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A low sun lights up Sadler's Wood near Stokenchurch, South Oxfordshire.
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More from Sadler's Wood and one of my first panoramas using the new stitching function in Lightroom 6. Didn't do a bad job and easy to use. You may recognise some of the trees from an earlier shot, this was just from a different angle.
A venture out into pastures new found me driving past this wood and spotted the bluebells carpeting the woodland floor. Shortly after finishing here, the heavens opened! Came away with some nice images though so expect to see some more.
One of Derby’s Georgian built streets in the Cathedral Quarter, this used to be a vibrant shopping area but since the Westfield/INTU Shopping Mall was built footfall has all but vanished.
I make a point of purchasing most of my camera gear from London Camera Exchange which is just discernible on the rhs about halfway up (count 5 shopfronts).
Some of the properties go back to 1675
This was taken on my birthday last year and given a touch of Luminar 4 ... HSS!
Derby Café culture getting back to some kind of normal.
This is Sadler Gate in the Cathedral Quarter.
It’s a bit out of my comfort zone and Derby folk aren’t noted for their tolerance of photo intrusion, but heigh ho, they say you don’t feel the second or third punch anyway. 😄
Back in Romsey, Liz took me for a walk to this great viewpoint at Sadler's Mill and Salmon Leap.
The Causeway is the private road beside the River Test joining Middlebridge to Sadlers Mill. It is also a public footpath which provides for one of Romsey’s favourite walks, forming part of a convenient circular route from central Romsey.
This walk includes Middlebridge Street and after Sadlers Mill, passes the Memorial Park and then onto The Abbey. Thus it incorporates many attractive places in the old town.
Before the flow of water through Romsey was altered, salmon would leap up the mill race on their journey up the Test to their spawning grounds. Sadly for the many people who flocked to see them each autumn, they now take a different route and this popular attraction is no more.
A worn looking Santa Fe Warbonnet leads BNSF Train M KCMKCK1 27A past the CB&Q Searchlights at West Sadler on the BNSF St. Joseph Sub. en route to Kansas City from the line's namesake city.
This job originates out BNSF Murray Yard in North Kansas City, MO and runs to St. Joseph, then terminates at Argentine Yard in Kansas City, KS and commonly gets a "shuttle set" of local/transfer power based in the city.
Locomotives: BNSF 659, BNSF 6186
2-28-20
Sadler, MO
The Norfolk Southern Erie Heritage Locomotive leads BNSF Train E MHKATM 005A out of the siding after meeting an Iatan Load at Sadler on the BNSF St. Joseph Sub. West Sadler is still home to a full set of CB&Q Searchlight Signals, but the disturbed ground and survey markings seem to indicate their tenure is about to come to an end.
This was the first time I'd shot this engine in almost 6 years. It's strange how some of the NS Heritage Units frequent KC, and others have made only a handful of appearances over the past 8 years.
Locomotives: NS 1068, BNSF 9231, BNSF 6214, BNSF 9189
7-31-20
Sadler, MO
A pair of Ex-BN SD60Ms, one still green and one repainted, lead BNSF train M-KCMKCM1-27A past one of several remaining CB&Q searchlight signals at Sadler on the BNSF St. Joseph Sub. Some afternoon thunderstorms with very heavy downpours were just beginning to move out of the area.
This is a turn job that runs from BNSF's Murray Yard in North Kansas City, MO to St. Joseph, MO and returns. 9/28/19.
While walking near Bishop's Castle (Jan 2025). Sadler's Big Wood ahead, the Shropshire Hills in the distance.
An Ex-Western Pacific GP40-2 leads UP Train MKCSJ 22 past West Sadler and catches a sucker hole on the BNSF St. Joseph Sub. on its way from Kansas City to St. Joe with a manifest freight. Trailing it is 1 of the 3 remaining C40-8's on the UP roster. 9990 is one of about a half dozen remaining units with Missouri Pacific style "North Little Rock" or "Jenks" font lettering.
The GP40-2 was built in 1-1980 as WP 3556 with a builder and frame number of 786277-7. It became UP 911 on 1-7-1986 with Mo-Pac style North Little Rock font lettering. On 9-19-2002 it was renumbered to 9990.
Locomotives: UP 9990, UP 9152
6-22-18
Sadler, MO
A pair of Dash 8's, an Ex-LMSX C40-8W lettered for the IC and a C40-8M "Cowl", are accompanied by an SD70M-2 as they lead BNSF train G-SIOEAP5-08A past the CB&Q searchlight signal at East Halls on the BNSF St. Joseph Sub. The train got held up here on the main for some time due to some sticking brakes on a couple cars deep within the train. The Trainmaster is couple grade crossings down the line giving the train a roll by after assisting the crew.
These former CB&Q searchlight signals certainly aren't long for this world, as all the newer PTC-compliant signals have been installed at Waldron, Leavenworth, Sadler and Armour, including the last Q cantilever which wast at East Armour.
The G-SIOEAP5 was interchanged from the CN at Sioux City, IA, and they have sported some fairly eclectic consists over the past year. It was overcast and extremely cold today, but the chances of shooting a blue IC Dash 8 leading around these parts isn't something to pass up. 2/9/21.
The saddler at Blists Hill Victorian town, Shropshire. He's a proper sadler with 30 + years of experience.
Blists Hill is a fantastic day out - a real living museum.
Mere minutes before sunset, Norfolk Southern's Erie heritage locomotive leads BNSF train E-MHKATM0-05A out of the siding at West Sadler on the BNSF St. Joseph Sub after waiting on an Iatan load and another eastbound. The CB&Q searchlight signals here at West Sadler are still standing, but they're not long for this world. 7/31/20.
Having a couple of cold beers in the Old Red Lion Theatre Pub after a show at Sadler's Wells
Angel, London Borough of Islington
England, United Kingdom 20.12.2014
Nach einer Vorstellung im Sadler's Wells auf ein paar kühle Biere in den Old Red Lion Theatre Pub
Angel, London Borough of Islington
England, Vereinigtes Königreich 20.12.2014
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I am Juggalo Deadmore, a relative of the Grimaldi Deadmores of 1778.
I come from a long line of performers, some sane and some not.
My earlier ancestors regularly performed in Drury Lane and Sadler's Wells, and Charles Dickens described my great great grandfather Joseph or 'Joey' Grimaldi, in his novel The Pickwick Papers in 1836:
"His bloated body and shrunken legs-their deformity enhanced a hundredfold by the fantastic dress-
the glassy eyes, contrasting with the thick white paint with which the face was besmeared;
the grotesquely-ornamented head, trembling with paralysis,
and the long skinny hands, rubbed with white chalk- all gave him a hideous and unnatural appearance."
'Here we are again, Joey!'
Inworld name: Tigre Milena
Thank you DRD.
This beautiful barrel-shaped Sadler teapot makes a lovely container for this arrangement of mixed flowers from the summer garden. The teapot dates from the 1950's.
One of 10 GE ES44AC's honoring the BNSF Railway 25th Anniversary of the September 22, 1995 merger between Burlington Northern Railroad and the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway leads BNSF Train C CAMKCL 110A eastward on the BNSF St. Joseph Sub. at West Sadler. Far out of sight on the rear behind 134 loads of coal is DPU BNSF 9293. This train interchanges to the KCS at Kansas City for forwarding to the Evergy, formerly KCPL La Cygne, KS Power Station.
The logos of 8 predecessor railroads line the hood of the engine including CB&Q, GN, NP, BN, AT&SF, SLSF, C&S, and SP&S. This is the 3rd unit to enter regular service across the system with the anniversary lettering. This is the 6163's first round trip in revenue service on the point of a train since being released by the RELCO-Wabtec Shop in Albia, IA.
Locomotives: BNSF 6163, BNSF 8405
9-9-20
Sadler, MO
The River Test is a chalk stream in Hampshire in the south of England. It rises at Ashe near Basingstoke and flows southwards for 40 miles (64 km) to Southampton Water. Settlements on the Test include the towns of Stockbridge and Romsey. Below the village of Longparish, the river is broadly followed by the Test Way, a long-distance footpath.
Much of the Test is a 438-hectare (1,080-acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest. It is part of the Solent and Southampton Water Ramsar site and Special Protection Area. The river is used for fly fishing for trout from its source to its tidal limit.
The river rises near the village of Ashe, 7 miles (11 km) to the west of Basingstoke (at grid reference SU 532,498), and flows west through the villages of Overton, Laverstoke, and the town of Whitchurch, before joining with the Bourne Rivulet at Testbourne and turning in a more southerly direction. It then proceeds through the villages of Longparish and Middleton to Wherwell and Chilbolton, where the Rivers Dever and Anton join.
From Chilbolton the river goes through the villages of Leckford, Longstock, Stockbridge and Houghton to Mottisfont and Kimbridge, where the River Dun joins the flow. From here the village of Timsbury is passed, then through the grounds of Roke Manor before reaching the town of Romsey. On the western edge of Romsey, Sadler's Mill, an 18th-century watermill, sits astride the River Test.
South of Romsey, the river passes the country house of Broadlands, and then Nursling, once the site of a Roman bridge. Finally the river is joined by the River Blackwater and soon becomes tidal, widening out into a considerable estuary that is lined on its northern bank by the container terminals and quays of the Port of Southampton. The Test estuary then meets that of the River Itchen and the two continue to the sea as Southampton Water.
800 years of history, Overton was a 'church’ manor from at least King Alfred’s time. His successor, Edward the Elder, in 909 confirmed a previous Crown grant of Overton to the bishop in Winchester. But we know tantalisingly little about any place of worship in Saxon times on the present site of St Mary’s, Overton.
The origins of the church building are from the late Norman period in architecture. Although only the nave pillars remain of the original church, there is a record that in 1180 it had a nave of three bays. The old church probably had narrow aisles and a small chancel.
Strictly Come Dancing Star Katya Jones ~ Somnium ~ Sadler's Wells - London ~ Thursday June 20th 2019.
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So I got to meet the gorgeous Strictly Come Dancing star Katya Jones & her husband Neil last night at the premier of their new dance show "Somnium" We got to meet the couple before the show started & had a pre show photo session & Q&A which was awesome..:)
Have a great Friday Y'all..:)
Located in Derby’s once vibrant Sadler Gate - the building of the soulless shopping mall that is the Derbion has decimated the footfall here. I do my best to use these shops…well, mainly the London Camera Exchange…again, I think I may have a problem ;D. Anyways this is the Old Bell Hotel, renovated some years ago and an old haunt of mine back in the 70s.
©Jane Brown2014 All Rights Reserved. This image is not available for use on websites, blogs or other media without explicit written permission
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the performance of Pina Bausch's 1980 last night at Sadler's Wells was remarkable in every way. A standing ovation.
I hope to catch up with everyone soon . . .
A break from the colour and a scene I think works rather well in black and white. The sway in the tree trunks caught my eye, as they gracefully move through the bluebells at their feet. The colour version, to me, detracted from the implied motion before me.
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Independent retailers in this historically rich street are financially hanging on in defiance to the monolithic Intu shopping
The whole street contains buildings originating in the 16th and 17th Centuries, refaced in the 18th and 19th Centuries. It is a pleasant quiet street of shops, small wine bars and pubs.
It holds Derby’s oldest coaching inn, and in a quiet corner called Blacksmith’s Yard you will find BMP selling vinyl records in a 16th Century Yeoman's house.
Shot at Stratford-upon-Avon to the left of shot you can see Lucy's Mill Weir.There is mention of a mill at Stratford as far back as 1086 AD.It was said to be worth 10 shillings and 1,000 eels.In Shakespeare time it was owned by a John Sadler landlord of The Bear public house .The mill changes hands over the centuries until we get to the end of the 18th century when they were purchased by William Oldaker of Stratford,at this time there was a flour mill and an oil mill on site.He sold the whole premises to the Weirs namesakes the Lucy family.The Lucy's pulled down the oil mill and built another flour mill in 1819.With the development of the river and canal for transport of goods the mill became very prosperous ,but the lucy's lost a lot of their money supplying flour to the Southern States in the American Civil War.The mills are now owned by a limited Company but are still known as The Lucy Mills.......as for the Colin P Witter i can find no info on this person ....if you have any info on this man i would love to see it .......thanks ......the church spire you can see behind the trees is the Holy Trinity Church .....the burial place of William Shakespeare
This is Sadler's or deer oak (Quercus sadleriani): This one grew from an acorn, and is living in Seattle, far from its native northern California and southern Oregon. It’s about 3 feet high, and gives us acorns…or rather gives the squirrels acorns. It can grow to 10 feet high The inset photo is the female flowers.
©Jane Brown2014 All Rights Reserved. This image is not available for use on websites, blogs or other media without explicit written permission
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the weather for our trip to the Cotswolds yesterday was idyllic - which was marvellous for us as we were overseeing substantial furniture removal from the cottage for auction. Caroline came over to help and the day went well, but . . . it was so cold inside the cottage with the doors open. Glad there had been no need to stay overnight and we were able to come back to our home and warmth.
My Valentine's treat is a visit to Sadler's Wells to see Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch: 1980. Oh lucky me!
Will catch up at the weekend . . .
Built 1936-8, this was where the Metropolitan Water Board tested the water quality from the New River.
The New River is an artificial waterway, opened in 1613, which to this day brings fresh water from Hertfordshire all the way down to this point, at Sadler's Wells, Islington.
The Old Bell Hotel, Derby, Derbyshire, United Kingdom, is one of Derby's oldest and largest coaching inns and is situated in the historic street of Sadler Gate. Built in 1650, The Old Bell Hotel is located in Derby's Cathedral Quarter and is a Grade II listed building in the Derby City Statutory List, Buildings of Special Architecture or Historic Interest. Much of the building has been altered and restored but most of the original building can still be seen from the street consisting of a timber frame building of four storeys, the top being four gables, each with one window. Over the years The Old Bell Hotel has been used as a coaching inn, hotel, bar, restaurant, doctor’s surgery, courtroom, gaol and other functions.
©Jane Brown2014 All Rights Reserved. This image is not available for use on websites, blogs or other media without explicit written permission
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just a quick posting and catching up with all your kind invitations to groups while taking a break from packing. The problem with going away in the UK is the weather - it is seldom consistently one thing or another. Rain? maybe. Hot? maybe. Cool? maybe. Windy? maybe . . . and then of course we're staying in an apartment - what will be there, and what won't be there!
so this afternoon we're off to east London, taking Abby and Elsie out for an early supper and off to Sadler's Wells to see a modern Dutch ballet company. Tomorrow morning we are off to St Ives in north Cornwall - it will be our 40th wedding anniversary on Sunday. We went to St Ives to celebrate our 25th anniversary and loved the place, so I'm really looking forward to going back with my camera . . . back soon .. . .
The one and only bucket hat worn by a dancer at 'Breakin Convention.' 2022
Sadler’s Wells’ annual festival of hip hop dance theatre was back for it's 19th year. Platforming cutting-edge street dance, rooted in the streets and represented on stage, from around the world and around the corner. It is curated and hosted by hip hop theatre pioneer, Jonzi D.
©Kings Davis 2022
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From Mendoza, Argentina - Loads of sweet fruit flavors and a bit of smoky oak make it rich and easy drinking. This one's a keeper to sip all summer long. Made by Opi Sadler, of the La Mascota Winery.
The southern part of Northgate Street, the Roman main road of the city.
Black and White Revival architecture built at various times and by different architects in the early 1900s.
They are a mixture of new builds and the restructuring of existing buildings that formed a medieval row reached by steps, but not as high as the usual first storey rows of the city. A number sit above medieval undercrofts, some of which may contain earlier Roman work.
The buildings incorporate some wonderful wood carvings and figurines, those on the ground floor pillars are depicted in Elizabethan dress.
Below is a photo pre 1900 of the row before it was largely rebuilt.
Something dropped in Sadler's Wells for the upcoming Breakin' Convention event, celebrating 20 years...first piece in London this year!