
Autumn
Over the hills and far away.....
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Cumbrian Fells
The fell, centre picture, is called Cat Bells and overlooks the town of Keswick and Derwent Water.
Cat Bells is a fell with a modest height of 451 metres (1,480 ft) but despite this it is one of the most popular fells in the area. It is situated on the western shore of Derwent Water within 3 miles (5 km) of the busy tourist town of Keswick.
The fell's unusual name may well have come from a distortion of "Cat Bields" meaning shelter of the wild cat, although this is not certain. The fell's name is sometimes written as Catbells.
Wasedale and Wastwater in Autumn colours
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Rowans in Rannerdale
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Rannerdale is a small but beautiful valley in the Lake District hidden from view by a fell called Rannerdale Knotts. An easy walk up the valley onto the shoulder of Rannerdale Knotts rewards you with superb views of Crummock Water, Loweswater, Buttermere and their surrounding fells.
Pointing the Way - (HFF Everyone)
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HFF 26/2/21
Access gate and signpost on Green Lonning (Lane) for Embleton High Common and Ling Fell - Allerdale District, Cumbria
Cumbrian Sunset (HFF Everyone)
November Sunbeams
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Nature's Cycle Continues
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Autumn puts on a colourful display alongside the field of a newly sown crop, probably wheat. As seen by the lying water on the soil in the foreground, the field is very wet after many days of rain.
Beech in Autumn Colours (1 x PiP)
Golden Sycamore
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Early Morning Illumination
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The white specks in the sky are seabirds flying inland. They were harassed by crows rising from the trees to send them on their way!
Forest Mushrooms
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In the Dark and Damp
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Wykeham Forest
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'Noodle' Mushrooms (1 x PiP)
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Kept in Suspence
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Fading Oak
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Autumn Haze, Hole of Horcum
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The Hole of Horcum is a section of the valley of the Levisham Beck, upstream of Levisham and Lockton, in the Tabular Hills of the North York Moors National Park in northern England. The hollow is 120 m deep and approximately 1.2 km across. A "Devil's Punchbowl" type feature, local legend has it that the amphitheatre was formed when Wade the Giant scooped up a handful of earth to throw at his wife during an argument.
The Hole was actually created by a process called spring-sapping, where water welling up from the hillside gradually undermined the slopes above, eating the rocks away grain by grain. Over thousands of years, a once narrow valley widened and deepened into an enormous cauldron – and the process still continues today.
The distinctive peak of Marsco - Isle of Skye
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Marsco is a peak (736 metres) in the Red Hills (Red Cuillin) on the Isle of Skye in Scotland. It lies on the east of Glen Sligachan. Its distinctive pyramidal profile dominates the view southwards from Sligachan.
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