HWW The Wakeman trail. Look Up
HFF from Aston Locks Nature Reserve
Winter Cormorant
Pottery plaques and childrens poetry
Happy Christmas
HBM from different times.
HWW
HFF from The Mach Loop
HFF from Shropshire
Winter Crab Apples
Porthill Suspension Bridge
Ice boot
HWW
HFF from Ruyton XI Towns
Attingham park fungi
Bracket fungi
Tremella mesenterica, the Yellow Brain Fungus.
The River Severn in Winter
HFF or HBM from Aston Locks Nature Reserve
Underneath The River Tay Road Bridge
Outdoors Indoors
Aston Lock 3
HFF from this little bluetit at Attingham Park
Ladies bathing.
If walls could talk
Relaxing on a bench after taking a plunge
The Roman Baths
HFF from Bath
5 mallards
Swans trio for TSC
HFF everyone and stay safe
Museum of the Moon in Durham
Museum of the Moon in Durham
Late dragonfly
HFF from Shrewsbury
HWW
TSC
In Wildness Is the Preservation of the World
Contorted
Wall carving
The Sunday Challenge. Chirk Aqueduct and Viaduct
HFF from Dundee
Angel of the North with little child
What is this?
Grey wagtail, female I think. Motacilla cinerea
Location
See also...
UNESCO-Weltkulturerbe...UNESCO World Heritage…Patrimoine Mondial de l‘UNESCO
UNESCO-Weltkulturerbe...UNESCO World Heritage…Patrimoine Mondial de l‘UNESCO
Auf geht es in den Urlaub - Vivent les vacances - A few holidays... " lunga vita alle vacanze
Auf geht es in den Urlaub - Vivent les vacances - A few holidays... " lunga vita alle vacanze
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Pulteney Bridge and Weir.
Pulteney Bridge is a bridge over the River Avon in Bath, England. It was completed by 1774. it is highly unusual in that it has shops built across its full span on both sides. It has been designated as a Grade I listed building. The bridge was designed by Robert Adam and named after William Jonestone and Frances Pulteney. They secured the funding from Parliament, so they named the bridge after themselves.
Pulteney Weir (or just “the Weir” for short) was built in the late Middle Ages to prevent the river from flooding the town of Bath. It is a low barrier built across a river in order to control water level and regulate flow—was completely rebuilt in the early 1970s and given a more effective and now iconic V-shape design. A sluice and controlled flood gates were also added in the upgrade.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulteney_Bridge
Pulteney Weir (or just “the Weir” for short) was built in the late Middle Ages to prevent the river from flooding the town of Bath. It is a low barrier built across a river in order to control water level and regulate flow—was completely rebuilt in the early 1970s and given a more effective and now iconic V-shape design. A sluice and controlled flood gates were also added in the upgrade.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulteney_Bridge
appo-fam, Erika Akire, Annaig56, LotharW and 23 other people have particularly liked this photo
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........wünsche noch einen schönen Abend,ganz liebe Grüße Güni:))
A cracking shot Amelia.
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