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Gatepost fungus
Our gatepost has seen better days so the water gets into the wood where it is cracked and these cute little toadstools grow there too!
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Best viewed in set. At the top of a hill on a dirt track was this gatepost, which serves to give a sense of perspective on the lion.
These gateposts are all that survive of the Derwent village Vicarage. It survived for a couple of years after the rest of the village was demolished in the mid-1940s to make way for Ladybower Reservoir, but the Vicarage was finally knocked down in the late 1940s.
It is park "Garden of Mr. A. " of Suginami ward. The foundation of "House of the rose" that is burnt down has been left as it is.
The other side of the gatepost is the entrance.
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杉並区立の公園「Aさんの庭」です。焼失してしまった「ばらの家」の土台がそのまま残されています。
門柱の向こうは玄関です。
Old gateposts and the crumbling remains of an old wooden gate on High Bank Lane, Royd Moor.
The sunsets behind snow laden clouds hanging over Thurstone Moor.
This was on a gatepost at Moreton, the information I have found about this fungus is that it is edible except if it is growing on a Yew as it absorbes the toxins of the Yew tree. It tastes like chicken apparently, hence its name.
Three gateposts, four wheelie bins, two speedbumps, half a dozen lamp posts and one derelict oilseed mill.
Old gateposts on Midhope Moors, looking over Langsett reservoir towards Hartcliff Hill near Penistone.
Gatepost name, La Residence Hotel, Hue, Vietnam, June 2012: former headquarters of the French resident-general after the Treaty of Hue in 1883
This property has the most wonderful ecosystem on its boundaries, and I do hope it doesn't change hands any time soon. It also has a super garden and a vegetable plot as well.
The new money jet-wash everything into oblivion, have ensuites even in the baby's bedroom, use a dishwasher for 2 coffee cups, drive at least two Chelsea tractors, pave the garden and have their imported veg delivered to the door.
Oops..I nearly got started there, sorry.
Near Wychbold, Worcestershire. As I was saying yesterday - if you walk the fields in flat country you tend to notice the small things more - like moss and last summer's vegetation in skeleton form on wooden gateposts as they grow hollow from the middle out, and a century's graffiti on a capped sandstone post.
Westmoreland Water Wheel & Gatepost
Knoxville, Tennessee
Listed 12/18/2013
Reference Number: 13000949
The Westmoreland Water Wheel and Gatepost are being nominated to the National Register of Historic Places under Criterion C for their excellent representation of the Tudor Revival architectural style and under Criterion C for their contribution to the development of the Westmoreland Heights Subdivision as the source of water and electricity prior to city services. The Westmoreland Wheelhouse (built in 1923) and the Gatepost (built in 1925) were designed by noted local architect Charles I. Barber of the firm Barber and McMurry. Prominent local landscape architect, Charles F. Lester provided the landscape design for the structures. The Water Wheel is a steel overshot wheel purchased by Edward T. Manning, President of the Tennessee Mill & Mine Supply Company from the Fitz Water Wheel Company of Hanover, Pennsylvania and installed by R.A. Calloway, an employee with the Tennessee Mill & Mine Supply Company. The use of East Tennessee marble is the most notable exterior architectural feature of these structures; other architectural materials worth mentioning are wood, slate, and iron. The Westmoreland Water Wheel and Gatepost retain a high degree of architectural integrity and are an excellent example of the Tudor Revival style in Knox County and meet the requirements of the National Register of Historic Places. The Westmoreland Water Wheel and Gatepost also meet the registration requirements in the Historic and Architectural Resources of Knoxville and Knox County, Tennessee Multiple Property Listing under the historic context of Suburban Growth and Development in Knoxville, 1861-1940.
National Register of Historic Places Homepage
Westmoreland Water Wheel & Gatepost, Knoxville, Tennessee, Summary Page
18th C guidepost near Slipper Low Farm, Aldwark. Now being used as a gatepost. Just above the post, on the horizon, is the distinctive summit of Minninglow Hill.
CUT MARK: N FACE S P S SIDE RD (ODN 261.113m, AGL 0.5m).
Toppled Gatepost
Location
Grid reference: SD 7185 1688.
Landranger 109: Manchester, Bolton & Warrington.
Explorer 287: West Pennine Moors.
Structure: Gatepost.
This gate-house stands at the western end of Workington Hall grounds. The Curwen's crest of a unicorn's head once again appears atop the pillar. Unfortunately a hideous modern building has been erected on this side of the drive meaning that the matching pillar is no more.
You get some big bugs in Florida, but these locusts adorning a pair of Pasadena gateposts take some beating.