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First silage of '25
Abend am Stintfang -HBM!
U-Bahn Gallerie (6 x PIP)
Staffordshire not Canada
The Names on the Armed Forces Memorial at Alrewas
Löwe in der 'Diele'
Castello Estense
Silage cutting
The Lovell Telescope
Collecting the silage
Formation cutting
North Carr Lightship
Löwe und Greif
Hamburger Originale (PiP)
Silaging Squad
Silaging Squad
HFF - wann kommt endlich der Zug??? (PiP)
Hermes
Teamwork
Bulli
Bales are back
HWW - Salzspeicher in Lübeck
Begrüßung - HFF!
HWW - Valldemossa
Drilling
Working the fields
Kindertransport - Der letzte Abschied (5 PiPs)
Working boat on the Shropshire Union
Working boat on Shropshire Union
Working boat on Shropshire Union
Keyworkers
Mauerwerk und Sonnenuhr (PiP)
The Telford Beacon
Das gelbe Meer
Tränendes Herz - FROHE OSTERN
Tay Fins
Speise-Karte
Getränke-Karte
Ploughing
Ploughing
Ploughing
Frohe Ostern! Happy Easter!
Spring ploughing
Stein-Mauern
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HFF
The River Tay Road Bridge Commemorative Obelisk.
The Tay Road Bridge was built to replace the former Tay ferry service, popularly known in Dundee as "the Fifie". A passenger and vehicle ferry service across the River Tay operated from Craigie Pier, Dundee, to Newport-on-Tay. The bridge was opened formally on 18 August 1966, by the Queen Mother, and the bridge authorities organised a day of free events on Sunday 21 August 2016 to celebrate the occasion.
Originally the bridge was originally a bidirectional toll road with the original 1966 toll for motorcycles, cars and goods vehicles of 1/-, 2/6 and 10/-, respectively. On 31 May 2007, the Scottish Parliament voted to scrap tolls on all bridges in Scotland.
I often used to cross the River Tay using the ferry from Newport Fife to Dundee, and remember cart horses pulling trailers piled up with jute on the quayside in the 40s and early 50s. It's all different now. One of the ferries was a paddle steamer. I remember my dad taking me to look at the large pistons which worked the engine on one of the ferries, possibly the paddle steamer.
Behind the obelisk is Dundee's V&A museum, and it's possible to see the rail bridge in the far distance.
The Tay Road Bridge was built to replace the former Tay ferry service, popularly known in Dundee as "the Fifie". A passenger and vehicle ferry service across the River Tay operated from Craigie Pier, Dundee, to Newport-on-Tay. The bridge was opened formally on 18 August 1966, by the Queen Mother, and the bridge authorities organised a day of free events on Sunday 21 August 2016 to celebrate the occasion.
Originally the bridge was originally a bidirectional toll road with the original 1966 toll for motorcycles, cars and goods vehicles of 1/-, 2/6 and 10/-, respectively. On 31 May 2007, the Scottish Parliament voted to scrap tolls on all bridges in Scotland.
I often used to cross the River Tay using the ferry from Newport Fife to Dundee, and remember cart horses pulling trailers piled up with jute on the quayside in the 40s and early 50s. It's all different now. One of the ferries was a paddle steamer. I remember my dad taking me to look at the large pistons which worked the engine on one of the ferries, possibly the paddle steamer.
Behind the obelisk is Dundee's V&A museum, and it's possible to see the rail bridge in the far distance.
Dimas Sequeira, Annemarie, LotharW, Don Sutherland and 15 other people have particularly liked this photo
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HFF et agréable fin de semaine paisible et salutaire.
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