Worcester break 10.
The neighbourhood garden mentioned in the previous blog. A very good example.
Worcester break 10. Read More »
The neighbourhood garden mentioned in the previous blog. A very good example.
Worcester break 10. Read More »
(Apologies for poor spelling in previous blog). Above is a photo taken in the Shrub Hill area of Worcester showing a viaduct carrying the Worcester to Hereford rail-line over a section of the Birmingham to Wocester canal, an unusual feature of the viaduct being the hole in the viaduct above the archway giving access through
Worcester break 9. Read More »
Above = geese on Camp House site (s.p.b.s). Walking the Riverside footpath from Camp House into Worcester I came across a relatively new metal footbridge over the River Severn just north of the Georgian road bridge. Seeing the footbridge was called the ‘Sabrina’ bridge I wondered what the connection was between it and the 1950s
As mentioned earlier in the week there is what I call a ‘hutment colony’, although now mostly caravans, near Camp House (s.p.b.s) beside the River Severn. The photo shows one substantial hutment. Hutment ‘colonies’ often developed after the Great War in the 1920s, sometimes earlier, in an age before strict planning regulations came into force.
Worcester break 7. Read More »
At the Camp House (s.p.b.s) the waters of the River Severn are always flowing downstream, the extent of the tidal impact on the flow of the River being from the Severn Estuary upstream to Gloucester. The Severn Bore, a moving wave pushing upstream, also does not reach Worcester. The ‘Bore’ results from spring-tides pushing water
Worcester break 6. Read More »
(I still don’t understand why some pictures come up sideways when they are the right way up on the desktop), anyway another photo of the lane from Hallow to the bank of the River Severn at Camp House (s.p.b.s). So why a young mature oak tree? – simply because they are now uncommon in eastern
Worcester break 5a. Read More »