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One step, just one more step, / that is the true test of faith, / to face the light and the dark, / and find a path through the web of illusions, / for in this moment, in this now, / you are the best, / you are yet to be. After a very heavy recent snowfall in North Yorkshire, this was the road between Sand Hutton and Buttercrambe, which as you can see, was just about open at this point. Converted into black and white and best viewed large
This is the view from Hutton Rudby in North Yorkshire across the valley towards the Cleveland Hills, which are slightly hidden by the incoming next snow storm. The title is a play on the streets name and the famous excuse used by the UK rain industry a few years back. Converted into a holga black and white and best viewed large. Upon this seat I will rest awhile, / The season is as it should be,so like the season, / I will be as I should, / and rest these tired limbs Featured by the kind hosts of The Benches Group
Taken at Kew Gardens. I recently sold a two-year, non-exclusive licence for this image to Lauren Hutton Cosmetics for use on the new Passport to Brazil product line. Not sure whether they will use it or not, but the money’s in the bank!
The same shot as posted earlier of Sheriff Hutton castle but converted to infrared to give emphasis to the moodiness and atmosphere of the castle against the
Hutton Sessay is a very small village about 6 miles from Thirsk North Yorkshire. 3 image processed in Photomatrix Pro3 using Detail Enhancer adjusted in CS3. Pentax K10D 18-55mm lens. DSLR. 10 June 2009
Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Red Berries Hutton-le-Hole, Yorkshire, England.
the most beautiful village on the north yorks moors
usually completely ruined by coach loads of tourists, hutton enjoys some respite from the hoards. bet the villagers are enjoying the break! not forgetting the phantom photographer MORE HERE
This is a collection for my Poppop, as he deserves to be honored for all he did during his 91 years of life. John Charles Hutton was my maternal Grandfather. Born in Pittsfield, Maine he was a Park Ranger and was the overseer of the park from a tall look out tower. He graduated form the the University in Maine in 1916. There he was a member and co-captain of both the chamionship cross country and track teams, as well as the varsity baseball teams. He completed his Master’s Degree at Temple University. During WWI, he was commissioned as an ensign in the U.S. Navy. He was sent to Europe on the U.S.S. Luckenback. Fondly known as “Chuck, Poppop, or Chicken Legs,” (well, chicken legs to me), he spent his entire professional as a teacher and a coach. He started teaching at West Chester High School from 1925 to 1929 and at Lower Merion High, located in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, from 1929 to 1963. As a U.S. History teacher he was known for his remarkable memory, often interspersing colorful stories about Maine during his lectures. His humor was contagious and his student’s loved him dearly, just as I did too. He sincerely loved and was dedicated to young people. Young at heart, he could always relate to kids at their level. I guarantee you that he kept them laughing, which is why he was so popular. For 20 years he was elected class sponser by his students. Many of Lower Merion’s finest cross country and track players of those years credited my Poppop for their development and success. During his coaching period, he proudly took his team to the PIAA Surburban Championships, twice competeting at the state meets at Penn State and also as the nationals. He was a memeber of the Pennsylvania State Education Association, the National Retired Teacher’s Association and the Military Order of World War I. Much of this history has been taken straight from Poppop’s obituary. Poppop lived to a ripe old age of 91 and kept his humor about him until his dying day. I will always be greatful to have such a wonderful, fun loving, kind and gentle spirit in my life, that remains with me to this day! To get a a good glimpse of my Poppop’s humor click here: A Tribute to a Maniac / It’s a recount of so many wonderful times that I spent with him and how he tolerated my devilish inventions and creative imagination with lots of laughs!! /
This beck starts on Spaunton Moor and runs through Hutton-le-Hole, which is situated in the North Yorks Moors National Park.
Broken by nature and an early credit crunch rather than by battle, this is the newer castle at Sheriff Hutton. The older one faces away from here down towards Bulmer and can be accessed through the church graveyard, This ruins are because one owners debts were called in after being packaged and sold on, lol does nothing really change? The guy turned up with ox and carts and took chunks of the castle away to build a lodge just outside the village. Shot in North Yorkshire.
another view of this beautiful village, in the north york moors national park.
this leads into more fords and streams, but this stream crosses the road at this small country lane xroads in a quite different manner!
a different view
Storm clouds hanging over the ruins of Sheriff Hutton Castle in North Yorkshire.
St. Chads Church, Hutton-le-Hole, North Yorkshire. / Found this little chapel type church nestling in the trees on the main road through Hutton-le-Hole. Camera: Olympus SP-570UZ
A beautiful little stream hiding amongst the North Yorkshire moors.
Hutton-le-Hole is a small village on the edge of the North Yorks Moors National Park
One of the most distinctive of all the Scottish mountains, Schiehallion forms part of the Grampians and at 3,547’ it is famed not only for its Munro (i.e. over 3,000’) status but also for forming part of the largest pieces of scientific apparatus ever used! / It was used by the Rev Neville Maskelyne, Astronomer Royal, in the mid 1770s to obtain a value for the mass of the Earth (by measuring the deflection of a plumb-bob due to the mass of the mountain). He aligned a telescope on many known stars having used a plumb-bob to level the telescope on one side of the mountain and then did the same on the other. The difference in the stars’ position then told him how much mass there was in the mountain. / All he needed now was a measurement of the volume of the mountain and this is partly why Schiehallion was chosen, it’s characteristic wedge shape made the calculations easier. However, it still needed surveying very accurately and this is where Charles Hutton came in. To do the job as accurately as possible he devised the system of contour lines that we still use today on maps! / So, there you go, not just a beautiful mountain but a very important one too. Thanks for looking (and reading Richard Tech detls / Nikon D200 / Nikon 55-200mm VR @110mm / f25 1/8s / ISO160 / Some greying of the sky in Photoshop
Hutton le Hole is a small village in the Yorks Moors National Park. Pentax K10D 18-55mm lens / 1/250 @ f4.5 ISO 100 / Focal Length 35mm / 11 Nov 2009
Situated in the village of Hutton le Hole, in the Yorks Moors National Park.
My entry into, Bite Me, Fanboy! / Evel provided my childhood fantasies. Along with every young boy growing up in the seventies, I wanted to be Evel Knievel! There are others I would’ve loved to have been if given the choice, but if a genie granted me the wish to live an idol’s life at it’s peak, for one day, doing what they did best, hands down it would be Evel Knievel! / I’ve never seen the movie though….
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