time out in Walton Street
woodsmoke in the snowy twilight
iced canal at Jericho
snow at Rutherway
sunlight on the icy canal
canal boat on ice
frozen canal at Walton Well
cold weather for ducks
life goes on in the freeze
icicles on the eaves
post van in the snow
snow in Cranham Terrace
snow at the Radcliffe Arms
Old Bookbinders in the snow
snow in Canal Street
Nelson Street snowman
winter in Walton Crescent
snow in Walton Crescent
Walton Crescent in the snow
snow at Walton Crescent
snowed-up cars (ha ha)
clearing the snow
snow at the factory gate
wild sky and chimneys
Albert Street bus stop
Mount Street terrace
Jericho's vanishing brickwork
old terrace backs
St Paul's bus stop
Gibraltar in Jericho
spring at Rewley Road
College Cruisers 2010
Time Please (look at the clock)
Jericho polling station
old Wesleyan Boys' School
election posters
Harcourt Arms
windows in Cranham Street
Worcester Place terrace
Worcester Place renovations
King Street, Jericho
springtime in Jericho
blossom in Jericho Street
St Barnabas in the May dawn
Only House on the corner
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Having congratulated myself on having properly secured the loose pipework behind and sealing up the loose floor tiles under my washing machine, this morning I found water was still dripping through the ceiling below. So after some more rude words, I had another look upstairs, and found where the leak had really been (and was still) coming from - the (concealed) cistern of the upstairs WC, the adjustment screw of the ballcock in which had never been properly tightened. I've now fixed it (it took seconds), but if I'd done that sooner it would have saved a lot of time, effort and expense.
I'm going on a 3-day photographic holiday in Somerset, organised by a professional. Even using the new camera, it's unlikely to be very successful; Exmoor must be nearly as dead and dry as the countryside in the SE. I booked it months ago, in expectation of normal conditions.
But unlike on my photographic holiday in China, 5 years ago, I won't be the least serious or well-equipped photographer in the group, but nor will I come home with comparable pictures or memories.
The new, full-frame, 3-pound sledgehammer was used for all but one of them. But what's been achieved by buying it is a good question. The results (on Flickr and Ipernity) really are indistinguishable from those taken on my much smaller, lighter and older other digital cameras.
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