Taken on Feb 2nd 2008 On lower part of Mam Tor, Near Castleton. Derbyshire.
Taken Between Calver & Froggatt Derbyshire.UK
Thorpe Cloud, Peak District, Derbys. dovedale tree trees
Best Viewed Large. / View of Ladybower Dam, Derbyshire, UK.
Oink is a buffalo who is 15 years old. He lives in Derbyshire about 4 miles from me and he’s a beautiful boy! Sadly, some thugs have been cruel to him, adding washing up liquid to his water, putting mustard on his food, throwing bricks at him, whipping him with fishing rods and setting fire to his hay! My images do not belong in the public domain. Copying, altering, displaying or redistribution of any of my images without written permission is strictly prohibited. All images and writing are © Luci Mahon. All rights reserved.
A nice cozy Hobbit Hole
A waterfall on Beeley Moor in Derbyshire.
The Royal Pioneer is the steam train that runs on Peak Rail near to where I live in Derbyshire.
All along the river Dove in the Derbyshire Peak District, there are these small water falls. Instead of taking the whole scene as usual, I decided to zoom in and take just the stream of water flowing over the shallow edge. What I got was this wonderful effect.
On one of my many rambles through the Peak District of Derbyshire, I came across this old barn in a field just above Matlock Bath. I love the feel of the old stone. This barn has been standing here for almost 200 years. Canon EOS-1Ds Mark ll, 28-300mm zoom / f/5.6, shutter 1/100, ISO 160, exposure bias -.67
These amazing weathered stones can be found on the edge of Kinder Scout, Derbyshire, Peak District National Park. Featured in the Your Magic Place group JAN 2009.
I love how the water flows along the river Dove in Derbyshire’s Peak District, over the stones and logs that have fallen in and disrupted the smooth stream. I love the colour of the water here and the autumn leaves floating down stream. Canon EOS-1Ds Mark ll, 28-300mm IS Zoom, f/5.6, shutter 1/8, ISO 200 / Cokin graduated grey ND filter 121
Sun rays bursting through some woodland.
Winter Scene Taken From Rushup Edge / Derbyshire Peak District.UK
Canon EOS 400D / Tokina AT-X 12-24 F4 / Snail sculpture @ Chesterfield Station, Derbyshire
Near to where i lived in Eyam, Derbyshire, is the small village of Stoney Middleton. It is a lovely little village situated between cliffs and woods. At one end of the village boundaries is this lovely old house called Rock View Cottage which dates back nearly 300 years. So picturesque with the smoke coming from the chimney. It is a sad note to add that this cottage was pulled down last year and no longer stand at the entrance of the village. For me, it is an icon of Stoney Middleton gone forever. Now all i have is this photo! Please enjoy. HP Photosmart C850 bridge camera / f/2.8 / 1/800 / ISO 160
I took this photo a few years ago on my little Canon A60 Powershot only 2. mega pixels, But thought it was not a bad shot & decided to post it. I think the pic looks better viewed in large mode.:-) London Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) Princess Coronation Class 6233 Duchess of Sutherland is a preserved steam locomotive. 6233 was outshopped in July 1938 from Crewe Works and was part of the third batch of her class. These were unstreamlined, painted in LMS standard crimson lake livery and had a single chimney and no smoke deflectors and an estimated cost of £13,800 each. Service. 6233 was initially allocated to Camden, London. She acquired a double chimney in March 1941 and because of drifting smoke acquired smoke deflectors in September 1945 before being painted in postwar LMS black livery in September 1946. With the creation of British Railways on 1st January 1948 she was allocated to Crewe North depot. She was given her BR number 46233 in October 1948 and repainted in BR Brunswick green livery in 1952 or early 1953. In June 1958 she was allocated to Carlisle Upperby before eventually being withdrawn from Edge Hill depot in February 1964. Preservation. Following her withdrawal from service she was acquired by Butlins Heads-of-Ayr holiday camp, Scotland in October 1964. Later moved to Bressingham Steam Museum she was subsequently acquired by The Princess Royal Class Locomotive Trust and restored to working order at the Midland Railway Butterley. To allow her to run on the mainline in preservation she has been fitted with Train Protection & Warning System (TPWS) and on-train monitoring recorder (OTMR) equipment, alongside the BR fitted Automatic Warning System (AWS). Royal Train. On 11 June 2002, the restored Duchess was the first steam locomotive to haul the Royal Train for 35 years, transporting Queen Elizabeth II on a tour to North Wales, from Holyhead to Llandudno Junction, as part of her Golden Jubilee. The trip also marked the 160th anniversary of the first Royal train in 1842. On 22nd March 2005 the Duchess again hauled the Royal Train, the second time for a steam locomotive in 40 years, transporting The Prince of Wales from Settle to Carlisle over the Settle-Carlisle Railway. The trip marked the 25th anniversary of the formation of the ‘Friends of the Settle and Carlisle’ pressure group. On the trip, the Prince spent a 15 minute spell behind the controls of 6233. INFO Link below. / http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LMS_Princess_Coronation_Class_6233_Duchess_of_Sutherland
Mute Swan (Cygnus olor) in Derbyshire. Taken 5th April 2009.
A Magic Place For Me Is The Midland Railway Centre As I Love Old Steam Trains!! / 73129 History. / Photo Take At Butterley Midland Railway Centre.Derbyshire. / British Railways standard class 5 No. 73129 is a preserved British steam locomotive. It is the only surviving Standard Class 5 built by British Railways which was fitted with Caprotti valve gear. 73129 was outshopped from Derby Works in August 1956. It was one of 30 built fitted with Caprotti valve gear. Originally allocated at Shrewsbury Shed (which required the fitting of GWR style lamp brackets), it was later transferred to Patricroft Shed (near Manchester) in 1958. It spent the rest of its working life there until it was stored at Patricroft from June to November 1967. It was officially withdrawn from traffic on 2 December 1967. During 73129’s working life, it covered roughly 198,359 miles – the majority in 1957 with 35,814 miles that year. Restoration was started at The Midland Railway Centre Butterley Derbyshire on a limited scale on 73129 shortly after it arrived there in 1975 although work began to tail off in around 1985. Another small attempt to restart the restoration was tried in 1992 although minimal work was carried out due to lack of financial and human resources. In late 1993, restoration began in earnest. This took over a decade. The first fire in 73129’s firebox since 1967 was lit at 3.25pm on the 22nd February 2004. Steam locomotives 92214, 80098, 47357 and Peckett 1163 “Whitehead” were all in attendace, all whistling when smoke first appeared from 73129’s chimney. /
Just thought I would try the 3 shires head shot as an HDR image.Three Shire Heads is a point where four packhorse routes meet. There is a fabulous high-arched stone packhorse bridge beside which is Panniers Pool where the little ponies with their heavy panniers or saddlebags would have been allowed to drink. / Taken with my D300 and 10-20 Sigma lens ND 0.6 filter on tripod 2 seconds at f22, then processed in Capture One and NX2. Then HDR’d the image in Dynamic Photo.
Three Shires Head is situated at grid reference 010686 on the border of Cheshire, Staffordshire and Derbyshire. Nikon D80 – Sigma 10-20mm lens – ND4 grad Featured in the NIkon D80 Users Group JUNE 2009.
Young Ram portrait / Captured on moors at the Snake Pass Derbyshire UK
On my recent trip to Derbyshire with my friend Ted, we spent the last part of our final day at Monsal Dale, photographing the beautiful scenery along the river Wye which flows through the beautiful valley. Some way down from aqueduct is this beautiful Weir. The falls look so refreshing, and the lush green plants that grow in the centre and along the side display the kind of life and vegetation that the river boasts all along it’s shores. As the sun was setting and the rain seemed to be moving in, I wanted to capture this beautiful scene before it was too late. I used my Coking system and filters in order to get the soft water effect. Canon EOS-1Ds Mark ll / 28-300mm IS zoom lens / f/29 / 2 seconds / ISO 100 / Cokin Filter System: ND 8 filter, ND graduated filters (120, 121) / Minor tone adjustments were made using Photoshop CS 2 / /
Shot on a recent meet up with fellow bubbler Bradley shawn Rabon in the lovely peak district national park and Derwent reservoirs / Derwent Reservoir is the middle of three reservoirs in the Upper Derwent Valley in the north east of Derbyshire, England. The River Derwent flows first through Howden Reservoir, then Derwent Reservoir and finally through Ladybower Reservoir. Between them they provide practically all of Derbyshire’s water, as well as to a large part of South Yorkshire’s and as far afield as Nottingham and Leicester. / Derwent Reservoir is around 1.5 mi (2 km) in length, running broadly north-south, with Howden Dam at the northern end and Derwent Dam at the south. A small island lies near the Howden Dam. The Abbey Brook flows into the reservoir from the east. / At its peak the reservoir covers an area of 70.8 hectares (175 acres) and at its deepest point is 34.7 metres deep. / Shot with a Nikon D300 and 18-70mm lens / f8 / 1/80 sec / ISO 100 /
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