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Capability Scotland Westerlea, 26 September 2012

Capability Brown Walk @ Trentham Gardens

Capability Scotland Westerlea, 26 September 2012

Capability Brown landscape garden in Worcestershire

Croome Court is a mid-18th-century Neo-Palladian mansion surrounded by extensive landscaped parkland at Croome D'Abitot, near Pershore in south Worcestershire, England. The mansion and park were designed by Lancelot "Capability" Brown for the 6th Earl of Coventry, and were Brown's first landscape design and first major architectural project. Some of the mansion's rooms were designed by Robert Adam.

The mansion house is owned by Croome Heritage Trust, and is leased to the National Trust which operates it as a tourist attraction. The National Trust owns the surrounding parkland, which is also open to the public.

taken from: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croome_Court

  

Lancelot 'Capability' Brown parkland and Henry Holland house, what a perfect combination!

NATO Strategic Airlift Capability

Boeing C-17A Globemaster III SAC 02

08-0002 (cn F-210)

Riga International Airport ( RIX )

 

Incredibly rare shots of a kingfisher were taken by photographer Gustav Kiburg on the Sony RX10 III, which features an extended 600mm super-telephoto zoom lens and silent shutter capability, to ensure the endangered animal was not disturbed

DPAC activists protest at High Courts as legality of Work Capability Assessment is challenged - London, 29.06.2012

 

Disability rights activists from DPAC (Disabled People Against Cuts), the Mental Health Resistance Network, WinVisible and Single Mothers Self Defence held a static demonstration outside the Royal Courts of Justice, where the legality of the right-wing David Cameron government's much-hated Work Capability Assessment is being challenged by a group of community lawyers.

  

All photos © 2012 Pete Riches

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Seen across the lake of the hall, formed in a landscaping scheme by Capability Brown, 1756 - the sham bridge is thought to date from this time (list.english-heritage.org.uk/resultsingle.aspx?uid=1163576). For the church, see list.english-heritage.org.uk/resultsingle.aspx?uid=1244942 . The lodge - described by the Buildings of England as "super-picturesque" - dates from 1908-9 (list.english-heritage.org.uk/resultsingle.aspx?uid=1163611).

Location: Berrington Hall, a country house located about 3 miles north of Leominster, Herefordshire, England.

Berrington is a neo-classical mansion built for Thomas Harley to a design by Henry Holland, set in superb gardens by Capability Brown. The exterior is a restrained classical design, whilst the interiors are stunningly ornate, with painted ceilings and an exceptionally fine entry staircase.

Harley had made a fortune supplying the British army with clothing and pay and when he decided he needed a new house to showcase his family's prestige and wealth, he called on landscape gardener Capability Brown. It was Brown who chose the location for Berrington Hall, selecting a site that gave sweeping views to the Black Mountains of Wales. While Brown busied himself with creating the parkland and semi-natural landscapes for which he was famous, the task of building the house itself fell to Brown's son in law, architect Henry Holland. Work began in 1778 and the house was completed in 1783.

 

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Tesla founder Elon Musk revealed at the Tesla Semi unveil that the truck can work in a convoy mode, with a three-truck convoy beating not only traditional diesel trucking, but also rail transport in terms of a cost per mile price. It can do $0.85 per mile, with diesel only able to do around...

 

www.wikishopline.com/tesla-semi-has-the-technical-capabil...

Visit to Compton Verney art gallery and museum in a Robert Adam house set in Capability Brown gardens.

 

Taken with Panasonic 20mm f1.7 lens on Panasonic GX7.

Capability Scotland Westerlea, 26 September 2012

Capability Scotland CEO Dana O'Dwyer and Corseford School pupil Steven Sweeney

 

FREE FIRST USE..Public Health Minister Michael Matheson MSP visits Capability Scotland's Corseford School in Kilbarchan to announce £4 Million of extra funding to improve alternative communications...Further Info:.Robin Matheou.0207 378 3013.robin.matheou@rcslt.org..Lenny Warren / Warren Media.07860 830050.www.warrenmedia.co.uk

 

Corseford School

Senior military and civilian leaders visit the 116th Infantry Brigade Combat Team's eXportable Combat Training Center rotation June 19, 2014, at Fort Pickett, Va.. Brig. Gen. Timothy P. Williams, the Adjutant General of Virginia, Brig. Gen. John P. Johnson, Director of Training from the Office of the U. S. Army Deputy Chief of Staff G-3/5/7, Brig. Gen. Victor J. Braden, Deputy Commanding General of the U. S. Army Combined Arms Center at Fort Leavenworth, Deputy Secretary of Public Safety and Homeland Security Adam K. Thiel and other military and civilian leaders received an information briefing about the XCTC then toured several support locations and later visited with troops at different training locations. The 10-day eXportable Combat Training Capability rotation is designed to train and validate platoons on tasks that support offensive and defensive operations under daylight and hours of limited visibility. Units will concentrate on training selected mission essential tasks in a realistic field environment to refocus junior leaders on tactical field craft. The Army National Guard’s XCTC program provides an experience similar to a Combat Training Center to Guard Soldiers at a home station training center, minimizing cost and time away from home and jobs. XCTC is an instrumented field training exercise designed to certify unit proficiency in coordination with First Army. (Photo by Cotton Puryear, Virginia National Guard Public Affairs)

Disabled and Capable

 

Gunby Hall is a country house in Gunby, near Spilsby, in Lincolnshire, England, reached by a half mile long private drive. It’s a fantastic place to visit. WOW factor. The Estate comprises the 42 room Gunby Hall, listed Grade I, a fine Clocktower, listed Grade II* and a Carriage House and Stable Block which are listed Grade II. It was given to the National Trust in 1944 by the trustees of the Gunby Hall Estate: Lady Montgomery-Massingberd, Major Norman Leith-Hay-Clarke and Field Marshal Sir Archibald Montgomery-Massingberd. together with its contents and approximately 1,500 acres of land. Surrounding the hall is a 100 acre park, listed as being of historical significance and laid out in the style of Lancelot "Capability" Brown. Around that is a farmed estate of 1,500 acres. the estate used to extend to many thousands of acres and reached the coast at what is now Skegness. Land was sold in the 19th century to the Earl of Scarbrough who built the town of Skegness to satisfy increasing demand from tourism created by the expansion of the railways.

The gardens are laid out in an informal English style with large Victorian Walled and Kitchen Gardens, lawns, an arboretum and carp pond believed to be older than the main hall. There are 50 types of apple tree, 21 of pear and over 50 types of rose in the gardens. There is also a 17th-century dove cote, a grass tennis court, croquet pitch, cottage, apple store and studio. On the edge of the formal gardens and within the Park lies St Peter's Church. Rebuilt on Medieval foundations in the 1870s the Church is accessible only through the Hall's gardens but it remains the active Parish Church of Gunby with a service once a month.

 

STOLT CAPABILITY in New York, USA. October, 2008. Copyright Tom Turner.

Harrier GR9 VTOL 02/ZD321. The harrier is famous for its vertical take-off and landing capability by thrust vectoring. Photographed at the Leuchars Air show on 11 Septmber 2010.

A walk around Minterne Gardens in Dorset.

 

The garden walk is about 1 mile in a horseshoe shape.

 

You can take different paths on the last leg of the walk, we went on the upper path.

 

Flowers

 

Information below from leaflet from Minterne Gardens:

 

The Minterne Valley, landscapped in the manner of Capability Brown in the 18th century, has been the home of the Churchill and Digby families for 350 years. The gardens are laid out in a horseshoe below Minterne House, with a chain of small lakes, waterfalls and streams. They contain an important collection of Himalayan Rhodocdendrons and Azaleas, with Spring bulbs, Cherries, Maples and many fine and rare trees; the garden is noted for its Autumn colouring.

 

Of particular note are the large plants of Magnolia Campbellii which flower in March and April, together with a profusion of spring bulbs. Many flowering cherries were brought from Japan in 1920 and the Pieris Forrestii with their brilliant scarlet shoots, originally came from Wakehurst. A very fine collection of Davidia Involucrata (the pocket handkerchief tree) produce striking bracts in late May and early June, when the streams are lined with primulas, astilbes and other water plants.

Although now run by a trust, Harewood is the family seat of the Lascelles family.

 

Edwin Lascelles started building in 1759, employing John Carr of York, Robert Adam, Thomas Chippendale and Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown to realise his dreams.

Command Sgt. Maj. Kenneth M. Cruz, left, command sergeant major for the Guam Army National Guard’s 1st Battalion, 294th Infantry Regiment, and Lt. Col. Romeo Delfin, 294th commander, display the Guam flag June 14 at the highest peak of Camp Roberts, California, during the 2016 eXportable Combat Training Capability (XCTC) exercise. The battalion leaders were checking Soldiers who are located at various training sites including hilltops, where Guam Guardsmen were retransmitting communication signals. More than 500 are “boots on ground” for XCTC that ends June 25. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Eddie Siguenza)

 

Development of an environmental prediction capability will require incorpo-ration of additional components of the Earth System beyond the physical climate system. The core elements and expertise needed in this regard include atmospheric general circu-lation models, ocean circulation models, land surface models, interactive vegetation models, marine ecosystem models, atmospheric chemistry models, global carbon cycle models, assimilation techniques for atmosphere-ocean-land, population dynamics, crop models, and infectious disease models, to name a few. The challenge now is to bring these core elements together within a common infrastructure and with a central focus on sub-seasonal to decadal prediction of the Earth System in the broadest sense. Further-more, the prospect of Earth System prediction has unique policy relevance at both the national and international levels.

 

Antonio J. Busalacchi is President of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Re-search (UCAR) in Boulder, Colorado. Prior to his appointment at UCAR, he was the Glenn L. Martin Institute Professor, Director of the Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center (ESSIC), and Professor in the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science at the University of Maryland. He received his Ph.D. in oceanography from Florida State University in 1982 and began his professional career that year at the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center. He has studied tropical ocean circulation and its role in the coupled climate system. His research on climate variability and predictability has sup-ported a range of international and national research programs dealing with global change and climate, particularly as affected by the oceans. He previously served as a UCAR Board of Trustees member. Among his awards and honors, in 1991, Busalacchi was the recipient of the Arthur S. Flemming Award. In 1999, he was awarded the NASA/Goddard Excellence in Outreach Award and the Presidential Rank Meritorious Executive Award. He is a Fellow of the American Meteorological Society (AMS), the American Geophysical Union (AGU), and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). In 2006, he was the AMS Walter Orr Roberts Interdisciplinary Science Lecturer and in 2016, he was elected as a Member of the National Academy of Engineering.

Col. Matthew Tedesco, Training and Doctrine Command Capability Manager for Global Ballistic Missile Defense, U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command/Army Forces Strategic Command Future Warfare Center, retires from the military June 5, 2019, at the Von Braun III auditorium on Redstone Arsenal, Alabama. Tedesco retires with 28 years of service.

Gunby Hall is a country house in Gunby, near Spilsby, in Lincolnshire, England, reached by a half mile long private drive. It’s a fantastic place to visit. WOW factor. The Estate comprises the 42 room Gunby Hall, listed Grade I, a fine Clocktower, listed Grade II* and a Carriage House and Stable Block which are listed Grade II. It was given to the National Trust in 1944 by the trustees of the Gunby Hall Estate: Lady Montgomery-Massingberd, Major Norman Leith-Hay-Clarke and Field Marshal Sir Archibald Montgomery-Massingberd. together with its contents and approximately 1,500 acres of land. Surrounding the hall is a 100 acre park, listed as being of historical significance and laid out in the style of Lancelot "Capability" Brown. Around that is a farmed estate of 1,500 acres. the estate used to extend to many thousands of acres and reached the coast at what is now Skegness. Land was sold in the 19th century to the Earl of Scarbrough who built the town of Skegness to satisfy increasing demand from tourism created by the expansion of the railways.

The gardens are laid out in an informal English style with large Victorian Walled and Kitchen Gardens, lawns, an arboretum and carp pond believed to be older than the main hall. There are 50 types of apple tree, 21 of pear and over 50 types of rose in the gardens. There is also a 17th-century dove cote, a grass tennis court, croquet pitch, cottage, apple store and studio. On the edge of the formal gardens and within the Park lies St Peter's Church. Rebuilt on Medieval foundations in the 1870s the Church is accessible only through the Hall's gardens but it remains the active Parish Church of Gunby with a service once a month.

 

A walk around Minterne Gardens in Dorset.

 

The garden walk is about 1 mile in a horseshoe shape.

 

You can take different paths on the last leg of the walk, we went on the upper path.

 

Flowers

 

Information below from leaflet from Minterne Gardens:

 

The Minterne Valley, landscapped in the manner of Capability Brown in the 18th century, has been the home of the Churchill and Digby families for 350 years. The gardens are laid out in a horseshoe below Minterne House, with a chain of small lakes, waterfalls and streams. They contain an important collection of Himalayan Rhodocdendrons and Azaleas, with Spring bulbs, Cherries, Maples and many fine and rare trees; the garden is noted for its Autumn colouring.

 

Of particular note are the large plants of Magnolia Campbellii which flower in March and April, together with a profusion of spring bulbs. Many flowering cherries were brought from Japan in 1920 and the Pieris Forrestii with their brilliant scarlet shoots, originally came from Wakehurst. A very fine collection of Davidia Involucrata (the pocket handkerchief tree) produce striking bracts in late May and early June, when the streams are lined with primulas, astilbes and other water plants.

A walk around Minterne Gardens in Dorset.

 

The garden walk is about 1 mile in a horseshoe shape.

 

You can take different paths on the last leg of the walk, we went on the upper path.

 

Flowers

 

Information below from leaflet from Minterne Gardens:

 

The Minterne Valley, landscapped in the manner of Capability Brown in the 18th century, has been the home of the Churchill and Digby families for 350 years. The gardens are laid out in a horseshoe below Minterne House, with a chain of small lakes, waterfalls and streams. They contain an important collection of Himalayan Rhodocdendrons and Azaleas, with Spring bulbs, Cherries, Maples and many fine and rare trees; the garden is noted for its Autumn colouring.

 

Of particular note are the large plants of Magnolia Campbellii which flower in March and April, together with a profusion of spring bulbs. Many flowering cherries were brought from Japan in 1920 and the Pieris Forrestii with their brilliant scarlet shoots, originally came from Wakehurst. A very fine collection of Davidia Involucrata (the pocket handkerchief tree) produce striking bracts in late May and early June, when the streams are lined with primulas, astilbes and other water plants.

RAAF WARTIME CAPABILITY AND THE ROLE OF LOCAL AIRBASES

WNGCDR Rob Gill CSC

Commanding Officer, 21 (City of Melbourne) Squadron RAAF Base, Pt Cook

 

80th Anniversary Memorial Service

of the Woomera Bomber CA-4 A23-1001 crash at the Comans property 'Homewood', Bylands, Vic.

Hosted by Kilmore Wallan RSL Sub-Branch

January 15, 1943 || May 13, 2023

 

War Time Plane Crash, Bylands, Vic. 1943 – The Pidgeon Coop. (2023, May 17). Retrieved from www.pidgeon.info/comans/war-time-plane-crash-bylands-vic-...

A walk around Minterne Gardens in Dorset.

 

The garden walk is about 1 mile in a horseshoe shape.

 

You can take different paths on the last leg of the walk, we went on the upper path.

 

Flowers

 

Information below from leaflet from Minterne Gardens:

 

The Minterne Valley, landscapped in the manner of Capability Brown in the 18th century, has been the home of the Churchill and Digby families for 350 years. The gardens are laid out in a horseshoe below Minterne House, with a chain of small lakes, waterfalls and streams. They contain an important collection of Himalayan Rhodocdendrons and Azaleas, with Spring bulbs, Cherries, Maples and many fine and rare trees; the garden is noted for its Autumn colouring.

 

Of particular note are the large plants of Magnolia Campbellii which flower in March and April, together with a profusion of spring bulbs. Many flowering cherries were brought from Japan in 1920 and the Pieris Forrestii with their brilliant scarlet shoots, originally came from Wakehurst. A very fine collection of Davidia Involucrata (the pocket handkerchief tree) produce striking bracts in late May and early June, when the streams are lined with primulas, astilbes and other water plants.

For space-constrained automotive applications, Vishay’s new AEC-Q101-qualified, 600 V SE20AFJ and SE30AFJ standard rectifiers with ESD capability offer high current density in the low-profile, surface-mount SlimSMA™ DO-221AC package. (For hi-res version, select "View all sizes" from Actions pulldown menu above.)

Ninjutsu, also know as shinobi ninjutsu, is a conglomeration of capability related to reconnaissance and subterfuge. Know more in this video.

 

See more ninja content:

little-ninjai.medium.com/

www.linkedin.com/in/little-ninjai/

www.fanpop.com/fans/little-ninjai

thelittleninjai.wordpress.com/2021/12/15/real-life-weapon...

neotakus.com/ninjai-the-little-ninja/

 

Thank You!

The second visit to Croome, the National Trust property / estate in over 5 years.

  

Croome Court

  

Croome Court is a mid-18th-century Neo-Palladian mansion surrounded by extensive landscaped parkland at Croome D'Abitot, near Pershore in south Worcestershire, England. The mansion and park were designed by Lancelot "Capability" Brown for the 6th Earl of Coventry, and were Brown's first landscape design and first major architectural project. Some of the mansion's rooms were designed by Robert Adam.

 

The mansion house is owned by Croome Heritage Trust, and is leased to the National Trust which operates it as a tourist attraction. The National Trust owns the surrounding parkland, which is also open to the public.

  

Croome Court is a Grade I listed building.

  

Listing Text

 

SO 84 SE CROOME D'ABITOT CROOME COURT

 

3/12 Croome Court

(formerly listed as

Croome Court with Stables,

11.8.52 Garden Room or Temple,

Principal Lodge, Lodge on

west, and Panorama)

 

GV I

 

Country House 1751-2 by Lancelot (Capability) Brown with advice from Sanderson

Miller. Interior work from 1760 by Robert Adam. Built for 6th Earl of

Coventry. Limestone ashlar Palladian mansion with principal North and South

fronts of 11 bays. Basement and 2 storeys with 3 storey end pavilions. Slate

roofs, pyramidal over corner towers and 3 paired axial chimneys, pair linked

by arches. 1-3-3-3-1 division with pedimented centre to North and fine pro-

jecting Ionic tetrastyle portico to South. Modillion cornice and balustrade to

flanking wings. Moulded window architraves enriched with flat cornices on

ground floor main range, pediments to North front pavilions and Venetian win-

dows to South front pavilions. Roman Doric curved pediment doorcase to North

front, flat cornice on consoles over South door. Chamfered quoins to project-

ing centre and to end pavilions. Fine 2 armed balustraded stair to North door

and broad straight flight up to South door flanked by cast stone sphinxes.

INTERIOR partly Brown with plasterwork by G Vassalli, partly Robert Adam with

plaster by J Rose Jr. 2 Adam rooms removed to New York and London. Spine

corridor with stone stair at East end with moulded underside and iron balu-

strade. NORTH SIDE: Entrance hall with 4 fluted Doric columns and Palladian

moulded doorcases, to East, dining-room with plaster cornice and ceiling,

original pelmets, to West, billiard-room with fielded panelling, plaster cor-

nice and rococo fireplace. These rooms, probably decorated c.1758-9, probably

by Brown. SOUTH SIDE: Fine central Saloon with elaborate deep coved ceiling

with 3 embellished panels and rich cornice, fine Palladian doorcases and 2

marble Ionic columned fireplaces. Room probably by Brown and Vassalli. To

East former tapestry room now dismantled; ceiling a copy of original by R Adam

and J Rose. Beyond, former library by R Adam, largely dismantled; marble fire-

place. To West, drawing-room with shallow rococo-style plaster and marble

fireplace. At WEST END, Gallery by R Adam 1764, with half-hexagonal bay to

garden, elaborate octagonal panelled ceiling by J Rose, plaster reliefs of

griffins, painted grisaille panels and marble caryatid fireplace by J Wilton.

Attached at East end, SERVICE WING: L plan, red brick and stone with slate

hipped roofs. 2 storey. Stone plinth, band, moulded eaves cornice and

Chamfered quoins. Glazing bar sash windows with gauged brick heads. Red brick

wall joins service wing to stable court beyond: 2 rusticated stone gate piers,

one still with ball finial. CL 10.4.1915. A T Bolton: The architecture of

R and J Adam 1922. D Stroud: Capability Brown 1975. G Bead: Decorative

Plasterwork 1975. R Adam and Croome Court Connoisseur October 1953.

  

Listing NGR: SO8849444596

 

This text is from the original listing, and may not necessarily reflect the current setting of the building.

  

Sphinxes - this is the back exit from the house.

Capability-Driven Defence Research and Innovation Conference, Palace of the Parliament, Bucharest, March 26th, 2019.

Photo credit: Ministry of Foreign Affairs / Andreea Tănase

Capability Scotland Westerlea, 26 September 2012

Capability Scotland Westerlea, 26 September 2012

Capability Scotland Westerlea, 26 September 2012

Oil spilled in the ocean can sink to the seafloor due to its high density or by attaching to floating particulate matter, as happened during the Marine Oil Snow Sedimentation and Flocculent Accumulation (MOSSFA) event following Deepwater Horizon. Oil that reaches the seafloor can smother benthic organisms or the organisms can ingest it, causing long-term negative effects, as happened to some deep-water coral and foraminifera.

 

Advanced tools are needed to predict oil transport to shorelines or if it will sink to the seafloor and affect sensitive ecosystems. The Subsurface Oil Simulator (SOSim) model, originally developed by the NOAA Response and Restoration’s Emergency Response Division during Deepwater Horizon, uses statistics to infer the velocity and dispersion of oil spilled in the water column and predict oil’s transport. The model was initially developed to track only sunken oil (oil that has reached the seafloor) on flat bay bottoms following an instantaneous spill, conditions that represent only a portion of the Gulf of Mexico environment.

 

Ph.D. students Mary Jacketti (left) and Chao Ji (right) present their research at the University of Miami College of Engineering Research Day.

 

Photo Provided by Chao Ji

 

For More Information: gulfresearchinitiative.org/grad-student-jacketti-enhances...

One of the French Navy pair - the superb AMD Super Etendard gets away to demonstrate their role capability at the RNAS Yeovilton Air Day 2011

A walk around Minterne Gardens in Dorset.

 

The garden walk is about 1 mile in a horseshoe shape.

 

You can take different paths on the last leg of the walk, we went on the upper path.

 

Flowers

 

Information below from leaflet from Minterne Gardens:

 

The Minterne Valley, landscapped in the manner of Capability Brown in the 18th century, has been the home of the Churchill and Digby families for 350 years. The gardens are laid out in a horseshoe below Minterne House, with a chain of small lakes, waterfalls and streams. They contain an important collection of Himalayan Rhodocdendrons and Azaleas, with Spring bulbs, Cherries, Maples and many fine and rare trees; the garden is noted for its Autumn colouring.

 

Of particular note are the large plants of Magnolia Campbellii which flower in March and April, together with a profusion of spring bulbs. Many flowering cherries were brought from Japan in 1920 and the Pieris Forrestii with their brilliant scarlet shoots, originally came from Wakehurst. A very fine collection of Davidia Involucrata (the pocket handkerchief tree) produce striking bracts in late May and early June, when the streams are lined with primulas, astilbes and other water plants.

Disabled and Capable

 

Capability Scotland Westerlea, 26 September 2012

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