
Photos (part 2)
- Bob Jefferson
- Posts: 6212
- Joined: 11 Dec 2004, 21:16
- Location: Planet Porty
- Contact:
- Bob Jefferson
- Posts: 6212
- Joined: 11 Dec 2004, 21:16
- Location: Planet Porty
- Contact:
I have now added 18 images of Portobello from Capital Collections at:
http://porty.org.uk/gallery4/thumbnails.php?album=45
Clicking the link on each picture will take you to the Capital Collections website, giving you more info and an opportunity to purchase prints. The images on the Portobello Online gallery are in larger format, don't have the watermark and have been enhanced to remove spots, scratches etc.
There is a now a total of 101 images of Portobello on the Capital Collections website, although you will recognise many of these as postcards which we already feature in Margeorie Mekie's collection.
Several other galleries now completed or in progress.
http://porty.org.uk/gallery4/thumbnails.php?album=45
Clicking the link on each picture will take you to the Capital Collections website, giving you more info and an opportunity to purchase prints. The images on the Portobello Online gallery are in larger format, don't have the watermark and have been enhanced to remove spots, scratches etc.
There is a now a total of 101 images of Portobello on the Capital Collections website, although you will recognise many of these as postcards which we already feature in Margeorie Mekie's collection.
Several other galleries now completed or in progress.
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sunnyporty
- Posts: 52
- Joined: 18 Jan 2006, 17:26
- SoupDragon
- Posts: 2201
- Joined: 03 Oct 2006, 11:02
Thank you Bob (and Scorpion) for pointing out the Mills to us - we walked from the wee carpark at the A6094/B7003 junction to the mills via the old railway then back up the B7003 (which is closed I should warn anyone thinking of visiting Roslin Glen - part of the road has subsided and it will be sometime before it's fixed I reckon. You can still get to the Glen carpark from the Roslin side).
Anyway, what's left of the mills and the associated weir and wades is very interesting and I'm off to find old maps and photos of it all!!
Anyway, what's left of the mills and the associated weir and wades is very interesting and I'm off to find old maps and photos of it all!!
Last edited by Poppy on 15 Jul 2008, 15:35, edited 1 time in total.
Four from the last couple of months:
Colorado:
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lkindness/2664364943/" title="Top of the world by Lee Kindness, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3271/266 ... b8fe5d.jpg" width="500" height="375" alt="Top of the world"></a>
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lkindness/2664364941/" title="Hunting cabin by Lee Kindness, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3290/266 ... bdbb26.jpg" width="500" height="373" alt="Hunting cabin"></a>
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lkindness/2664364927/" title="Colorado high sky by Lee Kindness, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3091/266 ... 600510.jpg" width="500" height="373" alt="Colorado high sky"></a>
Zante:
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lkindness/2664208499/" title="Jump into the aqua sea by Lee Kindness, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3238/266 ... 16f5ef.jpg" width="281" height="500" alt="Jump into the aqua sea"></a>
Colorado:
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lkindness/2664364943/" title="Top of the world by Lee Kindness, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3271/266 ... b8fe5d.jpg" width="500" height="375" alt="Top of the world"></a>
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lkindness/2664364941/" title="Hunting cabin by Lee Kindness, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3290/266 ... bdbb26.jpg" width="500" height="373" alt="Hunting cabin"></a>
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lkindness/2664364927/" title="Colorado high sky by Lee Kindness, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3091/266 ... 600510.jpg" width="500" height="373" alt="Colorado high sky"></a>
Zante:
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lkindness/2664208499/" title="Jump into the aqua sea by Lee Kindness, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3238/266 ... 16f5ef.jpg" width="281" height="500" alt="Jump into the aqua sea"></a>
Mexican Striped Owl (Asio clamator)
The Mexican Striped Owl is found native to Central and South
America. This strange looking species of owl is related to the
British Short Eared Owl, and is very adaptable to a number of
habitats, including forest, farmland, rainforest, suburban and
urban areas. They also eat a varied diet, from small rodents
and birds, to pigeons and doves, to reptiles, with spiny lizards
being a particular favourite. They are also intriguing in that they
are one of the few species of Owls who will roost communally
in one tree - one count saw as many as twenty-six Mexican
Striped Owls living together in the same tree. This is unusually
as owls are more commonly solitary or live with their mate
only, and will fiercely defend their territory from any intruders.
While the Mexican Striped Owl does not hunt in groups, it is
certainly more sociable than most owls to live in one. This
may be why Nimue is such a friendly (if very noisy!) creature.
He loves attention, and gives his happy scream to visitors
all day long. He is also very special as one of our two Wedding
Ring Delivery Owls who will happily deliver your wedding ring
to the Best Man in the Chapel, outside or on the Quarterdeck
in the Castle. Nimue is also flown in the Ultimate Falconry
Experience, the Owl Encounter and the Children's Activities.
He is available for handling in the Regal Greeting.
http://www.falconryscotland.co.uk
The Mexican Striped Owl is found native to Central and South
America. This strange looking species of owl is related to the
British Short Eared Owl, and is very adaptable to a number of
habitats, including forest, farmland, rainforest, suburban and
urban areas. They also eat a varied diet, from small rodents
and birds, to pigeons and doves, to reptiles, with spiny lizards
being a particular favourite. They are also intriguing in that they
are one of the few species of Owls who will roost communally
in one tree - one count saw as many as twenty-six Mexican
Striped Owls living together in the same tree. This is unusually
as owls are more commonly solitary or live with their mate
only, and will fiercely defend their territory from any intruders.
While the Mexican Striped Owl does not hunt in groups, it is
certainly more sociable than most owls to live in one. This
may be why Nimue is such a friendly (if very noisy!) creature.
He loves attention, and gives his happy scream to visitors
all day long. He is also very special as one of our two Wedding
Ring Delivery Owls who will happily deliver your wedding ring
to the Best Man in the Chapel, outside or on the Quarterdeck
in the Castle. Nimue is also flown in the Ultimate Falconry
Experience, the Owl Encounter and the Children's Activities.
He is available for handling in the Regal Greeting.
http://www.falconryscotland.co.uk
Thanks Pops. The big boat was the QE2 and sadly we weren't on board. We just viewed the wealthy from afar. Mind you, with the price of everything in Norway - especially booze - we might have been cheaper booking a cabin on board!Poppy wrote:Lovely piccies - were you on holiday on the big boat, Marya??
We first saw her in Flam, at the head of the famous Naeroyfjord, while we were en route to Bergen. The next day our ferry made its way down the coast from Bergen to Stavanger before travelling to Newcastle and there was the QE2 again! She left the harbour just before us, surrounded by a flotilla of hundreds of small craft and with ships' horns sounding and tugboats sending up fountains of water. It was really quite a spectacle. We were told she is to be sold to Dubai this Autumn so was on one of her last trips.
It was our first visit to Norway and, cost of living aside, it was wonderful. It is like Scotland on steroids and is breathtakingly beautiful. The glacier behind Matt was HUGE, but there were guided walks for all abilities. Homer and Matt also climbed Galdhopiggen, the biggest mountain in Northern Europe and almost twice the size of Ben Nevis. I was happy just to watch their video!
Here's one of the local delicacies !

Thanks for the compliments guys, though the photos don't really do the scenery justice, as it is impossible to convey the scale of the country.
The wee church at Urnes, is the oldest Stave kirk in Norway, Sandra and dates from 1050. It is under renovation at the moment as the left side of the church leans over 12 cm more than the right. The whole thing is pinned together like a Viking ship and rests on foundations of loose layered flat stones, which look like a low, dry stane dyked, wall. It was quite amazing, as were the freshly made waffles with sour cream and homemade raspberry jam we had at the wee cafe nearby. Yum!
I didn't try the smoked whale Seashell, but Homer and son did. Their verdict was that it is ...'smoky'
The wee church at Urnes, is the oldest Stave kirk in Norway, Sandra and dates from 1050. It is under renovation at the moment as the left side of the church leans over 12 cm more than the right. The whole thing is pinned together like a Viking ship and rests on foundations of loose layered flat stones, which look like a low, dry stane dyked, wall. It was quite amazing, as were the freshly made waffles with sour cream and homemade raspberry jam we had at the wee cafe nearby. Yum!
I didn't try the smoked whale Seashell, but Homer and son did. Their verdict was that it is ...'smoky'
Well, I've just returned from holiday in a caravan in Ayr. Apart from a bite from a clegg which gave me a bad reaction (my hand/arm and face swelled up and I had a large blister on my hand) I had a very relaxing time. Some of the sunsets were great


Andy Knight
Fear knocks at the door, knowledge answers and finds nothing.
Fear knocks at the door, knowledge answers and finds nothing.
Closer (and a lot of the soil is now washed away)

PS While we were drinking a warming coffee in the carpark at Cove, a policeRange Rover appeared and went away at once. Our curiousity was only really aroused by the www address on the vehicle www.cnc.police.co.uk...... It was only when we got home did we find out that cnc is the nuclear polis (who are "routinely armed"
)

PS While we were drinking a warming coffee in the carpark at Cove, a policeRange Rover appeared and went away at once. Our curiousity was only really aroused by the www address on the vehicle www.cnc.police.co.uk...... It was only when we got home did we find out that cnc is the nuclear polis (who are "routinely armed"
- Bob Jefferson
- Posts: 6212
- Joined: 11 Dec 2004, 21:16
- Location: Planet Porty
- Contact:
Some absolutely stunning pictures here http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2008/1 ... o_nyc.html
Andy Knight
Fear knocks at the door, knowledge answers and finds nothing.
Fear knocks at the door, knowledge answers and finds nothing.























