Geograph IrelandLatest Images by Graeme Churchard
https://www.geograph.ie/
2024-03-29T15:12:41+00:00text/html2005-07-01T15:56:30+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard50.789241 -3.681108SS8100 : Cromwell's Cutting
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/22941
Cromwell's Cutting is said to have been cut by Cromwell's soldiers to get some guns over a steep hill, OR to keep the soldiers too tired and too busy to visit the brothels and stews of Crediton. This latter may have been a calumny put about by the Royalists.text/html2005-07-01T15:43:33+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard50.764951 -3.681655SX8197 : A view to the south west from Posbury, near Crediton
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/22938
text/html2005-07-01T15:26:55+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard50.644850 -3.889529SX6684 : Fernworthy reservoir, Dartmoor
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/22933
text/html2005-05-19T19:54:10+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard57.145048 -3.827813NH8907 : The castle on the islet in Loch an Eilein
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/11093
At the foot of the Cairngorms, in the Forest of Rothiemurchustext/html2005-05-19T19:47:58+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard57.135828 -3.843883NH8806 : Old Scots Pine near Loch Gamhna
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/11092
This is part of Rothiemurchus Foresttext/html2005-05-19T19:42:37+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard57.155432 -3.729125NH9508 : Lochan nan Geadas
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/11090
This was photographed at the end of a very dry summer. Lots of mud, not very much water.text/html2005-05-19T19:34:59+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard57.653689 -4.054445NH7764 : Harvest time on the Black Isle
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/11088
View of fields and an oil exploration rig near Cromarty. Many oil exploration vessels use the Cromarty Firth for maintenance purposes.text/html2005-05-19T19:28:22+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard57.125609 -3.925976NH8305 : The River Spey at Kincraig
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/11086
text/html2005-05-19T16:52:07+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard57.684566 -2.691090NJ5866 : Shorehead, Portsoy Old Harbour
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/11048
text/html2005-05-19T16:47:31+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard57.686129 -2.747975NJ5566 : Cottage in Sandend village
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/11047
Sandend or Sennen, as it is known locally, is a tiny village on the Moray Firthtext/html2005-05-17T20:53:08+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard54.168839 -5.880016J3826 : Bloody Bridge
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/10636
This is the old bridge over the Bloody Bridge River.text/html2005-05-12T20:50:51+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard54.120842 -2.353997SD7669 : Small wood in Crummack Dale
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/9324
text/html2005-05-12T20:43:15+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard54.138841 -2.345885SD7771 : Walking across a field
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/9319
Walk this way!text/html2005-05-12T20:34:18+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard54.129854 -2.345810SD7770 : Walking in Crummack Dale
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/9311
"Head for the dead tree"text/html2005-05-12T20:24:19+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/195Graeme Churchard54.174375 -2.468737SD6975 : Thornton Force
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/9308
The falls go over a thick bed of Carboniferous Limestone. Under the limestone is Ordovician sediments. So we have a waterfall and an unconformity!