Two in Purple (2 x PiPs)
Grass of Silver
Hebridean View
Last Rose of Summer After Autumn Rain
Filtered sun over field and forest
Shiny new fence (HFF everyone)
White to Black (1 x PiP)
Hunting in the long grass
Rowan in Autumn Sunlight (HFF Everyone)
Autumn Fruits (2 x PiPs)
Al little autumn light under the canopy (3 x PiP)
Forest floor food (Not for human consumption)
Foggy day in Wykeham Forest (3 x PiPs)
Just had a wash n' blow dry, courtesy of the Skye…
Common Inkcap
Autumn Larch after a damp and foggy night
Faded autumn tones
Spring in November
Light and shadow play
The beauty of surface tension (3 xPiPs)
The old and the new
Made for the comfort of bird watchers - HBM everyo…
Troutsdale in morning light (1 x note)
Becky in her element; she loved the fells of the L…
The Bee and the Ladybird (2 x PiPs)
Sycamore Lantern
Yellow (3 x PiPs)
Oxeye Daisy, en masse (1 x PiP)
Summer storm clouds passing by
A walk through Sawdon Dale (5 x PiPs)
Long straight tracks and a big blue sky (3 x PiPs)
Shadows in the shadows
Mollie's Roses
Fauna on Flora (2 x PiPs)
Red Campion among the Cow Parsley
Yellows and Greens (2 x PiPs)
Flora and Fauna in the undergrowth (4 x PiPs)
Subdued Sunset (2 x PiPs)
RED
Rural lane in Spring
Park Farm
The 'Ice Poppy'
Starling garden visitors
Bleeding
The last drop
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" A Yin & Yang group - Light & Shadow - Licht & Schatten - Lumière & Ombre "
" A Yin & Yang group - Light & Shadow - Licht & Schatten - Lumière & Ombre "
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Hackness Spring greens


One from the archives
Hackness is a village and civil parish in the Scarborough district of the county of North Yorkshire, England. It lies within the North York Moors National Park, and is situated at the foot of two moorland valleys, Lowdale and Highdale. The parish population rose from 125 in the 2001 UK census to 221 in the 2011 UK census.
Hackness is mentioned as the site of a double monastery or nunnery by *Bede, writing in the early 8th century. The present Church of Saint Peter is a Grade I listed building, parts of which date from the 11th century.
There have been two monastic foundations at Hackness, first an Anglo-Saxon nunnery founded in 680 and second a cell of Whitby Abbey that was used as a refuge when pirates forced the monks away from the coast.
The original establishment was a nunnery founded by **St. Hild or Hilda of Whitby in 680, the year of her death. According to legend the bells of Hackness tolled at the moment St. Hild died fourteen miles away in Whitby.
Hackness Hall and its landscape gardens were created in the 1790s. The house, a Grade I listed building, was commissioned by Sir Richard Van den Bempde-Johnstone, who had inherited the estate through his mother.
*Bede (672/3 – 26 May 735), also known as Saint Bede, The Venerable Bede, and Bede the Venerable, was an English monk at the monastery of St Peter and its companion monastery of St Paul in the Kingdom of Northumbria of the Angles (contemporarily Monkwearmouth–Jarrow Abbey in Tyne and Wear, England).
**Hild (614 - 17 November 680) is a significant figure in the history of English Christianity. As the abbess of Whitby – a monastery for both men and women – she led one of the most important religious centres in the Anglo-Saxon world. In 664 Hild’s monastery hosted the Synod of Whitby, which set the course for the future of Christianity in England.
A lot of history for a small village
Hackness is a village and civil parish in the Scarborough district of the county of North Yorkshire, England. It lies within the North York Moors National Park, and is situated at the foot of two moorland valleys, Lowdale and Highdale. The parish population rose from 125 in the 2001 UK census to 221 in the 2011 UK census.
Hackness is mentioned as the site of a double monastery or nunnery by *Bede, writing in the early 8th century. The present Church of Saint Peter is a Grade I listed building, parts of which date from the 11th century.
There have been two monastic foundations at Hackness, first an Anglo-Saxon nunnery founded in 680 and second a cell of Whitby Abbey that was used as a refuge when pirates forced the monks away from the coast.
The original establishment was a nunnery founded by **St. Hild or Hilda of Whitby in 680, the year of her death. According to legend the bells of Hackness tolled at the moment St. Hild died fourteen miles away in Whitby.
Hackness Hall and its landscape gardens were created in the 1790s. The house, a Grade I listed building, was commissioned by Sir Richard Van den Bempde-Johnstone, who had inherited the estate through his mother.
*Bede (672/3 – 26 May 735), also known as Saint Bede, The Venerable Bede, and Bede the Venerable, was an English monk at the monastery of St Peter and its companion monastery of St Paul in the Kingdom of Northumbria of the Angles (contemporarily Monkwearmouth–Jarrow Abbey in Tyne and Wear, England).
**Hild (614 - 17 November 680) is a significant figure in the history of English Christianity. As the abbess of Whitby – a monastery for both men and women – she led one of the most important religious centres in the Anglo-Saxon world. In 664 Hild’s monastery hosted the Synod of Whitby, which set the course for the future of Christianity in England.
A lot of history for a small village
Stefani Wehner, Marco F. Delminho, Annemarie, * ઇଓ * and 29 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Wünsche noch einen schönen Tagesausklang,ganz liebe Grüße Güni :))
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Impressed with the notes too!
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Thank you for the interesting note.
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