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Sadly, I spotted a dog walker in the area the day before. Looks like this isn't a big city problem after all.
A visit deep into the Isle of Anglesey to Melin Llynon Windmill.
You can go up to flights of steps inside. The ceiling are a bit low, and I sometimes hit my head going up, so preferred to be outside.
Melin Llynnon, or Llynnon Mill, is a gristmill located on the outskirts of the village of Llanddeusant on the island of Anglesey. It is the only surviving working windmill in Wales.
The mill was built for £529, 11s in 1775–1776, on land owned by the surgeon Herbert Jones. It is classified as a tower mill. The machinery is within a stone tower and the moving top, or cap cwch, turns so that the sails hwyliau catch the wind from any direction. The tower was 9.3 metres tall and with four floors. It was used to drive machines for grinding corn, oats and barley. The first miller, Thomas Jones (1756–1846), worked it until his death. The position of miller was passed down through the generations, eventually going to a cousin William Pritchard.
A storm in 1918 damaged the cap stopping it turning to face the wind. It still operated intermittently for the next six years when the wind was from the south-west. Eventually the mill closed and became increasingly dilapidated. It remained deserted and unused until the local council restored it between 1978 and 1986. It reopened in 1986 and now produces stoneground flour.
sign - No Dogs
This sign confuses me: is it forbidden to forbid dogs or is it forbidden to go on this beach without dogs?
Verboden voor geen honden.
A photo taken by my sister, perhaps while she walked the dogs, who were not welcome at their own home.
Aquamarine street lights near the Saint Malo beach.
Bretagne 2008 (C 6979)
This photo is part of a big set of my summer vacation in Jersey and France, in 2008.
You may find some of the best shots from this vacation in JeromesPOV, check the Jersey / France 2008-set while I add more over the next months.
Map it: Google Earth | Street | Satellite | Hybrid | Nautical
Chicago, IL, 2012
Development details on FilmDev
Canon EOS 620
Canon EF 28mm, f/2.8
Ilford HP5+, d76, 1+1, 22C, 10:30 min
Have you ever seen dogs on swings?
Not to be used in any way without prior written permission
All photographs © Alexandra Bone
I probably wouldn't have believed it, since it's so late in the summer, but last week I'd seen a baby elk only a day old, so that birthing is still going on. No sign of Mom or Baby in this area, they moved on.
Seen in the close to the sandstone church, Bridgnorth. I've done my best to disguise the modern signage! The electric light spoils the portico for me too.
The window pane design is quite delightful, IMHO
Do NOT try to bring your dog if you're going to Santa Fe, New Mexico. Clearly it is a dog-free city.
A visit to the former estate of Moseley Hall, now part of the grounds of Moseley Hall Hospital during Birmingham Heritage Week.
The estate was farmland back in the 18th century, until the land was sold, and became part of the City of Birmingham (and housing built around the estate).
After leaving the Dovecote, I went on the trail via Moseley Hall towards Moseley Park (and the Ice House).
Had a brief look inside the entrance of Moseley Hall (decided that I didn't want to look around it) and headed onto the park.
Sign - This is not a public Right of Way - No Dogs
Sign seen from Salisbury Road, while I waited to cross over into Moseley Park.
Friedensreich Hundertwasser's original and unruly artistic vision expressed itself in pictorial art, environmentalism, philosophy, and design of facades, postage stamps, flags, and clothing (among other areas). The common themes in his work utilised bright colours, organic forms, a reconciliation of humans with nature, and a strong individualism, rejecting straight lines. He remains sui generis, although his architectural work is comparable to Antoni Gaudí in its use of biomorphic forms and the use of tile. He was also inspired by the art of the Vienna Secession, and by the Austrian painters Egon Schiele and Gustav Klimt.