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Soft and chewy biscotti is definitely a favourite with us, and when flavoured with pistachio, it's really hard to beat!
Love the buzzy atmosphere and shared tables at Carlton Espresso. The pastas are very good!
Carlton Espresso
(03) 9347 8482
326 Lygon St, Carlton, VIC 3053
Reviews:
- Carlton Espresso - Urbanspoon
- Carlton Espresso - by Matt Preston, The Age, October 11, 2005
- Carlton Espresso - Lonely Planet #93 of 718 things to do in Melbourne
- Carlton Espresso - Sarah Cooks
The bar belongs to architecture, a place of temporary hospitality somewhere to go for a quick drink and a cruzie vibe a spuntino; a short stop before hitting the road again before assuming one’s social productive role; it is a haven a temptation and a refuge - embrace it as the Italians have. - Monika Kiss Horvath (Written on the back on the menu)
Bolton Abbey, Wharfedale, North Yorkshire, England, takes its name from the ruins of the 12th-century Augustinian monastery now known as Bolton Priory. The priory, closed in the 1539 Dissolution of the Monasteries ordered by King Henry VIII, is in the Yorkshire Dales, next to the village of Bolton Abbey. The estate is open to visitors, and includes many miles of all-weather walking routes. The Embsay & Bolton Abbey Steam Railway terminates at Bolton Abbey station one and a half miles/2.5 km from Bolton Priory.
The monastery was founded at Embsay in 1120. Led by a prior, Bolton Abbey was technically a priory, despite its name. It was founded in 1154 by the Augustinian order, on the banks of the River Wharfe. The land at Bolton, as well as other resources, were given to the order by Lady Alice de Romille of Skipton Castle in 1154. In the early 14th century Scottish raiders caused the temporary abandonment of the site and serious structural damage to the priory. The seal of the priory featured the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Child and the phrase sigillum sancte Marie de Bolton.The nave of the abbey church was in use as a parish church from about 1170 onwards, and survived the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Building work was still going on at the abbey when the Dissolution of the Monasteries resulted in the termination of the priory in January 1540. The east end remains in ruins. A tower, begun in 1520, was left half-standing, and its base was later given a bell-turret and converted into an entrance porch. Most of the remaining church is in the Gothic style of architecture, but more work was done in the Victorian era, including windows by August Pugin. It is still a working priory today, holding services on Sundays and religious holidays. Bolton Abbey churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Flying Corps officer of the First World War.
The Craven Heifer
The Domesday Book lists Bolton Abbey as the caput manor of a multiple estate including 77 carucates of ploughland (around 9240 acres/3850 ha) belonging to Edwin, Earl of Mercia. The estate then comprised Bolton Abbey, Halton East, Embsay, Draughton; Skibeden, Skipton, Low Snaygill, Thorlby; Addingham, Beamsley, Holme, Gargrave; Stainton, Otterburn, Scosthrop, Malham, Anley; Coniston Cold, Hellifield and Hanlith. They were all laid waste in the Harrying of the North after the defeat of the rebellion of Edwin, Earl of Mercia and classified as the Clamores (disputed land) of Yorkshire until around 1090, when they were transferred to Robert de Romille, who moved its administrative centre to Skipton Castle. The Romille line died out around 1310, and Edward II granted the estates to Robert Clifford. In 1748 Baroness Clifford married William Cavendish and Bolton Abbey Estate thereafter belonged to the Dukes of Devonshire, until a trust was set up by the 11th Duke of Devonshire turning it over to the Chatsworth Settlement Trustees to steward.
Today, the 33,000 acre (134 km2) estate contains six areas designated as Sites of Special Scientific Interest, including Strid Wood, an ancient woodland (mainly oak), which contains the length of the River Wharfe known as The Strid, and a marine fossil quarry. The estate encompasses 8 miles (13 km) of river, 84 farms, 84 buildings of architectural interest, and four Grade I listed buildings; and is currently home to 27 businesses from tearooms to bookshops. The iconic stepping stones cross the River Wharfe near the Abbey ruins. The estate includes extensive grouse moors, including Barden Moor on the west side of Wharfedale and Barden Fell on the east side of the dale. There is also a pheasant shoot. Apart from people employed within these businesses, the estate employs about 120 staff to work on the upkeep of the estate. Much of the estate is open to the public. A charge is made for car parking. The Dales Way passes through the estate on a permissive path. Barden Moor and Barden Fell, which includes the prominent crag of Simon's Seat, are on access land, and permissive paths lead up to the moors. Access to the moors may be closed to the public during the shooting season.
Bolton Abbey Hall, originally the gatehouse of the priory, was converted into a house by the Cavendish family. The hall is a Grade II* listed building.As well as Bolton Abbey, the Cavendish family also own the Chatsworth (Derbyshire, England) and Lismore Castle (Waterford, in the Republic of Ireland) estates. In the early nineteenth century, a cow known as the Craven Heifer was bred on the Bolton Abbey estate. Weighing 312 stone (1.98 tonnes), and measuring 11 ft 4ins in length and over 7 ft in height, she to this day remains Britain's largest ever cow.
Victoria - the District line platforms have been opened up to daylight during the redevelopment works above. At present there are short sections at both ends of the station where daylight penetrates.
RIUM, WP Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Palaquium gutta (Hook.) Burck. Sapotaceae. CN: [Malay - Taban merah, Nyatoh taban merah, Balam, Getah merah]. Distribution - Malesia: Indonesia (Java, Kalimantan, Sumatra), Malaysia, Singapore. Habitat - scattered in lowland to hill forests up to ca 1600 m. Medium to large tree up to ca 45 m tall. Leaves alternate, clustered at tips with cone-like terminal bud; leaf blade obovate, ovate, elliptical or narrowly elliptical, abaxial golden-brownish velvet color; adaxial shining green; twigs hairy or scurfy. Uses - timber, the trans-polyterpene gutta-percha (excellent nonconductor) latex once collected is often employed in insulating marine and underground cables. It is also used for golf-ball coverings, surgical appliances, and adhesives and also still in use for temporary dental fillings.
Synonym(s):
Many; see www.theplantlist.org/tpl/record/kew-145714
Ref. and suggested reading:
FRIM Flora Database
Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka, Malaysia
www.theplantlist.org/tpl/record/kew-145714
www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/taxon.pl?26351
During a bathroom remodel, I built this temporary shower setup in the basement. It's right next to the utility sink, so the water source and drain was close by. It helped that there was a mixer faucet on the sink!
Used zip ties to hold the hose/ garden nozzle up at the right height. Sprayed only to wet and to rinse.
After bathing, I used a sump pump and hose length to drain the kiddie pool into the sink.
For the three weeks without the regular bathroom, this really helped keep the peace!
A temporary marketplace set up by Onnagawa residents to benefit victims of the 2011 tsunami and earthquake in Tohoku.
Last December a ship rammed the weir (Dutch: stuw) in the river Maas near Grave. Water level in the river dropped some meters leaving a number of houseboats grounded. Now a temporary dam has been built for the duration of the reconstruction of the monumental weir.
The seats which come with the van are removed to go off and get transformed into Roadtrek seats, but the van still needs to be driven around in the meantime until it's time to install the finished seats, so each van get this stylish temporary driver's seat. Sharon got a big kick out of seeing these seats.
Arborfield Road was closed between Shinfield and Arborfield Cross between Monday 3rd and Sunday 23rd August, for realignment and drainage work.
During this time route 3 was split into two sections, with the main service curtailed at Shinfield, School Green. A separate route 3a operated from Reading non-stop to and from Arborfield Cross then on to Wokingham via the usual route.
Gas-powered Scania 425, carrying "the Leopard" branding for the route which was introduced in June 2014 when it replaced Thames Travel's route 144, is seen loading at Reading Station on Wednesday 19th August with a curtailed Shinfield journey.
Copyright 2013 Hilde Heyvaert.
All rights reserved.
No unauthorized use, reproduction or distribution without prior permission.
My cat, Montana, absolutely loves fishing. We discovered this by accident early in his life when we were getting poles ready for fishing and he started chasing the line around the yard. So, we got him a kitty-safe fishing pole toy. Fishing is one of his favorite games, especially in the fall leaves.