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#ingleton falls
thesilicontribesman · 2 years
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Thornton Force Waterfall, Ingleton Falls Trail, Ingleton, Yorkshire Dales
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jumpneoshoots · 2 years
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Pecca Falls, Ingleton
July2122
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scentedchildnacho · 11 months
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Watch "Ingleton Falls - Champagne In Mozambique" on YouTube
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And that's people with really grody swaggy class action psychedelics have to be allowed a dope politic about it....and that meta terrorism is such a crank
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awhilesince · 2 years
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Wednesday, 18 June 1823
6 1/2
12 50/60
Off from Ingleton to Chapel in the dale, 4 1/2 miles, at 8 – drove my aunt (the black mare) – George and the guide walked by the side the whole way –
An old woman shewed us Hurtle-pot – 6d [pence] admittance for my aunt and me – the place is enclosed with a highish wall. and locked up – descended 2 or 3 steps to the door – a great hole, almost like a jelly bag – a subterraneous passage on the right (looking down from the Entrance) thro’ which the water of the Greta enters the great hole or Hurtle pot – 15 or 16 yards deep in the passage – appeared a yard or 2 deep in the pot – a few very meagre trout occasionally caught in this place – ‘Tis not very bad getting down to the water’s edge in the pot – Jingle pot is only a little distant on the other side of the farm house (John Metcalf’s to whom Weathercote belongs) not enclosed – a long, deep, widish fissure thro which the Greta runs –
a shilling each admittance to Weathercote-cave – walled round and locked up – the owner a respectable looking farmer, shewed us it – descended a flight of steps nearly to the bottom – I scrambled down to the very bottom, and went behind the water which falls 75 feet – falls from just above Mahomet’s stone (as seen from above) not from below this stone as represented in Westall’s drawing – this waterfall beautiful – the spray by the reflection of the sun formed a fine iris – I, by going quite to the bottom, saw a double iris – but people generally go too late, after 12 p.m., and therefore see nothing of this effect which adds greatly to the beauty of the scene – near the fall on the left (looking towards it) quite at the bottom is a recess in the cavern in which I could hardly stand upright – Westall has drawn this too high – hence also issues water into the cave when there is a great deal of water – at these times there is also 2 more water vents, one on the right another on the left – Into the recess in the cavern one can go (creep) a hundred yards but there is too much water now – 2 years ago after a thunderstorm the water filled the whole of this Weathercote cave, and ran over at the top – holes made in it in the wall to let it pass – the Greta runs a mile underground before it comes to Weathercote, and then another mile underground before it gets into its channel on the surface – In favourable years as many as 200 people go to see Weathercote –
Left George to drive my aunt back to Ingleton, took John Metcalf as an additional guide, and at 10 40/60 proceeded forwards determined from what Metcalf said to go both to Gate Kirk and Greenside cave – ca[me] to Hars cave, a pretty little jumble among the rocks where the subterraneous Greta appears a little for a few yards, and then falls down to a lower and hidden course –
came to Gate-Kirk cave at 11 – our candle in the lantern had nearly burnt out – with some difficulty we lighted our 3 candles and crept thro’ the cave – 3 or 4 passages, perhaps 30 or 40 yards long, communicating with each other – could only stand upright in 2 or 3 places full of stalactites – crept thro’ all the rest of the way – the rocks sometimes very slippery and in the main passage obliged to crawl close to the water’s edge – the water perhaps a yard deep – there might be some deeper holes in the passage – Westall has made a pretty drawing of the entrance to this passage – 1/2 h[ou]r in Gate Kirk cave – a little farther on a little girl led the way thro’ a small narrow cavern called Boggard-hole, which neither of my guides remembered that we could creep thro’ – Metcalf said money had been formerly hid there – several fourpenny pieces had been found there – Gate Kirk cave a mile from Weathercote –
went forwards from GateKirk and at 12 1/2 got to lower Forsgill, a beautiful fifteen yards fall of the Greta down a scar something like Dowgill scar near Horton – a little higher up is what they call the upper Fors a pretty fall of 7 1/2 yards – just half the other but very pretty – at Greenside cave the spring head of the Greta, at 1 – what a pity we had nor match, nor tinder box – Metcalf fancied it full of water we might probably have gone a long way if we had had lights he said it was one or two hundred yards long – could stand upright very well – for the few yards we durst venture, no water in the cave, and no dropping from above – Going by these Forsgills was a roundabout, and we all agreed we had walked four long miles from GateKirk – all across the heather made it very fatiguing – saw the 2 covies of grouse, 15 or 16 in each – put up several pairs of old birds –
In mounting across the hill (the pastures and fell below Whernside) saw the little village of Winterskill below on the Greta where very fine trout are caught, weighing 2 lbs. – Gave Metcalf 1/2 crown for his Trouble (he had shewed us Westall’s drawings and recommended Hutton’s (the reverend Mr.) tour in these parts) and we parted at Greenside – these Forsgills are worth seeing – the best way would be to drive from Ingleton to Winterskill (along the Richmond road the road we travelled from Horton on Monday) and thence proceed nearly straight up to the falls, to Greenside cave, and then direct to the top of Whernside –
this was the route my guide James Greenwood and I took after Metcalf left us, and we were at the highest summit in about 20 minutes at 1 1/2 – we missed Chapel in the dale on Monday because the Chapel steeple is so like a large chimney, we mistook it for one, thought the building a house, and instead of turning down about the 22 milestone from Lancaster (about 2 1/2 miles from the house near Ribble head) we drove forward to near Ingleton – walked along the summit of Whernside –
fine view of Ingleborough, and of the road we came from Horton along deepdale, of Saleside etc etc on one side, and on the other of the rich valley (then said the guide there is not a richer valley in England) and town of Dent – the hills beyond Sedbury – Skiddaw – the sands beyond Lancaster etc –
crossed down the other side of Whernside to a cottage near Yordas cave § – got a great thing like a rake (without teeth) to stick candles in, – lighted our 7 candles at the lime-kilns close to the cave, and went in, 1/. each admittance (guides never paid for) at 2 1/2 – reconnoitered the whole cavern in about 1/4 hour – the bottom rather soft, sandy and towards the far end gravelly – here the stream passed thro’, and went along a narrow deepish channel we could not pursue – a drip from the top – fine, spacious, lofty vault – thickly encrusted with fine stalactites – a remarkably fine cavern to those who have never seen the caves in Derbyshire, Castleton etc – I began to feel the cavern rather cold, and gladly escaped to realms of day –
after walking about 1 1/2 mile on the road, turned to the left along the fields, (having just before noticed the springhead of the little river Skell close to the road on our left, and sunk considerably below us) and went across the Thornton-fors a beautiful fall of the Skell of 15 yards or perhaps more altogether; for there is a great tho’ divided fall before it comes to the main one – at this fors at 3 40/60 –
from here to Ingleton along the fields, the walk is most picturesque – the Skell runs along a deep glen wooded down to the bottom on each side, murmurs over its stony bed, and joins the Greta at Ingleton – as we walked along the high ground the finest view of Inglebro’ and his noble rocky abutments, rising in 3 huge steps of white ruggedness – Ingleton picturesquely situated – yet the stone walls along the sides of Inglebro’ rather spoil the majesty of his appearance – they bespeak the avarice and power of man to share and divide even nature’s deserts –
Rambled along Helks wood – peeping here and there at the Skell, here and there at Inglebro’ – gathered the most beautiful white dog rose I ever saw – and wild lilies of the valley – they grow in the beds 10 or 12 yards square – and there are many curious plants in this wood – belonged to a reverend Mr Foxcroft who had a nice place near (at the village of Thornton) – he died lately – left his widow the place for her life, then to his heirs – he was 1st cousin to Mrs Watkinson late of Ovenden, now of Crownest, a poor place, about 3 miles beyond Settle on the Ingleton road –
Got home at 4 1/2 – Dined at Ingleton – Roast shoulder of Excellent mutton – very good dinner Thirsty after so much walking (I had walked full 15 miles 4 or 5 of them over heather) the cold water chilled me – a large basin of hot boiled milk set me right again, and we were off at 7 20/60, and got to our old quarters, the Golden Lion Inn Settle, at 9 1/2 –
wrote out Sunday and part of Monday and went upstairs to bed at 12 – Very fine day – [E two dots O one dot, marking discharge from venereal complaint] –
after returning from Weathercote this morning my aunt had Percy in the gig, and made an attempt to meet me at Yordas cave, but the road was very hilly she was afraid of being too late, and turned back when she had got within a mile of the place –
§ this cave now belongs to Mr Peart the banker of Settle, he having lately purchased the property in which it is situated –
left margin:
Ingleton-caves, Weathercote, etc
Forsgill.
(fall of the Greta).
Whernside.
Yordas Yowdass cave.
Ingleton.
Helks-wood.
reference number: SH:7/ML/E/7/0028
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architectnews · 2 years
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Sir Sydney Camm Science and Technology, Esher
Sir Sydney Camm Science and Technology Claremont Fan Court School Building, Fletcher Crane Architects Surrey Design
Sir Sydney Camm Science and Technology, Claremont Fan Court School, UK
5 May 2022
Seven projects have been awarded Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) South East Awards.
Sir Sydney Camm Science and Technology, Claremont Fan Court School, Claremont Drive, Esher, Surrey, south east England, UK
Design: Fletcher Crane Architects
photo : Nick Kane
Sir Sydney Camm Science and Technology, Claremont Fan Court School, England
Jury Report
Fletcher Crane Architects were engaged by Claremont Fan Court School to design and deliver a new building to provide ten subject-specific classrooms set over two levels, on its sensitive Grade I listed historic estate. The route into the site follows a fall in the ground level, and the new building contrasts this with a strong horizontal roof line – an abstracted entablature perhaps – supported by a sober two-storey dark brick colonnade that echoes the trunks of the trees that surround it.
photo : Nick Kane
Two floors of bright, well-equipped classrooms and laboratories are linked by top-lit broad passages, and a generous, double height foyer space with seating and a well-detailed concrete staircase. An upper floor hallway culminates in a display-case window, allowing the building’s users to show their work to passers-by.
photograph : Nick Kane
The axial stair through the building may become a principal route into the school as the masterplan develops, and the building’s upper level opens onto a terrace facing the project’s other building on this route – a design and technology workshop clad in expanded metal. This building has a technical directness suited to its function, and a quiet theatricality in the way that its glazed wall makes the workshop and its machines and users appear almost like actors on a stage to those passing by – a drama of making.
photograph : Nick Kane
RIBA region: South East Architect practice: Fletcher Crane Architects Date of completion: Oct 2019 Date of occupation: Oct 2019 Client company name: Claremont Fan Court School Foundation Project city/town: Surrey Gross internal area: 1,600.00 m² Net internal area: 1,440.00 m² Contractor company name: Life Build Solutions
photo : Nick Kane
Consultants
Structural Engineers: Elliot Wood Environmental / M&E Engineers: Michael Jones Associates Energy Assessor: Ingleton Wood Quantity Surveyor / Cost Consultant: Synergy Project Management: Richardson Greenyer
Awards
• RIBA Regional Award • Regional Award Short List
Guildford Crematorium, Surrey
photo : Simon Kennedy
photo : Simon Kennedy
photograph : Simon Kennedy
photograph : Simon Kennedy
photograph : Simon Kennedy
Text awaited from the RIBA
2022 RIBA South East Award Winners
2022 RIBA South East Award winners
School building designs
Sir Sydney Camm Science and Technology, Claremont Fan Court School – 2022 RIBA South East Award winners images / information received 040522
Claremont Fan Court School is a co-educational independent school outside Esher, in Surrey, sixteen miles from London, in the grounds of the Claremont Estate.
Address:
Phone: 01372 467841
Location: Claremont Dr, Esher, KT10 9LY, Surrey, South East England, UK
Surrey Building Designs
Surrey Buildings
Surrey Architecture Designs – recent architectural selection:
Guildford Crematorium, New Pond Road, Godalming Design: Haverstock, Architects photo : Simon Kennedy Guildford Crematorium
UCB Windlesham, Windlesham Architects: Heatherwick Studio image : Secchi Smith Apple UCB Windlesham Surrey Science Research Hub
Glade House Design: AR Design Studio, Architects visual : Nu.Ma Glade House England
Surrey School Designs
Charterhouse School Building, Godalming Belsize Architects image from architects Charterhouse School Building
Business School for the Creative Industries, Epsom Design: UNStudio visualisation : FlyingArchitecture Business School for the Creative Industries at UCA Epsom, Surrey
School of Veterinary Medicine at University of Surrey Design: Devereux Architects image from architect School of Veterinary Medicine at University of Surrey
RIBA Awards
RIBA Awards Winning Buildings + Architects
RIBA Awards
English Architecture Designs – chronological list
Stirling Prize
RIBA Royal Gold Medal
Comments / photos for the Sir Sydney Camm Science and Technology, Claremont Fan Court School design by – 2022 RIBA South East Award winner page welcome
The post Sir Sydney Camm Science and Technology, Esher appeared first on e-architect.
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dave-j-smith · 3 years
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Waterfall from the Ingleton series of waterfalls in North Yorkshire, England.
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seanmorroww · 6 years
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Ingleton Falls - “High”
Champagne in Mozambique [Isle of Jura, 2018]
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don’t go chasing waterfalls x
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thesilicontribesman
The Ancient Landscape and Woodland of Ingleton Falls Trail Photoset 2, Ingleton, Yorkshire Dales.
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earthstory · 4 years
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Thornton Force Thornton force is a 14m waterfall on the River Twiss; located in the Ingleton Waterfalls group in Yorkshire, UK. The waterfall drops from horizontal limestone (deposited 330 million years ago) onto dipping sandstone deposited 500 million years ago. This means while the water falls 14m over the fall, it passes an age gap of 170 million years.
This type of contact between rocks is known as an angular unconformity. An unconformity represents a contact between two rock units where there is a substantial age difference between the rocks (usually caused by a break in the geological record). An angular unconformity is a type of unconformity seen when horizontal strata are deposited on older tilted (also known as dipping) layers. Originally, Ordovician (485 – 444 million years ago) mud and sand would have been deposited in deep water. The origin of this sediment was likely to be in turbidites (a deposit formed by a turbidity current, which is rapidly moving the water that moves down a slope under the sea). This mud and sand would have been uplifted before being folded into mountains and then eroded to form a flat surface. The onset of marine transgression lead to the flooding of the land by a subtropical sea leading to deposition of limestone horizontally 330 million years ago. When the sea regressed, further uplift and erosion of the valley by glaciers occurred. ~SA Image: http://bit.ly/1MfVqUt Copyright Val Vannet and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence More on turbidites: http://bit.ly/1GkIsEM and http://bit.ly/1GuhJaL
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thesilicontribesman · 2 years
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Ingleton Falls Trail and Ancient Woodlands, Ingleton, Yorkshire Dales
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thatsnakeman · 4 years
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Ingleton Falls, Yorkshire, UK [OC][3024x4032] via /r/EarthPorn https://ift.tt/2SwetVY
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ukge · 4 years
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Found Ingleton Falls https://ift.tt/2Oh4B0j
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viajesdefernando · 5 years
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La Yorkshire Dales Cycle Way: Día 2
La primera noche acampando no fue buena, ya que no pude dormir bien. Al día siguiente aun estaba cansado, pero Miresfield Farm ofrecía un buen desayuno inglés para recuperarse. El primer desafío del día fue la subida a la salida de Malham. Me tomó unas cuantas paradas para completar la subida, mas que nada porque aun no me acostumbraba al ritmo necesario para viajar con una bici cargada. Una vez arriba, el camino se tornó mas fácil y el paisaje se abrió. De aquí en adelanta todo era nuevo para mi. Después de unas cuantas horas de andar confortablemente pero con un poco de frío sobre varias montañas, descendí a Settle. No paré aquí, ya que sentía que con todas las paradas en la subida al inicio y para tomar fotos, no me iba a alcanzar el tiempo para visitar otros lugares en Ingleton. Después de Settle la ruta va paralela a la línea del tren y entre granjas, y es menos exigente a pesar de que a esa altura ya estaba cansado. Después de luchar contra mi cabeza y la idea de terminar mi viaje y devolverme a casa en la siguiente estación de trenes, llegué a Ingleton. Ahí instalé mi carpa en Meadow Falls, tomé una ducha y caminé por los alrededores. Hice un hike en las Ingleton Waterfalls (una de ellas en la foto) y llegué de vuelta a Ingleton para la cena y a comprar comida para el día siguiente. Al final del día estaba cansado y aun con la idea de abandonar la travesía, miedos facilitados también por el informe del tiempo, así que decidí que en la mañana vería como me sentía y si podía continuar.
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nando-on-the-road · 5 years
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The Yorkshire Dales Cycle Way: Day 2
The first night camping was miserable, and sleep didn’t come easy. The next day I was a bit tired still, but the Miresfield Farm offered a very nice full English breakfast for recovering. The first challenge of the day was to climb out of Malham into the tarn. It took me a few stops to complete the climb, mainly because I could not get use to the pace required for cycling with a heavy bike. Once up, the trail eases and the landscape opens. From here on everything was new for me. After a few hours cycling comfortably by several hills and with a bit of cold, I descended into Settle. I did not stop there, I was felling that with all the stops in the initial climb and for taking pictures I wasn’t going to have enough time to spend in Ingleton. After Settle,  the road goes parallel to the train line and between farms, and it is less challenging although at that point I was already tired. After fighting with my brain and the idea of ending my trip and returning from the next train, I arrived to Ingleton. I set my tent at Meadow Falls, got a nice shower and walked around. I hiked around the Ingleton Waterfalls (one of them in the picture) and got to Ingleton for dinner and buying fuel for the next day. At the end of the day I was feeling tired and still with the idea of abandoning my trip, fears fed also by the weather forecast, so I decided that I will see how I fell the next day.
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mhz-mhz · 6 years
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