NIGHTVIBE - Level 2 DJ event at Pump & Grind, Ipswich
Music Technology.
Suffolk New College Music Technology Level 2 DJ Event
Song Senses by Music Tech student Liam Howard
ipswich rave shutdown by cops
ipswich rave gets shutdown by cops uk suffolk
Suffolk New College HAPPY
The Collective presents a Pharrell Williams tribute.
DJ Dummy live at Tates, Ipswich 24 Feb 2012!
DJ Dummy Live at Tates Nightclub, Ipswich 24/2/12
Brought to you by Ardeo Entertainment & Tates Nightclub
Facebook Event Page:
T: 07539394411
E: info@tatesnightclub.co.uk or info@modepromotions.co.uk
F:
T: @tatesnightclub
W:
MODE Promotions
BB pin: 23983EAC
Twitter: @MODEPromo
djdummythegenius.com
Twitter:
@IMDJDUMMY
@KallyWeed
TATE'S Nightclub
3-5 Falcon Street, Ipswich, Suffolk, IP1 1SL, United Kingdom
Rushmere mx Ipswich #gingerprincess 15th oct 2017
Very happy with my riding, not speed but consistency!
Mx and Enduro have a very different fitness discipline
Arm pump and remembering to breath effect me on motocross tracks resulting in me having to pull to one side or slowing down after just a couple of laps but a slight change in my training and bike time I feel like I am starting to pick up some good consistent speed!
but in all fairness its all about having fun riding your bikes with friends!!! we cant help but get competitive.....its a man thing!!! tar tar
Dj Vibes & MC Duracell KC's Nightclub Ipswich
The man like Dj Vibes blessed us with his happy and positive vibes with an old Happy Hardcore set with MC Duracell.
Suffolk New College - Exceptional Student Experience
Full-Time & Part-Time Courses, Apprenticeships, Professional Qualifications and Leisure Learning in state-of-the-art facilities in Ipswich.
Charlton Athletic Foam Pig Protest October 2016
Charlton Athletic fans continue with their protest action against absent owner Roland Duchatelet and his hapless CEO Katrien Meire by throwing foam pigs onto the pitch, causing 7 mins of delays to the game, which in turn lead to positive national coverage.
Coventry City fans joined in from the Jimmy Seed stand as they too have their own axe to grind with SISU, owners of their club.
So why pigs?
Duchatelet's regime shows no signs of learning from their numerous mistakes despite empty words suggesting otherwise. We say 'pigs might fly' to suggestions they have changed, or ever will.
#RolandOut #SISUOut
JCTV - Wheeler - Ips64 (JCTV COMPETITION)
Ips64 is a competition presented by JCTVSessions. Any style of music: Grime, Rap, Guitarists and singers! Get your entrys in as soon as possible. if you are interested drop us a message. 1st place will win a free music video and there name in future JCTV videos and description. 2nd and 3rd will be chosen by JCTV and they will get there name and links in future JCTV videos and description. Who's the best?
Museum Of East Anglian Life Stowmarket Suffolk
Music:
The Museum of East Anglian Life is a museum, located in Stowmarket, Suffolk, which specialises in presenting the agricultural history of East Anglia through a mixture of exhibits and living history demonstrations.
History of the Museum
Grundisburgh Smithy
The land was originally part of the Home Farm for the Abbot’s Hall estate. The estate dates from medieval times, when it was an outlying manor for St Osyth's Priory in Essex. It passed through numerous owners until it was purchased by the Longe family in 1903.
Huge changes in the 1950s and 1960s meant that England was in danger of losing long-established skills, equipment, and buildings, if something was not done to rescue them. Local farmer Jack Carter, the Suffolk Local History Council, and other individuals worked to collect, preserve and display objects from rural East Anglia. After several years of temporary exhibitions, Vera and Ena Longe placed 70 acres (28 ha) of farm land, Abbot’s Hall, its gardens, and 18/20 Crowe Street, in trust to be used as a museum. The Museum opened in 1967.
The Museum has various buildings on its 75 acres (30 ha) site, including:
Abbot's Hall — each room explores a different notion of home and belonging in East Anglia. Home is defined in this exhibit as the physical place where we live, but also our sense of belonging to a place.
Edgar's farmhouse — a 14th-century aisled farmhouse discovered in Combs, just south of Stowmarket, and incorporated into a much larger farmhouse dating from the Victorian era. Saved from demolition in 1970, it was the first historic building to be re-erected on the museum site. The first recorded owners were John and Ascelina Adgor, who in 1346 held nearly 40 acres (16 ha) of arable land, 1.5 acres (0.61 ha) of meadow, 1 acre (0.40 ha) of pasture, a Rood of wood and three acres of alderwood in Combs. Evidence suggests that the Adgors survived the Black Death and prospered. The building is Grade II listed.
Crowe Street Cottages — the last pair of workers' cottages to remain as part of the Abbot's Hall Estate.
Boby Building — features exhibitions of agricultural engines and individual craft workshops, a working printing press and a cinema. In July 1985, a team of apprentices assembled a Whitmore and Binyon horizontal condensing steam-engine in the building, which had previously been located at the mill of Rueben Rackham in Wickham Market. It is believed to be the only Whitmore and Binyon steam engine on public display.
William Bone Building — an exhibition on the history of the Ransomes company in East Anglia.
Eastbridge Windpump — a windpump used for draining land in the 19th century.
Alton Watermill — an 18th-century watermill which was used to grind corn. Like many of the museum buildings, it was taken apart and then transported to the museum where it was reassembled. The watermill was moved to prevent it being destroyed by the Alton Water Reservoir.
The museum also has two huts depicting scenes of shops, kitchens, and living rooms of the 1950s, and a Victorian schoolroom.
Restoration of Abbot's Hall
The museum was awarded a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund to renovate Abbot's Hall and Crowe Street Cottages. The project was completed in April 2012, and officially opened in June 2012. There are nine exhibition spaces exploring ideas of home and belonging in East Anglia, as well as space for temporary exhibitions. Crowe Street Cottages, which were occupied by workers at Abbot's Hall, have been displayed as they would have looked when the last owner lived there.
Abbot's Hall is open year round, providing a permanent centre piece to the museum. The Hall features a permanent exhibition of the life and works of Welsh folklorist George Ewart Evans.
For more information go to eastanglianlife.org.uk
Mampi Swift @ Universal Drumz Ipswich 20th Dec
The man like Mampi Swift dropping is first tune @ Universal Drumz Ipswich
Key life-cycle tailings management risks
Professor David Williams speaks about key life-cycle tailings management risks.
The NSW Resources Regulator facilitated a workshop on 10 April 2019 where experts, industry and other regulators discussed leading practice methodologies and current issues regarding tailings storage facility management.
Speaker: Professor David Williams, Director, Geotechnical Engineering Centre, The University of Queensland
Push it to the Limit.mov
Push it to the Limit (lame title)
Copyright apple inc. - apple.com
Copyright iMovie apple inc.- apple.com
Copyright Nikon inc. nikon.com
Copyright MGMT inc. whoisMGMT.com
Copyright AJ inc. Movie is protected against copying, editing, and any other unauthorized usage.
Copyright Mirraco Bmx - mirrabikeco.com
Movie was made using iMovie in a span of 2 hrs.
Footage was taken over a week span from 10/17/10 - 10/22/10
ENGINE PREPARATION BEFORE SHIP LEAVING PORT IN TAMIL
In this video we can know about the procedures to be carried out in engine room before manouvering.How to make engine ready.what procedures to be carried out.
Cottons miniramp skate session
Some makes and fails from my session at Cottons skatepark, Romford, Essex
Beccles Fire Brigade empty the pool
May 2010
Yet again, huge thanks to volunteers from Beccles Fire Brigade for helping Beccles Lido, this time using their big old pumps to empty the pool so that we can clean it before 365TPS come to line it ...
One of a series of short videos showing how the community in Beccles saved the open air swimming pool and re-opened it as Beccles Lido - if you like this, go like
and apologies if some of the vids are a bit random, but big up to everyone who filmed or got filmed !
Windmills of Suffolk: Bardwell Windmill
Bardwell Mill was built in 1823. It worked by wind until 1925 and then by a Blackstone oil engine until 1941. The mill was derelict in 1978 but was later purchased by James Waterfield, who completed the restoration of the mill in 1985. The mill was sold to Geoffrey and Enid Wheeler in July 1987. On 16th October 1987, the mill was tailwinded when one of the gears in the fantail drive system became disengaged. The result was that the windshaft sheared at the rear of the canister, bringing the sails crashing to the ground. Restoration work began again in 1989 but was hampered by limited funds. Geoffrey Wheeler died in 1995 and in 1997 The Friends of Bardwell Windmill was set up. English Heritage and St Edmundsbury Borough Council gave over £73,000 towards the estimated cost of £92,000 to restore the mill. The balance was to be raised by the Friends. A replacement cap, cast iron windshaft and fantail were fitted to the mill in 2004. Owing to rising costs, it was decided that the new sails would be constructed by volunteer labour. The first pair of sails were completed by late summer 2008 and fitted in late 2010. The second pair of sails were fitted in April 2012.
Bardwell Windmill is open to the public at various intervals throughout the year and remains under the ownership of the Wheeler family. I myself was at the centre of controversy around this windmill around a year after visiting in 2017 after I had made the mistake of writing my name on one of the walls of the windmill near the window with a Sharpie pen. This was something I had done a couple of times to ‘leave my mark’ where I had seen others had done the same. I do not know why I did inside this mill when it became apparent no-one else had. I stupidly wrote my name, town and put my Social Media username 'sniff001'. I sincerely apologised to the Wheeler family over the internet and admitted fault; it was not something I could even explain as to why I did it to this day, and I admit was very silly and unnecessary. However the posted photo of my small “graffiti” resulted in a social media witch hunt across Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and I received insults of every swear word under the sun and even death threats. Members of my family and my town were contacted, and threats were made by these people against my job. One person even asked the ITV News if my “crime” could be featured, to which the ITV News replied it was not newsworthy, however the slander and threats against me across the internet WERE newsworthy. Needless to say it was one of the biggest regrets of my entire life and was not something I have ever done again, and Bardwell Windmill is unlikely to be a windmill I will ever return to because of the hatred I rightly or wrongly received. I only hope the Wheelers realise how sorry I truly am for that silly act, and I hope it is something they have been able to forgive me for and move on from.
Myself and my sister have had a lifelong interest in tall and interesting buildings such as windmills, and aim to continue to go round many of the windmills in the region and other counties in England.
Filmed on my Sony Cybershot DSC-H55 digital camera on 24th July 2016.
2011 Maidstone Pumas at Kent Exiles
Highlights of the Kent Exiles vs Maidstone Pumas home match from 2011
Car on fire in High Street Car Park, Glasgow