Poppy and oxeye daisy in fields near Trysull
A glimpse of the Church of All Saints at Trysull
Trysull
Trysull
Smestow Brook seen from Woodford Lane
Church of All Saints at Trysull
Church of All Saints at Trysull
Bratch Locks (2) 027
Round Oak pub on the Staffs and Worcs Canal
The weigh-in.
Bumblehole Bridge N046 on the Staffs and Worcs Can…
Bumblehole Bridge N046 on the Staffs and Worcs Can…
Bumblehole Lock on the Staffs and Worcs Canal
Bumblehole Lock on the Staffs and Worcs Canal
Approaching Bratch Locks on the Staffs and Worcs C…
A circular walk of 4m in June 2010 from Bratch Loc…
Foxton Locks on the Grand Union Canal
Main Street, the Black Horse and the Church of St…
Looking down Main Street, Foxton, from the Church…
Churchyard of St Andrew at Foxton
Version 2
Version 2
SIMG0156
Smestow Brook near Trysull
Convolvulus arvensis (field bindweed)
Looking down to Bell Road and the Church of All Sa…
Looking South along the pylons from above Bell Roa…
View west from the South Staffs Railway Walk
Flash Lane passes under the old railway bridge
Orton Hill from the South Staffs Railway Walk
Looking over Canal Side Farm from the South Staffs…
Looking west from the the South Staffs Railway Wal…
Site of the old Wombourne Station
Awbridge Bridge over the Staffordshire and Worcest…
Small stream Union Lane near Awbridge Bridge
Hampton Loade on the River Severn (Scan from the 1…
Frosty morning on the River Severn at Ribbersford…
The Warwickshire Avon below Marcliff Lock (Scan fr…
The Warwickshire Avon below Marcliff Lock (Scan fr…
Church of All Saints at Alrewas (Grade I Listed Bu…
Bagnall Lock and Bridge 49, Trent and Mersey Canal…
A 5.5m circular walk in January 2006 from Branston…
Looking towards Barton Turn from Bridge 37 on the…
Bridge 36 on the Trent and Mersey Canal
Looking south along the Trent and Mersey Canal fro…
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Cornflower (Centaurea cyanus) in the fields near Trysull


“An iconic image of rural meadows, the bright blue cornflower was once a common sight in cornfields, but it has declined dramatically in the wild in the last 60 years. Fields full of cornflowers were last seen in Britain between the wars.”
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