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My wife and l took the grandchildren to Sion Hall Falcon Centre just outside Northallerton. These are a couple of pictures l took whilest there.
Level 2 Covid activities. We are allowed to catch up with friends again. The men are getting together once more to sail their yachts on the waterways (in the distance). Keeping their Covid distance from others as we expand our bubbles is about the only thing different here.
A few weeks ago I posted this shot of Goðafoss, a waterfall in the North of Iceland, but what I neglected to mention then was that the waterfall spreads over quite a long distance with various small waterfalls dropping a few levels until getting all the way to the river.
It’s a beautiful place and getting there so late (about 1am) and seeing everything so misty was a really cool sight.
To view the blog entry go to: www.momentaryawe.com/blog/?p=2600
The High Level Bridge, Lethbridge Alberta, Canada. Shot from directly underneath in the midst of near waist high damp undergrowth that was pleasantly inhabited by rather large mosquitos.
Construction of bridge began in August of 1908, and the bridge was completed June 22, 1909 and officially opened on November 1, 1909. It cost $1,334,525 to build. This bridge is still the longest and highest of its kind in the world reaching 5,327.625 feet long (1.6km) and 314 feet high (96 meters).
Shot May 2007.
56081 Passes Langham Levels with 43197,193,069 for scrap while working the 1056 Laira - Newport Docks 31/5/22
The lowest levels of the Keep Tower contain the Drawing Room. This splendid room is an octagonal chamber crowned with an amazing two-storied, ribbed dome embellished with brilliant colors and bright gilded vaulting. Floral designs and a wide variety of birds, as well as an array of mice, lizards, monkeys, foxes, caterpillars, and butterflies, adorn the Drawing Room's walls and ceiling.
Limerick to Foynes Railway Line - MP Limerick 9 3/4.
Level Crossing (XF29) at Kilgobbin Halt, Limerick 12th May 2014.
You'll have to wait for my full thoughts on the iPhone 6/6 Plus and their cameras. And I haven't even looked at all of my photos yet. But I'm very pleased with many of shots I came home with today.
(OK, technically, "the shots I came to the Panera a few Green Line stops away" with.)
This was taken this morning from the small bridge over The Division Rhyne south of Godney. Normally these fields would be full of cattle in summer. The River Brue was overflowing between Glastonbury and Meare with water cascading across the road along a one mile stretch.
The photo below is the same view from the same spot taken in January when you might expect flooding, but at that time we had a drought.
One of the heritage railways I was discovering for the first time was the Ecclesbourne Valley Railway. Here you can see BR Class 33 Bo-Bo No.33103 Swordfish approaching the level crossing at Idridgehay with a service to Duffield.
Unlike other heritage railways the gates to the level crossing remain open to traffic until the train gets really close and then the guard will get off the train to close the gates to traffic so the train can pass the level crossing. Once the train has passed the level crossing, the guard will open the gates again to traffic and then quickly board the train before the service will resume.
I took this photograph with my Panasonic G7 on the 1st August 2017.
Limerick to Foynes Railway Line - MP Limerick 11.
Level Crossing (XF35) with Adare Station, Limerick 12th May 2014.
Level C of the Frost is the booky section of the library, a place where you can still browse. I was looking for a book on chancery hand, which I never did find, so I have reprojected the stacks into Mercator for ease of navigation. The shelving down here is both Dewey Decimal and Library of Congress, but latitude and longitude might work better.