View allAll Photos Tagged widcombe
Overwhelmed with Prior Park Palladian Bridge shots. So have decided to no post any yet. I quite like this one though. Taken in the cold whilst waiting for the sun to come round.
note all pictures are copyright to British fire rescue pics. none of these pictures can be printed, displayed or saved to any kind of retrieval system without my prior knowledge or consent. as follows uk and world copyright law any one found to breeching this law is liable for prosecution. www.britishfirerescuepics.webs.com/
Carved by the wonderful Charlie Oldham and recently spruced up, The White Hart at Widcombe has never looked better.
Portrait shoot at Widcombe Crescent Studio with Maria Magro, 5th year erasmus student at Bath Architecture school.
About 8 miles of walking. The cake really is that good. And also, the fish needed a new thingummywhatsit for their filter, so we just kept on going from Heni's into town, then beyond into Widcombe. Then of course M & S called to us, with its seductive chickens and wine and desserts for £10. Then as we passed the bus stop, laden with provisions and feeling knackered, our bus came by. And we looked the bus in the eye and said 'No, we will bloody well walk, straight up that bloody giant bloody hill'. The cup of tea at home was much appreciated.
Ralph Allen's Cottages, Prior Park Road, Bath, c1740.
By John Wood the Elder (1704-1754).
Built by Ralph Allen to house his stonemasons who worked nearby.
Southcot Burial Ground in Bath. See this 360ºx180º equirectangular panorama interactively from the inside here.
This statue is outside the Natural Theatre Company on Widcombe Hill Bath. It guards the area for rubbish collection near the back door
The Natural Theatre Company specialise in comic walkabout street theatre and do great set pieces at Festivals ..Checkout their web site they look so much fun!!
We thought we'd finished with photography for the day... the sun had set, and the colours had died. I couldn't be bothered to turn the car around on Widcombe Hill, so decided to make a little detour via Claverton, and come back into Bath down Ralph Allen Drive. And what a great decision it turned out to be...
As soon as we got to the top of the hill, it became immediately apparent that there was a layer of amazing misty gorgeousness rolling over the landscape. So quiet, still, and mysterious...
First upload directly from iPhoto09. That was easy.
Viewed from Abbey Burial Ground, whilst the snow was still around. Not a bad pad to have in the city.
CWGC gravestones
First World War
GREEN, WILLIAM CHARLES
Rank: Able Seaman
Service No: J/38408
Date of Death: 05/03/1920
Age: 22
Regiment/Service: Royal Navy, H.M.S. "Fox."
Grave Reference: V. HC. I.
Cemetery: BATH (ST. JAMES'S) CEMETERY
Additional Information: Son of William Henry and Mary Green, of 13, Excelsior St., Widcombe. Bath.
Link: www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/394030/GREEN,%20WILLI...
One of a series of panoramic pieces illustrating Bath in the great freeze of January 2010. This is a late evening view from the northern slopes of Lower Camden across to the silhouetted spire of St John the Evangelist Catholic church (c1861-3) with the outlines of Widcombe hills and behind them the the trees on the high ridge of Beechen Cliff immortalised by Jane Austen.
See the rest of the "Bath - Cold Winter 2010" set here: www.flickr.com/photos/david_lewis_baker_arts/sets/7215762...