#countryside

mkwadee@diasp.eu

Beware, this is going to be a long post...

My standard longer #bike ride is a 30 km round trip to #Starcross, which is #village on the west coast of the #ExeEstuary on the way to #Dawlish. The ride is motor-traffic-free for a goo 80% of the distance. It's also through a lot of #countryside and it's my intention to photograph some of the #trees through all the seasons. However, this set contains a little more for your edification.

Not all trees are alive. For example, this one is a hulk of what was once probably a magnificent specimen.
Dead tree

Most #FarmFields have been replanted after harvesting and even now, shoots are appearing. Meanwhile most #Trees still have their #Foliage.
Green shoots in a field

The #plants and #insects that feed off them are also a food source for these male and female #pheasants.
Pheasants feeding in a field

The village of #Starcross is small but it happens to have a #RailwayStation on the line from #LondonPaddington and #Penzance, though the #IntercityTrains don't usually stop there. This is the last part of the journey for me before I turn and head back homewards at the station itself.
Starcross and its train station

Here is an #IntercityTrain passing. It is run by #GWR or #GreatWesternRailways, which was a company in existence before nationalization and which came back after privatization.
Train passing the cyclepath

Starting to head back, you can get a good view of the other side of the #Estuary, where the #town of #Exmouth can be seen. There happens to be a nice ferry trip on which you can take your #bike between #Starcross and #Exmouth
Exmouth as seen from Starcross

The #ExeEstuary has a few #wrecks in it. I presume they are #NavigationHazards but I guess it would prove too expensive to clear the #waterway. Perhaps they provide a #habitat for #MarineLife. Here you can see #Birds (I can't tell whether they are #Cormorants of #Shags).
Birds perching on a shipwreck
Bird perching on a shipwreck

Next, we come to #PowderhamCastle, which is now a #NationalTrust property. It has a herd of #deer numbering in the hundreds.
Male deer sitting in a field
Male and female deer in a fileld
Dozens of deer in a field

The mild #autumn #Sun is seen shining through this #tree's #branches.
Tree with sunlight shining through it

More #trees in the grounds of #PowderhamCastle.
Trees in a field
Trees in a field
Trees in a field

At first glance, this may look like a dead #tree but you can see that parts of it still has #foliage.
Tree with dead and living parts

This #tree, on the other hand, looks completely dead.
Dead tree

This #Pheasant is eyeing the #photographer warily.
Pheasant in a field

This #cycle #bridge was installed not much longer than a decade ago. It makes traversing the #RailwayLine easy. I think there was a #footbridge before this but I'm not sure. A nice addition to #cycling #infrastructure.
Bridge over a main railway line

From the top of the #bridge, you can see the #barracks of the #RoyalMarines in #Lympstone. Technically, this #photograph is a #Selfie too.
Royal Marine Barracks

Getting closer to home now, here is the #M5 #Motorway which links #London to #Exeter. This #concrete #viaduct goes over the #Estuary, thankfully leaving much it intact.
M5 over the Exe Estuary

Some parts around the #Cyclepath form natural ponds.
Pond in a meadow

Any #journey of moderate length or longer often leaves one #reflecting. Here, you can let the scenery do it.
Trees reflecting in the canal
Panorama of trees reflecting in the Exeter canal

This #swan was preening on the #ExeterCanal (and so was its #reflection).
Preening swan and reflection

Lastly, this is the #bridge over the #RiverExe, which is a sign that my home is a mere 5 km away. A sight that is always welcome. The bridge is old but it a #cyclepath was constructed as an extension to it on the far side, which blends in very nicely with the existing #masonry.
Masonry arch bridge over the River Exe

#MyWork #MyPhoto #CCBYSA #DSLR #Nikon #D7000 #Autumn

psychmesu@diaspora.glasswings.com

https://mastodonapp.uk/@davidallan/113375040362141063 davidallan@mastodonapp.uk - On the night we bid farewell to British Summer Time (clocks back an hour at 2am), headed up to the Copt Hill above Houghton-le-Spring in North East England to capture this evening's sunset.
As so often happens, a low bank of cloud to the west hid any dramatic light show, but it was still worth the effort.

#england #countryside #landscape #sunset #autumn #photography

mkwadee@diasp.eu

As it's a #BankHoliday #weekend, we went on a hike on #Dartmoor. I planned it to be a visit to somewhere I hadn't been before but starting off from a familiar location. In total, the excursion was 18 km of walking and took the best part of 6 hours with all the stops and breaks. As anyone who has walked here before knows, it's not to be done without preparation and having a good #map and #compass with you is vital. Mobile phone reception is patchy at best and so I rely on a paper map and the tried-and-tested method of #DeadReckoning. Essentials include a pair of good quality #WalkingBoots, #WaterProof clothing available and you should always prepare to be colder than you would be in town. As the terrain is quite rough and the vegetation can be thorny along with the presence of insects, #Shorts are not recommended unless you're happy to have grazes and bites by the end of the trip. The elevation is between 400-500 m above sea level and it is one of the wettest places in #England. It is also exposed to high winds.

The start of the journey was easy enough, just a short climb up to a #Cairn.
View looking south from the start of journey on Dartmoor
A cairn on Dartmoor

Until you join a #path or #bridleway, you have to negotiate #gorse which, if you're not careful, could easily mean a twisted ankle. However, the wild #flowers are very colourful. You can also see part of #FernworthyForest in the background, which is where we were headed.
Irregular terrain with forest in mid-ground
Gorse and flowers around a bridleway

On the way to our first target, there were some #Neolithic artefacts such as these #StandingStones. There are some wild #DartmoorPonies in the background and I took a zoomed-in image of one of the ponies -- it's best not to get too close to them.
Standing Stones
White Dartmoor pony feeding

The first destination on the itinerary was #FernworthyReservoir. It has a #MasonryDam, which is not a common form of #Dam, most being concrete or earth (embankment) dams in the #UK. There is a another one in Dartmoor and so I'm guessing there was a trend to build such types at the beginning of the twentieth century, which is when I happen to know the other one was built. Neither the dam nor the #reservoir are very big but they do provide water for nearby populations.
Detail of masonry dam
Detail of vegetation in the foreground of dam

The surface of the reservoir was quite choppy owing to the windy conditions. Also, the level was near the maximum and right up to spillway at the centre of the dam.
Choppy surface of Fernworthy Reservoir
Spillway of Fernworthy Dam
Shore of Fernworthy Reservoir

Fernworthy Forest is a #conifer forest, which I think is not natural, rather being there to provide timber. There are many track through it but none are marked and so the only way to find out which way you're going is to use a compass. I was uncertain of my precise location after a while but I knew that if we kept heading in a westerly direction, we'd eventually get to the other side.
Bases of coniferous trees
Tops of coniferous trees
Densely packed trees
Details of tree foliage

Once out of the forest, it was a matter of heading south towards the main road. The weather forecast was spot on and it started to rain right on cue. Once over a rise, eventually we found a bridleway down.
Western edge of Fernworthy Forest
View south

Once we passed this #StoneCircle, I knew we were on the right track as it's marked on the #OSMap. The journey from there was quite straightforward, although still another 5-6 km to go.
Stone circle
Ferns on valley side

The last leg of the journey was on a main road, without a separate footpath but just before getting onto that, I looked at the path we'd taken and also to the other side of Dartmoor.
Looking back on the path from the forest
A panorama of Dartmoor

#MyWork #MyPhoto #CCBYSA #DSLR #Nikon #D7000 #Summer #Countryside #Moorland

mlansbury@despora.de

Countryside access curbs in England ‘cost 6 times’ Scotland’s right to roam

In England, only 8% of the countryside is open for walking, picnicking and other outdoor activities. This includes footpaths, the coastal path, mountains, moors, heaths and downs. In Scotland, all of the countryside is open for access as long as guidelines are followed such as leaving no trace and not harming farmland.

Data shows implementing policy that closes 92% of English countryside cost £69m over five years

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/article/2024/jun/06/englands-restrictive-rural-access-rules-cost-six-times-that-of-scotlands-figures-show

#Scotland #England #nature #countryside #RightToRoam #walking #exercise

mkwadee@diasp.eu

Yesterday, we went on a day trip to #Oxford by #train. No other means of powered transport was used as we #cycled to and from our local #RailwayStation.

Here is the #countryside zooming past the train window.
Blurred image of trees

It was a nice day to be out and the city has its own distinctive #architecture, much dominated by the UniversityOfOxford.
A building of the University of Oxford

Some of the centre is a zero-emission zone or #ZEZ, aimed at curbing the use of polluting vehicles. Such vehicle owners need to pay to use roads in that area.
A street with a ZEZ sign

Here I am walking up a street with some nice buildings in the background.
Me walking up a quiet street

The view of a church from across some botanical gardens.
Church tower behind some gardens

The entrance to those gardens.
Entrance to botanical gardens

The #SheldonianTheatre. This is where the degree ceremonies take place.
The Sheldonian Theatre

Oxford #TownHall is in a similar style to other buildings in the city.
Oxford Town Hall

I'm not sure what this building is but I don't think it's part of the university.
A building in the centre of Oxford

#MyWork #MyPhoto #CCBYSA #Android #Spring #UK #England

psych@diasp.org

Lacock, Wiltshire

And now for something different: Harry Potter country in the English countryside. This is the tiny and picturesque village of Lacock, with its several taverns, abbey, hunting lodge, and stores.

Here at 'The George' (Wadworth) Inn there are some photos of the making of "Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince" just outside on these streets, and down the lanes of old stone houses and pubs.

Inside the tavern there is an unusual heirloom - I'm just reporting it! Not my doing! - which is a "dog wheel". Seemingly the height of cruelty looking at it now, but it was... real. A dog ran like a hamster in a wheel, which through pulleys turned a rotisserie which was attached. Photo included. Beer extra. (I have a video of this working, sans dog, by request!) Other than this.... sweet sweet village.

#Lacock #Wiltshire #MyPhotos #UK #England #HarryPotter #GeorgeInn #RedLion #countryside #Fenfotos

wist@diasp.org

A quotation by Krutch, Joseph Wood

Children can be taken occasionally to the country to see what the sun looks like as they are taken now to see a hill or a mountain. Probably many of them will not want to go anyway, for the country will be to them only what it was to the London club man: “A damp sort of place where all sorts of birds fly about uncooked.”

Joseph Wood Krutch (1893-1970) American educator, writer, critic, naturalist

The Twelve Seasons, “June” (1949)

#quote #quotation #birds #city #countryside

More notes and sourcing on WIST: https://wist.info/krutch-joseph-wood/53305/