Lobster Pot Christmas Tree
Emsworth Mill Pond
Picnic Time
Emsworth Mill Pond at Dusk
Beach Huts
The Royal Oak and The Old Mill At Low Tide
Spying
Follower
A view across Langstone Harbour
Stroll
Langstone Harbour, Hampshire
Tricolour
The End of the Line
Wreck, Dell Quay
Low Tide at Dell Quay (+PiP)
Mudflats
The Royal Oak and the Old Mill
Sailing into the Light
Sunshine, Silhouettes and Sea Mist
The Old Mill. Langstone Harbour.
Langstone Harbour View
Tranquil Langstone Harbour
Traffic
Yellow Buoys
Westcliff Ramsgate
WR - for repair
BDD - chasing the ball
TiG - anchored landy
SCB - entering the dock
whn - wsba 2
MFS - stbees cruise at anchor
O&S - gone potty
gbw - the Crumple
olb - ON 808 returns
shs - sneaky stick
hin[22] - Groyne
West Bay cafe, Westgate-on-Sea.
Pegwell Bay Hotel. (Overlooks the sea)
The White Cliffs of Dover
View from Dover Castle
The Jetty & Viking Bay, Broadstairs
PERFUGIUM MISERIS
Ramsgate’s Royal Harbour
Westgate-on-Sea Kent
I knew the sun was up there somewhere..!!
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Coastlines and Seaside Areas from around the world
Coastlines and Seaside Areas from around the world
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Richborough Power Station
Richborough power station was a power station close to the mouth of the River Stour near Sandwich, on the east coast of Kent. It operated from 1962 to 1996; the towers were demolished in 2012. It was built on land within the Port of Richborough but being on the northern edge its site lies mostly within the neighbouring parish of Minster, Kent.
The Central Electricity Generating Board started construction of the power station in 1958, with Unit 1 coming online in December 1963, and Unit 2 following in August 1963. It opened as a 342MW coal-fired station, using coal from Kent and other coalfields. It was converted to burn oil in summer 1971 and further converted in 1989 to burn a proprietary oil and water emulsion called Orimulsion, imported from Venezuela through Port Richborough.
The site was also chosen as the site for an experimental 1MW wind turbine, which was at that time the largest ever installed in the UK, with permission given in 1987, and the turbine becoming live in 1989.
After growing concerns over the environmental effects of the Orimulsion fuel in the main power station, court action was taken in two separate actions, with both cases settled out of court. The 360MW station ceased generating in 1996. Following the plant closure, the majority of the equipment was removed during a strip out programme, which also saw the demolition of a number of the buildings, leaving only a few outbuildings, the office block and the landmark cooling towers and chimney standing.
In controlled blasts, the three 97m cooling towers and a single 127m chimney stack were demolished on 11 March 2012. Some locals had campaigned to keep the towers, saying they formed part of the historical landscape and were used as a navigation point by boats wanting to enter the mouth of the river Stour known to have a narrow channel of useful depth.
These pics were taken in the space of 1 minute and show the demolition process, the pics on the top are the first and last.
Made the collage and it removed exif info taken with Panasonic FZ45.
Don't get out so much now but doing archive digging! Best viewed Large
MY THANKS TO ALL WHO VISIT AND COMMENT IT IS APPRECIATED
The Central Electricity Generating Board started construction of the power station in 1958, with Unit 1 coming online in December 1963, and Unit 2 following in August 1963. It opened as a 342MW coal-fired station, using coal from Kent and other coalfields. It was converted to burn oil in summer 1971 and further converted in 1989 to burn a proprietary oil and water emulsion called Orimulsion, imported from Venezuela through Port Richborough.
The site was also chosen as the site for an experimental 1MW wind turbine, which was at that time the largest ever installed in the UK, with permission given in 1987, and the turbine becoming live in 1989.
After growing concerns over the environmental effects of the Orimulsion fuel in the main power station, court action was taken in two separate actions, with both cases settled out of court. The 360MW station ceased generating in 1996. Following the plant closure, the majority of the equipment was removed during a strip out programme, which also saw the demolition of a number of the buildings, leaving only a few outbuildings, the office block and the landmark cooling towers and chimney standing.
In controlled blasts, the three 97m cooling towers and a single 127m chimney stack were demolished on 11 March 2012. Some locals had campaigned to keep the towers, saying they formed part of the historical landscape and were used as a navigation point by boats wanting to enter the mouth of the river Stour known to have a narrow channel of useful depth.
These pics were taken in the space of 1 minute and show the demolition process, the pics on the top are the first and last.
Made the collage and it removed exif info taken with Panasonic FZ45.
Don't get out so much now but doing archive digging! Best viewed Large
MY THANKS TO ALL WHO VISIT AND COMMENT IT IS APPRECIATED
Eric Desjours, Frans Schols, Fred Fouarge, Phil Sutters and 10 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Zunächst aber dir noch einen schönen Abend und einen schönen Sonntag!
www.ipernity.com/doc/philsutters/35984299
Frans.
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