Patience
Star cluster of the Wild Garlic
Public Footpath
Pointing the way (for many a year) (1 X PiP)
Forget-me-Not
Yedmandale Road Forget-me-Not
I see you!
The Hare by the wheatfield (1 x PiP)
Yellow Close
Field of Yellow - close
Misty morning fence jewellery
Misty morning fence jewellery trio (1 x PiP)
Woodland light and shadow 2
Woodland light and shadow 1
Field of Yellow
A quite Spring morning
Spring at last.....
Spring Hawthorn encrusted with lichen
Horse Chestnut shading the Derwent
Derwent in the shade - Forge Valley - (1 x PiP)
Sycamore leaves in Spring sunlight
Moody Morning
Red
Mill Lane cottages
Bluebells by the Derwent
Spring windfall
Spring on Castlegate - East Ayton (1 x PiP)
Pretty in pink
Mature horse chestnut tree
Weir - in sunshine and in shadow
Weir Overflow
Trees by Derwent Mill
Cherry tree in full bloom - 1 x PiP
All white
Early Spring visitor
Wallflowers by a rural lane
Derwent Mill in Spring
Winter morning sun
A trio of Yagi-Uda antenna (array) at sunset
Nature reclaims
Autumn/Winter cascade
Frosted fruit (1 x PiP)
Frosted Sycamore seed cluster
First snow of winter 2023 (1 x PiP)
First snow of winter 2023
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149 visits
Wild Garlic gone wild in Seavegate Gill (1 x PiP)
The woodland in Forge Valley, and many other valleys in this area, are carpeted with wild garlic in the spring. The crop this year seems to be more abundant than ever, perhaps due to all the rain we have had over the past few months. The picture shows only a very small part of the carpet.
Beyond the fallen tree the gill becomes much more narrow, and deeper, with steep slopes ending in vertical rock walls of about 3 to 4 meters height. A footpath descends from the high ground at the top of the gill, allowing easy access from my home to this part of Forge Valley. (see PiP)
**The Yorkshire dialect word Gill or ghyll, from the Old Norse, means small narrow valley or ravine.
**Reference: www.viking.no/e/england/yorkshire_norse.htm
Beyond the fallen tree the gill becomes much more narrow, and deeper, with steep slopes ending in vertical rock walls of about 3 to 4 meters height. A footpath descends from the high ground at the top of the gill, allowing easy access from my home to this part of Forge Valley. (see PiP)
**The Yorkshire dialect word Gill or ghyll, from the Old Norse, means small narrow valley or ravine.
**Reference: www.viking.no/e/england/yorkshire_norse.htm
Holger Hagen, Ninfea, Mariagrazia Gaggero, Annemarie and 19 other people have particularly liked this photo
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