in the United Kingdom). The cloud cover was starting do decdent giving a bit of a misty look.
I like the light about this shot the most, the way the plains are lit just infront of the trees.