Looking to Fulwood Hall
Beech in the spotlight
Handfasting Ground devastation 1
Handfasting Ground devastation 2
Early autumn colours in Rough Standhills 1
Early autumn colours in Rough Standhills 2
Early autumn colours in Rough Standhills 3
Early autumn colours in Rough Standhills 4
Rough Standhills early autumn pine avenue
Spurn Neck Basement Till and peaty layer
Spurn Neck close-up of peaty layer
Spurn Neck sand ripples 1
Spurn Neck sand ripples 2
Spurn Neck; looking out to sea
Spurn Neck view south
Spurn groyne 1
Spurn groyne 2
Spurn groyne 3
Spurn groyne and large vessel
Spurn Chalk Bank view north 1
Spurn Chalk Bank view north 2
Spurn Chalk Bank view WNW to Immingham
Spurn Warren view NE
Wigley Farm fields view to Castle Dyke Lodge 2
Wigley Farm fields view to Castle Dyke Lodge 1
Lonely sycamore and Wigley Farm fields
Lonely sycamore in September
Midnight clouds and stars
Comet Neowise from near Burbage Bridge
Altocumulus with fallstreaks
Cat's ear at ground level
Garden wilderness
Garden meadow
Spring meadow
Lichen on wall - detail
Lichen on wall
Lonely sycamore
Bole Hill Plantation view to south
Bole Hill Plantation view to south-west
Footpath to Firs Farm
Bole Hill Plantation - 'holly smelter' slag 2
Bole Hill Plantation - 'holly smelter' slag 1
Bole Hill Plantation - 'holly smelter' slag tip 2
Bole Hill Plantation - 'holly smelter' slag tip 1
Bole Hill Plantation - 'holly smelter' stone work
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4.5-81.0 mm
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Wigley Farm fields view to Castle Dyke Lodge 3
A fully zoomed-in view over the fields of Wigley Farm on the west side of Sheffield.
The prominent house is Castle Dyke Lodge, formerly Hoyle House on old Ordnance Survey maps. Just in front of the house, in the newly harvested and harrowed fields is a small, dry valley, possibly initiated as a melt-water stream at the end of the Devensian glacial period, but no longer having any flowing water, except as a smaller feeder to a pond in the grounds of Castle Dyke house, hidden in the trees.
The prominent house is Castle Dyke Lodge, formerly Hoyle House on old Ordnance Survey maps. Just in front of the house, in the newly harvested and harrowed fields is a small, dry valley, possibly initiated as a melt-water stream at the end of the Devensian glacial period, but no longer having any flowing water, except as a smaller feeder to a pond in the grounds of Castle Dyke house, hidden in the trees.
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