More Derby architecture
May. 12th, 2009 01:38 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
I went shopping in Derby again yesterday, and for reasons that don't need exploring at this juncture (because they're dull) I was in town about an hour before most of the shops opened, which meant I had a chance to pootle about and photograph some more of Derby's cool architecture, of which there is lots.
( May contain traces of Architecture. )
( May contain traces of Architecture. )
(no subject)
Sep. 20th, 2008 04:51 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
The forecast for today had been a good one, so we'd decided at the beginning of the week to go to Dovedale, near Ashbourne, today.
For once the weatherman got it right and it was a lovely day for walking - warm and dry but not too hot.
( Dovedale )
For once the weatherman got it right and it was a lovely day for walking - warm and dry but not too hot.
( Dovedale )
Derby Architecture
Jul. 31st, 2008 08:00 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
Not, I admit, the first thing most people are going to think of in connection with Derby. It's not like Bath, where the archtecture walks up, slaps you in the face and demands that you look at it. But there are some very nice buildings and other features in Derby. Often you have to look up to see them, because many of the best buildings have high street shops on the ground floor, but the upper storeys are often things of genuine beauty. Today I finally had the opportunity to photograph some of them and put them into this very long post.
Dial up will run away screaming from the number of pictures under the cut.
Dial up will run away screaming from the number of pictures under the cut.
Walking from England to Scotland
Jul. 14th, 2008 12:22 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
I've already posted some of this to my own LJ, but it occurred to me that the part about my walk to Scotland with some additional pictures might be a suitable post for here.
Lots of photos under the cut - will eat dial-up whole.
Lots of photos under the cut - will eat dial-up whole.
Calke Walk :-)
Mar. 28th, 2008 11:19 am![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Yesterday we went for a walk out to the nearby village of Ticknall and back via the National Trust property at Calke Abbey (They have a cafe. We're not entirely daft :-)). The start of the walk has been improved mightily by the installation of a pavement on the bit of Cockshut Lane that had previously lacked one. Normally I'm not keen on gratuitous tarmaccing, but that bit of road was quite dangerous to walk on without a pavement.
It had rained overnight, but we didn't think it would be too muddy. We were this : wrong.
If anything, the track through Robin Wood was even squelchier than last time we did this walk, though fortunately there was a diversionary path through the trees that bypassed the worst of it. Just out of Robin Wood we passed this rather splendid tree in which someone has built a treehouse :-
( Tarzan's House? )
The weather was good for most of the morning - sunshine and light winds. We made decent progress and got to Calke around twenty-five to eleven.
I was rather taken with the green iron gatepost on the way in :-
( Gates )
We didn't have to pay to go in, not having a car to park, and the nice lady on the gate told us about the lambing marquee where we could go and coo over the new lambs :-
Having duly admired the woolly babies we set off in search of tea. Just outside the cafe, which is in part of the Abbey outbuildings, I came across another piece of interesting metalwork:-
( Drainpipe )
Not bad for the stable drains!
There was a shop at the cafe and they also sold plants. I was absolutely delighted to find they had Bowles Mint, a variety that my mother has been after for years. I'm not sure why she was so keen on this particular one, but it's lovely to be able to give her something she particularly wants, there being so few things that fall into that category.
On the way home there were some lovely cheerful primroses out :-
( Flowers! )
The picture really doesn't do them justice - they were so bright and vibrant, it was lovely.
I was also amused by this fallen tree, which from the angle I saw it from looks rather like a quizzical dog's face :-
( Puppy? )
Or perhaps I'm just daft :-)