View allAll Photos Tagged boler
because, you said so ...
tumi ashbe bole shurjer aalo
molinota khuje payni
tumi ashbe bole ghashphul gulo
gaan bhule aajo jayni :)
explored
When I first saw pictures of misty woodland birches in the Peak District they were tagged "Bole Hill". After extensive searches on maps I pinpointed it to the woods at Bolehill S42 6RF and excitedly headed over there early one morning. Eager to find the bit with mill stones I headed off into the trees but quickly felt disorientated and somewhat lost when I didn't see anything that matched up with the photos. The shape of the land, the types of trees, the very ground itself, was all wrong. We had a good firk about in the dense woodland, and having asked several bewildered dog walkers where the millstones were, we found our way back to the car.(BTW one walker was quite sure he had seen mill stones, but....you always find someone keen to please). Eventually I found the right Bolehill some 26 km away! Anyhow, a miserable walk around Padley Gorge and the right Bolehill didn't turn up anything interesting today, and no surprise views.
Wisbech
Cambridgeshire
Britain's largest frozen warehouse, storing 77,000 pallets at temperatures as low as -28°C.
Bole Hill, Peak District, UK
© 2021 Paul Newcombe. Don't use without permission
A misty morning a few years ago in Bole Hill.
The Parish Church of Saint Martin
The small village of Bole is located in the Bassetlaw district of north Nottinghamshire close to the west bank of the River Trent.
The parish church is dedicated to St Martin and has a large Norman octagonal font, the church was restored in 1865 when a new south porch was added.
The left hand section of the house was a former school dating from the 17th century...to the right is the 19th century extension...an eye catching property.
Bole Hill Quarry, Peak District, UK
© 2015 Paul Newcombe. Don't use without permission.
Ever once in a while (or a Blue moon) you get a morning with the most perfect conditions. Eight years ago was one of those mornings.
I keep revisiting those RAW files and I'm currently copying all of them to the cloud. This one jumped out at me this morning and I thought it worth processing.
Having spent the last 365 in total visual isolation Tim is finally awoken by an iridescent glow coming from deep within the woods.
PDS-01169
The letters on the side say "House of Kohler" but it has a Batman insignia on the back. The people in a house on one of my walking routes have had one of these small camper trailers every year. This year they had 3 small beauties.
This photo is my 500th image uploaded to the site in 10 years. I would also like to thank everyone who has looked and appreciated my pictures.
Bole Hill, Peak District, UK
© 2015 Paul Newcombe. Don't use without permission.
Just a straightforward composition from Bolehill Quarry yesterday morning.
Located on what is now part of the Longshaw Estate in England's Peak District National Park, Bole Hill was an active quarry up until the start of the first world war. It is perhaps best known for producing the stone for the building of the nearby Howden and Derwent Dams during the 1900s.
The quarrymen worked between eight and ten hours a day, depending on the time of year and the hours of daylight. Working at the quarry must have been a dangerous life - many accidents were reported, including several young people being crushed by heavy lifting equipment or hit by runaway train carriages. When a fourteen year old named Charles was crushed by a counterbalance from a crane, the Sheffield Daily Telegraph reported on 4 July 1904 "The boy's father saw the accident and fainted at the dreadful sight."
After the quarry closed it was abandoned. Some remnants of its working days do remain, though. You can still see the broad, flat tracks where railways were laid; the steep incline leading down to the railway line just to the west of Grindleford Station was constructed to transport the rock away from the quarry, through Bamford and on up to the dams. There are also lines of unused millstones, now covered in moss, still lying where they were left over 100 years ago.
In 1954 the National Trust began to look after the site and now the quarry has become a birch wood with a bright green grass carpet. It's home to wildlife such as fly agaric fungi, pied flycatchers and woodpeckers.
Reference: www.nationaltrust.org.uk/longshaw-burbage-and-the-eastern...
6.10.2020.
DRS liveried Class 37 No 37423 leads the 09.24 Sheffield - Woodburn Junction (via Worksop, Retford and Gainsborough Central) Thursday RHTT working.
37402 was at the rear of the train.
Seen here approaching West Burton East Junction.
Mausoleum of Batthyány-Montenuovo / Batthyány-Montenuovo Mauzóleum.
Bóly
It was built between 1879 and 1894 by Carl Gangolf Kayser (1837-1895) according to the plans of an Austrian architect.
Épült 1879 és 1894 között Carl Gangolf Kayser (1837–1895) osztrák építész tervei szerint.
Taking The Dale in Wirksworth brings you to Stoney Wood and the Star Disc. Here you can see Bole Hill and, if you look into the distance, you can just see my photo inspiration vanishing :-)