Amelia's photos with the keyword: Mist

hFF from Ruyton XI Towns

The Kashmir Goat

11 Feb 2021 16 5 224
Kashmir Goats roam freely and wildly on the Great Orme and were introduced to this area by Lord Mostyn. This sculpture by Graham High shows a goat on a spiral of rock balancing in position with the ease they are accustomed to. Its shaggy coat and long horns are detailed with fur and features fully shown. It stands outside the visitor centre and was unveiled in 2002 at the opening of the refurbished Great Orme Visitor Centre next to Summit Tram Station. Shrouded in fog the building in the background is the Summit Complex and consists of a Café/Restaurant, a boxing themed bar based on the famous Randolph Turpin and gift shop for the hordes of tourists.

3 bridges

01 Feb 2021 37 20 377
CWP : 2/2021 - ''Fog or Mist'' The main bridge seem here is the Royal Border Bridge. It is a Grade I listed railway viaduct built between 1847 and 1850, when it was opened by Queen Victoria. The engineer who designed it was Robert Stephenson (son of railway pioneer George Stephenson). The second bridge is the Royal Tweed Bridge. was designed by L G Mouchel & Partners and built by Holloway Bros Ltd between 1924 and 1928. The bridge cost a total of £180,000 and opened with great ceremony by the Prince of Wales, later King Edward VIII on 16th May 1928. It is Grade II listed structure. The third bridge is dates from 1624 and is the fourth to have stood on this location. Two of the previous structures were destroyed by flooding and one by an English attack. The bridge is 355 metres long and was the original route of the A1, before the construction of the Royal Tweed Bridge in the 1920s. The bridge is a Grade I listed structure. It is undoubtedly the prettiest of the the three. Courtesy of en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berwick_Bridge

Bridges Over the River Tweed

Cedars of Lebanon in the mist.

HFF from a misty Attingham Park

08 Oct 2020 50 39 414
I have to congratulate the National Trust for their organization during this peculiar time. It's possible to book a slot on line, and the number of people allowed in for each half hour is limited. We book in for the 9 - 9.30 slot. There is no time limit for how long each visit lasts, and there is plenty of areas to walk, but we try to leave before noon when it starts to get busy. The fog lasted for another 30 minutes, then the sun broke through. It was a bit difficult to see the deer at times.

Roath Park on a misty morning