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Humber River, Old Mill, Toronto ON 29 Sep 2020
Chinook Salmon attempt to leap the obstacle built to keep them out of the headwaters of the Humber River. The barrier can be usually be cleared by the native Atlantic Salmon, but the Chinook find it more difficult.
Thanksgiving hike at Hilton Falls Conservation Area. Beautiful spot this time of year. Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
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© KARYN STEPIEN PHOTOGRAPHY 2013
water pouring over the top of the clough pool at Waulk Mill, below White Nancy at Kerridge.
(waulking is a process applied to wool, by soaking and bashing to shrink and soften it)
The old mill, now a private residence, was a working mill until WWI. It is made up of three distinct parts, the mill itself built across a creek, built in 1800 – 1832, the mill store, built in 1800 – 1832 on brick piers and the oldest part, an attached windmill, built in 1720 – 1740. Barges could be brought up to the mill for transporting the milled goods away around the coast.
The mill operated two ten foot wheels, one set higher than the other to make full use of the stream feed and the tide, which was kept behind tide gates.
The black windmill is a distinctive feature of the landscape, it’s tarred outer skin resilient to the full force of the coastal weather.
© Mark V. Krajnak | JerseyStyle Photography | All Rights Reserved 2016
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Hyde Mill, located in Hyde, Wisconsin. Another shot taken last summer when I went looking specifically for this mill through pictures I've seen. Driving through Hyde there is very little to see other than a General Store and a Blacksmith shop. If you blink your eyes, you would be in and out of town. I initially missed the road where this mill was and had to turn back again to find it.
North Little Rock, Arkansas -- Seen briefly in the opening of Gone With the Wind. Thought to be the only standing structure remaining from the movie's filming, it is now listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
Learn more here: www.northlittlerock.ar.gov/visitor/old-mill.asp
Taken in North Little Rock, Arkansas
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