Frensham Pond
Came home and went for a walk.
Any feedback would be appreciated!
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Filmed on | Canon 7D w/ Canon 24-105mm f/4 + Tokina 11-16mm f/2.8
Edited on | Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2015
Graded on | DaVinci Resolve 12
Music | Jon Hopkins - Autumn Hill
#VideoWalks April19
Join me on my April Video Walk as I take a walk through the British countryside, listening to the sound of birdsong and bees from Farnham to Frensham Brewery
#VideoWalks April Theme - British
Hop Art Brewery Love Farnham Surrey
Win a Tour of the Hop Art Brewery! #HopArtBeers
Simply choose which Hop Art beer you are and why, for the chance to win a fantastic tour of the Hop Art Brewery for you and a friend.
Find out more info:
LoveFarnham on Facebook -
LoveFarnham on Twitter -
HopArt on Facebook -
HopArt on Twitter -
Clive Garton & Ernest Mingay Remembrance 2 September 2018 (Lowering Flag)
Ernest Eustace Mingay was born on 29th April 1892 at Roestock, near St Albans, Hertfordshire, and grew up in Colney Heath. He was in his mid- teens when the family moved to Woodburn Green, Bucks. His father was a gamekeeper and Ernest followed in his footsteps. After the birth of their sixth child, in 1910, the Mingays moved south to Tilford, near Frensham, Surrey. Ernest followed them south and came to work and live on the Nork Estate as a gamekeeper for the Colman family of Colman’s Mustard fame.
He joined the Army on 7th September 1914 but remained on the Home Front for three years. Just before he left England, he married a Sutton girl, Florence Stay, at St Barnabas Church, Sutton, on 24th February 1917. Ernest left his bride and his country behind a week later and sailed for Egypt, where he joined the 12th Somerset Light Infantry and fought in the Palestine campaign. When that was won, his battalion went to France.
Edward Clive Garton was born at Banstead Wood on 3rd February 1899. He was the fourth son of Charles and Juliet Garton. The Gartons made their money in sugar and brewing and were great local benefactors. Clive attended Eton and gained a place at Oxford in 1916 but applied for a cadetship shortly afterwards. After nearly a year at Sandhurst, he was commissioned in the Rifle Brigade. He went out to France in July 1918.
On 8th August, Day 1 of the Hundred Days, the Allies took the first step to victory with the Battle of Amiens. They then began a series of attacks, one every few days, constantly shifting the point of focus, probing for a weak spot. 2nd September was Day 26. Zero Hour was 5:30am. Ernest Mingay’s battalion went into action on the Somme. They were met with machinegun fire as they left their trenches but pressed on. After capturing the village of Haut-Allaines, they advanced up gently sloping open ground, towards Moislains, and were met with fire from the village and their right flank. Fierce counterattacks pushed them back but they fought on to gain their objective, only to be driven back. They advanced once more and reached their objective again only to be pulled back to a more defensible position, just 500 yards from their starting point. Ernest was killed. He was 26.
At Eterpigny, 20 miles to the north, Clive Garton’s battalion went over the top and captured a major German defensive line. They then met “the most terrific and accurate machinegun fire” and took severe casualties. They could go no further. Clive was wounded and died later that day. He was 19.
Research by James Crouch of the Banstead History Research Group (bansteadhistory.com)
Clive Garton & Ernest Mingay Remembrance 2 September 2018 (Raising Flag)
Ernest Eustace Mingay was born on 29th April 1892 at Roestock, near St Albans, Hertfordshire, and grew up in Colney Heath. He was in his mid- teens when the family moved to Woodburn Green, Bucks. His father was a gamekeeper and Ernest followed in his footsteps. After the birth of their sixth child, in 1910, the Mingays moved south to Tilford, near Frensham, Surrey. Ernest followed them south and came to work and live on the Nork Estate as a gamekeeper for the Colman family of Colman’s Mustard fame.
He joined the Army on 7th September 1914 but remained on the Home Front for three years. Just before he left England, he married a Sutton girl, Florence Stay, at St Barnabas Church, Sutton, on 24th February 1917. Ernest left his bride and his country behind a week later and sailed for Egypt, where he joined the 12th Somerset Light Infantry and fought in the Palestine campaign. When that was won, his battalion went to France.
Edward Clive Garton was born at Banstead Wood on 3rd February 1899. He was the fourth son of Charles and Juliet Garton. The Gartons made their money in sugar and brewing and were great local benefactors. Clive attended Eton and gained a place at Oxford in 1916 but applied for a cadetship shortly afterwards. After nearly a year at Sandhurst, he was commissioned in the Rifle Brigade. He went out to France in July 1918.
On 8th August, Day 1 of the Hundred Days, the Allies took the first step to victory with the Battle of Amiens. They then began a series of attacks, one every few days, constantly shifting the point of focus, probing for a weak spot. 2nd September was Day 26. Zero Hour was 5:30am. Ernest Mingay’s battalion went into action on the Somme. They were met with machinegun fire as they left their trenches but pressed on. After capturing the village of Haut-Allaines, they advanced up gently sloping open ground, towards Moislains, and were met with fire from the village and their right flank. Fierce counterattacks pushed them back but they fought on to gain their objective, only to be driven back. They advanced once more and reached their objective again only to be pulled back to a more defensible position, just 500 yards from their starting point. Ernest was killed. He was 26.
At Eterpigny, 20 miles to the north, Clive Garton’s battalion went over the top and captured a major German defensive line. They then met “the most terrific and accurate machinegun fire” and took severe casualties. They could go no further. Clive was wounded and died later that day. He was 19.
Research by James Crouch of the Banstead History Research Group (bansteadhistory.com)
The Farnham Charity Bike Ride & Sportive 2018
This is this years Farnham Charity Bike Ride 2018
Filmed on location in Farnham Surrrey & surrounding villages.
Please ignore the date stamp as the camera messed up when changing batteries.
This year the event took place on Sunday July 8th 2018, and had a starting & finishing point of Castle Street Farnham.
The event raises money for many different charity's mostly those close to peoples heart.
This year I am raising money for Hampshire Air Ambulance which is not government funded and needs every penny it can get as you never know if you or someone close to you will need this important life changing service, so if you would like to donate please drop me a message for more details, thank you
This was my 5th Farnham charity bike ride and completed the 25mile circuit in 2hrs 16mins which was a good mins quicker than previous years.
The event its self is really well organized and is well marshaled and well run, there are break points on the circuit that allow you to refill your bottles and have a snack from many of the volunteers that are around the circuit.
The event is normally held on the 1st or 2nd Sunday of July and consists of either the 16,25,50 or 75 mile course heading around the surrounding villages of Farnham Surrey. So if you would like to see more pictures of the event or even take part in next years event please do find there Facebook page as its is full of information and great stories. And not forgetting the Hogs Back Brewery at the end with the beer which went down really well.
Please ignore the date stamp as the camera messed up when changing batteries.
As always thanks for watching and keep tuned for more videos during the year.
Tour of Britain Stage 7, 21-Sep-2013, leaders passing Shepherd and Flock, Farnham, Surrey
via YouTube Capture
waverley abbey film location
Waverley Abbey film location in Surrey was the very first monastery founded in Britain by the reforming Cistercian religious order. A small group of monks from France settled in this quiet spot by the River Wey in 1128, and Waverley soon became the springboard for Cistercian settlement in southern England. The impressive remains include the fine 13th century vaulted refectory or dining hall for the lay brothers, the Cistercians' labour force.
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My gear:
DJI Mavic Air ;
iPhone 7 Plus;
Tom Streller LUT Packs ➭
Clive Garton & Ernest Mingay Remembrance 2 September 2018 (Intro & Tolling of the Bell)
Ernest Eustace Mingay was born on 29th April 1892 at Roestock, near St Albans, Hertfordshire, and grew up in Colney Heath. He was in his mid- teens when the family moved to Woodburn Green, Bucks. His father was a gamekeeper and Ernest followed in his footsteps. After the birth of their sixth child, in 1910, the Mingays moved south to Tilford, near Frensham, Surrey. Ernest followed them south and came to work and live on the Nork Estate as a gamekeeper for the Colman family of Colman’s Mustard fame.
He joined the Army on 7th September 1914 but remained on the Home Front for three years. Just before he left England, he married a Sutton girl, Florence Stay, at St Barnabas Church, Sutton, on 24th February 1917. Ernest left his bride and his country behind a week later and sailed for Egypt, where he joined the 12th Somerset Light Infantry and fought in the Palestine campaign. When that was won, his battalion went to France.
Edward Clive Garton was born at Banstead Wood on 3rd February 1899. He was the fourth son of Charles and Juliet Garton. The Gartons made their money in sugar and brewing and were great local benefactors. Clive attended Eton and gained a place at Oxford in 1916 but applied for a cadetship shortly afterwards. After nearly a year at Sandhurst, he was commissioned in the Rifle Brigade. He went out to France in July 1918.
On 8th August, Day 1 of the Hundred Days, the Allies took the first step to victory with the Battle of Amiens. They then began a series of attacks, one every few days, constantly shifting the point of focus, probing for a weak spot. 2nd September was Day 26. Zero Hour was 5:30am. Ernest Mingay’s battalion went into action on the Somme. They were met with machinegun fire as they left their trenches but pressed on. After capturing the village of Haut-Allaines, they advanced up gently sloping open ground, towards Moislains, and were met with fire from the village and their right flank. Fierce counterattacks pushed them back but they fought on to gain their objective, only to be driven back. They advanced once more and reached their objective again only to be pulled back to a more defensible position, just 500 yards from their starting point. Ernest was killed. He was 26.
At Eterpigny, 20 miles to the north, Clive Garton’s battalion went over the top and captured a major German defensive line. They then met “the most terrific and accurate machinegun fire” and took severe casualties. They could go no further. Clive was wounded and died later that day. He was 19.
Research by James Crouch of the Banstead History Research Group (bansteadhistory.com)
Alton Carnival 2012.wmv
Alton Town's Carnival 3 June 2012
A Ride Through Alton in Hampshire
A ride though the Hampshire town.
08.08.13.
Patricia & Chris Wedding Highlights
A beautiful wedding at Grand Central Hotel in Glasgow! Congratulations Mr & Mrs Anderson!
Richard – Front of house team St Austell Brewery
Watch Richard, part of the front of house team at the Globe Topsham, talk about why he loves working for the company and his career progression within the company.
Surrey TRF Recent members run from Farnham.
Helmet cam footage of The Gibbet and rear facing 'bootcam' footage of Tilford Whoops, Sandy Lane and a section near Petersfield, that includes a small off.
White House Robertsons (Alton) (short version)
urban xploring part of an abandoned hospital (Treloar Hospital) using a new gopro hero 5 black to film it all.
Farnham Police Station - Surrey - Urban Exploration - Urbex
Farnham Police Station is located within Farnham town centre and is positioned just south of the designated Central Shopping Area. It occupies a prominent position within the town centre and the Conservation Area, being located on the town’s one-way system. It is adjacent to Gostrey Meadow recreation ground, the River Wey and is in close proximity to a number of listed buildings, including the Farnham Maltings, a disused brewery building converted into an arts and performance venue.
The Police Station was built in 1963. The site contains the main station buildings and a large parking area to the rear. A row of six semi-detached houses are located in the south-eastern corner of the site. The houses at either end of the row were in use as accommodation for serving officers. The four remaining houses were offices for police operations. The total site area is 0.54 hectares.
The site closed around 2012.
In February 2014 Churchill Retirement Living resubmitted a planning application to
provide 50 sheltered/retirement living apartments following a Planning Inspector’s
appeal decision in November 2013 dismissing an appeal for insufficient Affordable
Housing provision. The site has now been DEMOLISHED!
Advertising in Surrey with Love Farnham
Find out how you can advertise with Love Farnham, we have the biggest Social Media reach for Farnham. Get your business in front of the Locals on a Daily Basis.
Advertising with Love Farnham is very simple.
We have 5 easy to use options to suit all business’s needs.
Option 1 is a One off Banner for just £10, you’re banner will be up on the LoveFarnham website for 1 month.
Alternatively we can create a short one off post on our site about your business and link to it on Facebook and Twitter. Both accounts have a huge following, the biggest online for Farnham.
Option 2 is for Small Business’s for just £20 a month we will set up a page for you on Love Farnham, showing off all your information, links to your website, social media and contact information, anything you’d like to add to your page, it can be as long or as short as you’d like, check out this example.
As you can see this shows all of the company’s information, videos, social media and website links plus contact information. And you can also see it’s had over 298 shares on social media
You also have unlimited changes to your ad, you can simply let us know what you want changed or updated and we will do it for you. It’s not like a static newspaper ad which is tricky to update or change, we will update for you straight away plus it’s a much bigger ad than local newspaper, a bundle cheaper and we have a bigger audience reach, more on that later on.
As a Bonus you’ll article will be shared on our Facebook and Twitter pages and after six months we’ll create a video for you FREE of charge, promoting anything you like, again this will be shared on our website, youtube and social media channels. Not bad for Twenty Quid HUH?
We also have options for Medium Business, Large Business and Global Business, and as the price goes up so does the level of support and benefits of promoting your business.
Let’s take a look at our social media presence, it’s the biggest by far for Farnham online, if you think the population of Farnham is 40,000 and we can reach at least 16,000 of those with just a few clicks, and this number is growing weekly.
Here you’ll see an example of a Small Business campaign we ran for a local brewery. You’ve already seen an example of the page we created for them with all their contact details; this also included a small promotion run on Facebook, Twitter and the Love Farnham website. On top of that we created a short video for the brewery with over 2500 views. And with just 1 post on Facebook, 2419 people were reached, imagine that reach every week, or even every day.
On our website we also share with you our full data for complete transparency, this shows your our Google Analytics Traffic, how many unique visits we receive per day. A full breakdown of our Facebook fans, including sex, age, city, and our insights so you can see how we compare to other Facebook pages. Again this number is constantly growing as we publish more news, fun stories, jobs, events and anything else happening in Farnham and Surrey.
We understand and listen to our members and give them exactly what they want, keeping them fully engaged in Love Farnham, we learn from them and they learn from us.
You’ll also see an example of our weekly Facebook interaction, which again is the strongest online right now for Farnham, and we intend to keep it that way.
You’ll see some examples of our successful posts, from our Satire News which usually ends up going viral increasing the number of visits to Love Farnham where your advert sits.
Here in this example we reached a massive 12,880 people, with 206 Likes, comments and Shares, This post reached 32,912 people, but we again topped that with 34,976 reached. These type of posts happen on a weekly basis, just keep an eye on our Facebook page. Our best yet with a massive reach of 40,464, higher than the total population of Farnham.
You’ll also see our Twitter statistics, which whilst not as strong as Facebook, is still growing and one of the, if not the biggest for Farnham.
If you want your brand out there, shown daily on viral news posts, letting a huge percentage of the Farnham population know about your business event or product, then simply visit our Advertising Page below to get started today.
Helping grow your business, helps grows ours, so we are fully committed to doing the best we can for you.
If you have any questions please feel free to drop us an email via support@lovefarnham.org
Thanks for watching and we look forward to working with you.
Image thanks to
A31 pt7 Farnham to Guildford
Pride Of The Valley Hotel, Farnham, England - United Kingdom (GB)
for reviews, prices and info.
Pride Of The Valley Hotel, Farnham, England - United Kingdom (GB)
The hotels ground floor and public areas were extensively re-furbished in the Spring of 2007 maintaining the hotels wonderful traditional features whilst adding a twist of contemporary design. We have 13 great bedrooms that have been individually designed and themed. We want you to be comfortable so there are large luxurious pillows and duvets in the rooms. There is wireless access to the internet telephone tea and coffee making facilities and amenities by Au Lait in every room. During this time a team were put together to create the ambition to provide the best food and service in the area. Our Chef Luke Gale has developed a tremendous network of suppliers who can provide great fresh seasonal produce year round. The hotel pub bar features some very attractive wood panelling and comfortable sofas which create a wonderful atmosphere to sit relax and enjoy your favourite tipple. We always maintain a ready supply of the local brewerys(Hogs Back Brewery) award winning bitter T.E.A. We also maintain two guest beers that are changed weekly guaranteeing a varied supply of real ales. The hotel lends itself exceptionally well to hosting exclusive weddings and events. The option for you your family and friends of making the hotel your home for the duration of your event is one rarely available. You can use the hotel for your own house party.
Hotel Features
General
Non-Smoking Rooms, Coffee / Tea Maker, TV, En suite, Cots
Activities
Cycling, Horse Riding, Hiking
Services
Dry Cleaning, Wake-up Service, Laundry service, Photocopier, Facsimile, Luggage Storage
Internet
High-speed Internet is available at this hotel. Wireless internet on site.
Parking
The hotel has free parking.
Check-in
From 1:00 PM
Check-out
Prior to 11:00 AM
FAQ
The following questions have been answered for you by Pride Of The Valley Hotel... What are your breakfast options?Breakfast is included in our room rates. We serve English or continental breakfast, which is a choice of cereals, porridge, fruit juice, toast, tea, coffee, cooked breakfast to order with scrambled, poached or fried egg. We also serve breakfast to non-residents at the cost of £6.95 per person, but booking is required. Breakfast is served Monday to Friday from 7:00am until 9:00am and on Saturday and Sunday from 8:00am until 10:00am. What transport is available to get around?We are not on a public transport route, but there is a taxi rank at the nearest train stations (Farnham or Haslemere) which is 4 miles. What can I do nearby?We are situated 4 miles from Farnham which is a market town and 4 miles from Haslemere; the nearby attractions are:-Pride of the Valley Sculpture Park-Grayshott Pottery-Bird World-Devils Punchbowl-Waggoners Wells-Farnham Castle-Farnham Museum-Alice Holt Forest-Frensham PondsWe are also around 6 miles from the town of Guildford, which is a great town for shopping, bars and restaurants as well as the beautiful Guildford Cathedral. Do you have internet?We do have internet access in the hotel and there is no charge for this. Do you provide parking?We have a car park at the hotel with free parking for around 60 cars.
** Visit for more info, reviews, prices and booking. **
the burtons got talent
a typical friday night at the world famous new burton in crewe cheshire, come and see for your self !