Weavers Morris Dancers at the Bluebell pub North Walsham, Norfolk
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NORTH WALSHAM PEOPLE'S CHOIR
OK, For those of you who like (?) to watch my videos of North Walsham People's Choir, this is my second attempt at uploading this video! This was taken last night at N. Walsham Community Centre at the Christmas lunch for N W social club for the blind. Hope you enjoy this video.
North Walsham Hotel Scarborough Hill Country Inn
Set in 4 acres of beautiful gardens, Scarborough Hill Country Inn is the perfect place to relax and enjoy all Norfolk has to offer.
corals north walsham ronnie at its best
Hickling, Norfolk Broads, UK
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Hickling is a very attractive village on the Norfolk Broads, next to Hickling Broad which is the largest broad in the system. It is located quite close to the sea at Sea Palling. The village covers a large area with a very low density as can be seen in this film.
The Doomsday Book refers to the Village as Hikelinga, and mentions a Church being here - noting that Godwin, a free man of Edric of Laxfield' s, held Hickling before 1066.
Hickling Priory, some distance from the Parish Church towards Sea Palling, was founded in 1185. The Priory was granted a Charter by King John, in 1204, to hold a weekly market. The market took place near St. Mary's Parish Church for some five hundred years. (The Priory ruins are on private land and are not open to the public.)
The church was started in 1204 and can be seen in this film although much was added later.
In 1287 a flood engulfed the village, and 180 people were drowned. The waters rose 30cm above the high altar of the priory church. Less than a century later, in 1349, the Black Death struck. At the Priory only two of the canons were left alive, and more than half the population of the village must have died.
During the Middle Ages peat was dug from the marshes for fuel; the diggings later flooding to form the Broads. Hickling Broad, the largest and wildest of the Norfolk Broads, has for a long time played an important part in the social and commercial life of the village.
Agriculture has always been a major feature of rural life in Hickling, and it continues to be so today, though many fewer people now work on the land than formerly.
Both Stubb Mill, an important drainage mill, and Hickling Mill, near the Methodist Chapel, date from the early nineteenth century. Hickling Mill was described in 1819 as a handsome new mill. It had eight floors and three pairs of French stones, being capable of producing 4320 stones of wheat in a week.
King George V and King George VI visited the Village and Whiteslea Lodge. One occasion in 1959 is well remembered when, because Whiteslea Lodge was flooded, the Duke of Edinburgh and Charles, Prince of Wales, stayed at The Pleasure Boat Inn. The Prince of Wales was in Hickling in 2001 to visit the Nature Reserve.
Source :
My channel on you tube : is one of the most prolific from Poland. I have produced around 1,800 original films, most in English. My big interest in life is travel and history but I have also placed films on other subjects.
Please feel free to ask questions in the public area or to comment on things you disagree with. Sometimes there are mistakes because I speak without preparation. If I see the mistakes myself, I make this clear in the text. Please also leave a star rating!
There are a number of films here on the packaging industry. This is because I am the publisher of Central and Eastern European Packaging -- - the international platform for the packaging industry in this region focusing on the latest innovations, trends, design, branding, legislation and environmental issues with in-depth profiles of major industry achievers.
Most people may think packaging pretty boring but it possibly effects your life more than you really imagine!
Central and Eastern European Packaging examines the packaging industry throughout this region, but in particular in the largest regional economies which are Russia, Germany, Poland, Czech Republic, Ukraine and Austria. That is not to say that the other countries are forgotten, they are not, but obviously there is less going on. However the fact that there are so many travel related films here is not from holidays but from business trips attending trade fairs around the region. Every packaging trade fair is a new excuse to make another film!
White deer in south Uk
White deer spotted in Forrest
Places to see in ( Holt - UK )
Places to see in ( Holt - UK )
Holt is a market town, civil parish and electoral ward in the English county of Norfolk. The town is 22.8 miles north of the city of Norwich, 9.5 miles west of Cromer and 35 miles east of King's Lynn. Holt is on the route of the A148 King's Lynn to Cromer road. The nearest railway station is in the town of Sheringham where access to the national rail network can be made via the Bittern Line to Norwich. Holt also has a railway station on the preserved North Norfolk Railway, the 'Poppy Line', of which it is the south-western terminus. The nearest airport is Norwich.
Holt Hall was owned by Henry Burcham-Rogers, who inherited it from his father John Rogers in 1906. Henry Burcham-Rogers kept the hall until his death in 1945. Holt Hall is currently a field studies centre run by Norfolk County Council. Byfords is thought to be the oldest house in Holt (the cellar dates back to the 15th century), a survivor of the great fire of Holt in 1708 and a further fire in the building in 1906.
Blind Sam is the name given locally to the Queen Victoria Jubilee Lantern located in Obelisk Plain. From the year of Victoria's Golden Jubilee in 1887 until 1921 it stood in the Market Place, where it had two functions, to provide light to the Market Place and to provide drinking water from two fountains at the bottom. The pineapple-topped obelisk at Holt is one of a pair gateposts from Melton Constable Park, the other having been given to the town of Dereham in 1757. Each gatepost had the distances to various places from Holt and Dereham respectively carved into the stone.
Holt Country Park is a short walk from the town. It has had a chequered history, including a horseracing course, heath, farmland, forestry and woodland garden. It has now been developed into a tranquil woodland dominated with Scots pine and native broadleaves. The Lowes is an area of heathland of around 120 acres (0.49 km2) to the south of Holt set aside by the Inclosure Act of 1807.
Holt railway station, opened in 1887, was served by the Midland and Great Northern Railway. Most of this network was closed by British Railways in 1959 but the short section from Melton Constable railway station via Holt to Sheringham (services continuing on to Cromer and Norwich) escaped closure for a few more years – finally succumbing in 1964 when the branch was cut back to Sheringham (now the nearest national rail-head, served by frequent services to Norwich along the 'Bittern Line').
( Holt - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Holt . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Holt - UK
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Unknown wreck off Norfolk
Description
Gay Marriage and Black Swans
Is Gay Marriage right and what has it got to do with Black Swans?
England's Winter Bird Spectacular | vLog #3 | Nature Travel Guide
I grew up in Britain and I am always excited in the winter to see the visiting swans, geese and ducks from the Arctic. This video goes anti-clockwise around the coast.
Maps, Photos and Videos
Map: World map showing Britain.
Map: Britain.
Map: Dumfries and Galloway.
Photo: Reedbeds at Caerlaverock National Nature Reserve (NNR).
Video: Barnacle Geese washing at Mersehead RSPB nature reserve.
Video: Tree Sparrows.
Video: Barnacle Geese flying overhead at Caerlaverock NNR.
Video: Reed Bunting.
Video: Bewicks Swan.
Video: Field of Barnacle Geese.
Video: Close-up of Barnacle Geese.
Video: Circular formation of Barnacle Geese feeding on field.
Video: Blue Tit on and around a feeder at Loch Ken RSPB reserve.
Video: Nuthatch.
Map: Cumbria Solway.
Photo: Frost on the grassy edge of the Solway Firth.
Video: Barnacle Geese flying over the saltmarsh and landing.
Map: Morecombe Bay.
Video: Bearded Tit feeding at Leighton Moss.
Map: Ribble Estuary.
Photo: Moorhen at Longton Brickcroft nature reserve.
Map: Dee and Mersey.
Map: Severn Estuary.
Video: Water Rail feeding at WWT Slimbridge nature reserve.
Map: Somerset Levels.
Photo: View over reedbeds and hides at Steart.
Photo: View over shingle at Steart.
Video: Little Grebe swimming.
Video: Shelduck.
Video: Stoat on footpath.
Video: Large group of Starlings flying towards Ham Wall.
Video: Close-up of Starlings flying.
Video: Starlings circling near the reeds.
Video: Starlings continuously flying across a gap in the reeds.
Video: View of reeds showing Starlings flying in foreground, roosting and flying further away.
Video: View from a hide at Shapwick Heath.
Video: Ducks.
Video: Ducks with lots of diving ducks feeding.
Video: Ducks feeding at Graylake RSPB reserve.
Video: Nuthatch at Swell Wood.
Map: Hurst to Lymington.
Map: Chichester.
Video: The resident Canada Geese at Farlington Marshes.
Video: The winter-visiting Brent Geese feeding at Prinsted.
Video: Cormorants drying wings (or gaining some other evolutionary advantage) at the lake just south of Brook Meadow.
Map: Kent Marshes.
Photo: View from Northwood Hill RSPB reserve over wet fields.
Map: Essex Coast.
Photo: View of the desolate Old Hall Marshes RSPB reserve.
Video: Black-tailed Godwits on the field by the car park.
Map: Suffolk Coast.
Photo: View of the reeds and a hide at Minsmere RSPB nature reserve.
Video: Snipe feeding.
Map: North Norfolk Coast.
Video: View from a hide at Cley Marshes nature reserve.
Video: Two Marsh Harriers.
Video: Pink-footed Geese at Holkham flying in the sky.
Video: Pink-footed Geese landing.
Video: Pink-footed Geese grazing on the grass.
Photo: Sunrise at Snettisham RSPB nature reserve.
Video: Pink-footed Geese flying off the mudflats and onto land at dawn.
Video: Waders flying over mudflats.
Map: The Fens.
Map: Lincolnshire Coast.
References
A lot of the things I say in this video are based on personal experience and so do not need referencing (this is known as primary research in academia). Of the remaining content, a lot of the wildlife/nature knowledge I talk about is relatively easily verified and/or generally accepted at this stage of human civilisation; the following references are suitable for this general information.
C Cutts and J Speakman, 1994. Energy Savings in Formation Flight of Pink-footed Geese, Journal of Experimental Biology 189 251-261. (Energy saving is estimated as being between 2-14%.)
Jennifer Gill, 1996. Habitat Choice in Pink-footed Geese: Quantifying the Constraints Determining Winter Site Use, Journal of Applied Ecology 33 (4, Aug) 884-892. (This, and other studies mentioned within, finds strong evidence that Pink-footed Geese in Norfolk are very concerned to find places to feed near where they roost. This helps explain why Holkham is so popular as it is not too far inland. They also do not like disturbance.)
D Snow and C Perrins, 1998. The Birds of the Western Palearctic Concise Edition, Oxford University Press.
Lars Svensson, Killian Mullarney and Dan Zetterstrom, 2009. Collins Bird Guide 2nd Edition, Collins.
S Aulagnier, P Haffner, A J Mitchell-Jone, F Moutou and J Zima, 2008. Mammals of Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, A and C Black Publishers.
Visit Southwold, UK
WATCH IN HD!
The result of a short trip to Southwold, UK this autumn.
Music: Touch Sensitive - Pizza Guy
All imagery property of Shark Media UK. I do not own the rights to the audio.
THE SWAN INN
A Boutique Hotel, Bar and Restaurant located at Chiddingfold, Surrey
Great British Ghosts S02E05 The Grand Theatre and Blackpool Pleasure Beach
Helmsley Timelapse
A collection of day and night timelapse. Taken in and around the market town of Helmsley on the edge of the North York Moors National Park. This video is made up of over 8000 individual images shot over a 3 month period. For more information on Helmsley visit visithelmsley.co.uk or for the moors visit northyorkmoors.org.uk
2020.01.01 Two Black Swans Soaring, Gliding and Landing on Water ~ Elton Y
The black swan (Cygnus atratus) is a large waterbird, a species of swan which breeds mainly in the southeast and southwest regions of Australia. Within Australia they are nomadic, with erratic migration patterns dependent upon climatic conditions. Black swans are large birds with mostly black plumage and red bills. They are monogamous breeders, and are unusual in that one-quarter of all families are parented by homosexual pairings, mostly by males. Both partners share incubation and cygnet rearing duties.
Beasted by the 'Beast from the East'
That Norfolk weather forecast in full . .
St. Faiths, Norfolk 28th February 2018
Firework display, Lightwater Valley theme park North Yorkshire England
Firework display, Lightwater Valley theme park North Yorkshire England
Avocet On Nest - Salthouse Marsh - North Norfolk
Avocet On Nest on Salthouse Marsh in North Norfolk.
ringland norfolk walk
ringland norwich norfolk walk easrer
Times Like These (Foo Fighters) - ADENLAND
Performing at The Rooms (Black Swan, North Walsham) 23.03.2012 - starting the show for the amazing ELECTRIC DUCKS ** LATEST - Adenland no longer has this original line up so future performances will be different