View allAll Photos Tagged rnb
After the constant rain of the last few days I thought the River 'Howy' might be worth a visit.
9 Shot HDR.
Video over on youtube
Here are more pictures I took on a magical walk before breakfast in June along the Stour River near Flatford Mill in "Constable Country" in England.
The Stour forms the boundary between Suffolk and Essex here.
I took this at about 6:00 AM one gorgeous morning in late June. One of the most perfect walks I've ever taken, with a wonderful breakfast of kedgeree and stone ground out porridge waiting for me back at the room.
I am on my way to school, and running later than usual because it has taken me half an hour to defrost my car, but as I cross the River Ock on the way out of Uffington, I can't resist pulling over for a few moments. The Ock itself is only visible where the dark water opens out before passing under the road. I lean over the hedgerow, straining to see over the top of it, and can just make out the line of trees that marks the course of the Ock, winding away into the mist. I am looking upstream: up towards the source, which is perhaps a mile distant as the crow flies, but the Ock itself winds this way and that across the Vale of the White Horse. I know that this weekend I must find the source: it has become a sort of Holy Grail. I am imagining it already: a chalice of cold, black water, nestled in the hillside. Not that this is becoming an obsession or anything...
FOR A CUMULATIVE PHOTO ESSAY, SEE THE 'RIVER OCK' SET ON MY PHOTOSTREAM.
Seen from immediately above Skelwith Force, Chris Brammall's cycle/pedestrian bridge looks particularly skeletal in the snow and mist.
I took this at about 6:00 AM one gorgeous morning in late June. One of the most perfect walks I've ever taken, with a wonderful breakfast of kedgeree and stone ground out porridge waiting for me back at the room.
The Stour forms the boundary between Suffolk and Essex here.
A B&W version of the recent Fiddlers Ferry Power Station shot at Widnes Merseyside from Wigg Island across The River Mersey in Runcorn Cheshire.
Killhope Burn drops 7? metres over the central part of a cliff composed of thick beds of sedimentary rock.
Cowshill, Weardale