View allAll Photos Tagged jerseys
Jersey Tiger moth, Euplagia quadripunctaria, resting on Purple Loosestrife, Lythrum salicaria. 17 July 2025. Ealing, London, England, UK.
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A westbound New York to Trenton local crosses the Raritan River at Highland Park, NJ.
NJT 3841 @ Raritan River Viaduct, Highland Park, NJ
NJTR ALP-45DP 4520
Jersey Bus Tours newest acquisition KGU 284-RTL 326, a Park Royal bodied Leyland RT entered service at Tottenham garage August 1949, seen at the Radisson Blu Hotel St Helier with the Jersey Pearl Moggy! 26/04/16
The small herd of Jerseys are managed whereby the calves remain at foot for about six months.
The cows are milked once a day, in the morning, which means that the calves have ample opportunity to get the milk they need from their mothers throughout the rest of the day.
The benefits of keeping cows and calves together are vast, but essentially, it's best for the calf and its mother and it allows for a more symbiotic relationship between cow and human.
Ideally, this technique will be adopted by more dairy farmers.
Old Hall Farm, Woodton, Norfolk
Almost as though it wanted to continue the theme from our holiday for just one more day..... this morning we opened the curtains to find it on our window. Then it fluttered off with a flash of orange underwings, to rest on the greenery.
www.theislandwiki.org/index.php/Noirmont
"Batterie Lothringen was only German naval coastal artillery battery to be established in Jersey during the Occupation."
www.vibrantjersey.je/destination/the-channel-islands-occu...
"The Channel Islands Occupation Society (Jersey) has been opening and restoring German fortifications for 45 years and arguably boasts some of the best-preserved fortifications today that originally formed and defended part of Hitler’s much vaunted “Atlantikwall” which stretched from inside the arctic circle of northern Norway to the French/Spanish boarder with about 10% of the fortifications constructed found in the Channel Islands!"
www.jersey.com/inspire-me/inspiration/jersey-occupation-s...
"The Channel Islands were the only part of the Britain Isles to be occupied by German forces in WW2. The five-year occupation came to an end on 09 May 1945 – Liberation Day, an event still celebrated in Jersey with an annual Bank Holiday."
"Hitler ordered the conversion of Jersey into an impregnable fortress. Some 6000 forced workers from countries like Russia, Spain, France, Poland, and Algeria built hundreds of bunkers, anti-tank walls, railway systems, as well as many tunnel complexes.... All of the fortifications built around the island were part of Hitler’s “Atlantic Wall”."
Just after sunset.
tenuous link: lanterns
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