Geograph IrelandLatest Images by MDS
https://www.geograph.ie/
2024-03-29T02:25:53+00:00text/html2007-03-06T13:24:45+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS51.477532 -2.758500ST4775 : Grid
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/355439
text/html2007-03-05T11:33:32+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS51.477713 -2.758359ST4775 : Storm flow
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/354273
text/html2007-03-05T09:22:07+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS51.488829 -2.777267ST4676 : Scots Pine, Somerset
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/354238
text/html2007-03-05T09:08:53+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS51.483261 -2.762483ST4776 : Ye Ald Mud of Levels
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/354233
The next phase in the burial of The Bear Inn Motel, The Somerset Levels explaining their full capacity for becoming mired in bog. Beneath this Scene of England rests a new sewer run, of concrete ring sections. A Welsh furniture store wished this, One Time;
there is no furniture in Portishead these days and the old part behind Challicom the new suppliers went half way out to Yatton, where a van drove into the rhyne ditch full of water; I presume it to be a yearning to return to the native farmland. Try ploughing this for profit.text/html2007-02-28T15:51:04+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS50.724428 -2.932571SY3492 : Tidal River Curve
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/349800
Opposite to the Stream photograph, The Lyme Regis outlet for the River Lim meanders around the gravel of the part retained beach, to the east of this is a rock block wave break, to the back is the street contained deep trench. What happens when tide and waves, river flood and town drainage meet here? A super hydraulic feature for flow and beach motion analysis. How stable? Another photograph may reveal this. text/html2007-02-28T15:43:56+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS50.725230 -2.933437SY3492 : Stream Lyme Regis
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/349793
The river flowing through the many slips and clay, sands of Lyme Regis, recently pinned by Geotechnical Engineering after the large landslides and coastal erosion events winds past the foundation of buildings in the central area. Plus duck. text/html2007-02-28T15:27:03+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS56.576747 -3.364665NO1643 : Feathers Highland Chief
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/349778
Photograph by Elinor Susan Stagg of Eagle Owl at Blairgowrie, Roy Dennis states on Television programme that these are being brought through in care and released in Sweden, a programme well worth observing. Elinor took a liking to one and it was definitely a softie.I think Laurence Blair Oliphant has the advantage in bedecked beard !, but then there was much in the way of excellent dress and equipment at this event. A superb wood carver and furniture maker was exhibiting, a leaf of elm cut both ways to make the pattern of leaf veins. Sheep, lambs, seem to be able to keep this predator in order, making superb pictures, but then I had my moments facing down Welsh sheep, it depends how stubborn they become when sitting on Brian Davies' soil thermometer and my research fence.text/html2007-02-28T15:14:14+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS56.576727 -3.366455NO1643 : Scots
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/349764
Laurence Blair Oliphant of Ardblair and Gask takes the salute for the Blairgowrie and Rattray Highland Games as Chieftain, after the early mist and rain and on a sun bright Sunday afternoon following a hard work of soggy establishment by the organizers.text/html2007-02-26T17:59:17+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS52.196085 0.122701TL4557 : Hobson's Conduit
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/348052
Many ducks, tree lined brook, Cambridge Spring budding forth.text/html2007-02-26T17:19:18+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS51.486729 -2.768446ST4676 : Architecture Congregational
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/348005
Ancient Architecture of the Congregational gone URC. This is a key junction and landmark. Man on roof with ladders laid across this slope repaired it not so long ago.text/html2007-02-26T16:58:13+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS51.478522 -2.758372ST4775 : Flood water source
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/347987
The Headwaters of the rhyne ditch. In this weather everything is a flood source and headwater to a stream ephemeral. Before 1996. text/html2007-02-26T16:35:03+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS51.475515 -2.778192ST4675 : Flood sediment
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/347972
This is the Flood of the Great Storm on the base of the Spring in Old Red Sandstone, fractured, but I am not sure when; I suspect 1995 summer or late, into autumn. It was not cold weather, just wet and people's gardens awash, or rather small rivers.text/html2007-02-26T15:58:09+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS51.485753 -2.766413ST4676 : LibLab Paddy Wack
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/347924
Is this the Library? If so I am not sure which Council is responsible.
The Politically Blue High Rise Crane hovers off the edge of Port Marine above the giant piling sheet based concrete.text/html2007-02-26T15:40:37+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS51.485834 -2.767855ST4676 : Lights Road
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/347907
The Many Lights to the Roads.
Not quite a Bruce Springsteen lyric, but getting there.
This is the famed traffic light argument.
text/html2007-02-26T12:24:15+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/10075MDS52.191593 0.122487TL4556 : Condemned Trees
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/347838
Trees at Chaucer for Chopping according to the Environment Department notice, Cambridge. Presumed diseased and dangerous? No more information available.