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  • Clear winter evening outside a farmhouse in the Cotswolds near Stroud, England.
    Cotswolds-007-20170128.jpg
  • Ferns in Wiltshire woodland, England
    UK016
  • Keeping the steam trains rolling along the Corfe / Swanage railway on the South coast of England.
    Dorset-02520200727.jpg
  • Evening light in the harbour of Axmouth. On the Devon Coast of England this was a key harbour ...until the 14th century when a part of the nearby cliff fell into the harbour, blocking much of it. More popular now as a great walking route link from the cliffs of Beer Head and Seaton to the Jurassic Coast and the amazing number of fossilised remains constantly being uncovered.
    2016MarchAxmouth-40.jpg
  • Beachy Head, Sussex Coast, England, White Cliffs, Lighthouse,
    Beachy-011-20140412.jpg
  • 2016MarchAxmouth-44.jpg
  • 2016MarchAxmouth-45.jpg
  • Beachy Head and lighthouse. Britain's highest chalk sea-cliff, 162 metres (531 ft) above sea level near to Eastbourne on the Sussex coast, overlooking the English Channel. The chalk was formed in the Late Cretaceous epoch, between 66 and 100 million years ago, when the area was under the sea.
    Beachy-004-20140412.jpg
  • 2016MarchAxmouth-14.jpg
  • 2016MarchAxmouth-16.jpg
  • Early morning at Axmouth Harbour. What used to be one of the major ports in the UK until the 14th century (about 15% of the country's shipping trade), but suffered both from a major landslide blocking the harbour...and larger boats going elsewhere. Axmouth is a charming stop next to Seaton on one side and the "Jurassic Coast" on the other with some hugely fossil-rich coastline
    2016MarchAxmouth-4.jpg
  • Dramatic clouds and sunshine over Beer Head.
    2016MarchAxmouth-47.jpg
  • Waves crashing onthe harbour marker at Axmouth
    2016MarchAxmouth-23.jpg
  • Ruined Tintern Abbey, England / Wales borders in the cool of a winter frost.
    2014DecemberTintern002.jpg
  • The sea of blue and purple from these glorious English bluebells in some of the beech woods of Wiltshire, England.
    WestWoods-04220180501.jpg
  • The sea of blue and purple from these glorious English bluebells in some of the beech woods of Wiltshire, England.
    Bluebells-01220170421.jpg
  • St David's Cathedral. Based around a monastic community founded by St David in the 6th century this cathedral was built by King Henry I of England in 1115. In 1123 Pope Calixtus II granted a papal privilege upon St Davids, making it a centre of pilgrimage for the Western world, the Pope decreeing that "Two pilgrimages to St Davids is equal to one to Rome, and three pilgrimages to one to Jerusalem".
    StDavids-03220170514.jpg
  • The sea of blue and purple from these glorious English bluebells in some of the beech woods of Wiltshire, England.
    WestWoods-04620180501.jpg
  • The sea of blue and purple from these glorious English bluebells in some of the beech woods of Wiltshire, England.
    WestWoods-00720180501.jpg
  • Tintern Abbey was founded in 1131 and sits on the Welsh bank of the River Wye, the (current) border of England and Wales. Used by the Cistercian monks until 1536 and Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries. The monastery fell into ruin and we are lucky that so much still stands today. Amusing aside - it also features in Iron Maiden's "Can I play with madness" video
    Tintern-001-20180727.jpg
  • The sea of blue and purple from these glorious English bluebells in some of the beech woods of Wiltshire, England.
    WestWoods-03920180501.jpg
  • The sea of blue and purple from these glorious English bluebells in some of the beech woods of Wiltshire, England.
    2014AprilBluebells022.jpg