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
Spurn Warren view SW to lighthouses
Spurn Warren view W to Grimsby
Spurn Warren view NE
Spurn High Lighthouse 1
Spurn High Lighthouse 2
Spurn High Lighthouse 3
Spurn Lower Lighthouse
Spurn lighthouses view NE
Spurn Warren view E to wind farm
Spurn east beach bank, swales and ripples 1
Spurn east beach bank, swales and ripples 2
Spurn north end view SW over the Spurn Neck
View south east over Dore and Totley from Lady Can…
View west over Limb Valley from Lady Canning's Pla…
Houndkirk Road looking south west
Houndkirk Hill north-west escarpment
Path to Houndkirk Hill
Spurn groyne 1
Spurn Neck view south
Spurn Neck; looking out to sea
Spurn Neck sand ripples 2
Spurn Neck sand ripples 1
Spurn Neck close-up of peaty layer
Spurn Neck Basement Till and peaty layer
Rough Standhills early autumn pine avenue
Early autumn colours in Rough Standhills 4
Early autumn colours in Rough Standhills 3
Early autumn colours in Rough Standhills 2
Early autumn colours in Rough Standhills 1
Handfasting Ground devastation 2
Handfasting Ground devastation 1
Beech in the spotlight
Looking to Fulwood Hall
Wigley Farm fields view to Castle Dyke Lodge 3
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
1/125 • f/8.0 • 15.0 mm • ISO 100 •
Canon EOS 600D
EF-S15-85mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM
Location
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Address: unknown
Lat, Lng:
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Address: unknown
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120 visits
Spurn groyne 2
A visit to Spurn Point 8
The east-facing beach of Spurn has a series of groynes, now mostly in disrepair. The object was presumably to try to limit sediment drift southwards to help keep the mouth of the Humber clear for shipping.
The east-facing beach of Spurn has a series of groynes, now mostly in disrepair. The object was presumably to try to limit sediment drift southwards to help keep the mouth of the Humber clear for shipping.
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