NE UK Dashcamming #1
A lovely Sunday drive, or parts of it at least. Evidently my camera's date stamp was set wrong.This is a selection of a 2 hour exploration of the countryside, visiting Deighton and Appleton Wiske. The single lane roads are quite slow for obvious reasons, and because I like to take in the scenery.
I was listening to the Roosterteeth Gaming Podcast.
HYDE CC vs PCA ENGLAND MASTERS 19.08.16
#LegendsOnTheLow
On Friday 19th August 2016, Hyde Cricket & Squash club hosted the PCA England Masters in a Twenty20 match.
2005 Ashes winners Steve Harmison, Matthew Hoggard and Simon Jones, plus England legends Mark Ramprakash, Alex Tudor, Darren Maddy and Usman Afzaal.
Hosted by Tim Cocker, Virgin Radio presenter and ex XFM Manchester legend, the day was fun filled and action packed for everyone who attended.
Cheshire Nightlife
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Summer's Day at Kingston Lacy 4K
Thank you for invaluable input from my friends at “Drone Video Reviews” Facebook group.
Kingston Lacy is a country house and estate near Wimborne Minster, Dorset, England. It was for many years the family seat of the Bankes family who lived nearby at Corfe Castle until its destruction in the English Civil War after its incumbent owners, Sir John Bankes and Dame Mary, had remained loyal to Charles I.
The house was built between 1663 and 1665 by Ralph Bankes, son of Sir John Bankes, to a design by the architect Sir Roger Pratt. It is a rectangular building with two main storeys, attics and basement, modelled on Chevening in Kent. The gardens and parkland were laid down at the same time, including some of the specimen trees that remain today. Various additions and alterations were made to the house over the years and the estate remained in the ownership of the Bankes family from the 17th to the late 20th century.
The house was designated as a Grade I listed building in 1958 and the park and gardens are included in the National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens at Grade II. The house was bequeathed to the National Trust upon the death in 1982 of Henry John Ralph Bankes, along with Corfe Castle. The house and gardens are open to the public.
Music: hooksounds.com - Way of Life
Drone Video Reviews:
Knutsford Hockey - 3rd XI 14/3/09
Musical highlights of the penultimate game of the 2008/09 season for Knutsford Men's Hockey Club 3rd XI. A 4-3 victory over Macclesfield as we looked to cement a third place finish in the league
???? Reddish Vale Country Park DJI Phantom 3 Drone ????
Reddish Vale is a loosely defined area in the Tame Valley close to Reddish in the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport, Greater Manchester, England. The generally accepted centre of the vale (as indicated on maps) is around the bottom of Reddish Vale Road. Reddish Vale Country Park is a country park managed by Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council.[1] It covers 161 hectares in all and comprises some of the traditional Reddish Vale area, Reddish Vale Farm and the grazing land and Woodhall Fields, about half a mile to the south. Part of it is a designated Local Nature Reserve.Reddish Vale is mainly green space, comprising woodland, flat riverside meadows, sloping fields used to graze horses and a golf course. At the end of Reddish Vale Road near grid reference SJ905935 is a small car park and a visitor centre housed in portable cabins. A number of footpaths lead in all directions, with the more popular ones following the line of the river, both up and downstream.
Highly visible from the visitor centre is the sixteen-arch brick viaduct built in 1875 to carry the Hope Valley Line over the Tame Valley.[1][4] There is a legend that during construction a local witch cursed the viaduct and anyone who counted the number of arches.[5] A railway line once led to Stockport from Reddish Junction at the Brinnington (east) side of the viaduct. This line has been turned into a public bridleway joining the two parts of the country park and forms a section of the Trans Pennine Trail. The Stockport to Stalybridge Line forms part of the western boundary of the vale. A spur once ran to the colliery at Denton. Its position is still visible in places marked by a hedgerow that runs alongside Ross Lave Lane. Where the line had to span Denton Brook an embankment was built using slag and other waste from the mine. This slag was ignited by the hot summers of 1975 and 1976. It continued to smoulder and smoke for a number years until the site was bulldozed and cleared in 1981. Train drivers called the place 'smokey ridge', along the bottom of Denton Brook you can still see the bricks used for the tunnel. Some locals refer to Ross Lave Lane as 'piggy's alley' as there was once a pig farm on the Denton side of the viaduct on the embankment above where Denton Brook joins the River Tame. There was a plan at the end of the 18th century for the Beat Bank Branch Canal to run across the vale, and some sections were dug, but it was abandoned before completion.[6]
Nearby are two mill ponds left over from industrial activity in the vale. The ponds were fed from the river above a weir (destroyed in floods in the 1960s,[dubious – discuss] all that remains is the sluice gate) on the upstream side of the viaduct, and provided both power and processing water to Reddish Vale Print Works, a calico printing works dating from before 1800.[7][8] The works had ceased printing by 1975,[8] and have now been demolished and the land turned into a butterfly park. The ponds are now used for angling, and attract herons and a variety of ducks. Most of the race has been filled in, but a short length carries Denton Brook down to the river. Denton Brook (and a small tributary) marks the traditional boundary between Reddish and Denton. The manorial corn mill (one of several to be known as Reddish Mill) was sited over the brook and was demolished in about 1860 when the ponds were extended
Typical White Van Man in Handforth
A typical white van man, and someone with FU in the number plate, so that certainly reflects their attitude towards other drivers.
I hate this section of road in Handforth, near Wilmslow, at the best of times, as people park on both sides and all too often, no-one is willing to give way, especially when they are a typical white van man who has no clue how to drive on the road other than fast and in an intimidating style, as this one does when he zooms into the bend.
So you can easily reach an impasse, and it was only after I looked back at the video that I realised he had somewhere he could've reversed into (on the left, as I was looking). And then someone else came up his rear anyway, so if this was to be resolved quickly, there was only one outcome, but at least I got a satisying beep at him.
That caused him to quickly bring his van to a halt soon after, but was his dad going to get out and shake his fists at me? No, as he was too slow to do anything about it.
My beep was partly because of his arrogance at the way he sped round the corner (where anyone can step out), and partly because of his taking his hands off the wheel gesture and grinning like a loon.
I think he should've reversed, or do you think otherwise? Let me know in the comments below.
BTW, I had a sweet in my mouth so it wasn't the set of marbles it sounds like.
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Gaelforce by Peter Graham
Track #1 from our 2007 album Introducing... Mill Creek Colliery Band
The Mill Creek Colliery Band is a traditional British-style brass band based in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The band consists of an enthusiastic group of local professional and amateur musicians dedicated to promoting excellence in brass banding throughout western Canada.
Find out more at millcreekbrass.ca
Full track listing for Introducing... Mill Creek Colliery Band:
1. Gaelforce
2. Elegiac Melody
3. Bugler's Holiday
4. Radetzky March
5. Somewhere Out There
6. Pie Jesu
7. Penny Lane
8. A Fanfare of Praise
9. Bolivar
10. Brillante
11. The Kingdom Triumphant
12. Amazing Grace
13. Jerusalem (And did those feet in ancient times)
14. Shephard's Song
15. March: The Standard of St George
Rescue from St James Tower, Louth
via YouTube Capture
VLOG 026 - Mystical Forrest Walk with Magick Ritual in A Stone Circle
Playlist of All the Episodes of AIWW:
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We manage to get to Strandfield House for some food, and then we hike through the very mystical Ravensdale Forest. Wonderful day. This Vlog even includes and actual Magick Ritual in a stone circle! :)
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FIFA 20 Career Mode Livestream - Grimsby Town FC
We are back with some more FIFA 20 Career Mode with the mighty Grimsby Town FC as we take our 1st steps into the wonderful world of the Premier League!