Mother Pig Gets Fed Up With Feeding Piglet, Launches it Into the Air (Storyful, Animals)
Rebecca Tay was visiting Cotswold Farm Park in Guiting Power, England, recently when she came across a group of piglets nursing from their mother. She started filming and caught the moment that one piglet stepped on its mother’s snout. The mother clearly wasn’t happy and sent the little squealing pig rocketing through the air. The piglet appeared fine, however, and went back to get more food.
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Places to see in ( Tideswell - UK )
Places to see in ( Tideswell - UK )
Tideswell is a village and civil parish in the Peak District of Derbyshire, in England. It lies 6 miles east of Buxton on the B6049, in a wide valley on a limestone plateau, at an altitude of 1,000 feet above sea level, and is within the District of Derbyshire Dales. The population (including Wheston) was 1,820 in 2001, increasing slightly to 1,827 at the 2011 Census, making it the second-largest settlement within the National Park, after Bakewell.
Tideswell is known locally as Tidza or Tidsa. In addition, local residents are known as Sawyeds, owing to a traditional story about a farmer who freed his prize cow from a gate in which it had become entangled, by sawing its head off. Today the story is re-enacted raucously and colourfully every Wakes week by a local mummers group called the Tidza Guisers.
In the Middle Ages, Tideswell was a market town known for lead mining. The Tideswell lead miners were renowned for their strength and were much prized by the military authorities. The Domesday Book of 1086 lists TIDESUUELLE as the King's land in the charge of William Peverel with fewer than five households.
Tideswell is now best known for its 14th-century parish church, the Church of St John the Baptist, known as the Cathedral of the Peak, which contains three 15th-century misericords. A sundial lies in the churchyard; it is positioned on steps which local historian Neville T. Sharpe thinks likely to be those of the village's market cross. A market and two-day fair were granted to the village in 1251. The Foljambe family, later the Foljambe baronets, were the principal landowners from the fourteenth to the eighteenth centuries.
The town has a week-long festival near the summer solstice known as the Wakes, culminating in Big Saturday, which includes a torchlight procession through the streets, led by a brass band playing a unique tune called the Tideswell Processional, and townsfolk dancing a traditional weaving dance.
( Tideswell - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Tideswell . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Tideswell - UK
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Places to Visit: Caravanning in the Cotswolds
This week we took our touring caravan to The Cotswolds and stayed in a Caravan and Camping Club site near Bourton-on-the-Water. It was our first trip to the area and we were blown away by the ‘chocolate box’ towns. We spent our time stopping around two areas, soaking up the atmosphere and views of the many quintessentially English villages. We started with a top breakfast at The Hollow Bottom in Guiting Power, followed up with a saunter over to Lower Slaughter and then Bourton-on-the-Water. We feel like we barely scratched the surface and will be sure to return.
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Temple Guiting St Mary
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Temple Guiting
The villages of Temple Guiting and Guiting Power were known as Upper and Lower Guiting, they were renamed in the 19th century. Temple Guiting is built on the steep slopes of a valley through which the River Windrush flows.
Temple Guiting takes it's name from the Knights Templar who were given lands here by Gilbert de Lacy and Roger de Waterville in the middle of the 12th century. A Templar preceptory was founded to administer these properties, they built the present parish church in 1170.The preceptory consisted of serving brethren, a chaplain and one or more knights under a preceptor, a knight who gathered revenues to be sent to their order in Palestine. The Templars were suppressed by pope Clement V, on the 8th January 1308, the Templars were arrested under orders from Edward II who seized their properties. John de Coningston, the preceptor of Guiting was detained and sent to London, Templars were examined and tortured, eventually the belief that their master could grant absolution from sin brought the charge of heresy. They made a public abjuration of error in June 1311, were absolved and reconciled to the church but their lands were confiscated. John de Coningston and six other Templars did penance at monastries in the diocese of Worcester where they were maintained by a charge on their lands at Temple Guiting.
The south and north chancel walls of the church with their corbel table, the south wall of the nave, the winged lion corbel now in the chancel, some carved fragments in the porch and the capitals of the tower arch are survivors from the Templar church. In the 13th century the east end of the chancel was altered, the remains of two chancel windows and a corbel in the porch are of this period. 14th century work includes the north chapel with its piscina and aumbry, the low window of the south wall and the north and south chancel windows. The 15th and 16th centuries saw the addition of battlements, the east window, nave and north chapel windows, the priest's door and the font. The west tower and it's bells are 17th century. 18th century features include the westernmost nave windows, the north window of the north chapel, the Royal Arms, a hatchment and a gilded decalogue. The north porch and the chancel and north chapel arches are 19th century.
The church has three panels of 15th century stained glass depicting Mary Magdalene, James the Lesser and the Virgin Mary. There is also a beautiful modern window by Tom Denny.
Temple Guiting lies between Stow-on-the Wold and Winchcombe about an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, Adam Henson's Cotswold Farm Park is nearby.
bwthornton.co.uk
'Winchcombe: A Cotswold Town' | Trailer
A short Trailer of the 65 minute documentary: Winchcombe: A Cotswold Town.
Like what you see? Order the DVD here at winchcombevideo.co.uk
A Cotswold Walk from Bibury to Coln St Aldwyns 28th March 2012
A Cotswold Walk from Bibury to Coln St Aldwyns 28th March 2012
Rob Little
letstourengland.com
18 Aug. 2012 : Bibury Trout Farm and River
Bibury is a popular Cotswold village in Gloucestershire.
The most beautiful village in England, and it remains most attractive in its setting alongside the river.
River Coln rushing through Bibury
The Cotswolds - Glorious Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire is a county in South West England. The county comprises part of the Cotswold Hills, part of the flat fertile valley of the River Severn, and the entire Forest of Dean.
The county town is the city of Gloucester, and other principal towns include Cheltenham, Cirencester, Stroud and Tewkesbury...
Summer in The Cotswolds.....by Drone !
Included in this video you will see Lodge Park, Sherborne, Upper Slaughter, Lower Slaughter, Naunton, Yanworth and the garden that is The Cotswolds !
Cotswold Town Winchcombe
Winchcombe is a beautiful golden-coloured market town set above the River Isbourne on the Cotswold Edge. Sudeley Castle and the steam railway are key attractions in the area and the town is a great centre for walking.
Bibury,The Trout Farm, 15/08/13
Today we visited Bibury & its Trout farm.
Cotswold Life March 2014
Cotswold Life magazine March 2014 issue on sale now
cotswoldlife.co.uk
Explore Tv visit PB Winery
PB Valley Estate is located Valley 150 km’s northeast of Bangkok a comfortable drive of less than two hours from Bangkok Metropolis on a 6 lane highway. PB Valley Estate is situated on the edge of the Khao Yai National Park and is the birthplace of the Khao Yai wine region.
March 2011 in Regents Park, London
A beautiful spring day in Regents Park. And a view from Primrose Hill towards the end.
Mickleton - Wood Lane (Public Footpath, N-S)
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NGR Start: SP196440
NGR Finish: SP174432
Footpath Number: 35, 37 & 24
Date: 14.109.14
Condition: Hard farm track, field track and woodland track.
Notes: This right of way was ridden with permission from the land owner as part of the annual 'OK Supreme' trial/trail event. It is a criminal offence to use it with a mechanically propelled vehicle without this permission.
33rd HONC (Hell of the North Cotswolds mountain bike trails)2017 (100K)
Hell of the North Cotswolds 33rd edition 2017. An off road on road 100k ride through the picturesque north Cotswolds, on dry fast trails in fantastic weather. Well marshaled excellent signing/routing and the tea at the Guiting Power Village Hall feed station was greatly appreciated, thank you. A really great ride, but really tough going when not fit!!!
My Movie bibury
fish farm at bibury uk